Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star (1907-), 27 Aug 1936, p. 3

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a , » Re: ath * 4 4 wie # theta [ign | Fi 9 v »- # 's £3 ] '4 ( » . » « ov? » + |» * g » o . a . I [] * R os 4 5 4 - 2 xX ~ = or y 3 ey r « y », IN v . 4. | ow -~ [2 b ~~ a. Fou 1 i v2 a dm pt | ¥ e+ $ 9 i y ~-- . and garnish « 'Home Hints => By LAURA KNIGHT -- Red, Ripe Tomatoes Do you know that 76 years ago tomatoes were considered poisonous? They were planted in the -garden be- cause the vegetable was considered beautiful -- but taste them -- oh no, There' is no record of who tried them 'a8 feod, but whoever it was -- they merit a .vote of thanks, Now that tomatoes are plentiful try some of these interesting recipes: Grilled Tomatoes Wash tomatoes and cut in slices about 4 inch thick, Sprinkle lightly with sugar, salt and pepper and dip ~. in fine cracked crumbs. Brown quick. ly in butter in a frying pan, first on one side and then on the other, Serve at once. . Veal Cutlets Veal steak cut % inch thick, 1 egg, 2 tablespoons melted butter, tine dried bread crumbs, 1 teaspoon salt, 34 teaspoon..pepper, -1.cup water. Cut the veal in neat pieces about the size of a silver dollar, Season with salt and pepper and dip in melt. | ed butter. Roll in crumbs, dip in egg, slightly beaten, and roll again in crumbs, Saute until well browned on both sides, 'Add water, cover closely and simmer slowly for 45 minutes, It the oven is going for baking, cook the cutlets, closely covered, in the oven. Serve with the gravy in the pan, . Devilled Tomatoes Three "tomatoes, salt and pepper, flour, butter for sauteing, 1 teaspoon Inustard, 14 teaspoon salt, few grains cayenne, yolk of 1 hard-boiled egg, 1 egg, 2 tablespoons vinegar, 4 table- spoons butter, 2 teaspoons powdered sugar. : Wipe, peel and cut tomatoes in slices, Sprinkle with: salt and :pep: per, dredge with flour and saute in butter. Place on hot platter and pour over dressing made by creaming but. ter, adding dry ingredients, yolk of "égg rubbed to paste, egg beaten slight ly and vinegar, 'hen cooking over hot water, stirring constantly until it thickens, Baked Tomatoes 9 Wipe six small tomatoes and make] two one-inch gashes on blossom end of each, having gashes cross each other at right angles, Place in pan and bake until thoroughly heated. Serve with sauce for devilled toma- toes, adding, just before serving, 1 tablespoon heavy credm, Stuffed Tomatoes Prepare - six medidum-sized toma- toes, Take out seeds and pulp, sprin- kle inside of tomatoes with salt, in: ert and let stand half an hour, Cook 6 minutes 2 tablespoons butter with 34 tablespoon finely chopped onion. "Add 14 cup finely chopped cold cook- ed chicken or veal, 4 cup stale soft Kuba the man swings the right and the THIS WEEK'S WINNER FISH AND VEGETABLE SALAD 2 cupfuls of cold boiled fish (canned salmon or tuna may be used) 1 cupful ,0f mayonnaise 1 cupful of coursely chopped celery 1 tablespoonful of capers or chopped pickle . 1 cupful of cooked peas 2 medium sized cooked beets '2 hard-cooked eggs Add to the fish, the celery, peas and capers, or pickles. Mix with the mayonnaise, taking care not to break the fish into too small pieces, Pile lightly on crisped lettuce leaves and garnish with alternate slices of cold boiled beets and hard-boiled eggs. -- Miss Pearl Hunt, Huron St, South- ampton, Ont, - Attention! Send In your favorite recipe for ple, cake, maln-course dish or preserves, We are offering $1.00 for each recipe printed. HOW TO ENTER CONTEST Plainly write or print out the In. gredients and method and send it to- gether with name and address to: Household Sclence, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. "Swing" Dance "Swing" music, which started to become popular about last New Year, but- which has nefer been clearly de- fined in the mind of a large part ot the public, has been- crystallized into a definite form and has been follow- ed by the "swing" dance, Comments 'the Ngw York Times. What the term "swing it!" means, exactly, and just how the "swing" dance is done, was described in detail annual convertion of the Dancing Masters of America, Inc., at the Hotel Roosevelt. TE Miss Virginia Gollatz of Pasadena, Calif., not speaking as a speclalist on "swing" by comparison with the other teachers present, but nepertheless with the approval of the conventjon faculty, said this. t 'time, preferably popular music, but i . - EDWARD 1. people. only a few thousand. cathedrals were rising all over Eng- land, monuments ty and piety. Then {it was that Salisbury's tower lifted {ts lovely head to heaven, and Westminster Abbey flung forth buttresses, pinning it to earth like the slendor cables 'that hold a ship to her station. of Wales, were dark and bloody. He was weak and leaned on evil, corrupt- ing favorites. The barons took Law that his father made into their own hands, and wars and feuds rent the country. In the end a scw.. murdered him. The next Edward had at the third 'session of the fifty-third | 0 fI&ht to gain his throne from the usurper., man - who conquered more of France was a bad business for France England, He had ga son, the Black Prince. The Black Death is the big thing in the reign of Edward III. 2 ple of England. "Swing music is any music in 44 |gcarco and valuable that every land. Ec LL 1327-1377; - (8) * Frank Queen in the London Daily Express observes-- ¢ . Seven other Edwards span seve hundred years of England's history, Most magnificent of all the Ed. wards; perhaps of all the Kings of England, was Edward the First. Edward | subdued the Scots and the Welsh. He took from the Scots the coronation stone of their kings at Scone, and brought tt to London as the seat of Britain's kings, Ed- ward VIII will sit on it in Westmin- ster Abbey. Edward I. cleaned up the corrupt judges, curtailed the vast riches of the Church, set .up the first model Parliament in England, summoning wo knights from every shire -and two citizens from every town. "What touches all should be approved by all," sald Edward. He laid the base of the English Constitution. Either he was a pro. phetic genlus, or the art of govern. ing- does not change. For our Con. stitution 'suits us still, though Ed. ward called his Parliament in 1295, when the life of the people was ut- terly different from our own. Then the feudal system was at its height. Nobody owned land. Every occupier held it as a fief from the lord above him. The King was the supreme Land-Lord. Nobody paid rent in cash. Instead, you pald 'in military service if you were a baron, or even a bishop; in kind -- that is, in goods or labor, if you were a freeman or a villein (serf). Then, London war a city of 40,000 The other towns contained Yet in these same days glorious of enduring beau- its delicate fly- The universities were born, SECOND AND THIRD The days of Edward II, first Prince the Irel This Edward, the Third , was the ban any English King in history. It and This plague swept off half 'the peo- It made labor so The Edwards of England (1) Edward L 1272-1307; (2) Edward II. 1307-1327; (3) Edward (4) Edward 1V. 1461-1483; : Edward C. 1483; (6) Edward VI. 1547-1553; (7) . Edward VIL 1901-1910; (8) Edward VIII. 3 flourished;" and the King went fato business on his own account, Only raw materials were 'allowed to be imported, foreign corn was forbidden entirely. England was 100 per cent Protectionist. ' . Edward .IV left a prosperous herl- tage to:.his young son Edward V. " Edward V was the 'elder of the Princes in the Tower. He disappeared with his brother. Who killed him? History says his uncle, the regent who became Richard III. But history for the next hundred years, was writ. ten under the Welsh Tudor Henry VII who slew Richard in battle, and un. der his Tudor descendants. EDWARD VI Edward VI was the son of Henry VIII, and the brother of Elizabeth. He inherited the row between the Church and. Henry VIII, His reign was run under the regime of the powerful nobles' who had' shared in the plunder of the monasteries and meant to keep it. In these days the greedy new masters enclosed not only Church lands but the common 000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000 =Or, more briefly, five with 67 ciphers after it--are- the chances of getting the freak hands dealt four Edmonton bridge players the other day, ~ University of Alberta mathemati- clans studied the permutations and combinations behind the deal and pro- duced odds worthy of a dally double, The players were W. W. Bridge, 8, C. McLeod, W, Gunn and R. St, Denis. Bridge received the ace, king, nine and five of clubs; McLeod the same cards in diamonds, Gunn the same in hearts and St, Denis the same in spades. . Bridge got the jack, seven and three of hearts; McLeod the identical val- ues in hearts, Gunn in spades and St. Denis in clubs, Finally, each received the 10, six and two in different suits. When they picked up these hands in billion bil- lions, they found they each had cards numbering consecutively from two to the ace in different suits all round, The British Government now main- tains 14 wind tunnels for testing air- craft. . No Unemployed In This Ontario Town one cent in arrears on its bank a penny," declared E. his home town, during business progress. Mr. heads of the automotive firm which "There is not a single able-bodied man on relief. The town is not bonded indebtedness and does not owe the G. Odette, a recent banquet there to celebrate the district's Odette who is Ontario's chief liquor commissioner is shown, at right, chatting with Ross Mackinnon, left, and A. E. summing up conditions in Tilbury, : Barit; is the town's chief industry. lands of England. They drove ,the peasants off the soil into the towns, on to the roads; they created the swarm of "sturdy beggars" which made necessary the Poor Law. These lords, the Ceclls, Russels, Cavendish. es, made the Great Dispossessed, the forerunners of our dole population. And they ended that social partner: ship between "Church 'which -has never been Testored since. Edward VI was a boy through all this, but his reign marks the end of the Middle Ages and the first chapter of British industrialism. ow EDWARD VII Edward VII marks the end of an- other era--the age that gave us a world-wide Empire and saw the limit in which the'drums are accentuated rather than syncopated." The faculty committee, which real-. ly had only become fully conscions of the country's trend to "swing" at a-meeting the night before -nodded; 'Miss Gollatz proceeded to demon: strate. "Take two slow steps, as in the fox trot," she said. "Than swing the right leg from the hip--that fs, woman the left. Swing the leg all the | way from the hip, Then for variation EEE La. Announcement SEE"NEXT WEEK'S ISSUE FOR THE OPENING INSTALLMENT OF OUR NEW SERIAL and People | bread crumbs, tomato pulp and salt and- pepper to taste, Cook 5 minutes, then add one egg slightly beaten, ook 1 minute arid refill tomatoes with mixture. Place in buttered pan, sprin- le with buttered cracker crumbs and ake 20 minutes In-a hot oven, Tomato Canapes Three ounces cream cheese, 2 }ablespoons Rocquefort cheese, 2 blespoons heavy cream, 1% teaspoon 'galt, shake of cayenne, 2 medium-siz- od tomatoes, toast, mayonnaise, Mix the two cheeses together with ream and 'seasoning, until smooth, fut rounds of toast the same size ag tomato slices. Spread with cheese Ixture, cover with slice of tomato with mayonnaise and . parsley. Po - Coleman Hot Plate : ter Solin fouled aves, swing," The 'cut. steps", her execution showed, were quick, small steps. The faculty members approved again, It was further explained that much of the popular music being written. to- day is particularly adapted to "swing- ing it" in dancing. A Compliment - Canada was paid a compliment at the Fourth International Conference on = Anti-Locust Research, recently held at Cafro, Egypt, The Conference considered that the formation of the Canadian Committee on Grasshopper Research and its close co-operation with workers in the United States was the type of prganization required, It was also shown that the work in Canada has progressed nearer to a solution of the -grasshopper problem than In any of the other 24 coutnries which sent- delegates to the Confer- 'ence. Neew-style Rail Cars Being Tried in England COVENTRY, Eng.--Speed, silence 'I and economy are the triple advant- ages claimed here for new pneumatic- tired rail cars now being tested for | the London, Midland and Scottish Railway. Trolley buses are replacing stréet cars in London. Issue No, 35 -- '36 bY @ Makes its own fits m gaso- no OUso it any. where. No pipes nor connec ol 1 ASLOWAS | © llahts Instant. FRG Siebrnarand yatin 0 pre. wo burner models B Ln \ vailable. Ask your | ® Economioal, ealer or write for ne gallon "o Ee | EEC ace dl IE ot. Toronts, Ont, -C--2 number one, take two slow steps. fol- Jow- with two. 'cut' steps and then ford tried to steal his neighbors' vil: leins.. The landlord offered wages, a new thing, to anyone who would la- bor and all the laws and courts In the country could not keep wages from rising. : And when the demand for labor was still unsupplied the landlords took to sheep farming, whicl required only a shepherd and a dog. England, which had once been a granary of corn, be. came a wool-growing land, the Aus- tralld of the Middle-Ages. : After. Edward III, Continental wars brought England to the edge of 'ruin. The land was filled with desperate returned soldiers, 'the treasury was |s empty,.the Church and nobles at each |u other's throats, the common people were the prey of-thieves, high and low. In these days came the first So. clalist movement in England, when John Ball, the travelling preacher, asked: When Adam delved and Eve span, Who was then the gentleman? and the peasants, fired with a vague religious fervor, and a very definite bodily hunger, marched on London and sacked it. EDWARD 1V Edward IV, was the strong man, who rose out of the next sixty years of anarchy, He was the chief of the Yorkist faction that won the Wars of the Roses. He was brave, liberal, lazy and immoral, ta Under him, Caxton set up hig print- ing presses, England took to manu. facturirig her wool instead of export- ing it; the great merchant guilds a that output comes Edward VIII. His age fis that of high wages and high {8 Our adventure, It will be memor- from a fight, ed in their enjoyment. cal, name was "Hurley" and he was a reached of British International ex. pansion. Through the Great War, which came after his death, gave Bri- tain more territory, it narrowed her world markets. Free Trade went over- board even before the war. Already, in the days of Edward VII, the volce of Imperialist consolidation was then heard--Joe Chamberlain proclaiming the need of the closed Empire mar. ket. oe Into a world of economic nation- alism, of terrific industrial production and still undiscovered. markets for tandards of living--and yet mass nemployment, and poverty. His reign ble. : A Gentleman Passes A gentleman has just passed on. He was kind and courteous, re- spectful to his superiors and indulgent to his inferior. He had courage without bluster and pride without vaunting, Ho was a loyal friend and a devoted companion. ing hem which gives a tunic effect An Apron Smock in Three Versions EDMONTON, -- One in 50,000,000, | Toronto's Relief Costs FREE FREE New list of planos, sewing machines, dining room suites, Blmmons beds, mattresses, springs, and everything for the home. Furni- ture Warehouse, 90 Chestnit St, Toronto. (Dept. WL 1) FREE chesterfields, Pre-cooling Save ---- Prairie Dam 1] RR mmm -- Herman Trelle, famous for the. Western Prairies, which is given much publicity in Western news- papers, observes the Ottawa Journal, Mr. Trelle's plan, briefly, is to build two great dams along the Saskatche- wan river, one of them near Saska- toon, plugging up the river, creating great reservoir basins. The reservoirs would send up moisture in the form of evaporation, the evaporation would come back from the consequent clouds in the form of rain. For Mr. Trelle as a wheat king, as a scientific farmer, all of ys must have respect, For Mr. Trelle as a scientific engineer we are bound to havo less respect, Therefore, when competent engineers are skeptical of such a plan on can but join in thelr skeptismn, Competent engineers have said *hat the Saskatchewan river does not contain sufficient water to pro- duce anything like the results envi- sjoned by Mr. Trells. There is something else -- cost, Mr. Trelle admits that his plan would call for millions, but thinks all charges could be met by eletrical ene- gy generated by his dams, the elec- trical energy mado available to "thousands of farm homes and indus- tries." ' | " Which brings us to the realm of oconomics, Little is easier than to imagine thousands of industries fed by electrical energy, A much more difficult thing is to show where and how the industries would market their products. We have a lot of in- dustrial plants in this country just now not overly active. Not being engineers ourselves, and not even professing knowledge, or much of it, in the sphere of enono- mics, we are not condemning Mr, Trelle's plan out of hand, But we dis- like the idea of its being taken seri- ously before those in a position to judge of it have passed upon it prac- ticability. Brief Comment It King Edward keeps on flying, Fruit in Transit At the joint request of the Nova Scotia Department of agriculture and the "Masstown Strawberry Growers' "wheat Association, a representative of the king," known as "Trelle of the Peace", Transportation Division of the Fruit come out with a plan to dam the Branch, Dominoin Department of Agri- Sagkatchewan river to produce rain Culture, gave a practical demonstra- tion of the governments system of 'pre-cooling fruit by the use of fans { From June 29 to July 17, 1936, fit- teen carloads of strawberries were pre-cooled, and the-advantage of the system was amply manifested In the fine condtion in which the fruit ar- rived at the points of destination. During the past few years, the work of the Transportation Division has been the means of preventing con- siderable loss in transit both by sea and rail, Pre-cooling, as it fs com- monly called, simply means the re- moval of field heat from fruit after harvesting and before it is shipped to market, With strawberries, as with other fruit, there is a tendency to pick and shop fruit that is not fully mature, because deterioriation 'fs not as apparent as in mature fruit. Fruit fs mature when it has reached that stage when the normal process of ripening will continue after the fruit is picked and enable it to develop full flavour, In order that mature. well-coloured, and fully developed fruit may be placed within reach ot the consumer, the Transportation Di. vision of the Dominion Fruit Branch recommends to producers and ship- pers the fan pre-cooling system which has proved its efficacy in all the fruit- producing areas of the Dominion. Another "No-Soil" Farmer We have a suspicion that when far- mer readers scanned our recent ar- ticle about farming without soil in England they would say "Oh yeah?" to themselves or something equival, ent, Since then we picked up another newspaper and therein found a para- graph {rom Berkeley, Cal,, about Pro- fessor W. F, Gericke, of the Uni. versity of California, who has been experimenting along similar lines. Professor Gericke has a "soilless farm," or garden, and by means of chemicalized "water has grown flow- ers and vegetables. The professor expresses the belief that farming can be conducted on a large scale by these 'methods. pistol tossers are going to have a dif- ficult time -- Kitchener Record. "The June bLridegrooms are now Evidently, as "great minds think alike," scientists have been working along the same lines at the same tima commencing to turn from cigarettes to the pipe. -- Brockville Recorder and Times. No doubt the tariff will ultimately get the blame for what the drought has done to crops thic year -- [inan- cial Post. . Farmers are learning that before they begin saving for a rainy day, they must have the rainy day. -- Guelph Mercury. } B Some people -aren't satisfied with getting everything for nothing. They demand to have it delivered. -- Que- bee Chronicle-Telegraph. Show $737,818 Decrease on 'both sides of the Atlantie.--Strat- - ford Beacon-Herald, A Neigbborly View The Brantford Expositor has been sent an editorial from the Burlington, Vermont, Daily New s, entitled, "Ghosts of Vimy Ridge Do Not Seck Our Pity." The article shows keen appreciation of the sacrifice made by 60,000 Canadians who laid dow: their lives overseas for the sake of human- ity. It emphasizes the fact that the ceremony at Vimy Ridge was "a re- of the year were $5,571,880;-a de- | crease of $737,818 from the cor-| | Great War continues to provoke." minder that human beings on this TORONTO--Toronto's direct re- | carth must stand or fall together, ali lief costs for the first seven month's {of them, and a repetition of the wist- ful unanswerable, 'WILY 2° which the It ' 1 | 04-p | Livery woman loves a commodi- ous smock to slip into when she prepares refreshments or works in the garden or "slaves" at the office, and this fetching model will answer a thousand needs, ' Like most good smocks, it opens down the front and- hoasts two ample pockets, The sleeves are slit for quick movements and cut {n ono with the yoke, a feature be- ginners will find easy to under- stand, Complying with the trend to simplicity it requires only a few bright buttons and piping for decorative purposes, For versatil- ity add a belt and note the spread- responding period a year ago, it was | reported recently, There were 69,166 individuals on | relief during the peak week in July,' compared with 97,676 san. 1 112,476 at the beginning of 1935. and then proceeds to say, speaking of the dead: "And you cannot pass them in re- view before your mind's eye without | thinking how strange it was that a | dispute born in the middle of Europe Warranted Council Standard Choose *'Rosco™ COUNCIL STAND- ARD Roofing for economy, quality and permanence, Heavily with durable spelter--officlally "spot. | tested" for quality -- this roofing eliminates upkeep cost--rteslsts wear and weather for years. We will gladly send literature and on prices. Write us roofing requirements, now coated your ROOFERS SUPPLY CO. LIMITED MONTREAL QUEBEC TORONTO LONDON OTTAWA could call all of those young Cana- | dians across the Atlantic to die. What has a young rancher in Alberta to do "with the quarrels of close-packed Europe? What have the endlessly in- i volved problems of overseas imperial- [ism to do with the forests of Quebec, lor the mountains of British Columbia, that they should call 60,000 boys away to dic? To ask questions is to hear the answer. Those young Canadians | --and young Americans, too, for that matter. For the world has somehow grown small of late, and one man's trouble is all men's concern nowadays. --very smart and arty, The pock- i If things go badly on the plains of | Manchuria, the Louisiana farmer and the Montreal shopkeeper 'will ulti- mately feel the effects. No man lives i to himself alone in this modern world. Injustice and stupidity are the concern of all' men everywhete. The fate of mankind is one fate, and none of us can evade his due share." That is a broad international view ets may be eliminated, Two lengths are avallable--the three-quarter or full length. Barbara Bell Pattern No, 1904-13 Is available for sizes 14, 16, 18 20; 40, 42 and 44, Corresponding bust measurements 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44, Size 16 (34)) requires 2% He never picked a qhiarrel nor fled He loved little children and delight- He "was generous and never eriti- He was full ofthe joy of living. His yards of 39 inch material, HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Write your name and address plainly, giving number and size of pattern wanted, En. close 20c in stamps or coin (coin preferred); wrap it care. fully and address your order to Barbara Bell, 73 West Ade'- YOUR SAFEST INVESTMENT IS IN YOURSELF ! Specialised training will enable you to overcome INFERIORITY COMPLEX, to develop MENTAL POWER, and to equip yourself for better things in life. ' Write for particulars of our special course in mental training. The Institute of Practical and Applied Psychology 910 CONFEDERATION BUILDING Montreal 4 iy Quebec sheep dog, eleven years olds 1] alde Street, Toronto, - . | and apparently shows little sympathy j with the parochial doctrine of isola- | tion, which is sometimes so vocifer- ously proclaimed throughout the United States by both rp: ry and politicians, It has taken the world a long time to discover that mankind is one great family, the interests of one part of which concern all the others. While this lesson has been very em- patically taught, it has been only poorly learned. When this broad view is accepted there will be some hope that the doctrine of the brotherhood of man may prevail and war be pre- vented,

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