The Brussels Post, 1943-2-17, Page 7ST
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I'VE FOUND A GRAND
WAY TO CORRECT
••MY CONSTIPATION I
• Here's the sensible, enjoyable
means that so many people take to
correct the cause of oonstipetion
due to lack of the right kind of
"bulk" in the diet: they cat ALL -
BRAN regularly!
This delicious cereal keeps thou-
sands regular naturally .. , stops
their trouble "before it starts" . .
eliminates their need of harsh pur-
gativea rrefie Try KKELLOGG'S at give .temporary
pALLL--
BRAN, in cereal or breakfast muf-
fins, denic plenty of water, and std
why it's called the "better way".
Ask your grocer for KELLOGG'S
ALL -BRAN today. In two conve-
nient sizes; and in individual serving
packages at restaurants. Made by
Kellogg's in London, Canada.
• SERIAL STORY
OF BR GHTNESS GONE
tlY HOLLY WATI'ERSON
BIRTHDAY PRESENT
CHAPTER XV
It was working out, Candace
thought happily, hi a way that
was almost too good to be true.
The big intrafraternity dance,
Martin's birthday and, best of all,
her transfer all. coning at once
like this! -
She had several days off before
she was to start at Good Samari-
tun,. They gave her a chance to
make arrangements with Mrs.
Prosser for a birthday supper
after the dance, and to do some
personal shopping,
She squandered . long -saved
money on a dress she felt he..
fitting to such an occasion. She
was exquisite in a pansy -purple
thing that clung in all 'the right
places and billowed frothily for
the rest. It did marvelous things
for her skin and hor fine eyes,
and she knew it.
Candace was pleased when, at
dinner; the solicitous waiter left
them alone. She sat back, smil-
ing at Martin, "What was it Peter
said he had to do?"
* * *
They lead planned to have din-
ner together, the three of thein,
and some girl Peter had asked;
• . but at the last minute Peter had
sent word that he couldn't make
it.
"Some case they've been fol-
lowing went bad," Martin said.
•"They're doing a transfusion."
"Tonight, of all nights," she
said, sighing a little. "'But, 'then,"
she added, "he doesn't get stuck
nearly as often as you do, at
that."
Martin stirred guiltily, resent-
fully. "That's all part of a doe-
tor'S life."
"Oh, I Know" Candace said
quickly, "I know! I didn't mean
to sound complaining." Martin
was so darned touchy these days!
She leaned forward a little.
"Martin," she said softly, "I have
a wbnderful surprise for you. A
wonderful present. We won't have
to be separated any more. Pve
gotten a transfer to Good Samari-
tan."
He didn't say anything. But he
didn't look moved, he looked star-
tled. First startled, and then
guarded. ' She saw, with a sick
shock, that he was displeased.
All her happiness, all her assur-
ance was abruptly stripped from
her. Dazed with disappointment,
she heard hersoif apologizing, "I
won't hang or to you, truly 1
won't. If you think it might be
embarrassing, it needn't be gen-
erally known that we're engaged.
I thought that 'with us both in
the same hospital, even though
we'll each be busy and won't have
much .time off, it will still be
something just to catch a glimpse
of each other occasionally—"
Then, when Martin still didn't
say anything, "You're not happy
about it? You're not pleased,'
Martin said carefully, "I'm sur-
prised, natttirally.' Nothing more.
But later, •when they wore in
a taxi bound for the dance, he
said abruptly, "Candace, there's
something you should know."
BACKACHE?
Look out for Trouble
With Your KIDNEYS
If your back aches or if you, have
disturbed steep, burnIhg or smarting, look
eat for trouble. Tide condition is a sure
sign that your kidneys are riot fully
ridding your blood of poisonous acids
and wastes. When the kidneys slow up,
wastes collect. Backache, dlzry spells+
puffy eyes and rheumatic pains may follow..
Your kidneys need help—and there is a
time -tried, proven way to help •them
known as GOLD MEDAL Haarlem 011
Capsules. These Capsules contain care-
fully measured quantities of that widely
known diuretic called butch Drops. You
will find their action fast and effective,
Be sure you get GOLD MSbAL Haarlem
011 Capsules. the genuine, and original
Dutch Drops --packed in Canada. Get a
40c package from your druggist. o
ISSUE No. 8-43
With a frightened sense of im-
pending doom she cried out sharp-
ly, "No!" Then she tried to light-
en that. "You sound so serious,
let's not be serious tonight—"
* * *
The evening was a -failure, No
amount of pretending could save
it, Peter didn't show up at all,
but she never noticed. Her mind
was a blank, sbe was sick with
this sense of foreboding.
She was relieved when Martin
finally, said savagely, "Let's get
out of here."
They went back to Mrs. Pros-
ser's. At the sight of the table
and the cake with its candles
waiting. to be lighted, Candace
shivered.
Martin said, trying to be
hearty., "Looks mighty swell,
chick. Your idea, I take it?" But
his . heartiness had. a hollow ring
and her own smile with which
she tried to answer him* telt
wooden.
Martin had felt her shiver.
"This is the damnedest damp
moldy. place," he said. A fire had
been laid and he applied a match
to the shavings and drew a riekety
chair close to the fireplace for
her.
When Martin no longer had
any excuse for fussing about, he
said finally, "Candace."
' It's coming now, she thought. -
Her shivering stopped, she sat
frozen in an icy calm.
-1 You remember Pete and:I told
you about that tea for the pros-
pective
rospective internes? You remember
we mentioned that girl, Faith
Hartshorne, the daughter of the
chairman of the board? I looked
at a dog of hers that was sick,
you remember that? Well, the girl
was grateful or something and, she
must have mentioned it to her
father and he was too and they
Phoned me one night and asked
ale to dinner."
* * *
Candace made a move as if to
speak but he said, "No, wait.
Wait until I've told you—I felt
1 couldn't refuse because after all
I wanted that appointment, Oh,
I know it sounds silly. But Good
Samaritan isn't like most hos-
pitals; pull counts a lot with the
appointments. You wouldn't know
about that." (Oh, wouldn't I, she
thought bitterly; she'd pulled
some strings of her own to be
near Martin;) "Anyway, Hart-
shorne is number one boy there,
and I felt I.couldn't afford to
have hint down on me. So 1
went."
He added abruptly, "I've been
seeing the girl occasionally since."
The hospital tea had been
months before. All • this time,
then—Candace said slowly, "And
you never told me, Martin?
Why?"
He shrugged impatiently. "Be-
cause I was afraid you'd get up-
set, I was afraid you'd think it
was important. And it wasn't."
It was important enough to tall
her now, thpugh - important
enough to have turned her gay
laughing Martin into • a guilty,
hostile stranger. . "But now?
Why are you telling me now?".
* * *
He had forgotten that Peter
had insisted on it; that was swal-
lowed up in this new and embar-
rassing .development. He pointed
out reasonably, "If you were to,
turn up at the hospital suddenly
like that, don't you see how it
would look? it mould look as
though I've been trying to put
something over—"
"Do you mean," she said, "do
you mean—you'vo never told her
about n1o, either?" •
He laughed bitterly, `Che :first
minute she was nice to me I Sup-
pose I should have warned her,.
(Don't.you go falling in love with
Site; I'm taken, That would have
]narked me down as a nice chump,
wouldn't it?"
Candace flushed resentfully.
"All these tenths since, though,"
she suggested; but he didn't an.
swer that. Sine persisted, "You'll
tell her now, won't you? You'll
go to her, tomorrow, and tell 'her_
about nit? ,About ---tui?"
Martin swore, "No," lie said
oltplosively: "Going to her, dra-
?natieally, like that— Suppose she
told lior. father? It might even
cost me lay appointment."'
"Why? . Why? Unless----" Sha
struggled with Stiff dry lips
against words that hated to come,
"--;-unless she's in love with you."
He didn't deny that she was in
love with '111m, "She's a kid," he
said. "She thinks a penniless in-
terne is 'romantic,'- In sixmonths
she'll be over it---" He sounded
bitter. •
She asked slowly, "And if she
isn't, Martin? If she isn't? Sup-
pose I help you to ,lie and cheat
a little longer and she still dosen't
`get over it,' what then?"
He didn't answer and she`
thought, I'm in competition with
his ambitions. He feels I'm in
the way. , . . Her ehin went up.
"Suppose on the other hand," she
said, "that I refused to be a party
to deceiving someone else as I've
been deceived. Suppose—that I
made it no longer necessary for.
you to lie and cheat. That I--
released
—released you."
Ile had flushed a deep, angry
red. "I'd have my brain exam-
ined if I wasn't glad. If I didn't
feel 1 was lucky to be free of a
jealous, nagging woman—" His
foot struck savagely at a log and
sent it crashing into the fire.
Candace felt as though she her-
self bad been kicked. A dizzying
wave of nausea swept over her.
When it had passed, she rose
slowly. "How nice for you then,"
she said, hocking him. "How
nice! Because you're free of Inc.
And so your career as a fashion-
able physician, providing this girl
doesn't 'get over it,' starts much
sooner, doesn't. it? And it starts
right at the top."
She would not allow him to ac-
company her, she shrank even •.
from letting him help her on with
her wrap.
And 'then she was alone in the
hallway outside and Peter's white
face was swimming -up to her
through a sick mist.
(Continued Next Week)
A Pill War,
This is a pill war, E. R. Noderer
writes in The Chicago' Tribune.
A soldier in the Solomons takes
eight pills daily if he is well; sick
or wounded, he takes more,
The correspondent traveling
with the troops starts off the clay
with a bracer of two poly -vitamin
eapsules designed to make the
digestive system believe bully
beef and hardtack are just what
the 'doctor .ordered.
At midday two salt tablets are
in older, and with the"evening
meal two five -grain quinine tab-
lets are taken. To purify the
river water, he says, we put a
•ehiorine pill into the canteen, fol-
lowed half an hour later by a.thio
Pellet (apparently some sort of.
sulphur •compound) to take away
the chlorine taste. I also have
sulfanilamide tablets to take if
wounded—two every five minutes
until twelve are taken, and an-
other type of sulfa pill for dys-
entery.
LACY PINEAPPLE SET41.7,
!_r
523
arum /tccieu
Handmade accessories add so
much to your home! Give beauty
And distinction to your buffet or
luncheon table -•-- with these ex-
quisite, lacy doilies. They aro in
'that favorite of all crochet de-
signs - the graceful pineapple
motif! Pattern 528 contains di-
rections for making doilies; illus-
trations of stitches; materials re-
quired.
Send twenty tents in • coins
(stamps cannot be eceoptoti) for
tills pattern to 'Wilson Needle-
craft Dept., Rogan .121, 78 Ade.
laide St. West, Toronto. Write
plainly pattern numb es, your
nerve and address.
Optical Glass
Production In
Canada Heavy
Precision Instruments Also
Made In Dominion
Until a year and a half ago.
Canada had never manufactured.
optical glass; nor were precision
instruments for war pu1'•poses
made 1n the Dominion. Research
Enterprises, a Government-owned
company, melted its 1!rst optical
glass in Tune,, 1941, and is now
producing .manly tllousa.11(1s - of
pounds of it a day,
Canada needed more optical
glass than eves before just at the
Hine, in 1039, nvheu its importation
from Germany stopped. Great Ell'
taln and the. United States, the
only two possible impellers left,
bad their hands full meeting their:
own needs. Therefore, Canada set
up • a Crown company which is
making history today in an intrl-
eate production field never before
entered upon in this country,
6,000 Workers Employed
Output of optical glass, however,
is by no means the full span of Re-
search Enterprises' activities. The
amazing instruments, this country
turns out include gun sights,' dial
sights, 'periscopes, range finders,
Bre-control devices and other work
on the secret list.
More than 6,000 workers are
employed in this crown company's
huge plant, 60 per cent. of whom
are technicians or highly,' skilled
workers—a higher percentage by
far than in the usual munitions
plants:
At the same time, in an old
garage building in Montreal, a
small concern is making test
tubes, ampules and other Biles of
medical glassware no longer avail-
able from the regular foreign sup-
ply sources. The work there is car-
ried on under the guidance of a
small group of highly skilled glass-
makers from Czecho.Slovakia, who
were brought to 'Canada after
Munich.
These Girls Hear
Big Secrets First
Handle Messages To and
From British. Battlefronts
Four of them were . on duty
when Romnntel's rout began, says.
a writer in The London Chronicle.
They had to keep the secret be-
fore the Cabinet was told and the
censors had decided on the re-
lease of the story.
These girls assist the Royal
Corps of Signals, and have been•
doing the job only four months.
They work in shifts throughout.
the 24 hours. Through their head-
quarters pass all communications
to and frons the War Office to
British troops, whereerer they
may be.
By special permission I visited
this secret H.Q. You go down a
wide cdnerete stairway through
gastight steel doors. 1t seems a
long time since you left daylight,
It is warm, cosy and air condi-
tioned, and the hum of a - dis-
tant dynamo fills the air. - The
girls sit in one long room at
chromium -edged control and
switch panels.
Wires from any secret radio
receiving posts are carried be-
low the street in steel -clad con-
duits to the signal room.
Cypher messages from Cairo
and the other battlefronts, re-
ceived on aerials at lonely sites,
are passed to this secret "sta-
tion.".
I found Jean, Margaret and
Kathleen on duty at their robot-
like apparatus.. Jean, who has a
brother in the North Africa
fighting, told ale they have tobe.
very aceturate.
"You see," she explained,
"wavelengths are changed at var-
ious flours of the day to ensure
secrecy, and good reception. and
switching have to be timed to a
second."
Margaret is chiefly concerned
with the reception of radioed
battle pictures. Not all of these
are for plsblication in the press.
Some are confidential pictures
of Axis tanks and' guns, aircraft
and ammtulition. There are direct
transmissions fn;031 Cairo to -,Lon-
don and New York.
'Margaretlhas a sweetheart in
Cairo who is on the radio "can-
nel" to her every day. •
"But I dare not talk to him,"
she said, "for this channel' is only
for the transmission of pictures."'
Small Boys Help
On English Farms
In some Ontario cities objection'
has been raised to the enlistment
of school pupils 111 farm work. In.
this connection the editor of The
Farmers Advocate has received an
interesting letter from H. J.
Purser who farms neat' Maiden-
head in England, lie says: "Would
it interest you to know that since
year visit about 50 small boys,
aged 10; to 14 years, have helped
ale, with my small staff, to has -
vest 250 tons of potatoes and 500
bons of mangers, all put, safely
into Clamps for tile' winter?".
mow YOUNG CANADIANS
CAN HELP TO WIN THE WAR
WE CAN GUY WAR
SAVINGS STAMPS AT
TNG GROCERY STORE NOP/ )—
- AND A WAR
WINO $TAMP
TOO, MR.G.ROWN
tOOK,MOTAER
1've Gor THE
WAR SAVINGS STAMP!
4
�tfyr
l .
' 'THATS SW5Lt,CNIt!5$11,
44* SAVE 16 STAMPS AND
YOU'LL GET A$5 CERTIFICATE
Eta h1O<E OF 101
TABLE TALKS
SADIE B. CHAMBERS
The Grain Field
Products made front grains
such as wheat, oats, rye, barley,
corn and others are known as cer-
eals.
Flour is one ofthecereal prod-
ucts and bread made from flour
is one of the main items in our
meals. Cereals and bread are the
cheapest foods in our diet. That
is why a generous amount is in-
cli.ded' in the literature prepared
and recommended by the Cana-
dian Red Cross.
The amount of food value we
get from bread and cereal in re-
turn for money depends on:
(a) the kind we buy
(b) the form in which we buy
it.
Both points are important, but
particularly the first one.
Refined cereals such as white
flour have had the most valuable
parts of the grain taken away.
• When we eat white bread we are
not getting the most health -giv-
ing parts of the .grain, Whole
grain products have Vitamin B
which is needed for good health
and growth, and iron for the
blood.
This is the reason doctors
recommend that everyone have at
least half whole wheat bread and
whole grain cereals in the diet.
The less money you have for food
the more whole wheat bread you
should buy. However, even if
you have unlimited money you •
should' still buy half whole grain
products. You can start today
buying better health for your
family by following the above
suggestions.
When the food budget is lim-
ited' it is cheaper to buy the cer-
eals • in bulls.
Even in the summer the chil-
dren need a dish of hot cereal at
breakfast. A certain amount of
care is required to produce_ a
tasty dish of .cereal.. Cereal that
is lumpy and has no salt ddes not
appeal to the child and may be
the cause of his dislike of this
nourishing food.
Following are general direc-
tions for cooking some of the
common cereals:
1. Lightly grease the pan (up-
per two inches) in which cereals
are to be cooked. This prevents
boiling over.
2. Have water boiling and add
salt.
3. Sprinkle cereal gradually
into the boiling water. Cook G
minutes.
4. Place in double boiler or
slightly larger saucepan filled
two-thirds full of boiling water,
Cereals may lie partly cooked
the night before. To prevent skin
forming cover with thin layer of.
oold water.
To save fuel cook cereal as
directed for 5 miuntes. Place
over boiling water, ,remove from
stove, wrap. up- well and put in
warm place.
All cereals may be cooked hi •
fireless cooker, '
Cracked wheat, whole brown
rice and other coarse cereals may
be soaked over night to reduce
cooking time and improve the
flavor. '
Next week — some cereal re-
cipes and Easy Graham lilted.
MIAs (il,0nthers welcomes (ler*0hnl
letter* MIA interested resider*. She
Is pleased to 'receive suggestions
Int topics for her eo111mn, Magi 11.'
vh r0Mily to listen to yoOr espei
peeves," I<*nhests 000 recipes .nr
speelat menus are In order. Address
sour letters to "Miss Sadie O. Chani.
eery -a West Adelaide Street, To.
youth," Send stomped Kelt-addressed
/0131050 it she wish a 18011.
Coventry, Eng., is to stook the
library of the now cruiser H.M.S.
Coventry:
"He That Killeth
With the Sword"
"Barbaric crimes," said Presi-
dent Roosevelt, must "meet with.
fearful retribution." The Arch-
bishop of York has just urged the
British .Government to make it
clear that "when the hour of de-
liverance comes retribution • will
be dealt out not only on the cold-
blooded and cowardly brutes who
order these massacres, but also
on the thousands of underlings
who appear to be joyfully and
gladly carrying out these cruel-
ties." An occasion might well be
taken to repeat and emphasize
the warning Mr. Eden gave in the
summer; by their support and
toleration "the German people ac-
cept ever-increasing responsibility
for the actions committed in their
name." The savagery which they
practice at the orders of the
Fuohrer has roused against them
invincible forces. Every state
every nation has learnt that there
can be no peace, no justice, no
civilization while the German
people worship their power cult.
The free world will not lay down
its arms till it has enforced the
law: "He that leadeth in cap-
tivity shall go . captive; he that
killeth with the sword must be
killed with the sword."
Ski Troops to Wear
Wolverine Parkas
Canadian ski troops will have
parkas trimmed with white wolv-
erine fur, because wolverine is the
only kind that does not become
frosted, the Munitions Depart-
ment said.
The white is to allow it to blend
with the snow. More than 20,000
parkas have been ordered.
Think of it .:.one of the fastest
pain reliefs known today for less
than 1f a tablet !
No need now to
suffer needlessly
from headaches,
neuritic pain, or
neuralgia. For to-
day, you can get
real Aspirin ..
one of the fastest
reliefs from pain
ever known ... for
less than one cent
a tablet! So get
this bargain today, See how Aspirin
goes to work almost instantly to
relieve a severe headache or,pain of
netuitis in minutes. Millions now use
it and heartily recommend it, At this
low price, why take anything else?
Get the big economy bottle of Aspirin
at your druggist's today,
Look for This Cross
Every tablet you buy must be stamped
"Bayer" in the form of a cross, or it
is NOT Aspirin. And don't letenyono
tell you it is. Aspirin
is made in Canada
and is the trademark
ef'The Bayer Company,
Limited.