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Village Squire, 1976-04, Page 341 Escaping the horror of food additives BY KEITH ROULSTON Charlie Bramwell used to live in our neighbourhood. He was a quiet guy for most of his life .just another schnook that people looked right through at the supermarket as they hurried to pick up a pound of ground chuck. Charlie's house was just down the street from ours and I must confess I never took much notice of him. That all changed though one year when Charlie went to a fall fair and dropped by a booth where the hawkers were stressing the importance of a good diet to health. They were promoting their own brand of health foods. Charlie, being careful with his money, didn't buy anything. But the seed planted. He went home and he worried, as he ate his bacon and eggs that night. He began, he told me later, to think what that greasy bacon was doing to his stomach. He could almost feel it. He worried too when he broke out the heavily buttered chelsey rolls for desert. Half way through he threw it in the garbage (he wouldn't feed it too his dog Joe because of what it might do to his internal workings) Charlie worried and worried, and went for two days without eating a thing but oatmeal porridge, before he finally journeyed to a health food store over in the next town where reluctantly, with a feeling for his thin bankroll, he stocked up on stone ground flour, and all the other essentials of good diet. All the winter the only time he showed up at the local stores was to buy some fresh vegetables and fruit- But by about March, he'd stopped doing that too. He'd been reading, he told Mari Smith at the super market, about all the sprays and chemical fertilizers and so on they used in the growing of those crops. What, he worried, was this doing to him? Was he building up residues in his body that would shorten his life? Turn him into a freak? So he stopped showing up at the vegetable counter for food though what he did for the nett few months I don't know. Perhaps he fasted. Anyway, when spring came Charlie could be seen out working in his back yard. He had a big rambling house, an old barn left over from the days when horses were in vogue in tam, and about two acres of scrubby land He had decided to grow his own food so he could make sure it was pure. He even hired in` a farmer who kept draft horses for a hobby in order to make sure that a tractor wouldn't kave any gas fumes that might ruin the soil This was all very well with the neighbours They joked a little about Charlie going off the deep end, but he ignored them They couldn't ignore him, however, when he was ready for planting, Good vegetables need fertilizer and 32, VILLAGE SQUIRE/APRIL 1976 Charlie was going to have the best. So he had a local pig farmer bring in 10 loads of manure to spread on his field. It was then, that Charlie began to be noticed no matter where he went in town. His neighbours were even set to take up a petition. But once the smell died down, so did the stink the neighbours raised and everything went pretty peacefully all summer. It even got that when the vegetables grew ready in the fall, all the neighbours were trying to get friendly again because the fertilizer had done its job and this was prize produce. But that winter, after months of eating cabbage and turnips and parsnips and canned pickles and frozen peas and corn and what -have -you, that Charlie began to yearn for a little more variety in his diet. He longed for some meat and eggs and milk, but these were all too rich foods for him. But then he heard about goats' milk, and soon had a half dozen goats housed in the barn. The trouble was that they weren't in the barn often enough. More often they went visiting and they weren't at all fussy about their djet 1.fter they ate Mrs. Hooliday's brand new perma-prest, titted, flowered bed spread off her clothes line, Charlie was again the object of a good deal of hostility in the neighbourhood. Then he heard about a special breed of chickens that laid low -cholesterol eggs. Soon he had a small flock of the hens that clucked around the back yard and a rooster that crowed loud and long every morning at precisely 6:45. This did not endear him to his next door neighbour Marvin Hicks who worked the night shift and had just arrived home settled into bed every morning at 6:30. The neighbours were about ready to lynch Charlie. Some had approached town council to see if anything could be done .'even suggesting tar and feathers, preferably from his own chickens. They needn't have bothered. One morning they no longer had to worry about Charlie or his farm. They took him to the hospital in an ambulance and he was dead a few days later. The doctor said it was a bleeding ulcer, probably brought on because of all .the worrying he did about protein; cholesterol, vitamins and weed sprays. IS YOUR MATTRESS CAUSING YOU TO LOSE SLEEP? SUCH AS - SIMMON'S - SLEEPMASTER - DEL-MAR CUSTOMIZED -FOR -COMFORT ... AT SOOTHING SAVINGS AT P 523-7521 LODGE HONE FURNITURE WEST ST GODERICH master charge i THEN \ COME / IN AND SELECT FROM FAMOUS BRAND MATTRESSES