HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1956-07-19, Page 2TJULE TALKS
cia-az Andbews.
Combine several fruit juices for
cool, refreshing summer drink
either to be poured from a pitcher
or ladled from a bowl. Acid ginger
ale or some other sparkling bev-
erage, ice cream, sherbet, or fruits
snd you have the makings of au
easy form of hot weather enter-
taining,
For a decorative touch, make
polka clot ice cubes,
Pour blended orange and grape.
fruit juice into your ice cube tray
In the centre of each cube pince a
fresh strawberry, raspberry black-
berry, or blueberry, or a mara-
schino cherry; or, use several of
these to have a variety in color
and taste. After freezing them
solid, float them in your pinch bowl
er cups.
Polka Dot Party Punch
2 cups lime juice
�a cup sugar
8 cups blended orange and
grapefruit juice
2 cups sparkling water
Polka Clot ice cubes
Combine lime juice and sugar;
heat slowly until sugar is disolvecl.
Chill thoroughly lime juice mixture,.
blended orange and grapefruit
mixtures. Combine in a punch bowl;
just before serving, add sparkling
water and ice cubes.
* e *
Use either fresh or frozen red
raspberries for this colorful, re-
freshing drink. It you use fresh
berries, you'll need ;-j eup addi-
tional sugar.
Raspberry -Lennon Shrub
3 cups fresh or 2 12 -ounce pack-
ages frozen red raspberries
1 cup water
1 eup sugar (1r/, cups, if fresh
berries are used)
1 cup lemon juice
1 quart cold water
In a saucepan, combine rasp-
berries, 1 eup water, and sugar;
bring to boiling point and boil
gently for 10 minutes. Strain and
cool. Add lemon juice and the 1 qt.
water ; mix well. To serve, pour
over crushed ice or ice cubes.
Makes 2 quarts.
* * *
Lemonade is one of the favorite
'cool -off' beverages. If you want it
pink, add red fruit juice (from can-
ned or crushed eberries or berries)
—about 1 cup to 1 quart lemon
juice in the recipe to follow. Make
this ahead of using time and store
in your refrigerator.
Made-Altead Lemonade
t,50 portions)
21.4 quarts lernon juice
2'j pounds (5 cups) sugar
2 gallons ice water
Crushed ice
Dissolve sugar in lemon juice;
add water, Store iu glass container
ander refrigeration (between 30
degrees F. and 40 degrees F.),
Before storing, taste -test each
batch of lemonade for flavor and
add more sugar or lemon juice if
needed. Have lemonade cold
enough so that much ice will not
be needed. Garnish with lemon
dices. * * •
If you'd like a milk punch for
the children, try this orange intik
drink. This makes 3 quarts.
Orange -Milk Punch
1 quart orange juice
1 quart vanilla ice cream
1 quart milk
Whip together the orange juice
and lee cream. Add milk and serve.
* * a
If you like the taste of fresh
mint in your puneh, try this gin-
ger -ale- . n •na,ie-mint drink.
Mint Lemonade
10 lemons
2-3 cup crushed mint leaves
2 cups sugar
I cup water
3 quarts ginger ale
Fresh mint
Add juice from lemons to crush-
ed mint leaves, sugar, and water.
Bring to boil; remove from heat
and allow to cool. Strain and add
ginger ane. Garnish with fresh mint.
Serve over crushed nee.
* a *
A tench of spice adds a new
taste to this fruit ;nice julep. This
recipe n,nkt.e le -ounce ^!aF?ea-.
Fruit Ginger Ale Julep
1 cup sugar
1 eup water
*,a teaspoon ground nutmeg
cup fresh grapefruit ,juice
1 eup fresh orange juice
Cracked ice
1 quart chilled ginger ale
Lemon or raspberry sherbet
Make syrup of water and sugar;
chill., Add nutmeg and fruit juices.
Pi11 tall glasses with ice. Add
cup of fruit juice mixture. Fill
glasses with ginger ale. Top with a
spoonful of sherbet and garnish
with a sprinkle of nutmeg and a
sprig of mint.
Petits Fours
Bake white cake In a sheet and,
when cool, cut in squares, diamonds,
or triangles. Place on rack on Wax-
ed paper (be sure all crumbs are
removed after enttiug,)Use a fond-
ant icing, tinned with food coloring
if you like, and pour slowly over
cakes, Decorate with candied fruits,
nuts, or tiny flowers made with a
pastry tube. Or use the following
sugar frosting:
Confectioners' Sugar Frosting
2 cups confectioners' sugar
4 tablespoons butter
Cream or orange juice (enough
so frosting will pour)
Flavoring (vanilla, grated orange
rind, melted chocolate)
Mix together sugar and butter;
thin with liquid. Add flavoring
Pour over cakes. Sprinkle some
with coconut or nuts and deco-
rate others as above.
Electronic Mailman
The latest Book of Knowledge
Annual records that the Cana-
dian Post Office has recently
spent a million dollars experi-
menting with a unique system
of electronic mail -sorting. An
electronic keyboard translates
the address of an envelope into
a code of dashes and stamps
the code on the back of the en-
velope. Next the coded letter is
passed to a "reader which
flashes the code to the central
"brain." In a fraction of a sec-
ond the "brain" issues direc-
tions for sorting the letter,
which is then deposited in the
exact slot for its destination.
If this device works out as
well as it is expected to it will
eventually be installed in main
post offices throughout the
country. The larger models, it
is believed, will do the work of
about four hundred men and
sort upwards of 150,000 letters
an hour. The experiment is be-
ing watched with keen interest
by postal officials in the U.S.A.
and elsewhere in the hope that
it will solve the pressing prob-
lem of how to deal efficiently
with the tremendous and in-
creasing pressure on mail serv-
ices everywhere.
Takes To The Air
in New Film
Out of his western garb for the
first time in quite awhile, Gary
Cooper is back in the air again
in "The Court -Martial of Billy
Mitchell." Actually Cooper start-
ed out in films as a flier and is
as much at home in the air as he
is with six-guns strapped to his
waist.
Far removed from his "yup"
and "nope" parts, Cooper plays
General Billy Mitchell, who was
known as a very talkative guy,
in the Warner Bros. Film. Al-
though the long, lean actor
makes no effort to keep up with
General Mitchell's conversation-
al pace, he does have several
long speeches—long for Cooper,
that is—in the Army trial scenes
when he is being questioned.
When asked how he felt about
his "talkative" role, Cooper re-
plied;
"Well, I talk more in this pic-
ture than I would in a western,
but I don't think there's so much
difference,"
However, a glance at the
script, shows that Gary has so-
lid pages of dialogue as he un-
dergoes the ordeal of defending
his honor and ideas about air
power from the probes and jibes
of Fred Clark and Rod Steiger
who play the Army prosecutors.
THINKING, THINKING, THINKING — What sets these animals in
such contemplation? The solemn -faced camel, left, sits it out
at the traditional hazing of freshmen at the Paris Institute of
Agronomy in France. The simian takes to the pipe, right, to get
the proper setting for her moods of musing. Cleo is the family
pet of a jeweler's family.
WHO'S SERENADING WHO ? — What comedian Jimmy Durante
began as a solo lullaby for one -year-old Rosemarie Mastro soon
became a lusty duet. Durante and Rosemarie were fellow passen-
gers on a flight from Los Angeles to New York.
Best Man
icked Groom's Pockets
Throwing a farewell party for
her friends on the night before her
wedding, a pretty young bride-to-be
answered a knock at the door and
was conforted by a masked and
armed man.
"This is a bold -up! he snapped.
But before he could step inside the
house she had acted with lightning
speed, courageously sending the
gun flying from his hand and, with
the help of her guests who rallied
round, overpowering him.
Then came the shock. As the
mask was removed she shrieked
with dismay. The bandit was the
man she was due to marry. He said
he needed money to pay for their
honeymoon!
Romance and crime are, unfort-
unately, often mixed, as that story
from Colombia, S. America, illust-
rates. So does the case of the Can-
adian bridegroom who was to leave
a Winnipeg Church with his
radiant bride on his arm, when he
found to his horror that his pock-
ets bad been picked.
No guest was allowed to leave.
Police were called in. An inten-
sive search was made and the crim-
inal was found to be none other
than ...the best man.
Fortunately, crime still has its
occasional funny side. Like the,
time a masked cyan rushed into a
bank in a small town in Ohio, whip-
ped a gun from his pocket and
pointed it at the cashier. Then he
thrust a bag on the counter and
ordered the other to stuff it full of
notes,
Nervously, the clerk obeyed. But
he couldn't help noticing that the
bandit was trembling with fear, too,
and suddenly — to his astonish-
ment — he saw the violently sink-
ing gun start to fall to pieces, clat-
tering on to the floor at the band-
it's feet as he bolted in terror from
the bank.
There's also the example of the
bold bandit who rushed into a Det -
riot bank, "This is a hold-up i" and
accidentally shot himself in the
foot as he dragged his gun from
his pocket!
The staff nursed him until an
ambulance arrived.
Escape from the scene of the
crime can be hilarious, There have
been three instances — one in Brit-
ain — iu which escaping bandits
have climbed into police ears, box-
ing mistaken them for taxis!
There is also the classic case of
the two men who robbed passengers
on a tram 1n a Mid -West American
town. After collecting the loot, they
jumped from the tram and raced
down side streets. They came out nn
to a main road, saw a tram coming,
and climbed aboard. It was the
tram they had just robbed—coming
beck on its return journey,
Many crooks believe that their
selection of a profession does not
mean that they need be ill-manner-
ed.
' After taking 11,000 from a Hong
Kong businessman's safe, a bandit
spent an hour with his victim show-
ing him how he could "rig" his in-
come tax to get the money bee's.
More than one thief, after reir-
biug a vietiin, has offered to sign
a receipt that he stole the n-oney.
Two bandits holding -up a i.id-
cage restaurant found only 300 but
that did not stop ;hem from dishing
our drink to the e.u' ,omen slug -
Mg and doing a dance, and then
shaking hands with everyl*dy
when they left.
When stealing things other than
money, the crook can run into
difficulties.
The owner of prize pigeons did
not complain when he found n
dozen missing from his garden in
a north of England town. They
were homing pigeons and he hoped
the thief had taken them a gond
distance away so that they would
have exercise on their home - run.
They all returned within a week.
A youth stole a large black car in
San Francisco, backed it into his
garage after a hard, nerve -grinding
chase, then climbed into the rear to
hook at it. Ile found a body in a.
casket. The car was au under-
taker's hearse.
In committing a crime, thieves
often lose more than they gain.
A cracksman completely ruined a
set of expensive tools brbaking into
a stubborn Cape Town safe. Alt he
got for his efforts was $3.00 worth
of stamps.
When three Glaswegians broke
into a grocery, the police arrived
and they had to leave hurriedly.
411 they got was $10,00 in small
change. But the police got
the three expensive bicycles they
left behind.
Thieves, too, have so badly
injured themselves in breaking -in
that all they have stolen is ban-
dages and disinfectant from the
first-aid kit.
There's a lot of truth in the
saying, "Some people will steal any-
thing."
Dustmen in an Australian town
complained to the authorities that
somebody with a lorry had been
round the streets five minutes
ahead of them and emptied all the
dustbins.
Then there is the thief who broke
into the Californian "pen -friends"
club and stole all the records of
men and women on the firm's
books
In Phoenix, Arizona, somebody
stole a "Dog for Sale" hoarding,
then came back next day and stole
the dog.
Crooks are quick to act when
opportunity accidentally knocks.
to make a turn.
When a Paris bank van collided
A Los Angles woman had a $3,000
ring stolen from her finger as she
put her arm out of her car window
to make a turn.
'When a Paris bank van collided
with a car and spilled banknotes
over the roads, officials recovered
only a quarter of the million
francs blown over the pavements.
One of the craziest crimes ever
recorded took place at Venice,
California, recently. A bandit enter-
ed a suburban house and tied up
the housewife and her two guests.
But before he could ransack the
place, there was a knock. Two more
guests arrived. Before he had
finished tying them, a baby in the
next room began to cry, and he was
forcedto release and watch the
housewife while she attended to
the child.
Before he could safely rope the
housewife down again, the tele-
phone and then the front door bell
began to ring.
Disgusted, the bandit left the
house empty-handed.
Stolen (Kiss
Brought Fortune
Never had the romantic young
Swede seen such attractive ruby -
red lips as those of the blonde
New York shop clerk.
As she walked briskly towards
her bus stop, he overtook her
and began to speak. But she ig-
nored him and increased her
pace.
Looking round swiftly to see
that no one was near, he put his
arms round her and kissed her
lips ardently. Then things . hap-
pened.
Freeing herself, the girl
screamed. Up dashed several
people, seized the dazed young
Swede and handed him over to
a policeman.
He paid a fine of twelve dol-
lars after the indignant girl had
given evidence against him. It
was more than he could afford
but, he mused, the kill was
worth it.
And now for the surprising
sequel. When the incident of the
stolen kiss was reported in the
newspapers, the publicity re-
vealed to a U,S, firm of solicitors
that the amorous Swede was the
missing heir to a $75,000 fortune.
"We have been trying to trace
you in America for three years,"
he was told. "But for that pretty
girl and the kiss you gave her,
we might never have found
you,"
Kisses which bring fortunes
are rare, but one snatched im-
pulsively at a New Year's party
in Birmingham nearly sixty
years ago brought happiness and
prosperity to a penniless clerk.
He had gate-crashed the party
only to find that he knew nobody
there. Then he saw a lovely girl
sitting alone in a dimly-lit al-
cove and looking as dejected as
himself.
He went over to her and she
explained that her brother, who
had brought her to the party,
had been called away suddenly.
Overcome by her charms, the
clerk seized a sprig of mistletoe
and, holding it over the girl,
kissed her. At that moment her
brother -an athletic six-footer—
returned.
Assuming his sister was being
kissed by a stranger against her
will, he waded in and struck
him. The clerk, a brilliant ama-
teur boxer, knocked the brother
down.
The girl was so delighted that
they were married three months
later and her brother was best
man. And the once -penniless
clerk became a $100 -a -week
partner in his father-in-law's
business.
Surface Affects
Amount of Paint
A lot of people run into'trou-
ble in painting their homes be-
cause they haven't figured be-
fore they started just how much
paint they would actually need.
By the time they get halfway
through they decide that the job
is taking too much, paint and
costing ..too much money. What
a lot of them do then is to
switch to some cheap off brand
of paint and the final result is
not often so good,
The amount of paint required
for a house will depend on the
size of the house, the number
of coats and the type of surface
you are painting. It will also
depend on the kind of paint you
use. It's easy enough to figure
out the number of square feet
of surface you have to cover --
simply multiply the width of
each wall by its height and then
add them all together.
If your house is covered with
wood siding you can expect a
gallon of paint to cover between
450 and 500 square feet on the
first coat. On a second coat a
gallon should cover about 550
square feet. Now if your house
is covered with wood shingles at
gallon on the first coat will
cover Only about 350 square feet
and about 400 square Peet on
the second coat.
If you have asbestos siding
and use an asbestos shingle sid-
ing paint, loop for a coverage
of about 200 square feet per
gallon on the first coat and
about 400 square feet for the
second coat. A paint suitable
for use on brick siding will give
you about the same coverage.
The reason you get such poor
coverage on wood shingles, as-
bestos and brick is because these
surfaces are more porous than
ordinary wood siding and they
quickly absorb much of the
paint from the first coat, The
second coat does better,
How to Reduce
Traffic Deaths
According to James S. Kem-
per, former U.S, ambassador to
Brazil and now an automobile
insurance executive, there IS a
way to reduce traffic deaths by
88 per cent: See to it that every
driver obeys the law.
The companies Kemper heads
have determined, he says, that
33,700 of the 38,000 persons who
were killed in motor "acci-
dents" last year lost their lives
because of traffic violations.
Viewed in that light, traffic
lawlessness has become prob.
ably the greatest scourge of
modern life. And enforcement
of traffic laws, strictly and im-
partially. is more important
than the enforcement of laws
against murder and other
homicides.
There is a strange psychology
about traffic violations that de-
serves special study. Millions of
Americans who are law-abid-
ing in all other respects, seem
to feel no compulsion whatever
to obey traffic rules.
How high will the traffic toll
have to go before a climate
favorable to the laws which
have been written to keep us
all alive on streets and high-
ways can be created?—"Denver
Post."
LLOYD'S THIRD CENTURY
According to the Book of
Knowledge, Lloyd's of London,
the world's greatest marine in-
surance organization, dates from
the end of the 17th century,
when a group of insurance men
met to transact business at Ed-
ward Lloyd's coffee house. It
is not an insurance company
but an association of individual
underwriters. These underwrit-
ers engage in other types of in-
surance, except life insurance,
and it is possible to insure at
Lloyd's against almost any kind
of accident or contingency.
WITH OSTRICH GRACE — Thi:
female athlete in London, Eng
land, is seemingly beheadec
and most assuredly befallen
The girl, P. Bungard, landed it
this position during a schoo
track event.
1•
SPAIN
!1' FRANCE
SICILY
GREECE
TUNISIA
BLACK
BUL'. SEA
•
TURKEY
CYPRUS
1
IMOROCCo
ALGERIA
MEDITERRANEAN
SEA
LIBYA
ISRAE
,.. �NEW.‘\,..
BRUNSWICK'
-- St Lawrence R!rer \�' ". $' \ \r `��`\'
`'` '� ' ONTARIO \�\'\\ Quebsc > \''
t and Great Lakes `. \t�` '
Duluth*,
L.5UPER10R Route for Ocean,::::::.,..:".‘:',\,<:‘‘:\\ N "
ShIps2300Miles l\\
Duluthd�j rZ2 g �Ma ..:,,„7";-;,--s-
Montreal • MAINE
=oultSte Marie �„NtiN.�1 ,r,�v
Ort::: 4-1-
-'.
t
f <INN,
WISCONSIN
IOWA'
,t,
Milwaukeea'
ILL'
Chicago
MICHIGAN
Detroit%.).....„ERIE
IND.
Toledo Cleve and
OHIO •
tt
PENNSYLVANIA
N.J.
ATLANTIC
fi. OCEAN
tr Boston
MASS
CONN,1 °
New
York
ii4EW,SMAPI
Y:.:RLD'S MIG.i-1YIEST INLAND WASEIZWAY — When deep -draft craft steam througn the St. L:. v-
rence - G. eat. Lcies waterways system, perhaps as early as some time in 1959, the men v:•ho go
down to 1 -:le sea in /Nips Will Ea traveling the world's longest inland route for deep -draft trot.
fie, its C's?c. r.cst ^-^_ -rn e I n^tn (in-lu:ire of one-way mileage from Lake Hurcn into Lake
Mich gun C.7 t 'r. ,i io t'arr or C:1:_cc s) will rival the Mediterranean Ssa route (inset).