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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1939-6-7, Page 7We Carry Full Line Of Sun -Ray Poultry &Hoq feeds For Bigger Profits and Better Results Change to Sun -Ray Chick Starter & Growing Mash F. M. SAMIS Phone 80 Brussels bent floating fruit. Pour quickly T x * * * * * T ESTER RECIPES »nd. seas loot Tem ec onae with o paral'flrr. .Theis recipe requires about 2 medium pineapples and makes 10 to 11 eight -ounce jars. * * * * * * * * * * STRAWBERRY AND PINEAPPLE JAM 31h cups prepared fruit 61 cups sugar M bathe fruit pectin To prepare fruit, crush completely or grind about a quart of fully -ripe starwberries. Reduce each berry bo a pulp, Out fine or ,grind, a medium-sized, fully -ripe pineapple or use a No. 2 can of crushed pine- apple. 'Combine fruits and mea. sure the exact amount. Measure sugar and prepared fruit into a ]arge kettle; mix well and bring to a full rolling boil over the hottest fire. Stir constantly before and while bailing. Bail ,hard 3 minutes: Remove frons fire; stir in bottled fruit pectin. Then stir and sletm by turns for Jost 5 minutes to cool slightly, 'which will prevent floating fruit: Pour quickly into glasses (will 1111 about 9 6 -oz.. glass es) and paraffin at once. PINEAPPLE JAM 4 cups (2 lbs.) chopped fruit 7 cups (3 lbs.) sugar 1 bottle liquid pectin Put pineapple through food: ebop- Per, using finest knife. !Measure fruit and juice into large kettle. Add sugar, mix and bring to rolling boil over hottest .fire. Stir con- stantly onstantly before and while boiling. Boli hard 1 minute. Remove front fire and atir 1n pectin. Than stir andskim by turns for just a fear minutes, to cool slightly to pre - PINEAPPLE JELLY 3 cups (1%1lms.) juice 1 bottle liquid pectin 6 1henps (2% lbs: sugar Chop pineapple fine. To four cups of dropped fruit, add '/i cup of water. Bring to a boil, cover, and simmer five mintues. Drip through jelly bag. Measure juice and sugar into large saucepan, stir, and bring to a boil over beteg fire. At once add the liquid pectin, stirring con- stantly and bring again to a 'full rolling boil and boil t/2 minute. This recipe requires 2 medium pineapples and makes 9 S -ounce jars.. BLUEBERRY AND PINEAPPLE JAM 2 cups blueberries Grated rind and juice of 1 lemon 1 cup crushed pineapple, fresh or darned 21/2 cusps granulated sugar Carefully sort and wash, .berries. Mix with pineapple and lesion rind and juice. Place over low flame and stir occasionally until mixture comes to a boll. ,Gradually add to a boil again and simmer Por 20 minutes. This. will 511 6 6 -ounce jelly glasses. ' WILLIAM SPENCE Estate Agent, Conveyances and Commissioner General�� Office Office Main Street, — Ethel. Ontario Modernize Your Home , Building Supplies of All Kinds .ti We have the Best and Largest Stock —of . . B, C. RED CEDAR SHINGLES ONTARIO and B. C, LUMBER of All Leading Kinds On Hand Cement Lime Gyproc Board Lath Plaster Coal Wood and Cedar Posts See Our Stock and Get Our Prices Before You Buy We have been advised by the Local Bank that they will advance monesr on the home improvement plan and its the Better way to do your repairing or improvement as you can always buy better with Cash We deliver your job Free anywhere within reason D. N. McDonald And Company Phone 77 Brussels, Ont., LET US LOOK AT THE PAST Nero Are !tonna raked cross' Mhos of the Poorof O. u.d N Peers Ago 25 YEARS AGO W ROXETER G. Rasmussen left for Toronto on Monday, where he will be employed Cor the summer at his trade. * * • Miss Sophie l;abinsou Is at pres- ent confined to the house ,suffering from the effects of the shock of conning in contact with: a live elec- tr11e wire. • * * A pleasing event took place at the close of the prayer meetiug in the Presbyterian church; last Wednes- day evening when Life memberships to the W. F. M, S. were presented by the local society there to Mrs. Wm. Wilson and Mrs. Jas. Rae. The address was read by Mrs, Wm. Douglas, MORRIS James Bowmann M. P., is home from Ottawa. • * * Elston Cardiff, 5th Line Juad the misfortune to lose a, valuable mare last week. Good' progress is being made with Harvey Bryans' new house on gravel road 12 m>dles North of Brussels. GREY ,Next week, Ed. Fulton leaves for Quebec, •where the High Court of Foresters convenes. Ile is the representative of Oranlbrook. Thursday afternoon of this week a barn raising was on the program: at Mr.. H. McKinnon'* farm, 7th con. The barn has been split and 20 feet added which, will stake a building 60 x 64 feet. New stabl- ing will be put in. Geo. Heaney la the framer and L. Farin did the cement work. BELGRAVE John Kelson, of Clifford, paid Alex Oloakey a hying visit by auto a few dayis ago. * * * L. J. and Mrs. Williams are on a visit to Owen. Sound, Detroit and Niagara Falls, where Miss Williams will Join them, being on her way from Liverpool to visit friends in. Ontario. BRUSSELS W. H. and Alms. Kerr were at Sarnia- during tb,e week attending the Methodist conference. Colin and Duncan*MaApthur left this week on a trip to Scotland. * * * Miss, Armies. Parniss has return- ed to +i. J. Gilpin's after an absence of three months, Pully restored to health. :She spent most of the time in New Ontario, 50 YEAR AGO GREY Noll Duncanson, lot 12, con. 14, is putting up a new residence on his Parm. •.• • . • * - Mrs. E. H. Davidson, Hamilton, Is visiting, he runole, David Grant, 14hp, con, • • • Mrs, Slater is visiting at her old home for a few weeks. She is a daughter of John 11111. ' CRANBROOK Elder McNair will attend the General Assembly of the Presby- terian church next week at Toronto. ti+ so 4� James. Brown, has rented the farm of Peter IrleDouiald and moves thereon this week, MbRRIS Mrs. Beerinan, Listowel, Is visit. Ing at Chas. Rozell's this week. * * * iltepotit- PIre 2ollouing is the standing of 'pupils in S,S. No. 6, for the months oP May:-- *'ourtlt Class— David, COrtntlen, Mary. Mason Johu P"arkhie; Sr. iii—Jahns Dutton, ligtlties 'Ireland. Lizzie Anderson; Jr. $1T—Violet Bone, Arthur Cam 7on.nle Mason; Paul class,-- Magile Cnntlon, James •Andereon, Wm, Ireland; lst °lase, pt. II- R.obt. Bone, Martha Osborne, Willie. BI '- ani; 'let Chase -pt. 1- ,l.onls :Bold, THE BRUSSK,S POST Weeefentleste W3DN+NSiiJA:X, JUN A lith, row CHEVROLET Jllustratrd--Ch nnolet Master DeLuze Sedan with trunk. YES, every 40 seconds somebody buys a new Chevrolet ...every 10 minutes of every day, Chevrolet wins 15 new owners ... and the demand is increasing day by day! Let this outstanding sales leadership be your buying guide. Know the thrill of being "out in front" in the liveliest of all low-priced cars . • . own the car that's first in performance, first in features, first in value. Choose the fastest -seller of the new -ear year—the new 1939 Chevrolet! Low monthly payments on the General Motors Instalment Plan. Drive the Car with ADVANCED KNEE -ACTION RiDING SYSTEM* Frictionless Coil Springs .. Double -Acting Shock Absorbers ... Ride Sta- bilizer ... Shockproof Dual Cross Steering. *Available on Master Deluxe Models only. Drive the Car with STEERING COLUMN GEAR -SHIFT with "Vacuum Assist"' "Vacuum assist" supplies 80% of shifting effort. Simple, positive design .. more room in front ... only $13 extra. Drive the Car with CHEVROLET'S FAMOUS VALVE -IN - HEAD SIX ENGINE Valve-in-headengines have mode all world re- cords—on land—on water and in the air. Drive the Car with PERFECTED (QUADRO-ACTION) HYDRAULIC BRAKES Maximum effect with mini- mum pedal pressure .. . under -cowl Emergency Broke Lever operates on both rear brake shoes. C-1696 Orval Whitfield -Champion's Garage BUY FROM A BUSINESS LEADER:..YOUR CHEVROLET DEALER Alex Anderson. Thos Bell. A. M°Call, teacher. WALTON D. Johnston is having holidays, as luls school Ls closed on account of didphtheria in the section, �e * sr Last Tuesday L. Caanabell left on the farmers,' excursion for Mani- toba. , BRUSSELS An addition, is being built to the rear of John Anima's dw'eiling, near the station. 4 Harry Dennis ands his son Bettie have gone to Winnipeg, * * IN THE GARDEN • Weed Killers * * To prevent grass or wends grow - lug in driveways, gardeners are ad- vised to spray with some of the commercial weed, killers now avail- able, lit not handy, gasoline +viii do the trick. Care must be exer- cAseit to keep these killers away from waniled grass; flowers or shrub- bery, Another suitable material for weeds or gratis in driveways is common salt, the cheaper andcoars- er the batter. Net only will a liberal application, of this, about one or tWo handfuls to the square foot destroy grass, Weeds poison Ivy, etc., but 41 will also. bind graves together into an even sur,• face, keep do'wii drat and repolfrost. In some parts o( Canada salt is used on ell gravel roads and gives a surface equal to light pavement. Pests Garden insect enemies are divided into two groups --those that eat holes in the foliage, and those that suok out the Juices. For the first_ .marred, poison is usually applied, :while the suckers are attacked with a burning spray which penetrates. Often, when both are perseat, a corn- bination of poison and something that burps, such *5 lion sulphur and arsenate, gives the best re- sults. The damage from the biting insects is usually quite apparent, but the presence of the other kind is, only shown at first by a wilting or withering of the foliage, For sucking For sticking pests, chief 01 which are the aphids of plant lice, spray with whale of isoap a quarter pound of soap to a gallon and a half et water; nicotine, or 'Black Leaf 40,' or any pular re - pelletal secured from a reliable seed store. when fungus atltadln the plants the foliage usually turns a yellow or brown, or white spots like mil• dew cover the leaves.. Fungus murk"' most common in. 'waren, meati weather. Spraying with Bordeaux Mixture or dealing with etpeetall7 finely ground sulphur is advised. Sulphur dust will also protect hollyhocks and phlox Polo mat, it applied when the disease first shows, itself. Cut worms which eat througb newly stet -out plants at the base of t)t5 stem, are deleftroyed by spread%• ing sive'etened *olson,ed bran about the plants. 111711er'e there are, onae a few planets •fro protect, the same may be provided With palper toilers, Support Dahlias, tomatoes, large cosmos or nicotine, young shade trees, new climbers, all beu•eflt from some arti- ficial supnport while they are get- ting started. For tail individual flowers or tomatoes, sixt'oot stakes of wood or steel are advisable and the plant is tied to these loosely .with soft twine or rafts. Stouter and perhaps long- er stakes, will be reed with shade trees and correspondingly shorter ones, for the smaller " flowers. For . the latter, a cut and, straightened wire coat hanger with hook left oar stakes an ideal support. Wirth vines getting ready to clilug to fence or \ wall, string is used or perhaps ads h,eedve tape or staples where it Is .t impossible to tie. with sweet peasand ordinary garden peas, one may. flee 'mire, • from three feet to sin; feet high, Ile. periling blow tail the peas grow in '• the reader's`particular pert of Cana(' Ada. 01di garrdeners, however, state that brush or etringe are pre.'.. ferable for the pees as the, wire may burn the tender foliage, With tomatoes, dahlias, eta., usually side. shoots are, iripper> oft and the main, item only allowed 10 • grow. . SALESMEN WAN'T'ED— ,good salesanear only!, Sell Famlilex spices, egtarets,', alimgnitar.. `. les; , medicines; stock, ,an4 other tarn" products. Monthly ER1 E+7 giftb, open eVemy door. Every per. son a user. 0100 protected ;vat - told* `open. • Tiry ,ltd sut:tceed; or 1,, give . nth withknut risk. Steady..• pleasant sand isr055table Work for honest hard worker. FREi17 pla11 and cataiopue. F. IMTI.EX, 5?0 St, Cietnent, M 1-'10; 1A3..