Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star (1907-), 20 Mar 1952, p. 7

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i 4 NETRA tats As un A EAE ad ROL Ty Se, LE Ee f The Art of Punting Now to. the boathouses! Punts, variety of flat-bottomed high-prow- ed water vehicle not unlike a gon. dola, are rented hy the hour, com- plete "with -poles; Punting is very" simple; the Cam is. shallow, the pole is long, All you have to do is to seat your wife, mother, affianced, or in lieu of female acquaintance, best friend in the: middle of 'the 'punt, (Young ladies; do not, I be- lieve, punt each other; although I do not see why fot.) Anyway, you have: the passenger in the middle of «the 'boat; you stand in the back on' a little platform, just the right size. Take the pole, and push off from the dock.. Excellent. Nothing to it. N.w you are in the middle of the Cam: How historic! You will tell your: children you went punting at *. Cambridge, And what makes peo- ple say punting is hard? Why, all y~u have to do is to dig that pole into the river bottom, and push, Voilal The punt slides down the river. How deeece--lightfu'l How silvery is the water! Sce the beau- tiful building, left and right! Ob. serve the lush gardens. What a charming way of spending a sum- mer afternoon. Just pu-u-u-u-nting a-l-o-n-g; green grass, Renaissance brick, pretty girls - (or handsome young men) in other punts, waving and smiling; people sitting along the Cam, lolling on the sun-lit turf, "Why, this is heavenly!" you say. At this point, if not sooner, your pole gets stuck in the mud, you give a healthy push, and the plat- form of the punt just gli-i-i-i-des out frggm under you. For a fraction of a second you are suspended in space, clinging despérately, fever- ishly, with an expression of wild dismay and surprise, to the pole. But before your beloved in the punt "has had time to 'rise, and cry in- dignantly: "George! What are you doing!" you have descended abrupt- ly into the drink. You can walk "Happy Fanatic" 'Records Bird Songs - Ludwig Koch is a happy fanatic who cares for nothing so much as recording the songs and sounds made by various wild creatures, preferably birds, He made his first recording on a tiny. wax cylinder when he 'was' eight and is still re- cording" busily at the age of sev- - enty. SR, The BBC for whom he has made so many magnificent recordings, celebrated his last birthday with a special programme 'of the pmost famoys and interesting of them, Lately Koch presented a new programme, "Birds of the Scillies," | a collection of recordings recently made in these islands lying off the tip of Cornwall. Some of the larger Scilly Isles are inhabited, but the majority are almost all rocks and nearly always inaccessible to man though ideal for the sea birds that were Ludwig's quarry, His great ambition was to re- cord the cries of the Manx shear- waters, those far-flying birds which nest in burrows and ony come out of them on dark, moonless nights when the black-backed gulls can- not see them and attack them. As the shearwaters fly in from the sea to relicvé their mates who have been sitting on their single eggs in their burrows for twenty- four- hours and often longer, they make a noise unlike anything else. Their mates fly up to meet them and their voices mingle in cries which combine-the coo of the dove with the hoot of the owl and an unearthly shriek which is pure shearwater, To stand on a pitch- black island at midnight with these screaming birds swooping all around is an unforgettable experi- ence and it was this noise above all others that Koch longed to-re- cord. ' BY EDNA MILES ADDING flavor to a kitchen is a lift to your morale as well as to the appearance of the.room. You, as a housewife, spend more: time in the kitchen than in any other room in the house. Why, then, lavish all your attention on the living - room? i : ". Dressingup the kitcheri can he done on a budget, and done "with a minimum of sewing, The trick is in using inexpen- sive fabric to make new curtains and to tie up a kitchen theme. by making matching aprons. -Pamper yourself as well as your kitchen! : : The popularity of denim is penetrating from fashion to -home decoration.. Or, you may use highly acceptable ging- hams or chintzes, both inexpensive. ___ Frosting on.the cake comes from your own ingenuity and from the clever use of conso trim. Blue denim, for example, can be 'combined with white ball fringe to make cottage curtains. Run up a matching apron in cobbler style, with * three roomy pockets that are handy for storing odds and ends as you work, ol Pink-and-white checked ghgham is the best bel for tie- back curtains. Try edging them in red-and-white cotton i loop trim and use this same trim for ruffle valance and tie- backs. The matching apron is pretty in a petal effect, perked up by red-and-white loops. For a kitchen window without a view or_one with an un- sightly view, opaque green glazed chintz hides unaltractive scenes and keeps the inside looking bright. These are made in cottage style, bordered with quilted chintz which-also is used for the valance. Edging is fluffy yellow cotton brush trim. The apron, which repeats the motif, is worked with - quilted chintz pocket and two inserts that can double as pot holders. Brush trim is repented at pocket and hem. For an ordinary window, about three yards of fabric will make the curtains, with enough left over for an apron by piccing in three sections. : ~ Use Inexpensive Fabrics to Brighten Your Kitchen Practical and pretty, this set of kitchen curtains and an apron to match are made of sturdy blue denim- with a white ball fringe. * TABLE TALKS dane Andrews Match The Nicknames With The Pople Through the media of music, or sports, or entertainment, people in these fields have been dubbed with nicknames that fit them. See if you can match up the people with their well-known titles. La Majestic Ararat Pc In the imagination of the ancl ents, Ararat seemed a wonder, the work of a supernatural power; the colossus became: sacred, the abode of genii.. known as "Dragon's Sons." Its snowy summit was as- sociated with the dim memories of forgotten ages, with stories én. hanced by tradition, and Ararat, i - the work of divine hands, stood in coaitrast . to that other fabulous tower which maeials liad sought in_ vain to build to heaven, Such power and grandeur, such com- manding poetry, emanate from the volcano's majesty; that simple minds have ever been struck with overwhelming awe and admiration in the presence of this natural wonder . . . } When towards the east the sky is aglow with the fires that herald the dawn, while all Armenia is still slumbering deep in darkness, a blood-colored patch appears in the cloud, bright as the steel aglow on the blacksmith's anvil. Slowly this patch spreads, lengthens, and takes the form of the sharp-pointed head of a giant arrow, directed threat- eningly to heaven. This is the snowy peak of Great Ararat, made crimson by the first rays of the sun, while the orb itself, still hid- den to mortals, announces its coms= ing by the gleams it sheds in the cloud ' beyond the Black Moun- tains , . . To the left of the Giant rises an- other peak, lower but just as sharp in outline, and also bathed in blood, namely, the Lesser Ararat. It like- wise is touched by the first glows of daylight, and this vision, evoca- tive of the time when the two craters together belched forth flames and lava, soon disappears. Then, towards the west, there comes soon into view the summit of another extinct volcano, the THANX out. No danger. Just good, clean After great difficulty, he and his 7a _---- , M2 Joao Pirin sate setseiades a.» Joe Di Maggio brother of the two Ararats, the fun for your large audience on the helpers landed on the little island This is probably the hardest time crumbs. Mix well. Add eggs, one - 4 Young Man witha Hom sevens smi I Ir Cob ) Alagheuz. (or Blue-Eye) whose river banks. : of Annet and over rocky treacher- of the year for a housewife who at a time, beating until well blend- 3. The Mighty Sachmo EEE, = ee..or © Charles E. Russell eternal snow dppears pink in the ht I adniit that people falling on a | -our ground laid out five hundred likes to have variety in the foods ed. Stir in remaining ingredients 4. The Litde Professor ...oviiiiiiininin d. Ping Crosby now azured sky and stands out NE banana j.el are tragic, not funny, | Yards of cable from the recording she serves, 'and especially so in and mix well. Turn: into 6 greased S. Swing and Sway with ....... OE ... e. Jesse Lasky against the dark huddle of the 3 but I must confess that one of the machine. He was worried by the homes where the Lenten. season muffin cups. Bake at 350° I. 45 6. The Lip oon viii innnn. Ee § ... {. Shep Fields mountains of Western Armenia. 2A most entertaining afternoons I-ever yery heavy~dew that collected on makes the choice even more re- min. Unmold on "serving plate. 7. Der Bingle .....ov.... Dens ara rrs es g. Ray Anthony Gradually, hundreds of peaks come Eat spent was sitting on the grass along | his tod and by ten pm. heard | coy . Serve with hot mushroom cream 8. The Yankee CHPPEr wae iveeesvnnnnnns h. Albert B. Chandler out of the darkness, announcing to or the Cam, Watching tourists go Taping fo Jeu Ord pesinm But whether or not yours is one sauce. er . 9. Happy Ce enim a # Bitrate lee © Cua i. Frankie Line Svery Yioy JS. Souing of bass v4 u-u-u-unting along.. } . A y 3 : thi ago Tg Tt } 'h adov 8 Lk ron 'Here's England', by Ruth recordings. : Mike Ja 15e yg of hams, Ga MACARONI AND CHEESE ne ee Gn Jazz) tiem wr Sees sas J leo Duroetior : still surround the whole Araxes VR M-Kenney and Richard Bransten. The second attempt . was made cheese" dishes will be a real help. WITH OLIVES - The Rippling Rhythms of ....... crn p k. Dominic Di Maggio plain . . . In the distance are heard LN mia iinré re on a dull, dark night when the |- Here's hoping, anyway. 1 8-0z. package macaroni 12. Georgia Peach ............. ET vo... LL Billy Eckstein the church bells ringing the An- CRAY he water Sesopniony was at is - vw 2 * . 14 lb. Canadian pasteurized process 13. Mr. B. ...... WR Ss Rr LI ET «o. mm. Frank Sinatra gelus, he bleating of herds leaving AO AES eight and there was not too much - : cheese, shredded . 14. The Voice .vvver.. unum PTT. NT nS: (ay the villages, the singing of shep- RYE IOA dew, but by some hideous' mis- INDIVIDUAL CHEESE AND 34. cup stuffed olives, sliced 15. Mr. REVEhNT oer o I or herds, the barking of dogs: Arme- Re chance the disks had been left on MEAT PIES % 14 tsp. salt Ke annectn fieeibene mn ee amy ; nia is awaking to return to its bi he main and and gig not get to 1 a Sun Dash pepper rire EE ay daily labors in its fertile fields. Pa Annét until it was too late. 2 ' , : . : . i ~ Rie On his third visit there was a % cup chopped green pepper : 4) bp. Lohr sauce and bake at 375% F. 25 min. Serve Reading®loud Ai he sw pouty ms Joyous . 32 : : * 2 tbsps. butter - : on toast with cheese sauce. over top. smile on the workers who' have a high wind and the birds never P 1 cup milk a Oh What His Jet Met -- Second Lt. Ira Kimes, Jr.,, demonstrates the accuracy of Communist anti- aircraft guns' in Korea and the ruggedness of his fighter-bomb- er by sticking his head through the hole knocked in the jet's en- gine wall, Lt. Kimes finished bombing a tunnel before re- turning to his base. Colours May Make Child A Gunman If you are a parent and want your child to be a warm-hearted, relaxed little chap, see that the walls of his nursery or the room where he habitually sleeps are dec- orated in greens and browns, For according to an American who studies the effect of colour on children (he has recently decorated 50 nurseries in order to do thi), the right colours are vital in a child's life. He says parents should avoid brilliant red on nursery walls, Red- ~ stimulates; a child influenced too much by red might become a gun- "man! Deep blues and purples will give a baby a calm, philosophical outlook, states this expert. But he utters this warning: "The worst thing parents can do is to use a lot of conflicting colours." Why? Because they are "too much of an optical stimulation for a child. The infant will not show it as quickly as an adult, but eventually he will get nervous." If you have a tin of black paint you don't want, your child will be delighted if you slap it over the nursery walls, For children accept black as easily as pale pink or blue. But a mother's reaction to a given shade is often transmitted to a child, To Conclude . . . In Tulsa, Okla., Mrs, Emma Conway. complained to police that her husband, after a spat, had: 1)-mixed alcohol with ber cosmetics, 2) smeared sulfa _ eream on=her clothing, 3) cut the "otraps off' her. shoes; 4) dumped a Bot roast with gravy 'all over the kitchen, 5) broken the bedroom mirror and two flower vases, 6) slashed her brassieres to shreds. ' came within range .of the micro- phoiie, : Trying his friends' patience to --the uttermost, he persuaded them to help him to land once more on Annet, He chose a darkly perfect night but the dew was devastating and by eleven p.m. disks, turn- table and microphone were soak- ed with dew and fog and the gear had to be. wiped dry every five minutes. Suddenly at twelve-forty a.m, the shearwaters rose and be- gan their weird wailing. The heavy dew was making re- cording - 'impossible = and Koch worked frantically with a handker- chief to dry out the gear and make the 'table turn, At last, at one-fif- teen, he heard through his head- phones that the disks were clearly recording the fantastic nocturnal ..cries, : = It was a sound which few peo- ple have heard and no one else has ever recorded, and he concluded his programme in triumph by play: ing his unique shearwater sym- phony for listeners. QUIZ ANSWERS 1--e; 2--g; 3--o0; 4--k; 5--n; 6--j; 7--d; 8--a; 9--h; 10--c; 11--f; 12--b; 13--1; 14--m; 15--i. Listening Post--The curlicue tubules utting from the wall are parts 'a radio-felescope designed by Dr, John Kraus. He hopes to plek up radio signals from stars 1,000,000 light years away. from the earth, He says the signals produce a "frying sound" on the "space Laat teat, ofa - ----3-cups cooked fine noodles 1 1b. chuck beef, ground 1 tsp. salt, % tsp. pepper' 134 cups condensed tomato soup Buttered soft bread crumbs Break macaroni into 1" pieces and cook according to label on package. Drain well. Place altern- ate layers of macaroni and the cheese in individual casseroles. Add 14 lbs. process cheese foods, grated - Line eight 33" pie pans with pastry. Cook onion and pepper in the olives, salt, pepper, mustard butter until tender. and lightly and Worcestershire saiice to milk browned. Add ground meat, salt and pour over macaroni. Top with and pepper and mix well. Stir in tomato soup and noodles; blend well. Add cheese, saving 4 cup for top of pies. Fill pastry-lined pie pans with cheese-meat mixture. Sprinkle 1 tbsp. cheese on top of each pie. Bake in oven of 350° F. 45 min." Serye hot in pan, * . . SAVORY DAIRY LOAF 2 No, 2 cans red kidney beans 5 4 tbsps. onion, finely chopped 3 tbsps. green pepper, chopped 1 tbsp, butter 1 cup creamed cottage cheese 14 cups dry bread crumbs 2 eggs 14 cup evaporated milk 14 tsp. poultry seasoning 114 tsps. salt, 74 tsp. pepper 2 tsps, Worcestershire sauce Put drained beans through food chopper. Cook onion and pepper in butter until tender. Blend beans, onion and pepper, cheese and bread buttered crumbs. Bake in oven of 350° F. for 40 min. Serves 6. * L] a PEPPER SURPRISES 2 large green peppers 2 cups cooked narrow egg : noodles '3 tbsp. margarine, melted 14 tsp. salt 14 1b. pasteurized process Can- adian cheese 4 peeled, thick tomato slices Soft bread crumbs Cut the peppers in half length- wise, remove seeds, boil rapidly) for 6 min, in a quart of water. Remove carefully, drain and place in a shallow baking dish. Combine the cooked noodles, margarine, salt and cheese; toss lightly until cheese is melted, then fill the pepper shells with this mixture. Place a tomato slice on top of each and cover with crumbs. Bake in an oven of 375° F. 15 min. or until the crumbs are lightly browned and the tomato halves are tender. Serves 4. * - TUNA SALAD SANDWICHES 2 64-02, cans tuna 2 tbsp. horseradish * 1 tsp. lemon juice 14 cup mayonnaise Salt, pepper od Bread, crusts trimmed Melted butter or margarine Sliced pasteurized process Canadian cheese p Flake the tuna and mix it with the ~ horseradish, lemon juice mayonnaise and seasonings to taste. Spread generously between" slices of bread, spread the outsides of each sandwich with melted but- ter. Toast sandwiches on both sides until brown. Just before they are ready to serve place a slice of | cheese on each sandwich. Return "| to the broiler to melt the cheese. Serve immediately. ". * . CHEESE SAUCE 14 tsp. instant coffee 2 thsps, flour : 7% tspgsalt, dash of pepper tsp." dry mustard 2 tbsps. butter 1 cup milk 3% Ib, process cheese food, diced Melt butter in top of double boiler. Mix first 5 ingredients and blend into melted butter after it 'has been removed from heat. Gradually add milk, stirring con- stantly until thickened. Add cheese and stir until cheese melts. Serve over tomato ham cups. Place slice of ham in muffin. cups; into ham place a scooped-ont tomato shell with whole egg broken Into tomato. : * Cover with bread erumbs, season dream of spring and summer that * * * BAKED OMELET 14 1b. sharp - oo} pasteurized process cheese 14 cup evaporated milk, undiluted ¥4 tsp. salt Dash of pepper 6 eggs, separated Melt the cheese in top of a double boiler. Add milk gradually, stirring constantly antil the sauce is smooth, Add scasonings. Remove from heat. Beat the egg yolks and slowly add cheese sauce. Fold mix- ture into the stiffly beaten egg whites. Pour into a well-greased 9" skillet or shallow oven-prdof casse- role. Bake in oven of 325° I, 25 to 30 min. Cut into wedge-shaped pieces and serve immediately. Makes 6 servings. Time In The Bank' March this year arrived one day later than usual. For this we can thank that happy institution known as Leap Year. The cffect may he to raise by a slight percentage the month's mean temperature, at the same time postponing by one day the calendar's announcement of spring. Whatever the nature of March in any given year, we can live through it in peace of mind, if not always in comfort of body, If March is genial, that is a dividend we receive without asking ques- tions. If March is snowy, that is all right, too. We will be rewarded later for our patience, and in March, with the break of the year so close at hand, it is easy to be patient. "Winter has growg old and shabby. We have some pity for him. ' In March we have time in the bank--golden time, not buried in some frowning Fort Knox but ready to draw upon when occasion arrives. In March we can still gloat over the unspent days of April, May and June, we can still count over one by one the languid hours of July and August. These are ahead of us in a land of pure de- lights not yet traversed. We can still cherish illusions about this treasure trove in its unpenectrated hiding place. It may be better to sit by our fireplaces on a some- 'what chilly March evening and it is actually to: spend those sea- sons when they arrive. For in the dream there are no disenchant- ments. There are no. days when the heat wears down our energies, There are no mosquitos. There are no traffic blocks on blistering high- ways. There are no disappoint- ments whatever, In March we still have time in the bank. Like so many Silas Marners, like so many pirates on some stormy shore, we count our golden treasure over without spending it=~From The New York Times, Reading aloud has come back into fashion, though done with a difference. First it was Charles Laughton, Charles Boyer, Cedric Hardwicke, and Agnes Moorhead holding Broadway enthralled by their pel- lucid reading of Shaw's "Don Juan in. Hell"--the wit and passion of ideas flashing before the mind's eye without encumbrance of stage- craft and scenery, as dramatic a play of sheer argument as any- thing since Plato's dialogues, More recently it has been Emlyn Williams re-creating Charles Dick- ens' triumphal American readings of a century ago--and re-creating, with the magic of the spoken word, the gloriously rough-and-tumble, haunted and gaudy, childlike and merry world of Dickens' novéls. How wonderful to sce whole troops of characters come pouring out of the void into exuberant life ---- all through one man's words and an- other man's inflections! To a generation brought up on movies in technicolor and televi- sion in the living room we hope an echo. from the readings on Broad- way may penetrate. For they re- mind us again that the words treas- ured up in books and shared among friends may open for us what eye has never beheld --"infinite riches in a little room." One half of the world wonders why the other half lives. "since he was born, been up before dawn, dispels the - shades of the mist, tinges wih blue ~the-light-smoke-hovering--over--the - villages, and sends forth its waves of warmth, Women clad in blue or red, carrying a jar on head or shoulder, come out chattering from thier. houses of yellow clay, while the men, wearing heavy sheepskin caps like the 'Tartars, come and go, take the horses to water, and lead the oxen to the plow. Heed- less of Natufe's awakening, they sing, chant love-songs or oll le- " gends preserved by the minstrels, and do not even look at the Giant majestically standing beyond the plain, an object of admiration for the traveler, but of no concern to the countryman who has seen it Ararat whose summit stands in the clouds like an imniense regu- lar cone, is over 13,000 feet higher than the wategs of the Araxes.-- From "History of the Armenian People," by Jacques de Morgan, FALLING LEAVES The gentleman at the art mu- seum stood spellbound staring at | a huge oil painting of a shapely girl, dressed only in a few leaves at strategic points, The picture was entitled, "Spring" Suddenly, his wiic's voice inter- rupted "his reveries as she nap- ped: "Well, what are you waiting for? Autumn." Sorry, No Kitchen Sink--Nita Nels ~ -- ' Wilt -- alo (hit \! on cautiously inspects what ap- pears to be the instrument panel of a jet plane, but what is actually the dashboard of Joseph Bailon's custom-built automobile. Bailon included both air speed and ground speed indicators, a record player and a snack bar when he constructed his gadget car which was displayed at the third annual National Roaster show wv 8" 1, Wo Yor .. "Fae /. Se i ow ei Ea TE Soot a BAS

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