Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star (1907-), 17 Jul 1952, p. 3

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: $ » * # - s i , . Eis CAF Mra Ee FP ai i dire Tn a i : pie = yr ? - = ai' ; > z : < yore ebatiinic fis * : he. : ° + : eg it Ps ? + EY ares A ye . had 5 : 4 iE : 4 Fi po ph S-- -- wens n 3 ahhh ---- 'How To Choose Fla : Y ; Ha b : of ; iy | And Wear Nylons [Flavor Your Hamburgers With a Little Surprise : : hart ofa Loe Se a $i8t dan 5 13s} Guia roi tin af IE aia iated Fr re ee att § fh 11) ire 5 vg for the sheers | as fa a a dad males ; - - i A ------ cid z % est in hosiery for those "all-dressed- Ti fox DOROTHY MADDOX : ¥ otes cli. aa S ais AGE AL ; + wp" occasions, ask. for 15 denier VERYONE likes hamburgers. 'likes a pleasant se : stockings. But if you want a more » 100. - Sa put the two tox and you'll ha : 3urpr se, ! ! sind 3 | * ether ou'll hav : SC RENNIA gurable yet still fairly sheer stock- {ine crowd. yt : Tou ELEY 4 : san extra 'treat Jor = 'Ing, ask for 30 denier. For aroungd- |[' - }: Always allow one pound hamburger for four good-siséd servi 1 G3 < the-house activities, it's your. besf | *:. .- The more times meat is ground, the more compact the fibérs ying : . buy because the highér the denier ah ~to-use hamburger, sold under current government regulations, +4 the stronger' the yarn. af ARE bo "jwill 'by 'ruling be ground twice. * The patties made by this ready- 5 . And' here are some' more hints : Beat by meat will be firm. If you prefer a julcier 'product, buy the . 2 here i by the plece 'and have it ground only once, Choose boneless i on hosiery: , GV ¢huck, round, neck: or. flank for thls. If meat is particularly lean, ddd : If you are wearing nylon stock- | * '3 ounces of suet for each pound of lean meat, © «i veiiimenits Ings that are too short, your feet Surprises (4 servings) --One pound hamburger, 2 tea- ; may burn, Sitting, bending or reach- {| Spoons salt, ¥ teaspoon pepper, 2 tablespoons butter or margarine, . Ing may become uncomfortable 85D Anely chopped onion, 1 slice bread, cut in 4 squares, }: cup movements. If you have these diss 2 41S HOB, | Cm mai : on ar 2 BE aed ave Lise he Co Mix urger and seasoning. Divide hamburger info 8 equal son rn Eo EL 'portions, ape each portion into a round patty about 3 inches id Vig available at most hosiery counters. |- diameter. Melt butter or margarine in a large skillet.' Add onions On the other. hand, if your stock- and bread squares. Stir and cook untjl onions are'tender and bread ; ings 'are too long they will snag : is browned and crisp. Push onions and bread -squares to one side ! : more easily because 'of the loose-- of the skillet, Place one-fourth of the cooked onion ard a' toast ; ® ' ness of the fit. : Musre n the Lenles of each patty, Place remaining 4 patties on: top : ).- TO A ' of bread squares. Sea ges of each 2 hamburger"patties by gently = 0084 way a Svold Yuneessary i pressing them together with the back of a spoon. When bottom patty. Sl g down is cooked through, turn it : y Koei 10 the 1 bef lini i ; ugh, turn it over and cook top pafty. Turn,carefully Rie = 0 the togxbelore shpping it on. | in order not to break the seal. Cook about 7% minutes on each side. _ Then straighten the foot seam, Place cooked surprise on slices of tomato and then place on lightly ~ iy -unroll the stocking slowly and: toasted bun. Heat chili sauce in skillet until very hot and serve over "smoothen it over the leg. To assure the surprises, wh 3 1 ye fo y 'stockings longer life, be seated | Deviled Hamburger Pattles (4 servings)--One pound hamburger, ees , a . : when fastening front:and side gar- 1 teaspoon salt, ¥ teaspoon pepper, % cup crushed cornflakes, 1 ta- Hamburger Surprises on sliced tomatoes served with hot chill sauce. ' NO» JT ters to allow for. kiiee action. Stand .,.blespoen fat,. 10 pimiento olives, sliced, 1 can condensed cream of Fis : : < . : EN : up to fasten the back garter. Whe- tomato soup. ay : : olives and tomato soup (or seasoned and thickened tomato juice). - ther your stockings are full-fashion- "I Season hamburger with salt and pepper. Add cornflakes. Form - Simmer '10 minutes. Serve on toasted English muffins or split and od or teamlEss. Tasten garter in, the inte patties 1 inch thick. "Brown in hot fat in heavy skillet. Add toasted rolls. . ws ; 3 © ..welt (reinforced part) and not on = = fi ¥ ; : -- the seam.- © =: Xgl : : 1 3 i : % The term "gauge" indicates fine- I | ey: Old Lady Weaves _mess of stitch. A stocking witha 4 , D : Rugs As Hobby shigh 'gauge like 66 has smaller § : oh £8) EHR stitches and so gives better snag- > SEA : d ; : ; " "Aunt: Fanny. v Ak 5 es b J anny, you have made Ra _ -Fesistance than one with a_lower i : ane Andrews : ig yourself an antique" exclaimed an "gauge ike 42, Degicr--the- weight ei SER an admiring niece, as Mrs. Fanny and thickness of the thread -- is J } CC . Tas \ Waugh Davis took a"colorful hand- : the guide for sheerness 'and the Informal summer meals caten -thieken, then stit in the chopped woven- stair "carpet from the large Vig most important factor in wear. outdoors--on the pore or even on onion and chunks of cottage cheese: Toom ins her Nashville living 'room. ; Fernie Th Sera the_lawn-- are becoming more and | Pour mixture into four individual The finished product measured 24 Don't Fool With ~ more" popular, The - following sug- molds. Chill -yntit Grm and umhokd "feet long and 18 inches wide : ¢ 2 gestions will be of a help to you on crisp greens. Makes 4 servings. "It was i 31 Ha Blasting Caps. Pa when you want" to serve. the, folks Ta » * th ! Shi wa ro Ne ve it fecinzel ER 5h eri ; with "something a bit different." 71, qj you hive some cold sliced' io Deke, Ay Whi hin . While thousands of sticks of Ee = chicken, veal, lamb, beef or 'ham, ing Sith rs Re Fo og dynamite and thousinds. of blasting perhaps you would like to. serve A 3 te E Spay : caps are safely used every day in" | +a colorful, nourishing salad with Db: Noth hobby. in. which . Mrs, mines, quarries, road building, land' .it for an impromptu outdoor "sup- ove Mod Sidsilgedd is; hooking clearing, oil prospecting, constric-" "per. Here lis an unusual one com: Pigs She has also made blankets * tion and other important. jobs; seri- «<bining 'bright - green peppers, rosy or cack ou her two gran ehild, B ous accidents «can happen if they réd 'tamatoes and white rice in an you, reaviny seven-jiich four-ply . get into inexperienced hands: "attractive combination. Use a curry Avda] spares on.a AA frame, J Consequently, with the summess-|-- dressing and, if your family "likes iad VC OR Chifstin "ders slightly less in diameter than work scason approaching full swing, explosives engineers repeat Hr annual warning to parents and chil- dren: By ! _"If you find blasting caps-or ex- 'plosives lying about, do not touch them but notify police' or other authorities immediately." There are two types of 'blasting caps, both readily recognized as small aluminum or copper cylin- an ordinary pencil. Both types. are designed to defonate dynamite and are loaded. with powerful-and- sen: sitive" explosive charges for. this purpose. One type, about .an inch - and a half long, "has an open end "and is fired by flame froma fuse. The other type, from two to five - Inches long, has two wires extend- ing from one-end and is fired by electrical enrrent. Either type, if struck witlia hammer or rock, may -- kill - 'or injure . anyone anding within a 25-foot radi Dynamite _cartridges.are usually about cight inches long and an Inch 'or so in diameter. ~ Special types. may be up to two feet long and from four to eight inches thick. Most have a brown waxed - paper shell but some are in cardboard tubes. The important point to re- member is that they are all-sensi- -tive. and their purpose is -to ex- plode with tremendous force. In skilled hands they are essential tools. In the hands of children or" inexperienced adults they can .cause Injury or death. : y The warning is repeated: If you find blasting caps or explosives, don't touch them. Report them to _A whole mieal salad may be served attractively as-a buffet meal where you help yourself to. in- gredients and" mix your own_com- binations into your owg individual + salad with _dny one of.escveral" dressings topping it. - Either "ara range on a big platter," each in its own line, or serve on andivid- ual dishes: hard-cooked egg slices, © bright red tomato wedges, ciicum- ber slices, shrimps, white tuna chunks, cubed _ chicken," carrot sticks, celery curls, thin "slices" of radishes, stuffed olives, and salad greens. : . On another platter. serve fruit -cut in slices and ~wedgés--oranges, pincapple, cherries, berries, 'grape-, - fruit, avocados and thin lime slices. ------Tartar --sauce;--French--dressing, . and mayonnaise complete this cool : . -supper--and it's fun to make your. own choices. + bs If you'd rather omit the tomato wedges and serve a gelatin to- mato cheese salad molded in" cute fluted molds; make it this way! * + * ".- - 'Tomato Cheese Salad 1 envelope unflavored gelatin Vi cup cold water - ; 1 can condensed tomato soup (1% _ cups) - ' 1 tablespoon lemon juice 1 tablespoon finely chopped onion 1 cup cottage cheese : . Soften the gelatin in the cold water. Heat the tomato soup and add gelatin, _ stirring. until- com- pletely dissolved. Mix in the lemon police. or other authorities. AN juice. Cool until it begins to Tot Totes His Own-With his dad's hat perched jauntily otop his head, two-year-old Gunner Philipp, a displaced person from Latvia, prepares to carry his luggage from the pler in New York. onion, add a small aniount of it, = finely minced, to the dressing Tomato Rice Salad 4 green peppers. - 4 ripe tomatoes . Lettuce leaves Cold cooked rice Curry dressing' : TT Cook Tice «Mully and call I'cel tomatoes and remove seetls from green peppers, Slice peppers and quarter toniatoes. © Combine and measupe. Add" half Jhicic_quantity of the cold] rice. Toss Serve on lettuce leaves, Serves 4 * + + ' caoked Curry Dressing 1 teaspoon curry powder 1 teaspoon salt Pinch sugar 2%: teaspoons vinegar 2 : v; feaspoon finely. chopped onion (optional) ; o Put curry powder, salt and sig- ----ar wm a pitcher. Add ving onion Stit- Mix with HRP dnd serve fmniediately Tm " . ¥ . + Another idea for_ a mixgd-at- <table salad is ham or fish loaf-- big and beautiful =in the * center of. your largest platter, garnished all-around .with generous colorful salad mixings. A. pinkish, ham mousse, for instance}: can be sur- rounded by wide green pepper rings filled with shredded carrots, clusters of radish roses, fluted cu- cumbeér slices, wedges of tomatoes, dark green cress, pale green lettuce leaves, and the white hearts of celery. A hot vegetable--aspara=-- gus or brocecol with a lemon butter sauce, and a fruit will complete this delicious and colorful meal. Jellied Salmon Loaf 1 package lemon flavored gelatin 1 cup hot water' } . 34 cup of cold-water -- '14 cup lemon juice 1 teaspoon salt ' 13 cup mayonnaise : 2 cups salmon flaked (tuna will be just.as good--or chicken) 1 cop diced celery va cup sweet pickle relish Dissolve gelatin in 'hot water; add cold: water, Jemon juice and salt. Chill until slightly thickened. Fold in "mayonnaise, salnion, cel- ery, and relish Turn into loaf pan = or a melon mold is prettier = and' chill until firm. v If "you'd like to ice your loaf with a mayonnaise coat, you -can make attractive flower. garnishes for it with slices of stuffed olives for the blossoms and water cress for 'the leaves. This is the way to do it: Soak one envelope of plain gelatin in three tablespoons + cold water for five minutes then dis- solve over hot water. Add slowly to one .cup, mayonnaise, stirring constantly. Pour mixture over loaf and spread evenly over en-' tire loaf with® spatula. Place a "flower garnish whege cach slice will be. 3 -Qgrve. a Tartar sauce with your fish loaf, or if you've made a ham loaf or mousse, make a sour- cream sauce for it by adding to 2 cups sour cream some prepared horseradish -- just the amount you want and then season it to taste. . en cpert, he "receivers, : i : Neck and Neck Helén a giraffe at'Doc Mann's. 200 gets a close look at Harry, the 4-foot tod: dler she brought into the world the day before. The proud mo: 'ther was bJFh at 1945 and. her lang:legged son the zco in is the second generation of the tamily to bé 'born there Hospitals Should Be Quieter Now ; aN 1 Dr. Michiels" siz Michacls, bellow the calling loud speakers of a hospital The syctem has -its points, but it also rasps the nerves of patients who need pest and quiet ) One patient: decided to this problem. He was Gharles I Neergaard-- Though no ridic ex- : visualized J Tshort-wave radio means of communication that would permif patients to Suffer iy sitence. : Neergaard appealed to a tend Harry Royal, whe was in the elec trical communication business Royal turped to a gifted ridio fan in the person of Al "Gross, who knows his waves and electrons and tosses off inventions as a Broadway wit would toss off jokes At Royal's instigation Gross work- ed out "a small transmitter and amounted it -on the tenth floor of a Cleveland . haspital. 'The receiver could be slipped into the breast pocket of.a business suit] it started a buzzer that told the doctor whe carried the receiver that he who was attack wanted, evén if he was in a closed!" completely lead-lined X-ray thera py: room. Seléctive calling was an obvious need, "because only "the physician who was wanted was to be called Here Al Gross' ingenuity came to the. fore. By "an arrangement of special selective crysfals; in hoth sending and receiving sets, Gross made it.possible for the transmitter to brogdcast over 800 non-interéep; tible signals to 800. different re- ceivers, never than 100 to 200 walls need "more Fifty system--more than "ample. And there is no interference of any kind with the 'hospital' or outside, The signal transmitted and re: ceived lasts less than five mil- lionths of a second. After an in- finitesimal "ping-g-g!" the receiver itself does the signalling. So short a "broadcast signal cannot reach other receivers, It cannot be ignor- cd, yet it cannot be heard. at a dis- tagice because of its low volume. The doctor himgelf carries a plag- tic box about two inches longer than a package of cigarettes. Com: plete with batteries, it weights -just twelve ounces--not enough to stretch the breast pocket, * of power" gives a four-mile range to Gross" | ny electronic device inside The average hospital will - Science "Monitor. The materials used in her star carpet were all mostly worn-out artickes; such: as discarded slip covers and the better parts pf old Anything nonde- "senpt in color Twas "dyed with en- 1 ough cotton," garments depth of -She tone to character followed directions Ano tstripping" the gaps, F thin Neri was cut-mto awviders strips wd heavy or thek cloth was made flarrowes = % As. coon ay Lica bushel basket of rags Mis a sheet spread on the Toad bet pra pareed, Davis dumped them out onto floor. she mixed them thoroughly, sO as "to distribute the colors evenly, The SHIPS were sewn together on thie "pachine by lapping tivo ends about tlien and running lengihwise under the, pres- one inch, folding - twiee ser loot Alter this connect- od, they were chipped apart with and ~thes lengthening steip dropped behind the machine: severad were the scissors The strips were rolled nto- balls - ob haifa pound cach, "this being a convenient size to handle." About 18 pounds of rags went into Mrs. Davis' = She estunated the poandage needed by weighing a small vag rag having the approxi- carpet mite width desived for the finished piece % } : Ia the end of predominant color wats variety mn tlic other hades to give the whole the desired hit-or-miss effect. rose with enough and gramfmothers ured what they called the "half shade" method inf warps ing a loom for rag carpeting, Mrs. Thos that only hali as. much w arp was used Cur grandmothers Davis recalls. means a result titely covered hy the rags, later got the wear 2mctead of the warn OPERATIONS Before the American Geriatric Society Dr. Lowis Carp followed up a study made fous ago of, the "risks that persons 60 years cof age and older when they must undergo an operation, After considering cighty consecutive" hew who died a month after dn epafation he was years rm ~ autopsies of old people able to report a drop of "7 "per cent in the emergency cases." Preaths from heart failute, from, sepsis (putrefactive poisoning), 'from peritofical and kidney Ninfee- tion were lower than four years ago. Dr. Carp attributes this good showing lirgely . {fo the wide- spread use of the antibiotics and improvements in what*he calls "sup- portive therapy." All this means that an old person has a better' chance of surviving a major op- eration than he did only four yéars ago. But for some reason that is "not yet clear, deaths from broncho- pricumonia have increased surgical risks ; : Statistics show that only 5 per cent of the doctors tn the U.S.A. are, women, as compared with 17 per cent in England and more than 50 per cent in the Soviet Union, give at on the package of commercial dyes, There great as for weaving Hiner materials, As the wirp was almost cn?' which George Bassett was. w tidy. soul. | Suiting his sweet tooth and shrewd business Instincts, he liked to send out his sweetstuff salesmen with their fondant chips, sugared. but- tons, liquorice sandwiches and other products ranged in tidy lines like troops' ready for' review. Loo Nothing caught the eye, he "thought, as surely as-a geometric pattern neatly arrayed on an ordecly sample tray. : FRE, lif But one day Charlie Thompson, one of the firm's salesmen, siripped. ' over a doormat in a i, KH shop, spilling his samplés all over "the_lloor--and was his face red! Just as he Swas "gathering the pweets into a heap the customer shouted: "Stop! If you can sell me some of all sorts like that," he ex- 'plained, "I'm sure-they will sell." And that's how liquorice allsorts were born! ii] Beginning the Boom. It's jusf over fifty years since the Bassett family began its higgledy- piggledy boom; and now linorie allsorts are among Britain's -sen- sationally successful dollar exports. Three finns have captured sixty per cent of the American market. 'Hundreds of cases were recently . shipped to Los Angeles to keep the movie stars munching. "We haven't handled any American H- quorice in two years," says a tough "Chicago. wholesale -distributar, "Tt just isn't as good as the British," Intp New York, Seattle, San Fran-. cisco and other ports pour the all: sorts. And the derowning triumph came when the three biggest chain- stores in -the States started stock- ing British liquorice in their coast- to-coast networks? y Americin candy nmanufacturers have tried -to imitate--with no success. As if to make it easy for them, U.S. health laws denfand that a list of ingredients must be printed on the packet. Sugar, flour, treacle, liquorice, coconut, glucose, it's all there. But the Americans can't tell how long we boil our allsort in- | gredients, how we mix them it's liquorice hush-hush! In* the "Juice Room" Yetin a black of factories near ShefTicld, "specially bmilt far all- sorts, you'll see hundreds of pretty Tripped On Doormat, Started Candy Boom Shocked by these sweet victories, - Yorkshire. girls --standing--at- cops veyor belts, counting, assorting add hing allsorts. The procoss really. begins in' thie "juice room" where liquorice paste is ladled like wblack ddugh from the vats. From the: extrusion machines, presently," * plugs-, of liquorice squeeze like snakes or flap-like sheets . . . and on to each sheet of liquorice goes a layer of 'whit icing" with another liquorice sheet to. topiithe sand- wich. The sheets are guillotined "into. sfrips and the strips into squares. , 'a: : Or peor -into the copper vats "where the tiiy non-pareils; pinhead size sugar -balls® revolve. Maybe you call them hundreds and thou- sands--and eéach one begins as a single grain "of. sugar, gradually picking up colour and 'extra coating as it swirls. . Buttons, non-pareil, black plugs, cream rocks, reels--all the, differ- ent allsorts have their _pecrets. Jealously watched for "purity by electronic eyes, jazzed into boxes and transparent bags, they're ex- "ported to fifty-two different coun- tries, so big-is; the British allsorts boom. i! Yet every country has it different problems. Allsorts for Borneo are made in a special way to ensure they'll stand "up to the climate. Malaya, the [Falkland Isles and Sweden, all have separate allsort specifications, i You Can't Fake It : Liquorice is one substance that has never been made synthetically. That bitter-sweet taste, too, is due to glycyrhizin, a substance fifty times sweeter than sugar. Origin. ally extracted for 'medicinal pur. poses from a. plant taproot, the con- centrated liquoricé blocks. arrive here from Turkey and Mesopo- tamia looking like lumps of pitch. Byt a liquorice allsort is not en- .tirely composed of liquorice. The . rest as the children say, is pure yummy! CANDID COMMENT "You'll have td wait a few moments for your beer," said the landlord. "There's an obstruction inthe pump." "Probably | watercress, the customer, " replied PRE EE ~p FEEDING that the Lights, arr conditios It's taken for water, granted electric v Nvdrates, as well as all thie necessan - £ . = = There was a une when the c somewhat femperamental; he. cone mtellipgence the quict. dimness under the north due me the elucking, fussy moth with their broods. A pood Loomer I'eeding the hens mm those an When cliore time came, a lad too whole corn, oats, and hadley in the vitanmims or nutritional about toward him from "all directions, 1 habel of voices-- sumilar tic nois high or low, when food is ingthe of the clean, Lard grains and scatte ie dE : B : and inhibitions in hen society as hungry talk change to a low, « 3 fundantental importance of food in : --From Counttyman's Year, by Haydn SP feathered bilince. As he the hens was a pleasant day's-end THE HENS COI SON ae eerie) _ 3 0 = 11'S differait now. Hens are kept an multdeckdd apartment houses, Ladies shall have running nig, cand a saentifically aoncocted ration that mcludes just the night amounts of proteins, fats and carbo V ovitannns, wantryiman considered lens essential but simple membars of the fagm's hvestock. He granted "they were ded they possessed only moderate Fach springs a few hens were set on clutches of eggs in scadfold of the horse barn, and in ors wandered 'ardund the farmyard liked to have plenty "of fryers for summer and roasters far fall plus a batch of pullets for avers, - . x scientific days was a simples task. koa wooden measure, filled it with grain rapmoand never had a worry from the stepped barn and started in divectiph of the hencoop, the birds came running here was a confused, high-pitched ¢s made by all forms of animal life, offing. It was_fun to take handfuls r them widely so all the hens could get a fair share, for there are bullies and selfish ones, social graduations well as in human society, Feeding ask. As a lad listened to the excited wmitented "murmur, he glimpsed the life's scheme, 2% . Dark Victory Peggy Perry, 19 and Paul Ch ¥ 30, leave First Baptist Church after they were married. Bride and groom, both blind, are'led by their seeing-eye dogs, Rickey and Tex. Neukom,

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