HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1956-06-13, Page 35.4
"Deaden. The ji411".
Says Rornsby •
It was th Chicago that someone
mentioned Mickey lifuntle'S mune
and Rogers Uppish), said; "I don''
kBOW whether ,time Mantle kid eau
bit the farther than Babe
Rath or not. Bill Dickey saw Ruth
Jot and says this new boy eau
do it.
0,nowovr, 1 know .One
Mantle has .an edge on nil those
old long'ball hitters because he POI
do It front both, of the plate-
IOW .swung from only one side,
"Mantle sure has hit some long
ones, but It may be that the ball
Is. livelie r today than ever before,'
the ene.thne second base ,greet COW
00;10. "I 4.04 ,p. mean that the
manufacturerg have deliverately
"souped"..np the ball., Evidently they
are entirely sincere when they say
they, totems% But improvezneme in.
materials have speeded up the ball,
in my opinion.
''you: don't have to w.alt• for some-
one like .Mantle to hit one out of
Griffith Stadium, Just watch balls-
3 ice through the infield, An
er today can't take any more than
two or three steps before the ground
ball shoots pest him, Infielders
might have to wear shin guards
and chest protectors if Jimmy Foss
wtis swinging today.
"Pitchere are afraid. to throw
the ball over for strikes," said :the
Ball of Tamer who batted .358 for
23 years in the National and Am-
erican Leagues. "The count goes
4 to three and, two on three out Of
every five batters, as if the pitch-
ere keep delaying that big strike,
in. hopes that something will hap,
pen so they won't have to throw
it,
"Is there a .club in baseball that
doesn't need pitching? Even the
Yankees can't get a staff straight-
ened out and look !.....,:at Brooklyn.
They're baying all sorts. of ðic.
The other day I read where some.
body told Lou Boudreau that the
Red Sox had only two starting
pitchers and Lou replied: 'Good for
them. I haven't any.'
"I think baseball would be bet-
ter all-round if they deadened the
ball a little," Hornsby went on.
"Now don't' get me wrong. I'm not
asking for the dead ball of the
days 'before Ruth. I'm saying they
should take some of the rabbit out
of it and encourage more close, low
score games..
"This would bring. pitching batik
to the game. It not only would cut
down on home runs and tallies,
hilt remove a mental Wizard among-
pitchers. They feel Ilse odds are
against them, even • before they go
to the rubber, and the way things
are they're - right. It takes a lot
of pitching today for a shutout of
low score game."
Names That Sell
SOME CLASS — In Top photo, you are looking at the entire
student body and faculty of the River Bend school in the Bates
Hole area. River Bend is probably the smallest of many small
schools in the sparsely populated state, The teaching "staff" of
the one-room school is Mrs. Gladys M. Johnson, second from
right. The "student body" consists of Thelma Watson, 11, left,
her 13-year-old brother, Murray, and Sherolyn Minchow, 14,
right. Lower picture shows the schoolhouse. Authorities recently
voted to build a fence around it because wandering cattle herds
frequently surround the building and poke inquisitive heads in
the door and windows.
TEACHERS WANTED
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PATENTS
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PERSONAL
$1.00 TRIAL offer, Twenty five deluxe Personal requirements. Latest cata-logue included. The Medico Agency. Box 22, Terminal "Q" Toronto,-Ont,
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Male Protestant Principal TWO-ROOM school, Grades V-X first class certificate state age, qualifica-tions. Salary minimum $2,700. Name of last Inspector.
Female Protestant Junior room, Grades I-TV, first class certificate, Salary minimum $2,200. Name of last Inspector. State age and qualifications.
Teacher Protestant For one-room school. Average 20 pu-t' pits. Grades I-X, Salary minimum $2,300. First class certificate, state age, quali-fications, name of last Inspector.
Salary adjustment according to ex-perience. Duties commence September 4. Apply to F. Chaddock Secretary T. S. A. Murchison & Lyell, Mada-waska, Ontario.
WANTED
WANTED TO BUY 19171920 Ford Roadster or Touring Car. -MAIER JOHNSON, Route 3, New-market, Ontario.,
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HELP WANTED
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bowl la the (teen, and then Ogee:
ibis howl over the dough for ,alone
45 minutes. (This was the secret
Per the perfect consistency of the
dough.) A yientiese secret:
After Mama. had manned the
apples which I bed peeled and
slieef?, she covered Wein ,up with
cold water and went about Pre.
paring the filling for the etradel,
Pirse she stirred a cup of, bread
crumbs with some sweet butter
until It turned golden brown. M.
ter petting this aliXtelre aside, she
began to blead eiatirusson and sugge
with grated lemon, rind and nut.
meg, a, dash of voselintry; and ri
Minn]cupful of raisins and chopped:
almonds,
After drelning the apples, she
added the browned crumbs and ail
the spices, raisins and nuts; next
she added the beaten white of an
egg. She tossed these ingredients to.
gether with practiced gestures.
Then she suddenly stopped And dlp-
• ped a elision into the mixture and
handed it to me. "Open mouth:"
she said and smiled,
I smacked my lips, These
thoughtful little gestures, always
made me feel so good. Mama was
the most I
. Rut the part that remains the
shiniest of all Was the stretching
and pulling of the strudel,
Melee whisked tiet a gleaming
white linen cloth which she waved
through the air and over the kit-
chen table. She sprinkled it gener-
ously with lots of flour. Next, she
removed the dough from beneath
the heated bowl and placed it in
the center of the floured cloth. Dip-
ping the tips of her fingers in more e
flour, she began slowly and gently
to pull and stretch the dough, a
bit at a time, coaxingly and With
care, to avoid tearing. I knew, af-
ter watching this same perform.
ante, week after week, that the
dough Just had to be as transpar-
ent as isinglass.
Mama had to work fast and the
procedure was exciting. I could
scarcely sit still, so had to get up
and stand beside the table. At times
I had to leap aside, for Mama kept
racing around the table, pulling
the dough here and there and
everywhere, Just so it Was stretched
over the entire table.
"Now!" she exclaimed, and I
knew this rifeant the filling was to
be distributed evenly over the ,
transparent dough. With handfuls
she deposited the ,filling over the
dough, adding additional pats of
sweet butter and a sprinkle of salt.
When the filling was all gone she
picked up one end of the cloth and
said: "You may help now. Lift the
cloth with care." I' lifted the, cloth,:
as though I were in the 'garden
with Papa and he was askingme to
hold a fall-blown rose so that he
could fasten it with a fragile bit
Of silk.
I stood at one end of tile table
While Mama was at the other, su-
pervising the production ; slowly
flow Mama Made.
A.ppj e Strudel
The other _evening; while dining,
tit. a friend's home, I Was W1100
int when dotted arrived..
"Tide etrudelsis; not the Ithid. yen
eee ssereaetmo4 te," nay Hostess •VP-
imarked, "Wit. hitt the :best I ,could •
manage." Stsqing at Me. front Its
plete wee: this aegpeteXtheett Otis
metion, wrapped. Wanted seine: half
sooked Appice, It would netSbe easy
to emieeree this facsimile,
Siege. My friend is a top-level
writer.440. not that :Wed of a cook,
I made no coannent. With the aid
of generous moUpds of whipped
grew, I begat' to struggle with.
the oil:eying.
This was the perfect Knit .for
me to think about Mama's VIen,
nese, tipple 01101, for how could
I ever forget it?
Minna had a way with an ap-
ple strodel. flaying acquired the
eullnayy ingenility of making one
In Vienna as a young- lady, site
never forgot the recipe. Papa el-
ways eemarked that it was perfect
and: just as good as his own moth-
eres, which was the height of
compliment.
I never wearied of observing her
prepare the ingredients, of watch-
ing her toes and stretch the dough
and then form it into a • horseshoe
and bake it. I used to think, even
when, I was only six years old, that
Mama was wonderful. Especially at.
making strudel!
I. wrathd watch in patience and
wait for her -to ask me to help,
Eventually, she always did,
"Now you, can peel and. core the
apples- . . and see that you keep
the 'skisie thin," she admonished.
This order made me feel import
ant. I had learned, through per-
sistence, to peel apples with such
transparent .shins. that I could al-
most see Mama through them.. The
intricate part arrived when I
reached. the core of each apple and
began to slice them No apple meat
could be wasted, yet no core be Ins
eluded in the strudel's filling..
Mama mixed sifted flour and
salt, then added the beaten egg
and butter and a cup of lukewarm.
water. This .mixture was tossed on.
a floured board several:Brims -with
great vigor. •
Mama was an expert at tossing
the dough onto the board. Although
I held. my breath watching her, the
dough always missed the floor and
landed- on the board unmistakably.
I wondered if Mama would ever
allow me. to toss the strudel dough
In. this fashion. 1 had &secret yearn-
ing to. ,perform. this feat.
I often:practiced tossing my doll
and, myeerubher ball, but I never
did hit the .board properly. My
tossing attempts landed on the
floor, every thee.
I continued to watch Mama
transfer the tossed mixture onto a
plate, heat an earthenware mixing-
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ARTICLES FOR SALE
HANDICRAFT Materials: Leather, Felt,
Aluminum, CAPPer, Beads, Etc. Write for catalogue. flandycraft Supply Own-Party, Peterborough, (need°,
PRINTING! 100 Letterheads e1,00. 100 Envelopes $1,00. 150 Business Cards $1,00. 100 Billiwads $1.00. Free Sam-ples, Wessling Press, 352 New York Ave., jersey City .7, N.J.
100 SPOOLS sewing thread $1,00. 104 Razor Blades e1.00, 12 unwoven towels $L00. All three $2.50 Postpaid. Post R.2, Box 499, Phenix City, Alabama.
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BABY CHICKS
IMMEDIATE delivery. Wide choice. Breeds, crosses. Pullets (Including. Ames In-Cross for more egg profit, minimum overhead), Mixed chicks. Ask for complete list, Bray Hatchery, 120 John N., Hamilton.
If you want top quality chicks or tur-key. ()milts in a hurry we have them. We set extra eggs to hatch in June to take care of rush orders. Send your orders along to us and we can give you prompt shipment of all the popu-lar special egg breeds or dual purpose breeds, also Turkey Poults. Catalogue. TWEDDLE CHICK HATCHERIES LTD. FERGUS ONTARIO
FOR SALE
POULTRY farm for sale on Manitou-lin Island. Write for particulars. Box 143, 123 - 18th St., New Toronto.
TRAILERS-14 TO 51 FEET
FULLY modern mobile homes for liv-ing or holidays. Anything in trade, low down payment. 5 years to Pay, deliveries anywhere. Trailer Mart, Wharncliffe S. at Base Line, London, Ontario,
perfect setting. Crisp and golden
brown, with little spirals of escap-
ing steam that brinneed with the
tang of cinnamon, lemon, and well-
cooked apples.
The highlight for me occurred
when llama nodded and I sallied
forth to' sprinkle the strudel with
powdered sugar, flavored with van-
111a sticks that- Mama kept en-
sconced in the porcelain contain-en
"That is enough !" Mama admom
ished as I contiened to smother
the strudel with' poWdered sugar.
So when my `geed friend and
hostess, glancing at my empty des-
sett plate, remarked, "Well, you
'managed to get through that pro-
position !" I merely nodded and
smiled wistfully, but she knew and
I knew she knew that neither of us
were kidding each other. She had
partaken of Mama's strudel often
at our home, so she was convinc-
ed as I, that nobody, but nobody
could concoct an apple strudel that
had the crispness, the taste, and
the, *ye-appea l of Marna's strudel.
Marna had a way with apple stru-
del — after the Viennese fashion.
—By Annette Victoren in The
Christian Science Monitor,
The Carriage Shop
we rolled the dough by propelling
the cloth and at last we had it ac,
roes the table.
"Good !" Mama exclaimed, her
eyes shining. She buttered a large
white enameled baking dish gener-
ously and sprinkled more bread
crumbs over the bottom.
Then site transferred the long
roll, horseshoe fashion,, into the.
greased pan, and with a hand-braid-
ed goose-feather braSh she patted
Melted butter over the strudel. Then
she slipped the masterpiece into
the waiting oven and slammed the
black. nickel-plated door. She plac-
ed our black and gold sugar bowl
on a chair before the oven.
"Do not move this," she ordered
and waved her hand at the chair
and sugar bowl. This was to remind
her there was something gOing on
In the oven which'ehe must remem-
ber . . . not to forget. She glanced
at the clock and then began to pick
up pots and pans.
I always helped wipe the cook-
ing dishes, for this made me a
complete part of the entire enter-
prise. While Marna supervised the
Simmering of rich beef ,soup which
She was cooking for Papa's din-
ner, I thought there never in all
the world was a nicer, warmer,
friendlier place than our kitchen.'
The sunshine broke in without
knocking; the sparrows fluttered
about the window sills, eyeing.
Mama's' many potted plante and'
the tangy fumes of skillfully cern-
bined ingredients permeating the
atshosphere.
When the dishes were dried and
properly restored to their cup-
board niches, when the soup .slins
niered down to its exact capacity
and strength, *ma removed the
strudel from the oven. It was arias-.
tery art; perfectly prepared in
KITTEN-SITTER—These kittens didn't lose ;heir mittens, but they
keep losing their ma. A hen gallantly steps in to fill the breach
and kitten-sits till mealtime, when the skylarking mother returns.
1
The carriage shop was a very
interesting place the Boy al-
ways thuoght. He'd watch old
Obadiah Pinchsnuff make sur-
reys, buggies and one Obadiah
turned out tt• hansom cab that
he said was ordered by a man
in New York. Maybe, Mr.
Pinchsnuff said, the famous Dia-
mond Jim Brady will ride in
this cab. That is, he added, if
he can get his shape into it, for
he is a very large man.
When Mr, Pinchsnuff finished
a couple of buggies or phaetons,
he would hitch them together
and drag them around the
county looking for buyers.
Grandma Tillinghast bought a
shiny black buggy with a tur-
key red wheels, but complained
that $100 was a great deal too
high for „It.
All that money, she moaned,
just for something to ride
around in,
The Hired Man said, shucks,
a nice looking buggy is all right,
but he'd take the old one any- •
time because ,you never had t'
keep j.t washed and slicked up.
And besides, he reminded het,
this sparikin s new ve-by-cle
(with the accent On the middle
syllable) will make the old
harness look pretty dettied
shabby', Won't it?
Grandma said she Wasn't go-
ing to buy a new harness and a
new horse just because of the
new carriage. Why, she' said,
that would be like her cousin
Deborah getting rieW carpet,
new furniture and a rieW piano•
just because When they washed
the windows everything seeM-
bd Courant'i
A great soul
prefas
moderation
GAVE HER FITZ
An efficiency expert was gent into
the Colorado tootittaine to advise
the miners, • 'One old miner was
driving him throtigh the snow and
cold, so he spread a buffalo laprobe
over the knees of both of them.
Stiid the efficiency -eXperti "You
ought to turn the hair on fhe
Don't you know a great deal
Wernier to Mee the hair neat to
your body?
The old Miner obeyed and then
set there cheeklitigs
Said the expert, "What are you
laughing at itie?"
"No," replied the Miner; "I was
just thinking about that buffalo,
What a simpleton • he. Was AR big
life net to knots a thing like that," „...,...,
Words are important in making
the sale. As Ruth McInerney point-
ed out in Nation's Business, "Name
experts are important vertebrae of
the business backbone. Companies
handling everything from clocks to
coal welcome them, for a good name
facilitates sales.
"Anybody can mark down a
tableful of rubbers to 30 cents and
dispose of them. It takes sales In-
tuition to name them Rainheaus
and watch them sell at a profit.
"Three times more then purchas-
ed a gray felt hat called Tyrone
than when unnamed. A piece of
furniture becomes irresistible When
called Snuggle Sofa. General Elec-
tric increased- the sales saturation
point for clocks with its Morning
Star. Customers wishing cathedral-
like doorbells ask for Mello-Chimes.
wren times more women bey "a
shade of hosiery When It is called
Gala than when it is offered as
plain beige. A diplomatic hosiery
compatly calls its short-legged
lengths Byes, long-legged ones
Duchees, while the stoutish lady
ithembarrassedly asks for Classic-
al and feels understood."
Bet eoitietlines /Melee may back-
fife. A departmeht stare was ins
ttodeeing a new petfrane called
Fragrant, But the show-card writer
taistisideestood the telephone
structions. Awl so posted over the
perfume counter were signs that.
plainly spelled out Vagrant.. , The
section manager was hoping Mid,
But the chap from the adeortisitig
depart/ruin; cooled him off. "What
are your beelin' about? took at all
the tramps buying 11:"
C
t 5 I3.C.
C It i n g Bolen Piteininobe
fittiebttee her happy marriage to'
Vat Freddie (Giant coach) to a
Vale of .fudge, As a girl, shie lived
iri Indlantipolie. One day a little •
.Colony of ball players Mewed Into
etteeht house across the street.
They Were all idea clean ,eitt young
fellows, and naturally they kept
giving her •the eye. tut Wien only
had eyes for Freddie Whe Stud-
lonely Ignored her,.
Filially, She (leaded to do some-'
thing -about it. She inado• tin te big
batch of fridge and sent it 'beer an
a plate, sere, enough, tone' time •
later the plate Was returned in Pets
Son—by Freild 1 OS
"Gee;" Shined Bolen happily,
to glad it was you Who brought. the •
plate back,"
"Well," said Freddie-0.4We had to'
draw straw's to see who'd ild• the
Letter."
"Pin so lied 'Stu erbilS"' getShed
• Helene
"Lade;" replied Pada* .4i 1.45St,'
the Pouse of Seagram
tir ;
New — Activated
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Men 'who think of tomorrow radix modeeationtoday
The Arabian horse is the •OnlY
true thoroughbred lentil he the'
World today. This heetitifel Horse
of the desert hes been *at
out mixture for no leSS :3,()(10
years;.itad oddly enough has two
Tess ribs than other I horsey. t is
infereSting to note that both 1Vel
11 neon nnd. Napoleon rote Arab
IiiirseS at the 'Tattle of Wet:otiose igstt. 241. —