The Brussels Post, 1938-3-9, Page 6THE .BRUSSELS POST
W1 DN12S1PAV, MARCH 9th, 30013
156
,DIERD or Pickled Canadian Fish is one
LL// of the most nourishing and economi-
cal foods that money can buy. It is rich in
proteins, and in the mineral elements that
build good health.
No matter where you live, your dealer can
secure Dried or Pickled Canadian Fish for
you. You can choose from such dried fish
as cod, pollock, hraddoek, hake, and cusk,
and from such pickled fish as herring,
mackerel, and alewives .. , every one of
which can be served in a variety of tasty
recipes.
Serve dried or pickled Canadian Fish to
your family often. It makes a welcome
change at meal -times ... and you will find
it very economical.
DEPARTMENT OF FISHERIES,
OTTAWA.
Department of Fisheries,
Ottawa
Please send me your free 32.page Booklet "Any
Day a Fish Day", containing 100 delightful and
economical Fish Recipes.
Name
Addrar
WD -4
WRITE
FOR FREE
BOOKLET
v2FPse
i `. >..n
01
ANY DAY A FISH DAX
Prepare Pretty
Plates
Pineapple Premeditated
Everyone luxe, an opportunity
these days to choose between treat
pineapple and canned fruit.
The two are by no means com-
pletely intertibnogeable; in the
case Of ela,Dad1 yes; but in the case
of a gelatine cliish, for instance—no.
There are some interesting pine-
aZxirt,e uses in the few ,dishes we
,have seleetect for your Interest here
,Pineapple, Omelette
3 tableetpoono fat or shortening
4 egg yolks
4 egg whites
1 tablespoon sugar
4 ;ta:b1eepone canned pineapple
ap111e juice
In teaspoon salt
"Grliehed Pineapple
Melt ahontening in pan, 'Beat egg
yoik'e, until len on -colored, .add sugar
,s'a2t and pineapple juice. Beat egg
vvhitels until stiff but not dry ani
foil into tato egg -yolk mixture. Pour
gently into pan,
Cook over law heat until a deli-
eate brown on the bottom and firm
Spread; crushed pinenalpl'e over halt
of the omelette belfore turning (roan
pan, and told. Serve at once.
COSTS LITTLE
Accomplishes Much
A two cent *tamp does'. lot fpr
very little mo
i tinay, but it would to.
quire thousands of two cent stamps
rind personal letters to make your
wend known. to ai many people ss
s ISe. investment in.our Chitsl6ed
Want Ads, •
•bmessr.r ra •s,e.,.
Pineapple Betty
% of medium-sized pineapple
1 cup stale cake crumbs
2 tablespoons butter
1e eue sugar
% cup boillintg waiter
Cut the pi'>'eapple in 't_inoh gbices
and. peel. Bo11 sugar and water five
minutes. ' Add pineapple to ,the
syrup and cook until tender. Butter
a baking dish and cover with cake
crumbs; place a layer of drained
pineatpple on crumbs; dot with
butter and add another layer of
crumbs and pineapple, Top, With a
layer of crumbs, Pdur juice of
piineapple over top and. bake 45
minutes,, :in a moderate oven, Serve
with light sauce, or whipped cream.
OOanned pineapple and syrup may
replace fresh pineapple, sugar and
water. Ilse 6 emcee of pineapple,)
Pineapple Loaf
'12 to 1 sup sugar
ria. cup water
4 egg yolks
1 cup butter
2 cups powdered auger
1 cup drained, crushed pineapple
4 egg whites
;fi teaspoon venula
2 taillespoona powdered sugar
Dissolve Sugar in water In the top
of a double boiletr, {lrattfaliy gin
the beaten egg yolks. Stir until
rho mixture is smoothly thickened,
Cool, ,Cream bother and 2 cups of
sugar until light and fluffy, Add
egg mixture and' pineapple. Add
vanilla and powdered sugar to the
stufflebeeten egg mixture. Line a
mould with lady-Rn+gera, sponge -
cake pieces', macaroons' etc, as de -
aired, and ,pour in the mixture, ChIlll
overnight 111 refeigerator. Serve
with whipped cream and Sherries,
Pineapple "Doughnuts"
Balcdng powder biscuit dough
1 tablespoon sugar
Pitreappie slices. (drained)
Whiplped cream
Sift 1 tatblegpoon angor with the
flour when preparing baking powder
Meagan,
Rea
1 Iti
our n
aver i
Y thin
sheet and, mat circles" just a little
larger than a slice of pineapple,
Make a .small hole in the centre of
each circle of dough, Place o slice
of pine'applie on routi.d of dough,
brush ,the edges' rrlth i stet' anti
cover with snot] er 011'91;0 et dough,
Preesw 1110 edger togertltot' firmly.
Bake 111 a loot oven, 450 degrees k',
for 10 to 20 spinus), Serve neat
whipped cream,
If desdredl.. serve plain, lenient
whipped crease, as an aeeomjpanl.
111011,1 for a meat d:eh,
Hydro To Become
Available To
2 Subscribers a Mile
Provincial Seorctary ,Nixon fore,
cast in eo address receetly that "as
revenues permit" the Onr'urio gov-
ernanent•homed to revise the present
• "three &alba'cribere a mile" provision
for intimi begird s .vice. The gov-
ernment, he said, would absorb the
extra cost and re:•vlca would be
available where .there were only two
subscribers.
The provincial secretary's, +brief
hydro reference cam's at the end of
an address, defending $be govern-
ment's% proposed compulsory milk
pasteurization measure, before the
Ontario Concentra:cd Milk Produc-
er's, Association and .the Ontario
Whole Milk Produces' League, He
'stroke In the abeeree of Premier
Hepburn, who had suffered a re-
currence of bronchial trouble.
Mr. Nixon promised regulations
under the compulsory milk pasteir-
iza.tiom, measure, to be introduced at
this legislature 000L on• "would not
be unduly onerous and ,plenty of
time would be allowed In 'which
they can he earned out," He added
"No undue expense will be imposed
on any one.
by Grant Fleming, M. D.
A HEALTH uERVICE OF
THE CANADIAN MEDICAL
ASSOCIATION AND LIFE
INSURANCE COMPANIES
APPENDICITIS
In• one year appentllcdbls wee re-
epousibte for over fourteen hundred
deaths in Canada, more .People died
from appendicitis alone tban From
•tyiphoid Fever, measles., starlet fev-
er, whooping -cough 505 diphtheria
all put togeeber. T:atfic accidents
are of much too frequent occurrence
but the fatalities alls'ng out of such
accidents are teen; than those due
to appendicitis,
The City of Philadc:'phia hes giv-
en particular attontr'cn to this disc
ease. For five consecutive Years',
a close etude has been made of all
aPPendioitis deethE occurring in
that city in order to determine the
fathers which centelbeted to the
fatal outcome. At the same time,
the Deparihment of Public Health
carried on an educe:tonal campaign
Ib the hope of impro:a'ng conditions.
We should learn Dram the exper.
fence of Fbiladde'l, h a in order that
we may profit by it, and so the find,
Inge of the Philadelphia study are
presented to our readers.
Patients admitted to hospital with-
in
ithin twenty-four hours of the onset of
symptoms had a mortality of less
than 2 par cent.; Ixtween twenty-
four and forty-eight hours, the mor-
tality rose to over 4 per eeut.;
when the delay was between forty-
eight and setventy.two hours, it was
nearly 6 per cent; after seventy.
two howl*, it reached over 8 per
cent. From these Ileums summar-
izing the experience of a large city
for five years, it is shown so ciearr,
ly that everyone may undens'tand
that the percentage of deaths rises
in ratio to the delay in securing
proper treatment,
There were over 18,000 cases
studied. Of Mee total, ap.proxena.te-
ly 3,000 did net have a laxative and
1 In 57 died; over 5,000 were given a
laxa.tdve and 1 in 18 died; 725 bad
more than one laxative and 1 In 9
died, Those who read these figures
will surely never forget that the
giving of laxatives to mut, woman
or child who has a pain in the abdo-
men Is the most dangerous, thing
which, c•ln be done,
When there is a pain in the ab-
domen nothing should be taken, by
mouth, anti, above all, never a taxa -
Pain which per:s,!ete' le meal.
ly serious, and the sooner the pan
rent Is under proper care the better,
because 1f the condition is apOlend'i-
cittls
, dela.
Y is dangerous, sae kms
been clenity shown by the. 1Pt111a-
de0phla experience,
Questioua, Can,cerning 1lealth, ad-
dressed to the Calladdan, 114edideo1
Atssooiartlon, 1.84 Collage Street, To- 1
ren:to, will be a0000rred pel'sonally t
by letter, x t
(MERE MAN DISCUSSES
Qi,J,ESTION OF MAEKUP
Says There's a SUbtle ,Distinction
Between Being "Stared At" And
1'1-ooked At" ,
Two or three weeks ago et the
golf el eb, writes Adlrlan Ilam in the
ilk Item t.otidou Dully Mali, '1 over-
heard a malt 059' seol•nRwlily:
"Good between, jt181t look at thee
girl! Rouge and lipsltlok and red
na110 complete, Wlly o11 ea)"th dose
she coupe on to a golf couree Into
that?"
And someone eine said, with a
quiet chuckle: "Well, anyway, she
playa a rattling good game."
Fresh and Healthy
Then a third voice jellied !n waltz:
"Oh,she's all right, just llama
much sense about makeup, tt1Wi's' all
knee (that was 'me) ought, to intro..
duce her to his wife, She is a clew•
er woman, if you like, always looks
fresh and healthy outin elle open
and yet in the evening manages to
change herself completely."
Wee, I cam tell you, 1 positively
glowed with pride. Of course, I had
vaguely noticed tills about Celia
before, hut, now came to think
about it . .
The older generateon says' desdainr
fully; Men ]late a girl to put ell
that stuff on her face," and a let of
men join In the chorus.
But do they bate it really?
Personally, I'd hate my wife to he
stared al, but 1 like her to be look-
ed
ooked at! That's a subtle distinction,
if yon like, But, iuterupited, 1t
means that I would not like to see
het with scarlet lips and nails, dyed
or bleached, ]lair, and painted on
eyebrows.
"Women of the World"
What I do like is' to see Celia
looking like a "woman of the world"
—as though she had no ma,keeup on
a,. all, yet with her complexion look-
ing too good to be true to nature. I
like the asllaothnesei of powdered
e'en—a math surface, I'm told it's
.called --and definitely, and a little
defiantly, I like 11petick.
.I11 confess that I have two weak-
nesses' where women's looks are
concerned. I like a perfectly cut,
brushed and set head of 'lair, with.
out a single straggling end (most
women seem to achieve this now),
and even more I like perfectly kept
hands.
Best Pupils -Sure
To Be Yes Men
Adult Life of the Child Who
Was "Teacher's Pet" Is
Certain To BeThorny
,
The adult life of the child, who
always gets, A's' In school may de-
velop into anything but a bed of
roses.
such was the conclusion that
£ane peychologis4 and ed'uca+tor•s
disclosed in comment on a recent
statement by 5I.4ss• Etat An.chester,
kindergarten superintendent In
Philadelphia, who said:
"We must realize the seriousness
of a child's always, getting A's. He
haw a right to get a D once 4n a
while. It w111 do him good, for life
lan't going to, strew A's. all round
himr,"
Frozen Vegetables
Aspargus, beans•, corn, peas, and
spinach were the principal prod'ucis
in the frozen vegetable paok in
Canada in. 1037. Like the Canad:an
frozen fruit pack, they are finding
a read,., market in the .hotel and
res,taunant trade, but, as they re -
duct in any way; rather tt should
improve 1::, whatever the quality of
the milk may be. The question of
quire a telmpw'a.tur••e of narout zero,
they cannot be offered to the geu•er-
al public until proper storage Facil•
ittes, are deli table in the retail
trade,
HOUSEHOLD HINTS
Did' you ever ---try using adhesive
tape for mending parohnient paper
lamp shares'?
* a 1
Or if the cover hoe dime off 0
hook 1190 tavin rows of overlapping
sticky plaster 411111. the book and cov-
er will he companion* again,
M * *
Or try t'h'e tape for mending a
tear in your glove, placing it on the
wrong side. It weelt , equally well
on a sle tt belt, a 51100 bulcktle or to
mend the hashes of handbags'.
* 0 *
Oh if you, want to protect mien -
nem of foods try putting them In
ins made 1140•tigh't With rdheolve
ape,
Orange Pekoe
LATEA
rr
Housing Plan
Under Way
Montreal, Maxon 9'—' the first
step it a nation-wide movement to
secure industrial andb public support
for t'he Domtndon I• ouedng Aet and
to ,stimulate building of low -costs
readdences, Building Prodnclts Ltmdi•
ed th18 'week atanouneed a Bee
Smell Home Plan dor Canadian
budlde,,s,
tesla d' the new housing plan, time
Mose complete and conuprebensdve
ever designed In Cana';,, aro the
full vesotlnces• ,of the c :"ra• y^,til
offices, and faotonies 4: „r.: fax
to Winnipeg. Believing that It is
perfonaufng distinct social and seen.
antic functions, the emnpany has
alieetted to the plan the largest ad-
vertising appropriation in the tom-
Pony's history and IS 'prepared to
carry the story of low-cost housing
through the, newsl,rapers, of Canada.
Early th1* week lee Company's
sales convention In Montreal heard
II. M. More, assistant r•'ecretary of
the Sun Life Asr:urarier Company
state that low-cost lInu.::ng is the
Crying need of Onitadla today, Im-
mediately following this statement
the company went on record with
its plan to meet this' need. Arch!.
tetteero have been enliployed in Mont
read, the Marj,tlme Provinces' and
Toronto„ .to prepare pinna and' sPeCl-
fioatione for ]louses' of different
design ilrtut can be 'built ,any3Nherfl
in ,Oanada for $3,000 to $3,500. Three
of those plans have been prepared
and ,the company 4e making 'them
available through He dealers eo
nrosmootdve builders', These Pians
include not only +the perspective
and floor piens but complete detail-
ed plans end apeclflcaitlons so that
they can be used by •contra.Ctore in
•tiro simalles't and most remote Dom-
mun'lties, While designed to work
In with the Donnel:ion Housing Adt,
the Smell House Plan is not contfln-
ed to opelcttione under thea legisla-
tion. The company ,will also en-
courage speculative builders' or
home owners who are not in need
of financing,
TOWN OF FERGUS TO
SELL TRAFFIC LIGHTS
Fergus Council, elected little
more than a month ago 'when the
1937 b.dy was turned completely
out of oftce, took steps • lately to
offer the municipal (rump truck for
sale. Last year's council mixt-has
ed the machine at a cost of 4400 to
carry out work previously done by
teams, bleed at $5.00 a day.
eSNAPSUIOT CUIL
memory Pictures of Home
Hr
In after years. They are easy t
ome "Interiors" less photographed
o make If time exposure Is used,
than most subjects, become precious
RARti is the person of middle age
who retains a good memory -
image of the home or homes In which
he Iived as a child, and who does not
wish he could.
How the exterior of the bouse
looked is not so difficult to recall,
but once -familiar details of living
rooms, how the furniture was ar-
ranged, what pictures were on the
walls, the appearance of the fire-
place, how the stairway looked, how
the windows were curtained, grow
vague with the passing years—un-
less photographs of these rooms
taken at the Limo are available to
refresh the memory.
Chances are, in the case of most
grown-ups of middle age and older,
no such pictures were taken. But in
these days when there is a Camera
in almost every household, what a
pity, really, to let youngsters grow
up and leave home, without any pie -
tures ever being taken of the living
rooms and bedrooms in which they
spent so many of their childhood
hours! It is probably because such
pictures can be made at almost any
time that we are apt to postpone
taking them. Since they can now be
made easily with any camera, by
artificial light at night, as well as
by daylight, why, with all this time
available should d
wean Inger erne
0
Y g neg-
lect to take them? Here are a few
'ilnts on taking views of interiors:
Stade no movement of the subject
made to be considered, time ex-
poeures are best, whether by day-
light or artificial light, the time de-
pending, of course, on the tiim used,
the amount of light and the stop
opening in the lens,
A small stop must usually be used
in order to obtain sharp images of
objects at various .distances from
the camera.
Leave all the furniture in its usual
place, as far as possible, and take
Pictures from several viewpoints.
Do not crowd a lot, of furniture in
a small space just to show it off. It
will not be the natural arrangement
that you want to remember. Leave
clear floor space in the foreground.
This may require the removal of a
nearby piece of furniture for some
views. Watch out for distracting re-
flections from mirrors or pictures.
Have the camera on a tripod or
other rigid support, and placed low
enough so that more of the floor thaw
the ceiling can be seen in the finder.
If the whole area of the picture is
not clear in the Finder because of
dark tones and walla, have someone
hold a light near the wall until yeti
have fixed the view exactly.
For interiors taken by daylight
coming from only one window, are -
floater (of white cloth or paper the
Mee of a window shade) will in-
crease the illumination of the cor-
ners of the room. Floodlight bulbs
may also be used in conjunction with
daylight to considerable advantage,
Interiors at night may be taken at
limo"
with the illumination of three
or four ordinary electric light bulbs,
but the inexpensive floodlight bulbs
now available for indoor picture tak-
ing will serve the purpose better.
Cate should be taken with either
kind that an unshaded bulb is not
result,
inolttdedin the picture or "fog" will
114 /MN VAN GUILDER. '