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The Brussels Post, 1942-11-11, Page 3Make the most of you:Tea-0 THE B —ti 1 Sy ANNE ALLAN *Oro Home honomis9 CONVOY OF APPLI115' POR I312ALTH Hello Homemakers. Canada is falcons for apples and the apple Is icing„ or fruits Whether freeh, dried evaporated or canned — a whole some food, easily prepared, and jelly good eating at all tines. An apple convoy of several n11l- 110m1s has just arrived from the orchards of the (011111217. 1atfely delivered at local market. ports. P1111 of healthy, fghtin;g spirit, these rosy-cileelled soldiers are here to bring us 'health and help us to balance our food budget. The apple army will be a big factor ou the food front this winter. Here's its rluty roster. Sweet apple eider at breakfast. . , . a golden - crusted apple Pie tot' dinner .. . a steaming platter of apple dM in' lings to top off the vegetable stepper ... a •eatisfher during the ten . mannite morning rest, a juicy and a.Ppetizing dessert for the lunch box, and a crunchy bite at bedtime. a Quite a List, isn't it? RECIPES Apple Cake 1 cup sifted cake hour, 1!11 tsps. baking powder, 14 tog. a',I 2 tbs. sego', 2 tbs. ohorlenlug. 2 egg yolks, 1/8 nip u1I1k, 4 apples Pared :'rid sliced thin. 1 tsp. cinnamon 1 top. grated lemon rind butter. ,heat. pate in electric eve11 at 401, Sift flour halon, powder. salt and 2 tablespoons sugar together. Cut in shortening and mix well. Beat egg yolks, combine with milk, 'ane) .-tie Into first mixture. Beat w211. four 1'•tc greased shallow Pau andcover with apple slices. Sprinkle with remaining sugar, cinnamon and lemon rind and dot with butter. Bake in electric. oven 1400 degrees F,) about 35 minutes, Smite with ].emote Sauce, for 8. add thick apple min a to whipped mashed turnips, adding a dash of sugar. salt and p+'ppt r. 2. Sweet -seer Cabago. Mix 1 tablespooli vinegar, 2 table- epoone boiling wiper, 2 tea- oPoo1s sugar and 1 tablespoon butter. Pour over belled cabbage. Matte( 0 illil'feeence. 3. Make smaller eised Pancakes folk:,! Wily? ' grater to flip and more cluieltly cooked, 4. Nems' the beetti -,.• :terve large whole beets by first boiling, ;:coop cart centre. 1111(1 01111(2 to 50(111' Co111 on 1.114 11 OKI gay's salad plate); Jill with the fol. lowing mixture: chop 2 hard - (4101;0 11 eggs Hurl 'cascne with salt, pepper, dash of currY pew,ler and chutney :0110e, THE QUESTION BOX Mrs. N. ('•. tl+1t;; "101100 far vanities using mineelneat." Answer; Min.et+,eat Drop Cookies 11) cup hitter, 14 cup sugar, 14 cup corn syrup. 1 egg. 1 (101) mincemeat, 114 nips flour, 2 tsp. baths powder. Cream hatter, add sugar and syrup. Blend well together. Beat in egg°'. MIX in measured ary ingredients and nm'.ncemeat. Drop by spoonfuls on; greased baking iihron ?rthce m Eggs, Poultry & Peels Moue 66 :13 as:^om� ' ;31 oS HOP ,and POULTRY FEEDS Commercial Feeds Mill Feeds Bone Meal Oyster Shell Cod Liver Oil Grit Everything to make the yens lay 'A' Grade eggs We are in the — ! E market ReSr alld kinds l £ POUL'Q a'k Y! "mock >ctamirg A Specialty" 'r Bring kisYour Eggs Our�01:�� Honest Grade Motto— on every egg ; I Apple Fritters 1 egg. 14 cup flour. 1 top. sngnr, 14 cup water, 1 tb. melted fat, speck of shit. Beat egg. Adtl salt, sugar and water. Add flour, a little at a time, beating well. Then add melted bak- ing fat. Pare, quarter and core apples. Dip quarters in batter and fry in deep fat. Apple Tapioca 14 cup fine tapioca (or sago substitute) or 14 cup pearl tapioca, 14 tsp. ,salt, 3cups 1111111, 6 email apples, honey. Cook tapioca• with salt and milk in top or double boiler until tapioca is transparent. Core and pare apples. Stick three or four cloves in each. Arrange apples in greased baking dish. Fill cavities with honey rand pour rooked tapioca over apples. Bake in a moderate electric oven 'until apples are tender. Serves 6. .If Mang Pearl tapioca or sago, soak in some of the milk for several flours before cooking. TAKE A TIP 1. For TPrnip Apple whip, simply • NOTICE ! Clerk's Notice of First Posting of Voter's List degrees for 10 minutes. Mrs. R. C. asks; "We still have some cucumbers that have/ kept we11, Can we rise saccharine for pickling?" Answer: Yes, but precautions mast be taken. Pure sacclu•ine (1 grain) tablets are very strong. The 1/4 grain tablet is the equivalent of about 1 teaspoon sugar. There are 46 teaspoons in a cup, thel'efore you would nee twelve 34-gtiafn sac- charine tablets When, 1 cup of sugar is called for. Anne Allan invites you to write to her in care of The Post. Send in your questions on homemaking proleaus 111 watch this column' for replies. Voters Llst, 1942, Municipality of the Village of Brussels, In the County of Huron. Notice is hereby given that I have C O• urtafling Bus Tavel W ill Result In �Savinig f Gas, Rubber, Labor Because rubber and gasoline are nclispanlsttble to moderns warfare; rale Ines in. Canada. have been. faced with a majora' problem for some time. It (res been necessary to provide for 'wavy emergency needs caused by the was` and at the same time, wher- ever ,possible, to coutseeve labor' gasoline, rubber and steel. ' To effect .a saving in mmatertale since August all new buses have been painted khaki green. with new. identification markings so that they inlay be sent to .any part of the country when the creed arises.. Beginning Nopeanber 15111, the De, partanent of Mninitio.% and •Stepply has' ordered beau trips 'curtailed' to 50 miles in one direction. Routes aro to be revised to eliminate bus travel where railway a000mmodtation is available. In places where bus travel is the only reasonable mean% of teansportatIon service will be con" tinned', It is expected that. title cur- tailment in service will result in sub- stantial saving's in gasoline and rub- ber,, THE BRUSSELS POST Ontario Plans Special Drive For Salvage An lnton>lve delve to round up iron aual eteel ralvags will be con dueled by Township Reeves in •-.,rt+'>:•rn aunt eastern O1ltateo during the next six weeks, arcon•dini; to Ottawa selvage officials. I.% ley cere.' its will c: affected and their wardens will tltl'eet the cam- paign as representatives of On, gov- ernment :eolvagc agency working ou the advice of 191(2 steel controller. Meetings will be called in each township at which the Reeve can ex- plain the roas•at governneeta order which mal, eri it en 0110(1ce rer•auy per, cars to retain in their Iwsession more than 500 pounds of setup trot. and steel except by permit from the 1':.m1 Cootie A11nrindstranor of the Wartime Prices and Tracie Board letinseen Building, Toronto, The Reeve will also give directions anti i:eeve will akao give directions and advice as to the best method of col- lecting told disposing of this salvage. Conveniently located groups will be headed by oaptain•s charged with the rerponsi0sility of seeing that all scrap owned by individuals is deliv- ered to a central point. There the government agency will pay $7 a net ton, the price level fixers by 1110 De- partment of Munitions and Supply for setup iron and steel other than tin calls 17)1' sheet Metal of any kind, antomo6bile bodies, or fenders, stove- pipes or wootleer attachments. An additional $1.50 Per tan will be Irate for serail loaded into can's and a further $1.50 per tom if they are loaded with 25 toms or more. Groups working near each other may poo, their acccunnulation and load jointly to take advantage of the higher price. When the scrap has been collected by a group it can be dolnated to the Voluntary .Salvage Committee func- tioning in their comeounity or sold to the Government agency. If that is thine proceeds from the sale can be iurned over to the local Salvage Committee or. can be divided up be- tween the variola mentbers of the gr'o'up. The. plan which will afford people in country districts' an outlet for their swap metal, will at the same time allow them to make a. valuable complied with Section 8 of the Vot- ers' List Act and that I have Posted up at my -office at the Village of Brussels, 1942, the list of 011 persons entitled to vote in the said Municip- ality at Municipal I]lections, and that sable lists remains theme for in- spection. .And I hereby call upon all voters to take immediate proceedings to Have any errors or omissions cor- rected according to law, the last day tor appeals being the 14th day of November, 1942. Dated this 15i11 1912• R. S. WARwICS, Clerk of the Wage of Brussels, day of October, u- rc •aotwesamaimumenemess tern L. and W. rs GENUJINE FORD PARTS & ACCESSORIES Batteries New & Used Tires Gas, Oil & Antifreeze HORSES BOUGHT AND SOLD. t to V Phone 161 List iwel. Ont. WALT 11N Wedncerlay, November 141 It, 1992 etieseoeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeeee Car of Western ...Han f 1.. 0 Cwt. heat D. blo W ho lFi contribution to the war effort, and 0111111 210001er Important obligation -- the accumulation of funds for war services in her t.'enlln'tlllity. DID YOU EVER • WONDER ? HOW SUGAR IS USED IN MAK- ING WAR MATERIALS? Some persons might be inclined 1•; wonder just how restriction of eivirian 1150 of sugar can help the war effort. Surely our munitions makers are not planning to sugar- coat t11e leaden "Pills" they are so oesidieuely preparing for the Axis. There is however, an explanation or the military importance of sugar and it involves the fact that ethyl alcohol is on the Priorities Critical List. This is dere to the fact that it requires about one-half pound of alcohol to produce a pound of smoke- less powder. and nearly 150 gallons r. •r alcohol are said to he involved in the making of a single shell for big 10.1mb gums used by our Nan=y This means that hundreds of millions of gallons of alcohol a year ase used i11 the manfa1cture of explosives and nlanIittons. Ethyl alcohol sometimes called "geat.0 alcohol," play be obtained from guaain:, from sugar, from a by- product of the petroleum) crackling process, and from bla[ktasrap moles- ses, Bla.okstrap molasses is a by -pro - duet of sugar refining and its use in the making of alcohol does not out into the euPply of table and cooking sugar. Recently, however', 00111e com- panies have been converting regular first -run, moles 05 into alcohol, a practice veld It rocas use material wlliel) otherwise would be a source of table sugar. ?II or th110 wattle's will be pulled upol' to debet r their shard of the 01c•oI101 necessary to the war effort. And neat, snerres of ethyl alechol are diegently being sought, A method betts recantly been dts- covered for changing or breaking down, certain non-ferinenting sugars previously of no use in malctng ethyl alsohol) to, form a new source of that valuable thud, Also a new mold process has been discovered which does a faster job of changing grain to alcohol than the mala previously used, and this proces extraete from 93 to 96 pen cent of the theometeal total amount obtainable from co: 1111514malt yields only about 65 per cent. Best Wheat Crop Ever Thi's season Canada hes .available for ail 115e5 ever a billl,bn, bushels of wheat'. This, is easily the highest ac- cumulation ever reported. Tt i5 made uli of over 000 million bushels of new crop — the biggest yield ever— plus almost 425 Million bushels of carryover. In some quarters it is pointed out that this would be gut - Potent wheat to teed the Canadian populations for 20 years. In actual fact, however, as the Canadian orfi- cial monthly review points out, the total amount orf wheat available is 50 milniom, bushels leso duan: Canada disposed of, b9 one means or an- other. inthe first three years of time war. Close to 100 friends and neighbors surprised Mr. and Mrs. Reid Fischer. on the oc'easion of their silver wed- ding clay and presented them with a lovely cedar chest anti silverware. They also reoivect many messages fnom blends. The 'bride of 25 Years ago weal pmesentedwith a bouquet of chrysanthemums and .a throe -tier wedding carte. Climax of evening was 'a monk wedding with Mrs. George Rock as minister, Mals. Joseph e'mith as bride, Rota Benewise es bride groom; Arhntrus Smith as brides- maid and Pearl Wok as hest mar. All were dressed in comic ital- lorvve'en costumes. G,ne5t•19 were present tem London, Stratford and s(1u'Isytis tli'cug Metliics. Moe. Geom.() hock read the presentation address arid: a. delteioes pinch , was sea'ved. • The bride of 7+5 t'eat's ago was formerly Anna. 114og1t of 'Bornholill daughter or John 1ioglc and the late Mrs, llfogilt. The ibrhdgl'oom is the son, of'ttue late Mr, and bless. Henry Percher of 'I045..11. Thai were mantled at Sit. Peter's . Lutheran Chewll Broadhagen• 011 October 80, 1011, by the late Rev. Weigand. They have a family of three, (Olive) Mrs, T3clwin Schet'barth, of Logan; .'Iua1Ph lend Marjorie, at home; and One grandson, 'clay Mr. ford hies. Fisher have lived at lot 9, ooaeeseton 13', M0Ttliloo town ship, since their marriage.'. eirs ca+. w911r 1 S� • —Shortage of Materials —Reduced Production —Factory Facilities devoted to war work OR these reasons the supply of Duro Pumping Systems will be A. considerably reduced this year. We will supply our dealers with as many new Pumps as materi- als and manufacturing facilities will permit but if you already have a Duro Pump, we suggest that you ask your Duro dealer to check it over and replace worn parts, if required. Make certain your pump is in first class running order to insure a continuance of the satisfactory Duro pumping service to which you have become accustomed. If you haven't running water in your home, your Duro dealer may be able to secure a Duro Pump foi; you, especially if it will increase farm production and your efficiency. The Duro Special shown below pumps 250 gals. per hour and has 25 gal. galvanized tank. EMCO Quality Bathroom Fixtures and Fit- tings are still available in a, good range of styles and prices. If you need new plumbing fixtures. and fittings for bathroom, kitchen or laundry, look over the ENICO line, They will please you. London WUUtor&GiPUespie Phone 68 Brussels EMPIRE BRASS MFG. CO., LIMITED Hamilton Sudbury 'Toronto. 'Winnipeg 342 Vancouver