HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1956-10-18, Page 2ewa e f
The Short -Change Artists
By Irving• Leiberrnan
.Editor's Note: Sgt. Audley
Walsh. one of the leading police
authorities on swindles, esti-
mates that professional short -
changers gyp the public out of a
hundred million dollars a year.
And it -happens to everybody.
To show how (hese cheap swin-
dlers Cheat the public, the Police
Gazette has asked four typical
victims to tell their own stories.
Continued exposure of these
shortchange swindlers will stop
then from preying on unsuspec-
ting .victims.
5 5 5
I'tn a trek driver and there's
en ail -night diner where I stop
for a spot of coffee and dough-
nuts on my run between Chicago
and Indianapolis. That is ---where
I used to stop,. until I got wise to
the shortchame gypping the lit-
tle redheaded waitress was pul-
ling off on all us guys.
She's a wisecracking gal, al-
ways ready with a joke, and she
gives you that big smile and a
lot of fast talk when you're get-
ting your change.
Then one night, just before I
got in •my trailer, I just sore of
happened to look at the change
she had given me and did some
quick figurin'. Two cups of cof-
fee and two doughnuts added up
to thirty cents. I'd given her a
buck and got forty rents back,
all in dimes and nickels,
"Hey," I said to myself, "I got
thirty cents coming to me."
I started to go back; but I
.figured Fd look cheap- and be-
sides, I could be wrong.
But the next time I stopped et
the diner that missing change
etude in my mind. When the
waitress pulled the jokes while
I was paying my check. I stop-
bed to count the money I got
ack before I stuffed it in my
pocket, •
This time 1 was missing two -
bits.
"Just a minute, Venus," I told
her, "you shortchanged me a
quarter."
She made a big fuss about
looking at my cheek and re-
counting my change.
"Sorry, Mae," she said, flashing
that big smile ,and handed me
the two -bits, 'those big, brown
eyes of yours take my mind off
any business."
"Sure, sure," I says, 'but It's n
pretty good business—for you."
I Passed the word on to the
qt thea• dyivera I knew and they
:started checking their change.
The redhead was working the
name gyp sr. all of them.
So now we stop at another
diner down the road where the
waitress is honest and doesn't
think a guy is dumb just because
he drive.-' a truck..
5 5 -
I�^l a business s ntan living in,
n smr.11 town a hundred :Mies
POPPER OF THE
by t^e , 'r oafs cf ;Tonle?tan
warne7.s is ^is cap cf mink
fa:is. A tassel of strung pearls
coscedes from the crown -over
the brow The is typical of
the Fat Eastern motif in the
winter collectiren of designer
Simone :it+man, o f London,
%n -+a d.
AILS --Inspired
from San Francisco. About once
a month I go into the city to
spend a day or two in the home
office of my company. -
One night after a late confer-
ence I took a cab to my hotel. It.
wasn't n long walk, but I was
tired. When we got to the hotel,
the meter read thirty-five cents,
so I' handed the cabbie two quar-
ters and got out.
"Iiey, mister," he hollered.
"You owe me some money."
"I gave you half a buck."
He shook his head. "Here's
what you gave me." The cabbie
held nut his hand. In it was a
quarter and a nickel.
I was positive I had given him
two quarters but I was tired and
didn't waist to argue. So I handed
him another twenty-five cents.
The next night I took another
eab rifler having dinner with
friends. The fare was sixty cents.
Rementhering the night before, I
counted my change carefully and
handed the cabbie three quarters.
I had walked about ten feet
toward the hotel when he hol-
lered:
"What's the idea, buddy? You
shortchanged me."
"I gave you seventy-five cents
—sixty" cents for the fare and
fiftc'n cents tip."
"You made a mistake. Take a
look."
He had two- quarters and a
nickel in his hand.
This time I got mad. "I made
sure I gave you three quarters,"
I told the cabbie. "And that's
what I gave you. Don't pull your
racket on me."
He scrambled out of the cab
and headed for me belligerently.
"Don't call me a crook, you —
I called a cop nearby and ex-
plained what had happened. He
nodded as I filled in the details.
"It's an old one the hackies
pull on tourists," he said. "I'll
take care of this guy and thanks
for telling me. This guy won't
be driving hack for awhile."
The officer ordered the cab-
bie to get back In the car, "Come
on. bud," he said angrily, "we're
going down to the station house."
5 5 fl
I work on the docks on New
York City's East River and
there's a bar where longshore-
men hang Out after wrestling
tons of cargo all day.
The bartender's name is Harry.
I'ce's not working at the bar now
and here's how it happened.
On payday we'd- throw five,
ten or twenty dollar bills at
Harry to pay our tab. While we
picked up the silver, Harry neat-
ly stacked the bilis and counted
them twice. Then he handed the
change across the bar.
What we didn't know for a
long time was that when Harry
tapped the bills nn their edges
to make the stack neat, he let
the back bill drop behind the
bar.
Harty let the bill stay on the
floor until the customer left. If
the guy noticed he was short a
live or ten, Harry would pick it
up off 1110 fluor anti ay::
"I'm wire :Pettit e trans\' in my
o1 Sorry.Mae"
Wi, ripped nff the rachet squad
rind thee- used narked bills to
cart IlamWin=1 t' r o„ntOd
tin tite lot's ho Ind nt•nt,t*ed hack
of the b r :and later pieked un.
Barr. had- mnde Kiat) in three
neere we':hose tv ra the cops
call -The Deep Rs.,'ket.'
Sew w t hcrt-
t':117.77 gypa47cording
to police
sxo c w, n t let a a -
•f the t+ you t d out fm -r
1 1r.nt "yor,r silver
n { t•: t ,t f•+re you
1e.:..:. 1-17.2 accept
reat i.' 1 fled with.y.lt re-
cti ,ise the amount.
If cr are , rc1 t you have
been r , e
,stats -,.i and yell are
refus,d the corrt mr.ount. say
that . ,.e e:'.1 a p0-
11 einere dealing with
a t .•a he'll t._r i'l fork over
t coir t ig'.•i change .n a harry.
Frew. 'The Police ,Gazette.'
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Answer elsewhere on this page
SCORCHED SKI -JUMPERS — Skiing was a mighty hot activity
for Tom Spencer, above, At the first Western Ski -Jumping
Championships at Mt. Baldy, competitors donned shorts and
doffed shirts to withstand the torrid 102 -degree heat. Coolly
clad Spencer soared 64 feet in this particular jump to win the
class A title.
"Until I was a grown woman
and a grandmother, I never
saw a cake that had less than
four layers," a great-grand-
mother from the South told me
recently. "In my father's home
several cakes were baker every
Saturday, since we had a great
deal of weekrend company.
Every one of them had tour
layers."
This woman went On to des-
elbe the large colonial home
in which she grew up and the
kitchen which smelled so de-
liciously of coconut, chocolate,
earamel, nuts, and baking cakes
on Saturdays.
"The kitchen, which had once
been across the yard from the
house, as the kitchens of many
Southern homes were, had been
moved close to the house and
was connected to it by a porch
which ran along the side of the
kitchen and pantry. Servants
who felt they belonged to the
family reigned supreme in the
kitchen. One old mart who had
served the family for countless
years, sat by the stove and fed
it wood just at the right time to
keep the temperature even for
cake baking. Once the hatter
was in the oven, he never ellow--
ed us children to conte neer for
fear a jolt would stake the cakes
fall." -
As the gals in the family eree,
into young ladies, tlr-v were
taught cake baking r.nd frosting
along with sevcrai othrt' p t•tt of
the eulinere art considered nee-
essaly to their f•iilie: sn.
"Each weak my sstr.i..and I
I would have what to us an
exritin.: time de.:iding who
should '17 t e what t i d of t c."
this v: -'t. i t mid "My sr -:al
favorite WaS chocolate • e with
icing. One sistr liked c - conut,
especially if we had fresh coco-
nuts to shred and use: another
sister was especially partial to
hickory taut cakes and would
start the night before, getting us
all te Brack and pick out the
kerne._ :a that she could mix
them in a white cake batter. The
unbroken kernels were caved for
cake decoration." states a writer
in The Christian Science Moni-
tor. -
When the four or five cakes
were finished and arranged tin
the pantry shelf reserved - for
them, this woman and her sisters
would stand back and admire
their products much as an artist
might look at his paintings, she
said. Then, when the cakes were
cut and served their parents and
friends would pass judgment on
the lichtnese, the thickne s of the
icing, and the taste — and pride
fo accomplishment would rise
high'
4 1 u
A nut cake, baked in a fruit
cake pan ar.d made in this
woman's hone at the time she
describes. was one favorite. Here
is the recipe
PECAN CARE
?tri pound butter
2 cups sugar
2 cups flour
6 eggs
?s cup fruit juice
3a teaspoon salt
1 quart broken pecan meats
1}i pounds raisins
1 teaspoon nutmeg
Roll nuts and raisins in flour.
Cream butter and sugar. Add
eggs slowly one at a time, beat-
ing well after each addition. Add
sifted flour and all other ingre-
dients. Bake in 3257. oven.
5 o n
Times have changed in many
ways since the days described
above, but cake baking is still
a time of sweet-smelling kitch-
ens and creative opportunity for
decorating favorite cases.
Here is a chocolate cake iced
with peppermint and decorated
with peppermint candy.
DEEP DARK
CHOCQJ.ATE CAKE
2 cups sifted cake flour
al teaspoon salt
4 squares unsweetened
chocolate
le cup butter
2 cups sugar
2 egg yolks, unbeaten
lite cups milk
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 teaspoon sada
Sift flout' once, measure, add
salt, and sift again. Melt choco-
late and shortening together over
hot water. Turn into mixing
bowl and ;roof to- room tempera-
ture (this: is important,. Then
add sugar and prix well. Add
egg yolks and I cup of the milk;
blend. Add flour and mix just
until all flour is. dampened. Then
beat I minute at low speed of
eleetrie :nixes' or about 150
strokes by hand. Add vanilla
and 1. cup more of the milk;
mix UF1111 aft:eoth. Dissolve soda
ti. the remaining 1.1 cup milk.
Stir into bettor quickly and
thou; ttly. B..`.ter will uc
sliest
Pour C: t c_ into Si round 0 -
inch pans, _ inches deep,
thich ra bin liners on bot..
tuna wvitn paper. Make at 350'F.
10 minutes or 11rtt1 cake springs
be:'k when touched lightly. Cake
also iney hz, baked in a 13xOx2
par. about 45 minutes.
Note: This: cake may be Mixed
completely in a 2 -quart double
boiler. Aleft Chocolate and short-
ening in a double boiler and cool
to room tetmperature. Proceed
with mixing as directed above,
using double boiler instead of a
bowl. Bake as directed above.
Cool cake before frosting.
� M
FLUFFY PEPPERMINT
FROSTING
2 egg whites, unbeaten
11.1 cups sugar
Dash of salt
!:I cup water
2 teaspoons light cern syrup
ti teaspoon peppermint extract
peppermint eandies
Combine first 5 ingredients in
top of double boiler. Beat about
I minute or until thoroughly
mixed. Then place over boiling
water and beat constantly with
sturdy egg beater (or at high
speed of electric beater) 7 min-
utes, or until frosting will stand
in stiff peaks. (Stir frosting up
from bottom and sides of pan
orwith rubber spatula
or spoon,)
Remove from -boiling water,
pour at once into large bowl,
add peppermint extract and beat
I minute, or until thick enough
to spread. Decorate with candy.
Pfiaking Homework
Less Pailful
Parents can't do a child's
studying for him but they
can help. One important contri-
bution they can make to the
success of the school year is in
arranging an ideal place for a
boy or girl to do his homework.
The bedroom is the best spot
since it is away from the dis-
traction of family activities. But
bedrooms are seldom bright
and cheerful enough for study
purposes and redecorating is
usually called for.
Because most homework must
be done at night, the prime
consideration when decorating
a bedroom study is light re-
flection, according to Wilfred
Sinclair, C -I -L color consultant.
The ceiling should receive
careful attention since it is the
chief reflecting surface for arti-
ficial light. Paint it white, light
ivory, cream beige or lemon
yellow, the colors which toss
back the most light, Mr. Sin-
clair suggests,
In choosing colors for walls,
take into consideration the size
of the room and the direction
it faces. If windows are on the
north or east, warmth will be
added by using paint in yellow
or reddish hues. If the room has
a southern or western exposure,
the cooler blues and greens are
more suitable. Incidentally,
those blues and greens make a
small room appear larger.
A high gloss on a painted
wall tends to reflect a harsh
light, so flat paint with a vel-
vety surface or easily -washed
semi -gloss enamel is best for a
study room.
The best color scheme in the
world, however, won't save a
child's eyesight if the lighting
itself is inadequate. The lamp
used for studying should have
a large enough bulb and the
desk should be low enough—or
the chair high enough—so that
little Johnny's nose isn't skim-
ming the page of his boolc.
Well - designed desks are
available in unfinished furni-
ture departments of Canadian
stores and can easily be painted
to suit the decor of the bed-
room. Even ars old kitchen table
might be used. disguised with
a fresh coat of paint,
Pleasant study surroundings
aren't guaranteed to produce
straight A's on a report card.
But they're worth a try.
"r-oder'n t,candies
ve 1t Easy
$nate of ue are €keptiee
when we read the ln'bcl on is
jar of face ereant or a tube of
toothpaste. In this •age of
science we aren't to be takers its
by old wives' remedies or erre-
all concoctions based en notat-
ing more solid than s.upine-
stition. - - But the fact is, heron:);r:4ee
today is on a scientific basis..
Once a laboratory des+elnps acd
tests a promising formula, liv-
ing models try to prove -las
worth. Medical records :.re
kept. -Then it goes to the gen,-
cement, whose high standards
must be met before the prnciact
sees a drug -store it'.11. T?-
gredients are checked to be sere
they are harmlers end will
aeltieve the reults ctnirtted. It
may take years far that le:'le
jar of create to reach lyot1, tut
when it does you may be :wee
it can dia what it sine .t cae—
if you use it properly•
Helping Mother Nature i, ae
big business today. Cheneney,
medicine and industi t.il hec3
a hand in it.
Those women woo , onlp!ain
about the time .and trnu.ble it
takes to apply modern beaten, -
aids should try this special c•:n-
coction which was popular in.
the days of Marie Antoinette:
Pulverize the wings eeid claws
of a pigeon and mix t e 11 vgth
lily petals and fresh eggs, add
ground Mother - of - pearl and
camphor distilled wsi.n mush.
Apply liberally.
Today, we have punkt "pinion
behind us in our (pest for
glamor, In -lath century Fete -
land, a touch of reeve- could
have sent us to .fail! Au in-
credible statute was p'ac'ed l;v
Parliament, reading in pert:
"All women of vhatsn,,er Inc
or degree that shall 'lace ems
betray into matrimony ny cf.
his majesty's sub] c'. ,r,.:>.-
paints, cosmi1! arti-
ficial teeth, faletcse as Stwttish
wool, iron stays, oewoe,
heeled shoes shoes and renew
shall incur the peneitc of tha•
law in force against rhes .ft
and like demean:rs. eel the
marriage upon eieni,^, e
stand null and void."
Science has Made 1 caw fc,,
us to look oar bast a t on'.,_t
with a formula iweiwee us
from the danger c inberr-
Another. has releatsc,i es ;tom
the shackles of the ". ee:eel
permanent -wave riac'1•'IC.
thetic detergents hate 'ter: us
shampoos which r . ,- r.;lir
clean and shiny bit hardest
water. Out' natural ,, eety )1S1,1
a valuable p 1tItcr In the
.t
Upsidedown to P,"se,it 1'cei;ne ,
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OFFICIAL'S TIME OUT — President Eisenhower downs a soft dritge
during a time out frcm shaking hands and greeting guests.
THE GODS ARE ALL PLAYED OUT —Two giant -sized Egyptian deities lie ready for dis-assembling
on a stage ct the famed Caracalla Baths in Rome, Italy. The open-air opera season hod just
ended, and the statues are to be returned to the dusty warehouse whence they come. The.
ancient goes were seen in the opera "Aida", by Verdi.
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Answer elsewhere on this page
SCORCHED SKI -JUMPERS — Skiing was a mighty hot activity
for Tom Spencer, above, At the first Western Ski -Jumping
Championships at Mt. Baldy, competitors donned shorts and
doffed shirts to withstand the torrid 102 -degree heat. Coolly
clad Spencer soared 64 feet in this particular jump to win the
class A title.
"Until I was a grown woman
and a grandmother, I never
saw a cake that had less than
four layers," a great-grand-
mother from the South told me
recently. "In my father's home
several cakes were baker every
Saturday, since we had a great
deal of weekrend company.
Every one of them had tour
layers."
This woman went On to des-
elbe the large colonial home
in which she grew up and the
kitchen which smelled so de-
liciously of coconut, chocolate,
earamel, nuts, and baking cakes
on Saturdays.
"The kitchen, which had once
been across the yard from the
house, as the kitchens of many
Southern homes were, had been
moved close to the house and
was connected to it by a porch
which ran along the side of the
kitchen and pantry. Servants
who felt they belonged to the
family reigned supreme in the
kitchen. One old mart who had
served the family for countless
years, sat by the stove and fed
it wood just at the right time to
keep the temperature even for
cake baking. Once the hatter
was in the oven, he never ellow--
ed us children to conte neer for
fear a jolt would stake the cakes
fall." -
As the gals in the family eree,
into young ladies, tlr-v were
taught cake baking r.nd frosting
along with sevcrai othrt' p t•tt of
the eulinere art considered nee-
essaly to their f•iilie: sn.
"Each weak my sstr.i..and I
I would have what to us an
exritin.: time de.:iding who
should '17 t e what t i d of t c."
this v: -'t. i t mid "My sr -:al
favorite WaS chocolate • e with
icing. One sistr liked c - conut,
especially if we had fresh coco-
nuts to shred and use: another
sister was especially partial to
hickory taut cakes and would
start the night before, getting us
all te Brack and pick out the
kerne._ :a that she could mix
them in a white cake batter. The
unbroken kernels were caved for
cake decoration." states a writer
in The Christian Science Moni-
tor. -
When the four or five cakes
were finished and arranged tin
the pantry shelf reserved - for
them, this woman and her sisters
would stand back and admire
their products much as an artist
might look at his paintings, she
said. Then, when the cakes were
cut and served their parents and
friends would pass judgment on
the lichtnese, the thickne s of the
icing, and the taste — and pride
fo accomplishment would rise
high'
4 1 u
A nut cake, baked in a fruit
cake pan ar.d made in this
woman's hone at the time she
describes. was one favorite. Here
is the recipe
PECAN CARE
?tri pound butter
2 cups sugar
2 cups flour
6 eggs
?s cup fruit juice
3a teaspoon salt
1 quart broken pecan meats
1}i pounds raisins
1 teaspoon nutmeg
Roll nuts and raisins in flour.
Cream butter and sugar. Add
eggs slowly one at a time, beat-
ing well after each addition. Add
sifted flour and all other ingre-
dients. Bake in 3257. oven.
5 o n
Times have changed in many
ways since the days described
above, but cake baking is still
a time of sweet-smelling kitch-
ens and creative opportunity for
decorating favorite cases.
Here is a chocolate cake iced
with peppermint and decorated
with peppermint candy.
DEEP DARK
CHOCQJ.ATE CAKE
2 cups sifted cake flour
al teaspoon salt
4 squares unsweetened
chocolate
le cup butter
2 cups sugar
2 egg yolks, unbeaten
lite cups milk
1 teaspoon vanilla
1 teaspoon sada
Sift flout' once, measure, add
salt, and sift again. Melt choco-
late and shortening together over
hot water. Turn into mixing
bowl and ;roof to- room tempera-
ture (this: is important,. Then
add sugar and prix well. Add
egg yolks and I cup of the milk;
blend. Add flour and mix just
until all flour is. dampened. Then
beat I minute at low speed of
eleetrie :nixes' or about 150
strokes by hand. Add vanilla
and 1. cup more of the milk;
mix UF1111 aft:eoth. Dissolve soda
ti. the remaining 1.1 cup milk.
Stir into bettor quickly and
thou; ttly. B..`.ter will uc
sliest
Pour C: t c_ into Si round 0 -
inch pans, _ inches deep,
thich ra bin liners on bot..
tuna wvitn paper. Make at 350'F.
10 minutes or 11rtt1 cake springs
be:'k when touched lightly. Cake
also iney hz, baked in a 13xOx2
par. about 45 minutes.
Note: This: cake may be Mixed
completely in a 2 -quart double
boiler. Aleft Chocolate and short-
ening in a double boiler and cool
to room tetmperature. Proceed
with mixing as directed above,
using double boiler instead of a
bowl. Bake as directed above.
Cool cake before frosting.
� M
FLUFFY PEPPERMINT
FROSTING
2 egg whites, unbeaten
11.1 cups sugar
Dash of salt
!:I cup water
2 teaspoons light cern syrup
ti teaspoon peppermint extract
peppermint eandies
Combine first 5 ingredients in
top of double boiler. Beat about
I minute or until thoroughly
mixed. Then place over boiling
water and beat constantly with
sturdy egg beater (or at high
speed of electric beater) 7 min-
utes, or until frosting will stand
in stiff peaks. (Stir frosting up
from bottom and sides of pan
orwith rubber spatula
or spoon,)
Remove from -boiling water,
pour at once into large bowl,
add peppermint extract and beat
I minute, or until thick enough
to spread. Decorate with candy.
Pfiaking Homework
Less Pailful
Parents can't do a child's
studying for him but they
can help. One important contri-
bution they can make to the
success of the school year is in
arranging an ideal place for a
boy or girl to do his homework.
The bedroom is the best spot
since it is away from the dis-
traction of family activities. But
bedrooms are seldom bright
and cheerful enough for study
purposes and redecorating is
usually called for.
Because most homework must
be done at night, the prime
consideration when decorating
a bedroom study is light re-
flection, according to Wilfred
Sinclair, C -I -L color consultant.
The ceiling should receive
careful attention since it is the
chief reflecting surface for arti-
ficial light. Paint it white, light
ivory, cream beige or lemon
yellow, the colors which toss
back the most light, Mr. Sin-
clair suggests,
In choosing colors for walls,
take into consideration the size
of the room and the direction
it faces. If windows are on the
north or east, warmth will be
added by using paint in yellow
or reddish hues. If the room has
a southern or western exposure,
the cooler blues and greens are
more suitable. Incidentally,
those blues and greens make a
small room appear larger.
A high gloss on a painted
wall tends to reflect a harsh
light, so flat paint with a vel-
vety surface or easily -washed
semi -gloss enamel is best for a
study room.
The best color scheme in the
world, however, won't save a
child's eyesight if the lighting
itself is inadequate. The lamp
used for studying should have
a large enough bulb and the
desk should be low enough—or
the chair high enough—so that
little Johnny's nose isn't skim-
ming the page of his boolc.
Well - designed desks are
available in unfinished furni-
ture departments of Canadian
stores and can easily be painted
to suit the decor of the bed-
room. Even ars old kitchen table
might be used. disguised with
a fresh coat of paint,
Pleasant study surroundings
aren't guaranteed to produce
straight A's on a report card.
But they're worth a try.
"r-oder'n t,candies
ve 1t Easy
$nate of ue are €keptiee
when we read the ln'bcl on is
jar of face ereant or a tube of
toothpaste. In this •age of
science we aren't to be takers its
by old wives' remedies or erre-
all concoctions based en notat-
ing more solid than s.upine-
stition. - - But the fact is, heron:);r:4ee
today is on a scientific basis..
Once a laboratory des+elnps acd
tests a promising formula, liv-
ing models try to prove -las
worth. Medical records :.re
kept. -Then it goes to the gen,-
cement, whose high standards
must be met before the prnciact
sees a drug -store it'.11. T?-
gredients are checked to be sere
they are harmlers end will
aeltieve the reults ctnirtted. It
may take years far that le:'le
jar of create to reach lyot1, tut
when it does you may be :wee
it can dia what it sine .t cae—
if you use it properly•
Helping Mother Nature i, ae
big business today. Cheneney,
medicine and industi t.il hec3
a hand in it.
Those women woo , onlp!ain
about the time .and trnu.ble it
takes to apply modern beaten, -
aids should try this special c•:n-
coction which was popular in.
the days of Marie Antoinette:
Pulverize the wings eeid claws
of a pigeon and mix t e 11 vgth
lily petals and fresh eggs, add
ground Mother - of - pearl and
camphor distilled wsi.n mush.
Apply liberally.
Today, we have punkt "pinion
behind us in our (pest for
glamor, In -lath century Fete -
land, a touch of reeve- could
have sent us to .fail! Au in-
credible statute was p'ac'ed l;v
Parliament, reading in pert:
"All women of vhatsn,,er Inc
or degree that shall 'lace ems
betray into matrimony ny cf.
his majesty's sub] c'. ,r,.:>.-
paints, cosmi1! arti-
ficial teeth, faletcse as Stwttish
wool, iron stays, oewoe,
heeled shoes shoes and renew
shall incur the peneitc of tha•
law in force against rhes .ft
and like demean:rs. eel the
marriage upon eieni,^, e
stand null and void."
Science has Made 1 caw fc,,
us to look oar bast a t on'.,_t
with a formula iweiwee us
from the danger c inberr-
Another. has releatsc,i es ;tom
the shackles of the ". ee:eel
permanent -wave riac'1•'IC.
thetic detergents hate 'ter: us
shampoos which r . ,- r.;lir
clean and shiny bit hardest
water. Out' natural ,, eety )1S1,1
a valuable p 1tItcr In the
.t
Upsidedown to P,"se,it 1'cei;ne ,
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OFFICIAL'S TIME OUT — President Eisenhower downs a soft dritge
during a time out frcm shaking hands and greeting guests.
THE GODS ARE ALL PLAYED OUT —Two giant -sized Egyptian deities lie ready for dis-assembling
on a stage ct the famed Caracalla Baths in Rome, Italy. The open-air opera season hod just
ended, and the statues are to be returned to the dusty warehouse whence they come. The.
ancient goes were seen in the opera "Aida", by Verdi.