HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1941-3-5, Page 8Sup/tome us
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TESTED RECIPES
APPLE 1G THE KiNG OF i ROITa
TAMING NG WINTER ,MONTHS .
Apple, king of fruits reigns in the
1s nelnen during winter months,
likeelfhful and inexpensive this reYsi
remit ably blends its pelatabe ,-ars
Is, with flour and eggs, sugar and
§ccs.
the Soar in Alppesauce Loaf Is an t
accommodating carrier of Lemon pple1
sauce and chopped nuts. I
SYaiee points up the flavors. Apple,
mince contributes moistness as well
as flavor. For a variation, use one l
4V -V9 mashed bananas in place of the ,
of applesauce.
Spiral apple muffnz contain fine -
g stropped apples, along with Mona -
;lama and nutmeg for spices'. Pare
lore and chop the apples just he'
Bare they are to be added to the
'flatter, so that they will not darken
'because df standing.
Applesauce Loaf
" cup :shortening
1 cup sugar
2 eggs
cup aiplesauce
1 teaspoon lemon Juice
2 cups sifted ftour
3 team -icons baking powder
1,72 teaspoon salt
1 cup chopped nuts
Cream shortening and sugar ta' , and add the sliced apples. Sprinkle
fresher. Add beaten eggs. Arid it with the one-fourth cup of white
lemon juke and applesauce. VA sugar and eover with the remaining
Bour, baking powder and salt to- 1 crumb mblture. Bake this in a rho-
getter and add to sugar mixture,
stirring only enough to moisten
Soar. Add nuts, Bake In greased
loaf tin in moderate oven (375 Se-
ga•ees) 1 hour and 16 minutes,
Yield, one loaf.
Spicy Apple Muffins
2 cups sifted flour
2 teaspons baking powder
y teaspoon soda
rb
teaspoon salt
teaspoons cinnamon
teaspoon nutmeg
1 egg
3's cup brown sugar
1 cup sour milk .or buttermilk
1/2. cup melted shortening
1 cup finely chopped apples,
.(about 11/2 medium+sized apples)
,Sift dour, baking powder, soda, applause.
salt, oisintunon and nutmeg, togeth-
er, ,Cotnbdne beaten egg, brown so -
gar, sour milk and melted Shorten -
Ing, Add to flour mixture, stirring
only enough to moisten flour. Ada
anniers, Pill greased muffln pans
twoathirds full, d3ake in moderate-
ly hot oven (425 degrees) 25 min-
utest Yield, 20 2 -inch muffins.
And lastly, here is a recipe for ,stmt Your Mere Even winter calf,
something espeoially'delicioues, and,
serving a double purpose, they sen for a cool drink Suc(tti as this, It
be eaten to the last morsel. •S'teani-
for party serving, year friends ,may
ing hot with cream or milk, or a wonder , just what concoction you
hare prepared. And it you want to
ad dan extra bit of zip what about
some lemon ice cubes made by pre -
Paring some strong lemonade. Hair
311 the trayls, freeze for one hour
then place a maraschino cherry in
each compartment. Freeze another
half hour and fill with some more
lemonade. When frozen through
they are' a delicious 'bit of extra for
fruit juice beverages, iced tea el
ginger ale.'
THE BRUSSELS
ICE CREAM CONSUMPTION
spite Inannfa{Lul'e 95'i0e cream In
Canada 1s s,gtrled nu by Various
agenoiee ,ptdnoipaily try the dairy acral
eenfeetlonery industrlea, i
meant'preduced in /939 by the dairY•
ccil1ecitiouery and ba11:1ng ludnatries
totalled S11s4,a26 gallou5 valued at ll
$9,688,109, brit as ice cream is else
manufactured by hetels, restaurants,
and cream parlourb and so there is
alifo ice ereain mix (unfrozen) and
several novelties, the material pro.
duetien and cona)uxnittiou f t
cream to Canada is materially high-
er than shown by the flgarea fine*ed.
so=mi i
KITCHEN CHATTER
If you wonder what to do with
that sUrlytus juice from canned free
a good idea would be to place it in
your refrigerator until the longing
for a nice cool drink oomes along
When you may toombine it with
freshly brewed tea in Proportions to
puddles sauce if you prefer, they
make a delicious dessert. Or, if
there is a surplus they may bo cut
in bars to serve as t000kies we
know the children will love. And
they are made of the most whole-
some ingredients. Now we .ask you
to try—
Apple Bars
1 cup of flour
% teaspoon of salt
} teaspoon of soda
% cup of brown sugar
1 cup of oatmeal
1 cup of butter
22 cups of sliced tart apples,
2 tablespoons of butter
1/2 cup of white sugar
Sift the flour with the salt and
soda and add the brown sugar with
the oatmeal and cut in the butter
until crumbly. ,Spread hair of the
mixture in a greased 7 by 11 inch
baleng dish. Dot it with butter
derate oven (350 degrees Fahren-
heit for 40 to 45 minutes.
Cir 1
Successful Speech
"We've now come to Mr,. Bracer
the ia'et speaker on our program,"
said the weary toastmaster.
Brown arose slowly as those
abowt the banquet table made a
weak but polite attempt at ap-
plauding.
"I'm bored from listening so
much," 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 beenfirst on the list
can read the speech: It's dere all
tytpewriten. Thanks."
Brown sat down amid deafening
,, -1' -+r_MINO
1f�r• I
olfing'
Rid inqr
of rr�g.
fin
ALL YEAR
IFL 0 IJ..S l Ell
vergreen
PLAYGROUND
YES, out in Vancouver and Victoria
GOLF is played all year 'round!
Warm sea -breezes and the protection
of the mighty Coastal mountains
maintain a moderate temperature in
which all outdoor sports take on an
invigorating newness.
Plan now to visit Canada's EVER.
GREEN Playground—for rest or play,
the ideal place for a thoroughly
enjoyable winter vacation! Special
Winter rates at hotels. The new Hotel
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
:ATTRACT VE RAiL RATES
Reduced sleephtg-Car fares ... Low meal rates on trains
Always Use . ,
CANADIAN NATIONAL EXPRESS
TELEGRAPHS a MONEY ORDERS
Speed . , . Dependability . , . Safety
Pall inlerntaiden from any ticket agent
11
CANAbl`..'.1\ A 1 1
4S'
W4du9sf4ay , whish 5th, 1941
"".,,,,,+:„.:', Every t1101, well awl bo s%ly dome, It a Fo Orlbnrlun to Vcup,we. 1,i►
r , Tia Pfur o MINIMA or CnNeen.
YOU
--'" , A Mechanized Army Serving
' % Metbanized and motorized units—these make pp the
. modern army, You have often noticed deli tips Crews 0.
With titers trucks along the biginway, .�hpse too ere
i
��._ mechanized, .motorized aorta, each with a 1 t 6 ti1
Y
4 Skilled crew; each completely equipped with tools,
power, material,
In an emergency they can be mobilized --quietly,
Wieldy, efficiently -- to repair the bovoe wrought by
storax, fire, or flood. The equipment they carry --`' standardized apparatus of many kinds — Hakes pos-
sible the speedy restoration of vital service.
Preventive maintenance; preparedness, experience, and
• ; skill .—these all serve to ensure that your message
jViU get the'ough with minimum deloy'in any enner-
acnes—a Vital contribution to the eoUntry'e war effort.
—..-r ✓ f %� (Jnr° 3e
+ice
�j
CANADA'S FLOUR MILLS
There were 358 flour mills and 927
feed Mills in Canada in 1940. The
flour )Hills had a total 2,44hour capa-
city of 98,553 barrels, Thirty-five 07
the flour mills, 60 per cent of the
feed mills, and 46 per cent of tile,
flour milling capacity in Canada are
located in Ontario, Quebec ranks
second as far as, the number of lions
and feed mills is concerned, but in
dour roiling capacity Saskatchewan
is second to Ontario, followed by
Alberta,' Quebec and Manitoba. Tile
Maritime Provinces and British
Oolunibia have a smell snilUng
osmacity.
• HEALTH
TOPICS
TENDER TEETH
l
:N
Wawa Whispers
Ice Cream Soda was made by R.
Green of Philadelphia and sold over
the counter in the great Centennial
Exposition held in Fairmont Park in
1976. Golly was there and saw it,
Don't think for a moment that
tears indicate a tender heart -lots•
of them are shed lair the purpose of
softening someone's heart.
On a tombstone in a graveyard in
Heighten Hills, Medona, Iudiana:
"Some have children, some have
none, But here lies a mother of
twenty-oneri
Statistics show that there are 83,-
000
2;000 more women over '15 years of
age than men. It's, funny how they
got the age of all these women.
Equal Rights: A good wife will
help tier husband with, the house,
raid 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 child iu
the Harpoon Armenia, orphanage as
a gi.Pt to Sarkis I -T. Nahigian,
Chicago. It contains over 4,O0U
hand- tied knots,
4,==:1r----lE�
National Park Site
Reserved At Churchill
work. 1 Designations of national historic
One woman said she knew a man . pants by the Canadian Government
include one at Churchill, Canada's
with an could turn It.a head like a door knob—any farthest North railway terminus
woman
- operated as part of the Canadian
There is a place in the South National Railways. Other sites in -
of England where an air raid alarm eluded in this designation include
wit mean money to someone. k:V' j the fortresses at Louisbourg ` and
ery time a new man goes on duty ' Font Anne, and Port Royal Habita-
nt ti ie Pollee box there, he puts six , ton near Annapolis Royal, in Nova
Pence in a pool. Then the fust Po- 1 Scotia; Port Beausejour just east of
)iceman who has to sound the air Sackville in New Brunswick and
Teeth may be tender from, cold,
in which cases all the teeth are
likely to be affeoted.
In pregnancy and lactation the
teeth often •become tender and
affected (with caries, The cause
is the drain, of calcium by Lite
growing infant within the 'mo-
ther's womb. The remedy is the
adniiniitration of vitamin 1),
round in butter fat and cod-liver oil.
A certain nunrlper 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
health. Their roots will often
prove to be stinking. They spread.
Infection to near and distant parts
of the ;body causing' erythema,
arthritis and other infections,
(Must Extract Dead Teeth
Cancer of the antrum or sarcoma
of the bony margin of the jaw some-
times follows neglect of dead teeth.
'Other resulting infections from
dead teeth are: osteomyelitis and
necrosis of the jaws, celluitis of the
neck and neuralgia of the third
nerve. Many medical conditions of
the body will cause tenderness of
the teeth, snot for example,, as
scurvy, anaemia and lukaemia.
Sylphiliie, malaria, diabetes and
tuberettleais have an i1l=effeet on the
Meth: Hysteria, migraine and
many other neuroses are often ars
centuated by tender teeth, many
acute illnesses' and the recovery'
therefrom, are accompanied by
dental aching,. A too high chug,
large metal fillings injury, small
tooth-brinties, fish -bones or other
objects lodged between tine teeth,
grinding of the teeth at night and
the oceupall One i abrasions of
eoblers, seamstresses •and player's
of wind .instruments — all these
may result. In tenderness.
Per -'rhe safety of the subJoot
dead teeth should, es a rule, be
extracted.
WANTESD—'--
Pine, Hemlocks, 7lasswood, Wlike
Ash and 'Reek Ulm Logs.
D. N, 1ylollonald,
• "
actually visible to passengers in
Canadian National trains; Fort
Lennox t Ile•aux SJolx and Ohambley
near Montreal; and Fort Welington
and Fort Malden at An herstburg,
Ontario,
Something To
Think About •
"Listen to what theclock MS's -
It slays: "I have harder work to do
than any mortal has; but I do it
more easily, because I do it one se•
Gond at a lime. d have thousands
67 treks to snake everyday, ' but 1
have a second to matte each one of
them I,don't de diem all at once.
I never worry" about what I Md.
yesterday, nor about what I will cls,,
tomorrow. My business is all to-
day, here and now, I know that is
I do that weII I need not fret about
the pant, nor trouble about the fu-
ture. If you would be as peaceful
and happy as I am, do not by to
live all your life and assume lite
burden of all your work In the Cu -
tare. Live now. Do the work in
hand. There is always time enough
if you take time. There is a hard
road and an easy road to do the
work you have to do. It you would
find the easy road, -look at me. 1
never flurry. I never worry. But
what I have to do I get done,''
Sixty Years ofProgress
Anisr
Sixty years of faithful and valu-
able service to Canada form
the background for the sixtieth
an liversay of the Canadian Paci-
fic Railway Company in mid-
February.
On February 15, 1881, the Gov-
ernment of Sir Sohn 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 Was organized on
an official basis and a glorious
new era of Canada's history had
begun.
The Canada of 1881 was .an In -
fent country, its sparsely settled
portions separated from each
other by dense wilderness. Con-
federation itself was in danger be -
cease of lack of communloatiou
between provinces, Railway con-
nection with British •Columbia bad
been promised but in ten 'years
the work a•eoomplisitod had been
negligible.
The story of the building of the
transcontinental ileo can be sum-
med up in the statement that it
was completed in half- the time
called for in the charter, with a
pitifully small subsidy consider-
ing 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-
ers' personal fortunes, seemed
lost. The growth of the Canadian
Pacific Railway and of Canada
represents sixty years of mutual
co-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 583,944,-
701 and import trade of 500,488,-
829. Its field crops were worth
$155,277,427, its dairying $22,743,-
929, and' its mamifactures $309,-
675,068. -In the last year of re-
cord, Canada's estimated papilla -
thin was 11,315,000, exports total-
led $1,178,054,000 and imports,$1,-
081,950,000. Field crops wore
worth 5061,228,000, dairying $217,-
716,020 and manufactures 53,337,-
581,366.
Tho (lartadian Porfirio Railway's
growth in the same Period has
been equally uniazin0. There was
practically rtothing in 1881, Now
the cutnpany has 17,109 miles of
call lines in Canada, 65 ocean,
coastal and lake steamships, hotels
with a total of 6,204 rooms as well
as summer lodges, 1,767 locomo-
tives and 82,714 pieces of rolling
stook. Its property and equip-
ment represent an investment of
more than one billion dollars.
Other facts of interest concern-
ing the world's greatest transpor-
tation system are that it operated
370,000 circuit miles of telegraph
line lest year and carries 120,000
passengers across the Atlantic in
a normal year. In 1940 the Cana-
dian Paclilc rail services carried
nearly eight million passengers a
total of more than 924 million
passenger miles, in addition to
transporting approximately 37
million tons of. freight represent-
ing more than sixteen billion ten
miles, During last year the com-
pany paid out in taxes more than
nine million dollars and, since in-
corporation, a total of approxim-
ately 172 million dollars. The
gross earnings in 1040 totalled -
$170,964,000, every dollar of which
represented a unit of service to
tlie Dominion and the );moire
The illustrations abeam aro
eymbolio of 00 years of progress
and 8110w an early stage °each
which was more romantics . than
eomfol'tabie; the arrival o4 the
first transeoatinentat train at the
Pacific Coast on .Ttily 4, 1886, and
the modern transcontinental train,
"The 'bominton,"
1