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The Brussels Post, 1956-06-06, Page 2NE 141 ~f any afitwebrt, COVERING —Actress Sandra Giles, 23, slapPed `cirtcit- Phillip Paval, threatened court action, and tearfully denounced photo- graphers as she covered the midriff of lady Chance," a nude painting of her, The painting wa's unveiled at the opening of the Fremont hotel in lt:ts Vegas, Ney. Sandra •claims she posed for sketches for the painting in a bathing suit, and that the finished painting was to show her covered. up. • an,e- Artthews. -1311 TALKS 732 IRON-ON COLOR SIZES 5-10-12 M—I 4-16 L—I 5-20 "Corn Starch Starch Makes Smoother Sauces!" • FISH AN SANE 1 pound fish fillets 1 tablespoon butter Few grains salt 3 tablespoons BENSON'S or CANADA Corn Starch 'A teaspoon salt % teaspoon pepper 1 % cups Milk 1 egg yolk, beaten 2 tablespoans lemon juice 'A cup MAZOLA Salad Oil• Cooked green vegetables PLACE fish in shallow baking pan; dot with butter. SPRINKLE tightly, with salt; bake in hot oven (4251.$ for 20 minutes, MIX BENSON'S or' CANADA Corn Starch, salt and pepper in a small amount of milk until smooth. STIR In remaining milk; cook over low haat, stirring constantly, until mixture thickens 'and boils. BOIL 1 .minute; stir constantly. REMOVE from heat and gradually add to egg yolk. RETURN to heat and cook 2 minutes, stirring constantly. REMOVE from heat; slewly beat In lemon juice. ADD MAZOLA beating until smooth. ARRANGE green vegetables around cooked fish. COVER with sauce and swim immediately. YIELD: 4 servings, For free folder of other delicious recipes, write tot lane Ashley, Horne Service Department, THE CANADA STARCH COMPANY LIMITED, P.O. Box 129; Montreal, P.Q. 4 ..,:s20.4;.-01ftt**1M0- ake these simple? *AJ447S$ X., WC. Sift td:::tiir Into boiet * einei-tifteri pithy er e. Nrtrpse fleiw isle. Miele &meg Pitvider, isei see Cut le finely % e. ehtitertihertenlnj /T?ear Anne UirSt: I do. 'hope nO.Qtber girl will be as dumb as .I've been since I was 18; three Years I had gone with just one bay, and my whele happiness depended on 'him. No one knows how often I stayed awake night bemuse he's. broken our date, lie took other girls out, too, and boasted how many .he had; he even asked my best friend, ,and I was se.humiliated I cried, 41"1 lied to me consistently-,-- and I was sp infatuated T. for, gave him, though he made my life miserable . ""At last I got wise. I gave him up. He had asked me to marry him, and suddenly I realized. what a h usband he would make,. That did it! Now I have four boys who take me out, and not one ever stands me up! I'm bay- ing a wonderful life, and only regret I wasted so Much time being a doormat for one no- good boy. MILLY" 13ACR TO NORMAL • • ", -Other young, girls who read * your letter -will,. I hope," pro-. 1* fit by it before they, too, `waste precious years on a 4 worthless boy. `" A boy in. his teens, having Cinch to Sew! Cinch to sew this pretty wrap- halter! No, .embroidery! IRON ON flower trim in glowing col- ors! Pattern '732: Tissue pattern, washable, lionon color trans- blue and green. Small (1042); Medium (14,10); 'Large (18, 20). State size, Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS (stamps :cannot be accepted, use postal note for safety) for, this pattern to Laura "Wheeler, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toronto., Ont. Print plainly PATTERN NUMBER and SIZE; .your, NAME and ADDRESS. Our girt to you — two aqinz derful patterns for yourself, your home — printed in our Laura Wheeler Needlecraft book for 1956! Dozens of other new designs to order crochet, knit- ting, embroidery, iron-one, no- Velties, Send 25 cents for your copy of this book NOW — with gift patterns printed in it! • his VI* dates, adepts his " social code from the first few • girls he takes out, If they al, • low him to stand them up, * to break his word, to * ate them, he is bound to see • himself as a breaker of hearts • who can pursue his Primrose * path and get away with it— * until some smart girl puts " him in his, place. That, however, does not al- * ways occur as soon as it * should, Sometimes he con- * descends to marry one of his " devoted followers, and she is * so blinded by his physical * chum, so eager to capture * him, that she accepts with * gratitude, You, who have read * this column have learned * what a miserable existence * she leads from there on in. * Every young girl should * realize that she is a precious person, different in some way from every other young wo- man; she is entitled to res- pect and consideration from every boy she knows. If she conducts herself according to the highest social standards and demands the courtesies she deserves, she changes' the boy's attitude toward all her sex, or sends him flying. Thank goodness you have wakened at long last! I con- gratulate you on your com- mon sense. * "BOILING MAD" "Dear Anne Hirst: After read- ing that letter about the care of old people I am boiling mad! I bet a daughter-in-law wrote it, and I'd hate to be a parent to that creature. "Hereafter, people should put their babies out to board in some cheap place as soon as they're . born. Why should parents stay up nights taking care of them and doing with-, out necessities to clothe and feed and educate them? They should save their money so when they're old, they can live in luxury instead, of a furnished room! "That daughter-in-law ..pro- bably would like her husband to poison his parents — and in- cidentally, if the old people had saved their money for them- selves, they could buy their own car instead of using a bus. M. F." It is regrettable that my small space prevents my printing all of every letter that arrives: if I could, readers would realize the frequent justice of printed complaints. I do appreciate such right- eous revulsion as you felt when you read the letter, and I thank you for your com- ments. One editor calls Anne first's column "more exciting than front-page news," Problems of every period from childhood to old age, are presented in simple language, and counsel plus sYm- pathy reward the reader. Fol- low this column weekly — and if you are perplexed in any' way, write to Anne Hirst at Box 1, 123 Eighteenth St., New Toron- to, Ont. if the picture front your picture. window is alWays rather hazy,. tithe a. tip from the hotisewives in Mi- lani]. They keep their window,, sparkling with a solution made by mixing one clip of rider vineutr and one-and-a-half gallons of hot Water... Rang Door Row —Blew Up Rau An Ipswich. Man was annoy- ed when his, lawn mower ran over a stone, He would probab-. 137' have to resharpen the blades, )3„ut in, a few seconds a, far more Serious situation confronted him, A spark JIMA the stone get fire to his car and the brigade had to be called out! Amazing how quite a minor incident can sometimes set off a chain reaction resulting in in, jury to human beings or dam- age to property. Mr, and Mrs. John Morgan, of gerrards Cross went for a picnic recently and decided to make tea on a coal-oil stove, The stove exploded, Mr. Morn gents trousers caught fire and as he ran round trying to put them out a 35-ton stack of un- threshed wheat caught alight, Firemen were able to save only a third of it. As her boy friend drove round a corner, a New Jersey girl kiss- ed him, The car hit a fire alarm, started off a burglar alarm and brought two police cars .and four fire engines to the scene. Disfigurement for life was the penalty paid by a guest at a Bavarian inn who stole a kiss from a pretty servant girl. She was lifting a large can of hot water from a stove. •Taken by surprise, she screamed,. accid- entally kocked the can over and the water badly scalded the young man's face. At. Bognor Regis a few years ago a boy was flying a kite. When it got out of control in a gust of wind, a wernan was flung off her bicycle and found unconscious, the cord drawn round her neck. An extraordinary occurrence is reported from Geneva, where a householder was injured as a result of pressing his front door- bell. A spark set escaping gas alight and an explosion took place in hip fiat. Careless shooting, can have disastrous results. A seventeen- year-old French boy missed his target, put a bullet through a 30,000-volt cable, blacked out a steel mill° and started a fire which ravaged property worth $10,000. Another sportsman, in New York County, aimed at a crow and set off explosions in five buildings owned by a fireworks company. All five buildings were burnt to the ground, but the crow flew off. It pays to take care when making home-made wine. At a Spanish monastery a bottle ex- ploded. A student was killed, two monks injured, and the ab- bot's house and part of the church burnt down. Penny wise, pound foolish is a saying which will be long remembered by an American woman motorist -who had to pay $200 merely because she moved her car. A penny had rolled underneath, it. When the car's brakes were released, it hit first a parking meter and' then a near-by building, in which several windoWs were smashed. In 1935 a wasp cost 'a Staf- fordshire ambulance driver his job. The driver, with a clean licence for thirty years, was stung as he took a 'patient to hospital. The ambulance slewed across the- road, hit a telegraph pole and the patient was jolted off his stretcher. Afterwards the driver was ,dismissed by the lo- cal health committee. • One of the most embarrass- ing of these chain accidents oc- curred to an American motorist as he parked his car in a West Virginian tm,vn. A short dis- tance away a steam shovel broke down, knocked over a telegraph pole and festooned the cat with wires, just as the driver poked out his head to tell the steam shov- el operator what he thought of him, the shovel swung round and its jaws enveloped the me- torist's head, It was half an hour before the angry. — but uninjured — man was extricated, tOCIt PliM • The traveling salesman was in the 0;4arks., "How far to the- near-. est he tailed from his.' tar to on old lady on the .porch: . figgerd 'bout ten itilles,:'*.she said. "That is, ten Mites that tVay and twelve inflea hack. Cifse that's account he's straighter' goin' thiii eointnY The wsalesivaii Pound the • town anti iiiiidiieci illibtit,.jtS • .11MM C4.!' fteity„ 41.'d like to buy it tottle of ilootch„,0' he asked a stranger, Be Was, direeted to a 'shack are „ 'side ,street. ."'What 'kith" tehi - likker, Stranger? lie wag asked by the rimonshiner, 'tin Mean you hate 'brand names 1" "Heiti no, Thritia our WO Ct" 'OM apart, We got two typeit, Yeti want CoUrtint iikker or fig-title 196 CHOCOLATE SYRUP 3- squares Unsweetened Chocolate % cup water 3.4 cup sugar. Dash of, salt, 3/2 cup corn syrup teaspoOn "vanilla ' Place choeolate and 'water in saucepan. Cook slowly until thick and well blended, stirring constantly. Add sugar and Salt; bring to ''a boil arid boil gently .2 minutes, stirring constantly. (For a.-thicker' sauce, • boil •4 minutes.) Add. corn _syrup- and bring again to a boil. Remove, front heat. 'Cool slightly; , then add vanilla. Turn into jar; cov- er tightly. Keep in refrigerator. Makes about 1% ctips syrup. Serve hot or cold as 'sauce or use in chocolate .drinks. For chocolate drinks, use 2 tablespoons syruli to 1 cup milk. * COCOA SYRUP 1 cup Cocoa 34 cup sugar 1/2 cup corn syrup 1/4 teaspoon salt 11/4 cups cold water YI! teaspoon. vanilla. Combine cocoa, sugar syrup, and salt in saucepan. Add wa- ter slowly and place over low flame, 'stirring until smooth; then, boil gently 3 minutes, stir- ring constantly. Add vanilla. Turn into jar;* cover tightly. Keep in refrigerator. Makes about .2 cups syrup. Serve hot or cold as sauce or use in mak- ing delicious cocoa drinks. This syrup may be made using 1 to cups sugar instead of sugar and corn syrup, To make cold drinks, use 2 tablespoons syrup to 1 cup milk. * * EVAPORATED MILK SHAKE Substitute % cup evaporated milk and 1/4 cup water for chill- ed milk in Chocolate Milk Shake. Add to syrup and shake with cracked ice until foamy. Serves 1. * CHOCOLATE MALTED MILK 2 tablespoons malted milk powder 2 tablespoons Chocolate Syrup or Cocoa. Syrup 1 cup chilled milk. Add malted milk powder to syrup, stirring until smooth and ' thoroughly blended. Add milk slowly, stirring eanstantly. Beat or shake well. Pour into tall glass serve at once. Serves 1. * CHOCOLATE ICE CREAM SODA 14 cup chilled milk 2 tablespoons ChOcolate Syrup or Cocoa Syrup IA cup carbonated water Chocolate or vanilla lee cream Add milk slowly to Syrup, Stirring constantly; pour into it FltENCII 0111000WM ,V,6 squares Unsweetened Chocolate tfi cup water I•iA, POP sugar ',ash of salt IA, coo cream, whipped a curs, hot milk Add chocolate to water and place over low flame,- stirring until chocolate is melted and bienclicl. 4dd sugar and salt and boil 4 minutes, stirring con- stantly. Cool, Fold into cream, place 1 rounding teaspoon of chocolate mixture in each chocolate mixture in each chocolate cup; add hot milk to 411 cup and stir until chocolate and milk are well blended. Serves 18. For larger cups (6- ounce size), use 1 rounding tablespoon chocolate mixture, Serves 8. This chocolate mixture also makes an excellent sauce, The whipped cream may be omitted and sauce served as hot fudge. Hunt Down. The Traps Every year, says the General Electric Company, two to, three Mil- lion refrigerators are junked in the United States. And during the last 10 .years 110 children, have suffo- cated inside these tempting hiding places — an' average of 11 a year. Americans likely will be mildly shocked to learn that many Ltd these iner;nuileal mat vels do wear .out; 'they will be profoundly shocked to hear -how many of them, ' through no one's intent, have. become lethal traps for small fry. Thirty - five states have enacted laws , requiring removal of door or fastener from a refrigerator that • is- to be ,discarded. GE says it is now turning out a cabinet with doors, held closed by magnets only —cloorS a child can kick open easi- ly. That is certainly a contribution to safety. But there are undoubted- ly several million mechanically latched refrigerators yet to be re- tired. And town and country of- ficials .can hardly police every, spot every day where an elk box ,might, „ he thrown out. So parents would do well to take' look around their own neighborhoods 'nosy' that' vaea- tion time is pear.----From The Chris- Ilan Science Monitor. . „ • Ensemble 4606 Perfect twosome for summer, --sundress with, pretty yoke de- tail, and cover-up bolero! Per- fect for the shorter, fuller figure —its graceful lines make yOu look inches taller, sizes slimmer! Proportioned to fit — no alter- ations! Pattern 4606: Half Sizes 14%, 16%, 18%, 20%, 22%, 24%. Size 16% requires 3% yards 35-inch fabric; bolero, 1% yards. 'This pattern easy to use, sim- ple to sew, is tested to fit, Has complete illustrated instructions.. Send THIRTY-FIVE CENTS (350) (stamps cannot be ac- cepted, use postal order for safety) for' thit pattern. Print plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS -and .STYLE. NUlyIBER. „ , Send rordento ANNE ADAMS, -423- Eighteenth ,St, New „Torfna- t-9, tall glass. Add carbonated wa- ter and stir enough to mix. Add ice cream and serve ' at once. Serves 1. * CHOCOLATE-EGGNOG 1 cup chilled milk 3 tablespoons Chocolate Syrup or Cocoa Syrup 1 egg, well beaten Add milk slowly to syrup, stirring constantly; add to egg, and beat or shake well. Pour . into tall glass; , serve. Serves 1. . * * CHOCOLATE FLOAT 1 cup chilled' milk '2 tablespoons Chocolate Syrup or Cocoa , Syrup Chocolate lee cream Add milk slowly to „syrup, stirring constantly. Beat or shake well. Pour' into- tall 'glass. Add ice cream. Serves.l. " . INAT cAN't BEAT 1W—it° you might 'Ot loin 'alit *heti the ladies get the urge to hoUSecledn.- it you've ever' thought of departing for the Orient come Spring cleaning Luckless wretch, at left, is pressed into Service on his clay oft Fo lag flooe mots out of doors so that the lady of the house tart bead thirst "Scene h h Tokyri, circirnii is univiisal. ,pmet•le..witomemewiskatmo#wr Comblee .1 ,Well*Iseeten egg. • 1 gild Mishod josfelees Mend *well -With a forWthen blend In Vs c. milk Make a Well in dry ingridiehli and add abide 'aware., Mix lightly with fork, adding milk If. necessary to make soft dotigh., Knead for .10 " Wends on ei lighliptiOured beard. • ssieWi., • ilaligliinta tidift#4 pot loch 'toad into ?k inch thick round, Mark with Oche Irate aiMirieti with the bat** a, knife...Place' 'en orittiditi &Sidi sheet. If chisliaidr bruilt scones With milk Gad ''sprinkle' COM tonotrow I with , rake in hof 'wish, 4 Costs area thafi Jo — • „ toidi 12 Scenes it „ • Velti get ighier ' more delicious baked goods betatiie Magic's steicidyil,- even rising action out all the bed %,,00416, yoUr ingtecliantt, day MAGIC, Baking Power A14 G 1C tocIby. , n WD E R E • r.