The Brussels Post, 1948-9-15, Page 6a
he 406e 0Ce
CHIN:Ir... COUNTRY -STYLE:
!fete's ::n easy Way to prepare a tasty, i..i4rty chick,:: hotter that
cut. "ant to h 111111: 111101.
One plump a-4 11.. frier. 1'epp:r.
isut<„t. Flour.
�.tl?
Bacon Fat.•
t :nea•urements are not given as they depend on tate size of
the ehitt.,n and the nnmhc•r of parts in which the hied is cut
taut the tideless into pieces which will snake generous servings.
Co,er e.ieb piece thoroughly with butter (o pastry !wish is an ideal
utensil for 'hi. job!. Sprinkle servings with salt and pepper, then dust
with hour.
lk,.rt :m .ddS:t Iio:t d iron -handled spider least -iron frying pan).
PenT ani, civet hemi fat to "fry” the chicken pieces, which are placed
in tile spider cut side down. Put the spider into a 50 degree oven
and HAKE for about one hour. We suggest you serve baked pepper
siout.lt halves and carrots and peas with this. Then treat the tinnily to
the New Caramel Cake.
CARAMEL CAKE
Thi: recipe fills a :', quart mold, which can be any shape you
want. .1 round nixing howl will do if no other mold is available.)
melt 00 caramel candy- squares in 5 cups milk over low heat. Soak
3 ent,lupes untlavored gelatin in 1 cup cold milk. Melt d tablespoons
butter in the top of a double boiler and blend in 7 tablespoons flour.
Stir in ::F,nly 1 cup cold milk, then the hot milk in which the caramels
are melted. Cook in double boiler until smooth and thick. add gelatin,
1 tablespoon vanilla and ',• teaspoon- salt. and stir until gelatin, is dis-
solved. C .nt to lukewarm.
Spread :!'= cups nut meat,.—English walnuts or pecans—or a mixture
of both --on a cookie sheet and toast in a 430 degree F. oven until
brown. IThis will take watching. Shake the cookie sheet often and
turn nuts over with a pancake turner so they will brown evenly.)
When they are cool, set slide a dozen or so perfect halves to decorate
the top of the mold and cut or break the rest into fairly large pieces
awl st:r t1 . i ht-„ the
Now line the lid's of the mold with lady fingers in a pattern
that suit: its shote. 1f you're using an oblong or square mold, put
lady lingers nu 1110 !nitwit: as well as on the -ides. Spread a thin
coating of s":'t:•ned Lute. -r on ti:e outside of the lady fingers and they
will stick to the mold wherever you place them. Spoon itt the pudding
being earcfttl not to disarrange t::e lady fingers, covet with wax paper
and store in the : rfr;:,c: _,tor mail set.
Before serving tap e i1' .;hipped cream and chocolate .ante,
C
Sensational! Make two-way Pat-
tern 42)7 as a shirtwaist dress,
again as blouse and skirt for ward-
robe of separates. New. Regency
coif .r. .'harp cuffs, easy skirt)
Thi pattern, easy to use, simple
to , .,, i. .1'•11 for tit. Includes
con. t:,'. .I instructions.
Pattern .., : •e in sizes 12,
14, 16, i l'•.:: : ie. Size 16, blouse,
23. y..trrls intra .kirt, 2j4 yards.
T-.'.'ENTY-FIVE CENTS
(25c, c, i.tamps cannot be
acccpte:! :ills pattern to Pox 1,
123--=1,th .street, New Toronto.
Print plainly SIZE, NAME, AD-
DRESS. STYLE NUMBER.
Cleaning Fluids—
Handle With Care
Not long ago a NOV Jersey wo-
man attempted to clean a pair of
gloves with an inflammable clean-
ing fluid near a lighted coal stove.
Two minutes later she was dead.
So were a neighbor's two little girls
who were visiting her. Her three
small sons, pulled from the flaming
wreckage of the home, died of burns
in an ambulance on the way to a
hospital.
In another instance a maid who
decided to clean several articles of
clothing with naptha forgot to
open the doors and windows of the
room in which she was working.
She was found on the floor shortly
afterward in a semi-conscious con-
dition and bleeding from a lacera-
tion of the scalp. Evidently she
had fallen and injured herself
when overcome by the fumes of
the cleaning fluid. Fortunately,
she recovered, although the head
injury disabled her for three
weeks.
These cases are not isolated in-
cidents. Similar ones happen re-
peatedly. They illustrate the dan-
ger of using solvents carelessly
round the home. Protection against
these organic solvents—the chem-
ists' name for many cleaning fluids
—demands a knowledge of their
hazards.
These hazards are of four kinds.
Some solvents are highly inflam-
mable, and all give off harmful
vapors. All can be injurious to the
skin, and all are poisonous if taken
internally.
Five types of organic solvents
are used in the home for cleaning
clothes, r u g s, upholstery a n d
leather; for thinning and removing
paints; and for dozens of other
purposes. The most common of
these solvents are:
1. Gasoline, naptha and benzine.
2. Turpentine.
3, Benzol (sometimes called ben-
zene; not to be confused with
benzine).
Two Comics—and a Prize Beauty—Betty jean Ferguson of Halifax is better known to hun-
dreds of thousands as "Miss Canada". While visiting the Canadian National Exhibition one
of her special thrills was a "buggy ride" with the famous comedy team Ole Olsen and Chick
Johnson. That's Olsen holding the reins, awhile Chick tries to persuade Betty Jean that
there's absolutely no danger ,,i anything- extraordinary happening.
4. Methyl and ethyl alcohol.
5. Carbon tetrachloride,
Care trust be taken, also, to
avoid breathing the vapors of or-
ganic solvents, because all the com-
mon ones are anesthetics, and some
may cause more or less serious
injury to internal organs if large
amounts of the vapor are inhaled
for a considerable period of time.
The most serious solvent hazard
is that of iuflaunmability. Accord-
ing to the National Fire Protection
Association, about 200 persons are
killed annually- and a thousand in-
jured in 20,000 tires caused by in-
flammable cleaning fluid: used in
American homes.
As far as inflammability is con-
cerned, carbon tetrachloride is 100
per cent safe, since it will not burn
and its vapors will not explode. In
fact, the liquid is an efficient and
widely -used fire extinguishing agent,
since it vaporizes on contact with
heat and smothers a fire.
Ethyl and methyl alcohol are in-
flammable solvents, somewhat more
so than turpentine but much less
inflammable than gasoline, benzine
and benzol. e.
Highly Inflammable
Gasoline and its related products
are so highly inflammable that
many states have regulations
gainst storing them in the home.
They give off highly inflammable
vapors which can flow in invisible
streams as far as 200 feet from
their source.
Where the inflammable solvents
are concerned the danger of fire is
greater inside the home than out-
side, since indoors there are more
sources of ignition for solvent
vapor's, such as stoves, furnaces,
electrical appliances, and the like.
Also there are more combustible
materials to spread a fire. Accord-
ingly, inflammable solvents should
be used out of door wherever pos-
sible.
Care must be exercised to• avoid
generating static electrical sparks
when pouring the solvents from
one metal container into another
or when rubbing cleaning fluid on
fabrics, leather or other articles to
be cleaned. By placing the pan or
basin in which the fluid is to be
used on the ground out of doors,
static electricity may be conducted
harmlessly off into the earth. Those
who tend to minimize the danger
of such static electrical sparks
might bear in mind that even the
tiny sparks generated by rubbing
a cat's fur have been 'known to
ignite explosive solvent vapors.
All the highly inflammable sol-
vents should be stored outdoors, hi
approved safety containers, and
only in small quantities.
Baby to Have Its Chance for Life --Twenty-two month old Pamela Lamphere was born with
a bladder deformity which threatened her life. When the baby's father, seed holding her
ffive, insisted 011 1111 operation, the mother --far left of picture --threatened to sue for livorQe,:
ut later mothers of children who have Undergone similar surgery convinced her that the.
child had a good chance of survival.
With t
le 'Movie ant Rath® F&&ks
By Grace
Ill commenting on the return of
"The Pause that Refreshes" pro-
gram to the ai , after its summer
layoff, The !dew York 'Times
showers some nice --and well-mer-
ited—compliments in the direction
of Percy Faith, Canadian orchestra.
leader. This is to say he, was orb
smelly a Canadian, although it be-
gins to loot: as if the bigger oppor-
tunities south of the border have
taken a first hold on hint.
* *
"Under the knowing hand of
Percy Faith, the programming for
the broadcast draws its subbstauce
largely from the enduring popular
favorites and selections currently
enjoying public approval," the re-
view says, in part. "Mr. Faith treats
each to the saute skilful. orchestra-
tion which brings out the richness
in a song without tamepriug with
it, melody."
* * *
Then the reviewer goes on to
make some remarks which will
strike. a receptive note in the hearts
of thousands who fairly detest the
over•Iengthy commercial "plugs"
which star so many of the pro-
grams tt•e hear.
"Not the least of the program's
virtues are its cotltutevcials, which
are exemplary for modesty in
length and tone ... In addition to
being fine entertainment (The
Pause That Refreshes) is a lesson
in good public relations and an
asset to broadcasting."
* * *
In the British -made filet entitled
"Cockpit" Harcourt Williams plays
the part of a priest whose hands
have been completely maimed and
fingers broken by torture in con-
centration camps in which he had
been confined. How he gets this
effect of maiming is rather interest-
ing, I think,
Before he went in front of the
cameras the make-up man would
apply to'tVilliains' hands a mixture
of plastic asd gelatine. This was
then covered with a coating of collo-
dion—which drew up the actor's
bands to such an extent that he was
unable to use a knife and fork while
it was on, and had to be fed.
* * *
Just in case you ever get into an
argument as' to wha. was the first
ntotion pciture ever produced in
Canada—or even if you don't —
here are the facts,
It was "Hiawatha" fileted at
Desbarats, Ontario, back in 1003
by Charles Urban, an American
from Chicago, who later did a lot
of cinema pioneering in Great Brit-
ain. The acting—or most of it any-
way—was done by Ojibway In-
dians, and the picture consisted of
some twenty scenes, and ran 825
feet in length.
* * *
They must have established some
sort of a record when they made
"Pour Fares West" in which Joel
7
'2,5
%."q en, ,.,
"Re says he's subject to chlt-
blalnsl"
111117n,11III;I(
Sharp
McCrea and Frances Dee are
featured. Although it is a typical
Western, with bank robbers, sheriffs,
posses and all "the fixin s" and al-
though there are guns all over the
place, not a single shot is fired. Near-
est anybody collies to getting
knocked off is when McCrea gets
bit by a rattlesnake; but in spite of
this the picture doesn't lack for ac-
tion.
* �, *
A small Nova Scotia fishing vill-
age is the setting for "Johnny Be-
linda" starring I.ew Ayres and
Jane Wyman—but whether it is
the real thing or a reasonable Holly-
wood facsimile I haven't heard. It's
said to be a very sincere and touch-
ing filth, with Ayres playing the
part of a young doctor who be-
friends a girl who is a deaf mute,
and who is being badly abused by a
brute of a father. Jane Wyman's
performance is being hailed as one
of the
knelt ever sere
ened—a
nd
some of the critics are already pre-
dicting an Academy Award for her
on the strength of it.
Real Hospitality But
Slightly Misplaced
A party of late delegates to the
recent .convention of the American
Library Association later went to
New York and visited various
points of interest in the metropoli-
tan area, including Lake Success.
When they got to New York, one
of them called an official of the
United Nations Secretariat and was
assured that they would indeed be
welcome, with the suggestion that
they come down .the next day.
When they arrived, according to
the New Yorker, they were met by
a young man who exhibited—as
they look back on it—astonishment
at their appearance but pulled him-
self together and graciously told
them, in an assured international
manner that arrangements had been
made for them to attend a connnit-
tee hearing on the status of Afri-
can natives and that, moreover, a
special pre -meeting briefing had
been scheduled for then.
Puzzled but flattered, they fol-
lowed hint into a chamber where
another nice young man gave them
an earnest lecture on the more im-
portant sociological and economic
aspects of life on the continent of
Africa, after which they were es-
corted to the committee ream
where they listened to an hour"or
two of advanced discussion on the
same subject matter.
The next day, the leaden of the
delegation called the original Secre-
tariat official and thanked hint, She
said that their reception had been
splendid and that she and her con-
freres felt very well informed on
a subject about which most librar-
ians know practically nothing, "Li-
brariann!" cried the man. "Good
heavens, l °weight you said Liber-
•
inns."
By Rev. R, Barclay Warren
Barnabas, A Good Man
Acts 4:36-37; 9:26-27; 11:22-26;
13:1-3,
Golden Text:—Ile was a good
man, and full of the Holy Ghost
and of faith,—Acts 11:2.1.
A man who has been preaching
for forty-five years said, "1f I were
starting out. again as a young man
I should !mach more of comfort
and encouragement." Joses, a Le-
vite from Cyprus, so excelled in
this type of ministry that the apost-
les surnamed hint Barnabas, which
means "the son of Consolation."
Banishes played an important
part in assisting Saul into the full-
time ministry. Saul carte to Jerusa-
lem to join the disciples there but he
was shunned, as they thought it
might be a trick to get on the in-
side and secure their death. But
Barnabas befriended him. Ile told
the apostles of Saul's conversion,'
he was then accepted as one of
them.
After the martyrdom of Stephen
the disciples were scattered but
they bore witness of Jesus. At
Antioch many believed and Barna-
bas was sent to that city. Then he
went to Tarsus and sought Saul,
and together they ministered there
a
fi
Aro you going lh u the functional 'npiddlo-
ago' period p oul lir to women (28.62 yea.)?
Does thin make you outtor from hot finches,
rool so nem* eh high-drumtired? Thanno try i ydla 1i1, Plnkhum'e Vegetable Cam -
pound toraliovosnabsymptomnl Pinithmn'S
Compound u no bus what Hoofers roll a
atomael,fo tonin offeett
INDIA E. PINKIIAIA'S COMPO N0
lit
TSSUI .37 -- 1948
A READER -has sent in an excel-
lent example of Miss Ellen Terry's
handwriting, asking me to make a
a brief analysis of
it, Miss Terry
w a s England's
most loved act-
ress and thrilled
many audiences
with her superb
perorntances until
1928.
The writing is
very clear and
there is little difficulty in reading
each letter. All t'•e loop letters are
open as in "e" and "1" and these are
indicative of frankness, truthfulness
and honesty, with a desire for fair
play and justice for all. The capital
letters are moderately high, show-
ing an independent nature, and are
not too tall, which would be an in-
dication of haughtiness.
The capital letter "E," the down-
stroke of the "y;' and the strong
understrokes are the outstanding in-
dications of Miss Terry's faith in
her ideals and sincere desire to at-
tain success. You will never find
heavy understrokes in the writing of
a weakling or a person who com-
plains about difficulties. Ellen Ter-
ry's success was partly due to her
ability to increase her determina-
tion to succeed when all seemed
hopeless. It is a good example of
courage, graciousness and love of
servirc.
.c99.
Foo a betel analysts al your char-
acter send a sample of handwriting,
with n stamped, self-addressed enve•
lope, to Ales S. Arnett, 123 -18th.
Street, New 7 pronto.
for a year. It was soon apparent
that Saul, now called Paul, was
the greater of the two sten. They
disagreed at the outset of the sec-
ond missionary journey with respect
to taking Marie. They parted, Bar-
nabas tatting Mark and Paul tatting
Silas. Each pair did good work.
Paul was the more eminent but
Barnabas helped him to get started,
Christian workers should always be
on the alert to find and encourage
others to work for God.
DOES
INDIGESTION
WALLOP YOU
BELOW THE BELT?
Help Your Forgotten "28" For The Kind Of
Relief That Helps Make You Rarin' To Go
More than hall of your digestion in done
below tho bolt—in your 28 feet of bowels.
80 when indigestion otrikeo, try something
that helps digestion in the otomnoh AND
below tho bolt.
What you may need is Carter'. Little Livor
Pill, to give needed help to that "forgotten
28 feet" of bowels.
Take one Carter's Little Liver rill hofor,
and one after meals. Take them according to
diraotiono. They hole wake up a larger Sow
of tho a main digestive juices in your stomach
AND bowels—help you digest what you have
oaten in Nature's own way.
Then most folks got rho kind of relief thee
k
makes you fool batter from your head to your
toes. Just bo sure you get the genuine Carter's
Little Livor Pitts from your drneni.t--35ei
F®,. RELIEF
OF PAINS OF
HEUMAUSN
The pain of rheumatism
is dreadful. But now you
can get relief : : . quick
sellef a a a prolonged relief with
INSTANTtNE1
Yes/ INsTaterntt is the thing to
take for common pains and aches .. :
for headaches ... for neuritic, neur-
algic or rheumatic pain. Or for the
aches and pains of colds. INsrmrrnts
contains three medically proven In-
gredients that act together to bring
relief from pain fast and most
important ... the relief festal
Get INSTANT=NID now.
st One
.
r
. tine
What's some over
me these days?
Often a woman becomes panicky
and gives way to fears and nerves
—when ng place in Cher system
aro taking p
And the unfortunate part is that
these dark dreads and fears may
cause a nervous breakdown . ,
needlessly!
Plenty of sleep, fresh air,
wholesome food and Dr. Chase's
Nerve Food will help to build up
your vitality and tone up the
Whole system --so that nerves
and hysteria are forgotten. Yes,
when you're in good shape
physically and mentally—with
no condition of "nerves" to mag-
nify the slightest change—you
can keep serene and happy right
through the most trying times.
So remember, at the first sign
of the fidgets, hysteria or nervous
doubts—start building yourself
up with Dr. Chase's Nerve E ood.
You'll rest better, look better,
feel better. Keep yourself in good
condition with this time -proven
remedy which has helped tl p-
sands of Canadian women, The
name "Dr. Chase
18 your aseuran' '.
Dr. Chase's
N5E FOOD
x0.9IVRY REP andENERGY
nrN„r�rdgl'ar: