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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1938-7-27, Page 3THE BRUSSELS POST WIIIDNESDAY, ,TULY 20th, 1938 Of Special Interest to Women Readers What Does Valencia :Mean To You This Is the season of 111e year when thti colovful, juicy Valenciu orange a rhes up at you from every fruits :land In the ootungy. Rich its vitamins, rich in juice, fid' orous and healthful, it should be used regularly, Here are two delicicae recliners you may care to try: , ORANGE GELATINE (Serves 4-6- 1 -tablespoon granulated gelatine of, cup cold water Soak 5 nelnutee. Add. efs cup orange juice, heated but not boiled Stir to dissolve gelatine. Add: cup orange juice, not heated .2 tablespoons lemon juice ]tet cup sugar Sprinkling salt 'Ohillin individual mo)s ORANGE NUT 14"H•IP (Serves 6-8) I cup whil't•'dng cream 1 cup peanut brittle rolled fine l3 oz.) 1 cup orange Pieces Whip cream. Fold in powdered peanut beetle and orange pieces., Serve very cold, To make i nautomatie ret•riger- .stor, substitute orange juice for or- ange Metes, F.reze with le stip sugar to a mush in rapid Lreezing unlit. Fold in cream and peanut britt e. Let stand until frozel again but no longer, Serve. C.ZILLIAX &SON. t-\PRpo��L USS Test r ock pith the Fashion Flashes Dotted frocks, are seen every- where, Navy and white is' host ptaitaelar, with black and white e close second, Grapes are printed on white fee a smart drelse and jacket cos- telne, The bodice of the trim]: is draped and Cited at the neelii'ae, and the fitted jacket ties in a similar bow. With it is worn a dist of white straw with a third bow of 'the print at the brim front. Elastic setln is pit'nted it: a small all-over leaf pattern for a trim battling suit, A gypsy cotton play suit, gayly striped' consists of draped brass- iere and full, pleated shorts. Veils have by no means shot their bolt) Women have become, ansa are still entirely veil-consclius, autl they°I) be worn a great deal this fall, Strawberry pink and a new cerise Annie are added to the summer rat- ers, while dusky pink, flesh and other shades are featured in ,many of the new collections. Announce Dates or School Fairs School Fair dates In Huron Coun- ty have been announced by Ian Mac- Leod, iagris ultural representative far the county, Prize lists have been given to the printers and will be ready shortly. Last year all the school fairs in Huron were cancel- led awing to the poliomyelitis. epi - titmice The dates for this year's faite ale se• follows: Grand Bente, Sep(. 15; Hensall, Sept. 16; Belgrave, Sept 20 Gorrie, Sept. 21; St. Helens, Sept, 22; (turtle's t'oruer, Sept. 27 and Carlow, Sept. 28. Dates for Fall Fairs in the county this year are announced' as follows: 011 fiord Sept, 12-17 Myth Sept. 13.17 Cotlerieh Sept, 20-21 Sea forth Sept. 22 2.1 Exeter Sept. .21-24 I1ny fie1Q Sept. tle•26 \\-inghani Sept. 24-29 le seely Sept, 29-30 Luekttow• Sept. 20-10 1lli'kten Sept, et -36 Fordwich Sept, 30 Oct, 1 Znnlch Oct 3-4 Dungannon Got, 0.7 Safety Group Warns Against Sunstrokes Sunstroke le very wlfferen•t from heat proeU'atioe, the industrial As- cidtnt Prevention Aesociatons point out 114 a coneeive bulletin iss- ued thee week, which, suites the symptoms and recommends first aid trt:aUnents, Symptoms max be recognire'i by: 1, Hot dry skin and Ted tate, 2. IIigh fever, dizziness, chootiug pails• and headache, 3. Ilard, loud breathing and con- vulsions, 4. Pulse quick and pounding, 5. Patient may become insensible. Recommended treatment le; 1, Remove to shady place and re- move outer clot)ling to the waist. 2. Lay on back with head and shoulders raised. 3. Apply ice or Cold }eater to tread, cool body with water or wet cloth, but .avoid shock. 4, When censotons and tthle to drink, give cool -not iced—water. Give no stimulants. Pedestrians Must Learn To Reduce Highway Toll Highway Minister Asks For Co- operative Spirit FAULTS ARE CITED "Highway aeoident tolls will be sharply reduced' when pedestrians learn to think of themselves as a distinct group In the highway trat- 1ic stream-," Hon. T. a. \IcQuesten, Ontario' Minister at Highways, tattled in an appeal issued recently asking for co-operation from all nacre of the streets and highways in the press campaign of advertise ing noev being carried on through- out the province, aimed at cutting down the toil of fatalities and in- juries. "Pedestrians have rem lMee strongly individualistic through all the yeatrs• of rapid growth in vehicu- lar traffic," Ile explained, "while motorists are increasingly conscious of themselves as a class. Motor- ists have trained themselves, and a:e being trained, to keep their minds on the job of driving, whiie. they have a wheel In their halide. Two many pedestrians have their minds anywhere except on the job or lancing on the: streets and highways in a manner that will, plea•ent an accident involving them selves am possibly Weep travellers on the higllwny, "The best pedestrians," he said, ''are •tile postmen. They ties the Nova Scotian Lights and Shadows Alesson in the value of preserv- ing natural beauty is written plainly across Nova Scotia's 21,- 000 square miles whichretain nn old -true charm not to bo found In as great a dogroo anywhere else in Canada. Three-quartore of the proviece remain forest clad, literally Web- bed with rivers and lakes; the eternal Atlantic and the tnighty tides of the Bay of 1"undY lap Its sun -hissed shores; a wise pro- gramme of fish and genie protec- tion ensur00 sport for years to come; an inexhaustible supply of salmon from the ocean affords the world's beast fishing in the coastal rivers each year. The roinaining once -quarter of • the province 85 a beautiful blond - Ing of sleepy farmland, bustling eltles, and secluded resorts, toned by tete mellowness of age. The province is rich in historic sites, which, because of their association with the early days or the Continent, aro of peculiar in- terest to visitors. Annapolis Royal, Port Anne, and the .fortress of Louisburg are among the care- fully pneserved places where tin - portant pages of history were written, The Park at Grund Pre shows the land of Longfellow's Evangeline as it was in the days of the Medians. Nova Scotia has still further appeals to the visitor—good rail- ways, modern Toads, and splendid hotels wboro provision leas been trade for all types Of summer sport, OE these hotels, the beat stem eseeese known are The Pines at Digby, open from June 24 to September 14; Cornwallis Inn at h7ontvillo, open all .year; and Lakeside Ina at Yarmouth, open from June 28 to September 8. The pictures above, top 0010, left to right, show; A visitor examining lobster pots down by the docks; the Queen or the Annan polls 'Valley Apple Blossom Fes- tival; an os, the beast of burden common to the Maritimes; and the Canadian Pacific Steamship "Princess Helene," which oper- ates a regular schedule across the Bay of Fundy between Nova Sco- tia and New Brunswick. Left to right in the bottom row are seen Port Anne, .Svangeline's Church at Grand Pre, and a wllart-side stelae, streets More than anyone else, but very earely are they involved in an ecoldent and you don't bee a Past - Mil 11'8 name in the casualty lists. The postman uses the cruse walks is' careful and accurate in 101s judg- ment of traflice movements and speeds, and he never tries to coul- pete with passing truffle," Pedestrians, as a group, figure largely in the tutatl number If acci- dents', analysis of the Department of Highways- accident eta:isC.ee: reveals, The second most frequent type of accident involves pt tics - Glans and resulted in injuries. to 3,017 pedestrians fust year. "Nat ell the blame for these tori• dents can be placed' on the ulotal- lsts' ahouldere." Mr, 9icQureten said, ''because more than 70 per cent. of pedestrian accidents' 00- etnred under normal cunalei'rn,--• tote view was not obstructed --there was 110 confusion of traffic," The causes of these -"pedestrian" acc'ldents point their own 1050011 and cu, 1, the minister concluded. In the order or their frequency these major accident ('atlas'- lin- mediately suggest the cure: 1, Crosing between intersections —erose only at crossings.. 2. 'childre'n playing in the streets—parks, playgrounds and Yardie are ohvioucty reach safer places to ploy, 3. Oros'sing the street against traffic and' signals—don's walk tato t1,e path of trouble. 4. !Stepping from behind parked vehicles or objects—don't play hide -and seek on the highway, but give yourself and the motorlrit,' ai chance to see and be seen, 5, Walking on or crossing high- way—be fair and be safe; cross quiokly and safely and a'.lvays watb at the elle of the road, facing the traffic stream, when using the highway, Melody That Fits The Voice Set Above Fife And Drum Swing (By Guy Lombardo) \\'e like sweet musk:. We've been playing sweet music ever duce we left London, Ontario, with a band of nine men—and we're going to stay just as sweet as we are, Swing, to my mince, Is just a rad. Popular music always• travel.-., in cycles --we're always having a run of Southern eitranlmy" songs, or Hawaiian songs.. Right now. there's a, fadd for the Johnny Mercer kind er song, with guy, 01- for,nai, kidding lyrics. The jazz maze of 20 years ago wits the same kind of thing, And so is the seeing craze of today. I think the whole thing will elle 1011011 something neer conies along to take the pu'bilc fancy. But no matter haw many fads 01 crazes we have, there will always he the sante desire for sweet Music, \\'hy? Because sweet music nppett to all the fine things about, life hap- piness, hanniony, romance. Yttn alt remember Howard Dietz' song, "Dancing in the Dark,' from "'Phe Sendru^agon," I mention it be- cause it illuisti'ates• what I mean, Mr. Dietz was visiting me one night at the Roosevelt Hotel where my band wee playing. We were sitting together at a side table while the boys played one of the dance stets. It was a mellow melody, done in the quiet Lombardo style, and the lights were turned low to set the moo of the tousle. Mr, Dietz and I watened the danc- ers. and he remarked stow tluietly happy and relaxed they looked, "Yes," I remarked, "that's' elle) they like--dauctng in the chine." ''Say!" he replied, 'I'd like to write a song aboat it—using that for the t1(1e." Ansi he slid, 14 's a song heat seems to me to express that Deace- ful happtnt'.si we noticed in the dancers at; the Rooseven 4het eight, The Lombardo band used to piey un oecaelonat "trot" number, but when the swing craze 00 Me in. we stopped. even that. We ontl't like to imitate or follow. We prefer to piny the hind of uauste that has laeoing appeal, ILI When we started one ynu know`,` it was jest at 111e end of - the jazz ('raze, I remember we played a jcb in a dance hell in Akron, Ohio, We were Metytng along, she wey we''ve always Played, for nearly an hour, when a big bouncer came up and 15551(1, "Say when 410 souse guys alert playing?" We told 10t we were playing 111411 then—and we ]rept Dight on. 130fnrc' the evening was over, that bouncer came lap anti congratulated Its. Leven tete peoele veto think they like jazz best, often find out that, in the hong run, sweet 111115)0 is the kind that really gets under 111e slain, When you get right down to it, Bargain Excursions JULY 28 (rain Brussels Tickets also void at all adjacent C.N.R. Stations. To C.N.R.Station in Maritime Provinces Fe -v. of Quebec; New Brunswick; Prince Edward Island; For Pares. Return Limits, Train information, Tickets, consult nearest Ascot. See Handbtds. CANADIAN NATIONAL • the melody le the 11(111g that makes Drives taus:, what it is. People want mutat they than sting ---,and the thing they sing is the melody, You can't sing 11 drum solo, no shatter how wond•e1l'ul 11, Is. And you eart1 sing all the fancy stuff the "hot" Wren May when they [urges, .all about the nletod!y and start "riktl,g out," as they say, with ilnprovisa- tions of their own, lnstead of obliterating the melody well superfluous sounds anti rhythm, we try. through actua' eimpliiicatlon, to accentuate the melody so that it stays in the listener's ear long after he has heard 1114 play. That seems to the the best thing about music, and it goes right back to ail the fine old American tunes People still like to sing—back to the lovely Stephen Foster songs like "0111 Folks At home," "Old Sleek ,Joe,' and "I Dream of Jennie with the Light Brown Haire, Stephen Foster still remains the Franz Schubel't of American music because or his great gift of melody. The Lombarcdo band will never go in for the trick and novelty .aspects' of music. We have no ineerest in music fates. We will never play string, To us, music is' melody and melody 1s sweet. I think the great- est advance American music can snake ie to forget about the "hot" stuff and concentrate oil the pure sound of music that soothes the heart and that natures dreams. Blueing should be added to the last rinsing water and thoroughly dissolved before putting in the washed clothes. Avoid using too much. Thin fabrics need less blueing than heavy materials, 32 Years Without Mishap Good Record Results in Dismissal of Charge WINGHAM—"This case is on the border line mud 1',n going to give ynu the benefit of the doubt," stat- ed Magistrate .1. A. Makins in \\ ilghant Puiice court yesterday as Ile distniseed a charge of reckless driving against 65-year-ild William Mende:eon of Teeswater, result of au aciedent. Henderson, returning vital e. party of young people from Ren- tal] on June 27, struck the girder of a bridge south of W)ngham on the London-Wingham road, The car turned. over with the result thet sevelai of the young people were injured and the car wrecked In evidence it was shown that the driver had. been blinded by lights of approaching cans, and because at the narrowness of the bridge and twin he struck the side of the beege approach. Henderson has been driving for 32 years and' this is the filet asci- dent be has ever had Prior to t11e accident he had returned from a 2,000 -mile motor trip. Magistrate Makins dismissed the case, Garments' hold their shape bet- ter when pressed along the weave of the fabric, rather than across the weave. Press completely dry. Clothing put away even alightly damp is apt to be wrinkled and lack freshness when put on, • Even if luck, today, will like it! Your dealer can secure Dried or Pickled Canadian Fish for you no matter how far you are from open water. You can dioose from such Dried Fish as Cod, Haddock, Hake, Cusk, and .Pollock, and such Pickled Fish as e' Herring, Mackerel and Alewives , - , and every one of them can be served in tasty, different ways. Enjoy this food in your home. You can get Dried or Pickled Canadian Fish with all its goodness retained for your enjoyment. Ask your dealer. You will find it very economical, too. DRIED OR PICKLED FISH ii- SUPPER that dauntless fisherman didn't have any he can have fish for supper ... and he DEPARTMENT OF FISHERIES, OTTAWA. WRITE FOR FREE BOOKLET Department of Fisheries, 156 Ottawa. Please send me your free 52 -page Booklet, "Any Day a Fish Day". containing 100 dolishtful and economical Fish Recipes, NXf»e � Wog ANY DAY A FISH DAY r 0 0 tt 0 0 e 0 i0 .t1 1Q 0 11) )0 7.3 )0 78 .81 0a Oil 20 ,00 25 ,6e ,20 ,20 ,70 1.60 .40 .,20 t.46 3.80 3.00 1.70 hat teen ord.- eve. led, long • John • low - sepal Liver tory, chole ttson 11103'0 loner lived' In - tT its, wing Mrs. , anoes alum„ Wat- .11