The Brussels Post, 1938-4-27, Page 6Mr. & Mrs. Farmer
Feed The Best -- The Best Through Test
New Life Feeds
Are Good Feeds
1
New Life—Baby Chick Feed
New Life—Chick Starter
New Life—Growing Mash
New Life—Chick Developer
New Life—Hog Concentrate
New. Life—Hog Grower
NEW LIFE
Poultry Concentrates
and
Laying Mashes
Bran, Shorts
All Milkfeeds
Bread and
Pastry Flours
"Feed New Life Pig Feed"
Once Tried - - Always Used
SOLD BY— t, `.. r:.` 1. '.2C,
HARRY BOWLER
FLOUR AND FEED MERCHANT BRUSSELS, ONT.
TESTED RECIPES
Tomato Sauce
2 ens tomatoes
1 onion
1 a,blespoin flour
1 tablespoon butter
1/4 teaspoon salt
ee •teaspoon pepper
Skinner tomatoes„ onion, salt and
'pepper. Strain through a sieve;
add butter and flour mixed with a
little waster. Cook until smooth.
Baked Pork Tenderloin
1,a Ib, fat pork
4 large pork tenderloins.
1 cusp bailing water
2 talblespoons butter
1 teaspoon salt
teaspoon pepper.
1 teaspoon poetry seasoning
Wipe tendierloins :with damp
cloth, With s'har'p anlfe wake
deep pocket lengthwise in each
tenderloin (layijg tenderloin fiat
malting incision along the side).
Melt butter in water, add s'eas'onings
anal crasher crumbs; combining all
thoroughly and fill pockets. Cut
pork into long thin strips and lay
on top or tenderloins; place in ak.
ing pan and bake in moderate oven
of 375 degrees for 5 minutes, bast-
ing fres+uently.
Chicken Fricasse
1 chicken (at least 1 year old)
Butter
1 teaspoon lemon juice
% teaspoon celery salt
Flour
1 cup cream or milk
1 egg
1/4 teaspoon pepper
Synge, dressand wash chicken
Cut into pieces and wipe each piece
with damp cloth; sprinkle with salt
and pepper. Roll in flour and
brown in butter. Cover with boil -
Ing neuter and simmer for forty
ct=SNAPS410T CUIL
ENLARGEMENTS
Trimming and enlarging Improve a
picture. Both small and large picture
here were made from the same nega-
tive. Any pioture can be enlarged.
no SOME of your pictures include
1J too much — a lot of surplus
background and metertal at top, bot-
tom and sides that has little or noth-
ing to do with the eu,bjeet, and in-
jures the picture effect?
Don't doapalr. Such pietures can
be retrteved. Here's how pick out
the part you want, and halo just that
onlarged—to the size of the crlgi-
nal print, or even larger.
For example, .look at the picture
at the little, ,girl above, The boat
Wee the interesting part. 1'3eMdete
her hands 'were too alone to the
camera, and showed ep too largo
In the finished pioture. The Hegar
tive was "masked" in malting the
enlargement so that only the head
showed. Result: a much bettor pie-
tune.
When you gat a good picture, en-
large ti! Any good snap is better
when it's big. Lrnlat'ging "opens
tap" the details -lets you see inter -
aging Things you didn't see before.
And a large picture just naturally
has more appeal to the eye. Give
a person two pictures, equally geed,
and he will automatically look at
the larger one first. Moreover, he
will look et it longer.
Don't let email sleet or surplus
material handicap your pictures.
Any snapshot can be 'enlarged some -
What, and some, especially those
made on iino-gralned 11110, can be
increased many times in size, -Very
likely yeti halve -pictures In your
album right bow, that, if enlarged,
would .bo worth framing and hang•
frig In the home, Tee it, You may
dtseovor you're abetter stiapshOeter
'GAG 'YOU rtdtoitghal
180 dohri van iIddr
LIVEN_
cot 70149
CANADA-I933
}INS IR NG PROGRAM
FRIDAY 10 P.M, E'S'T'
STATION -- CBL
minutes. Remove .chicken and
reduce stock to 2 •cups. Melt 1
•tableepoon butter; add 2 table-
spoons' flour end seasonings; grad-
ually add broth and lemon juice,
stirring constantly, andcuak until
smooth. Add cream or milk
scalded and, •pour slowly over well..
beaten egg. Arrange chicken on
hot platter and pour hot sauce over
it, Garnish with toast points,
Tip Top Ginger Cake
94 cup butter or shortening
I/O cup molasses
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/u cup white sugar
2 eggs
11h_ cups, Pastry Hour
1. teaspoon ginger
' .cusp cold water
1 teaspoon soda
1 teaspoon cinnamon
Creams butter, or s'hortering, and
sugar; add beaten egg. 2 -combine
soda and molasses and add to mix-
ture No. 1. 3 -Sift flour with vinegar
cinnamon and salt and add, alter-
nately, with water, to mixture No.
2, 4 -Bake in moderate oven of
350 degrees for 35 minutes.
THE BRUSSELS POST
ly aarauged fo npe;nforvnance by the
"Canada 1938' 'orchestra, choir and
soloists. No other 'program has
ever renewed tills' 'policy consis-
tently just as no other program has
ever featured Canada through a
Roving Reporter,
L. S. 13, Shapiro will again be
heard frost the NB•0 Stiction in
New York with his news, and re-
views of the films and playe' on
131peetwev of interest to Canadians,
The orchestra and choir and the
soloists, Richard. Manning, Russ
Titns and Emiliawill eomnplete
the program with specially arranged
popular music including an. original
C'anadiau compoaittou,
T ornotoMaplcLea f s
Open at Home May5
Trifle
Stale cake
aerie
1 tablespoon white sugar
2 tablespoons powdered sugar
1 cup milk
2 eggs'
Flavouriing
' teaspoon salt
'Cut cake into slices tied arrange
layers of cake and fruit in buttered
caserole, having cake on top. Beat
egg yolks; add salt, white sugar,
milk and flavouring and pour over
cake and fruit. Let stand 15 minutes
then bake to lnoderate oven of 350
degrees until almost firm. Cover
with meringue of stiffly beaten egg
white and 2 tablespoons powdered
sugar, Bake in slow oven of 300
degrees until golden brown,
Dutch Apple Pudd ng
1 cup bunter
1 egg
1r': teapsooa salt
1/4 cup white auger
% cup milk
2 cups flour
32 teaspoons baking pr.wder
a6 teaspoon cinnamon
2 tablespoons brawn sugar
2 apples
Cream butter and sugar, acid well -
beaten egg. Stet flour with baking
powder and salt and add, alternate-
ly, with stink, to iiryt mixture. Pour
in greased pate Core apples, pare
and cut into eights and place 11
rows en batter, pre:,s'ng 'shanp
edges. into it, Sprinkle with brown
sugar, mixed with cinnamon.
Bake in moderate oven 31u degrees
for 30 to 40 minutes, Serve hot
with cream or pudding melee,
CANADA - 1938
Dan Howley has well balanced club
for lnternatiOnal League
campaign
13111 lerbanski, whose professional
baseball career stretching car the
past 10 years has. been confined 10
two Leagues, the International and
the National, was gossiping with a
number of baseball writers in a
Jersey 'City hotel recently ellen one
of she seethes. asked him what he
thought of the Toronto Maple
Leafs,
Bill is. not only a native of New
Jersey, but he is the new shortstop
of the Toronto team, and the five'
years he spent in the International
League before the Boston Braves
purchased, 111m from Montreal in
1931 Should qualify bile to give
something of an expert opinion on
on the calibre of the ShanghuessY
oireuit clubs.
"1 like 'em", reptred 13111. "I've
seen a lot o tball clubs in my time
and you can take it frpm ale that
Dan Bowley has' a good team this
year. And I'm not saying that just
because 111, on it. 11 is true that
we didn't win many ball games in
the South during the Sprit* • train-
ing series, but never fudge a team
on what it does in those exhib(0lan
games, Lven the Yankees were
getting knocked off in the South
this ,Spring. Howley was doing
some experimenting with his young
Pitchers and we were core concern-
ed about getting into condition then
in winning games that don't count,
Wait until the old bell rings on the
international League opening,
When the boys' start playing for
keeps that's the time you get a
real line on a team,"
This is qute a long speech for
eirbanski, The Perth Adbof resfident
takes his baseball eericusly and he
is noted for being one of the best
bustling ball players in the game.
He is the spark plug of the Leafs
and is &bowing the saute form that
made bim such a stand -out in the
international .League when Boston
bought frim.
But Howley 11315 a number of
other colorful and hustling players.
Jails Barns, nen' vest baseman,
"Flea" Clifton, secant baseman,
and several of the youngsters who
made last year's Leafs such a sen.
(talon In t11e first couple of months
of thei league season. Inc Gant-
tenbeln is playing brilliantly at
third, and Bobby Porter, Ted Pelee-
key and Mayo Snaith have clinched
the ontflelde jobs. They are Im-
proved players over last yes0'l
showing. Howley has uncovered a
couple of young pitchers who should
become popular favorites' with 'tile
fans In Walter Lan Pranoa0 and
George Klivak, Joe .Sullivan,
sterth5(13, one of four players
lloevley pmehased during the win-
ter menthe, will also make u. wel-
come addition to the mound sluff.
11 is the opinion of all lobo have
seen the Leafs, this' Spring, tial the
team Is ono of the Hest -balanced
11101 Toronto ham had in a number
y000110. Onr 01' two n 111111onal
D10 74,1•8 luny john the ctnb when 111e
Maier li 51)01 teams nut down to
the pleyer limit: a'0unt1 May 15.
The heats will open their home
season on May 5 atter a. trip
around 1110 sog1hern end of the
cirtvdl, They may not start off
as senealiorla11y ass Inst Year'e team,
which won its first 000el games,
but it by guaranteed not to rade In
,fury amts August when the going le
lougheet,
Toronto club officials arcs milking
11(g ((1119ullet011e for the opening
ugatnsl Jersey (11;y on Thursday.
May 5, and Maple Leaf Stadium
may hold a 10rger crowd than the
record one Chat lturned out on
Coronation flay last year to set an
011.1 hoe at:tendl5000 marts for that
field,
Moisten the nether sponge nasi
a toupee ti shame dry, tuns you will
find. 11 144 1'511111ent for relnoving
illi, dog Hair 01(1 rose fl'oli cloth.
Intel
'salter Bowles', ltoving ileporter
for "Canada 1938" will :peau trent
Montreal on Friday evening, April
29.th,
The voice of the Roving Radio
Reporter hoe been heard through-
out Canada from twenl7 odd points
in Cllnada during the past si5
1110111 i1E,', thus "Calmat) 1.935" has
been playing an huporlorn role in
focussing Canadian at(entioe on the
at'hievemenits and ambition% of ('nn-
11(3(1 and Canadians,
li,Lr, Howlett' visit to Montreal is
of general Internet ill tin( 110 will
speak far the fist time frown the
saes:o fn Montreal while "Catlttrlta .
1938" nrlesinates'. It will ba the
firs:l time., ho has had opportunity
eo see this %turtle, to learn just how
the complicated system of hoolt.038
tm' controlled and ha* will meat fro
t110 file,!: time most of the people
who have shared the pregrann wish
him elm's last Autumn,
Another outstanding feature of
this programs haw been the ripper -
(unity "Canada 103''" has given
('anatilan comensere of p1pa111r
een•gs an ollpol'tunity in 11505 their
works perj'nrnted before a national
mut er:me (lit nearly every brow).
cost an (015111a1 t•trrllposiimn 11y a
-('lutadtan eerammer lute been
eltoentt from isle largo :timber 44111).
netted Weekly end iia3 been special'
TELEPHONE T*L
WltlD1Vp2SDAY, APRIL 27th, 1838
S IN THE WATSON FAMILY
wen.ra;
"MY DAD
talk farther. ihan YOURS!"
When Donnie Watson's father greeted him
over the telephone from 500 miles away,
DIOmn3e wue.,ilmtpressed no end. He couldn't
resist boasting a bit to his next-door neigh-
bour and playmate.
Whenever you're called out of town, do as
Bob Watson does — telephone home. It
brings peace of mind at a trifling cost.
Reductions in telephone rates—local and long
distance — in 1935, '36 and '37 have effected
sayings to telephone users in Ontario and
Quebec of nearly are million dollars yearly.
O
can
ammk
EALIR
by Grant Fleming, M• D.
A HEALTH SERVICE OF
THE CANADIAN MEDICAL
ASSOCIATION AND LIFE
INSUP,ANCE COMPANIES
WHAT TO EAT TO BE HEALTHY
Number Four
Ever* individual requires to eat
a certain (111autite of vitamin C to
prevent scurvy. A lack of vitamin
C affects the miles and miles' of
capilliaries• throughout the body
The following foods give you v'i-
tenth: C: Oranges, lemons, and
grapefruit, tomatoes raw or factory
canned and most raw fruits and
vegetables.
V.nmin C is very readily destroy-
ed b0' heat. It is esa:eatial, there-
fore, that everyone take each day
some raw fruit or raw vegetables.
Canadian factory canned tomatoes
are an excellent source of vitamin
C� because the cooking is done with-
out expoeure to air.
The lank of vitamin 1) in De diet
eau5ee retests in children, soft
tones' and defective teeth,
The hollowing footle give •you
vitamin le. Cod liver oil, and other
110 oils he liqutld or c11311(le form.
egg yolk, and sunshine in summer,
As this food element is not ob-
tained in ordinary food's in adequate
emloumts, it is' absolutely essential
for every infant and child, and very
advisable for every adult, to utile
some itamtl1 D 'luring the wipe'
mouths—front October through to
Aril. One t.enspoontul of cod
liver oil gives yeti as much vitamin
D as 14 egg yolks or 1500 servings
of spinach. There are avail'ahle n
many parte of Canada specially
prepared milk and bread whch eon.
tale, vitamin D:
March has been said and written
in recent years' about the vitamins,
but mit all that one hears and roads'
about them ie true. boots faddists
and exploiters have toyed with the
vitamins extensively,
'i'hey have a very important part
to piny in normal diet for normal
p.copl0 and. if yell follow carefully
tea Information contained In: this
51351ee of ariie.es 00- "Whatto lvat
to be Healthy'' yeit will metre au-
Ih411,1c information and tweaked
advice on the. foods you Should. eat.
The next 11nticles 1t the series
will dent with minerals in ere diet,
Qmes'tlors conte :lug Health, nil -
(keeled to the Canadian Medical M-
saoelat9on, 184 .College Street, Toron-
to will he anerwered personally by
letter,
HOUSEHOLD HINTS
Wien y0tt are prepaying to mho
lemonade bent Om lemons and 7011
wi11 getmach mere juice from
them.
tp 1N s+
5(111 a row cloves to tit, vegetable
soup, and ago, 07 rattler taste what
an improvement it makes'.
w M a
lsn't i; the easiest thing In the
world to let mills burn on. the bot•
tt:m of the saucepan when you are
heating it? To avoid tide, Sprinkle
the bottom of the pan with grana -
lined; sugar. Let it get hot, Chen
pour in the milk,
-SMART
(By A. R, K.)
IT Two bright men put gas in
their tank, and drove away to rob a
bank, they knew it could be done;
-they knew jeer 151101 the thing
night pay, they'd e .udied how to
drive away, they also took a gun.
9 They 'mea'd retie on what they
got, and loaf when summer days
got hot, they dreaded not being old;
they'd lead a simple life of ease, and
do about just what they'd please, vo
south when it got cold,
it They had to shoot the banker
down, they made a rumpus in the
town, it was it wieked <ley; they
drove off lues its they'd mapped,
and sinew they hadn't yet been
trapped, they made a get -away.
They got a long way tram the
spot, they knew the trail was never'
hot, they had great wads of cash;
and neither one spent tune In toll,
anti So they had to spend their spoil,
to buy .them pinnies and Bash.
The bills they spent were
rather big, enougb to buy a fatted
pig, St took a lot of change; the
nem down at the corner o'bo'e, had
never seen 4110 like before, he
thought it rather strange,
11 The grocer told -the vUlaga 001,
acrd all at once the e11s0 got hot,
the robbers had no start; he topk
'hent to the village jail, and hold
them there refusing bail—two men
who were so smart,
Crate -Fattening Poultry
to crate or pen Keening poul-
try for market, the greasiest gains
in weight are made on the thinner,
under'tteveloped Miele that ordittar.
fly grade "C" for fleshing and fat If
solei straighe off the hinge, Such
birdh, 01)01,ld matte steady gains up
to three weeps feeding, If the birds
are in good shape and reasonably
fat when !placed in crates a shorter er
g' period may ]rr. used,
The average increase in weight
Obi normal orate feeding should, more
than Toy for the feed, The to.
e101t0011 ('0110040 01o11 11390100e13101
in grade is additional profit, Sone
ground grains, such as corn and
whom, are better than o11)11(s, but
any grains the farmer may have .
a's suitable. Snu111 and ummarkot.
able potatoes, emitted and mashed,
are eoanomear.] and add palatability
to any ration, They arse halls to
iiroanee white fat, MIR in any fore:
Ir. drsh•n11h'; whey may bo used if
:111( Is nes available; The nddiVlon
of mutton tallow or any annual fat
to the ration will increase Ibo pro.
pnrlltln oi' fat on 11111 11111site(j p,33'
011;15,