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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1939-9-6, Page 7JOIN THE "SALA 99 STAMP CLUB it for ten cents and the label end showing the teapot trade• emit, from any pocket of SALADA TEA we will send you e Beginner's Outfit oh 1-64 page Stamp Album, 2-100 all -different stamps. 3—Big list of thousands of stamps offered Free in exchange for SALADA labels. SALADA STAMP CLUI1"461 King Sf. W.,Toronto TESTED RECIPES* • * N' .. e- * * * * You Will Enjoy i Peach Recipes Cystis the largest and, most lus. cloths crop et peaches- ever known in Ontario now movxing to market, it 8s ondy natural that housewives will be using this, fruit almost every day df the peach season. Here are soave d,eliciousrecipes recommended by the Ontario Dept. of Agriculture, Wankel's rntetitute Branch. Try them, DEEP PEACH PiE Pare and hall', veach•es. Remove atones. AM'range halves la a deep baking diet, lS;priliikl* with sugar.. Cove nwith plain pastry and bake. PEACH TARTS Have ready tart shells baked over inverted patty paus. !Simmer •peacbez just enough to snake them tender in a ser0.p a equal parts sugar and water. Place half a peacbn in each tart shell. round aide. up. Drop a epoonfful of slightly sweetened whipped cream on top. Garnish with shredded' almonds, RIC5 BALLS WITH PEACHES Pack &teamted, rice into small ramekins or moults, Turn mould out on, a late. Cut beeves of fretsh or manned peaches in quarter and arrange round the mould. Serve with cream or peach sauce, PEACH SAUCE te, cup sugar 1 tablespoon cornstarch 1 cup hot peach juice 2 tablelslpoolue butter Th, teaelpoon lemon juioe - Mix auger and, corestanew. Add peace juice, tseirring constantly, Boil five Minutes. Remove fro mflre. Add butter and, lemon juice. POACHED EGG SURPRIS9 Cut rounds, of jGI2y roll or plain sponge calve, %' thick, Cover with a generous, Layer of Whipped cream. Top with halt a raw or canned peach, placed with roulid eide yip. PEACH BETTY Put alternate . layers of sliced peaches and •drrybreads crumbs into a well greased pudding (Vele Siprinkle each layer of ruit edit sugar. Dot peeves of butter over the crumebs, Have a layer of crumbs on top. Ade a very little hot wate.• and cover closely. Make in a moderate oven until fruit le tender. Remove cover towards, the fast of the cooking to brown the crunnbs. Serve with creamy. or .harm sauce. PEACH SALAD Fin halves of raw or canned peaches obis cottage 'cheese. or with loaf cheese moistened! with salad, dressing. Serve on lettuce. * * * OTHER SUGGESTIONS FmR SERVING PEACHES 1. Serve sliced peaches on cereal for breakfast. , 2. Arrange sllfcedl -machete in a sewing deisih and, pour over them a plain custard or cornstarch mite tore.' CANNED PEACHES Use full yripe fruit to obtain the best flavour. Use a thin syrup (113 caps sugar =SNAPS1-1OT CU!L IT'S FAIR TIME It's Fair time! Take your camera with you. EPTEMBBR is fair time and Pll tine backgrounds such as telephone wager that mighty few of You have given any thought to this angle of snapahooting. Right? Hon- estly,the fall lair or exhibition overs more poss!bilitiee for enapshooting than apace will Permit telling about. There's the aide -show band with its battered Instruments letting forth loud blasts of discordant music. And there are the, not so clean -looking venders of dolls, triek gadgets, bal- loons and various other things of questionable value. Everywhere you turn IS a subject for good human be tereat pictures. But let's look toward the more serious side of the fair—the exhibits, for Instance. By making intelligent use of your camera you can snap record pictures that may later prove invaluable. •Then there is the judg- ing of cattle, sheep, horses and hogs. If the judging is done in an open•air ring you can get the pioture of the winner of the blue ribbon with any camera—box type or folding, In taking such pictures, or any picture, as far as that is concerned,. don't just look" in the finder and snap the first thing you see. It the animal being judged has any um usual markings, manage to get to a plate near the , ring where theeo markings show up the 'best in your Ander. Try, too, to avoid unattraa poles, wires or sheds. Among the innumerable picture possibilities at the fair you will surely want to take some action plc - tures and a fair isn't complete without the thrill of horse racing whether they feature the veteran driver proudly seated in his sulky, or the young, dare -devil jockey. $nap a picture of the start of the race as the drivers or jockeys maneuver their horses to the barrier nr atartieg post and by all means take your position at the turn of the track as the horses dash perilously around the curve and into the "home stretchy Remember this, however. If you do not have a Camera with a very fast shutter, say one that will op - erste at 1/500 of a second or faster, don't try to soap a rapidly moving object as it whizzes directly across the lens of the camera or direct line of vision. Your chance of getting a good, sharp picture is much greater if you catch your subject at an angle of about 45 degrees. We a1' waya better to play safe than to take a chance and perhaps get a blurred picture, Load your camera and take along plenty of extra film. on that eventful day When you are "off to the fatter as! John van Guilder ThE BRUSSELS rosr to g cups water) or a medium eyrttlm to aura' sugar to it OW water) as deedred, BSoald veao)tels•, dip In cold water and peel, Iaeave peadbes, whole or retrieve plea aucl pack 118 tar*, bollow side deem. Cover with bailing wrap. Partial - W seal and po'coese ?0 minutes in a heat water bath, A, better 'Pack ie ootained 11 the peaches are eisuTneied in the boil- ing syrup for four to eight minutes before packing but they should' net be :cooked until soft, Robbers Employ Nitroglycerine To Smash Doors Villagers Heard Explosions But Thought It Was Car Back -Firing; $86 Taken The safe of the Hueston Planing Milan at Gerrie was blown in by ex - Pert ear* ctaolters on Friday at 4.30 a.m. and $85 In cash caroled away by the .robbers. iConsta'bles Jeneuin'ge, and Rutherford investi- gated. at Is believed the Job was the work of menthe. The combination was hammered off the 'bottom drawer of the modern. eafe, Nitro• giycerine was inserted is the bole and a match touched: to the fuse. The same otreradon was meed on bhe other dioor. The explosion wee heard by the villagers, but they thought it was the blow-out of an, autemabile tire, or backfire, and! paiid no further at- tenetlon to it. The robbery was not detected until 8 a. m. when Robert Hiueeton, the proprietor, reported for work. STAIRILINGS ARE HERE TO STAY Toronto hoe ,trouble with its starling population, 'No trouble at all with the birdie in the d'ay time as they all go out to the country tor a living, but they prefer to live in the city over night. At tihe moment they have decided that Lawrence Park Aena is a good) ,pot and each evening they arrive. Difficult to count 'bird* but they are reported as coarsing by the theousands. Toronto has tried a good many methods to chase them aft, includ- ing ammonia gas, but the people living close by didn't like it. Now aerial boanibs are to be used in, the early e,venfng to drive the birds away, After being bombed the bird3' will probably go about a little and return to the trees•. Hamilton organized a 'shooting party to daave the birds ant of the dity, and succeded in doing so. The starlings took up residence in near- by Burlington, Burlington shoot- ers went Into action and the birds rsturnied to Hamilton. So what's the use. in, a general way the starling in Otis couvltry is looped, upon with about as much esteem and, regard as the carp among fish. Both may havee their good point's but we never beard whet they are. New Telephone Exchange for Seaforth Wont: le peogressing rapidly in preparation for. changing Seaforth's teleplhone system from the magneto to the cotnanon battery method of operation, and is now in the final stage, according to 3, M. yllcintosh, manager in this, vicinity ,for the Belly Telephone Company of Canada. Lt is eupeoted. that the cutover, which will eliminate the necessary of using the crank attachment to signal the operator, will take place sat about a month, probably on Sep- tember 201t11.IilSeafortlh Huron. Ex- Positor. Drayton to Vote On Beverage Room In November Acting on the requeelt of a num be of th:e citizens or Drayton, that a vote be taken on the 'wine and beer gttestion, tlme Drayton council at a recent meeting Passed, the necessary lsye'aw and forwarded some to the office at the provincial secretary for the eppaaval of the Liquor C'on+troll Board,. Words ha8 been, received, that the by»lety bas been approved and, the• Board Itis stet the date for such a vote for 'Wednesday, Noveanher . 8th, when the resident voters wt11 have the privilege to exercise their franchise, Zt is three yearsi ,tube the iaot vote Was taken, when, 1h'aytone went dry, A. three fleth vote of ttte eleoctora is required, to make a 'change. Th. west tore i# *hid iebeeee leo be rlfobrd" We Need Your Help If any et our readers' are 411Sap' Pointed' et timet-+, le not seeing an dean of news in the paper, of wilicll they are fully acquainted with tee details, kindly da not place the blame on .ua, We are neither mind readers nor prophets and if we are not aoq'ua1ntev, vtilit ,the news We a certainty we cannot .pub'lise. it, Hand in every item yon can and we will greatly appreciate it, East Wawanosh Picnic Attracts Over Thousand Big !Crowd ,Attends Township's ,Filet Annual Picnic; R. J. Deachman, M,P., Speaker Winghaan, Aug, S. --Over 1,000 team all parte of East Wawanoish Townibhip yesterday thoroughly ap- proved Reeve 'Raymond Redmatond's idea for an annual township pic- nic. In, fact, the reception was so enthusiastic the township council unanimously adopted, tll.e Idea of annual picnics. Visitors, from other parts of Huron, attended. an perfect weather, the event was held on a natural plateau beside the 1001 conceeeion bridge on the Melttland River. A. program of sweeps an:d,'contests was held. The !initiative of the reeve in piannin,g ,the affair cams in for prates. Speakers, included •Mr, Sedge!wick of the Ontario depart- ment of agriculture, who spoke briefly one }lite control or weed,, es an aid to ,beantlaeati:on as wen as assistance in, growing bet- ter crops; T'am'es, C. Shearer, Huron County egti4oulhtnte representative from :Clinton, and T. Roy Patter- son, Huron County road: engineer, am East Wawanosh old .boy. R. 7, Deaebsnan, MP, for Narith Heron, and Easton Cardiff, the Con- servative candidate in the forth - coniine election, baths gave briet addre,g'(ses. John '3. Currie, a former East Wawanosh reeve and the old• est living ex -warden o2 Huron County, gave an. interesting account of early life in the township. ear. Outage recalled when he walked 20 miles to attend a musty council meeting in, winter. .A program was contributed by Mies Josephine Weir, of Auburn, soloist; Harald Boogie, Sooteh piper from Auburn; Maitland Henry, soloist from Bast Wawanashe Har- vey McGee; .Scottish comedian, and Jack Buehauan', dramatic reader, of Auburn. . The East Wawanosh To'vnship girls' settball team were swamped by the, Betgaave girls by a score of 22-1, Reeve Rayauond Redmond was chairanate lee was asedst2ed with Picnic duties by Cbemcillorse Lewis Ruddy, Harvey, Black, Norman MacDoweli and Duston Beecroft, and Township 'Clerk Alex. Porter- ileld. Heat ,Dries Your Hair Milady's Locks Refuire Care In Summer Your 'hair is suffering from too. much, sun, et need, attention, Do give it a pretter bruslhing, Remember that evemyy head of hair that ever was weeds, five minutes' brushing morning and evening, 'Donft sigh about It, Don't think that this mean,, the ,end of your wave and set — because it doesn't, Brush- ing dtslbributes the natured grease througih, the hair, and! that means you will keep your wave and, sett a great deal longer, If you deny this natural gersse tc the Iielr, it goes like straw, and you know what hap - Pens Alien. It doesn"t dteep its wave lot two stcondis. It snicks out liere and 'it goess like hay there, and secretly you are lather thank - NI teat you ean't •see the back of it, beoanse 'Heaven, on1'y knows, what that Is looking like! Use a good lotion. Buy .yourself a hair tonic, For. the time being 'wash your heir with Yolks et 'eggs. Bee Plenty of water for the rinsing, beeaues 1t is, this, meanmese on the water that makes, seam an, enormone drifter- eine to a head of hair. Change over, your steel wheels •to GOODYEAR TIRES ...we'll do the job QUICKLY • It costs less than you think to modernize your present steel wheel tractor with Goodyear rubber tiree. And we can do the job so easily . so quickly . the slight delay will never be noticed. Illustrated are the two types of. Goodyear Tractor Tires. The top tire ' , . the Goodyear "Sure.Grip" the surest -footed, hardest -pulling tractor tire ever developed for mud or clay. Has an efficient, self-cleaning tread of chemically treated rubber that re.. sista cutting and chipping. The lower tire ... the Goodyear All -Traction tractor tire, the greatest all-around tire ever de- veloped for sandy or loose soil condi- tions.Gives traction in all directions. One of these types will EXACTLY meet the soil conditions on your farm, increase the efficiency of your tractor, cut your operating and re- pair costs to a minimum. Drive in and let us show you how little it will cost to put Goodyears on your tractor NOWI THE COMPLETE LINE OF TIRES FOR FARM USE 12 will pay you to insist on Goodyear. on your new tractor or farm implements ANDERSON'S GARAGE Orwell Elliott, Operator PHONE 82 BRUSSELS, ONT, Children And Their Culture You ,Can't Shove Culture Down ea, Child's Throat A. lady was trying to improve the cultural life of the town's children, The comanittee had derided on a play, first, and then, an opera. She said: "We will get them to conte to the play, and they will be whiling to come to, the next per- formance. We will shove it down their llbreats." Now donttb shake pour bea,js. This is a common, idea about edu- cating our children to the better things of life. How to get the dose "down their threats" is a ,matter 08 planning wherever tate attempt is being made. Every parent wants the children to appreciate the clasateal. That ley to knew about gooa mnsec; One art, the best books and so on. And wbat do we do about it? We tiptoe up to the child, catch 111m from bellied and say, 'Now, ere 18 remelting you map not like at the nest, but down it goes?' In• doing so we ate not a bit dif-, fereatt torsi the lady who tried: to get her audience interested, in, fine Made by way of a dun opera eom- ereetely over their heads. It is really necessary to ineollide a few of the cultures in a growing child's diet, The point is that we cannot do so by ,siltuvtng them drown his throat, The approach mush be made at first through the feeling. A child must like all books and love to read' before he will devour beautiful writing merely for 'beau- ty's ,sake, I3ljs, first association with books give pleasure. But you "shove" dull books, at harm, or too- cOntLIkfcated, or too -old ones all et once areae he anay balk at all reading for good. et is bite setae with music and with art. A folding lapboard, placed on the artne• of the, chair, makes a 71andy 'work table for paring vege- tables, for writing or sewing. Are You Thinking 01 College? Now Is The Time For Girls To Think About College Clothes "Tou'gh, leek," sage the girl about to go to college, "to be asked to thine of campus togs when the *wen - thetas so dee and I'm in ankh good tennis foams.' She'll change her holed when .she zees iibw simply grand, the clothes etre. Comfort First Ibo clothes seen comfort They are good style without overdoing it They yetm1t you to be trim when you should: be and seloppY when you want to be. The type of dimers Mises, Crease 1930-40 will want to make her main prop ter general wear is the elentwaii{st tailored kind Witt pepepy pooketsy song waist and easy flaring skirt. The thing shorn love is the two pierce which she can ring endieses changes on. The dkirt and jacket blouse that can, be wont as a untt, .or, reeking it more cas- ual, ebe can hang the jacket on a hoods in her closet and put on a sweater with* sleeves, that she can push above the elbows. For chilly days. rho can wear it as a suit. Fresh Colors for ,Freshmen Checks and: plaids seem well in the lead of stadpes They bring with them a lively outburst of color. And nine times out of ten one rinds Ural tied up witch, a solid, color; we refer now to suits. When it comes, to monotone, girls wild find a wild range of greens awaiting them; there will be blues in; rich soft shades; browns that swing to golden tansy and lines .in redish rather purple tints. There will be dusty pinks, too, to greet thein, more tthen! is usual at this time of the year. For their collected ser - keg momenta they most likely will select the neutral, naturals, palati able to the taste as cereal. They are presented iht quantity in cash- mere jenseye Changing * * * (By A. R, K.) * * * ¶ My nieces and my nephews grow, not little folk of years ago, there's not one little tot; they've been to college and to school, to learn each new fansiangled, rule, and they've stepped out a lot. ¶ When they Were email they used, to come, they'd see me and they'd start to ruin, they were tilled up with glee; they called, for stories Met I told, cared not if they were rather old, they, tekti e& upon me knee. ¶ Beane my String of tales, were through; I'd told them ev'erythln,g I knew, they knew by heart my rhymes; nor df2,, they ever once complains or say my .stories, were the 'same, they'd heard' them haventy times, ¶ But now they're different in a ivy, nor listen to the filings, I say, nor ask .me or a tale; the goodie yarns I used to- spiny would, bring today a temtipered, grin,. theiy'd tell me they were stale, ¶ They tell me they should pass a' law, to gove0'11 whiskers on my jaw, my tea, are ,San too 0111; m'Y clothes aren't out la latest lines, therm, like try anctient tales and rhymme', they Seave them flat and ecddl. ¶ Of courses they'll ohange in rime I know, tllley'il gef0Is Clown each year they grow, they'll met. low in their way; 1 gnow Net 'what they're paeeing through, Tor T know ' more in eighty'+,wo--filian what T do today.