HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1953-1-28, Page 6F.
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•r`.t Gstilet•1dbLGree' 17 CI o,.t'ke
' We used to ]lav,• a neighbour,
very active in various social or-
ganizations, who was often heard
to say -- . =`Well, I can't work
and run around too.so I guess
1'11 have to quit work" And that
is just about what he did. I
thought of that neighbour last
week as I listened to accounts
of all the various farm meet-
ing that were taking place —
Federation of Agriculture, Crop
Improvement Association, Milk
Producers •— and a few others
that I have ler gotten — and I
wondered how on earth farmers
had time to attend so many
meetings. And then John Brad-
shaw said he had received an-. •
neuncements of fifty annual ,
meetings that were coming up
within the next month? ''Looks'
as if there should be at least two
men on every farm during the
winter months ,-- one to work
and one to run around. Anyone
farmer could quite logically lee-•
long to ten or twelve associa=
tions. Could it be that farmers
as a class are- over -organized?
Can they afford the time and
expense thus involved? Attend-
ing meetings regularly takes
time. As for expense, the Federa-
tion of Agriculture asks for 2'5
of a mill on the assesment; the
Cream Producers one cent on
every pound of butterfat; the
Milk Producers 1?h cents per 100
lbs. of fluid milk, and I suppose.
there is an equivalent charge
for other organizatiofis. The point
is are all these organizations
necessary — isn't a certain
t over -lapping inevit-
able?
of ov a nevi
P g
able? We have a Federation of
Agriculture. Isn't the main func-
tion of the Federation to improve
and protect the farmers' interests
in every line of agriculture?
Certainly the present threat of
synthetics to the dairy indnstry
is a challenge to the Federation
of • Agriculture to prove its
strength. If - synthetic dairy
products are allowed to flood the
markets theTe won't be. many
farm meetings called because
there wiitet bee many farmers left
to attend them. Dairy farmers
will either be in bankruptcy of
absorbed by industry. Actually,
the basic economy of our entire
l!duntry is at stake. If the feder-
t•
z Government is too absorbed
with defence projects and fin -
Arleta/ juggling to realise what
is, or maybe, happening tg ag -,
ribultbie. then there should be;. ,
41%-efe and cry?` coming front all `
fare ra. And who is better
:'qualified to raise the sum total
pg„ that hue and cry than the
Federation of ;Agriculture, .pr-
ferably .atiih JYr. 11. H. Hanham
as its spokesman. Dr. Hannam
has done wonderful work for ag-
riculture in the past. We are sate/ ash towel, l of inning the roll at
he will see the light and hope one end, of the tutee/. Draw the
he will be equally successful in roll through the entire length 'Of
this present emergency. We
the • sleeve; : Bien press, turning '
don't doubt his ability at all but { as necessary to press all parts...
that ability will 'be consideritbly ! of the 'sleeve. ,
strengthened and 'increased i#, I Z, /lair can '• eliminate.. xouch
given the whole -hearted sup- cs?
ovv an ?
'fit PH* eon 1 ald'+11Rcstihn el .
• food' a .e•
-• ,,e'leei ht' .siew eit4watig of filed'
cannot he too Strongly empha-
sized. Chew slowly, no matter
what you are eating and this evil/
'Aid: immeasurably in 'life proper
fl'igestiir'n .01r•tb0 Sootb .
Q. How can 1 remove obstinate
• ,Cigarette stains trent the fingers??
A. Try using well -soaped tum» '
ice %tone' `and hat 'eater. :The
lighter stains' can- be remege4
w'ittmrilai'nrden10fl uieei.
How can I bring out the
eolg s i}s iiitpleum? „
A. P41.10111 oil rubbed into the
liholilitmt will Itr'ing ant' the col-
ors 'Make, it' tt ear' twieto us long,
and impart a glossy strrfuce.. I .-
a little paraffin oil is added„ to
the watet,when washing the 11rtii-
a eum it Will clean ;Ind polish
Much easio`i '
1
° °t1; llott 'tun •'1 iron sleeves more '
easily? r ', eve -
A.• Make.1 .roll, out 01„ a T1,14 -
port of the farmers.
t
problem of Duet-or.gamzatrottto i house of roaehes. Powdered box '
' be eonsidered,which the farmer i ax xnixed tidal 'Sugar is' also, arr
can solve to a certain extent feetivi� 1uci�i' h`ish=fielif high Try his captor, pretty /Ytdry Timm, this fat
.likeI f h h a smuEr'tb8k%b4 satisfaction The alts- a]red gtrf holds'
A, Gary earepitpr,.i,, usually' a
In the meantime there is that " I spg,ei 11lfl dl for „lading the '.
for himself, arming, roar • Q Ho;v can 3 remote the black s os • .
ity. begins at bore. I have in spetks•yrhi{J; sonlotiules•iarnt'frit 4 "3fth 4`ttle`of"CtrllfdYnfdlTuna Queen, Her main ;Clglm:to, the.crown,
mind a farmer who was an ac- • ifis file 11i- ootids/' dangling from her line. Apparently hooking
ac-
tive 'member of. a certain live- i Santer, ; p
A et,;•,using a /taste 'of w}i}t �^t .., ..r.l.r- tela pvdr••FJE;h is no problem for Miss Timm.
stock impioveliient association, tug that' L2 frue" of gilt and ollxe , :r
Cane the time of one pereicu- -
oil;'lighily penal 'tivath told silk ,�• t r n•.! flat
'' lar annual Meeting. Before lege- , •lf'thefspecks:ate obstinate, smear y s ' 0.....kb'
ing home this farmer asked his. with that paste and. ,leave it' bur`'^' v 1' "r '°'
wife to take a look at Bessie, a-"F'r#n _b2tLllTlni
pedigreed Shorthorn, while' "lee y"(1 How e•lii 1 (dean neelefits•, •-- i er {try" 1 ' ^b'
was away ..—: :the,. might :sawn , lute. .•Oars ifeLTR;;L away
A neighbour was and ]riblwanh: thgY Tid`si thaltiff3gr11isedTe. Pie
during the .day. nag A; By 'placing' thein' ih a fruit „aen'tt the-^iiii3g issue to Jun
coming in ta.do the night chore @_ . jar halfsf lied • ititlr:xa'rban tet'r'a= los so1lte may-itse t4.14tete boom -
At noon his wife, who, senaee k' .- ,,chloride; oe.v,er the jarrand shek'e'• •' it •• arming
next to nothing about livestock; , foe ,few minutes• Follow with ,, Brings,_ G, • rick elf y.4., ? tt•
a coins. �'i� elle hitrocl'uchon -per
wax t'dawn to the barn. What .he ' a sin in clean carton tetra- ? a
saw frightened her. She phoned ` 'i rings the new 't4ioga.:hyla% soeTe you're
chloilde, and hung tri the apn�., dbonbrho -be' emandisated from
for the vet, but he was .oue. 1It , r ,. " ; ,f• , • , house-
'
of the most to4liousee
was nearly 3 'acloek before he 'f ewe's n=l remove the paper '
'Q hold chores—sock darning.
label on a bottle? The latest news in working-
-041e It .can be readily removed man,d •fashion".^ circles is that
by,flrst•weetring t1 and then hold- Canadian hosiery manufacturers
ing it near a flame :of the stove„,. f„ aaey"inovieshakitfg heavy work
Q. tiow"ean 'I temper Ilnife, - roc .gf nylo/a,;staplp rain and
poor cow, through- a o,.. - - • blades? it vertu turning'CriieeI.. •oaf b gncis,ir 1 )0sg,, ,,slur will--
- A.'23eat a rout's the oxdjnary 'es sev-
tentaon at the right time had , fully,. and. frequently „tq pretretite;1 eYa1 times,9,,0 are wa2tn, corn -
table,. Unable to survive the or- i •
warping. When tile latae is gran, g;
deal. t, • •'fdi table, ' '11"'Y are isi tor owill
rn-
lyr, heated, plunge perpendiceyjei ,, res fiii51]f tre>Lv -little , }s halt being
Well, one thing -is certain - ly into a vessel of..rata- linseed ,e—deP,�ilding: qr} the
attend. toe. - r ern'
't .likely to� 5hot�El •fixe drAthe' blend.
Partner.isnoil. Tlie°`tenipei amount of nylon in h
t
many meetings. He doesn't get on a clot iron• The=blades may be But ' even with the 'slightly -
time for the ones he would like ...heated,=and .hardened. between shrinking blends. sockk•sti•etchers
to go to . , so he reads about twq saight, pieces.of iron. are not required.
them instead, He has been to 1 -Deer, • 'Fher'e,Tare several nylon -wool
only one'meeting this rear — " ' e" �r T „/elends.nn. ,,the,Canadian, market
and at that the' chairman told •We�ekrs Sew-Thrif today—l0 per cent nylon and 90
his audience "the outlook for the I ''.p -pr cent' wool, •20 per cent nylon
dairy farmer was promising!" and'80`pei`"edht wool,' 519 -per cent
Our big worry lately has been , nylon and 50 per'cent•w4ol, One
water shortage The outlook was "ti ;� ' .. Quebec .,,yer•n, manufaoturer is
serious. And then carne rain .' . , producing a ]ieay y' 100 ,per cent
enough to start the creek rune nylon staple yarn for work socks.
Hing and to almost 1111 the cis- £ x According to laboratory abra-
tern, And this district was par- ai, 1' t —don tests, 'the eft''per• cent nylon
ticularly fortunate. The ice melt- - i.` jb s t : ,- blend •work -sock will outwear an
ed off the trees; there was no orehnat.•y wrtol one,by two to two
; a d one -hale times. The 20 per
power shortage; no plugged t � a cr}
roads and no ice to slither around r cent nylon Blend will last four
r to" five' -times ]dn`ger. A•1 .00 per
on. We are truly thankful and 1
cent -nylon- staple sock is mildew
, 'and , moth•,r;esistant ,and is non-
slp inkirie,
get there. It was 1 a,m, before
the farmer got home. He looked
in at the baize before going "to
the house. The calf was. dead
and so was the cow. The vet
had done what he could but the
th h- 1 ck f at
able to enjoy to the frill the
Christmas -card scenery.
NEI BUN RIING
td* fo make
--with the, new
} °1 P'asl'DRYYeastr.z.lr
M1, , •t.
:-i
•
t .aa:r.,
.+^._.•'l
°l.5, it;
1'idll,.,h
Eu
e Hot goodies come puffin' from •
your oven in quick time with new
kleisehmann's Past •bier Yeast! No,
mote spoilechcakes of yeast! No mord
Iasi -minute iris —.;this new form of -
Fleisc'hmann:'s'Se east•keeps in your cap*
ba3rd 1 Order a'montlits supply,
.7q
tr r
Manu#actiirers ' of ny'on-wool
blend and 100 per ""edit nylon
staple •wor•k 'socks ; "foresee a
ready market among, farmers, oil
and bush wprkers, trappers, pros-
pectors,"hunters, hikers, skiers,
badhdf6rtE, and, of " cetu'se, the
married—men- whose ;wives con-
sider, sock;.mel}dingg as.. the chief
barrier to domestic blase.
• uckets'of'Tears
In Old -Time Songs
THE other da) Wee singing as
1 made the beds, and my
allfrlaughte who was stand-
ggisi ,} er doll, began
ti•tb
e S*1,144t@t M/VIeffgtpiittlat'
sugar, 11/a tsps, salt and ;:i e.
co tp .•y7ukcw,a-111. i
tIt tanwiiit.,`treasure` idtd a;`1trgt.
:,ilovvli�tir.tTft1 ttatuni'oatcri i.tsp,.
granulated sugar; stir until sug-
11°,i9' disso'lved:�'iprlhkIE with 1
envelope Fleischmenn's fast Ris-
ing Dry Yeast. Let stand 10 mins„
'1'11)112 stir well.
Add ebolsd ' Milk .niixtuto and
stir is l well -beaten egg and 1 tsp.
grated lemon rind. Stir In 2 c.
once -sifted bread flour; beat un-
til stdooth, Work in 2 c. (about)
once -sifted bread flour, Knead
on lightly -floured board until
smooth and elastic. Place its.
greased bowl and grease top of
HOMEY -BUN RING
lf.
dough. Cover and set in warm
place, free from draught. Let rise
untie doubled ilii bulk. Punch
,dl4fiisd6Gl lifatll roll out into an
oblong about, ,9 wide and 24"
'tome* lIob4elt fl8&'diir Combine .14
e.. lightly -pecked,. brown sugar
and' 3d b. lquid fsoney; spread
over dough olid sprinkle with eft
u. broken walnuts. Beginning at
a long side, loosely roll tip like a
jelly roil. Lift carefully into a
greased 8rn" tube pan and join
,ends of dough to form a rang.
Brush top with melted butter.
Cover and let rise until doubled
In balk. Bake in moderately hot'
oven, 375', 45-50 minutes, Brush
top with honey and spt•intrie with
chopped umlauts.
h
' I said.
4500 song, If you
l;to make me
cry, you vont
Nilo "3.1'." in
"Answers."
WAIST •
Ili
gal 'r.f, `..i
R -r T :
You vii afters' 1.`s e 'Done thee
°fleet, prettietL` tz'bb]`' e yard
LIaLlecli fabric ' Sithed"ei1' 3 s"U. G Dat
t1. ts tfltl!'++ thiAp,rixicid
CIT' 'rn" rn 4400 has Me
$ o ly lookethalbis the
1511 t .s anon! 'Bade zi+f1I101V
s t�� fit. Se ess'.v1 eveltiri a
4 'h' Tr tiney1 se'tir1 'fbr
1 l?tke ° T , yow, S,df" Tt•ii°Cma i
Qi a of�{ is easy to =e, s�}'
gyle'' tea' alYie iii' tested :for l ia, ,(arta•,
oUm$letla: illjtseratedaanstruegon
Sexid' 'THIRTY-FIVE. CENTs.
(35'0 in coins;istamps-eannet,be
aeeepted] for;thls pattern. Print
;plainly SIZE, NAlii1, ADDRESS,,
STXLE Ni1Mi38it: '
Send older' to Eng 1, 123 Eight-_
eenth St„ Neils Toronto, Ont,
"Why rot marry," said Mr.
Newlywed to the woman -hater,
"andhave a wife .10 share your •
lot?"
"It sounds all right," wan the
reply, "but some of these share
holders blossorn into directors:"
Then 1 r emen4red. 1 Was
la(lhIkuigirt song another used
toeeitiewhen I Ur very small
child It was r1 Ben Bo]t,'
ocind"8very time s1uang it 1 was
d ed to tears,1,,; trange that
? y daughter's action should
'dint self 1£'t]elent fr mine:
td.44• was brought n. on tears --
buckets of them 1S'erhaps 1 was
'tftt5l°e 'ethotional N. maybe my
ur inotli 'eFfla rendering was more
".,potg sad' and Mice voice more
,epetited`a•fer heartreYeding ballads,
1 but the, fact renlitins, her bed-
side ,,lullabies end recitations
crieslirrne to s ] dap night after
night! to ; is
• "Yost"Rake to the boats, lads,
you rade your Iives" -- remem-
bet' trail Couldn't 1 just picture
•that plane sea captain standing
fast to his sinking ship, issuing
orders to the loyal crew to save
themselves because "I've got no
one 10 love me, you've got dill -
:Arm and wives." And couldn't I
picture hint going down "in the
angry sea with. the ship 1 love."
Then there was the battlefield
one:
ISSVIIS 5 -- 1059
�R'Side by si l 'in tlie`erimson tide
?•: in the days of long ago,
•sa``Qn we dashed and our sabres
flashed as we conquered.
'r. every foe,
%One by one ere the day was,dreee
x sa'itrl<rnS`Kcanarades fall,•.;:,'
And 1 was'filie only one left to
answer diet last Roll Call."
_ ',that's daft'
•"1 did 'not -have 'elle analytical
mind of my daughter, who said
that it was a daft song and riot.
possible, anyway. I believed
pathetically in "The Flight of .
Ages," "The Banks of Allan
Water," "The Better Land," "Be -
rause I Love You," and "Break
the News to „Mother." '
Like Aline, In< .Wonderland, 1
fairly Wallowed' in 'tears: over:
"There'll come a time some day;
when I have passed away,
There'll be ho father to guide
you from day to day. `
Think well of all eve said,
honour the man you wed , ,"
Perhaps the tune had some-
thing to do with the effect, but
this was always a sure winner!
Then the poems, which were
fully in keeping with the vocal
efforts, were enough to have
stamped me.for ever as a funer-
al director's assistant, "The Gam •
-
bier's Debt" that harrowing
epic of a bad man who gambled
through the night and returned
in the morning to find his wife
and child frozen on the fireless
hearth.'
The Little Match Girl," the
story of a lovely but unloved lit-
tle girl who had to sell matches'
in the bitter weather — Mee the -
watched other children enjoying : •,
their Christmas party, strikingy
the while her matches to keep
her little hands from freezing;
how she was found the • nezt,,.
morning frozen in the snowedeee,,
Last match spent.
My young daughter's satigdfne
temperament, so differentr•from
my own, will not suffer these
moribund ballads and poems. In
fact, the last time I found my-
self singing with much feeling
"Silver Threads Amongst the
Gold," she interrupted even be-
fore rd got to the end of the first
verse by saying "Oh, mummy,
try 'Sugar Bush: You'll feel
much better!"
1
- — *t `i1`tu m C r d—i
"Dear Anne Bind; here are the
facts of my problem; I ain in
love With the another of a col-
lege mate, and she is 20. years
older than I am, She admits the
idea is krezy--but she loves Me,
'
too '
We have about everything fin
common: religion, love of :art
"144d• ,ssports; aur sense of huifiour
Is' `identical, and we even get
along with tile same p ople. We
hold mart•lege alt Abed tenet,
and I ant'sin,T can be true 14
her forever'':.I..,!
"The only ren i hesitate is
rillafraid someo'f her friends
will Scorn her t, or marrying a
man % young enough to be her
son; I honor her too much to
expose her to unpleasant reiti-
cism. ' She says she can take it,
w do
T,R."
DON'T
" hat As a y • ou regular think? reader of this
• column, you know that 1 am
* on the side of lovers whenever
* I honestly can be. But I ant
* not on your side today.
* Nature requires Haat men
* marry women of approximate-
" ly their own • age or younger;
* to flaunt this law is to invite
* trouble. .You ,may stay true to
* this :woman for a number • of
* years; but after that, the age
* difference will transcend every
* atheit problem Try as she may,
* she will not be able to assume
* a youthfulness she cannot feel,
' You will find yourself mote ate
* ease wltb,women of your own
* j;eueration, "find, tholfgh you
i*'anay""iratf3,.ttourself foe it, you
" will be powa"less to prevent
* it.
6
ki 2 eeahwililert tills', Woman;w.,in
ill+ b* . endtii'edf•ilie Censure of....
° her contemporaries, as you
* will have become the laughing
" Psychologists some time s
* blame the mother complex for
° the fact that so many youths
*.,become enamored of older
° women. It is a common helait.
°' Properly approa eel ; t rink
r' stature and bell fir' '"ya.
* m,an in many ways; to contem-
',,plate marriage, thotighr'istee%-
*' go off the deepoend indeedn .0
1•T4 tter how; wiling; ithis
"woman is to become yyour wife
* You will bedofiit'lier`'`t;r43"htin`Sir
e° ness;'to "encourage AteI nolle,
°' you ;will stop seeing her im-.•,
sxiately. your Seek friends
.° am0tigeyour own generation
o and temperament. You will be
o rurprised to find how soon you
* will attract another love and
* another inspiration.
It Le foolltardY to ad agnea$
nature's own Im°ty. Not only.
vett
will havethe to pays#pr it, iiCo lnsalt.
Anna Hirst and know you OW
trust her, judgment; Addrese hes'
at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St,
New Toronto, Ont.';
A clel'lo in %iricoln, England,.
who had appealed to his congree
gation for a stuffd0 owl to pais
in hie' church belly for frights
thing pats received` se many,spar-
cinientthat he hied to advertise
to get rid of them4
•
RF4lEyEl)
1N A •
RELIEF
tnSd 1.614
hA
TING
fore, prolongs�relief.
fron
jltpusresea¢onpeh,onbu,fettethrJxfeaebsrprocvToernnxtaminedisTsokh
ingredients that ease the pain fast.
Analhenue' iseiieeediEeases, "as e
Try IrisTANTura just once for pais
relief and you'll say as thousands da
that there's one thing for headacis
7 :. it's IN&T.,Lntxurs,t
, And try IIYsTAstTtxs for other
act[ rf Yoe... for neuritic or neuralgia
pain t," for the pains and aches
that accompany a cold. A single tablet
fl•astisilj••= brings
prpxi pets a1ief.
:JxyGt inskaiine tadq
1 :.. x �. t ativrys
1 1 Re 3 5sSdy -
iL Tao `,;
nstan
tine
12 Tablet Ma 25$
Economical 48 -Tablet Bottle 450
CHEES'C•'CORNMIAL, F1N; rERS
Mix and sift into howl, 11i c, once•sifteti',1;aatry
flour (or 134 c, oi£ee-sifted bard -wheat floefie3Lsps.
Magic Baking .Powder, ee tsp. *nit.- Cut in'fuely
11 3 tba.; `cbl led ebertaning age nee id x£' 0. yellow
ire cornmeal, ?g,`c, shredded chassis and
2 tba.,eltopped parsley. Nfal:e uw'Cltdxr
sennet pour, in ?f m: milk mud ani
lightly with a fair: 11neacl for 10 '
sa.•oudioua liglitlySourcd hoard
k,. tag role out to 34 r: -thick rectoirglo;
into '12'•• Sept, find, 'arrange,
]ight,y upon.", •oa gtesned' baking
sheet/ Bake ist hot;oven, 415', about
10, ruins. Serve hpt with butter or
margarine. •Y]eld--1 dozen fingers,
31 S 1 `..'iwziLi:rl '. •,Iia ''-ria,-it.
i1
E
i!� � yraz gs t'ot • 2 ' P E
.., . .... y l �, g I , , r ( 1'61 'wiz Z ,i Mt
i t rfpw'in eTf C. f •,Epi LiJ Yhil 1 Season rptes ot1 aN sdliltty ,to B,ritgln and Eurppa . , .,
•iy'ith arrival gi;b conven ent English Wench or Irish port. •
. ,,.. , , i 1,,,,z, ft rr:e Si 1 ,..1in
1. 194Ei WAYj, RATES TO B.R,IT,ISH.,PQ,RiS r,,,
.firstChessefrom$•192 'r • Tottljfxl Oasis as tow as 049rr
Leave
NEW YORK
tears
HALIFAX
_ .1 • , , . , i•.
VESSEL
a, , 1."A '.1141i 15
,...,,ie i r111T.00. .
Jan. 23
Jile•V3 t'r
Feb,
Feb: 7
Feb! 13
Feb, 19
Feb, 20
Feb. 25
Feb.•27
—
«.Ids V i'I'
Pea- 6 •
• Fob. 15 ='• •
—
--QUEEN
Mar, 1
QUEEN MARY
SAMARIA
, MEDIA
• ' SCYTHIA
.. QUEEN MARY
:1'FRANCONIA •
.-i'* QUEEN ELIZABETH
PARTHIA
MARY
- ASCANIA
Cherbourg & Southampton
Cobh & Liverpool
Liverpool
Havre & Southampton
Cherbourg & Southampton
Cobh & Liverpool
Cherbourg & Southampton
, Liverpool .
Chetbol,rg'1ti tSouthtinij ton
Cobh, Havre & Southampton
CORONATION. A chance of a lifetime . .
witness the splendour of the Coronation processkon .. .
- make yoursailingplops NOW.
Consult your local Agents -No ane can serve you better.
CUNARD STEAM -SNIP COMPANY LIMITED
Corner /say dt; Wellington S(s., Toronto, Ont,