Times & Guide (1909), 19 Jul 1956, p. 8

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& # Coaise or fine, the proportion 3 a ; | of corn meal and water is the o mm s | same, as is the method of cookâ€" en oo irmmee®® 1 / ing J1<t remember 4 cups of is ® F ;& ,':‘;\,y,,. f% * water to 1~cup of corn meal, a f t plus 1 teaspoon of salt. It takes s Fu: only a little knowâ€"how to come h\ ; h ag + > . out with a miuch that not full M f »,.,N;__“:.;v of lumps Put 3 cups of salted t a Mess 'gs\z'i water on to boil in & deep ket ; < M .. 4 ;‘g§§' 3. | tle; the deep well cooker is ideal KE | . S i0 e Into the cup of cold water reâ€" B . . j PS % + S sn tw l a#a 4 served from your formula mix the cup of corn meal into a WHOOODOOOâ€"Bird ot ill:omen for the family dog, "Pug," is smooth paste, then add this to this baby screech ow! latest acquisition of one of the youngâ€" the boiling 3 cups of watr ters of a Dallas family Ow! doesn‘t give a hoot about Pug‘s| Stirring constantls _ until ut fealingsâ€"tinds the dog‘s water dish an ideal place t take @| thickens or about ten minute‘ teotbath. | y6u ran then reduce the heat CZECH â€" Women behind the lron Curtain will be wearing this beach ensemble, according to a fashion release from Comâ€" munist â€" dominated Czechoslo: vakid. Openâ€"toed sandals, black pedal pushers, turtleneck jerâ€" sey and white poplin jacket are just the things to wear beside the (Red) seaside, it infers. & the Waldorf‘s coif called onaparte," and Claude‘s coifâ€" e "In the Manner of David" Te early 19th century in inâ€" @piration. ; Michel of Helena Rubinstein‘s eaiffure â€" called _ "Farthingale," Avon‘s look â€" called _ "Classic Beauty," and Frances Denny‘s "Watteau Look" are descriptive. So the porcelain look, the scrubâ€" bed look, and the doeâ€"eyed look Oof the past yield to a genteel One in makeâ€"up, as well as in eoiffure, to a rather pale, soft. glowing look for all its cameoâ€" ?m: "Lyrical Look" means a :;;:t'pxcle Momm en imenm in enney ""P“’ to romanticism â€" to a| Tfli< spring. "short cut to the €elicate look in makeâ€"up (based | ag,. l4:;bep wn.gh smooth line that a soft palette of portrait|fuills out at sides with rounding lors), and to the flattering: |contours," describes the general e _ hairdos which have | pgip style picture. Hair stylists making women more b?au'“a\'or short to semishort, with #or a couple of centuries. |soft sidelights, because it proâ€" @The hairdos shown proved vides the needed foundation for .‘at the Gamine, Urchin, Tiger, wider, deepâ€"set hats. hnd Italian looks have disapâ€"‘ "This year, longer hair is behind longer, more inâ€" | more important than it has been icate tresses. Eevry model in for the past few seasons." James e fashion group was coifed |Caesar says. "The bigger the hat, d made up to emphablze"the greater the need for the Momgnliness" in keeping with sog'ftrening effect of a longer e vaporous chiffons and whisâ€" | coiffure." n S’i“‘ silks which she wore. | _ Michel of Helena Rubinstein "*The makeâ€"up which gives this 1aclvoc:ates a line based on smooth git. pale feminine glow, :akes!;“;mp‘licity expressfid ixi1 lotnhx. names from periods of the Howing curves. e calls e t. There is (l;harles of the jength "demilength." and it is tz‘s "Directorie Look," with | to Just below the ear lobes, pale, opalescént foundation Where the hair curls softly inâ€" © powde:r, pink lipstick, and WArd His line curves straight e o Renimess l cunniemen: big en‘s "Mme. Recamier Look"| t 7 : of the same period. Michaet| PatS and both the Directoire and Spity. xd to the clearer organgey and bright pink shades in cosmmetics (and the accompanyâ€" ing casual» easyâ€"toâ€"keep hairâ€" dos), before the summer is over we slall be projected into the "Lyrical Look." The New York fashion group fim this as the next great " in hair and cosmetic fashions. It will encompass the entire woman, however, her bearing and carriageâ€"and even Rer attitude. It is a look deâ€" Seribed as a "return to graceâ€" & headâ€"toâ€"toe symmetry." To achieve it women must learn to stand erect again, move with gpise, and look "quiet" once: Wore |â€" their strength in serâ€" ering makeâ€"up and a hg hairdo combine for ~ the â€" shoulders" _ attracâ€" we are now summerâ€" To Be In Paris. too, pretty Lucille Jackson endured an alarmingly lonely night on her honeymoon. Her American husband went out to find a garage and lost his way. All that he could reâ€" member of his hotel was that it was~ a â€" sevenâ€"storey building decorated with black bricks â€" like scores of similar hotels in Paris, Worried Mr. Jackson wanderâ€" ed round all night searching up and down the streets. At dawn he went to the police. But it was nearly midday before the gendarmes at last tracked his hotel and his weepy wife greetâ€" ed him with the words, "There you are at last!" Even a levelâ€"headed sixtyâ€" sevenâ€"yearâ€"old Lancashire lad, from Boiton. faced a similar dilemma when he visited Lonâ€" The groom hadn‘t merely misâ€" taken the time. He had arrived a day too soon for his wedding! There wasn‘t even a parson. Deciding they had arrive an hour too soon, Derek and his best man took a pew. _ Then guests began to arrive . . . but they all turned out to be strangâ€" ers! All Marseilles smiled at his delimma. And the laugh was still on the groom next day, for his bride kept him waiting on tenterhooks before she eventuâ€" ally came down the aisle smilâ€" ing and radiant. There he was, waiting at the church, tall and handsome and dressed to the nines. But the strange thing was there were no wedding guests. And no bride appeared. Lots of Waiting At The Church "Soft styling" was endorsed by 25,000 hairdressers this spring at the International Beauty Show. This cut has a wavelet bang effect on the forehead which combines with a series of waves and half waves worked intricately over the head to create a feminine coiffure. : This spring. "short cut to the ear lobe with smooth line that {fulls out at sides with rounding |contours," describes the general |hair style picture. Hair stylists }favor short to semishort, with |soft sidelights, because it proâ€" ,vides the needed foundation for | wider, deepâ€"set hats. Michel of Helena Rubinstein advocates a line based on smooth simplicity expressed in long, flowing curves. He calls the iength "demilength." and it is to just below the ear lobes, where the hair curls softly inâ€" ward. His line curves straight hair close to the head, smooth and sleek, to complement big hats, and both the Directoire and highâ€"bosomed Empire dresses. Ritz has an underâ€"makeâ€"up cream said to give a "satiny look." Coty‘s liquid makeâ€"up gives a dewy effect. Elizabeth Arden‘s a sheen. and Helena Rubinstein‘s a dewy look. Gerâ€" maine Monteil‘s makeâ€"up offers a glow, its basic ingredient beâ€" ing a lightâ€"reflector said . to minimize lines and to make for a more radiant, luminous look. "As fashion goes, so goes hair," is the saying. And certainly hair and cosmetic fashions follow closely _ and _ coordinate with readyâ€"toâ€"wear fashions, so that any woman can Acquire the allâ€" ofâ€"aâ€"piece look so essential to chic. like quality. That 19th century ladylike appearance is quite atâ€" tainable with‘ our advanced 20th century cosmetics! "Glow" seems a keyword in makeâ€"up this seasonâ€"for it perâ€" tains to the type of dewy finish which means moisture and is young looking. Charles of the Yellow corn meal can be bought in any grocery store for only a few cents a box. but for those wha prefer the coarse ground variety the sernrch may go further. Large groceries ofâ€" ten carry it, or food specialty counters in â€" department stores may be able to supply you Have 1ou been, overlooking one of the simplest yet satisfyâ€" ing dishes in your daily search for variety in meals? Something that can fulfill these requireâ€" ments in all ways is mush â€" corn meal mush. In addition, it has the added attractions of beâ€" ing inexpensive and certainiy versatile. Pass Your Bowl For Cornâ€"Meal Mush Learned arguments were exâ€" changed to decide whether a man without clothes could be described as clothed in a manâ€" ner likely to offend public deâ€" cency. Happily he appeared beâ€" fore a sympathetic magistrate, Mr. Paul Bennett, V.C., and he was acquitted. Could it happen to you? Nightmares can happen at any time to anyone. He lost his bearings and felt that he couldn‘t swim back. A policeman found him crouching in dismay beside a deckâ€"chair. A car rushed him to a police station. And on Monday mornâ€" ing, instead of going to work as usual, he found himself in a po}ice court. He didn‘t know the coach party had left some cash with the police in case he was stranded. He lived on his stick of candy, slept under a hedgo after twentyâ€"four hours on the road â€" and tried in vain to sell his cigarettes to buy food. Finally, a framer‘s wife gave him some sandwiches and inâ€" sisted on stopping a lorry so that George could have a lift. After four days on the road he reached his own friendly stairâ€" case â€" and collapsed. | But if dnly he had known if he could have looked up his sister who was on holiday in Blackpool at the time. There‘s the young man who | decided one warm night last| summer to have a refreshing | dip in the Serpentine. Taking advantage of the darkâ€" mess, he wore no costume. But when he reached the other side his nightmare began. He hadn‘t a penny. All he had was ten cigarettes and a stick of rock. Home, sweet home in Newcastle was 167 miles away but George set out to walk it. The queer things that happen to people! Football fan George Grahamslaw went by coach to see Newcastle United play at Preston and â€" the _ excursion should have ended with an evening in _ Blackpool. â€" But George missed the coach back! He spent the night huddled on a station bench while his anxious relatives toured the hosiptals. The next day he again tried to find his London digs and again failed. It was Friday before, exhausted, hungry and unshaven, he stumbled into a police station, Later doctors insisted that he should go to bed for three days. > But the five minutes turned into a grim five hours . . . and the man realized he was hopeâ€" lessly lost. After tramping for miles he decided to go to Euston Station and head back to Bolâ€" ton, but he found that he had left his ticket behind and had come out with only a few shilâ€" lings. don. He and his wife stayed with friends in Paddington in order to say goodbye to their daughter, who was off to New Zealand. Just after lunch on Tuesday, he decided to pop out and buy a postcard. "I shan‘t be five minutes," he said. REDS‘ LITTLE CONSTRUCTION SCHOOLHOUSE â€" Model home, above, at San Bruno, Calif, which Soviet building experts saw on their tour, is prototype of one scheduled for shipment to Moscow some time in August of this year â€" complete with furnishings. Amtorg, Soviet trade agency, has OK‘D purchase order placed at the time for the home. It‘s a threeâ€"bedroom, twoâ€" bath dwelling. s If you want to serve bucon, frv it in the skillet you intend to use for the mush and use this | fat â€" Hamâ€" shees. salt pork. or sausuge accompany it well. too, but fried mush can easily be | the main dish of any meal from company breakfast to family supper. â€" From The Christian Science Monitor. EAT ANYTHING WITH FALSE TEETH on tronbimsome upper. or. lower . Itire ; mbide perfectly Rasy fo se tastelem . o Marmiers to you And vour plates Remoss direeted Plata eleaner Included Money 1 mot completely amtisfed Available at all Drug Counters WwiLDROOT LTD,, fOrT ERE, ONT, ANYTHING1 Simp try Brimm« Plastiâ€"Liner : One < appileation makes plates ft rmuply |XG without powdet of paite. because Mrimm* Piatiâ€"lAner hardens per manontly to your plate lt Prliocs and plates In a way no pawder or nasts c on old tubhear (plates on get gnod If you have, troule with plater that «p. rock and enume sare gume If there is any left‘ over, which you should surely plan for even if you have to double the recipe, pour it into a butterâ€" ed. glass loaf pan while still warm and spread the top with butter so a erust will not form. Allow this to stand in a cool place until it is set, This will take only a few hours, or you can keep it several days in the refrigerator. _ The little loaves can even be removed from the pan when set, wrapped in freezâ€" er paper and frozen for use. Now, to fry the mush: Slice about as thick as a peneil, dredge both sides in flour. or a mixture of half flour, halt corn meal â€" a good comproâ€" mise â€" or all corn meal, Have a heavy skillet, the controlled eiectric ones are ideal and should be set at 360° F., coverâ€" ed deep enough with fat,‘ aniâ€" mal or vegetable, so that the slices will sizzle and bubble around the edges. Because of the moisture in the mush slices, they will be slow to brown so the heat should be medium. Be sure to count on several slices for each serving as it is erispy and savory with maple sirup or sweet jelly. . If you make not mush in the morning it makes a tasty breakâ€" fast food served with milk, or half and half cream. Some like sugar on it as with other cereâ€" als. Or if you make it at noon, it is as good for lunch,. and it certainly makes a nice solution for a light supper for any memâ€" ber of the family in the evenâ€" ing. to low, cover, and stir only ocâ€" casionally. A half hour of cookâ€" ing is all it requires no matter how you plan to use it. sroPPED IN A JIFFY or money back Very first use of soothing. cooling liquid D.D.D. Prescription positively relieves raw red itthâ€"baused by ecrema, rashes scalprritation, chafingâ€"other it ch trou hls Greaselees, atiinless, 39¢ trial botrle must aatifv or memey hack. Don‘t sufter. Ask wour drugwist for D. 0. D PRESCRIPTION GET A HORSE â€" Riders in Central Park give the horse laugh to the driver of a threeâ€"wheeled utility car. Named the "Star," the tiny vehicle has a streamlined body of molded fiberglas and a oneâ€"cylinder German J.L.O. engine. The car has a maximum speed of 70 miles per hour, and is said to get 80 miles to the gallon. Less than three feet high, the Star is 10 feet, five inches long, 50 inches wide, and weighs only 400 pounds. ISSUE 28 â€" 1956 ear or longer YOU CAN EAT | Drive With Care . gone the jr www q ed ths Q. Should ice cream, served in a sherbet glass, be eaten with the spoon or fork? Q., What kind of gifts are giveh in observance of a second wedding anniversary? A. This is the "Paper Anniâ€" versary," and gifts comprising that material are appropriate A. M-osl cer;*m-mrlryrhe shou)?q remove the pipe. | A. With the spoon. Ice cream is caten with the fork only when it is served with pie or cake alamode Q. Is it necessary for a man who habitually carries a pipe in his mouth to remove the pipe when speaking to a woman? â€" A. It is much better for the averaze person to break it with the" fork than to attempt to copy the Italians‘ skillful mafi- ner of handling it This may save you both embarrassment and laundry. Q. When spaghetti is served Italian style, how should it be eaten? A. The girl should return all presents to the donors promptly, with notes of explanation. Q. Is it proper always to seat a woman at a table to the right of her male companion? A. When practical, yes. _ The few definite rules about this inâ€" clude the seating of a guest of honor on the right of the host or hostess or chairman, and the military rule by which the senâ€" ior officer walks as well as sits on his junior‘s right. Q. Is it necessary that a guest unfold his napkin entirely when placing it on his lap? A. This is ncither necessary nor proper. It should be only half unfolded, Q. Who are correctly asked to serve as pallbearers at a tuneral ? A. Men who are close friends of the deceased. Members of the immediate family are never chosen, as their place is with the women of the family. Q. What should be done when a _ marriage â€" engagement . is broken after the wedding presâ€" ents have already been reâ€" ceived? Q. Hovw many salt and pepâ€" per shakers should be used on a dinner table? A. A pair at every other plate is the most convenient placeâ€" ment. Q. When someone to whom one has been introduced takes leave of one by saying, "I am very glad to have met you," what is an appropriate resâ€" ponse? A: "Thank. you," or, "Thank you very much," or, "I‘ve enâ€" joyed meeting YOU." Modern Etiquette What belief?" I helieved the policeman bad ner n here again‘ ask mr beliof repited In the cage, Belita began to build up the Grand Pyramid. For a moment I felt an overâ€" whelming sigse of relief: the last routine. Then, in a shock of horror, I realized that she‘d waited until the final act to stage the big moment. â€" I saw how she intended to do it It only nedded one of the stools forming the pyramid to be unbalanced slightly and the combined weight of five lions would bring it crashing down. And when that happened . . . "Luke!" I grabbed his arm, shaking him. "For Pete‘s sake, get her out! She‘ll be killed!" He stared at me, eyes glazed with terror. Killed Because She Ran Out of Smokes Mr. Bendall came in and went hurrying down to the cage. I saw Belita turn swiftly, and smile. This was what she‘d been waiting forâ€"to have her father there; to have him know it wasn‘t just a harmless scare, but a wickedly dangerous situation, so that when Luke ... Pyramid!". _ He began to struggle, backâ€" ing away. "No!" he moaned hoarsely. "I can‘t!" "You did once," I told him. desperately. "Show ‘em you still can. Look!" I ripped back his I shot another glance at him, and felt myself go sick. His face was contorted with fear. It must have looked ugly even to the ringmaster. He sent for the boss. And there was another nasty sign. Behind me I could hear them coupling the hoseâ€" pipes, getting ready to corner the lions with highâ€"pressure water jetsâ€"and no circus owner halfâ€"drowns his audience if he can avoid it. These were emerâ€" gency methods. her. Rex, I thought, was more than usually badâ€"tempered. . a sort of hypnotic fascination, but in his left hand, correctly held, the cane chair was weaving and thrusting in front of him.. "She‘s _ right!" I â€" thought, swittly. "He has trained lions!" Then a gasp from the audience brought my attention back to the ring. Belita had slipped. Whether by accident or design I couldn‘t tell, but she was on one knee, jabbing at Rex with the chair and groping with her other hand tox; the whip, which she‘d dropâ€" ped. It seemed an» age before she found it. I heard Luke let out his breath in a long, gasping sigh. His forehead was glistening with sweat. "Luke » "Quiet!" He breathed the word through the side of his mouth, his eyes never leaving the cage. Around us the audience was shifting nervously. Time and again Belita had to parry a swift, clawing thrust, and she began to lash them, a thing I‘d never seen her do before. He was staring at the beasts in Nothing could have been more dangerous. When animals have been trained to a rigid order of movements any break in routine upsets them. They don‘t know what to do next, and they get savage. And then she began cutting out parts of the routine. "It fell off that excursion boat at the height of the masquerade "Don‘t you understand? The I shot a quick glance at Luke. MERRY MENAGERIE! Men who think of tomorrow practice modcration today Che House of Seagram America has _ many _ great caves, but not since the dscovâ€" ery of Kentucky‘s fantastically long Mammoth Cave in 1800 has there been such excitement among the country‘s cave exâ€" perts, The Mammoth has subâ€" terranean rooms and passages on five different levels. > They believe, too. that the newly found cave may yield not only important geological and archaeqlogical secrets but also treasure, An old legend says that in one of the extenâ€" sive network of caverns urftierâ€" lying Kentucky is .a vast cache of gold hidden centuries ago by pirates fleeing from justice. The explorers are spending many hours daily crawling and stumbling through the cave. They have already mapped out moxe than thirty miles of its they may extend nearly three times as far. One of the world‘s biggest and most impressive caves has been discovered by intrepid exâ€" plorers in Kentucky. It is so vast that the last of its countâ€" less winding and twisting passâ€" ageways are not likely to have been completely explored until midsummer, Women do strange things, too. In moments of great danger they instinctively turn to the man they loveâ€"even though, until then, they may not have known who it was. Cave Proved Grave For Bandits "A man will do strange things for love, Koko." And how could a poor clown ever have told her of his great passion if she hadn‘t called in that moment of need? "Koko!" â€" she "Koko!" Could I ever have a better proof of her love? Or better hope for our future?â€"From "Titâ€" Bits." â€" Only once, for a fraction of a second, did she take her eyes from that maddened mob of savagery. She turned her head towards where Luke and I were standing, and called. It was a last, despairing appeal. In that call was all the hope and trust and love that a woman gives to a man. And no man worthy of the name, hearing himself called like that, could ever refuse it. Nor did he. I don‘t remember much of what happened after that. It was a confusion of roars and snarls and screams and of a hot pain searing my shoulder. But afterâ€" wards, in Mr. Bendall‘s caravan, with Belita leaning over me and her cool hand on my forehead, I remembered what she had said. sleeve, exposing the scar. "Reâ€" member how you got that?" His eyes widened in horror. "But you‘re wrong!" he gasped. "I was an attendant. I got it through the bars . . . I‘d been teasing them . . ." My heart turned ice. "You meanâ€"you weren‘t a cat trainâ€" er?" % He shook his head, dumbly. Behind me I could hear Belita‘s sharp word of command, orderâ€" ing Rex to leap to the top stool. "Belita! No!" I spun towards the cage, but it was too late. Rex clawed on to the stool. For an agonizing instant it swayed . . . tottered . . . then the whole thing collapsed, pitching five savagely enraged lions in a clawing, snarling heap at Bélita‘s feet. And Belita, backed against the bars of the cage, still lashed her whip, still barked orders, but her face, now, was as pale as death. h The cane chair was knocked out of her hand in the first panicâ€"stricken second. One blow from Rex‘s massive paw and it was a mess of splintered matchâ€" wood. The audience screamed. I could hear Mr. Bendall yelling for the hoses. Arizona‘s Colossal Cave. the cried _ wildly A great soul prefers , moderation C § B.C.~.A.D. 65 ) motorcycle racing champion H. P. Mueller holds up a measure with a little more than a quart of gasoline â€" the amount he needs for each test run of the new, streamlined German NSU racer. That small amount of fuel took the vehicle 100 kiloâ€" meters (about 60 miles) at a speed of 100 kilometers per hour in an initial test. Top speed by Hueller in his "racing chair" was about 90 miles per hour. During the special run, Mueller was lying almost flat on his back in the machine. only completely dry cave in the world, has an _ allâ€"theâ€"yearâ€" round temperature of seventyâ€" two degrees and is a crystal wonderland. All the rock is erystallized. Off went a sheriff and his posse, They searched the cave with its intricate windings day after day, but failed to find their quarry or the loot. It is belived that the bodies of the missing bandits are still someâ€" where in the cave. They probâ€" ably died of starvation. This cave was accidentally discovered by bandits in 1884. They had robbed a coach and fled, seeking a place .to hide their loot. They stumbled upon the entrance to the great cave and lay concealed there for two days. Then one of the robbers ventured out for food, was caught and imprisoned and reâ€" vealed where his companions were hidden. CLASSY GAS SAVER â€" World E: Eesnc emitigh EMERALD OIL acts instantly to quiet pain, reduce inflammation and stimulate circulation bringing fresh blood to the injured part. Just follow the simple directions. EMERALD OIL is sold by all druggists. » The simple EMERALD OIL home treatment permits work as usual while those old sores are being helped. You get relief real quick for EMERALD OIL helps pror{mte healthy healing. LcR 2 CECIPRHY D a Simple Ulcers _ Boilsâ€"Open Sores Now Get Real Help At Homeâ€" No Time Lost From Work

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