Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 2 Mar 1914, p. 11

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é | 'well with a fittle ore. and Le perfect "1 ry *atisfa Yo: £0 your families." ¢ and at hd same ime acauire app which is perhaps not to; be among their native qualities. Be So far therh bag béen orost abn athaty. dhe audiembes Mr Boltels. ili Show: ' They ity of those sthose hwomen, deepest Tnterest in Mr, lle stations. 5 re «i FMeat and How tol Bay subject of the fimt part of t of pictures api by. réiparks by Mr. Bolte. Ti tiest shiogw so Amtaaculate bu iniwhiloh Mw Bolte. clothed 4 is engaged in aerving a soc customers and in cutting up 1 kifids of meat into steaks, chicfos, roasts, && While: these rpels are {being run off Mr. Bolte stands on # platform and tells the audience a} fibout the verious cuts of mest, the pre: fant prices, | the nutritive valoe of the vif ious cuts) and the reason why rhe choic sn ones are| "0 expensive. ed toable. with the prio to-fay," says Mr. Bolte ln Me Rolte in she picture cu "toth and Wind quarters of beet separates a whole sheep lute suftabie for die Tider. "id 'doc. thie general pHoe of meat bis but. that in _sddition to this ne redsion of we various) | ¥ mests y ee oe | ig The or deftly Te - parts only that gone up oy yu oor aw And it is Sxpensive; * she 'admitted. | of Living Problem oy for igh Font hd twenty dons, cheaperieits when she next went market " Chit world cook just ax ine. . learning thingd 1 never #hont said. The pictures glick along and the veal wi weie warried the only meat I knew) Mer. Bolte: pala oul the pictured Mr Bolte in the very act am snrely {knew before," ashe "Helore) abiput were the steaks that we used to 3! but} of weighing ont. # cot when wé went to the restaurants. | piece of beef Thich he declares is shoulder [pever knew how much they cost. plug. {shen 1 tried to buy tye Just about as delicious a piece of afer we were mn arried and to prepare ; yon can get if you know Low to; them st home I disé overed that meat . ang it is onl y waa a just as good ones very expensive i I never ty or eighteen cdaln a pound: accords fev mn hestd of these cheaper meats and ar Sow "Tantonutle 3 neighbortiood wouldn't hava [Tht from now on I am going te buy pot I" the picture cuts off [yaast, shoulder blade, shoulder plug and ee of beef under the eager {short ribs. 1f I can get such good meat housewives inthe audience. for fifteen cents a pound it will mean Mr. Bolte, "twelve everything in cutting down our house es only ten cents, hold bills." ji§00d dishes can be made |' Iu sddition to the pictures in which Mr, in the audience; Whaitd be used for * meat dishes there are known what to ask for. Bolte is showing the cuts of meat t the "movie" manager became par jinkivk gonp 'are shown, such as shank (FV Tite in her case. the othertbones and hock ends, which range from " confessed at this poin: that never dn six {0 ten cents a pound. 'she realized that there were! After the buying part of the econom- Of "beef in the world than ical housewife's programme has iriatu, tenderloin, porterhouse and Del {folly jHlusteated by the moving pictures FIER OS "Sty meat Bi} © sometimes comes fo $8 a week, and John's salary is oniy $22." Mr. Bolte. gasped at this plece of in- formation, which instead of gratifying his to} pay the less desirable ™ meat." The clidice cits" are' Iii everybody wante them. © Cou the old law of supply and dem in and you housewives haved thirty cents & pound. for poy ePhouse steak and forty cents for tender in, But you keep right. off paying it aul' from- bling abotit fhe sont 'of mest wher}. it you only 'wanted tdi ¥ike the trou fu. you eduently steps to' pay ofessiongl 'feeling as a butcher only flderved to ingite him to greater efforts 10 help reduce the cost of living. + Bo impressed was the little bride by the opportunities. for acquiring which would help John out in carrying his weekly "Burden of bills that as the pletired Mr. Bolte severed the portions of mest ome from another with a magical deftness she sought feverishly to make sketches of the pieces in her little note knowledge book, 50 as to be better able fo select the | Onox. | Blind. Pe (From our New York dogs LL) UGAUSE for a dittle while sbi | teal: blind | fw and deprivations whith the mit codore for § lifetime, Mrs. B, Woodsals, & Bédatitul young" wiiter, is devoting a large part of h and enérgy to working in the inter bHad men and women. Especially waite her pen for their benefit. time | nit of 8 she | Wl of | lady of the Lighthouse'l "are vi. made over: Bf Ler tor the '§ ight f house" headquarters of the New} York ASdcciation for. the Blind. in East SFifty- street. x "1 uad glways been interested | for the thliud~ said Mrs. Woods yonr co ti who! ecatied Yi at her tbme, 3 Ne. 49 West Bad "but it was when 'I waa deprived « for wix month that I came to the #i04 1 must do sumething more f. than I had ever dove. Itiwas au bl also that I came fabs a \ : real published Wolonle, p work off to wm her! venue, 1 ¢ sight ronclu- ' them fz wy author | 1 Bova -- totally deaf dnd in RL {8 abeut { who read the book will become much more! Winifred interested in work for blind persons thal Lighthouse, {still farther if money encugh can be SUp-| the print for the blind myself. the author's profits of liek! latest pues Mrs. Woodruff Devotes. Profits of Her Latest Book 4 da Boy 'and shows how Le was able,a woman, the first faculty that I re to'be happy and active in spite of his af- egvered was the ability to speak, then in a led by the 'Lighthouse,' I hope that hose] it was six onthe Setors r cduld see. Mis Holt, the secretary of fhe) used to send some of the | thy have ever been and -will be aronsed | plind persous over to read to me because to the opportunity for benefiting then! § had not strength enough fo learn to read plied to enlarge the work of the 'Light-| «| jiked these hlind women who came to tead té me, bringing their own books "After all, "i. 1 had vot myself been {with tiem, of course. I felt great trust stricken blind 1 would perhaps never have! in them and there were so many things bad this opportunity te » to. "help others so afflicted. 1 bad writ- {afraid aftor 1 was stricken blind that it n my first book withodt any one's knowl nv ¢ me comfort to have them there, The | oo and concebled it in a bureau drawer. most poignant feeling that I had during! Mot 'even my husband knew 'that I Idwd {my blindgess was. that of terror, ynrea- written it. Perkiaps ¥ never would Rave bine JSerkop of everything and every-| had the courage te show if to any one my- body. This ig frequently cliaracteristie] self. But while 1 way blind iy husbandlof blind persons dantil they grow uséd to fognd it in the drawer, read it and|those ith whom they come in contact. | thought it was worth Publishing. He sent Next after the sense. of fear I suffered | HE to a » publistieh, ad it was accepted. ; from a keen sense of sbnermality. 1 do) i X 'f enough to hea + dt believe there is anything which makes! t 1 was a real a; persone feel so abnormal. That is one itely Tesolved Foret {lie* reasous why the blind should not Toake it renders! ie seg reat 4, They should as far as To, Feet ¢ thei apart in-any way from others is| years ago that g foes fed ig and suddenly different from the masses of mankind, Linpfoctonate. because, it accentuates. their A form uf own tiwidity and painful sense of being "As 1 lay 'n the darkness I thought out; ble to Boek es As © lay there| the buck: whith J wanted to write for the avery one fib gue wis undouscious! worl blind, but I did not dictate it to my bus | -y wind wis 'perf ttiy clear. Phesently band as I wys anxious to write it myself | [ "optrdion was, geflormed on wh, which As 1 bad been assired that my sight waa entirely eau Naturally, belog| would later be restored I resolved to wait) been" | the of meat Leh a hook! and so many persons of which I. was}, pared with in elficks « preparation the same manner. nd shoulder plugs such of these cheaper { so that they will be {illustrated {i | the skill in the cuts palatable is Even] ure pre-| "movie" . | kitchen that every one in the aidignes jgfammen, | lee . al.Thix « € Although' te mia "tention of the butcher "movies" is to Sive practionl ai' to the suffering housewife Wie romance and poetry of the' 'de Dave not been- omitted rom thle' unig came to be is explained by Mr. Bolte 4s the kuight of the carving Enlfel the act, of cuttidg $e Goking thee Bal cacies flits by om the' sefben: That the © misrketing of every day is reminiscent of the picturesque days when kings sud reir knighps eld their banquets fu the halls of mediaeval casties is shown, says Mr, Bolte, 'by the Very name of some of the ¢tth 'off tasdt: The sirloin steak, Zor {natines, came by its Dbawe in the fifteenth century helt » French and an English king held a won derful banquet on the conclusion of @ seties of wars, and a 'toast loin was. | brought in and put on tat OF £44 Ta = The royal banqueters fell to at once and were greatly pleased with the viand. | Oue of the royalties found the dish se | worthy that he summoned the head servi tor apd said :-- "What is the excellent dish that you bave served us?" "That, Your Majesty, ia called the loin replied the servant. "By our halidame " then exclaimed the King, "so noble a viand shall mot £0 un rewarded. Hereby do we knight thee 'Sir Loin" "That's how the sirloin was christened, explained Mr. Bolte. The origin of roast pork Iv Wise Sloel dated for the bemefit of the Olnclnnati housewives, the literary version of this epoch in human affairs being that when a fire occurred in whick the denizens of a pig sty were burned to a crisp the owner, lamenting his loss, by chanee stuck inte his mouth a finger which had come inte contact with poor incinerated piggy. "Whereupon he drew his finger out of bis mouth and, running té the spot where the remains of his' piglets lay, he plunged his finger in again and then repeated the process of putting the said digit into his mouth. ' "Um-mm-mm" be said, which meant that. be had never before tasted anything so delicious. From that moment the cruel habit of burning piggies became umiversal in that neighborhood until finally the scientific meaning of the delicious results struck the residents all of a sudden and they set about preparing roast pork for themselves in a more rational manner. pleels decided! aud enthus fo reach che sti with the new ways of cooking the Mr. housewives wait ter Bolte meats which the pictured their home kit us. before experiment has shown them. x Tommn---- VALUABLE HINTS ON HEALTH grip we have a highly infectious all-, r the vapor of tea aonful of the fol- tion is interesting from a practical point I-lof view. It is known that invalids with hronic appendicitis suffer for a long time . wae. from constipation, On the other hand, '€ 1 the ablationgof the healthy appendix witch « practised to-day rather abusively de~ Appendix.~At the prives the organism of a useful secretion. ie treated with! The conclusion to be drawn is that the 3 appendix, which waa thought to be useless, " should be considered, on the contrary, as an organ with a most important role. Simple Fracturea--In applying any form of dressing, perfect apposition of the parts must be oblained as nearly as pos- 8 sible. Excessive pressure over say' part the must be avoided, and the recurrence of the view deformity must be prevented. Some form of dressing should be employed that wild ominent' omnit of easy removal to ascertain thes ommuni- the deformity has not recurred. The spline Medicine (should be well padded. In every instances \ppendix, $e joints both above and below the frae- ns ture shoud be included in the dremsing. Pressure should be firm, even, abd ning elastic nd it may be desirable to change c. the form of the dressing at any time. The period of fixation varies with the location "lof the fracture and the condition of the ents patient. The toes and fingers should be left bare, in order to observe the. copdl- ree t and, ic obtained by : fon of the circulation. If a fixed dressing four times a day ' . ce. lig to be employed, a movable one had ' . 2 : Sh better be used for the first few days. The Hngture. of " ausing 1 va e intestinal jin) should be elevated and {straighténed. Sometimes extension will be necessary. ment which demands prompt t At the beginn es: a when the first sympto g of the s a cup manifested only by headache and pa tr lassigude and the commencement of a cold inthe head, it is advantageous to inhale eau de Cologne profoundly four or five tim aly day. Pour the eau de Cologne on a hand Ler hief and inhale by the { This the cold and ought The Vermiform ha and mouth esitution ir method prevents the develop i to be car Should the sy this pe 1 this method sho iglven up and another adopted three days nptoms per after id {| Further Remedies. --In order t {ish the cold In the head, every.t h of the following pow like grammes; |grammes; | a pir taken quid; a hydrechlorate. ol, 30 centigrainmes n drops of the following 1d be take {a glass of water at least t | liquid s n as a ga if possible, grammes; alcohol ammes; at Serva to Thos for Who Cannot See [night the woman who bad him in charge wished to show the child to a late visitor was midnight, and th$ child had been but. the matron ea~ Bat |months, and sud « oy re J that those had { much happiness during tt} for It {dictated to my Reall *h may hush in hed many hours, dren, p tered hiv room with a light. '"'Wei't we wake the asked the for the moment (hat he whi boy?" I'he insect hook te f visitor, forgetting life wi is totally blind, to give me 'No, said the matron, 'he can't see the light apd he can't hear us come, the poor child zannot know that we are here.' one of the his cout as I insects in 1 "As soon "The two women entered the room with the light, expecting, of course, to find the child sound asleep, { story lfady of ihe: Lichthouse 1 the "But the little creature sat straight up 1 book | in bed, a book wide open on the coverlet and his small twas inspired bouk is not {a portrait of her. nor is ite story. her| fingers rapidly touching the onntsl Meised His small sensitive face va alight with pleasure and exeitentent. In the pitch black room at midmight the ji Youngster was reading a Wild West ads ,| venture 'which had been far 100 interests {ing for him to abandon when it was time fur him to go to bed. "That shows one of the things that Sea be done to give happiness to the blind. There are an infinite number of others, und there.are infinite possibilities for the forwarding of all sorts of movements to prevent blindness and to cure-it. "I come from Alabama, which is Helen clleller's State, and when Iwas left in darkness and silence the doctor told me that 1 was in whch the condition that Helen Keller Wag at first, bot that T had cadvandagé of thirty yess of scientifie' progress. Sol feel that I bave a peculiar kinship with Helen Keller and alin 'believe in her prophecy that hn the deaf our blind institntions' fo" whith 'we point with pride will stand {ie sur ignorance and 0 Une! lug which we hive wun 1 otters, story. On the atl tof the methods | are all at the ik and {that reg he Dlipd {worker {the bi fend I find wonders Some asked me fered mate one the how 1 gath- diffi that way td that there ulty in is sa much material | the blind t lind tl of yea i fdramat the the i Jet ten ghe to tend 3 and acquired the art very rapidiy

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