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The Brussels Post, 1937-11-24, Page 3Enjoy te at its best BRANDED BEEF increasing sales oC thls branded beet have more than jnatillett Lite With a view to making it Pee - snag for the consumer to Identify entity in beef, and through the entphatsis on duality to provide an incentive for the 'v0(11.100011 of better beef cattle in Canada, the Dominion Department of Agricul- ture some years ago introduced the 1 system of branding the two top qualitees of Canadian betf, and the {Or Yerarr Lretri "Crown Brand" Corn Syrup makes happy, healthy chi!. 1 dren. No doubt about that, j for doctors say it creates Energy and helps to build strong, sturdy bodies. Chil- dren love it and never tire of its delicious flavor. THE FAMOUS n® ENERGY FOOD u The CANADA STARCH COMPANY Limited policy. There ale Iwo brands, eho'ce ar red brand, and Good or blue brand. The Choice brand is a epi:cittl grade which is distinguished by a red ribbon-like mark running the full length of Lite carcass, so that when the beef is cut up a section of this redbrand at eals in every lm or - tint enc The other grade, Good, Is oleo known as the blue brand from the fact that the ribbon mark is blue, These quality Matte are the guarantees of good 'beef end save trouble in buying, for the, con. rapier can rely on the quality of the beef purchased. The following recipes are taken from the bulletin "Beef; Iluw to Choose and Cook It," which may be obtained free from the Publicity and ExIenstot Branch, Dominion Deportment of Agriculture, Ottawa, 00 application. Round Steak en Casserole Trim off fat, remove bone from round steak cul 1 inch :heat. Cut 1n uniform piers lar set•vin . i't'md molt piece on both sides with the edge of a saucer. Sprinkle with salt and pepper and dredge. with tram, Brown richly on both sides in a hissing, bot, well-greateed pact. Re- move to hot casesrole, add brown stock to cover the steak. To the fat is the pan, add two tablespoons butter. In this, saute two cups sliced nein previously parboiled two miuu:tes. Covet' steak in cas- serole with prepared onions., add one cu.p sliced carrots, season with salt and pepper, cover and cook c'k=SiJAPSNOtl GUILT; LEARN YOUR LIGHTING Careful lighting, low and to one side, gives this "character portrait" its unusual firelight effect. HAVE you ever tried shooting away a whole roll of tllm on one subject, not changing its position in the least but merely altering the way the light strikes it? It inay seem foolish and extrava- gant but it can be one of the most important photographic lessons you over took. Try it on this theory: that the ob- jects in a picture have no real In- terest in themselves but that all the interest is in the way they are lighted—how the light strikes, how shadows are cast, Or, in the words of a great French photographer, that the subject Is nothing, the lighting is everything, Take a photoflood lamp in a re- ileetor and arrange a number of small objects --say some fruit spill - leg Cron n bowl—on a white table top. have mingle general room light to give detail in the shadows, Now set up yottl' camera firefly with the light right beside it, for yntlr fleet picture. 't'alco another with the light fee to the. left and high up. Take one with the light directly over the subleet, Take ono with it behind the subject, shading the bulb so that no direct light shines into the cam- era lens. Try as many positions as the length of the filen roll allows. When the pictures are developed and print- ed, the differences will astound you. Study them and you will learn what can be done with light when it is properly used, . If you don't like still life, try a series of portraits, using the same person and the same pose but dif- ferent angles of lighting. From pic- ture to picture, facial expression will vary astonishingly—dead with flat front light, sinister with the light low and directly in trout, startled or even terrified with the light low anti. to one side, and so on, The same, is true of landscapes. With each hour of the day they change, the deep morning shadows dwindling into noonand growing again into the grandeur of evening, Light is the photographer's work- ing material, the plastic clay from which he models his pictures. Study it. Learn what lighting can do and apply your knowledge and you will produce Matins of whinh you will be proud, 163 Joint van Guilder THE BRUSSELS POST slowly In oven until vegeeabiesare teltder. Serve f1'0111 casserole with belted DI/teems. Glenna Steaks Par's 1lu'ough the meat cllnpper twice ball pound etieh lean, rum, round steak and 1'£:+1, 111:<t reniiv:ny all flat and tlssne. I:Wis,oi with 11,1 tea tpoaul'ud' salt, ]hill' t'aspoon fnl each paprika and celery salt and clgith tt,u(pooufal nutmeg. Add half table apoonful of Union julv and a rely gratings of onion. Add slightly beaten whit ea 2 egg's, nil& well, let stand several hours, Shape Into s1111111 suttees or studks, urea:ige in a well-greaeml, hot frying pan; sear the oilier, Crook 6 minutes, Leming .ocraslonally. Spread gen- erously with butter. Serve will; broiled tomatoes or ntusbroonls, Smothered Beef To each ,pound of meat from rump or chuck, add 3. sliced onion, 1 table,, spoonful dripping, 1 dessert spoon prepared mustard, half teaspocnfttl celery salt, third cup strained toma- toes or tomato soup, Dredge meat with flour and brown in the drip- pings. Brown onions in remainder or drippings, add ibe other Ingredi- ents, and pour all over the meat. Cover and cook slowly on tog or stove for 3 hours or more, or for 6 hours in a fireless cooker, Baur, by Grant Fleming, M• 0, tai itecs A HEALTH SEM ICE OF THE CANADIAN MEDICAL ASSOCIATION AND LIFE INSURANCE COMPANIES CLEAN HANDS To keep the hands clean by regu- lar washing, and not too touch roods without having given the hands a good washiug with plenty of soap and warm water and using a nail- brush, is one of Inc most practical means whereby we may protect otueselees against commutable disease. The whole purpose of haud.wash- ing is oaten defeated by the wash- basin. The only sanitary way to wash is in running water. Most wash.bosins, however, are con- structed with two taps—hot and cold—catch with a separate spout. This makes ie practically impossible to wash in running water as the water which comes out of the taps is either very hot or very cold. 'Strange to say, •most baths are equipped with a common spout, so that, by adjusting the stow of the two tales, 'the right temperature is secured. It ,is, however, rather awkward to use the bath when washing the hands. Why put the type of equipment on the bath which is really needed on the basin, not ou the bath? Wash.bttains are provided with stoppers in order that hot and cold water may be mixed. The objec- tion to this is that you not only wash in the dirt which comes off year hands, but also iu what stay have been lett by previous weehtre. tt. Is. guile possible that your I. aids, niter such washing, may net be as free from germs as they vete more you started. The mouth, from the point of vt's, of disease germs, is the diltieet aid most dangerous part of the beey. The wash -basin, which receives the tineings from the mouths of the family as they clean their teal., is more than likely to be badly soiled with any and all of the germs Pres- , eat in the mouths of each member of the fancily, 1)e wvash basin that is used for teeth cleaning is 011 sate to wash In until it has been disinfected. Diad as the wash -basin may be in the home, the public wash -basins is infinitely worse because it is need by greater ambers of persons, Also, many public wash -basins, in order to save water and overllowht; have spring tape that resist any effort the individual tlhily 111011 to wash of rinse his hands hi running winter. Trains, at ieast, do 111011110 n separate basin for brushing the • teeth. The flirt we can see is, g ae:' lie epee king, not dangerous. file real danger lies in the insisiltic+ dint—secretions o[ the body --- i Which carries with id the germ) al disease --,for example, the Native de- posited ' on the common drine- tngeetip, 1t would even rets. enable, from all we know, to say that hands should be washed in running water -he way t110 surgeon pi'etntres his hands before an apara- tlon—tool that ell wash basins :Meld be ilaipped to make this possible, rtm"vva w: ;,rtes, an, l 'CANADA -1937 IMPERIAL TOBACCO'S INSPIRING PROGRAM I✓RIDIAY1 OP.M.tr.-'.S .T STATION - CRCT Canada .1937 B10HIND "CANADA 1937" SCEld !:- Canada's outstanding 'meet e:let links Montreal with European ' api- •tats in weekly trans.oceantc inter- views—Vernon Bartlett, [,alter of 'World Review of Reviews' te Euro- pean director—Walter Bon les, tee Roving Radio Reporter, speaks from St. John, N.B., Friday, November 20. Bowles is w1 a coast to coaet Can. adlen .lour to review Cenada acrd to interview Canadians' at work. Em- pire builders who generally tamale, the limelight—In Montreal two studios are used for this amblLicui broadcast. Orchestra, soloists and announcer work in a large metiou Picture sound studio—Jack Ralph, who interviews foreign corraepee. dents, and Viotor George, pro•lucer, work in a second studio at an upe town hotel—Producer's main worry during show to contacting and lin- ing up pleh.up paints, which 01.1 oc- casion have been as far removed as elyypt, He han complete control of programme and by.telephone and short-wave Is in constant communi- cation with all contributing points. Timing is also one of his principal concerns—George is well suited for the job, He is calmness personi- fied, He has yet to be seen ruffled. He is ably seconded by Lien Paul, chle(f-engineer, also phlegmatic to the extreme. ICetn knows wha; he wants and how to get it, Engineer in charge of musical portion is like- able Jack Gettenby, a capable and meticulous worker. There's not a detail escaping him—Some 250 per - sone contribute directly to the broadcast. Canada -wide network comprises 37 stations. Announcer is Corey Thomson, with a fine feeot'a of a decade or more before the mic- rophone, His voice is well.known to movie-goers. Frequently heard on Movie Shorts. One of featured numbers on November 26th b'•oad- cast is the old favourite "Nola" pre. sented in a new novelty arrange- ment for orchestra -Time of the broadcast, — every Friday night at 10.00 o'clock E. S. T. Fruit, Vegetables Advised Dieting Foods, Filled With Vitamins Atid Proteins, Seen Essential Milk, fruit, and vegetables, filled with valuable vitamins and proteids, are the eoeen tial footle in any re- I dttclug thea, acc•ordIng to Dr. Shir- ley Wynne, f.nmer health commie - Muer of New York city, A sliutnting diet calls for 1,20o calories a day as against the 3,1110 calories consumed by the average eater, t'olleeving is the third of a series of daily reducing diets, Pre- pared by Dr, Wynne and pnblithed by the state of New York: Brt'akettett Coteries Small gl.tss of pineapple juice 100 Coffee (unlit instead of cream, no sugar) 25 Lunch: t ctt0 macaroni and cheese 1.50 .Broiled Wheat* (with lump ' butter) 00 2 large 'fresh plums or 1 slice or pineapple 50 1 glans' unlit 150 Dinner: Tomato juice 25 eletiilnit roving chicken salad with l3 tablespoon of may- onnaise 150 1 slime bread or toll - 11111 Steen pat of batter 50 0 ,;talks of aslmtnulgus with 1 let 'l teaspoonful of drawn butter 60 1 glass of mill` ,e 150 1 ,Alltel( Mee of tette 100 "1l tttiuta, 411(1 you love to flirt whey yon were young?" "I'm atftvtitl 1 did, dein';" "AIM were you ever penisll',l for it, mamma?t' "Cruelly, Clear. I married your father," C, N. ,R. Freight Strikes Auto At Vineland Throe Yeung Men Victims Lived In Welland and Girls In Thyroid ON PLEASURE DRIVE Car Was Tossed 150 Feet; Visibility Said To Se Good Vineland, Ont. N•w. 1s. 'I'h•• belies of six young peeeons' lay in a Beanteviile morgue Relay, toll ct Ulla of the wara't lel'et etllstiln;1 1te- cide)tts in the history of the Niegara peniu•suIa, Three young men and three girls died when their tae was serucl, 'by a speeding [rain, The dead: James Fisher, 20 d•r'Iver; Robert Colley, 37; Steven Set eh, 17, all of Welland, Ont.; Madge Rita Jordan, 15; Ruth Jan- ette Wright, 14; Sophia Nicol, 15, all of Thora•1d, Ont. The girle remained unideet.ifed several hours after the crash. Tltey were believed ,to have met the •o y ung men to Thorold and were ou a 'pleasure drive when their ,:lowly- moving automobile pulled into ibe Path of a 50.mtle-an-]tour tht•otgh freight an the Canacl;an National Railways crossing here last night. Railway and provincial con. stables joined to investigate the multiple tragedy, ,Five of the six occupants of young Fisher's car were killed when it was struck broadside and demolished, The sixth died en route to hospital, Boys Sea Cadets The young amen were members of a Sea Cadets troop in Welland, They were identified by relatives, jnt:t authorities remained ignorant for !tours Its to identity of the girl companions until, hearing they may have been Thorald girls, they asked the police there to check. Tltorald police got Iu touch with the parents of several young we - mon and finally traced the victims. Sorrowing families thus learned of the accident and the father of two of the girls and a brother of the third went to the Beantsville mort- uary of J. W, Buck end Sone to identify the girls, Those who made Atte sad journey were John Jordan and John Wright, fathers, and John, the brother of Sophia Nicol. A driver's permit in the name of Fisher led to identi- fication of the young men- The automobile, a 1931 sedan, wee re-• gisteeed in the name or Elsie Fisher, Fisher was found dying 20 feet front the pile of car wreckage. He died at nearby Jordan while being taken in a car to St, Catharines hospital, He worked at a Welland grocery stare and had been buying the machine 'from bis father on a weekly -instalment arrangement, Will Canada Be a World Leader Again IN CONROLLING VENEREAL DISEASES irp to 1931-32, In spite of any Ale- flciences which may be demonstrat- ed, Canada led the world In the field of Venereal Dieetese Control. This striking claim apps i';s to the current issue of the Canadian Piddle Health Journal It is trade by Dr, Gordon Bates, General Dir- ector of the +Special Treatuuut Clinic 01 Toronto General Hospital. The paper sates [hitt tete venereal disease problem was brought to public attention for the Rest time during the war. After outlining the situation in Great Britain, Dr. Bates points nut that in 1019 .The Donindon Government gave grant,- to ratnt,to the Provinces to the extent of $200,000 annually Resides enlist - dieing the Canadian Social Hygiene Council (known es the Health League of Canticle). The Canadian scheme" he rays, "was the flrot example of a Dentin - ion -wide n ide cnritpauet"n agahrs•t discuse in witch the Dominion Government and .the provincial governments eco. operated. Appropriately nottgh, 1.1 was inaugurated slntuiton.ou ly with Nie establishMeat of the Do- minion Department of Health under a Minister of Health," Tho beneficial retanlls are cited by Dr. Bates, 111 detail as palet r,f Canasta's leadership for twelve Yeats, 'Pl1,, Canadian selli`alta "in- cluded all the fuel ors necessary in a Co_mdineted plan. The Dominion Department had a venereal disease division for inspection and catmsu-]- ttttion, The Dominion Governtneut and all tete. Provinces were contra 1tnLing and co-operating. Valunlary effort was encouraged and given every scope, The importance 0f legishition and social work was recogn.izer, The reasttlts were evi- WEDNESDAY, la'OV, 1 11 1937 For steady volumes of clean, easily regulated heat, order a .ton of HAMC O. Puts summer mer L., warmth in every room, regardless of the weather. No dust, no smoke, no waste, less ash. Easy to handle, too—and easy on the budget! For prompt service, order from your local HAMC•O dealer —he deserves your fuel HAMILTON business. 5Y•PRODUCT COKE OVENS, LIMITED HAMILTON, CANADA Sold By: CRERAR & McDONALD S. F. DAVISON J. H. FEAR, Ethel INSIST O1ve4H14. 1EST COTE en in tie undreds of thoacau:ls treatments and in the reduce:: a of syr hilts inhospitals and other Meta ttutions. ' Leading clinicians lu 1931 eeriest] I that the progress had been remark- able bat that in order to completely control venereal diseases, the facili- ties should be greatly extended. However, the Government, instead of progressing, did the very op -'1 posite. It cancelled all grants to the provinces for the purpose of ate - silting in the control of venereal? diseases, The Division of Venereal !, Disease Control in the Dominion Department of Health was abolish- ed and the grant to the Canedian Social Hygiene Council, the official i voluntary association in this Held, I was withdrawn. Dr. Bates points out that education of the physician is necessary and Yet with the exception of a techni- cal publication by the Health League, now nutter revision, very 1lttle hater been done about it, "Var- ious other recommendations of the conference of clinicians'' be says, "have not been carried out: revel treatment is not available In most hospitals, Length o1 clinic !tours has not been inc'reas'ed es recom- mended. Most physicians in clinics are still working without adequate reumnerntion. I have heard 11, ruiners oe regional conferences of clinicians, nor of provincial cattier - eaves )tti tentes for that matter, \e,—eel disease propaganda and edtc:akin have mit been intensified ae 'nom - mended rather the reverse. Routine Wassei'lnann tests in hnep:tals air the eet=plion rather than the rule. There are many other reconnntei.cla- iIous which have not been carried ant, In allies of all which hag been atroolnplislted, the venereal disease coulee! plan, unnrgauized as i.Y is, has carried on to some extent be- cause of its own momentum, Be- cause there are clinics and laws, much continues to be done tie a rattthte,'' The public will agree with Dr. Bates that in the absence of vigorous leadership, momentum slacketts. We also believe the pub. lie will agree that Canada should reorganize its original tichcmn, with all its component parts in or. tier that this country might be re- ecs'tablielheul as a world leader it this imp, ottattt phase of pnhii- 11ea1111 PREVENTING A FIRE A ]halt was running very fa' -1 tip the street when a pclicetlutn wee vented hist frttalt `turtling the• road as vehicles approached. "What'e the hurry " said the constable, 'GFoilg to a fire?" "Well, 1101 exactly," was 111e re- ply. S was going 10 prevent one; the boss said thee's what he'd do If I was ;lase again, and 1 was hurrying to the office in time!'' Advice To Hunters (ifandtaulln. Expositor) A deer has 'four' legs, a guide has only "two." Count the legs on the deer you are aiming at if it has `two" legs, then aslc it politely i1 it is a deer. In it says "NO," look sharply and see if the deer is smok- ing a pipe. If so then it might NOT be a •deer. Cows, horses and mules also have "four'' legst, so before shooting look care'Pally—if the deer is hitched to a waggon, it might be a horse or a mnule. If le hats a bell on its neck, ft could_ be a cow. If it howls mournfully, that would be a "Big Bad :Wolf," 11 a hunter find's another haunter has mistaken him for a deer and is shouting at him, he should not baste timte e'aying "Ltsseu, guy—I Ilain.t no deer." Deer hnntera are very skeptical and they would mere- ly think the deer was lying, The best thing to do is stand quiet and make a noise like a carvery bird, A. • deer hunter would be ashamed to still a canary bled and so he would.. stop shooting, THE OLD STORY Wilkins: "Mat you ought to do toe your cold is take quin:lie," Murton: "I'm sorry, but Have are one hundred and fortyseveu cures I've promised to try before yours." NAMING THE BABY a — "What are you calling your now baby, Mrs, Smith " "Oh, we ,tbougltt we'd give 'tial a Biblical name. We called him.. 'Arald•" "Harold but 1 thought you. said you grave him a Biblical Dame?" "We did: "Ark, the ;Atvtld angels sing," LL ZI C.AX &SON.