HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1954-05-27, Page 2In all probability there is no
place in the world where you
can find such a diversity of coOk-
wry recipes used as In Canada and
the United States,
That's because these countries
have, over the years, attracted
tattlers from almost every nation
and many of them, in coming
here, have brought along the
memory of their favorite dishes.
In the Ukraine, for instance,
they have - or used to have -.-
e special dough called "Babka",
tender and toothsome. T h e
(Ukrainians r.ornhine this dough
with meats, as a main dish, or
with fruit, as a dessert, take my
word for it, Babka is worth try-
ing - you'll find ways of using
up left -over meat or fowl. Just
grind it up, make a Babka roll
- - and then watch it disappear!
9 ., V
BABKA. DOUGH
1 e. sifted flour
ee tsp. salt
1 tsp. baking powder
g4 c. lard or shortening
1 egg, beaten
3 tbisp, milk
Sift dry ingredients together,
Cut in lard with two knives until
pieces are the size of small peas.
Add egg and milk, mixed. Toss
with fork until dough holds to-
gether. Flour hands, pat dough
into ball, Chill several hours, or
overnight. Roll on floured board
mato rectangle 16 x7 inches.
Spread with one of the following
Clings. Roll lengthwise. Shape
roll into ring in a 9 -inch greased
pie pan. Bake in moderate
(375°) oven 40 to 45 minutes, or
until golden brown, Makes 6
servings.
MEAT FILLING
e, onions, chopped
1 tblsp. butter, melted
1 ran condensed cream of
mushroom soup
1 r. ground cooked meat
1 c. chopped celery
eS tsp. salt
"Brown onions in butter. Add ie
cup soup. Mix in meat, celery
and salt. Spread on dough (see
Babka recipe). Dilute remaining
soup, and serve while hot over
BabIca.
CHICKEN FILLING
1 r. cooked chicken, chopped
1 '. chopped celery
Stretching The Truth - This Pari -
elan sidewalk salesman says his
rubberized socks will put bounce
in your step, and fit you "for-
ever." Could be he's posing be-
tide the Seine because a doubt-
ing prospect invited him to go
jump in the river.
g
isptblsp,
.schoppedalt parsley
tib
1 can condensed cream of
chicken soup
Mix dry ingredients with 35
cup soup. Spread On dough (see
Babka recipe). Dilute rest of
s6upi serve over Babka.
e V 5
FRUIT FILLING
1 e. mixed dried fruit, ground
1 apple, peeled, chopped fine
Vs e, honey
2 tblsp. brown sugar
1 , 0. orange juice
1 tsp, grated orange rind
Yee tap, cinnamon
tsp. nutmeg
Mix all ingredients ........ ........
Mix all ingredients. Spread On
dough (see Babka recipe). Serve
with sweetened whipped cream,
5 5 u
And although this next one
doesn't come from so far away
as the Ukraine, I think you'll
tied the following recipe pro-
vides a welcome answer to that
ever-present - in most homes -.
demand for "more cookies."
CHOCOLATE HERMITS
14j c, sifted flour
2 tsp. baking powder
le tsp. salt
1 tsp, cinnamon
l's o. shortening
1 o. sugar
1 egg, well beaten
3 squares (1 oz.) unsweet-
.ened chocolate, melted
1 tsp. vanilla
�.y e. milk
1 e. raisins, chopped
1 e. nuts, chopped
Sift together flour, baking
powder, salt, and c i n n a ni o n,
Cream shortening. Add sugar
gradually, cream until fluffy. Add
egg to creamed mixture along
with chocolate. Blend well. Add
vanilla and milk. Stir in dry in-
gredients, raisins, and nuts. Mix
well and chill le hour. Drop by
spoonfuls on greased baking
sheet. Bake in moderate (350°)
- oven 15 minutes. Makes 2 dozen
cookies.
Some Hogs Are
O.K. 'ut Not
The Road -Hog
Figures dori't lie, and they
show that the largest percentage
of bad accidents occur on
straight open highways when
one or both of the parties in-
volved are "hogging" the road,
or "opening up" to pass a car
in front which in all probability
Is touring at a reasonable speed.
Your traffic rules insist that
you keep to the right side of
the road and iii particular, to
the right Of any dividing line.
Moreover, if you yourself are
warned that another car is over-
taking you, you are to draw over
to the right and allow him to
pass. Too many accidents occur
through refusal by one driver
to yield to another his right to
overtake.
When you overtake another
vehicle, do so only when you
are absolutely certain there is
no oncoming traffic that can
force everyone concerned into
a squeeze -play that may mean
death to the loser. If you can't
be certain -DON'T OVERTAKE,
Never pass on a curve or rise
--for you can never tell what
is coming and if you guess
wrong, it's just too bad.
When you CAN pass safely,
always signal your intention.
And, once you have passed your
fellow driver, DON'T CUT
BACK SHARPLY in. front of
him. He prefers his share of
the road to the ditch, and he has
a right to it.
IT'S AWI'UL. -LONESOME DOWN HERE
.-Pinto to nen k,,,5i.sp.
Man Rescues St. Bernard - "Snowbound Gem," 160 -pound St. Bernard whose ancestors still
rescue stranded travelers In the Swiss Alps, is herself on the receiving end of a "rescue" effort,
Her owner, E. P, Everhard, constructed this five -customer canine cafeteria to help "mom" with
her 10 -pup chore at mealtime. (Only nine pups are in the picture - the 10th went out for lunch.)
More Than One
Bore Every
Minute
Should you chance to walk in-
to a certain shOp in the heart
of LOndon, the man behind the
counter will probably, try t0 sell
you a pair of spectacles with
which it is claimed you you can
see ghosts!
From under the counter he
will produce the spectacles -re-
sembling something which might
be included in the kit of a space
man who hopes to be rocketed
to the moon!
They have plastic, dark -blue
lenses and a frame of imitation
tortoiseshell. "Sensitive" people
who wear the spectacles are en-
abled to see "psychic entities"
at a seance, or ghosts at a haunt.
ed house!
People who have bought the
glasses have, apparently, seen
wonderful things with them. One
wearer, for example, "saw love-
ly astral colours." It is also
claimed that the spectacles can
help a person to see "the aura
which surrounds everybody and
to understand the world be-
yond.'
The price of these remarkable
spectacles? Ten dollars! And, be-
lieve it or not, some folk have
actually been gullible enough t0
pay for them.
One man who purchased a pair
reported that he has been trying
for a week to see something
wonderful and other -worldly
through them. He ailed that he
was now suffering from slight
eyestrain.
It's amazing but true that
some people, even in 1954, will
unhesitatingly believe every.
thing they're told. The more fan-
tastic it sounds the more credu-
lous they are. They'll swallow
anything.
Some men and women today
are just as gullible as the Am-
erican visitor to London who
"bought" Nelson's Column for
$15,000 from Arthur ("Sales-
man") Furguson, the notorious
confidence trickster, soon after
World War L
Strolling through Trafalgar
Square looking for victims one
sunny day, Furguson saw the
American gazing in admiration
at Nelson's Column. Introducing
himself as "a Government offi-
cial," he offered to show the
visitor round London.
During the tour Furgueon told
his victim that the British Gov-
ernment had given him the job
of selling many of our treasured
monuments to help pay the war
debt to America.
"It'll be an awful wrench to
part with Nelson's Column, but
it will have to go for the knock-
out price of $18,000," he said,
with a dejected air.
The American believed him,
but haggled about the price. Fur-
guson pretended to get in touch
with his "superiors" and even-
tually agreed to take $15 000.
It was not until the American
phoned a firm of contractors to
have the Colum) removed that
he realized he'd been tricke.i.
'ivhtiy th.. contractors wont
to the pollee, but Furguson was
au'eker. He escaped to America
w'th the $15 000, But before he
went he managed to "sell" Big
Ben for $3,000 to another gullible
visitor!
Furguson, who died in 1938,
was always proud of his Nelson
Co;umn "sale," which he regard-
ed. as his greatest coup. In Am-
erica he was sentenced to five
years' imprisonment for selling
the Statue of L,berty to a mil
lionaire philanthropic Australian
wile planned to re.erect it in
Sydney Harbour.
'.Che A4straHan be! levee! him
when he said the statue had to
be removed to ,Eiden New York
Hat emir.
In Poland a few years ago a
.wealthy business man rnet a
plausible rogue who convinced
him that he had actually been
"by rocket projectile" to the
taking No Chances - Gasoline station owner Owen Yates tests
George Russell's pitted windshield for evidence of radioactivity,
Yates borrowed the Geiger counter to test pockmarked car wind-
shields. So for, all have been negative.
moon and found there land rich
with gold and silver.
The Pole "bought" the plot of
land on the moon for the bar-
gain price of $15,000 before real-
izing he had been swindled.
Within an hour of her arrival
at a luxury south coast hotel in
1923, a lovely, auburn -haired wo-
man -apparently educated and
cultured -had made friends with
the other woman guests.
One evening when she appear-
ed dressed for dinner she was
wearing a "pearl necklace"
which she casually mentioned
had been valued at $75,000. The
other women gasped with ad-
miration.
They were permitted to handle
and "try on" the wonderful
necklace. The woman laughingly
suggested that one of the wo-
men should wear it at dinner
while she in turn wore the oth-
er's diamond necklace "just for
a change," Everybody swallowed
the story, as well as an excellent
dinner. The exchange was made.
But towards the end of the
meal the auburn -haired romanc-
er suddenly begged to be excus-
ed for a few elements while she
fetched something from her
roam.
What she "fetched" was her
suit -case and fur coat, and while
the simple women were awaiting
her return to the table she was
s,peeding in a car towards Lon-
don with the diamond necklace.
It was worth $7,500, Her
"pearls" were artificial and
worth about $10. Her victim's
gullibility had cost her dear.
Yes, there are always plenty
of people who can be induced to
believe anything. Some of the
charming, well-spoken men who
move about Europe's big cities
battening on the credulity of men
and women rank among the avis•
tocrats of crime, A citizen or so
have such a gift for reading
human nature that they can af-
ford to travel like millionaires.
One of these golden -tongued
swindlers persuaded a ship own-
er he met on the Riviera to part
with $60,000 for a spurious in-
vestment --within an hour of
making his acquaintance.
Another travels round with a
shapely brunette whose charms
"That's the mai who ernte to
dinner leeteweek ITe's st 11 herr;!"
4
pay big dividends when the vic-
tim is a rich young bachelor, She
is invariably his "daughter" ---
whose "fortune Is temporarily
tied up abroad," The victim, ren-
dered even more gullible by the
girl's looks, usually advances a
big "loan."
Some years ago an apparently
shrewd London business man
believed a well-dressed strang-
er's story that he had perfected
a wonderful machine which
could reproduce currency notes
of any country.
The stranger showed him a
queer looking metal machine
with electric light bulbs of dif-
ferent colours. He demonstrated
it by putting pieces of plain pap-
er through one slot and taking
Out f15 and dollar notes from
another.
The business man was tempted
-and fell. He paid $1,500 for a
share in the "profits" and never
saw the stranger or his ingeni-
ous invention again.
IT WORKED, ANYWAY
A doctor whose medical skill
far exceeded the clarity of his
handwriting sent an invitation
to a patient to spend an evening
with him, adding that there
would be mucic, cards, and so on.
The friend failed to turn up,
and sent no explanation. When
they met the following day the
doctor asked whether he had re-
ceived the note.
"Yes, thank you," replied the
other. "I took it to the druggist
and had it made up, and I feel
much better already."
is Could A\ppiy
To Canaidgans Too
A good .deal has been said
lately about the need for an
Ear of America as -a ell as is
Voice of America. There is a
growing recognition that the Un-
ited Status has been failing let
some important ways to under-
stand what other nations are
thinking and why.
That gallant soldier who re-
fuses the name of "hero," Maj.
Gen, William F. Dean, has writ-
ten a book that shows how much
Of value the listening ear and
humble heart can learn, While
enduring the terrible physical
hardships Of his KOrean impris-
onment --no more terrible in
many respects than the normal
hardships of his captors, he ad-
mits with characteristic honesty
-he made many discoveries.
The most important was that
"the ordinary Communist who
guarded me and lived with me
really believed that they were
following a route toward a bet-
ter life for themselves and their
children." Net fine words, not
bullets, but a practical program
Of help is the only answer to
such a faith, he implies. And
understanding is the answer to
the hatred for Americans he
found among otherwise kindly
though semi -barbaric enemies.
Their hatred was for the self-
confident aliens who callously
called all Koreans "gooks" and
were now, through the evil nec-
essities of war, dropping bombs
on Korean women and children.
Part of this enmity would never
have arisen, General Dean be-
lieves, if American efticers and
men had behaved with more
tact and respect for Koreans in
the years before the fighting be-
gan.
And in a speech delivered in
Boston a few days ago he point-
ed out that every time . stones
are thrown at a Negro's house
in the United States or conspicu-
ous injustice is done to a Jew
or a Nisei, Americans may soon
forget the incident' but it is
known by heart to every Com-
munist schoolboy.
Held prisoner as General
Dean was, there is little to clo
but listen and think. Americans
as a whole may learn, to think
more clearly the he -der they
listen. - From The Christian
Science Monitor.
Davey Jones - Suffering from
exposure, George A. Ramsdell
lies in a hospital bed after be-
ing adrift in his 22 -foot sloop for
nearly three weeks. The 30 -year-
old skipper had lost 20 pounds
during the period he had been
given up for dead.
Grins "Troops" Move On Drougjat. - Judge James A. Schooling,
left, examines one of the many huge fissures opened in his
parched land as a result of drought conditions. At right, soli
conservationist Albert Lichte demonstrates how Reeds' caneryy
grass can come to the aid of drought -stricken farmers. Tough
and drought -resistant, lis roots system binds the land together
and helps prevent erosion, It is said to be especially effective
when planted along waterways.