HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1955-01-06, Page 6One Hand For Piano
The Other For Beer
Bransby Williams, whose viv-
id Dickens and Shakespeare
character sketches viewers have
seen on TV, came up the rough
Way, giving turns on the saw»
dust in working men's clubs.
He remembers playing in a
dilapidated old theatre at Con -
sett in the north, more than
fifty years ago, when business
was bad and the orchestra com-
prised a bald-headed violinist'
who also conducted, an old cor-
net=player who never once look-
ed up, and a faded lady at a
very tinny piano:
Before the end of the week
the company knew that when
she played only the bass with
her left hand she was taking a
drink, from a can placed 'on top
of the piano, with her right.
When she played treble only
she was wolfing hot chip po-
tatoes. The boys in front amus-
ed themselves by shooting dried
peas at the conductor's bald
head. He would turn round,
threaten them with his bow,
then return to the conducting.
During the last act the vill-
ian locked the heroine in a safe.
One night a fellow in front
jumped over the orchestra rail
to the stage, knocking over the
pianist and her can of beer, and
began pitching into the villain.
A roar went up when it was
noticed that the pianist's chips
were stuck to his boot.! The
curtain fell on shrieks and yells.
Arriving at the theatre on
Saturday the company found
that the, huge, gypsy -like stage
manager had been drinking. He
met them with an iron stage
brace in his hands and bent it,
saying, "That's what I'll do to
the darn lot of ye!" The assist-
ant stage manager disappeared,
and next morning they found
him on the railway siding. He'd
hidden and slept in the train all
night!
Business was bad, too, at the
old wooden theatre at Stour -
bridge, this veteran trouper re-
calls in his lively memoirs,
"Bransby Williams by Himself."
About mid -week an old lady
came on the stage, a shawl over
her head, munching bread and
cheese, and proceeded to call
them everything but their
names.. Bransby apealed to the
stage manager to have her re-
moved. "Keep it mum, boys,
it's the boss," he replied.
It was Mrs. Patch, widow of
.SEitVIE FRUIT CAKE IN MANY WAYS
BY DOROTHY MADDOX.
For parties, fruitcake is almost a "must," And today, with
so many top-quality commercially baked fruitcakes to choose
from, it is not necessary to bake your own.
For your festive buffet table, have a full punch bowl and lets
of fruitcake served in different and attractive ways. Try some of
these variations.
Party. Sandwiches
Cut fruitcake into thin slices and spread with softened cream
cheese. Top with another slice of fruitcake.
Sandwich Cakes
Cut fruitcake into one -inch slices, then cut each slice in half,
to make dainty -size sandwich cake. Cover top with your favourite
butter -cream frosting. Decorate with coloured sugar, chopped nuts,
or chopped cherry.
Fruitcake Melba
Place slice of fruitcake on individual dessert plate. Spread
with strawberry or raspberry jam. Top with half a peach, cut -side
down. Pour a small quantity of the peach syrup over all.
Fruitcake a la Mode
Serve vanilla ice cream on slices of fruitcake.
Fruitcake Pudding
Place thick slices of fruitcake in the top of a double boiler.
Heat through. Place a slice on eachdessert' plate. Over the top,
pour any desired pudding custard; hot lemon or other favorite
sauce.
Sparkling Punch --- About One Gallon
Dissolve 3 cups sugar in 3 cups hot water. Cool. Add 3/4 cup
lemon juice and a 46 -ounce can pineapple juice. Chill. At serving
time add 3 pints sparkling water. Serve in punch bowl with ice
block, Decorate with fresh or frozen strawberries. This makes
about a gallon, or 30 to 40 small servings.
Pine -Tea . Punch
Pour cups boiling water, 1 cup tea leaves, 4 cups sugar, 4 cups
cold water, 12 cups (two 46 -ounce cans) pineapple juice, 2 cups
lemon juice.
A Fruitcake Buffet will be a welcome treat for your guests.
Add boiling water to tea leaves; let stand 5 minutes, then
strain add sugar, and stir until dissolved. Cool. Add other ingredi-
ents; chill. Serve in punch bowl with block of ice. This makes
about 6 quarts, or 50 half -cup servings.
the man who, with his partner,
Bennet, had made a fortune
with the old penny "gaff." They
gave Ghost Shows at all the
, fairs. She lived in a cottage
beside the theatre, and abused•
the company daily as they pass-
ed. She died some time after-
wards, and Bransby was told
she left over $250,000.
When Bransby was at, the
Coliseum with the clown Grock,
he had no sooner announced his
next impression—"Wilkins Mic-
awber, from `David Copper -
field' "—and proceeded to make
up, than he heard a what -to-do
backstage. Grock, who had
sauntered down to the wings to
watch, was shouting: "Send for
Sir Oswald Stoll! This man has
copied my make-up!" . Grock,
too, wore a completely bald
wig. He didn't know that Mic-
awber, also, had been created
quite bald by Dickens in 1850.'
i
,M,1 -. -- -1
iuit�itr°ln
ABLE TAUS
' av e Ancittews..
After all the rich fare of the
holiday season it's good to get
back to the simpler, more fam-
iliar sorts of dishes. So here
are some dessert recipes that
were good in Grandma's day —
and just as good right now.
OLD-TIME RICE PUDDING
31 cups milk, scalded
1/ cup sugar , -
1/ cup uncooked regular rice
Yz teaspoon salt
1/4 teaspoon ground nutmeg
1 teaspoon vanilla flavoring
1 tblsp. butter or margarine
Combine all ingredients in a
greased 1 -quart casserole. Bake
in a moderately low oven, 325°
F., about 2 hours. A brown crust
will form during baking, stir
this in every half hour for the
first 1% hours of baking. Dur-
ing last half hour, allow top to
brown slightly. Makes 4 to 6
servings.
,
QUICK RICE PUDDING
a Rice pudding made with
pre-cooked rice.
3 cups milk, scalded
3j cup packaged pre-cooked
rice
cup sugar
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/z teaspoon vanilla i avoring
1 tblsp. butter or. margarine
Combine all ingredients in a
greased 1 -quart casserole. Bake
in a moderate oven, 350°F,, 45
minutes. Stir every 15 minutes
during baking, and once more
after re -moving pudding from
oven. If a brown top is desired,
place baked pudding under
broiler for a few minutes. Watch,
carefully so top doesn't get over
brown. Serve warm or chilled.
Makes 4 to 6 servings.
INDIAN PUDDING
4 cups milk
4 tablespoons corn meal
lis cup molasses
14 cup sugar
1 egg, well beaten
1 tblsp. butter or margarine
% teaspoon salt
1/e teaspoon ground ginger
lk teaspoon ground cinnamon
Scald 3 cups of the milk. Com-
bine corn meal and molasses.
Stir into hot milk and cook over
moderate heat, stirring constant-
ly, until thickened, about 4 min-
utes. Remove from heat; stir
in sugar, egg, butter, salt, gin-
ger and cinnamon. Pour into a
greased 11k -quart baking dish.
Bake in a low oven, 300°F., 1/z
hour. Pour remaining 1 cup
milk over pudding and continue
to bake 2 hours. Serve warm
with vanilla ice cream or with
heavy cream, Makes 6 servings.
He Has "Smooth" technique — Artist Rudolf Urmersbach, 52,
has truly a soft touch with the brush, Using a technique all his
own, he paints on black velvet"
Fashion Knits New Styles'— Striped trim points up the cardigan,
left, knitted of cotton, which conforms to the new "slim" line.
Three-quarter push-up sleeves add the final casual touch. Middy
blouse, right, is also .of cotton knit. Oversize collar and contrast-
ing stripes at the neckline rive .it an enticingly nautical look for
spring wear..
CHOCOLATE BLANC MANGE
2 cups milk
2 1 -ounce squares unsweet-
ened chocolate
3 tablespoons cornstarch
1/ teaspoon salt
.eup sugar
1/a teaspoon vanilla flavoring
Combine 11,E cups of the milk
and chocolate; peat in the top
of a double boiler until choco-
late is melted. Beat with a ro-
tary until blended. Mix corn-
starch, salt, sugar and remain-
ing 3k cup milk; stir slowly into
scalded milk. Cook in top of
double boiler over boiling water
10 minutes, stirring constantly
until smooth and thickened.
Cover and continue cooking 15
minutes, stirring occasionally.
Remove from heat, stir in the
vanilla. Turn into individual
molds which have been rinsed
with cold water. Chill blane
mange for 1 hour or until firm.
Unmold on chilled dishes and
serve with plain or whipped
cream. Makes 4 to 6 servings.
,, * *
CARAMEL ]LANC MANGE
VARIATION
Omit chocolate given above
and make this syrup to add 10
scalded milk; Melt % cup sugar
in a heavy skillet over low heat;
when light brown in color re-
move from heat and slowly stir
in V4 cup boiling water, Cook
over moderate heat for 10 min-
utes or until the caramel is
dissolved completely. Add im-
mediately to hot milk.
* * k
PUMPKIN CUSTARD PIE •
3 eggs, slightly beaten
34 cup light brown sugar
113 cup granulated sugar
1 teaspoon salt
1/i teaspoon ground nutmeg
x4 teaspoon ground cloves
1/ teaspoon .ground sugar
1 cup milk
2 cups strained pumpkin,
fresh or canned
1 9 -inch unbaked pie shell
Combine eggs, brown and
white sugar, salt and spices. Stir
in milk, then pumpkin. Pour this
custard mixture into pie shell
and bake in a hot oven, 4257.
for 35 to 40 minutes or until a
knife inserted near one side
conies out clean. Makes 6
servings,
QUEEN O11' PUDDINGS
4 cups milk, scalded
2 tblsp. butter or 1argarine
6 slices day-old bread, out
in 1" squares
3 'whole eggs
s/ cup sugar
1h teaspoon salt
-e4 Via
•
SEE HEAR-- You'd never know
this young lady is wearing a
hearing aid concealed in her
horn -rimmed glasses. The unit
was designed to eliminate un-
sightly ear plugs, cords and mic-
rophones. The spectacles are fit-
ted with plain glass for those
who don't need lenses.
1/ teaspoon ground nutmeg
1 teaspoon vanilla flavoring
Yr cup raspberry jam
Combine milk, butter and
bread in a bowl. Beat 1 whole
egg with 2 egg yolks; reserve
two whites for meringue. Stir
in % cup of the sugar, the salt,
nutmeg and vanilla, and mix
with bread and milk . mixture.
Pour into a greased 11/2 -quart
baking dish. Set baking dish in
a deep pan and pour enough hot
water into pan to come to within
1" of the top of baking dish.
Bake in a moderate oven, 350°
1:'., 45 to 50 minutes, of until
a knife inserted near one side
comes out clean. Remove cas-
serole from overs and turn oven
regulator to 425°F. Spread top
of pudding with 1/a cup of jam.
Next make a meringue; Whip
egg whites until stiff but not
dry; add the remaining 1/4 cup
sugar gradually and whip until
mixture forms 'stiff peaks.
Spoon over pudding as pictured.
Replace baking dish in pan of
hot water arid Continue baking
about 5 minutes. Decorate with
remaining jam„ Makes 6 to 8
servings
Us
Love Letters
As x'`. Wing .Stick
For years the average man
has used a walking stick, if at
all, only when walking or
climbing in the country during
his holidays. He has seldom
'carried a stick for show as his
grandfather did. But during
1955 makers expect to see men
becoming once more walking
stick conscious.
There's a true story of an ec-
centric old peer who, jilted by
the lovely young girl he wanted
to marry, had her 3,000 love
letters pulped and wound round
a steel rod. He carried this
"walking stick" with him Wher-
ever he went and it was always
by his bedside at night.
When an impoverished old
bachelor of Ashland, Oregon,
entered the office of his lawyer
to sign a mortgage on his home
in 1924, his hands, trembling
with emotion, accidentally
knocked over his walking stick.
The agate head of the cane
was shattered, revealing in the
hollow stick pearls worth $60,-
000.
The old man recalled receiv-
ing the stick as a gift from a
white man with a Sioux Indian
wife in Minnesota in 1884. The
man had been stricken with
smallpox and abandoned by
wife and friends; the bachelor
had nursed him back to health.
As a reward he was given the
walking stick.
For years the new owner car-
ried it with him, little realizing
it contained treasure. He pawn-
ed it twice in Chicago, but each -
time redeemed it. Now aged
he lives comfortably on a farm
in Minneapolis.
THIRSTY LION
A thirsty lion apparently
knew exactly where to go for
a drink of water in the Wind-
hoek district of South-west Af-
rica. Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Nel
were sitting down to breakfast
when the kitchen door was nuz-
zled open.
A fully grown lion walked in
on the petrified man a n d
woman, then turned to the kit-
chen sink where he lapped up
a good quantity of 'water, Just
as casually it turned around and
walked out of the house again,
Blow-Out.Proof
Tires Aid Safe
Driving
Men are acquiring a new vo-•
cabulary, which has a curiously
familiar ring to women. Phrases
like `slender silhouette," "taut,
slim body lines," and "new
treatment 01 the side panel"
are creeping into masculine con-
versation.
Cause .of it all is not Paris
or even Saville Row, but Detroit.
And the silhouettes are mould-
ed of metal, not fabric,
Never in the history of the
motor -car has so much atten-
tion been given to stylingas has
been lavished on the 1955
models now being unveiled. The
introduction of each new car
seems to bring forth .lore high-
fashion terminology than is
usually reserved for a Paris col-
lection. Instead of the Flat Look.
the Narrow Look and the H
Line, motorists have the Low -
Slung Look, the Forward Look
and the Sloping Beltline,
According to the latest De-
troit dictum, the driving public
wants sleek, roadhugging lines
and higher horsepower. And
according to some automotive
designers, women are respon-
sible for all this preoccupation
with styling.
One prominent industrial de-
signer actually came out recent-
ly and said: "It is the little
woman who buys the cars.
When she looks at new cars, she
sees only the body style, the
dashboard and the upholstery
in that order."
Though few women would
pretend to understand what
goes on under the hood, many
also take a lively interest in any
new safe -driving feature. Un-
fortunately, many of these im-
provements in motoring have
been overshadowed recently by
all the drastic changes in body
lines, color combinations and
souped -up horsepower.
New safety features are con-
stantly being built into auto
construction a n d equipment.
One part of this continuous pro-
gram has been directed at over-
coming the dangers of tire blow-
outs. A slow leak caused by a
puncture is not dangerous. But
if a tire blows out even at com-
paratively slow spegds1-ilse car
may swerve into a dit5hrtaer into
the path of approafiing-~auto.
The new tubeless ttere.4s one
of the latest measur:‘..taken to
counteract this haze:x l 1± the
highways. But fully -as import-
ant as the rubber in the tire is
the fabric used to build the tire
body. By making this fabric or
tire cord, as it is called, of the
strongest materialknown to the
textile industry — nylon — some
tire engineers hope to fulfil a
long-time goal.
This is to build a tire which
will last as long as the average
family keeps a car or even up
to 100,000 miles. In the nylon
cord tires these engineers .feel
they have the answer because
after seven years of wear -test-
ing over the roughest roads on
the continent, the first blow-out
has yet to be recorded.
The three main causes of
blow -outs are moisture, heat
generated by speed, gradual
break -down of the tire due to
repeated bending and finally
damage caused by jolts -against
projecting objects. Since nylon
cord tires proved too tough to
succumb to these usually fatal
conditions, they are now regard-
ed as virtually blow -out -proof.
A surprisingly large part of
life in this country, incidentally;
is spent being transported from
place to place on four wheels.
Today, there is one motor -cat
for every 5.9 men, women and
children in Canada, while dur-
ing the thirties only one in 8.7
Canadians owned a car. By de-
veloping an anti -blow-out tire,
the automotive industry has
taken a major step toward re-
moving some of the risks we
take every time we step into a
car.
Shorty" Goes To College — Long after "Shorty" has passed on
to the world of steaks and roosts, he'll be remembered with
fondness on the campus of some agricultural college. The 1100.
pound Aberdeen Angus grand champion steer brought $15 a
pound at auction,second all-time high price. Janke Hullinger,
16, who is shown with Shorty, plans to use her $16,650 purse
to send her threat brothers to college,