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The Seaforth News, 1960-11-24, Page 2
Coins Aro This Woman's Career here's a piece of trariae money used m the time o; Christ Je tic," 11 eheth ?yea said :AA she took a .;mall coin Irina its place in one of her care- fully labelled veils cabinet.(. Sm tar as she 'untie's, She i$ theonlywoman in Britain who IS a fall -time coin denier. Willa something like awe I eian.+ied this tribute penny of the Bible." A :mall vein, about the size of :i farthing and ei ll•• t+ncst'd With :he head of Emitter - or fitter -.or Tiberius 14-3T A.D., it had been ,around for more than I900 gears sea looked as though it itad born newly minted. I Ant with ;hiss PyIn at the Kensington Antique Dealers' Fair where site head a table. and where every fey minutes numismatists ((zein cultirtasiilAts) pulled ep chair to examine her c0ilectio{I. ..Cucton1cr., bee'o111c ;And that 1, why this bu.sineas is such ani," .she said. - I tasked how site b.: eau, "I slanted eomething oriental :ted cut of the rut. she said. "My father witA t lLlertr,r of bc,:a- '1 711, glint-. among then Coins. 1 became iieeresr'd as a anal! child." 1 t uuthful en hu t 't, 11- ' car 1 d John Garbett, an ea, part en Roman yarn., „is M J .ytT . n. oisl int' "T beemne a twin ,ollectcer %hen 1 wee sevon year, old," he told m:. Miss Tym b_ eget her first so:- Ite. e,n ,tall her entire capital al. Now 'ht buys from "many oel-'i p r e S,-oript Ines she buys old eaest 1t bureau not for the (these .0t aieciaise she suspette thele may be a Sea et drawer with ooina in it. Often she is eight. `t 11.1 .nes units a r e throw i1 ttp when ex-Caeat: n work is .n progress nd site is s,laned to starch ;n the .mil dug up. write= MSeiitut I' i n':es in the c'` eiat•'n Semler- Monitor. In Nortek, :cl ..f e to e sends and t,,0 eDo,r_ eel :eta are reeved ,:p in :'.•e L, 1 t e ..it e t1 r are ,frill!‘. I ,.. MIAs Py.71: ... h," .i .. e ... .. -:-± .,elm'.io what r t,tilie is ti v. etde.- eltetrafetei • :ire ne-ent 0,. herr (0 ,. entitesiest a.fee lee 0 e :etc:: 4.r ,tor T. ot • — .' Tee a . se fen. Pyre', tr- tel t'SPE 47 - lf1(itt farthing; tense two -penny piece weighing two minces and minted in 1707, and a penny piece to go with it; a fout'pettiry piece •-• a groat (enough for t hansom cab fare itt Queen Vic. turia's day) :aid a double florin ala oat the- stet, of e five. It piing piece "The large towns had their ,awn rotate in the sixteenth and etwenteenth centuries," dist iglu said, so 00r accts a Vul•k-minted • Charles 1 iteli-entat of en ald- o:1ra VI base silver. Trate tokens wei.t eeinetimee. tsstted in the 10:0 and lith ten- t Mies where there R.'•e net enough cilantro. Miss Iynt ehcw- ed me New Zealand, Australian, e e.tfly Can sutra and U.S.A. Lok- - tile. There w t -e .1.Ibtr ru,hery tokens rind mail witch tokens, payable at the mail (mach cffioe. 'shire were also theatre tokens. ..The- Drury Lane ones 010 quite voluble." Miss Pym said. Mies Fyn: works from her -own ,tp:rrtment in Kensington at pres- t nt, bat is trying to find entail premises where • she can show her collection, On Saturdays she mites a .stand at the Portobello Road open air. market where many children come along to ask her advice and to buy coins. '.It's a fascinating subject. There's alv ams more to le,.:en. That's why I likeit,' she satcl- Just For Folks Who Can't Sleep Any bookstore drat takes in 5150.000 a year can consider it- :c'.t• in clover, and turning the trick in the drowsy, sunwashed California town of Hermosa Beach ! population: 10.000) is nothing less than phenomenal. A red - bearded Book eller• teamed Bob Hare does it there by com- bining books and coffee and staying open till 3 a.m., which e. why his place is called The lair ni e. In the customers pour. six u -.puts :i week, insomnia -rich -ban residents, idents, 0 peppering of beet - nits dawn for an evenin's drive ',teat -eighbouring Meets, dad an occasional ce et itt fr,::n Hollywood _0 miles t ey In eiinks end overalls. bench san- dals end b :reitr±ttlt they :eke .rouse every month 3,000 soft - c 'rt- c 'I nooks. 2.0111) hard caret's and 700 rectiras..In an eft a- hid ...n . ut..0:', home- Here 4".4110 110)t d0711', they :-pcnd -in nett it:on a; 0140.000 ennuelly. Haee end his wife, Jui ln:. , ,tasted ,he .:,nbinet, creretnnl • :.r ., rt otic tt:ell tbey e' , :th s5.000. For. tit:ten:1 ate -. .lily u. l ru a t ©t a As su,..A.},re« n. • d. :ie 1- 2:1 1± 'i6' mat knoiiked trirou„ihw d :alt p. _u.. 1 it%; -•,11v }hart : t .y ..s He. stockea .ip riO'a-.y ::1' ests'en- . ,... - Zen. and olexiindo: King. and r ..It, el to Heist Ce ate e sEllee :s :. K. ,,. -fee F: p -:e• t• At,]ext . atte a ... . e .silt - J iletteteet. Lae Fi - :re:nes Darefeas. .1.... Keots HOT AIR GUN in leg r'tete The gar es e. to e'a"et times. No neret poreeeen tett a cezeeff ,seri- .e. ehes a berbelcue fire u Win Lannon, !;"gland. -• erci ,a t, It heats - 0 teed b :.s it out- the nozzle. :ee- e needed, ; 5ary West waite. •-e -. . on, FISHERMEN ON WHEELS — John (Laramie) Smith, right, helps happy youngsters set their tackle on Fishermen's Wharf in Santa Monica, Calif. The Muscular Dystrophy Associations of America hosted the crippled children, '7" TA TALKS �iitiS �.~t1aV:li1 Dave AndtteAvs. Rete are some recipes for cook- ing wild game and fowl which I thought would be timely at this season, They are reproduced from the "C -I -L Oval" and 1 hope they will be useful to those of you who have Nimrotls in the family-. Keep one thing in mind when cooking wild game — most of the meat is quite dry. almost to- tally lacking in the heavy layers of fat or delicate marbling to be tound in dome.tie-fowl or prime beef. Because of this, game should never be overcooked. In tact. almost all game is best when done to the medium -or me- dium -rare atage. Also because 01 this, steal,: from a big game ani- mal should net be cut thinner than one inch. and st.n±onh:tt thicker is better. To train blood from venison, =mem. at it ewer- n ght in water and antra. Upland birds and waterfowl et 111e prairies feed heavily on train d hence become fatter than .coastal or eastern upland birds. Thies they roost •yell, n hitt birds from mountainous or heavily wooded :areas. or emelt tl •]sways requite match statins to he good reueters. The ruffed -rouse. for t x ale, ieldorn .eoi: d by • t ether method :d tl frying. Yount rshbita end red sq'air- :e:: ,:.reit- 'h the latter :Ire not yet .. popu'ar c,ah .n Ce. -ac: for were reason' make wi ide:•to. triees,?lit .he eider enimale are better in a stets , . , c. -suits 1,1 ':ttn:pii1: The tot -.,.c: 'n cf re- - ,et: scnisi t. osis „ -,: tt-n C:.r GAME I.I1'I:R is tract '.t.'i ':r'.,. i is 1.s....t e -:..t1- :. i r..:p. l-ta, :.•, t: .t. 1 •, .t ser :or Ra. ,.1.0 :et ticer • sen'. .,..:a:i i ,_urs <':y „ ten beck. Tic tie, :et tee. Pres. Cir;:, BROILED MIOUSE1ti'ltGERS 2 ]its. minced acute meat tbsp. chopped green pepper Pa tbsp. chopped onion stilt and pepper bacon strips butter Combine tier,, eate .e -. pepper :tit eleepp.:u m -'sli sorting with cert and pcpptr t•-, t.togc`, Pat Gat '1,'xttn'e on ci,okie sheet to depth of about Cul into cakes t w thleir:-h coolie cutter. Encircle- each cake w'th a strip re. hasps:, fa.atcr,:og v, ith tnrtlii _eks. Dot sucteet 0• e051 neat e- ii' ty; !1 c: : •'d 'Moil six nen:e _ el r ,.ti. a .....t-.. •ai' 1.11 veers litre's ,,1, c:1` twilit': hy-pr, ,7— •a; -„yr tis fte,:l:iv, l; 1:,• 1 1'i,. Ititities :..11t:1:. lie e 111'.511 `i-rt±w' A laliSPAGNGLE i II,s, 111.1r meal 1 11.111 0l11eg:lr 1 gallon water 1 small canal 1 green pepptr 1 clove garlic 1 stalks (cloy 1 can tomato paste 1 tan whole temente, 's tsp. tabaseo .;un(.N salt and pepper 1 pi 1dt 1 -- Ai a: Sh lik t;e , i 1:1 0 1 1 0 •del and tIee , ' r 1 - rt: 111 attar eeti '.o ..1 (cele cup of vinegar to a gallon of water). The neat should then he dried in a cloth, Fi•y, bear meat in a deep pan with the garlic, celery, green pepper and onion. Add salt and pepper. After frying well, add the tomato paste, to- matoes and tabasco, Let sinner for half an hour. ROAST PHEASANT pheasant t small onion 1 pinch celery seed 12 tsp. prepared mustard juice of lemon 2 oz. flonr 2 oz, Mutter 1 cup Espagnole sauce salt and pepper PIuck and draw the birds: clean gizzards and piece with hearts and livers,.in a saucepan with 000 cup of t tet, salt and pepper, one small diced onion, • pinch of celery sed and n.us- d. Wipe inside of birds with !,:.nem juice and stuff with do• n c tic fowl l turfing. Hub rietsides of birds with salt and pepper :and fru . lightly with tktul'. Place each bird in a • e t l sewn paper bag, tie mouth .{ beg and place in a eltallow pan in 0 moderate oven Meet:while. , ..,1 n:cr down -the • its t 1 t 1 little water ser mina. hC.nCve and dice the eeetitns. Piteee e p of hurter the size of en !nee in :-t small skillet and • t b:et, and broth, To this rid the Espagnctje sauce. After 0110 :out' cheek the pheas- ant's s, The. skin '-huuld uE breem and crisp. the meat juicy and tender. Sea's 'ire gra- y separe ,'t preferable te101 wild rale • , Fake 16 Lit :nits_ting 1 h tm t'otne. tai}'- Can - :tele. , t1.,, reverse Germany IRICASSEE OI' 1'IKE 5 -Ib. pike 2 tbsp, chopped onion 2 tbsp. butter : tbsp. (lour 1 us.-n•hite vinegar '- egets h me hroillls parsley - 0 anchovies. tolled salt and pepper 1. :its !eke ::::o • dry tht- n`r t00)' ;t- •o1±-,' p'et's- f et1 sliest ,.::ci pepper :tint t. teas. :-t'r-r:!i._ With :...illi'. efeediy squat pains tut .. tri 1-1 - - •: i1". • t' .1- 1 • T �rtLcr .. Oh ;ti tI"4h. • until the state ,moss t7 a third. .7e:• -ve the pieces with a feek need .,=t t t: - j e: • Quickly Made Leftover Dish . 7.- •r _ . .. 1 -▪ -. ... c 7 ;11 as 4 41. , _.±' p-nns lb„tr•ri i! odd 1s >}a,ti z41111,1 :,lex this iTeurol e20 .-nti odci 1 Il y tt't-1t, Sett:p., nlixttu'e into 11 11;ti1. ,n: ties r:n on 11 side', in hot fel, h• rotate fro, .1:To 521 Combine 2 titbit:T ns dour V•1111 f.a 1111 in skillet. Ida 1 cup sour et lien rule 12 cut} 1... rend t'otil t1.iic'1:, 11' 0 F.1u1 (leer hem ir:r!1•= and 07 5 0. Stylist Boosts Cropped Hair -.'"Fashion keeps our cnulook -Young." dec•lare'd Monsieur Nor- bert, director of hair styling for Elizabeth Arden salons through• out the world, when talking with the press upon his ar'r'ival in Bos- ton. • And the next fashion sensation soon to invade America from France, he predicted, is the. wig of natural hair, "What Is better tor evening wear, after a woman has been out all day attending committee meetings, playing golf, swimming, or even for the career woman!" he exelaimed, For blondes he recommends contrasting dark wigs, and vice • versa. The influential "they" of Paris are even more daring, he reported, "for they are match- ing the wig to the dress color" So much for wigs, Monsieur Norbert has other ideas, too, Most recently he has devised a "Passport to Beauty" to accom- pany the woman traveler, con- • fronted with the problem of try- ing to explain to an unknown operator in 00 unfamiliar beauty , salon just how she wants her hair done. He solves this for his client by presenting her with e chart illustrating not only her finished coiffure, but a diagram of instructions for setting each- , roller, and pin curl, As the youngest of -itis pro- fession ever to receive the high- est award given in France to specialists in hair styling atter feminine beauty, Monsieur Nor- bert started early in life break- ing with tradition, writes Nan Trent in the Christian Sciences Monitor, He confuted that as a very small boy, living on an island off Madagascar, he had flatly re- fueed to follow in the family footsteps and attend a military school. His father, an officer in the French Army, never became reconciled to this turn of events, he added. His mother, however, has maintained an active inter- est in her son's career. I•Ieading the list of his "keys to beauty" is, "Be an individual." To -this he adds the Socratic counsel, "Know thyself," and further states that he does not believe there are -any ugly wo- men, but only women • who do nut know themselves and their potentiate, His enthusiasm for short crop- ped hair is boundless. He finds it le becoming; to fat jn r ctrl orf all women, which 1 ul;' ly errs- counts for it having pushed the exaiRc rittucl bouffant, look riltht down and out of the fuel -deli pies tures 1'he spirit anti tet vt' of 1925 are brick with tis, it fact which obviously pleases Mon- sieur Norbert enormously Other bits of counsel from the engaging young F ronehlnr'utd "Do not tisk putt' girl frit:nd'e advice. She clnicrn't know any better than you, and 111 malty she is your competitor." "Do not follow fashion blindly, but tdapt it to ,your individual taste, to your own way of life :" I3is final word of wisdom? '"Go to a tumefy speciltlisll" Editor's note Nateh! Go' Ahead Get Tanned At Home • To sinus seeker., a dia'p, year. round suntan is an iutpreasive :symbol of upper -eruct leisure. Besides, the -tan minimize.: morin - Ides and makes teeth look whit- er. So. when cosmetic manufac- turers carne nut last year with artificial suntans in bottles, it was no surprise that Amoticans bought millions of quarts of the stuff. The only question: Are Man -Tan and the other bottled euntani made of dihydroxyt'oe- tone (DHA) really safe? The answer is "yes," according to a group of New York deems reporting in the current issue of the American Medical Asso- ciation publication, Archives al Dermatology. After testing DHA on 200 people, the Medical team found "no signs of primary err_ allergic reactions." DHA, the New York dclma.- tologists said, is actually a forth of sugar which often eumhiues chemically with animal preteies, turning then brown. The eun's ultraviolet rays trigger a chemi- cal action in deeper -lying skin cells, causing them to turn brown, hut DHA simply a Teets the outermost horny layer- Ae a result, two University of Penu- ';ylva.nia deetoes said in the cadre dermatology ;journal, the hi' or the skin, the deeper the t!our from Man -Tan -- thr .:f the feet and the palms re the hand, for ext+tnplc, stain a much Ocher colour than does the titin Akin on the face "Because of tete vast structural dieruncee of the various parts of the face," the doctors reported "it is extremely difficult to obtain e entlorm tone." Road safety in Italy— Inflatable 01 Inflatable plastic road marker, above, is a new version of the triangular metal signal that all Italian motorists must carry in their cars. Marker le set 1.'. the road as a warning when car breaks down. A battery -powered light is included, ta Device, below, shown in Rome, is designed to replace the usual tire chains. It gives traction in sand, mud or ice.