Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1940-12-26, Page 3Pledge for War Savings TEA' VPork-fat in lightly. Add milk grain• TESTED RECIPES ally to make a soot dough, Turn on a floured board. Pat out to 4f inch thickness.. Cut with a biseuit enter, Bake in a hot oven 15 minutes at 400 degrees k'. potato Cheese 'So 2 enol milk 2 tablespoons Sou 1 tablespoon butter 4 tablespoons cheese 1 oup mashed potatoes Melt butter, Add flour, 'Cook until frothy. Add cheese and milk, Stir until thickened and smooth. Add Potatoes. Reheat. Potato Fuff Cheese Meringue 3 egg yolks % teaspoon salt % teaspoon pepper % teaspon mace 4% cups hot mashed potatoes % cup milk 3 tablespoons butter 1' tablespoon corn syrup % cup grated cheese 3 hites Meltegg •butterwand add to potatoes. Beast egg yolks until very light. Add milk, seasonings and potatoes. Beat until very fluffy. Tarn into a grea3ea baking dish, Beat egg whites until stiff. Add corn syrup and % cup cheese. Hat on potatoes. Sprinkle with remaining cheese. Bake 15 minutes in a moderate oben or at 300 degrees F. Potato Candy 1 large potato 1 tablespoon butter Icing sager 'Vautilla Bake potato Scoop out pulp and marsh with butter and flouring until very light and .=month, Add icing sugar to make a paste which can be rolled into small balls. Roll in cinnamon to resemble small po tatties, HEALTH 2 tablespons fat 1/4 cup milk * 4 teaspoons baking powder Sift dry Ingredients. Ad dpotatoes THE VERSATILE POTATO Potatoes ouce every tiny is a good rale, but because they are everydaY fare rare should be. observed 5o. that they do net becomemonetOP. one. Potatoes lend themselves to a wide variety of ways of serving, all oP which may be made inviting, me tritioas and inexpensive. The following recipes have been tested by the Consumer Section, Marketing Service, Dominion De- partment of Agriculture Every one tt worth 'trying, Vegetable Pte . with Potato Crust 2 tablespons bacon fat 1 small onion 1 cup cooked carrots 1 cup cooked chopped potatoes 1 cup cooked peas 1 cup cooked string beans Salt and pepper celery salt aYielt fat. Add onion. Cook until .clear, Add vegetables and . cue meat stock of milk and seasonings. Cover with potato crust. Ba'ke 30 minutes at 350 degrees F. Potato Crust for Meat or Vegetable Pie 1 cup hot mashes pauttoes lei teaspoon salt 1 egg it; CUP flour 1 teaspoon baking powder 2 tablespoons melted fat Combine ingredients in order given. Roll mixture to about inch thick- ness on a -floured board. Potato Pancakes 1 cup grated raw potatoes 1 tablespoon flour % teaspoon salt Mix well. Drop mixture by spoon, fuss on a hat greased griddle, Turn when brawn on one side. Potato Scones 1 cup flour 1 cup mashed potatoes p from permit to pergon in Tarlcus Ways, lar, MaCeliough "Pints out lass eelusutniativo who coughs with uncovered Mouth sprays tile air areend Miert with the baeiln, If be spite ea the doer Or side Walk the germs are likely tO be mixed with dealt and blown about for others to breathe, 13ac1111 may be eeposjted on a spoon, drinking oup, pipe pr other article held in the =mouth at a victim. if these are used without a thorough' ()Mantilla by a 'healthy person, lie may con- tract the disease as a result, BY WAY OF PREVIONTIIN unpasteui+tze,d milk, if tarsen from a tuberculous cow, is likely to infect the drinker. ,Q. ,ttrbercul9sist mother •who kisses her baby on the mouth 4s almost 5Ure to pass the dlseaae on to the child.. , BY way of prevention, Dr. .'4e. Cullough urged that children of school ar pre-school age, students 111 seeondery schools and workera be exam=ined periodically by a T.D. expert, There is no serum, vaccine lir medtoine that will -cure tubercul- osis, and patent medicines are likely only to make rioters •worse. Dr. McCullough declares; but tulier- culosis may be cured if taken In time, and +the one remedy which Itas stood the tent of time is complete rest in bed. He urges the sanitorium as the best place for the treatment of the tuberculous patient, not only Le - cause be will receive expert and um ceasing care, bust because he will be no longer a danger to his fanil!:v and associates. LOOK OUT FOR YOUR LIVER Buck it up right now and feel like a million! Your liver is the largest organ in your hod; and most important to your health. it pours out bile to digest food, gets rid of waste, supplies new energy, allows proper nourishment to reach your blood. When your liver gets out of order food decomposes in your intestates. You be- come constipated, stomach and kidneys can't work properly. You feel rotten"—headachy, backaehy, dizzy, dragged out all the time. For over 35 years thousands have won prompt relief from these miseries—with Fruit -a -fives. So can you nom. Try Fruit -a tivves you'll be simply delighted how quickly yowl feel like a new person, happy and well again. 25e, 50c. FRUIT•ATIVESIsdga erT Tablets TOPICS * o * * * * * * * * EARLY SYMPTOMS OF TUBERCULOSIS In an article written for '1Health," official organ of the Health League. of Canada, shortly before his death last month, the late Dr. J. W. S. ' McCullough defines the early syrup• toms of tuberculosis as. ' Being too easily tired, Los of weight, Indigestion, and A cough that hangs on, Pleurisy may be one of the yrs: signs of tuberculosis in adults, so may be a spitting of blood, however slight. Nervousness, disturber) sleep and a rundown condition are ' all +symptoms to be suspected. The tubercle bacillus la passed _1 Did You Ever Wonder? BRUSSELS POST Weiner 'ollrwary 35t1t, t341 'Every roily, Wall awl 551141ly done, it a rantrlhutlort to victo y," Tea o=nce MINIS= Or CANADA. Mary is the "voice with, a smile", Mary is the efficient person generally known as a telephone operator. As an operator she knows much about telephone equipment— bow it should be used and handled, But Mury is best known for her personality -for her cool- ness in emergencies—for the grand things she has done time and again, ignoring her own danger, intent on one thing only—to keep the standard of telephone service high.. We pay respectful tribute to Mary and .all the gids who work with hes. Her On .4641/.0Sem"' devotion to her job sets a standard of public service. Tactful, patient and courteous, Mary is the indium through which this Company and its public are always in touch, She plays a vital part in Canada's war effort. issued to the men of Nova Scotia Our Burden Is Light, • then called "Acadia' 'by the French C IF LONGFELLOW'S "EVANGE- LINE" IS FOUNDED ON FACT? No mall individual a "Evangeline" ever existed as a real person. 'Thera is, however, au interesting theory as to the origin of Longfellow's famous poem of that name. In Nathaniel Hawthorne's Note Book we find that "H. L. C." Beard from a French Canadian the story of a young couple in Acadia. On their marriage day, all men in the Pro- vince had been sutltonecl to cts seaubie.iu the church to hear a pron. lamatiou, When assembled, they were all seized and shipped off, to be distributed through New England:d: among them was the new bride- groom. His bride set off in search Of him, wandering about New Eng• land all herherLifetime, and at last, When she was old, she found ner bridegroom, It is a historical fact that on Sep- tember 2, 1755, such au order was Over 400 mien and boys' assembled 1 on the appointed day, to find them- selves surrounded by an armed farce and, by His Majesty's orders, they and their families were shipped from Acadia and scattered through the New Einglaed colonies, In the con- fusion resulting, many families be- came separated, some of them never becoming united again. Longfellow himself," according te. it newspaper account printed at the time of the writing of the poem, stated that the work "was purely a fancy sketch, and the name of Evan- geline 'was ,coined to complete the the story." He 1s further quoted In e .article as saying, "The incident Mr Hawthorne's friend gave me, and my visit to the hospital in Philadedphla (on Spruce Street, not far from the lintel at which Longfellow was then staying) gave me the groundwork of the poem." In the Canadian provinces and particularly in Nova Scotia the re- gard for Longfellow is deep and strong for the warm and tender picture he painted of Acadia and its .people in "Evangeline." And even though the poem is, by Longfellow's own admission, "purely a fancy sketch," strangers visiting Phila. delphia still seek out the old burial grotrucl described in the poem to pay tribute at the supposed grave of Evangeline, inn TO BE SURE-- QUALITY — PLUS -- VALUE ' ' • THE PALACE BAKERY Phone 32X W. WILLIS—Prop. Brussels, Ont. OFFERS BREAD—brown & white, fruit loaf, Buns, Scons and Rolls. PASTRIES— tarts, pies, cakes, jelly rolls, dough nuts, etc. (always a tasty treat) BUY BREAD BAKED IN BRUSSELS The iRUSSL. DAIRY BAi_ �,.... Hot Chocolate, All kinds of Hot Soups --Nothing better after skating ! -- Soft Drinks or all kinds—Ice CrearnStrnclaes, Banana Splits --Vanilla Pineapple, Strawberry, Chocolate, Coffee and Orange. --Try a bottle of our Chocolate Milk for school lunch. Butter, Buttermilk, Milk and Cream In talking to Canadians, from Lon -.1 don recently, Sir Robert HlndersleY gave this country startling intonate time about the way Great Britain h*a carried ant a War :Savings Program since the start of ,the war fifteen months ago, The President of the National Savings tOommittee in England skated that in these fifteen months the s=mall man has saved through savings certificates, defence bonds, savings banks and a few odds and ends, the sum of .six hundred million pounds -- almost three billion dollars in Canadian money. And Sir Robert made an interest - lug comparison when he revealed that subscriptions to large loans 251- ing that period of fifteen, months was eight hundred and seventy-five million pounds, iu other words, the wage earners of old England are contributing a total mighty close to the total loan.. ed by citizens of means, and covert'. atone. Elven after discounting the vas'. dicerence between the population or Canada and the population of Great Britain, Canada's ttempt to secure one hundred nd twenty trillion in a year m War tificate loans suffersfroby comparisonCer. "True, the masses of people in England have a deep incentive to provide every last available shilling for the liar effort. Over there, they fully realize the,threat that hangs over their freedom and their homos. Any comparison between loyalty of Canadians to an ideal, and the loyal• ty of n Englisthman to the same idea?, is odious. Canada has shown and will show that it is ready to sacri- fice all for the retention of a free democracy. But it might not be out of the way to observe that if Canadians at the present moment were feeling the shock of war as. Engiehmen are now, those in authority would be setting 'a War Savings objective much higher than one hundred and twenty million_ dollars a year. Comparisons Critical Spedtator "I can't un- derstand anyone missing a Putt as short as that." Golfer. ',Let me remind you sir, that the hole is only four and a. quarter inches across, and there 10 the whole world outside it. As a Mater of Fact The soldier was explaining the theory of shooting to his girl ixlerd. "You see, we have to calcula`e the distance of the object we want to hit, and then allow for the. power of attraction of the earth?" `SBat suppose you are shooting over water?" "Oh, ,that's. more than you would. understand—besides, Pm not to the Navy." Have You a Used Car to Trade In From 1931 to 1937 If You Have, Call at . Jackson Motors Ltd. LISTOWEL, ONTARIO L. Passenger Cars 1940 Ford Coach, Radio & Heater 1940 Fcrd Sedan, heater. 1939 )Mercury Sedan, like new. 1939 Ford Coach 1939 Ford Sedan 1939 Ford Coupe 1939 Hudson Coach 1938 Ford Coach 1938 Hudson Coach 1938 Studebaker Sedan, privately owned, small mileage. ..moitmo..... Used Tractors 15.30 lntcr:fational Tractor, 3 Furrough Plow 2 Used Fordson Tractors Trucks 1940 Ford 2 ton 158 -inch, Chassis & Cab 1940 Ford 2 ton, Chassis and Cab. 1939 G,M.C, 2T= ton, 158 -inch Stake 1939 Ford 2 tont stake platform 1938 Ford 2 ton, stake, long wheel base 1938 Ford 23 ton' long wheel base, Dual Eton Axle, stake body 1937 International, 176 -inch wheel base 16 -foot rack. 1935 International 1S ton, dual wheels, 4 cylinder. 1932 Dodge, long wheel base, dual wheels, like new. . 1931 Ford' long wheel base, stake. 1929 Ford 1S ton Radios Stromberg=Carlson Specials 2 Used Radios 1 1941 Table Model 2, 1941 Cabinet Models Light Deliveries 1939 Ford Pick Up 1939 Ford Sedan Delivery 1937 Ford Pick Up 1931 Ford ' Pick Up