Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star (1907-), 21 Jun 1934, p. 3

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Woman's - tor too, making gelatine unnecessary. ~ World 'By Mair M. Morgan : Ji CHILDREN LOVE THIS Sip this as a'cocktail. Carrot juice Ice cream for dessert! The child-| is excellent for adults and a splendid ren shout the gleeful news and the| help for babies suffering from nutri- whole dinner, even the spinach, shares | tion deficiency diseases. in the glamor of the treat in store. SUNDAY NIGHT SUPPER , So why not serve this happy ending A curried dish "gives a menu a often since you can do it ihese daz without making extra work for your gelf? That is, if you make delicious and simple cardy ice cream you car concoct all scrts of different flavors as easily as you'd make a plain jun- ket or custard pudding. Any favorite recipe may' be used for the foundation cream. Junket, custard, Mousse, parfait, ice and sherbet may be flavored and -sweet- ened with the candies. All the hard varieties of candies, chocolate coat- ed or plain may be used without ad- ditional sugar, but some of the cream candies may require a little extra sugar. ; One-half pound of candy is enough to sweeten and flavor one quart of custard or other foundation mixture. If the candy is thoroughly crushed and allowed to dissolve in the foun- dation cream before freezing an even color is produced. An attractive mot- tled effect is obtained if the candy is rather coarsely crushed and added to the cream mixture just before freezing. There will be bits of un- dissolved candy which retain their color sprinklered through the frozen mixture, : Following are two basic recipes which may be varied by the use of different candies. Peppermint Stick Cream One pound red and white pepper- mint stick.candy, 6 cups thin cream, 1/8 teaspoon salt. Scald cream in double boiler. Re- move from heat and add salt! and finely crushed candy. Cool and turn into freezer mold. Pack in six parls ice to one part ice cream salt and let stand several hours. _Serve plain or with hot chocolate sauce, as pre- ferred. If you want to use this recipe in a mechanical refrigerator, stir 1 tablespoon softened gelantine into the scalding hot cream, stirring until gelatine is thoroughly dissolved. Mapshmallows should -be quartered and dissolved in the hot cream. This is splendid for an iceless refrigera- Chocolate coated molasses may be crushed and added to the eream after it has cooled. [his makes a delicious rich cream with- out th: effort of melting chocolate and washing an assortment of dishes. Walnut Brittle Ice Cream. One pound walnut brittle, 4 egg: 1 cup whipping cream, 4 cups milk." Beat egg yolks slightly. Seald milk and beat into egg yolks. Cook in double boiler, stirring constantly un- til mixture coats spoon. Remove from heat and add crushed brittle. Fold in whites of eggs beaten until stiff. Cool and pour into freezer mold. Pack in eight parts ice to one part ice cream salt. When beginning to freeze around the edges, stir in cream whipped until . firm. Let stand several hours before serving. This recipe is excellent to use in a mechanical refrigerator, too. . Carrot Juice Cocktail That the carrot is the vegetable par excellence for clearing the com- plexion is universally conceded. But it is little known what a quantity of juice may easily be extracted from it. As a welcome change from tomato juice, which is in vogue at present, try a carrot juice cocktail! Here's how. Grate a large carrot and squeeze the pulp 'through a piece of cheese cloth when you will find yourself chips certain zest that lifts it out of the everyday class and puts in into (he need'nt be used only for party menus. Try adding it to your favorite creamed concoctions and see if the family doesn't greet your efforts atl orginality with'loud cheers of ap- proval. Curry of chicken, served with steaming rice, makes a perfect main course for a luncheon or a Sunday night supper. Here's the way -to prepare it: bi Place two and one-half pounds ulie- ed cooked chicken in a saucepan with six ounces warmed butter. Stir in .one teaspoon curry powder, one table- spoon flour and one chopped onion, Season with salt .and pepper and pour in one quart chicken stock. Al- low to cook slowly for eight minutes. Add one-half cup shredded cocoanut and let it boll for two minutes. Then pour in one cup heavy cream and set aside, BE In a second pan place six ounces warmed butter and one chopped onion. Add two cups cooked rice ind simmer for two minutes. Pour in a quart of chicken stock and season. When boiling, ¢over and bake in a moderate oven for twenty minutes. When you're ready to serve luncheon, arrange the rice mixture in a mould-like form in the centre of a platter and place the creamed chicken in the middle of the mould. Decoc- ate rice mould with pieces of chutney- ed ginger and raisins and pour the rest 'of the chicken around the mould on the platter. WASHING OLD LACE The fortunate bride who has heir- loom family lace with which to adorn her wedding dress may 'be interest in the following French recipe hand- ed down through generations for washing old lace. First wind your lace very carcfuily round a glass bottle. When this has been done cover the lace with a final layer of thin muslin, which you pin here and there to the lace to keep it in place. Then place the bottle in a receptacle containing cold water and a handful of the prest soap flakes you can find. Bring the water to the hoil and leave it on the boil for a good hour, Pour away the dirty water, plenty of fresh warm water, and ally rinse in cold. If the iace is ery old and stiff it.is advisable to k it in pure olive oil for a hour efore washing. QUICK FRUIT ROLLS Two cups flour, 4 teaspoons baking powder, %-teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons sugar, 4 tablespoons shortening, 1 egg, % cup milk, 2-tablespoons soft- ened butter, marmalade or jelly, % cup broken nut meats, Mix and sift flour, baking powder, salt and sugal\ Work in shortening with pastry blender. Beat egg until light and cut into first mixture, add ing milk to make a soft dough. Turn onto a-floured molding board and knead outside edges into center with four motions. Then roll lightiy into # sheet about one-half inch thick. Spread with softened butter. Cover with a layer of marmalade ot hat. ever is chosen and sprinkle with chopped nuts. Roll up like a jelly roll and cut across in slices about one inch thick. Dip knife in flour "before cutting each slice. Place slices, cut side down on an oiled and floured pan and bake 20 minutes in a hot (400 degrees F.) oven. h SARDINE SOUFFLES with about half a cupful of juice. "special occasion" category. Yet curry | ing. Keep changing -to-a fresh part Pass a dozen skinned sardines | A BROKEN RAIL -- RESULT -- DISASTER z NL * TE TAT -- The "end of the road" was reached by at least on: transient at North Bay when a C.N.R. freight train piled up .and Frank Karlson was killed. contained 500 cases of dynamite. It didn't explode. The photograph shows part of the wreck. One of the cars through a sieve and add a 'little cream, anchovy essence, and pepper and salt to taste. tered cases with the mixture and bake in a hot oven for ten minutes. LEFTOVER ROAST Here's 3 happy ending for that roast of beef--tan appetizing bakei meat pie. Make it as follows: Three cups diced cooked beef, two cups dic- ed boiled ' potatoes, twc chopped onions, two grated carrots, two table. spoons finely chopped parsley, one teaspoon salt, one-half teaspoon pa- rika, one tablespoon flour. Cook beef and onions in-a saucepan in butter until brown, add flour and stir until blended. Then add slowly one and one-half cups of water or water and leftover gravy mixed together and when smooth and thick add other ingredi- ents. Line a baking dish with crust and pour in meat mixture. Coyer with a top crust and -bake for about "20 minutes or until light opown in color, : 2 HOUSEHOLD HINTS Squeaking Shoes, [RS If shoes squeaks Stand them in a tin tray of castor 6il, allowing the oil to reach as far as the junction of sole and upper Leave for 24 hours, to give the o!! time to penetrate, Banada Cake Filling. Press sufficient bananas through a sieve to yield a cupful of puree. To this add an equal quantity of sugar, the juice and grated rind of 1 lemon, and the white of an egg and beat all with a wooden spoon for about fifteen minutes. Cleaning Green Baize To clean a_card-table covered in green baize: Brush the table-top very thoroughly first of all- with a -stifl brush, then sponge with a nonin- flammable cleaning fluid. 'f there ave any grease-spots, sponge them with flannel" wrung tightly out of warm water. Then go over the entire sur face with a soft muslin moistened with the ,feanig fluid, using large sweeping strokes to avoid tidemark- of your sponging rag at the first signs of soiling. Cleaning Carved Ivory Carved ivory is awkward to clean. Try using a little sawdust damped ing. Keep changing to a fresh part with lemon juice. Rub the mixture in with a cloth, allow to dry, and brush off. "The evils men suffer from, the blessings they enjoy, very often have their origin far more in imagination than in reality."--Guglielmo Ferrero. Woman Elected to Mix in the stiffiy |=" whipped whites of two eggs, fill but-|" Royal Academy Mrs. Dod Procter's Husband is Also an A.R.A. For only the third time since the British Royal Academy was founded in 1768, a woman has been elected an assoclated of that iustitution. She. is Mrs, Dod Procter, painter of the picture "Morning," which The London Daily Mail acquired for the British Nation in 1927 and which was exhibited all over England as well as in the United States. The only two other women to be A.R.A's before her have heen Mrs. "Annie LL. Swyiinerton, elected in 1922 (she died-last October, aged 88), and' Dame Laura Knight, elected in 1927. There have been no women R.A.S since Angelica Kaufman and Mary Moser became Foundation Members in 1768. Man Also Elected Mrs. Procter is one of two new associates who have heen elected to fill the vacancies caused by the re- cent elevation of W. Russell I'lint and Terrick Williams to full... academic honors. . J The other is Meredith Frampton. also a well-known painter and son of the well-known sculptor, the late Sir George Frampton; R.A. (designer of the Peter Pan statue .in Kensing- ton Gardens and the Nurse Gavel Memorial), 3 Both have heen for many years steady contributors to the Academy shows, and the work of hoth isecon- spicuous by the excellency of "draughtsmanship 'Husband Also an A.R.A. Mrs. Dod Procter now shares the honor of being an A.R.A. with her husband, Ernest Procter, who was elected two years ago. They are the leaders of the Corn- wall group, oo oo After Mrs. Procter had come into prominence in 1927 with "Morning," her picture "Girl in a Petticoat," was awarded one of the eight prizes at the annual International Exhibition of Paintings at Pittsburgh in 1928. As a result of her election, "the Royal Academy now includes two married couples among its associates, Dame TLaura Knight and her husband Harold Knight were the first couple to achieve this distinction. New York,--Miss Louise Auchin- closs has admitted that she ard Ed- ward Hutchinson Robbins, son of Wa- rren Delano Robbins, United States Minister to Canada, are planning 'o marry. "However, we have not an- nounced our engagement as yet," Miss Auchincloss said. Jungle Cat night creeps up stealth To arch her sable back Against the roofs and chimney-pots And rub a velvpt track. The with jungle She captures all the silver mice That, gnawing through the sky, Are pounced upon and held for toys Before they scamper by. She rolls the world between her paws And lifts a wary tail When rustling leaves moves in wind Or stars begin 'o fail. the She prowls along the fence of dreams And loiters with a yawn Until, annoyed by barking dogs, She springs away at dawn. --DMuriel Jeffries Hard. Few Male Teachers In England Bécause Men Want "Plums" Dr. H. Critchton-Miller's statement at a recent meeting of the Lon-don, (England), Women's Council thal "school teaching is regarded by the community at large as a very useful way of using up superflous unmar- ried women" has met -with indignant denials from many educational authorities. Miss E. E. I'voud, secretary of the National Union of Women Teachers said: Dr. Critchton-Miller seemed to have ar extraordinary bias against women and women's work, though he is a man of science. "There are two reasons why there ave fewer men teachers," Miss Fround added. "Teaching is a very difficult job and men don't like it, and when men come in they want only the plums." Frank Roscoe, secretary of the Royal Society of Teachers said: "Dr. Crichton-Miller's statement is no* only bold but somewhat wild. Wo- men have a definite place in our school system. Their services in the infant schools of this country have commanded the admiration of edu- cationists throughout the world." - The country does feel that a school-mistress is as good as a schoolmaster, Mr. Roscoe thought, because the averiize parent recog- nizes that for all young children teaching by women is best. The More Beaytiful Canada Cam- paign Committee o! the Canadian Horticultural Committee has been ased to urge the various highways de. partments of the Dominion to estab- lish ardcfinite policy within their scope in the beautification and adorn- ment of Canada. and a "m'a'nikur."" Medical Skill Callander--The successful birth of the Dionne quintuplets at Corbeil, neat' here, was a triumph for a between 1,400 and 1,500 childy2n into the world. Dr. Allan Roy Dafoe is an old- school physician who has practiced in Callander for twenty-eight years, and he says the Dionne event was "similar to what any country prac- titioner encounters." Admirers of the middle-aged physi- cian call' him the most brilliant ob- stetrician in the North and are grati- fied that the country doctor has be- come widely known through the Di- onne case. Dr. Dafoe comes of a family of physicians. His father was one and his brother now practices in Toronto. He was born in Madoe, Ont.. of Unit- tended college in Toronto, graduat- ing in 1908. He has attended many unusual cases and assisted at the birth of qua-| aruplets in Burks alls some years ago, but none of his patients have attained the fame of the Dionne girls. | Speaking of his years spent in the North, thew physician remarked! that things are much easier for, the country doctor now that he is able' to use an automabile to make his calls. In the days of poor roads he travelled thousands of miles through all sorts of weather with a horse and} buggy. He has had to contend with the usual inconveniences of the rural practitioner: lack of hospitals, the poverty of patients, difliculty of travel | and of securing the proper assistance and aids to the profession. Recently a meeting with a Natn Bay woman vecalled to a former nurse a case which he attended twen- | ty years ago. A woman attempted to commit suicide by shooting, and Dr. Dafoe travelled over a lake by sleigh, to attend her, He found a bullet had blown away a part of her brain and. she had been lying on a cold floor for four hours. Through his expert care she recovered and now is living in North Bay. Cancer Hospital | For Helsingfors A new $1,000,000 hospital! for the treatment of cancer will be erected in Helsingfors soon, according to, New Finnish New the vasiting women members of Parliament, who is York, a Speaking of prohibition repeal in Finland, she said the people were! satisfied with government control of | liquor sales and had no desire for the return of the saloons. The tax; from liquor sales, she added, was not as great as had been anticipated. Turkish Language Being Modernized You can have a permanent "ondu- lasyon" in Turkish hairdressers now, 3 Turkey has been modernizing the language and putting it into Latin characters. [Stymologists arc horri- fied because the modernization is be- ing done in many trades by replac- ing the original Turkish words by phonetic French. This, in addition to the *"ondulas- yon' hairdressers offers a "friksyon" Shops display such signs as 'Rop, "Manto", Kostum," for robes, mant- les and costumes. Cdmonton,--H. [.. White, parach- ute jumper, is counting himself luc ky White leaped from a plane at an altitude of 5,000 feet and fell 3,000 feet before the chute opened. Part of the 'chute tors away in tatters as he landed at the speed of 35 miles per hour. Dazed from the force of the land- ing, White escaped. serious injury, MUTT AND (EFF-- [FEFE, THERE tS TROUBLE over 10 CHINA BETweeN THE CHINESE AND RUSSIANS -- ||AND T THINK THIS MAGAZINE CAN LSE US As WAR CORRESPONDENTS ! ------ = By BUD FISHER You € WOuld 1: SPoll. A GOOD WARY SCRAMMI we want THIS WAR To Be A success. DN I» N DN OH, MITE LORIMER), How Could ou? JEEE, THASS THE FIRST TIME T EVER HEARD oF A WAR CoRResPonDENT LOSING TWO WARS Lie Ama AND How, country practitioner who has brought! | "How yuh doin' boy? Miss Kyllikki Pohjala, one of the 147 . Greetings Show + Personuiity Amazing Difference in "Good Mornings" Gives Doorman Insight as to Character. Success . By their good mornings so shall ye know them. That's the conclusion of W. A. McDowell, the 'front desk" man at Paramount Hollywood studios, who for two years has been the first to welcome the stars as they arrive dai- ly for their picture sessions. His is a close-up slant on the per sonalities who land in a rush each morning at Hollywod's studios, there to put on film the actions which bring them heme to the millions through. out the world. On the screen they sonalities, but to Mac may he per- as the gate- I, A y man is affectionately known wo them ed Empire Loyalist stock, and i --they are just plain folk. And by their good mornings, Nac can identify them without lifting his eyes from the array of note pads, telephones, and opening switches which make him one of the busiest cogs in the Paramount machine of 1200 por- sons. } Mae West, to Mac, has proabiy the most amazing greeting of the players in that, according to her screen char- acterizations, she would be osxpectod to say something along the line of door DEMURE MAE But Mac revealed, the 'It Ain't No Sin" star glides through the front door--ten feet in front of the desk -- and murmurs a reserved and dignif- ied "Good morning." Irom the time Mae shows up she is an carly riser and an early studio i . "arrival when her pictures ave under production--the influx starts. And this is the way the vocal par- ade passes by: Bing Crosby--*"Hello" (Cheery.) Jack Oakie--Hi!" W. C. Fields--'He- Ilo. Anyone ask for me to-day?" (Snappy.' Ida Lupino--Cyod morning good morning. Have you a dollar, 1 have a taxi waiting and I really for- got my purse." Sir Guy Standing 'Fine Morning." Pleasantly.) Miriam Hopkins--"How do you do," (grac- ously.) . CHEERY HELLOS Adolph Menjou--'Good ncriing." (Crisply.) Cary Crant--*"Hi Mack -- great morning this." (Smiling) Geo. Barbixr -- "Good morning--how are you?" (Cheery bass). Carl Brisson-- "Well, this beats London fog" Charles Laughton--*"It's beastly early to be out." Kitty Carlisie--*He- lo." (Swiftly). Carole Lombard --- "How do vou do." (Casually.) Claud- cette Cothert--"Iine day to work." (Expectantly). Henry Wiltoxon "How are you today?" Dorothy Dell -- It's a great day." (Enthused.) Gra cie Allen---Good morning, good morn- ing Mr. Mac. Isn't this carly for a little working givl? And I've had my breakfast, too, but George didn't have time to--"" (Interrupted). George Burns--"Pay no attention to Gracie, Mac. I didn't have time ta cat seeing to it that Gracie didn't try to cat the canary and feed the hot cakes." (Explaining for Ghucie ay usual.) Lady Astor Approves >f Open-Air Nursery Turns First Sod on Site of New Kindergarten--Makes Gift of Superintendent's Salary for Year "If T were dictator of England," said Lady Nancy Astor, British AL.P. after cutting the first sod on the site of the new nursery school at Sunder- land, England, "I should see that ov- ery child from every home. rich or poor, went into an open-air nursery school, from the age of two to five. That is the only way to start a child on the right track and give it an eq- ual chance.' After the ceremony Lady Astor walked among the crowds surround- ing the enclosure, chatting freely with mothers and children whom the new school will seeve. To be built on a site cleared of slum properties, the new school will accommodate 10 child- ren at first and later 70. As their gift to the school, Lord and Lady Astor decided to pay the salary of the superintendent for the first year, 'because we know that if we can help you to get started on the right lines you will keep it going your selves," Lady Astor said. Poland Bars Films .By Three U.S. Firms Warsaw--Indignant over what 1t interpreted as a slur on the national honor, the Polish Guvernment have prohibited three American film cowmn- panies from showing any more of their motion «pictures in Poland. The companies whose filma barred are First National, Brothers and Vitaphone. In two cases, the companies gave two disreputable characters the family names of men who were heroes in tha American Revolutionary War, A third film was regarded as reflect- ing unfavorahlv umen Paland, are Warner ap Ahr nc To ---- Pa WT re o

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