Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1941-3-5, Page 6Surizeste SAL TEA 111 TESTED RECIPES salt, nluntaanonand nutmeg, togeth- er, Combine beaten egg, brown su- gar, .Cour milk and melted abQrteas StaFTL.,E, IS THE KING OF F'RUITa ing, Add to Roar mixture, stirring 'DURING WINTER MONTHS only enough to moisten flour, Ada • apples, Fill greased muffin pans Apple, king of fruits reigns in the twohhirds full, Soaks in maderate- Ta5fkrlreir during Winter months, ly hot oven (425 degrees) 25 min- alihful and inexpensive this DWI utesi, Yield, 20 2 -inch muffins. taruat. ably blends its palatabe tars- i And lastly, hare is a reatpa for with tour and eggs, sugar and something especially'delicious' and, .2cee. serving a double purpose, they :an the Rour in-n,,plteeauce Coat is an ` be eaten to the last morsel. Steam- jreommodating carrier of apple' ( ing hat with cream or milk, or a sauce and chopped note. Lemon t pudding sauce if you prefer, tbey juke paints up the flavors. .d.1Wle: I matte a delicious dessert. Or, if sauce contributes moistness as well Itaus is a surplus they may be ea as flavor, For. a variation, use one ! in bars •to serve at cookies we asp mashed bananas in place of the 111 know the children will love. And attpfui of applesauce. they are made of the most whole - Beni), apple muffins contain line- yr'rdropped apples, along with canna- .;lea and nutmeg for apices. Pare lore and chop the apples just be• lure they are to be added to the f,after, so that they will not darken 3tnecause of standing. Applesauce Loaf h "cup :shortening 1 cup sugar .2 eggs 1 ens applesauce 1 teaspoon lemon juice 2 cups sifted Rear g teaspoons baking powder ra teaspoon salt 1 cup chopped nuts some ingredients. Now we ask you to try Apple Bars 1 cup of flour IA teaspoon of salt V2 teaspoon of soda IA cap< of brown sugar 1'•cup of oatmeal lA cup of butter 214 cups of 'sliced tart apples 2 tablespoons of butter yr cup of white sugar Sift the Roar with the salt and soda and add the brown sugar with the oatmeal and cut in the butter until crunrlbly. .Spread half of the, mixture in a greased '7 by 11 inch baking dish. Dot 4t with butter THE BRUSSELS POST ICE CREAM CONSUMPTION 'Ne manafautai'e 44 lee ereanz 111, 'i r 4 Canada is .carried en by vAr ageurcies,Irrinelpally lay the dairy tree confectionery induatt'ies, The a• mount produce@ in 1939 try the da4ry. eontfeoiionery and baking iudnstries totalled 8,189,820 gaUone valued at $9,688,109, but as iso cream is also manufactured by hotels reataurantii, and cream parlour'& and so there is also ice cream mix (unfrozen) and several novelties, the. material pre• duertfon and oonsamptioa of tee eznrn in Canada is materially higia er Blau shown by tiie flgur'ee quoted. KITCHEN CHATTER If you wonder what to de with that swains juice troth canned frail. a good idea would• be t0 place it in Your refrigerator uutil the lough= for a nice cool drink Comes along 'when you may combine it with freshly brewed tea in proportions to suit your tash.e Even winter calla for a cool drink suet as this. It for party serving, your friends, may wonder , just what concoction you have prepared. And if you want to ad don extra bit of zip what about some lemon ice maims made by pre - Daring some strong lemonade. Half 211 the trays, freeze for one hour then place a maraschino, cherry 4n each compartanent, Freeze another half hour and fill with some more lemonade. When frozen through they are' a delicious 'bit 0f extra tor fruit juice beverages,iced tea or ginger ale. ,Corium ehortentug and sugar t) - and add, the sliced apples, Sprinkle I354cr. Add beaten eggs. Add it with the one-fourth cup of salute lemon juice and applesauce. aril. sugar and Dover with the remaining flonr, baking powder and salt to- I crumb mixture. Bake this in a am- gether and add to sugar mixture, stirring only enough to moisten Snnr. Add nuts. Bake in greased Bona tin in moderate oven (375 de- grees) 1 ,hour and 15 mdnlrtes. Yield, one loaf, Spicy Apple Muffins 2 cups sifted flour 2 teaslSons baking powder ,teaspoon soda 3,4 teaspoon salt teaspoons cinnamon afi teaspoon nutmeg 1. egg 2 cup lrrown .sugar 1 cup sour milk ,or buttermilk cup melted 'shortening 1 c118 finely chapped apple s (about lt/s medium sized apples) wt derate oven (350 degrees Pahron- Reit for 40 t .. 45 minutes. e 7) Successful Speech "We've now come to Mr,_ Browr the last speaker on our program," said the weary toastmaster. . Brown arose slowlyas those about the banquet 'table made a weak but polite attempt at ap- plauding. "I'm bored from listening . so mucor," he began, "and I'm too tired to give my speech, .Any man who would like to know .what I would have said if I'd. been fast on the list can read the speech: It's. here all typewriter. Thanks." Brown sat down amid deafening ,Silt flour, baking powder, soda. applause., GO/fin q j. l. f � 4, , r� t°11 ALL ?EAR, R0UI'i 1 YES, out in Vancouver and Victoria GOLF is played all year 'round? Waris sea -breezes and the protection of the mighty Coastal mountains maintain a moderate temperature in which all outdoor sports take on an invigorating newness. Plait now to visit Canada's EVER- GREEN Playground—for rest or play, the ideal place for a thoroughly enloyable winter vacation! Special Winter rates at hotels. The new Motel Vancouver's spacious rooms and de. lightful accommodations will add to the pleasure of your stay in Vancouver. TRAVEL WEST THE JASPER WAY USING THE AIR-CONDITIONED CONTINENTAL LiMITED ATTRACTIVE RAIL RATgS .educed sleeping -car fares, , , Gore meal rates an trains 2. Always Use . , . CANADIAN NATIONAL EXPRESS TELEGRAPHS • MONEY ORDERS Speed ... Dependability... Safety P1111 information: front any ticket agent Weduegday, i al'ett 64b, nti ' 41..rt,,,,,,e- . o . . 0 ' ' , • . . - .../°"°://:,'' Zer: ,ote victory, "',,?. THE PRIMA MINIST6a QP CANADA. r A Mechanized Army Serving YOU 0 Meehontzed..and motorized units --these make up the S�+' modern army, You have often nnti/.ed Bell lino crews r" f whit their trucks along the highway Those too are 4 mechanized, motorized units, coca with a highly 4 skilled crew; each oQnlplotely ecptipped with tools, power, material. 2. kIn.an emergency they can be mobilized — quietly, quickly, efficiently - to repair the havoc wrought by storm, Elio, or flood; The equipment they carry -- y . standardized apparatus of many kinds makes pos. r Bible the speedy restoration of vital service. • Preventive maintenance;preparedness, experience, acid skill -- these all servo tp ensure that yetir messagewill get through with minimum delay'in any inner,genet' n vital contribution to the country s wur effort, lLiallam . < :aA t ,,/,.,/�aa/ e gel1M.44 V T� ���GdAqlU rgstoA/ /%Y '1. ' i ./ 1—' I CANADA'S FLOUR DELLS There were 368 flour mills and 9-5 reed mills in Canada in 1940. The flour mills had a total 24-hour de:lta- oity of 98,553 barrels. Thirty -flue of the flour milts, 60 per cent of the 'feed mills, and 46. per cent of the, flour milling capacity in Canada are located iu Ontario. Quebec racks second as far as the number of hour• and reed mills is concerned, but in flour nailing capacity Saskatcbewan is second to ,Ontario, followed . by Alberta,' Quebec and Manitoba. The Maritime Provinces and British Columbia have a small milling rapacity. 1 y: HEALTH TOPICS o * * * *. * * TENDER TEETH Teeth may be tender from . cold, in which cases all the teeth are likely to be affeoted. In pregnancy and lactation the teeter often become 'tender ant affected twith caries. The tonin is the drain of calcium by the growing infant within the mo- ther's womb. The remedy isthe admiinistration of vitamin 1r, Sound in butter fat and cod-liver oil. A certain number of teeth that have ached a little, . settled down, take on a bluish colour and may be somewhat tender. These teeth are dead and are a menace to be'a1th. Their roots will often prove to be stinking. They spread infection to near and distant parts of rthe body causing erythema, arthritis and other 'dnfeotions, 'Must Extract Dead Teeth Cancer of the antrum orsarcoma of 'the bony margin of the jaw some- times follows neglect of dead teeth. 'Other resulting infections from dead teeth are: osteomyelitis ami necrosis of the Jaws, cellulins of the neck and neuralgia of the tiara nerve, Many medical conditions of the body will cause tenderness of the teeth, such for example, a.s scurvy, ,anaemia, and lukaelnla, Syphillix, malalda, diabetes and tabercuiosis have an ill -effect on Hoe teeth: hysteria, migraine and many other neuroses are often 41.1- centuated by tender teeth, Many acute illnesses, and the recovery therefrom, are aecampanied by dental aching. A too higar dlhug, large metal fillings injury, small tooth•bristies, ftsh.bones or ether °bleats lodged between: tine teeth, grinding or the teeth at night` and the occepa.tianai abrasions of c oblers, scalnstresses and players of Wi11d .insirnments — all these may result In tenderness, For the safety of the subleet dead teeth should, as a ride,be extracted, L 1 WANTE D--• Pine, S}iemloelt, Basswood, White Ash and Rock 171rn Logs, D. N, McDonald, Wawa Whispers Ice Cream Soda Wes made by R. Green of Philadelphia and sold over the counter in Ute great Centennial Exposition. held in Fairmont Park in 1276. d,oldy was there and saw it, Don't tbinit for a motneut that tears indicate a tender heart --iota of them are 'sated ter the purpose of softening someone's heart. On a tombstone in a graveyard in Heighten hills, Medona, Indiana: "Some have children, 50me have none, But here Ties s, another of twentywtre,rr 'Statistics show that there are 22,- 000 more women over 75 years of age than men Lt's fanny how they rand alarm, gets the kitty or the whole pot or pool. All the coal used on American Railroads last year gave work to 94,000 miners. World's Smallest Oriental Rug A diminutive rug only two by three inches, in size, believed to be the smallest silk Oriental in the 'world, was displayed in a recent Kalamazoo (Mich.) Exhibition. The rug was woven by a eliild in the Harpoot, Ammenia, orphanage as a gilt to Sarkis H. Nalrigian, Chicago. It contains ever 4,000 band- tied knots. 174 r actually visible to passengers in Canadian National trains; Fort Lennox t Ile-aux-lNblx and Chambley near Montreal; and Fort Welingtoa and Fort Malden at Antheratburg, Ontario. Something To Think About • "Listen to what the. 'clock says.. It slays: "I have Larder work to do than any mortal bus; but I do it more easily, because I do it one se- cond at a time. I have thousands Of treks to matte everyday, but 1 have a second to make each one of them I,don't do them all at once. I never worry about what I dl(1, yesterday, nor about what I will doa tomorrow. My business is all 10- - gat the age of all these women, National Park Site day, here and now, I know that if Equal Rights: A good wife will Reserved At Churchill I do that well I need not fret absut help her husband with the house... the past, nor trouble about the . fn- rvark. I Designations of national historic ture. if you would be as peaoerul One woman said she knew a ulna parks by the Canadian Government and happy as I am, do net •try to with a head like a door knob --env include one at Churchill, Canada's live alI your life and assume 1110 W01111111 could turn it, farthest North railway terminus burden of all your work in the fu- aperated'as. part of the 'Canadian tura. Live now. Do the work in' There is a place in the South National Railways. Other sites in- hand.' There is always time enough if you take time. There is a hard road and an easy road to do rhe work you have to do. If you would find the easy roild 10ok at me. 1 never 'Burry. I never worry. But of England where an air raid alarm eluded in bilis designation include all mean money to someone. Ev- I the fcitresses at Louisbourg and ery time a new man goes an duly ' Fort Anne, and Port Royal Habita- at the police box there, he .puts six . tion near Annapolis Royal, in Nova pence in a pool- Then the first po- I .Sootta; Font Beausejour just east of Beeman who has to sound the air Sackville in New Brunswick and . what I have to do I get done." Ilar - - - - ...rtes- .o.a. a Sixty Years of Progress Sixty years of faithful and valu- able service to Canada form the background for the sixtieth auniversay of the: Canadian Paci- fic Railway Company hi' mid- Fobruara On February 15, 1881, the Gov- ernment of Sir Tohn A. Macdonald granted a charter for the building by a private company of a railway to the Pacific Coast. Two days later, the Canadian Pacific Rail- way Company ryas organized on an official basis and a giorious new era of Canada's history had begun. Tho Canada of 1881 was an in- fant country, its sparsely nettled portions separated from each other by dense wilderness, Con- federation itself was in danger be- cause of lack of communication between provinces. Railway eon - notion. with British Columlrla bad been promiaed but in tell yoars tbo work oceompllshed had been negligible. The story.ol the building of the tran4Continental tine can bo sum- mod up in the statement that It Was completed in half the time called for in the charter, with a pltitutly Inna11 subsidy consider - Mg what had been granted in other places, and in face of the most bitter of political opposition.. Time and again the whole project, Including every cent of the build - era' personal fortunes, seemed lost. The growth of the Canadian Pacifio Railway and of Canada represents sixty years of mutual do -operation, each aiding in and benefiting from the other's strength and prosperity, In 1881, Canada was a country with 4,324,810 population, posses- sing total export trade of $83,644,- 701 83,644;701 and import trade of $00,488,- 329, Its field Crops were worth $7.55,277,427, its dairying $22,743,- 939, and 'Its manufactures 8309,- 679,068. .In the last year of re- cord, Canada's estimated Impalas tion was 11,31.5,000, exports total- led $1,178,954,000 and import$,$1,- 081,950,000, 29eld crops ware worth 8851,$28,000. dairying $217,- 716,020 and rnanufaetnres $8,387,- 681,366. The Canadian Pacific Railway's growth In the sante peeled has boon equally amazing. There was the ci mpany has Malting Now 17,160 Miles of rail lines in Canada, 55 0Coan, mutate and Mite steamships, hotels with a total of 6,294 voome its well as summer lollgee, 1,787 iocomo- tivee mid 82,754 Iiiodes of tolling stook, Its property and equip- ment represent an investment of more than 0110 billion dollars. Other facts of iatorest concern- ing the world's greatest transpor- tation system are that it operated 870,000 circuit miles or telegraph line last year and carries 120,000 Passengers across the Atlantic in a normal year. In 1940 the Cana- dian Pantile rail services carried nearly eight million passengers a total of mora than 924 million passenger miles, in addition to transporting • appraxlniately 37 million tons or freight represent- ing more than sixteen billion ton miles, During last year the corn pang paid out in taxes more than. .nine million dollard and, since in- corporation, a total of approxim- ately 172 million dollars. The grass earnings in 1940 totalled $170,764,000, every dollar of which re4resen.ted a tett of service to the Dominion and the Empire. 'The illustrations above are syniboll0 of 60 years of .progress and show an early stage coach which was more tomantic than comfortable; the arrival of the first transcontinental train at the Pacific Coast on Suly 9,1886, and the modern transcontinentaltrain, "Tho' >lominion"