The Brussels Post, 1961-10-12, Page 6TABLE TALKS
Jam Andrews.
Tragedy On a
Scottish Mountain
What Folks Eat
in Great Britain
ecret.
"BUT OFFICER , I" You
Cassity, 4, found out the
when alert "officer" Greg
decided to let her go after
can't even go too fast in a toy truck nowadays. Nancy Ann
hard way. She was absent-mindedly rolling along the sidewalk
Smith, 3, spotted her. Since It was Nancy's first offense, Greg
a harsh warning.
section, Scotland has A• bumper
ration .of eatreeel from which to
concoct ,delicious "oatcakes.' and
the '''porridge" which appear!,
en breakfast menus north of the
border. Scotland's oatmeal gone
eemption is 2.05 ounces a head
a week compared. with .05 in
London, writes 11/lento Knowles.
in the Christian Science Moni-
tor.
Vor oatmeal porridge one must
have salt. The caster sugar on
breakfast tables in Scottish ho-
tele, we are told by Scotsmen, is
a concession to visiting Sessen-
gees, This extra usage might .ac-
count for the fact that Scotland
consumes an average of 1.2e
ounces of salt a person a week
compared with .92 in London,
except that the Welsh consump-
tion is slightly higher than that
in Scotland and their oatmeal
allotment too low to allow for
much porridge,
When it comes to meat and.
fish, .however, Scottish cone
sureption is down, Their meet is
12 per cent below the average
while London's 11. per cent up
on the national average, Scots-
men prefer beef, both as .meat
and in their sausage, Scotsmen
eat six beef sausages to every
one pork, while in most other
districts the proportion is re-
versed.
Yorkshire, a country with a
penchant. for "fish and chips,"
tops the fish-eating groups with.
7.15 ounces a bead a week come
pared with the over-all average
of 5.93. In the metter. of "chips"
Yorksire is also above the aver-
age with 2.08. ounces a head
compared with only .65 in Scot-
land, .62 in London, and .31 in
Wales.
Of fresh fruit London eats 32
per cent more than the average
and Scotland 31 per cent less.
Londonere buy most oranges,
lemons, and grapefruit,- apples,.
pears, soft fruits, bananas and
fresh tomatoes,
CONFIDENCE — that feeling
you have before you know bet-,
ter. FRUIT SALAD — Avacados,
lemons and a peach are all
mixed up in this display at the
Los Angeles County Fair. Di-
ane Munch is the feminine in-
gredient.
herd saw elm emerging from the
wood arid noted that he was
"awful tired and worn out, like
as if he had, spent a day of hard
travelling among the hills,"
That night Annandale slept in
the lodgings he had shared with
Rose, In the morning he took
the steamer back to the main,
land, carrying nose's bag and
belongings as well as his own,
and wearing some of the Lon-
doner's clothes, A yachting cap;
a pair of slippers and a tennis
racket were left behind in the
lodgings, all the landlady had to
meet the unpaid bill.
His holiday ended, Annandale
went back to his, job as pattern-
maker at a Glasgow works, He
could reckon himself safe while
the cairn preserved his
Three weeks passed, Then the
headlines proclaimed that the
missing Arran tourist had been
found, writes Cedric Garth in
"Tit-Bits",
Systematic search had gone on
day after day among the waste
of screes and conies, A nause-
ating odour drew a fisherman to
the gully and the remains in the
tomb were revealed.
The hue and cry was raised for
Annandale, By that name he was
unknown, but a chance meeting
in Glasgow with another Arran
visitor directed attention to the
pattern-maker whose real name
was John Watson Laurie.
The police were told, but.
Laurie had decamped.
For some weeks he was on the
run. He had Rose's money to
support him and he travelled
south. Among Liverpool's thous-
ands he might have lived in safe
obscurity, but in his vanity .he
had to advertise himself by writ-
ing to the Press.
Again he fled and for the sec-
ond time he betrayed himself
to the newspapers.
At last the police were on his
heels. He took to the woods. A
police sergeant dragged him from
his hiding-place. In his hand was
a razor and his throat had a
superficial cut; it had not gone
deep enough to cause harm.
At the trial the evidence was
circumstancial, but it seemed to
point irresistibly to his guilt. But
when the verdict was returned
the Scots jury were found to be
divided — eight voices for "guil-
ty," seven for "not proven."
By Scots law a majority ver-
dict suffices. Laurie was sentenc-
ed to death.
After the majority decision
doubts began to spread. Was a
man's life to be forfeit by the
majority of one in a vote of
fifteen? And then, was Laurie
sane?
A medical commission was
ordered to report. It pronounced
Laurie to be Insane and a re-
prieve was ordered. He was re-
moved to prison to serve his life
sentence.
Strangely enough, Laurie was
a well-behaved prisoner. His
voice earned him a place in the
prison choir, of which he be-
came the mainstay.
Then came a chance to escape,
The good-conduct man was over
the wall, making off in a dense
sea-fog. He was soon recaptured,
however.
In those days, escaped crimin-
als, when recaptured, were fet-
tered at wrists and ankles to
make any further flight impos-
sible. And the chains remained
night and day.
Laurie passed more than forty
years in prison. He was sixty-
nine when at last death released
him from his servitude.
Thebv.abgBe.cAt tser o,r th is thee
United
champion
leingdom, He also eats more eho-
colate biscuits, the Welshman
consumes most cauliflowers, and
the people of East Anglia top
ttlelrenibrnssels-spronts eating fra- ty
These are some of the fascin-
ating details in the pattern, of
food eating as shown by MielS-
try of Agriculture figures for
the years since rationing and the
effects of rationing on standard-
ized eating habits during and
after World War II,
"A pattern of eating seems to
have emerged which has been
constant since 1955," a Ministry
of Agriculture spokesman told
this correspondent.
The consumption of green ve-
getables increases as one comes
south. Londoners eat more leafy
salad than any other group.
Scotland eats three times as
many buns, scones, and tea cakes
as. Londoners, and puts more
preserves on its bread. The Mid-
lender has the sweetest tooth
and the dweller in the Home
Counties eats most marmalade.
Londoners eat twice as much
fruit as people in Scotland.
The wartime rationing of food
continued to influence British
eating habits till 1955. From the
time food restrictions were re-
laxed until 1955, housewives
filled their shopping baskets
with the type of food they were
not able to buy in quantity dur-
ing rationing. By 1955 the abnor-
mal demand for these foods was
appeased and a more normal
pattern emerged.
In the matter of bread for in-
stance, the "staff of life," Lon-
doners and those in the Home
Counties lean far less heavily
on this "staff" than rural dwell-
ers in Scotland and Wales. In
the Southeast more whole-meal
bread is sold than in the North
although the Northwest eats as
much brown bread as London.
The average consumption of
all kinds of bread in the United
Kingdom is roughly 3 lbs. a
week. Wales and Scotland con-
sume an additional quarter of
a pound, whereas Londoners eat
on an average only 21/2 pounds
a week. Though Yorkshire is
noted for its "high teas" the
consumption of bread in the Rid-
ings is still one ounce below
the national weekly average.
Talk of "high teas" leads one
to the section of "buns, ,scones,
and teacakes." Here — as might
be expected in a country famed
for its bakery — Scotland is way
out ahead with 3.10 ounces a
head per week compared with
London's .74 of an ounce, In
"cakes and pastries" it is the
Northwest of England which is
at the top of the list with 5:10
ounces a head a week. In this
respect one remembers teas of
home-made delicacies eaten in
lakeside inns in Cumberland and
Westmorland. Scotland and
Yorkshire come next far con-
sumption of cakes, and London
not far behind.
In addition, still in the bakery
As the train sped north from
the smoke and heat of London
the young, athletic-looking man
'railed to himself. Edwin Robert
nose was looking forward to his
holiday i,n. Seotlaaci, ,A London
clerk in his early thirties, he
Was a keen climber and he loved
to get away to the solitude of the
mountains,
From Glasgow he took the
rtearner down the River Clyde to
Arran, the island resort in the
river's mouth,
Over Arran broods the. Moun-
tain of Goatfell, a great grey
cone of granite, majestic and
forbidding, Its glens and rug-
ged peaks are no place for the
timid, but to the adventurous
the mountain is a challenge.
It was one that Rose accepted.
He would make his way to the
top and stand there nearly 3,000
feet up,
He set off with a young Scots-
man, Annandale was the name
the other gave in the lodgings
the two young men shared. In
contrast with the easy-mannered
Rose, the Scot was silent and for-
bidding.
Local people said he was li-
able to dangerous outbursts.
Rose was warned against him —
on no •account should he climb
Goatfell with Annandale as his,
sole companion,
But the warning went un-
heeded, Together the young men
set out, By six o'clock in the
evening, that summer day in
1889, they reached the summit
and stood there admiring the
view, one of the finest Scotland
has to offer.
They began the descent
through the Coire-na-a-Fuhren,
the Glen of Fire, a lonely, Wind-
swept gully. Here Annandale
turned killer. His greed has been
roused by the other man's pos-
sessions — his clothes, his gold
watches and chain, and his
money.
Annandale had often scram-
bled on the Goatfell slopes and
the tracks were familiar to him.
It was by his choice the path
was chosen that led through the
'dully of Fire.
It was the place for a man
with murder in his mind, an
awesome spot, set amid preci-
pices.
Rosea was going down ahead
when a sudden blow caught him
ton the head. As he lay stunned,
the killer struck again, using a
stone as weapon. He rained
hown fearful blows that smash-
ed in one side of the head and
Made the face unrecognizable.
Alone, aloft among the clouds,
Annandale considered his next
step. His first plan had been to
attribute death to a fall, for
there were precipices on either
Nide. Amid the boulders he scat-
tered Rose's stick, knife, pencil,
cap and coat. Then he realized
that the damage he had done
in his savagery ruled out injuries"
from a fall. His villainy must
be concealed.
Almost at hand was an over-
hanging ledge. Here the body
was stowed. To screen off what
was still exposed to view there
were stones in plenty to fashion
a wall and seal off the cavity. He
get methodically to work.
Nearly fifty stones and bould-
ers of varying size were piled
up. To complete the screen, turf
and heather were pushed into
the clefts.
Three hours later Annandale
was back in his lodgings, A shep-
UNCLE SAM NEEDS WHO? —
Swept away by the glory of
joining the Marines, Mike, 5,
and Casey, 6, Gibson tried to
enlist. The Covina, Calif„ boys
didn't understand when the
local recruiter told them they
were too young. ISSUE 40 — 1961
0
Circle plum pieces, skin side
down, spoke fashion over entire
top of pie. Drizzle melted jelly
over plums. Chill until set. Serve
plain or with slightly sweetened
whipped cream garnished with
grated orange rind. Serves 6.
* *
Long experience in cooking for
large numbers at clubs, restaur-
ants, and a college have taught
me some special "tricks of the
trade" that I'd like to share with
Christian Science Monitor read-
ers writes William A. Hagan.
Here are three recipes that give
commonplace dishes an uncom-
mon flavor:
Cole Slaw
Remove outer leaves from
small head of cabbage and cut
it in four pieces. Let stand in
cold water for one hour, then
drain well and shred not too
fine. Marinate cabbage with the
following:
1 tablespoon vinegar
34 teaspoon Worcestershire
sauce
1 teaspoon salt
3/s teaspoon pepper
34 cup mayonnaise
1 tablespoon chili sauce
1/2 tablespoon dill pickle. relish
Add 1 teaspoon chopped onion,
1 tablespoon chopped celery, 3/4
cup chopped green pepper, and
grated carrot.
* *
POTATO SALAD
2 cups cooked potatoes, sliced
or cubed
1 tablespoon finely chopped
onion
3 tablespoons celery, chopped
not too fine
1 teaspoon grated cheese
2 tablespoons French dressing
1/8 teaspoon Worcestershire
sauce
1 tablespoon sweet relish
3/.; cup mayonnaise
1 tablespoon chili sauce
Salt and petter to taste.
Rub bowl with garlic (option-
al), Mix potatoes with French
dressing and Worcestershire
sauce and let stand one hour.
Add onion, celery, mayonnaise,
chili sauce, grated cheese, relish,
salt, and pepper.
4' 4,
_MASHED POTATOES
4 medium-size potatoes
1 small onion
3 tablespoons butter
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon grated cheese
1/8 teaspoon sugar
14 cup hot milk
Few grains pepper
Cut potatoes in eighths. Cut
onion fine and cook with pota-
toes. When done, drain and mash.
Add hot milk, butter, grated
cheese, sugar, salt, and pepper.
The following recipe, using
cottage cheese, make's a really
hearty dessert and we think
you'll like it.
Bake this in two 9-.inch pie
plates, or in an 8 or 9-inch
spring form pan.
CHIFFON CHEESE CAKE
3 cups creamed cottage cheese
(24 ounces), sieved
1 cup sugar
% cup sifted cake flour
% teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons lemon juice
1 teaspoon vanilla
3 eggs, separated
1 cup whipping cream
Combine sieved cottage cheese,
0/4 cup sugar, •flour, and salt.
Stir in lemon juice and vanilla.
Beat egg yolks until thick. Beat
egg whites until stiff, gradually
beating in the remaining Ye cup
sugar, beating until mixture
forms stiff peaks, Whip cream.
Fold egg yolks into cheese mix-
ture; fold in whipped cream and
then egg whites. Turn into
crumb-lined pan. Top with Yz
cup crumbs, if desired. Bake at
n5° F. 1 hour. Turn off heat
and let cake remain in oven 1
hour with door closed. Cool on
cake rack, remove sides of pan
and let cake chill in refrigerator.
(If you bake in pie plates,
shorten baking time to 40 min-
utes).
Crumb Crust
11/2 cups firmly packed Zwie-
back crumbs
2 tablespoons sugar
3 tablespoons softened butter
Blend all ingredients together
and press evenly on sides and
buttom of pan (save 3/2 cup of
crumbs for top, if desired). *
Specking of cottage cheese,
have you ever tried this for a
hurry-up dessert: Place a big
spoonful of creamed cottage-
cheese in a sherbet dish and
top it with strawbberry jam,
sweetened apricot puree or tiny
pineapple chunks. Pretty and
good. *
Here is a plum pie that is not
only delicious but beautiful to
look at on the table. It might
well fit into a party color scheme
for• you this fall.
PLUM CHEESE PIE
12 fresh purple plums, pitted
and quartered
1 package vanilla pudding mix.
(not instant)
1 teaspoon grated orange rind
2 3-ounce packages cream
cheese, softened and whipped
1 9-inch baked pie shell
N. cup purple plum jelly,
melted and cooled.
Place plum pieces in frying
pan, skin side down. Cover with
boiling water, Heat only until
skins start to ehriveL Using slot,
ted spoon, carefully lift fruit
from water and place on paper
toweling at once, Cool, Prepare
vanilla pudding by package di-
rections. Add orange rind, Cool
slightly, stir frequently. Blend
together the pudding mixture
and the cheese; lightly whip with
a fork. Pour into baked shell,
Famous Family
Publicity-Shy
Redbook magazine treated
readers of its October issue to a
liberally illustrated story on
three of the world's most pub-
licity.shy young adults: 27-year-
old Canadian quintuplets Cecile,
Annette, and Marie Dionne, The
layout included photographs of
the sisters, their childrerte-in-
eluding the first published pic-
tures of Ceeile's 2-month-old
twin sons, Bruno arid Bertrand
—and even a sterh-faced shot of
Mame tizire Dionne cradling
one of her twin grandsons. (The
f berth surviving quintuplet,
Yvonne, is now a nun; as for
Pepe Oliva Dionne, he just
didn't want his picture taken.)
Cecile and her husband, 30-year-
old Philippe Langlois, now have
four boys—the oldest only 3—
end When reeclbook interviewer
leobett 3,• 'Levin inquired about
her plans for the ineseepahly
beetle' years ahead, Cecile milled
wryly and said: "Suriiive."
hosed .38-caliber pistol, •burnish-
ed brass handcuffs, a police
whistle, and the seven-pointed
star of the San FranciscO police,
Neither 'of the lady cops had
any interest in opera until they
received their first "security" as-
sighments at the opera house,
Now, Officer Dillon likes. Pik-
citii i8 "Madame Butterfly" best,
and Officer Cullen,prefers: Vet-
di's "Aida.' Officer Cullen says
it it the "g o o d enteic" that
Makes' the job worthwhile.
i'Xothing really' interesting hap-
pens here," she 'confessed last
Week, "Believe it or not, this
IS just •a routine essignment."
From NEWSWEEIL
Cleaning Up
After High Society
The woman in black made 'her
way through the glittering
throng at the San Francisco War
Memorial Opera House. Quietly
but firmly, she marched up to
the hysterical dowager, took her
by the arm, and pressed some-
thing into her h a n d. "Thank
God!" cried the dowager, clutch-
ing her diamond brooch. "It was
returned!" The woman in black
bowed and retired, tactfully
omitting to mention to anyone.
but her superior (a police lieu-
tenant in white tie and tails)
that the recovered diamonds
were only paste.
For Officer Margaret Dillon,
the woman in black, it was all
in the night's work, She and
her colleague, Officer Virginia
Cullen, have been alternating as
policewomen on duty with the
San Francisco opera for more
than ten years. They have not
only found most of the lost bau-
b 1 e s and foiled most of the
would-be malefactors (mainly
box-crashers), but have devel-
oped a more-thaa-passing inter-
est in the grander crimes and
passions taking plade on the
stage. As the opera's 1961 season
began with Donizetti's "Lucia di
Lammermoor;" Officer Cullen
would be sitting, unobtrusively
but alertly, in a corridor that ,
gives her a view of practically
every box and the two entrances
to the box floor.
"Sometimes I read," she says,
"but often I follow the music."
When the opera is over, Officer
Cullen checks all the boxes for
forgotten articles. "I find furs,
shoes, some jewels, and once,"
she recalls, "I found a purse
with enough money in it to re-
tire,"
The city's police department
decided mare than a decade ago
that a woman was needed at the
opera house to cope with the
special kinds of emergencies that
Might arise in an audience load-
ed with money and riot averse
to showing it. "We had to have
a woman on duty," one official
explained. "You could hardly
send a man into the ladies' peW-
der tom if a suspect took re-
fuge there. And with lady
drunks — riot drunks, but those
who had maybe a sip too much,"
he added, "it seethed better po-
lice procedure to have a lady
escort them nut of sight."
When not on Opera duty, Offi-
cers Cullen and Dillon are ae,
signed to :he juvenile Bureau,
where they are veterans of a
dozen years on the force. Their
"uniform" at 'the opera is a
black dress and a pearl necklaee.
Both carry large handbags
Which contain, besides their own
make-tip and cigarettes, a grub-
14r, .:Al!AN HONEY — Honolulu dancer, Rose ,Marie Alvaro
smiles preitily to 'mate., the 'pictures of herself on po:ters put
Out by the Haweiii Visitors gUreaU, Rote Marie, of Chinese-
Hawaiian Portuguese-English ahcesiry, will prereole Howoil ail
Over the world through the neW posters,
SHIRTS FOR SKIRTS — The fashion scene is seeing a big change
when a skirt is replaced by a long, long shirt. The flannelette
muu muu, left, has hit the "at home wear" Seetie. eleizing red,.
green, gold and white stripes accent the tent effect. Par
lounging and sleeping it the beat-knit shirt, right. Finished
With crew heck dnd push-up''sleeve's, rf Sports bidek,• red, olive
'fetid blue stripes.