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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1957-10-23, Page 2RUSSIA 175 3,000,000 ,,t..,t11,1111,9.11;n1 NM DIVISIONS TROOPS LIGHT MOMENT—Driven by a pair of colorful fish, an oyster shell chariot carries four beautiful "pearls" in swimsuits. The float, called "Queens of the Sea", was a prize-winner in the Florence (Italy) Rificolone Carnival. ;FABLE TALKS itr ekme, Andtew Foiled Rivairs Kidnap Plot It was an April night in, 1708. The King's Theatre in. the Hays market London, was packed with rank and fashion. It was at Saturday night, the favourite evening for going to a show, queen. Charlotte sat in the geYal, bOX and was gazed at by the adoring ladies in hooped pet- tlOats Who Sat lIncemiortably in the pit stalls; In the stalls there were two vacant seats. Just be- fare the curtain rose on the Bret act of the opera, two people MAVed into those seats, The au- dience gasped; the women oohed and aahed; the men put up their quizzing glasses, For the man now waiting for his companion to be seated was the Duke of Grafton, Prime Minister of Eng- land and the woman with him Was Nancy Parsons, known as Mrs, Fleughton, But what caused the sensation was that a few seats away was the Duchess of Grafton, still married to the Prime Minister, but separated from him for the past four years. Gossip had it that the reason the ducal couple separated was that the Duchess was a great gambler, a pursuit that the Duke hated, although he often fre- quented the racecourses himself and was a keen ridedr to hounds, But who was Nancy Parsons and how did she come into the pic- ture? In the private, collection of Mr. Charles Wertheimer is a portrait Of Nancy painted by Thomas Gainsborough. It shows her to have been an excedingly beau- tiful girl in her late twenties, a girl of aristocratic appearance, but she certainly was not of aris- tocratic birth. So far as her origin is known, she was the daughter of a Bond Street tailor. According to report, her father gave her a good edu- cation, including a finishing course in France, but even that is not certain. The gossips of the day had it that she was already a friend of the Prime Minister before she went to France and that actually she had gone there after a quar- rel with him, that he had sent one of his party to France to bring her back, and she had re- turned in one'of the royal yachts. True or false, it is impossible to say. Nancy was a strange young woman, known to be highly in- telligent and a pious churchgoer, but how did she become Mrs. Houghton? It appears that she had no legal right to call herself Mrs. Hough- ton; she had met Captain Hough- ton in London and he had en- ticed her to accompany him to the West Indies, where he treat- ed her badly forcing her to run away and return to London ab- solutely penniless. Her enemies, of whom she had plenty, claimed that she became a lady of the town. However, it is known that when the Duke of Grafton was negotiating terms of separation from 'his Duchess he invited Nancy to, visit him at Wakefield Lodge, near Stony Stratford, where he had his official resi- dence. Determined to cut a good figure at the Mike's home, Nancy ordered a very smart carriage for the trip and gave instructions that the Houghton arms ere to be emblizoned on the panels, but time was short and the pain- ing job had to be done in a hurry. Nancy had a sixty-mile drive in front of her but she set out late in the afternoon and was forced to stay the night at a Dunstable inn. The ostlers, to please the pretty girl, promised to do a particularly good job of washing down her coach, but it was dark so they could not see that it required special care. Xri the morning when Nancy sapped out of the inn and saw her carriage she gasped. The coat of arms had disappeared; it was covered up by ugly streaks of paint! However, it didn't seem to matter much to the Duke, or to Nancy; for from this visit there sprang up a great romance. During the next four years Nancy had the greatest possible influence on the Duke, but they both kept their romance a secret. To the world he was a statesman separated from his wife to whom he allowed £3,000 a year, but Nancy was his secret love. True, there was gossip and whispers, but until the couple appeared together at the theatre in 1768, there was no open scandal, Soon after that Saturday night however, there was rumours that Nancy Parsons was investing in public funds with money she had received in bribes from people who sought her intervention in their own interests. Did these rumours cause the lovers to part? For part they did, after their romance had lasted at least five years. Now the separation between the Duke and Duchess of Grafton became a divorce, and three days later the Duchess married the young Lord Ossory, who was the co-respon- dent. The separation of the Duke from his adored Nancy puzzled people; many believed that this was but a cloak to hide their intention to marry, once the Duke was divorced. Three months later, however, the Duke of Grafton married the daughter of the Dean of Wor- cester. Nancy became frienly with Thomas Penton, brother of the Duchess of Ancaster, but that link was soon broken. Then along came the. Duke of Dorset, a famed cricketef of the time, to seek Nancy's favours She "took up with him" and they left for a continental tour that was to last for about three years. During the tour the lovers visited Rome, where an. Italian nobleman fell in love with Nancy and tried to kidnap her. The. Duke of Dorset rescued her just in time, when the Italian was trying to force Nancy into his coach. Soon after this incident the Duke broke with Nancy. His childhood sweetheart had become the Countess of Derby. The Duke of Dorset met her by accident and persuaded her to leave her husband and they ran away to- gether, so Nancy was alone once more. Nothnig more was heard of Nancy until the "Morning Post" announced her marriage to the 25-year-old Viscount Maynard, who was nearly twenty years younger. Nancy decided to con- tinue the continental tour she had, begun with the Duke of Dorset. The newly-married couple vis- ited Naples where they were well received by the King and Queen of Italy, but the British colony refused to know her. Nancy behaved with the great- set dignity and eventually she won over her enemies. The couple were now the greatest success at court, but a few yeara It takes inventiveness to use leftover foods attractively — to get something out of nothing. This challenges the imagination and so often is more interest- ing in result than when starting from scratch. * * For instance, one evening the refrigerator yielded five ground- beef patties (previously cooked with onions and green peppers), a bowl of mashed white potatoes and one egg yolk, What to do to get an appetizing result! I placed the meat cakes in the four corners and center of a square pyrex dish. Beating the egg yolk I added it to the po- tatoes and shaped five cakes. These I placed on top of the meat. Into each vacant space spooned corn from a can of nib- lets, dressed the top with bread crumbs, mild grated cheese and powdered parsley, and browned in the oven. Presto, a complete casserole meal, writes Marjorie K. Stackhouse in The Christian Science Monitor. A favorite 1 eft o v e r lunch makes use of my scallop shells as ramekins. Place a portion of leftover baked tuna - noodle - mushroom casserole in each shell. Surround with leftover mashed white potato rolled to fit space. Cover with slightly diluted mushroom soup and parsley flakes. Brown under broiler. • • • There are all sorts of vari- ants for these individual, baked dishes, What is left of a salmon- celery-green pepper-onion cas- serole may be surrounded by cooked rice, topped with diluted celery soup and grated cheese, and browned. Or use leftover diced turkey or chicken. Sur- round with rice; cover with cream of chicken soup thinned with gravy or milk. • • * Another favorite need not be a leftover affair. Have a pork rib roast cut through into chops. ,Bake in a' large flat dish half- filled with water, covering each chop with slices of green pep- later they returned to England where the 18-year-old Duke of Bedford fell violently in love with Nancy, now fifty. Viscount Maynard did not seem to object to this strange affair, but it end- ed when Nancy became ill in Lyons. At about this time she sepa- rated from her husband, the Vis- count, who, tired of his elderly wife, fell in love with an attrac- tive French dancer. Nancy retired to Naples where she had many friends at court. During the summer of 1802 she went to England but she did not see her husband. Her arrival in England was noted• in the news- papers and it was said she in- tended to pass the rset of her life in Switzerland, but instead she went to a convent on the out- skirts of Paris, where she became a religions penitent. Six years later her death was reported in the newspapers, but the report was false. It is certain that Nancy did not' die until 1814, the 'year before the Battle of Waterloo, She was then eighty. The account of her funeral was recorded by an unnamed Eng- lishwoman who was present, "The bishop," she• wrote, "order- ed that all due honour should be rendered to the piety and good works of the deceased." The funeral sermon was preached by a Protestant clergy- Matt in a Catholic church. As the body of Nancy Parsons, Vis- countess Maynard, was laid in the tomb, the watchnig peasantry Wept for the death of a tailor's daughter, who half a century earlier had wielded power behind the scenes in Englisb political life, per, onion, and your favorite seasoning. If you prefer, place alternate layers of sliced, raw, white po- tatoes, onions and green pep- pers, with chops on top, Have a little water in the bottom of pan, Brown chops, on both sides,, Juice and fat mingles with vege- tables. * You can make your own chicken a la king quite simply: 1 can cream chicken soup 1/2 to 3/4 can milk 2 to 3 cups diced turkey or chicken 1 package cooked frozen peas 1 chicken bouillon cube 1/1 cup sliced pimiento (or 6 large stuffed olives sliced) Season with savory, tea- spoon Worcestershire sauce, onion salt, small pinch red pep- per, plus salt and black pepper. • • * Desserts, too, may become tasty somethings from nothing —or next to nothing! It's al- ways fun to experiment with what you have on hand. In just such fashion I came up with three desserts. The refrigerator yielded 1/2. cup canned raspber- ries and 1/2 cup cocoa beverage. Here's the result: Dissolve one envelope standard unflavored gelatin in 1/4 cup cold water. Add 1/2 cup boiling water. Divide contents equally into three bowls. To No. 1 'bowl add the rasp- berry juice probably less. than 1/2 cup). When set, serye with raspberries and whipped cream. To No. 2 bowl add the 1/2 cup cocoa beverage plus I heaping teaspoon instant cocoa. When set fold in 2 tablespoons whipped cream, Top with nuts. For No. 3 bowl: beat 1 egg and, place in double boiler with 1/2 cup milk and 1 to 2 teaspoons sugar. When custard' forms add dash nutmeg 'or 1/2 teaspoon va- nilla. Combine with gelatin. When set, fold in 2 tablespoons whipped* cream. Serve 'topped with shredded -coconut or grated pineapple. The cream for all may be whipped and sweetened to taste at one time. * Another favorite: prepare a gelatin-base with unflavored gelatin and using your favor- ite red fruit-juice: grape, cran- berry, raspberry, cherry. Pour Vs , to 3A inch into each gelatin mold, Dilute remaining gelatin to make a sauce. When gelatin is set fill each mold with cooked rice which has been thoroughly mixed with whipped cream, sweetened and flavored to taste. To serve, empty mold into dessert dish and pour balance of thinned fruit gelatin over top, Bull Terrier Stops Battle When two fierce tribes in the mountains of New Guinea met one day to fight a tribal feud, they reckoned without a dog. On a hill nearby a gold miner stood with his dog, a bull terrier. Unexpectedly, four arrows whiz- zed by his herd. Alarmed, the miner saw that some of the fierce - looking tribesmen were coming his way, still engaged in figliting. He fired a couple of warning shots from his rifle. It was then that the bull ter- rier intervened. Startled by the shouting and the gunfire, he ran among the struggling natives, biting all and sundry and up- setting the men by throwing his heavy body against their legs. The miner Watched in astonish- ment as the men of the attack- ing tribe fled. The battle was over. The victors, sure that the dog's intervention had won the battle for them, sent a deputation to the miner's camp that evening, carrying a large pig. This they insisted on _"giving" to the dog as a rewar! Another View Of Fluoridation Using humans as experimentas subjects, without their consent is not in line with our eoneeption, Of The American Way. The fluoridation progrmn is. is strong point in .casi:‘, Administer. •medieation to person against his Or her will is totali- tarianism in the final degree. Placing a medication in the pub- lic' water supply so that people must take that medicine, ly or unwillingly, seems, to say the least, to ,be: elimination of the Ireedom of choice. • No one knows the results of regular consttmption of this chemical over an extended .period of time On all types of humans. It is, and, will be for a long time, an experimental program, that inp-i..a yyao;:.sro to canle. ay not have ill effects however, if eventually fluori- dation should be proved to be just as worthwhile as its spon- sors claim, no one in the United States of America should be forced to accept it. against .his will. No medical doetor„ of proper ethical standards, would ever ad- minister medication to patients who declared themselves oppes- ed to -having it administered. A surgeon will not operate, even in extreme emergency, without permission from patient or re- sponsible relatives, and these things are as they should be. By the same token, mass ad- ministration of a medication should not be forced upon any- one, Placing this substance in a public water supply would mean forcing every resident . to consume it or give up their homes and jobs to move else- where. After at least a generation of experimental consumption of this substance by varied masses of volunteers and scientific evalua- ton of the results, both good and bad, then the program could be presented to the citizenship of a community for acceptance or rejection . . . anything short of that is something less than right . All problems would be so simple, if they were just' worked out on the principles upon which this nation was 'constituted under God . . and all the decisions finally weighed orsalhe 'scales of the inspired word of God. - -Decatur (Ill.) Advertiser, Memory. Not The Same As Learning Is an extraordinary photo- graphic memory for related or unrelated data synonymous with an excellent education? Some- times one is an accompaniment to the other. And it would prOb- ably be impossible to acquire a good education without a nor- mally developed memory. But not just a photographic one. And as for what the psy- chologiats term "complete recall" --if that is the equivalent Of edu- cation then an appealing little stock clerk in St. Louis, made famous by television, ought to have been chosen president of some great university, long ago. But 'the nitiltithotisand-dollar crdik shows are' certainly glori- fying the American memory "whiz", perhaps at the expense of the truly educated man. One new college president has had ,something to 'Say on "this—Dr. Robert 'F. 'Coheen 'of Princeton. Addressing the. undergraduates for the first ,time he said: "I do confess a pertain envy for those persons whose minds teem indeliblY stored' with Meticilloa- 1Y-filed data on' everything tinder the sun . , . It is;' distinctively not, however, with this' sort of competence and achievement that a liberal education is es- sentially cOncerned.° But has President boheen ever won a "grand" or ,rnore in one of those -"isolation booths"? Let an educator who has, speak — Charles Van Doren of Columbia University, winner of a mere $129,000, He writes in Life Magazine: "A contestant ... could "know everything" and still know noth- ing because he knows none of, the connections between the things that he "knew" . . Knowledge consists largely of making analogies, of seeing simi- larities, of deducing principles and laws . Only old and wise men know how little Is known . . . Teachers are more ignorant than their students — or they should be. And they try to drive a little of this ignorance into their students' heads." Even to. those who grasp and agree with what he says quiz shows still are Inn, Mr. Van Doren declares he's keeping "all that money". And we'll keep peeking at quiz shows now and then, -crrorn the Christian Science Monitor,• "You want to say It with flowers, sir?"a florist asked a customer. "How about three dozen roses?" "Make it half a dozen. I'm a man of few Words." The Ancient Cradle Still Has Uses "Where's our old cradle?" it: my good wife suddenly the other evening and with the uttt r composure necessary to living with. said individual so long I replied, "Over a hem in the ba; n." You ean't fool me, "Jo wants .to 1<< rrow it," qtr. said. "Good for Jol" jo and Jot', friends of out's, recently acquired a handsome new 1057 model which they named Jan, and Jo has rebel ideas. She knows that the cradle has long been ridiculed from our Imo by the experts, and that rocking a child is the very worst thing you can do, It disturbs his unconscious and makes him insecure, or some- thing, arid confuses him. He will surely grow up out of whack in his compensating coordinations. I remember my Grandmother said "Fudge!" when she heard that, Jo doesn't believe it, either. At least she wants to borrow a cradle enough for Joe to take some pictures, Jo wants Jan to be able to say she slept in a cradle, There's more to it than that, The experts spend their time analyzing the babies, but neg- lect the rights and privileges of parents and grand-parents. Who says rocking is a one-way ex- clusive? Regardless of what rocking does to Baby, what does it do for Mother? Who does the kid think he is? Jo admitted she also had a yen to rock Jan in a cradle, It's as broad as it's long, Anyway, I went out to the barn and brought down the family cradle. It was full Of hay chaff, secondhand cobwebs, and had a mud-wasp warren under the hood. In 13 years of desue- tude a cradle over a barn beam must amuse itself. I presumed the time would come when I'd have to get the thing down for a succeeding batch, but I hadn't counted on. an outsider's bor- rowing it. To will take care of it, all right. I wonder how long it would take to find a cradle in a store these days? Ours is very old. One of our few authentic family antiques. Grandfathers long forgotten snoozed in it and grew up to see their sons and grandsons take it over. It was first made for a lang Scots bairn, and as our-lad has turned into a six- three-er he found it just right when his turn came. We had a big , old dog then, named Gelert, and when we snuggled the new baby into the cradle by the hearth Gelert came in, sized up the situation, stretched out alongside, and in- dicated where he Might be found henceforth should we want him. He never left the cradle except while the lad was taken up. When somebody out- Side the family came to peer at the baby Gelert would draw back' his weathered chops, bare his iiiiSsing teeth, and growl deep in, his beings People knew Whose baby this was. Do you remember the legend of the real Gelert? It was about that time people began .telling us they'd read an article by an expert saying the cradle was a barbarous device designed to ruin the growing ' child. Rocking 'a baby was the worst thing you could do. It was hard to subscribe to this 'contention' sitting in -a comfort- Wabolce)delcirotiarl l:y,otlif ewittIllgewitng nhaaprpd; apple, reading a worthy boob, giving the anti th 1.:11:4('Iii a n s paws;,c)w.11 sional shove. l'hore was the dog never awake and never asleep, eyeing hard, a i1 you th elt.st yiY(i'rillgsstlelar vesh taorQ- leg the family atmosphere with every aspect of being glad. When Kathie came to live with us, selecting the wildest January day in the cruelest winter of our time, the cradle proved an ideal place for her. With folded lambskin in the bottom, it was an insulated haven in a world that we weren't, otherwise keeping WO warm, We had a pail of water freeze behind the stove that winter, and the lad ate his pap with mittens on, We also had a new dog, a pup of doubtful intellect, and he found the cradle a delightful place to nap. Horror and boor,. aw accompanied the discovery that he was sleeping with Kathie. There he was with his head hanging over the edge and his tongue dangling, and there she was shoved to one side, Orders to cease and desist were posted, and sometimes honored, but he'd sneak back by times and we found he was kind and gentle about it, and just as pos- sessive as Gelert had been—but more comfortable. By the time he was too big to share the cradle we had taught him to bunk on the floor. We always called this a Moses cradle. I think it was cunningly made by a craftsman who went by more than rule of thumb. The design is good, The rockers have just the right roll to them, and more or less curve would be wrong. And the cen- ter of gravity is neatly contain- ed, so you can rock the cradle easily, but it would take a real strong push to tip -it over. The sides flare just so, making it handy to get the baby in and out, and warding off floor drafts -The hood is gracefully curved so this most useful item has a flow and charm. The top is thin oak, and I think it must have been steamed, Otherwise it would have cracked. There are several ways any- body could put a hood on a cradle, but this artisan took pains. Best of all, this cradle has that smoothness of long use, the wear of time and the hands that touched it, and the rocker ends are worn where feet have treadled. When people consider an antique "as good as new" they 'miss the point. An antique is better than new when it is well worn from family use. True, the now fulfilled desire of Jo to rock, her new baby in a cradle is scarcely more than a gesture. She was feeling something that ran deep and doesn't need to be explained. A new baby looks right in a cradle' and a, new mother feels right rocking it. Jan will grow up to be a perfectly modulated product of her own time, in spite of a toothless grin from a tired old cradle borrowed for the sake of a photograph. Some few may see the sense of it. Jo says the most. frequent • re- mark is, "Where in the world did you find it?"—By John Gould in The Christian Science Moni- tor, ISSUE 43 — 1957 THREE OF A kiN111-8oa-tothiri be proud of 'are these triplet heifer calves,Failh, Hope and Charily, shown with their owner, Rdyniand Pa lmer. The calves, how seven &tenths old, ore an Online:it rarity, Authorities point out that triplet heifers occur once in 812,000 cattle, births arid that for all three to• survive bi even rarer. the calves are second generation and 'artificially bred, RED MILITARY STRENGTH—Estimates by U.S. authorities indicate. That Russia and its satellites have some 4,468;000'men under ?arms. While the United States is conducting a sweeping face- lifting 'of its own .200,000-plus army in Europe for possible future atomic Warfare, the Soviets have been making similar preparatibnS. In addition to its huge force at home, Russia has 22 diVitioriS in Eat!. Germany. These troops, equipped with atomic weapons, tire at peak combat readiness and will be °hill a new training cycle starts in December, when new eetruits are sent in annually to replace dischargees. Figures. NeWsman give breakdown by countries. Bulgaria's 13 divisions 'are considered by the Soviets as the Most "trust- worthy' of the satellite' (Armies. Albania's three divisions are, considered- understrerigth. The situation ih Hungary is tbh-' fused due of last year's rebellion. The army deserted to the revolutionaries and the SoViets are trying t o reorganize it. gut it no longer can be considered on effective military fordee