HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1958-04-09, Page 2FIT FOR A PALACE—Looking like an aging giant's birthday cake
is the world's largest chandelier as it is turned on after its
completion in Limburg, Germany. The massive fixture is 16
feet high, 11 feet in diameter, weighs more than q ton and a
half, and has 545 electric candles and some 20,000 pieces of
hand-polished crystal. Destined to hang in a Chicago concert
hall, it moy be exhibited at the Brussels World's Fair.
ABLE TUNS
dam AraPews
FROZEN FOODS---Outdoor Magi no, picnic for
storm. What's for howl ttilttly cold cuts for
Regiment; ist Meolne i ivisibn. Nok they'fe not
they are undergoiri0 tOici4tother fbitercises a t
port, in the tieera Neircitici ,MoutitsrAnti
thete Marines Oi they cithe ih a snow
the facalesi, pork clad troops' of the till
in Ante:ode:4i bU) fiturirly't California, Where-
Pickle Meddeeet Training. Center near Seidelie
Princess and Pianist-i—
Love Conquers Protocol
by Rosette learerove
NEA 5tAff Correspondent
Steeltreirie — The most popular
song in Sweden these days is
`Spring Is In, the Air," a love
.#-IttY with words end music by
Aoreln Douglas-Horne,
Douglas-Home May be British,
young and old, students and
iihOpgirla here are humming his
song' with knowing Smiles, for
sore time this spring it's expect-
Zed Douglas-Home, e5, may be
perrnitecl to announce his en-
gagement to Sweden's eldest
Princess, 23-year-old Margaretha.
The fact that they are in love
is not news, but for a time it
looked as if the romance might
well end to the strains of "Stor-
my Weather." The royal family
considered a piano-playing com-
poser a poor matrimonial pros-
pect for pretty, lissome Mar-
garetha.
In March, however, they re-
lented. Robin was allowed to
Pay a visit, When he departed, a
royal communique said word 6f
betrothal might be forthcoming
— if they were still in love after
a cooling off period.
Since -the romance seems to
have been a case of love at first
sight, there's little doubt in
Swedish minds about the out-
come,
Margaretha met Robin a year
ago at the plush London cocktail
lounge called "Casanova" where
she was taken by the "Duke of
Kent's set." The handsome piano
player stepped over to say hello
to friends in the party and was
presented to the princes. And
from that evening on—for some-
thing like the next three months
—the princess and the piano
player met every night.
Then word of the romance
reached Sweden,. Margaretha,
who was in London to study do-
xnestic science and nursing, was
ordered home posthaste. Robin's
official letter of proposal (which
bore the family seal, "Faithful
Until the End") was answered
with. a courteous but firm "No."
After a stormy family coun-
cil the first marshal of the Swed-
ish court announced:
"The young man is charming.
But he has no title, no money.
His present position would not
permit him to give the princess
the standing to which she is en-
titled. Princess Margaretha is not
sufficiently wealthy to keep her
husband and the cost of living in
London is high. Therefore the
marriage is impossible."
For the British this looked just
like another Townsend affair.
Both Margarets were victims of
unfortunate loves. The Swedish
press unanimously said: "The
dreams of greatness of Princess
Sybille (Margaretha's mother)
will condemn her four daughters
to blessed spinsterhood."
With great dignity Robin re-
fused tempting offers to appear
In various nightclubs at home
end abroad. He also refused to
discuss his romance.
Meantime, back in the palace
in Stockholm, Margaretra looked
Lovelorn.
Behind the scenes, however,
Margaretha was fighting for her
love. She started to win over her
idoring grandfather. She pointed
Out that the Swedish royal fam-
ily descended from Marshal Ber-
nadotte who came from a "petit
bourgeois" French family before
be was crowned king of Sweden
in 1810. Robin, on the other hand,
was a member of the royal aris-
tocracy and could trace his fam-
ily tree back to 1473.
Margaretha's mother, daughter
of a German duke, seems to have
been the main objector to het
marriage. Despite her marriage
into the ultra-democratic Swed-
ish court, Princess Sybille has
always been e stickler for eti-
quette and firmly believes in the
grandeur of princes.
On the other hand, there is
no law in Sweden which can pre-
vent the princess marrying
Douglas-Home. She 18 and
need not obtain the royal con-
sent, as is the case of Margaret
of England,
Now it looks as though love
bad conquered in Sweden. There
OMNI!? boUGLAS.HOMEt Orin.
belie orcindpa,
PRINCESS MARGARETHA: Mom-
ma believed in grandeur.
are even rumors that betrothal
will be followed by a June mar-
riage, to which all the crowned
and uncrowned heads in Europe
will come,
Commented a Palace official, a
romantic and a poet like most
Swedes: "It is best for the mar-
riage to take place when the
trees are in leaf and the roses
in bud. Then, too, all the chil-
dren will, be out of school and
they will be delighted to see the
"wedding,"
Tracked By Shoes
When a man stripped himself
naked. to commit a murder he
reasoned, quite rightly, that he
could not be identified by his
victim's blood on his clothes.
But he forgot that he was wear-
ing shoes and the police found
traces of blood on them.
Twenty years ago, in Magee-
chusetts, two pairs of shoes con-
victed another murderer. He had
strangled a girl and placed her
body between two mattresses on
the bed. He then took off his old,
cracked shoes and swapped them
for a new pair which he found
in the house.
When arrested he wag wear-
ing the new shoes which the
owner identified, and the shoes
found on the scene of the crime
fitted the murderer perfectly.
In 1935 an old-fashioned fa-
ther in Virginia took a whip to
his twenty-year-old daughter
because the had been out after
dark with a boy friend. The
daughter retaliated by beating
him to death with a high-heeled
shoe.
Two years ago, in North Lon-
don, there was an epidemic of
housebreaking. It was eventu-
ally traced' to a thief with out-
size boots. He used to kick the
doors in?
When Night Falls
Along The Cape
From Monomoy Point to Race
Point in Provincetown — fully
fifty miles — twelve coast guard
stations watch the beach and the
shipping night and day. There
are no breaks save natural ones
in this keep of the frontier, . .
Every night in the year, when
darkness has fallen on the Cape
and the sombre thunder of ocean
is heard in the pitch pines and
the moors, lights are to be seen
moving along these fifty miles of
sand, some going north, some
South, twinkles and points of
light solitary and mysterious.
These lights gleam frotri the lan-
terns and electric torches of the
coast guardsmen of the Cape
walking the night patrols, When
the nights are full ,of wind and
rain, loneliness and the, thunder.
Of the sea, these lights along the
surf have a quality of romance
and beauty that is Elizabethan,
that is beyond all stain of pres-
ent time.
Every night they go; every
night of the year the eastern
beaches see the comings and go-
MO of the wardens of Cape Cod.
Witter and summer they pass
and repass, now through the Mid-
night Sleet and fury of a great
northeaster; now thrOtigh August
quiet and_ the reddish golden
radiance 'of an old moon rising
after Midnight from the sea, now
through Et World of rain shaken
with heavy thunder and etabbed
through and through With light
Sing And alWaYa, always *lime..
*henever I rise at earliest dawri,
r.htid, the beach traced and i•e-
traced With.footprints that van-
felt in'the distances each 'step •
ebain lorged anew each night its
the Cottragebud service of matt-
kind. -Preen "TheOuterrneat
Rouse," by Oenry 13eston,
When it comes to getting into
an evening goWny seine Wainett
don't goy far enough,
Snidf,Makers. Are
reOling Pinch
l3ecatise fewer people new
take souk a British ArM which
has. manufactured and sold this
Yellowish-brown powder for
more than gQQ years is ceasing
do so, it WAS recently ennotmc-
ed. •
Dealing in Snuff for ON cen-
*Pries. is a, business record not
to be sneezed at. Try to Iroa-
ging the prodigious number of
pinches of snuff which must
have been taken by the firm's
customers over that long period.
If a boy today offered his girl
friends a pinch of snuff at e party
she'd be surprised, but don't get
the idea that - snuff-taking has
died out, It hasnt, although the
habittheentl hasot stlhoowwlyarcl,eclined since
Lots ofmen and women take
snug today because they declare
it keeps colds away, For cep,
turies it has been popular in
certain trades, Thousands of
bench workers still favour "the
fragrant pinch," •.
During the war some works
,supervisors said that women
who took snuff at work were
more efficient, In the days of
Beau Brummell, rare and scent-
ed mixtures of `snuff were used
to tickle the nostrils of gallants
and their fair ladies. •
The experienced anuff,4aker
never sneezes, but an overdose
can cause the head to swim
alarmingly for a few seconds.
You can still buy snuff today in
twenty or so varieties, One cus-
tomer of a London snuff mer-
chant got through half a pound
of snuff every week.
LUMINOUS TAPE LOCATES
a tumbler of water or any other
object placed on a night stand,
Cut small square of tape and
attach to tumbler at a point
half-way between bottom and
rim of glass. Larger objects
may require tape strips• placed
either vertically or horizontally.
HAIL THE. CHIEF — Flame-
haired actress Jill St. " John
slides down the pole as she
celebrates her appointment as
honorary fire chief of Universal
City in Hollywood. The 17-
year-old beauty was a psychi-
atry student, when she signed
a screen contract.
That Diet Of Hers
Mamie Eisenhower looked
thinner and a bit tanned When
she alighted from the Colum-
bine III on her return to. Wash-.
ington from a two-week vaca-
tion, With almost girlish mod-
esty, the First Lady confided
that she had lost "about 5
pounds,"
She credited the' diet given
her by beauty experts at Elite.-
beth Arden's Maine Chance re-
sort neat PhOenix, Ariz,, where
(fins $600 per week) a customer
can breakfast in bed arid shed
weight in luxurious surtOund-
iftgs. (The First Lady Was
there as a nonpaying guest.)
It took hardly any effort on
the part of beauty editors and
fashion writers to pry the• diet
loose from the resort operator,
A typical day's intake:
Preakfeat: iHaek coffee Or tee,
heti a grapefruit.
il a,m.: One cup of clear
vegetable broth.
1 p.n14 Ohe seterribled egg,
garnished with julienne olgreen
'Popper and entishtrafee; jellied
ilispleetriee topped with yogurt
Milan Coffee,
4 p.m.: Sniall Oda of btittet.
milk or Sitini
/tit Fresh Vegetable,
juke deektaii,
It3ci pat.:: Broiled calf's livery
itteareed broccoli With meek hal,
landiae, stewed tOtiettthee, baked
tipple, sf rah coffee.
9:t0 P,M.: One CUP herb tea.
e•-•Fristri Newsweek,
Pizza is a sort of pie, having
a raised dough for its crust,
There are many variations for
the filling, but to be authentic it
should contain tomato paste,
cheese, garlic, oregano, olive oil
and either sausage or anchovies.
For a small family with diver-
gent tastes, you might try mak-
ing half your pie with sausage
and half with anchovies. There
are those who hold the opinion
that almost anything can go into
a pizza, as into a stew! Some
of the possibilities along this
line are tiny meatballs, mush-
rooms, ripe olives, onions, capers,
fish, parsley, heart of artichoke
chopped ham, chicken, shrimp,
lobster.
It is said on good authority
that there are now about 19,000
pizzeries along the roadsides
and in the cities and towns of
the United States, elbowing out
some of the hamburger stands.
In these restaurants or drive-
ins, usually pizzas sod spaghetti
only are served.
To make things easy for your-
self, try using packaged hot roll
mix for your first pizzas (and
you may like it so well you'll
always use it for this purpose).
ITALIAN-STYLE PIZZA
1 pound pork sausage roll
1 package hot roll mix
3/2 cup minced onion
8-ounce can tomato sauce
6-ounce can tomato paste
1 teaspoon salt
4 teaspoon oregano
3/8 teaspoon garlic salt
8 ounces sharp cheddar cheese,
Slice and pan fry sausage un-
til pink color disappears; drain,
Reserve 2 tablespoons drippings.
Prepare roll mix by package
directions. Let rise until light
(30-60 minutes). Only one rising
period. Pan fry lightly the onion
in 1 tablespoon drippings. Add
tomato sauce, tomato paste, salt,
oregano, arid garlic salt. Divide
dough into four parts, roll and
arrange in 9- or 10 inch pie pans.
Brush surface of dough with
sausage drippings. Arrange half
the cheese on dough, COver with
tomato mixture. Top with saus-
age and remaining cheese. Bake
immediately in hot oven, 450°
F. for 15-20 minutes. Serve hot.
If desired, sprinkle with grated
Parmesan cheese, finely cut part-
ley, or sliced cooked mushrooms.
Serves 6. *
Orie Italioti woman claims that
nothing makes a pizza so good as
Mozzarella cheese sliced or cut
in small pieces. She advocates
brushing the dough with olive
oil instead of drippings to pre-
vent sogging. However, she re-
luctantly admits that Parmesan
or some nippy cheese may be
stibetittited if Mozzarella is net
available, "But it won't be the
real Neapelitati pizza;" she
warhed. She uses 1/2 eleive of
garlic minced fine instead Of
onion and garlic Salt as IS Used
In the above recipe. * *
Requefett eheeee end anchovy
fillets make another good
ititiOlEPOItt 1'I t:A FILLING
eoltipeeseeettinbied koilliefort
Z teideapOons olive oil
1 tan '(11-1Z-ounce) tomatoes;
Attained and crushed
tittiehatioon Oath oregand- arid
1,4 teaspoon pepper
anchovy fiMete; into'
'Sinai! Plate§
Sprinkle dough Which you
Triumph Of A •
Hypnotist ?
In the comfortable .vonsulta-
ilea room of psychotherapist
Kant Schmitz, in Munich, Ger-
many, a grim man sat in hyp-
notic trance Before him was' a
notebook on which he was =lb-
Wing wildly. Desperately strain-
ing to jog his memory, he tore
up page after page. Dr. Schmitz,
a towering man with a bland
smile, limped .about the room
on a cane, encouraging and ca-
joling his patient.
Finally, the writer's confusion
disappeared; his scribbling be-
came an orderly sequence, After
three weeks of six-hour clays un-
der hypnosis, the patient's mem-
ory cleared and, so the doctor
said, be wrote lucidly of long-
ago events,
The patient was Heinrich Ger-
lach, once an obscure Latin tea-
cher in a schoei near Bremen,
His hypnotic treatment got him
started on the writing of a cur-
rent German best-selling book,
"The Betrayed Army," a God
page shocker presenting a vivid
picture of the gradual decima-
tion and final surrender of 22
German divisions on the icy
plains before Stalingrad in 1943.
Published only three months ago,
the book already has reached
its sixth printing and is being
translated into seven languages.
Next summer it will be intro-
duced to U.S, readers by Hai-
per.
Last month, Gerlach's enthu-
siastic readers heard an amaz-
ing explanation of the book's
grim .accuracy and authentic
autobiographical flavour: A t
least 120 pages, originally writ-
ten at -the time of the Stalin-
grad crisis, had been recon-
structed eight years later under
hypnosis — that, at least, was
the story Munich newspapers
printed. Moreover, they said, Dr.
Schmitz was' suing Gerlach far
2e per cent of his royalties be-
cause of his help toward getting
the book written.
Gerlach had started his book
shortly after becoming a Russian
prisoner of war at Stalingrad.
His first draft was confiscated.
by prison guards. Doggedly, he
set to work again, and once
more his notes were discovered
and torn into shreds. A third at-
tempt .— in microscopic hand-
writing-in .e tiny notebook—was
also seized before his release in
19to9.r the next two years, Ger-
lach vainly strained his mem-
ory to reconstruct his experi-
ences, Penniless arid deS,PA'Att,
in 1951, the papers said; he went
to Dr, Schmitz; who had gained •
a reputation for evoking total
through hypnosis:
In case, hypnosis,
worked. "It was like being back
in, two places at once," the wri-
ter said, "la the silent bell Of
the prison camp and in t h
nerve-shattering hell of the
battlefield .Suddenly, I ha ,d,
found the thread again.",
Gerlach completed his manu-
script in 1951 and submitted it
to several publishers, Not until
1957 was the book published by
the Nyrnphenburg 'Publishing
House. By then, Dr. Schmitz had
lost touch with Gerlach, 'When
the hypnotist saw the- book till-.
Mg the show windows of book-
shops in Munich, he decided to
remind his former patient of
his financial Obligation,.
"I can't and won't deny that,
my work was helped by Dr.
Schmitz's treatment," Heinrich
Gerlach, now 49, said recently.
"But then, couldn't a gynecolo-
gist, with equal rights, ask for
a part of all future earnings of
any child he has helped into this
world?"
To. this, Dr, Schmitz replied:
"The reason I am. suing Gerlach
is not because I am after money
—although I do have an explicit
contract signed by him in which
he voluntarily offers me the 20.
per cent for spiritual and materi e.
al assistance rendered. My main
motive is the hope that the trial
will help me publicize what
hypnosis may and can do,"
Gerlach said: "I don't recall
signing such a contract, If I did,
I must have been under his hyp--
Laic influence." — From News-
week,
ONIIS FOR THE HOOK
Booksellers sometimes need
crossword puzzle minds to inter-
pret requirements of their pros-
pective customers. One, with
long experience of the trade, was
telling of an elderly woman who
came to him asking for a book
by a man called Herbert, She
was vague at first but later her
mind cleared.
"I've got it!" she called out,
brightly. "It's called 'Deadly
Hollyhock.'" What she really
wanted was "Holy Deadlock," by
A, P. Herbert!
On some days, when a man
arrives, knowing the book's title,
publishers and price, the book-
seller feels sure he is dealing
with the author himself. He sim-
ply wants to ensure that the shop
stocks a copy.
have put into pie pans with
Roquefort cheese; sprinkle
cheese with 1 tablespoon olive
oil; cover with tomatoes. Sprin-
kle with oregano, salt, pepper,
anchovies, and 2 tablespoons
olive oil, Bake at 450° F. for 25
minutes or until golden brown.
It you'd like to use pizzas for
hors d'oeuvres, cut the pies into
thin slices, or make small in-
dividual pies and serve hot. If
you want to cook them early,
Stick them under the broiler for
a few minutes just before serv-
ing, *
Have you ever noticed that
frying pineapple or tomatoes in
a skillet leaves your pan shin-
ing and free from stains? The
Vermont Extension Service says
this is a helpful result of cook-
ing an acid food. The Servite
also recommends using fresh
water when washing your elec-
tric frying pan, Any grease in
dishwater will leave a film on
the outside of the pan, which
will then 'become discolored the
next time you turn on the heat.
It's also all right, they say, to
use steel or aluminum cleaner
pads if your pan has become
stained.
French-fried fruit looks much
harder to prepare than • it is —
but there's no debate about 'its
goodness. This coating forms a
golden crust which stays on, I
am told, and it's equally use-
ful for frying meat, fish, or vege-
tables.
Just blend half a cup of corn
oil with a cup of sifted flour,
add an egg ,and 11/2 cups milk,
and beat smooth. (The batter
will be thin.) Dry thoroughly
such fruit as strawberries, ba-
nana slices (thick), or pineapple
slices or wedges; coat with un-
seasoned flour, dip in batter, and
fry in ,oil three to four inches
deep at abOut 375° F. You'll have
something very special to show
for yOur efforts.
OFF WITH THE COONSKIN—After six outdoor action films, Fess
Parker decided he was ready to ditch the coonskin and the
wild frontier in •favor of some indoor roles, And that's why he
took on Playhouse 90's production of "Turn Left at Mt. Everest",
a romantic comedy in which he plays a devil-may-care Air
Force romeo. Fess is shown above in an exciting scene with
Patricia Cutts.