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Durham Review (1897), 11 Jan 1934, p. 3

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st f Old Inn led in Diary klin replied, ve him some sts cars MA n v gen i00K &1 Host" Thought () COrcié h ied in Hunâ€" 2# Caramelized Onions With a winter of the oldâ€"fashioned variety, solid, good food is called for, and what better than the appetizing healthâ€"giving onion. Try this recipe. It is sure to be a success with every member of the family: & well seasoned white s;;;s;.- onlons left whole and served this are very inviting. Use small onions and simmer them uncovered until tender. Then add to & well seasoned white sauce. Tiny onlons left whole and served this way Cut head lettuce in slices and arâ€" range with alternating slices of peeled tomatoes. Serve with French dressing. To make the mint ice cream crush peppermint stick candy and add to any plain ico cream recipe, omitting the sugar. Use oneâ€"halt pound candy to a quart of ice cream. 1 Stewed â€"chicke creamed onions, salad, mint ice c sauce. crisn enoki Braised calt‘s liver, stuffed baked tomatoes, Parker House rolls, jellied cabbageâ€"salad, peach _ upâ€"sideâ€"down cake, milk, coffee. Braise the liver with carrots and onions, The tomatoes are stuffed with a mixture of cooked macaroni, tomato pulp and cheese. _ ‘The combination provides a pleasing contrast with the rather highly seasoned liver. ‘ A prepared lemon or pineapple jelly powder may be used with the cabbage for the salad. Threads of green and red sweet peppers add color if scatâ€" tered through the mould. Fresh or canned peaches are used for the dessert. Two Wellâ€"Balanceg Interesting Menus Nowadays our menus reveal a tenâ€" deney to drift away from the oldâ€"fasâ€" hioned heavy meals with their hearty meats and rich desserts. Our menus are made with attention to a balanced diet and our choice of foods is not‘ limited to season. The following valanced : Always wash wearing them. acting upon th cause it to ladd washing streng greatly, Fur collars need attention, too. You can‘t keep your neck clean if. you wear the same fur collar all winter without cleaning it at least once every two weeks. A rough bath towel and a bit of cleaning fluid will clean any fur collar and won‘t hurt the fur a bit. Neek scarfs, either wool or silk ones, should be washed or dry cleanâ€" ed often. In other words, be just as fastidious about your outer garments as you are about the lingerie whlch‘ yOu wear next ty vane oli. h 1 _ ___"* . +118 I% important no matter how persistently you use deodorants. Remember to clean the shields each time you clean the dress, and it‘s not a bad idea to clean shields oftener than that. Dip them in a little houseâ€" hold ammonia and hang them in the sun to dry. Be sure that each dress in it This is important how persistently you use Remember to clean the s time you clean the dress, a bad idea to clean shi. cleaned frequently, lil;i be aired thoroughly seve tween cleanings. Hane th few hours Be sure in it Py ni,, ,, _ ___ "Uy Dath, of course, and Plan to use a good deodorant under your arms at least twice a week, Woolien clothes need to be dry. cleaned frequently, and they should DC aired Hhewnsctull _ n metent wrong side Consider your whole be clothes, as well as your ure, when you plan a w routine. _ Woollen frock heated rooms cause quite cess perspiration and you that in mind constantly. 4 time for a daily bath, of Plan to use a good deod YOUur arms aft lanct #«i.. . Fersonal da fAirst requisites ing. _ wash new stockings before them. ‘The heat of the foot pon the unwashed silk may to ladder at once, This first strengthens the stockings with attention to a balanced our choice of foods is not 10 CZCCC FUrds, 06 JUust as about your outer garments re about the lingerie which next to your skin. To Preserve Hose Menu No. 2 Menu No your whole body and your well as your face and figâ€" you plan a winter beauty Woollen frocks and steam out daintiness constantly. Allow Uy, and they should hly several times beâ€" Hang them in the gun, and leave them for a dinner itiness is one of of immaculate gr These Points ns are disjointâ€" ly until tender, ck is combined 1 the liquid is ‘poon flour rubâ€" ‘ with 1â€"tableâ€" brought to the red over the order of steamâ€" all winter without quite a lot of menus are has shields should bear enough of the groomâ€" By Mass Production How cottages could be provided for agricultural workers at a small rental per week, including rates, was exâ€" plained by W, Harding Thompson, London, Englind. The cottage has three bedroom:s, a living room with cooking _ range, sculleryâ€"warehouse with bath, larder and shed. The rent might be made even lower by mass production and reducing the height of rooms from eight to seven feet three inches. Cottages at Low Rent Chief Healy is not opposed to the practice in principle, but he points out that some of the men have been so generous as to endanger their health. He maintains that the first duty of a fireman is to Keep himself in the best possible condition to fight fires and consequently has ordered no more transfusions, at least for the time being. ‘ Denver.â€"The Denver Fire Departâ€" ment is losing too much blood, Chief Healy says, and he has moved to stop it. More than one hundred fire men, accordings to reports, have given blood to hospital patients withâ€" in a short period. Chief Healy is not opposed to the Denver Firemen Told To Stop Giving Blood exâ€" Stuff the heart with the forcemeat, stitch the opening, and rub over with seasoned flour. Place the heart in a baking tin, smear with dripping, then bake in a moderate oven for % hour, keeping it well basted. An Economica!l Sponge Cake If you feel you would like a change in cakes from the rich Christmas fare here is a sponge cake that is delicate and white yet is simply made from \oul_v three eggs. Hot Milk Sponge Cake f Measure 1 cup sifted cake flour. Add 1 teaspoon baking powder and sift toâ€" gether three times. Beat three eggs until very thick and light and nearly white. Add 1 cup sugar, gradually, beating constantly. Add 2 teaspoons lemon juice. Fold in flour, alternately with 6 tablespoons hot milk, mixing quickly until batter is smooth, Bake at once in ungreased tube pan in modâ€" erate oven (380 deg. F.) 15 minutes. Remove from oven and invert pan for What can we have for dinner that is nourishing, appetizing, and won‘t necessitate any leftâ€"overs? This is a question that often arises. A stuffed heart is the answer, Wash the heart in warm salted water, then gently boil for one hour. Make a forcemeat with four table-‘ spoons breadcrumbs, two tablespoons shredded suet, a dessertspoon mlxed‘ herbs, a small chopped onion, salt and pepper. Bind together with a beatenl egg. & hour or until cold The amount of oil and so on you will need depends upon how many potaâ€" toes you have. The vinegar is used in equal proportions of both kinds. A Heart Dinner What can we have for dinner that Should you make this salad in the winter, chopped celery in place of the onion is a delightful flavor. Cover the dish with a greased paper and put it in a moderate oven until the potatoes are really hot. Brush the bottom slightly with salad oil before putting in the potatoes ; chop very finely some parsley, chives, or the green part of some â€" spring onions; sptinkle them with seasoning and a pinch of sugar over the potatoes, Mix some best salad oil with Taraâ€" gon and wine vinegar; heat it, and when almost at boiling point, pour it over the potatoes. . When cooked, peel and let them get cool; then, with a sharp knife, cut them in thin and even slices. This salad is served in the dish in which it is cooked. m cemmmguie~.. Hot Potato Salad To make hot potato salad you will want some. mediumâ€"size potatoes, which should be boiled in their skings in the ordinary way. Peel small onions, prick with tines of fork at top and bottom, parboil unâ€" til nearly done,. Drain, place in frying pan, dot and sprinkle with equal meaâ€" sures of butter and sugar. Cook slowâ€" ly, turning the onions often until each one is carmelized. By BUD FISHER hm t reires s ies When The march was brought to the United States shortly after Mendelsâ€" sohn composed it in 1833, and its popuâ€" larity was so immediate that for many years no wedding was complete withâ€" out it. Damrosch has written words to the march which will be sung by a chorus of 1,200 voices. The celebration is to take place in Madison Square Garden. of which will be giv:er; i'o'a;le.;xxployed musicians. New York.â€"Walter Damrosch, the conductor, is looking for husbands and wives who were married the greatest number of years ago to the strains of Mendelssohn‘s famous wedding march. The four recordâ€"holding couples will be his guests at the Mendelssohn celeâ€" bration here January 17, the proceeds If You Were Married to Mendelssohn‘s Tune While the men were chatting pleasâ€" antly over their coffee and cigarettes, Miss Santos managed to inform them that the wrist watch they had taken was a gift from her dead father. It. was returned, with apologies. Then, wiping the fruit juice from their finâ€" gers and the coffee from their lips, the bandits bade their victims adieu an« departed. Several minutes later Mrs. Santos wriggled fre and sounded an alarm. "Ha, coffee," said one of the men, sniffing joyfully as he seized a percoâ€" lator and made for the stove. There was another knock. This time it was a fruit vendor, and he took his place, bound, with other members of the unâ€" comfortable group in the corner. Some oranges and grapefruit he had brought were peeled and sliced. The coffee was poured, steaming, into three cups. The radio was turned on. Breakfast was ready. ‘ _ _ The latter dropped his bundle of clean wash and submitted while the bandits tied his arms and legs gently but firmly. They had just deposited him with the six other victims when there came another knock at the door. Happily the men welcomed a grocer, tied him up, too, and unwrapped the comestibles he had brought. ‘ lTie Up Callers and Regale Themselves with Coffee New York.â€"This is a tale of a strange _ "bandit" breakfast party which lasted an hour and a half. Three polite bandits had just tied the last knots in the twine which firmly bound Mrs. Ramona Santos, her 22â€"yearâ€"old daughter, and four men, friends of the family, in Mrs. Santos‘ apartment in this city, when someone knocked at the door. Hastily pocketing the $200 in cash and the wrist watch they had taken from the group, one of the robâ€" bers opened the door and thrust his revolver under the nose of a laundry man. Polite Robbers Enjoy Breakfast Arrested for kidnapping her own son, 6â€"yearâ€"old Jimmy toa Chicago jail with her who had custody of the boy, laid the char Mrs. Blumenthal. ing her own son, Mrs. Ho B‘lumenthal took cago jail with her. Her divorced husband, boy, laid the charge, but the Judge favored 1 Ag the British Museum went into the deal with the British Governâ€" ’ment on a 50â€"50 basis, it has to raise $250,000 by public subscription. The subscriptions are already flocking in. One old lady in Scotland sent a ha‘fâ€" aâ€"Crown, 60 cents, which she said hoped would pay for a single letter in the Codex, The Codex, discovered in the midâ€" dle of the 19th century on Mount Sinai, came into possession of the Soviet authorities from the re‘i¢cs of Tsar Alexander. The dle of Sinai, Soviet Placed on View The Codex was then plyced on genâ€" eral view in a special case in the enâ€" trance hall, which already contained the 14th century copy of the Pentaâ€" teuch in Hebrew The crowd was alowed to enter the board room and witness the presenâ€" tation to Sir George Hill, director of the British Museum. Unwrapped, the parcel was revealeq in a tin box of red and go‘d, the manuscript itself being carefully shrouded in cotton wool. Dr. Bell, keeper of manuâ€" scripts, later made an inspection to see that none of the pages were missing. \ Arrived Christmas Conveyed to England by special courier, who arrived Christmas Eve, the manuscript remained in the strong vaults over the holidays and after a formal receipt was given the Soviet representatives the British intermediâ€" ary, a noted book dealer, guarded by detectives, took the parcel by car to the Museum where a queue of seyâ€" eral hundred awaited its arrival. Originally the Soviet asked a total of $2,500,000 for the Codex, called the most va‘luable _ manuscript in the world‘s _ history. Bibliophiles say that in getting the manuscript from the Soviet Governâ€" ment for $500,000 the British Governâ€" ment got a bargain. _ Not only that, but Russia has agreed to spend the purchase price in Ergland for maâ€" chinery anq the like. To say I‘ve ecarned no glory, But, oh, the lovely hands I‘ve held At playing cards 1 feel compelled Wrapped in Brown Paper the Famous Codex Sinaiticus Arrives at British Museum London.â€"A moderateâ€"sized brown paper parcel taken by motor car to the British Museum .recently repreâ€" sented _ a ha‘f million dollar purâ€" chase by the British Government of the Codex Sinaiticus, fourthâ€"century Bible manuscript, Modest Package Worth $500,000 ANOTHER GAME TORONTO . A magistrate of Gobabis was wounâ€" ded some time ago by one of these arrows and died in agony because no antidote was available. _ "Then is a man who loves fish a fishworm?" Poison Antidote Given By Blowgun Warrior * The helicopter, which looks like the skeleton of a giant insect, has two fourâ€"bladed propellers rotated by a 200â€"horsepower engine. The machine weighs about one ton. Brussels.â€"A machine for vertical flying successfully maintained itself for nine minutes and fiftyâ€"eight secâ€" onds in a recent demonstration beâ€" fore high ranking civil and military air officials. It is the work of Nicolas Florin®, a young engineer of Russian descent, who is a naturalized Belgian, He has been financed by the Belgian fund for national research. ‘ Belgian Army Officers See Test of Helicopter Since ‘those tragic days Great Briâ€" tain has quietly set the world an exâ€" ample which foreign nations are now breathlessly endeavoring to emulate. Always slow to act, she acted with startling thoroughness. With ruthâ€" less axe and tax she reâ€"established her fiance. Her bankrupt dole fund is1 now operating with a balance on hand Favorable balances have already reâ€" duced by nearly three millions the fund‘s old debt of £115,000,000. â€" Inâ€" cluded in the unemployment bill now before Parliament is an amortization scheme to wipe out the remainder by fixed payment from the fund within a maximum of 40 years. FINANCES REFORMED, With extraordinary success she carâ€" ried through the most extensive schente of debt conversion known to financial history. She abandoned her traditional freeâ€"trade policy, She left gold; and the reaction echoed round the Seven Seas, At Ottawa, she conâ€" eluded trade agreements with other nations of the British Commonwealth. With foreign countries, she made| agreements in endeavor to break| through the bounds of rigid economic 4 nationalisms. She has embarked on a : fiveâ€"year slum clearance plan. By i schemes of marketing and control she | is endeavoring to restore her agriâ€" 1 culture to a paying basis. , INDUSTRY RECOVERING. d Her credit is now restored, month| c B Scearcely more than two years ago she stood perilously near the edge of a financial abyss. Ready money was moving rapidly to foreign fields, Britâ€" ish credit was falling. The "dole" fund was running into debt to the tune of a million pounds a week. There were those, even, who predicted London had forever lost her preâ€" eminence in finance, that war and the aftermath of war had dealt such a blow that recovery was wellâ€"night imâ€" possible. London.â€"Great Britain New Year in the quiet cc notable achievement. Britain Faces New inancial Prestige Restored ; = _ Under Wayâ€"Dole J The Conversation of Two Lovers. britain faces the quiet confidence of _ Restored; Buoyant Industrial Recovery ayâ€"Dole Fund Again Solventâ€" Unemployment Falling my With Renewed Optimism _ According to one expert, the styles for the coming season will be based upon the Alexandra Curl and the Edwardian Roll. A very long shingle will still prevail, hair being long at the neck to form curls. The competitors included both men and women. Great Britain was repâ€" resented by 12 competitors and other countries represented were France, Germany, Spain and Austria. Each was equipped only with marcel irons, a pair of scissors and comb. When the umpire gave the word "go" the hairdresser set to work on his model, and within an hour exâ€" actlyâ€"his _ allotted _ timeâ€"produced heads of hair which would make any ‘ girl green with envy, / A thrilling race between 25 of theg world‘s finest hairdressers to evolve an exquisite coiffure from a straight] head of hair was witnessed at the| international hairdressing tournamem{ to commemorate the 70th anniversary | of the Societe du Progres de la Coifâ€" ] feur a Londres (London). Coiffure Tournament Prof. Gerhardt von Bonin of the Uniâ€" versity of llinois. Out of the old stone age, presumably, came the modern human face. Study of this and other skeletons of the old stone age shows that newl measurements of the many bones of| ancient man now in museums may greatly clarify the mystery of thel origin of the present human race said | Boston.â€"A real "old fashioned girl" Iot the old stone age, who was smart er than her modern sister, if you can judge by brain capacity, gave a new idea of the origin of the human race today before the American Associaâ€" tion for the Advancement of Science. She was a true "Minerva‘" of 10,â€" 000 years ago and an Amazon as , well. Her brain capacity was 1,430 cubic centimetres as against 1,300 for the average young woman of today and,1,450 for the modern man, and though only 20 years old she ntood‘ nearly six feet tall, better than the average for modern girls of the same’ age. Oldâ€"Fashioned Girl | Had More Intellect | Than Modern Sister‘ k. Britain is out of the morass. But d | she has still far to travel before she *~| attains the highlands of prosperity, @| _ New problems arise. a COMPETITION GROWING. t Ung:r the impulse of cheap labor and depreciated currency, Japan is °| breaking into British trade even in ; the Crown colonies. Britain‘s great l _| shipping is suffering from the compeâ€" ‘ tition of foreign shipping asssted by‘ ‘| state subsidies, Less and less cargo | ‘| is being brought to Britain herself in ; British ships, and more and more inl | foreign ships, said Alexander Shaw, | | cbairman, at the annual meeting of ; _‘ the P. and O. "and as from year to| _ year, the tonnage of British ships | _ entering British ports declines, â€" the j tonnage of foreign ships entering, British ports increases. . . ." SHIPPING IN DIFFICULTIES. For the first ten months of the year | the net tonnage of British ships en-;w tering at and clearing from United | ; Kingdom ports with cargo, compared ; , with 1931, has been reduced by more ) ] than 6,000,000 tons. The tonnage of | foreign vessels entering at and clean'-! ing from British ports on the other| i hand has gone up by over 3,700,000 | t tons. Compared with the same period] x last year the figures are: British | t shipping down 1,460,000 tons ; foreign ; i shipping up 2,290,000 tons. | a The Council of the Chamber of: b Shipping has forwarded to the Govâ€"| t ernment a report of the thipping) n committee, recommending temporary | w subsidies for tram ships in service or | o laid up. The object is to equalize| o advantages of foreign competition! ic due to subsidies, depreciated currenâ€"| t cies and lower wage costs. ,m by month her unemployment is fallâ€" ing. At the peak, insured unemployâ€" ed totalled 2,851,000. They now stand at . approximately 2,280,000, The Board of Trade index figure shows that industrial production is back to 96.7 per cent. of what it was in 1924, In the quarterly period, J ulyâ€"Septemâ€" ber, 1932, it was down to 87.3. I Held in London: the principal cities and towns of the kingdom, We es by the contestants for examination Thefirgteonwoltbokiudvill: decided with awurding of prizes in Uhiidren between six months _thnqmnofmmybomu;: They will be supplanted by child raising contests, in which the stat« operated mothers‘ and childrens‘ pro tective association will give prizes t« the mothers who have brought up the healthiest children. Children between six months and Rome.â€"Beauty contests will be conâ€" sidered unpatriotic in Italy hereafter, says an officially inspired statement issued in connection with the celebraâ€" tion of mothers‘ and infants‘ day. Beauty Contests Outâ€" Healthy Children It _ _Roth, like his father, the late Dr Walter Roth, noted anthoropolist and curator of the British Guiana Musâ€" eum, has spent most of his life in the hinterland. He said that even aboriynal Indians were unable to identify the animal, which is some thing like a puma. The natives . he reported, particularly feared this #p cles, of which they were inclined to be superstitiouns. Georgetown, British Guiana.â€"Appli cation may be made to the New York Zoological Society for aid in identi fying a species of tiger, slain in the jungle of British Guiana.: The tiger, shot by Vincent Roth on a survey expedition, is a peculiar gray color with black spots, not unlike the treacherous black panther, but having a narrow skull. ' Diet is the chief factor in unbalâ€" ancing the water and minerals of the body. By a proper control of what i« eatenâ€"more steaks and less pastry for those who cannot get rid of the water in their cells rapidly enoughâ€" Dr. Foldes show» how he has differen: diseases running from epilepsy and pernicious anemia to pimples, and nerâ€" vous disorders and bronchial asthmas to colds. What we have, then, is a new way of treating diseases by controlâ€" ling food and liquids in quantity ans quality, â€" Black and Grey Tiger Puzzle to Scientists One form of diagnosis is to deter mine the state of the water in th« body. Dr. Foldes distinguishes beâ€" tween the normal water and minera content and the supernormal and sub normal. As might be supposed, thers is little mineral salt in the superâ€" normal, and so much in the subnormal that it is definitely classified as "salâ€" inous." A fourth state of water varies widely in its amount of mineral conâ€" tentâ€"an indication of a predispos i tion to catarrh, cold and other res piratory diseases. , | *1qu1d behind the lens of the eye. Renâ€" ® soning thus, Dr. Eugene Foldes, forâ€" merly Assistant Professor of Medicine in the University of Budapest, but r"now of New York, presents a new > theory of health and of the disagreeâ€" l! able process of growing old in his reâ€" llcently published "New Approach to | Dietetic Therapy," 1 FACTORS IN AGING PROCESS. | _ Physicians know well enough that , in certain diseases of the heart and | the kidney the body retains water. So ‘ rare are the cases, on the whole, that |the body is assumed to rid itself of its waste liquids and salts with little 'difliculty. Dr. Foldes presents a vast body of evidence to show that this noâ€" tion is wrong and traces the origin of many diseases to the retention of water and minerals, When water and |minerlls are held back by the tissues ‘ of the brain, epilepsy and fits of varâ€" ious kinds result. If it is the hear that does the retaining, we have anâ€" gina pectoris; if the lungs, bronchia‘ asthma; if it is the joints, we have gout, a general retention throughout th« body, and it is to this that Dr. Folde» attributes the rapid aging of many men and women. To stay young, get rid of the water and minerals that your body no longer needs at maturity. But more than a lgcal damming u; of water and minerals may be in volved. Case after case is recorded oi ȴnue there can be no doubt that r,’ food is thus utilized, the actual methâ€" podisohcuu.‘l'bemmnicmtme still know little about a human body as a factory and as a machine, Chemiâ€" cal and physical functions are carâ€" |ried out in the cell, and the cell is | so small that it is impossible to study lit in action as we would the dissoluâ€" j tion of sugar in a teacup, Neverthe ‘ ' less it is safe to apply what is known of chemistry and physics, ‘ The evidence is convincing that the fluids and salts in cells are nicely balanced in accordance with the prinâ€" ciples of chemistry and physics that are applied in laboratories. There is | a balance, for example, between blood and lymph, between blood and spinal ‘fluid, between blood and the watery [Higuid behind the lens 0f the eve. Ran. ‘Find Cause of Man lives not by bread slone. A doctor will tell you that he aiso live: by water and minerals. Just what be comes of the bread, the water and th« minerals is explained by tuc process of metabolism â€" a process whereby food, which is so much fuel and raw material to our body factories, is conâ€" verted into energy and tissue. While there can be no doubt that Dietary Control as a Way of Keeping Youth and Health i1 tell you that he also lives and minerals. Just what beâ€" the bread, the water and the is explained by tuc process Rapid Aging pply what is known physics, convincing that the in cells are nicely

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