HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Brussels Post, 1958-08-27, Page 6A A
„da CBOT ON A LIMB The freedorri of the dance is symbolized
in this impressionistic photograph in Which the purposeful
tertian' of the detriCer's body" heightens the illusion Of MOVettient.
Won a prize for lerisnlan Otatiebit. Farkas. He calls'' "The
Le615,i'e
od Georgia last
se histories of
Ir Over one of
•traes
trete
is
opening between the defective_
gulletanplae.,,:windpipea-solliet
°°••14--TiPt-O;• -••
d nee
-"kno.wm. .the -..estimate is once
in ,every,,,5,Q0q1births,
Until, the- tu0 of the century,
such infants always died. Then
came operation* to allow feed,.
to (Usually by, tube) through
the ,abdominal;; wall into the
stomach. IVIany,,victirns struggled
along for years with these make-
shifts. About 20 years, ago sur-
geons got bolder, devised several
o,perations to supply a missing
strefelt:'6Vgtillet stiteittng -a
piece of the child's gut in its
p 1 a c e. Appallingly complex,
these techniques often needed a.
series of operations spread over
a period of years. They could
be done only in major medical
centers., .
For some types • of -eases, ',the
operations have now been sim-
plified, and they -are being done.
in more and more hospitals,
From IllinOl
ame '
surger s triu
nature's a m
pweat!
finnently--cr
aly: a 14177/irt'Veffrieuilinsia.4Z
birth, may prove to have no
let (esophagus) to carry food
o>xwc Thom ,fp 4.0111,e7,1
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Ora'
..1..AV S
1 cup chopped onions
2 tablespoons bacon drippings''t
. or salad oil
1 can (1 lb. 12 ounces) tomatoes ,a
IA cup tomato ketchup
1 tbsp. Worcestershire sauce
1 teaspoon sugar a
1 teaspoon salt •
Ye to 1/ tsp. pepper
2 bay leaves
1 pound perch, haddock or pilceaaa tATCillit "CATC1111P
cut into bite-size pieces , ;1, can
cup'
soup
Saute onions in. drippings un-, 314- cup cider,' vinegar
til tender. Add tomatoes and '''''"1/3 -'347 cup,...sugar'r (according -
next 6 ingredients; break toma=1", ",, to taste),
toes. Simmer 30 minutes, stir?' • '0 yL tablespoonfinely, put Onion
ring occasionally. Add fish; 1 talgesppou finely cut celery
simmer 15 minutes or until fish (or' lecfe'WSbodit celery' seed)
.flakes ,easily with fork. Remove 6 whole cloves
'baY leaves.- Serve in soup bowls 1 stick cinnamon linches long
over hot; cooked rice. Malta': "PBrinvalinost ttot ,,holl. Let stand
4-6 serVings.' a , a te,,ogOl; 'aa'
CRIMSON GOULASH
• :•/!2"*sli-Oes'"Ilikcini,:. Cut 'into ,
.r .
7.1.y2 ,.pour#IS, 01114
•
.into,,
altainch„ctiheS., .•
2 tableSpoona 'flour r
1 cup n finely chopped 'Mika
2 cubs wafter • •
cup -.toinato''ketchup •'
2 tablespoons cider vinegar-
, 2 teaspoons salt
,.autel bacon and „beef in -slcil-
let until Well 'browned' (about
25 minutes). Stir in: flour. Add
onion .and remaining ingredients, .
..Simmerl ,,ceveredriabeut 2 -hours
or -junta ampat is ,.tender...-Serve
oyea hot noodles. Makes •ser-
Vings. „ • •
1,4.
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up
AT
bu
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ESE RAREBIT
4,tablesp'oorks flour ,
!`,•• irtempoon? salt
teaspoon Repper„
1/2 'tsp. Worcestershire sauce
• 2 cups tomatellnice
etuf4raticr, Sharp . process]
cheese', Fr - ``'
Melt butter;.. add- flour, salt,
pepper, and, Worcestershire sauce;
„blending thercitighly, Stir in to-
inatejniae,'sloWly, COOk, stirring
••" conSfalitlY, :'smooth'- -and
thick;.'Add' grated cheese, Heat
'-just,-Untik ,cheese is- melted, stir-
„ring occasionally, Serve.on toast
,or. crackers : 4 servings.
4; *
If ' you like catchup ,on,, 3Pur
,hamburgers and hot Aogs,
herre,"is 'a,,hernernade one that
you'ile henna' te"•,like,
THE MOgdOW fill
cswing; I~ttss i5onies .46folfigiiiiirbrovifft
In the' state -run ,•department • •store • GUM. the eveniAci
9OWni crated. by Western. Ytyle itdhdords,
Happily Married
To Six Wives!
rne.M 14.. glai la -a-' •a"a • s man is Wain NifIrs50Th
4?daY in Moderp alt Lake
vity, It sounds incredible, for
the Mormon Cluaapla..a.alacalishad-";;
Mplural marriage in-1890, orthodox
ormons are _dead against it,
and since :a1935 -"unlawful co-
abitation" with , plural, , WiVes
as been. a s Are Yrf:PtInis e
$elonY,
Yet U.S. author Satnual -
Taylor hag visited the man and
met his ,atic Wives, living in sep-
Irate apartments in a big , old
tong* on the c,ity's decayed we
.ide, "Meal:toy Byeas," who
tvorlas in, real estete, is not his
real name. Taylor has had to
veil names and other details, to
save him from prison, in re-
lating his amazing story: "I
Nave Six Wives."
"You 'realize, that I am plac-
ing my jlife in your hands?" By-
ers said before showing him
bound. If. Taylor himself hadn't
een the Mormon son of a
gather who also had six wives
., In the days when it was deem-
- -. --the• right thing to do, and '
written a book on the subject,
Byers would never have taken
him into his confidence.
The wives he met in the
house were: Golda, tall, hand-
some, vital, the senior; Amy,
petite, charming; Faith, slender,
quiet, gentle. And in the car-
riage-house adjoining: Becky,
beautiful, with auburn hair,
lovely figure, occupying the
ground floor; and two sisters
sharing the upper - Pepita,
thin, nervous, intense, broody,
and Sibyl, the youngest, fair,'
calm, placid.
▪ They had married Byers,
within the Fundamentalist faith
which has secretly reverted to
plural marriage, during the past
eight years, and there were
twenty-eiint children.
Before That he had contracted
a norma4marriage with a girl,
Peggy,\pp bore him a son, In-
tensely kligious he regarded
polyganagjg, as crackpots-until
his brother Ge6rge became one
and his parents called a family
conference to deal with the ,
scandal.
Byers went to'work on George
to "save" him, but in the pro-
cess Was himself converted by
studying .Ftindamentalist doc-
trines. Peggy pleaded with him
in vain, and in the end, incited
by her outraged mother, di-
vorced him-.
Byers then married Golda at
a proper civic ceremony, but she
already. shared his convictions,
understood 'that . she would. be
the first.' of--a numberof wives;
and actually introduced a, friend,
Amy, in the hope-that she would
become. his. second.
Byere„...at first,tried to hide his
Interest in : Anir''.but ''of regard
for Golda's -probable!: feelings-
until she• resolved the situation
by saying: "Roy, I invited her
clowntbecause I hoped:this would
happ'.• It would pleas'e'tne very,
pane '
iii
if Amy became my sister
In th ." Principle
Bu t.- she wasn't so happy about
it when Amy, married to Roy at
it secret ceremony conducted by
a Fundamentalist Brother, duly
bore him a child. It was gall in
the cup of Golda's bitterness that
his other wives, , could bear him
children, latitiaot ' •his first. and
senior wife. .,-. - •
She had tO,4wait eight years
before she had. a ion, which she
longed to do' because child-
bearing was the essential object
of the Principle of plural mar-
riage.
Birthdays and marriage anni-
versaries were special dates
when each wife could "step out'
with Roy on personal treats; but
the embittered Golda always
contrived to ruin them under"the
pretence of safety, emergency
ea' her health. la or tinie she
4.4icpterftMMY4
den by Mormon etas-tern,
"The problent-pfaapttfrat-nta-r
'ridge"' 'Tearior :.o..ITEM,c--1-131barro
ge'ta VatTfrAtt
hut the other wives," and the
complexity of their relations
apaisesan aalmabiatg pep of the
aatorF,
,,,]?sakes,
44. (4s
the e fevOitritee`,%.'„Birera.:10jil
Though heaven :4he/p4.24`e its
who plays favourites.."
Byers' wooing of his wives
was not always as smooth-run-
ning as; in' the-caagaaefa-frolalera
Amy Kane, and others w. ho hid„
been brought up in the Eunda,.•
ihentalist - His". tOurth- wif er•
renamed Becky, whom he mar-
ried in 1940, was Wilma, Va`rsen,
beautiful, cultuted heiress
daughter of a rich businessman
with a showplace homes., faqir
cars and riding stables.
Wilma first went to Bye's
enlightenment on "the Principle"
because she had become inter-
ested in it. Roy asked, was she
disposed to enter it and marry
him' ifAhe approached her -father
With a proposal? She said:
"You'd better not, Roy. He'd
shoot you."
Roy duly did so, to be met
with the threat: "You try mix-
ing my daughter ni that filthy
mess and I'll blow your guts
out!"
When Wilma did eventually
leave home to marry him, Roy
had to leave town for a time
because Larsen and Wilma's
brothers were all gunning for
him.
All fedi earlier wives rebelled
when, at ,fourteen, the volup,
tuous honey-blonde Sibyl joined
her sister Pepita to become
Roy's *sixth wife.
The other wives only relented
when Sibyl, capitulating to their
hostility, offered to leave and re-
• turn to her family. Then they
persuaded her to stay:
Plural marriage, with all its'
dramas and economic problems
which,-often tried Byers to the
limit of endurance, is not with-
, -out its humours. When he de-
tided that Faith, who was musi-
cal, should have a piano, ,Golcia
and, Amy ordered pianos .:_tOo,
without consulting -him, and ; t1,
the end he had to buy six „pi-
anos! . •
•a ,14:aliave Six . Wives is • an.
ainaiing :,!i..atory 'Packed
human Ili:West,.
• a„ • '
'You could 'buy a couple of
drinks for a pinch of gold dust
during the Klondike and Cali-
fornia goldrushes. Bar owners
often picked their assistants ac-
cording to the size of their
thumbs.
* * •
The first man whose portrait
appeared on money was Alex-
ander the Great. * *
How many coins are in your
pocket at this moment? A test
showed that an average English-
man carries nine coins with him.
*
It was once stated by the U.S.
Treasury that if all the money in
circulation were divided equally,
everyone in the States would
have $30. .
A famous opera'- singing teller
used to identify himself to, new
clerks at his bank by bursting
into song and singing part of an
aria from "Rigoletto." *
At one .time there was ,a mint
in almost every county of Britain,
while every 'Won, bishop „and
most monasteries made - their
own coins:.:: •
Surgery Triumphs
OUT AGAIN - John Kosper,
self - proclaimed "segregation
leader," is shown leaving the
U.S. Penitentiary in Atlanta,
Ga., on August 1st. Transferred
there from a prison in Talla-
hassee, Fla., Kasper Was re-
leased four months, early for
good behavior. He announced
he would continue his fight
against "Jewish-Negro domina-
tion of the white race."
many in smaller cities. Example:
Karen Lee Gordon, from Pana,
Ill a went to St. Mary's Hospital
in nearby Decatur (est. pop.
75,000) for five operations to
Correct a complicated no-gullet
anomaly. Last week, out of the
,hospital 'In time for her fifth
birthday, she was eating nor-
mally', tasting and swallowing
food, for the first time in her
life, ;She even had sausage for
breakfast.
Two-day•.old Tominy 'Boston
Sr. 'of Cartersville, Ga,, was
taken to St. SOseph's Infirmary,:
in' Atlanta, where surgeon Wil-
` liam A. Hopkins found that he
had 'a short stub Of •gullet ex-
tending one-third -the normal
length down from his threat,
then nothing, Dr. Hopkins led
'this: Stump out through a hole
in the neck; so Tommy could
get rid of saliVa. For feeding,
he ran a tube into the stomach.
This, worked Well for six year's,
until , Tommy was old enough
to' undergo the 'operation, Then
Hopkins pushed the gullet
stump back into place, stretched.,
a piece of Tdnitny'S large boWel
itt) into his throat • to meet it,
and stitched them together. At,'
the lower end, this piece of gut
was joined to the stomach. .!rthq
small bowel, was joined to the
remainder of the lafge
Tommy's revamped 'digestive
tract worked„ tine 'Pie=
lerri: learning to die a knife,
fork and •spoon.
-Front
'.w.bh,dbrect *tier& hil.;4-41
the Smiths came front Until I
came' to the city,"
"Then What happened?"
'saw a sign %hut-
taaturing Company',"
ACCIDENT",
FEMALES
AGE:, 14 ..c.•
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EVERY AGE
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C". 'TABLE. TALKS
,eicaNte,
HAWAIIAN HAM LOAF „
11/2 lbs :ground smoked ham
1/2 lb, ;ground pork
1 64 rolled oats (quick, or
..-.•••':old fashioned, uncooked) 4
Tieaten eggs
Cup pineapple juice
.• .V.01). dry mustard
isp. ground cloves
•'Pack the meat mixture in
loaf pan, garnish with pineapple
slices and bake in a slow oven,,
(325°F.) 11/4 hours.
*
PINE BARK STEW
Right
iNApf.- = rouele
.eriat WO111415flitieUwItay,
a 3i
WiPlgike4 Y*.4151k.
be" Se\it
fg clo
g. 3.
'Sk,,,.
ey
6i-ke,, a
Mournfully, Abdu went to se.e
Michael Sheldon Cheyney, an
hAirtirne,raiptrile'wptit..4vai.W6Otrticitrego!.%fVit4t.in't
Aratrico ,oil construction firm in
'r,,Sattcli,',Atabiti,4, 4, •
Cheyney had,just arrived from
.the, States, and 4144, ;why. had
worked there;, asked him if' he
would mail an order for new
•glass' eye` t`deat 'N4w -York firtn.
He pay him five dollars, he
said` i
"Five dollars -.., no," .. said
Cheyney. "In New York you
couldn't get a box to. carry it in
for• five 'dollars." •••
"What • fel. it be more?". Abdul
demanded, "In •• Bahrein; can
get beg, .eye, made in. India, for
ten rupee-two. dollah,'
"For..cryin' out loud, why don't
you get thete, then?"'
"Iss no good."
Dntifully, Cheyney sent a pen-
cilled outline of the broken eye,
.details of colour, and so, on, r
But when it arrived, after
travelling 5,000' miles and cost-
ing more than $35, Abdu un-
packed it and exclaimed: "Whas-
sa matter, you . erazy? This is
left eye, not the right!"
So Cheyney returned it by air-
mail, and two "weeks later the
replacement arrived, with bills
for an additional $17. '
It was several times ..brighter
and•browner than its mate, but
Abdul paid only what he said,
Cheyney paid the rest because,
well, Abdu was Abdu .and ex-
pected. to be helped in return
for keeping a "fatherly" real
eye on Cheyney. •
The best, New York glass eyes
:proved highly perishable; sore-
placements became .a major
ply,,itera around ,the, office,. says
,Cheyney in a graphic acCount*.of
his eperiences, ' "Big Oilman
from, Arabia". Even when he
was 'transferred to another -.IA-
;seldom -went 'on holiday
without a 'sketch. of Abclu's- eye.
One • one trip he . even. carried
a sample, and foUnd that; • if
placed under the lid. of 'a suit-
case,. it ,,had . a ..uspful deterrent
Effect Ciistoms "inSpecters!
• Other's, th'ei'r .gyrnitiattiy*arotis-
'ed 7by•--the. Arab-i:,alse took •
vrt: op,
k,„000# ak44 ile.
11 0144* 41reggat .11Y ,
RO(ftitjOcVp 'OE AlieVed1:,...4
tirkthse, ce
r,
A.,;. ..4) Abdu was qUite a clisracter,
even apart from his glass' eye
over
aegtalcigigeS -fof, :keroaene-a*v? brooders, "feeders,:
c:tib t's' aid the
deCided-ohe day to . go ,in.. for
•mechaniXed-).3oultrSrareising in a
big .Way: •
It was nearly three years be-
fore Cheyney saw him again.
The. Armco-, eamp', paper had
published a story of a promising
new poultry industry, with a big
picture of. Abdu squatting in a
•chickenrrun and surrounded by
baby chicks.
In his brightest turban, and •
bloodshot' eye, he-, &One to the
editorial„offices for a few hund,-..
red free copies and found
Cheyney,
"Hello, Abdu," said Cheyney.
"How's the chicken btitinesS?"
"Oh, iss okay.." Abdu shruggedy
modestly, got .new partner,,;
big new place, many chickens,
Every. week I. bring eggs to
Dharan, sell to houses - fresh
egg, not stink like frozen. Pretty
soon a I bring yousand, -maybe.'
•"Don't , you worry, •
Abdu. concluded. "Be big bUsi-
ness' some .day. You want eggs?
I
'bring you."
He did .bring them, and they
tasted Strongly of garlic. Evi-
dently, he Was feeding his tableaI
scraps 'to .' the chickens, Which
produced eggs with the season-
ing he so liked.
Later, Cheyney, who gives a
first-rate account of life in the,
cif' industry, heard that- thea
chicken industry 'had died, "thea•
partner had pulled• out, .. and . •
Abdu had sadly moved back to •
town with a few salvaged hens,.
his radio and long-suffering,
wife, to make a precariods living ,
ailing lee-creain, to the • ,kids..
He was a .,pioneer .--7 ,,barn
years, top.„ seqp,•,. . • „. • •
Throughout the world there'
• • • are!36,000''icriaWn 'of niOrier.;
Dog teeth, for. instance, . are still
used as currency. in New; Guinea..
..Some.-.people Lisa
mans once used eattle,insteacl.
Coins, Cow's ,are still used as
paYmenfihParts of:the CaueaSifs.r
THE WEAKER SEX?-Women' "'have a lower 'accident death
rate than men in all age groups. One big reason is the man's
role in society. He does the riskier work. B ut even .before they
start to work, and after they' -retire, more' incites 'die in acci-
dents. And in the later years, when diseases take over as
the•paime killers, men siill cud gdnerallS, more vulnerable than
women.' - • ,
• Maney, Money! -
•
T 7- 'r.••,==•1 •
BLUEBERRY MUFFINS
1V2 cups flour
3h, cup sugar
2 teaspoons baking powder
• 1/2 teaspoon salt
1 egga ,heaten
1/.a 041)a :butter, melted
Y2 elm milk
• 1 'clip;; freah ,hineberries r>.•
Sift together dry, ingredients.
Blend .egg; melted butter and y„.;
.milk, .add. to dry ingredients
;.stir, just' until the ingredients
ere blended. Fold in the blue-
berries. Fill greased muffin cup
% full.. Bake in. moderately hot:
.Oven, '400°, for 20 to 25 minutes. -. •
youtiget,7 Set Fashion Hint