HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1938-9-21, Page 6THE BRUSSELS POST
,W13DA1k1SDAY, SFr8?, 211st 1933
Of Special Interest to Women Readers
TESTED RECIPES
Gee Cos of These When You Want
A Delicious Dish
Sunday Supper Sardines
8 large sardines
ee cup butter
cep dill Males. finely chopped
4 slices toast
Saute the sardines in a frying pan.
until golden grown. Soften the
butter and niex well with charmed
dill pickle, Spread a thin layer of
prepared butter on each slice of
toast. Cover with remaining
butter mixture. Serve at once..
Serves: 4.
Dinner Purch
1 cup atanae juice
1, cup lemon juice
lir cup grapefruit juiee
2 curs water
i, to leseeen.- sugar (or honey)
Orange slices
}pend thoroughly. Chill if desired.
Variations': Add to the above
mixture one cup of the juice of. an-
tele.r fruit. such as grape juice,
raslber:y jute. Ioganbe:rry juice,
p t:ear:ale juit•e, elder or the Juiue
front any canned fruit,
Qr add one cup of a puree made
by forcing peaches, .rears. apricots
hat:antis or berres thruuo,h a potato
ricer or coarse sieve.
Lighthouse on the Hill
1 pkg. cherry -flavored gelatin
1 pint wanm. water
Glazed apricots', prunes, and pine-
apple
Dissolve gelatin in warm water.
Turn into mold, Chill until firm.
remold. (tarnish with glazed fruit.
Serve wish whipped cream. Serves
4,
For glazed fruit, 'prepare thick
sugar syrup of 1 eup sugar, 3's cup
water, and 1 tablescooa light cora
syrups; boll 2 minates. Simmer batt
ring, of canned pineaprle, then
soaked, dried apricot s and seeded
Prunes in syntip 2(1 minutes, or until
glazed, Cool, Glaze only a few fruits
at a time and do not allow syrup to
boil hard; this avoids breaking of
fruit.
Spinach A La Sunkist
4 bps. apinaoh cleaned .thoroughly I
Place in kettle without any water.
dd:
1e cup salad oil
1 tables/poen salt
Mix thorougltjy. Cook 8 to 10 min-
utes. Stir or lift occasionally. Drain
and chop. Add:
1/ cup lemon Juice
Garntsle with lemon, Other greens
may be cooked by the same method.
Serves 8.
Orange Marshmallow Fluff
(Serves 6-8)
1 cup whireing cream
Ys cup sugar
1 cup quartered marshmallow
11/2 cups aranke segments (or half
slices) d
Whip cream until thick, told 4n
Other ingredients. Serve cold.
Dad's Beefsteak Sandwich
1 cup cooked beefsteak, ground
1 hard cooked egg
4 medium sized sweet ghervins
Catsup
Put through 'food chopper the
beefsteak, egg, and sweet gherkins.
Add sufficient cestup to moisten,
Spread between slices of buttered
bread. Makes filling fur 0 s'ca.d•
wlc-hes,
Sixth Sense Is
Aid To Women
Household Experience And
Child Raising Qualifies
For Public Life
•
An inherent "sixth sense" and
ages of experience in running
hausehatds and raising children
qualify women especlally for par-
tieipation in public avers, saki
Mrs, Millard E. Tydinps in a talk
at Baltimore last week,
"It has long been my contention
that woolen's place in tate political
scene is becoming more and more
important„' she suite "When you
consider that it has 'been only 20
years we've had the vote, it i3
phenominal the extent to which
women are participating in the at -
fairs of their community, state and
country,”
She said that women's "sixth
pease" and the common sense de-
rived from the household and
chdid-rearing problems !prevented
them from being fooled easily.
Men can be, she intimated, be-
cause they haven't had such valu-
able experience,
How To Regulate
Your Food Costs
Homemaker May Use
Good Substitutes In
Planning Meals
In appropriating funds the home-
maker may be astonished to find
how much has to be set aside for
fond. To reassure herself that
she is not spending too much for
Ibis department she may check up
by study+ing market quotations
and making frequent visits to Iota
markets, advises Hannah Dutaud
In an article in the Christian
Science Monitor I:f the food cost
Is in excess to the budget, the
homemaker learns to substitute
for the expensive cuts of meats
and other costly roods*, the less
I xpensive but equally good ones.
She does not buy 'foods that are
out of season, When she pur-
chasesa roast or fowl -for the Sun-
day dinner, which naturally sends
the budget for that day out of all
proportion to the other days, the
homemaker seesthe value of mak-
ing wise use of leftovers.
Plan Before You (Spend
No matter how large or how
Mall the ne,ome in Warming the
iiud.get, prepare to meet the cur-
rent expenses from current in-
come by building the outtline of
the expenses on a wide margin;
thus making allowance for the un-
expected, such as repairs and ad-
ditions.
Budgeting means planning be-
fore *meeting, and when this is
consolentiouely done trrse will be
ample supply for every need,
HOUSEHOLD HINTS
When snaking mustard add a
drop of salad oil, 'Pints improves
flavour and appearance,
Have some plaster of Paris and
mix tt with milk instead of water
to fill up- holes In waft, The milk
Prevents the plaster from setting
too quickly, and it also makes it
waterproof when it is set and
therefore inimuue from the ef-
fects of damp, This mixture can
also be weed for Illliug up anY
holes or knocks in the wall before
it is prepared,
If your eleotric door bell is get-
ting a bit weak You can eastlY
tonicity Ibis by buying a little sal -
ammonias, then mixing this with
some water (about three pints to
half a pound and filling up the.
battery Jar with the solution.
It sometimes Itatppens that a door
hinge will work lose owing to its
weight making the hoses too big,
Tbis fault can be got over by
plugging the screw holes wlttlt
dead matches• or thick pieces of
wood, if the holes are very big.
Sharpen the driving end if each
of the plugs.
Fill. a large old spoon with
alum powder and 'heat over a
gas jet until it melts, (Qt is bet-
ter to use an iron spoon for this
purpise,) Smear the broken edges
of a china or glass article with
this• preparation while it is still
hot and liquid, thea press firmly
together, It makes a very secure
join,
Some corks will stick, no matter
Whet you di with them, but next
time just try dipping them in pure
glycerine and you will not find
that they will stick again,
Parquet flooring needs to be well
brushed, dusted and then cleaned
occasionally with, a guod wax polish
softened tubus turpentine and then
ix:Maited with a weighted polisher
covered with a soft dus`er.
When you're boiling anything in
a saucepan, and it needs a bid
place a bawl of water over the
pan In place of it. You'll have
hot water for washing rip then. A
washing wp bowl of water placed
in the oven, it you've space for it,
also gets hot enough for washing
up while the roast cooks,
Open Lite oven door alter the
gas hes been alight fir a few min-
utes; it lets the steam out and
the oven will heat nip quicker. And
never let a gas jet flare up around
the sides of a saucepan. It's
wasteful. Qt's the underneath of
the saucepan you wart to heat, not
the air around it.
Hairbrushes can be cleaned with
pipeclay Instead of washing them.
In the ordinary Way- Sprinkle the
pipeclay over the brushes until the
bristle,e are tilled with tt, Leave
1
Sir Edward Beatty Becomes Freeman of Cranbrook.
wlien Sir Edward Beatty,
O,T3,70., IK,C„ LL,D„ Chair-
man and president of the Cana.
dian Pacific Railway, attended
Cranbrook's Pioneer Tteunien, leri-
day, September 9, he received
the freedom of the city and hoard
bimsolf extolled as an autstate-
Ing Canadian and tread of the
company whieb 40 years ago
forged the Crows' hest Pass Ilnk
of its great railway system into
the rich Kootenay country, Sir
Edward is seen receiving a silver
tray commemorating the occasion,
from Mayor T. M. Roberts, On
Sir Edward's left Is Judge G. H.
Thompson who swore him in as a
freeman of the hustling East
Kootenay city, Ross H. McMaster,
of Montreal, director of the Cana-
dian Pacific Railway, Is at the ea
treme left at the picture, This, the
third ceremony of its kind in which
Sir Edward hoe participated, Saint
John and 'Vancouver having pre-
viously conferred the freedom of
their cities, was a joint tribute
to Sir Edward and to the pioneers
of the road, many of whom were
present to see the brilliant care-
mony and to boar their own worn
of four decades age i)ratsed,
for 15 misstates, shake out, and then 1
rub the brushes together to get all
the clay owl,
Worn/ 'Wales in furniture can be
filled almost bnvieibly by this
method, Crush sante whitening
and Mix linseed oil to a paste.
-Buy a littlo coloring matter of
the right shade and mix it, Add
a v'er'y little french 0011511 Just be-
fore filling the proles, Polish when
quite hardened.
Green, Brown
Blue For Men
This Autumn And ;Winter
You Will See Fresh Tones In
A11 of Them; Shirts To /Bland
Vl'hat will be the fashionable
colors for men's snits this autumn
and winter? And what will be the
correct accessories to aecamaany
thein, The British Color Counsel
has enawreed these questions.
Blue, brown and green are sug-
gested for suits. Two new blues
are inttoluced, a dark shade re-
flecting the blue-green of the sea;
college -blue, a darker but warmer
tint. Blue-green is iedicated for
the lining of both,
Brown also has two fresh col-
ors: a 'warm shade named
Barbedoev; a darker tone describ-
ed ae Indies brown. A lining
matching the former, suits both
cloths. The council further apou-
sons regent green, a deep shade
wilth lining in accord,
Selecting the Right Tie
Which are the most .attractive.
tihtrts to go with these sults? For
the blue group, apart from white,
there are Lhree shades of blue and
a gray that malt+hes the sea gull's
feathers. To accompany brawn
kits, we have cream, ivory, parch-
ment, and ptnefrost, the last a
tight green. Green outfits require
starts in graduations of .that color,
medium gray with a touch of
green, silver-grey.
Men are keen on ,ties and the
mantel glees' guidance -to becom-
ing selections. For blue suits,
chocolate, Oaford blue, peony red
and purple, navy find favor. Cham-
pagne, cream, maroon and peat
brown represent suitable ties for
brown kit, While silver grey, bot-
tle green, Cambridge blue and
gold pass the 'tes;t with green
clothes. This should help those
who give ties' as presents,
You're Incomplete
Without Gloves
This Season, Whether
You Be Dressed In Sports
Or Evening ,Attire •
'Tits amazing what the lack of
of gloves will do to a smart ensem-
ble. For ages, it seems, fashion-
iste have been literally preaching
about the Importance of gloves in
the field of accessories, stressing
their vaue to the 'complete cot
tume.
There is no outfit complete
without stoves, whether it be in
the category at sports or full dress
regalia. Wizen more women me-
cept this fact, the impulse to be
dressing will be Stronger than ever
before,
14, Is too easy to slip into slov-
enly habits, and how any woman
Mtn go sheplllfog downtown with-
ont gloves is more 'than we can
fatlitom, for certainty their hands
tome in contact widh surfaces
where hundreds of other hands
have touched,
Clerk's Notice
FIRST POSTING 'OF
VOTER'S LIST
•
Voters Lists, 1938, Village of
Brussels, County of Huron
Notice is hereby given that I have
0011lp1102 with Section 9 of the
Voter's' Lists Act anti that I have
posted up at my office, Brussels,
Ontario, on the 3181. day of August,
]1138, the list of all persons entitled
't vole in the said M'iuicipalily for
'Members of Parliament, and at
Municipal Elections, and that such
list !equates' there for lnspe tion.
And I hereby call upon all voters
to take immediate proceedings to
!eve any errors or omiselons cor-
rected Recording to law, the last
day for appeal being the last day of
September, 1908.
R, S. WARWICK,
Viliage Clark
Dated dols 81st tlsy 01 august, 1988,
w
on the ROE. Complete.
Concentrate Plan
Here's a proven method: for every farmer
with his own home-grown grain. Get a bag
of ROE 32% or 40% Concentrate, and mix
about one pound to every three or four
pounds of home-grown grain, depending
on which level of protein concentrate is
your choice. Use only sound, heavy grain,
We give you formulae 112 each bag that do
get results. You do your part in mixing,
and you'll have the finest feed money can
can buy • - fully Vitemized for Health and
Farm -proven for Results.
ROE 32% and 40% Complete
CONCENTRATES
r Choice proteins, fully vitamired for
`Health with your home-grown grain./
if you have not
choice homegrown
Brains. ask for ROE
COMPLETE19%
EGG MAS - the
finest feed that
money GM buy.
This plan has made a hit with farmers
everywhere. It saves on freight and hand.
ling charges, lowers feeding costs, main-
tains health and vigour in the birds, and
when it comes to egg -laying, you will be
more than satisfied with the increased pro-
duction of large eggs of better texture and
flavour a money -making plan for the
businesslike farmer. Try a sack • • you'll
be back,
ROE FAR' S MiLLING CO.
ATWOODy; OroTARIO
ROE FEEDS SOLD LOCALLY BY
East Huron Produce Emporium, Brussels
Frank Harrison, Moncrieff
Geo. Michel, 1- enfryn
Albert Traviss, Walton
More Trees A Need
Says Former Premier
SPealetng at a forestry dinner
sponsored by York and Ontario
counties and ,the Ontario forestry
branch E. C, Drury, sheriff of
Simcoe County and former prem-
ier of Ontario, placed 'the blame
for mush of the destitution in the
rural parts of soathern Ontnrio on
deforestation. '1
Areas once covered with trees
and not suited for agriculture are
subject to sett drtftdng, thus this
land becomes more impoverished
and families endeavoring to make
a living on farms 111 such areas,
are finding conditions growing
from bad to worse. The proper
thing to do would be to conduct a
survey and plant trees where
tahm, clops' don't give a fair re-
turn for the money and exert ex-
pended, '
Mr, Drury cited other problems
which have ifollowed the denud-
ing of the landscape. Winds have
a much better ciltance of gaining
in velocity without these natural
barriers. Old -Omens say that w.ind-
etornig recur more frequently
flow than 111 the days when the
country was still well covered
with bush. It is also obvious that
deforested areas are more likely
to stiffen from leek of moisture in
the summer months and destruct-
ive floods in the spring,
Forests constitute one of a few
natural elements affecting water
flow, which men can control, A
wetter in the Canadian Forest and
Outdoor recently pointed out that
we cannot stop rain and evapora-
tion, but we can plant trees wlrtc11
will—
L Break the rainfall {oto min-
ute particles.
2. Retard the volume and vel-
ocity of the surface run-off,
3. Provide a medium for slow
evaporation,
4. Increase or ralse the subsoil
water table.
5. Rebuild and hold soil in
place.
6. Assist in regulation of earth
waters in springs and under-
ground channels,
4. Shade and reduce watre
temperatures along stream courses.
Canada and Ontario in particular,
should launch out on a comprehen-
sive scheme of reforestation. Such.
countries as Germany and. Sweden
are manifesting leadership in forest
conservation, In Germany an acre
has 10 be planted In forest tor every
acre out, and Sweden, a lumbering
country, by a judicious' handing of
the problem, has today 4e per cent.
more merchantable timber team
she had 100 years ago,
A statesman, plagued by authors
who sent Irian their books to read,
had a• regular form of receipt mai1%
ed book, stating; "Mr.
tends to lose no time 4n perssing
your book."'
WILLIAM SPENCE
Estate Agent, Conveyance,
and Commissioner
General Insurance
Office
Main Street, — Ethel, Ontario
r Get Glasses
NOW
a Jai I■
1111
If Your Eyes Need Glasses Get them from. R. A. REID
At Once. Take Advantage of His Wonderful
Eyesight Service — Complete in Every Detail
KReidj Stratford's Leading Optometrist
R. a 1 For Nearly 20 Years
AT BRUSSELS OFFICE —MISS HINGSTON'S STORE
EVERY WEDNESDAY AFTERNOON ZOO to 5.00
'Phone 51 for Appaintn►ent