The Brussels Post, 1939-3-29, Page 6THE BRUSSELS POT
WiODNr%ISDAI, MARCO 29t11, '1939
HILDREN of all ages
thrive on "CRO W lY
BRAND" CORN SYRUP.
They never tire of its delicl-
ane flavor and it really is so
good for them—so give the
children "CROWN BRAND"
everyday.
Leading physicians pro
tuaunce `CROWN BRAND"
iCORN SYRUP a most satis-
factory carbohydrate to use
as a milk modifier in the
feeding of tiny infante and
as an energy producing food
for growing children.
1tENEGY
11lERAMOUS JaGf
IuOD g0
QO
alp **IS
O Tits
CANADA STARCH
COMPANY Limited
* * *
5 * *
TESTED RECIPES
* --e * * g< * 'k• * *
USE OF MAPLE PRODUCTS
Sap's rnundn'! This means that
maple syrup and Maple sugar time,
The new crop is on the market and
so. the following recipes may prove
t hately:—
*
Maple Apple Pudding
4 apples
1 cup flour
'/s cup water
.34 cup maple .syrup
1 tablespoonful butter
1 teaspoon baking powder
Place sliced, apples in a buttered
rsserole pour maple sprup over
Mean. Sift flour with baking powder
lrrlieft butter and add cold water.
.Pour over sifted flour, beat well,
and, spread over the apples. Steam
or an hour, or 'bake for 20
minutes.
.Maple Spread
4 cups maple syrup
M cup cream
Boil syrup five aninnttes. Add
=earn ands boil three minutes. Re•
mover from fire and allow to become
cool, beat for five minutes, and pour
tbdn Masses, This may be used' as
a.tx icing for cake, a spread for toast
Dr as hard sauce for plain phddings.
Maple 'Oatmeal Cookies
2% cups fine oatmeal
1 nap maple syrup
14 cup -water
'2•B cups' flour
1 cup shortening
1 teaspoon soda.
Boll water and syrup together,
add.. soda, then sho'rteninng. Cool
slightly. Add to dry Ingredients
and, allow the mixture to cool thor-
oughly before rolling out,
Maple Syrup Pie fl
2 cups maple syrup
2 epg yolks
1 cup milk
:2 tablespoonfuls corn starch
A pinah of salt
Boll milk and syrup 'together. Add
Starch which 'has 'been blended
with a little cold milk. Cook to
donhle• boiler, stirring constantly
fur five ntin"le,s. Pone over the
he•,ten. r -e:s end return to double
t,.':'•... t eve rranutra, pour inti
to halted pastry shell, Covet toe
With meringue made from two egg-
'whites.
Maple' Custard
2 CUPP milk
1 sup maple syrup
3 eggs' .
"nett milk and maple syrup togeth•
•er to Bolling point bout do net allow
to boil. Pour ever the eggs which
have been well bootee, add a few
RI -ulna of salt, and strain into cuel-
tarrl cups. Set crops in warm
wafer a.nd bale until custard is
firm. Cool and turn, Serve with
itr*ple syrup if desired,
FOR 'SALE» -
Two Benita at United 'Chtilob
Shed. Bluevale, containing about
3000 ft, lumber, timber suitable dor
d'riving sired 40x40, apply to
Howard Stewart, Winghabl
,Square Dance
Coming Bach
In Many Parts of Ontario
Old -Time Fiddler's Contests
Art Returning To
Frvour Too
h tnanv parts of Ontario and
indeed 'throughout Canada there
has been more or less reversion to
old-time square dancing and old-
time fiddlers' contests in Pteier-
enCeto the ultra -modern "jitter-
bug" and "rug cutter," routines
with swing music neeomlraniment,
W. E. Hinton, of Glenavon, Bask„
called, the office of the •Oaluadian
Bureau for the Advancement of
Music under whose supervision the
old-time [Lancing and fiddlers' con-
tests are held at the Canadian Na-
tional Exhibition. Mr, Hinton. is
secretary of the nem:I nullity of
Gl•eavon which proposes 10 hold
competitions in May. If It can be
array -Ted to d9 Fn lite winters will
conte to the Exhibition contests
this year,
Capt. Atkinson of the 'Canadian
Bureau has been advised that
square dance and fiddlers' competi-
tiorte ah•ve been held in numerous
rural eommmunitiets which were
snow'boun'd in recent weeks. In
Caledon, a children's square dance
competition was held in which
school pupils between the ages Of
nine and thirteen years showed
marked aptitude In the dance rou-
tines popularized by _ their grand-
fathers and grandmothers. The
"caller" was a boy of twelve
years.
F very Girl
Must Have
Two Natures
The Clever Woman
Cultivates A Double
Personality To Be Liked
By People Of Both Sexes
There's' Da getting around it, a
girl needs two sets of attractions
to -be liked by both girls anti men,
--rites Ruth Millett,
A man will be attracted 'by her
good looks. A woman will be sus-
picious of her just because She is
good -locking,
A man will dike her helplessness,
or pretense of it, But women have
to drop their dependent ways when
they are out "with the girls"
A. man doesn't blame a girl for
playing up to other women's hus-
bnads. He just tries to get her at-
tention birhse1f, Rut women have
no good to say for her.
Men like a girl who is, very sure
of herself. But if she doesn't hold
her "sureness" it leash when she
is with other women, she makes
them itch to But her it -her place.
They Don't Like Wit
Few men appreciate it in a
woman — especially if it is the
least bit down, to earth.
Men like a girl that other men
like, while other girls seldom like
a glamour girl.
And yet we wonder why so many
girls change the minute a man
walks' into the room.
Don't Look Man
Straight In Eye
Girls, said M. Dono Edmond in
an interview of New York last
week, have an unfortunate' habit
of looking men straight ID the eye,
"It is. not alluring," said Ed-
mond, former court beauty advis-
er 'to the late Queen Marie of Ru-
mania. "It makes a man feel in-
ferior, lie feels, you're trying to
probe his mind."
Far better it is to look at him
fleetingly, and then look away, con.
tinned Edmond,
"Yes, I believe women should be
somewhat coy," he said, "but I
dont meant baby talk, That's ter-
rible! kb anmoYs a mat's nerves,
"Women should learn how to
blush. I00 can be done by exhaling
a little conger than they are ac-
customed,"
THE CHEERY GREETING
"How do you do?" ,just say it,
In accents load and clear,
So that your friends, in passing,
Are always' sure to hear.
paybe they like to ,hoar it,
Maybe they like to hear it,
Perhaps they rather e,Cpe5L it,
That cheery ''How 00 you do?"
"How do you do?" How It cheers
you,
To hear the folks you meet
just sing it out 10 passing,
A's they go on their way down the
Street,
"How do you do?" 'Tis a blessing
To solace the pares of men;
Just train the lips to speak it.
Then say it again and again,
•-'—Barryr Bobaw
Happy .Marriage
flints
English Woman Barrister
Lays Down Definite Rules
She Has Found Successful
In Dealing With Clients
Barrister Helena Normanton
mast likely candidate among Eng•
lanais woman' lawyers for a KC,
[itis year has beau making a name
for herself not by pleading for a
el', nt in cm:; 0 but by pleading the
cause of happy marriages in a
church.
Five Ingredients
She has laid down definite rules
she has found successful in dealing
with the marriages of nlleuts that
yore on the verge of the rocks.
Ilei recipe for a 1.tap0Y marriage
is:
Don't be afraid in the first place
to get married.
Don't be afraid to put into mar-
riage all you can,
Don't ever make your husband
feel that he comes second to the
children.
Look to your Bible for all those
serious qualities which maintrain a
plan's respect and devotion to the
end of his life.
Don't watt to give your husband
flowers until they go in the form
of a funeral wreath.
Humble Turnip
Goes High Hat
Canadian Turnip Is A Real
Delicacy To Our Southern
Neighbors — They Cali it
"Rutabaga"
Canadians ha'bitu'ally regard the
turnip, evens when it is offered for
sale 'with its seal -coat o,0 wax, as
rather a despised root, says the
Brockville Recorder and Times,
and we have seen some people ex-
press indignation when, it was pre-
sented to them et the table end
wave it away with an imprecation.
But our humble turnip is a real
delicacy t0 many of our interns
tional ueigh'bors who prize it high-
ly and who, apparently unable to
grow it as we grow it, buy it by
the carload each year, They 0011
the turnip a "rutabaga' '11110 soil°
restaurants in the South feature it
on their metmis as we Would fee
tore at exotic fruit imported from
a tropical clime,
Western. Ontario seems to have
cairtnred the bulk of this .tm'uiP
evpor't trade, and the counties of
Middlesex, Huron, Perth, Oxford,
Waterloo and Wellington have
been proditting from it tar years
Now -Bance county is beginning t0
develop a similar trade with the
country to the south and it is °x -
Ported that from that new district
alone fully 300 carloads 'will he
shipped to the 'United Stites be-
fore the waxing season is ended,
Household Hints
An old rubber hot water bottle,
slit in half with the• neck part cut
away, makes au excellent garden-
ing kneeling mat. Glue it to a
small square of thick coconut mat-
ting, give it a loop of strong waxed
string, ]tang on a nail ht' the pot-
ting shed and. it is always ready for
use. Another good use for daicard-
ed ruber hot water bottles, espec-
ially the green ones, Is to cut Into
strips and use these for nailing up
delicate climbing planta' like honey
suckle or jasmine to wooden sheds
or wooden fences. The green tones
in with the foliage an cisterns and
the soft rubber will not damage the
latter. .
• •
Mud stains on light fabrics can
usually be removed by chalk, mois-
tened and applied as a paste, Al-
low to dry 'before brushing off.
Lastly, precipitated chalk is, of
course, an old and proven cleanser
for the teeth.
*
Zig zeg tears are easily repaired
by buttonholing around the edges,
then catching up the Stitches in
the middle. Wool In knitting can
be joined neatly if the new wool is
threaded through a darning needle,
then drawn through the finished
attends for about four inches. Pu•11
11 carefully until the ends cannot
•
Excels In Quality
be seen, When twitted up it will
hardly show a joining,
• N ', •
Jelly should aluvaye be allowed
to get cold (though not set) before
pouring into the mould. If it is
molded when too hot it is liable
to become cloudy and may prove
dfiflcult to turn out.
* w *
if your shoes are white or light-
colored wrap them in blue tissue
ppaer and wadding when. not in
use. The blue paster Will prevent
the. dedicate colors fading, and will
keep the white a good hone. If
they are silver or gold, black tie
sue paper should be used to pre,
vent tarnishing.
* • *
'Suede shoes which are brushed
regularly with a wire brush will
keep in good condition. If you
have had them put by for any
length of time give tthem a thor.
°ugh steaming, before using the
bruab, by holding each shoe in
front of a ateaminig kettle until
the pile rises, and 'then leave in
the air ,to day.
• * •
Maar satin shoes that have be -
conte •r.ubbed: at the toe and heel
can be made to look new again by
painting with Brunswick black.
One coating, with a soft brush, 4s
sufficient. Po not put the shoe on
until it is absolutely day; this
takes only a minute or two. It is
always advisable ,not 40 leave
stains or dirt on shoes long or you
will be unable to reoove them
completely, The sooner they are
cleaned the better.
25
Educational Broadcasts
The Canadian Broadcasting 001"
partition' with the Canadian Teach-
ers' Federation, and the 'Canadian
Association for Adult Education,
will present a sepias of broadcasts,
each Wednesday from 9 to 9.30
p.in, E.S.T.
Apr. 5—Why the frills?—Dr, Ewing
a the Provirvciat Normal School
in Vancouver,
Apr, 12—'Can Education Prevent
ICrinte?—'Oluarles A, ,Krug of
Mount Alison University, Sack -
Apr. 19—,0an Parents help the
School?"—B. A. Pletel1ea', Profes-
sor of Education Dalhousie Uni-
Tensity, Halifax.
Apr. 26 --Education and Rural Life
—Agnes McPhail, M.P. of Ottawa.
May S.—Education and 'National
' dlealth--Dr. Grant Fleming, Dean
of the Faculty of Medlialne at Mc-
Gill Undvensi'ty,
May 10—tWh•ere is the ' Money
Cominig From?—J. W. Nose -
worthy, Pres., of Ontario Teach-
er's Council, Toronto.
May 17—CL.arger School Units—Dr.
M. E. LaZerte, President of 'Can-
adian Teachers' Fedenatfon, Ed-
monton.
May 24—Where Does Education
Stop?—.E. A. Corbett, Toronto.
WI JJAM SPENCE
Estate Agent, Conveyancer
and Commissioner
General insurance
Office
Main Street, — Ethel, Ontario
TheWroxeterBowlingClubPresents
"Back Seat Drivers"
(BY TEESWATER PLAYERS)
A Farce Comedy in Three Acts
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TOWN HALL, WROXETER
Monday, April 3rd.
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Play Commences at 8.15 P. M. Sharp
CAST OF CHARACTERS
(In order of -their first appearance)
John Wilson A young business man
Connie Wilson His wife
Peter Simms A neighbor, also a
• Frank Renwick
Helen O'Mara
business man R. D. Brown
Goofle Handy man about the neighborhood
M. A. Donahue
Della Moffet • . • • •••• Connie's friend and neighbor Mrs. M. A, Donahue
Cuthbert Moffet Delia's husband, a young business man • • • • •••• • • • • • • R. J. Moore
Austin Spence A smooth customer Jack Thompson
Amy Webb•'Stephens Spence's side partner • • ••. • • Mrs. R. D. Brown (Director)
Cara Simms Peter's wife • • • • ' Mrs. C. Cerson
Time—June 1938.
PLACE --The uptown section of New York City
TIME OF PLAYING About two end a half hours,
ACTCI - The living room of John Wilson's apartment in uptown New York City.
A Saturday afternoon in June.
ACT II --Same as Act '1. An afternoon two weeks later.
ACT III—Safe as in previous acts. An afternoon two days later.
MUSIC BETWEEN ACTS
AdmissionAdufts 25c,ChiIdreni5c