HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1955-09-08, Page 2Knitting Argyle
Socks For Babies
The knitting needles required
are; size 2 aluminum straight
needles, 1 pair; size 2 aluminum
double pointed needles, set of
four.
The yarn bobbins required
are: "A" 2 pink, "M" 2 white,
"C" 2 blue, "D" 2 pink, and "B"
1 blue.
Proceed as follows:
Set gauge for fists. to 1 inch,
12 rows to 1 inch,
Cast on 38 stitches: knit one,
purl one, for one inch.
1st, Row: K 2A -7M -1C -1D -
7M -2B (Tie on second bobbin of
"M") 7M (tie on second bobbin
of "D") 10 (tie on second bob-
bin of "C") 1C -7M (tie on sec-
ond bobbin of "A") 2A. Always
twist yarn when changing col-
ors.
2nd Row: (Purl all stitches
as follows) 3A -5M -1C -2M -1D -
5M 4B -5M -1D -2M -1C -5M -3A.
3rd Row: (knit all stitches
a s follows) 4A -3M -1C -4M -1D -
3M -6B -3M -1D -4M -1C -3M -4A.
4th Row: (Purl all stitches
as follows) 5A -1M -1C -6M -1D -
1M -8B -1M -1D -6M -1C -1M -5A.
5th Row: (For first cross of
diagonals with diamonds) 5A -
1C -8M -1D -8B -1D -8M -5A.
6th Row: 4A -1C -2A -6M -2B -
1D -6B -1D -2B -6M -2A -1C -4A.
7th Row: 3A -1C -4A -4M -4B -
1D -4B -1D -4B -4M -4
A -1C -3A. 6AA. 68
8th Row:
iD-2B-1D-6B-2M-6A-1 C -2A.
9th Row: 1A -1C -8A -8B -1D -
1D -8A -1C -1A.
10th Row: 2A-1C-6A-2M-6B-
1D-2B-1D-6B-2M-6A-1C-2A.
A-1C-6A-2M-6B-
1D-2B-1D-6B-2M-6A-1C-2A.
llth Row: 3A -1C -4A -4M -4B -
Luscious Blueberries Star in
BY DOROTHY MADDOX
Those luscious, giant, cultivated blueberries, most Of them
from Michigan, can put coloran d flavor into your salads and
desserts. Blueberry Ice Cream Sauce (6- 6 servings)
Simmer 1 pint (21/4 cups) cultivated blueberries in y cup
water for about 5 minutes. Add 11/4 cups small, dry bread cubes,
without crusts; 1/s cup sugar, I tablespoon butter or margarine,
teaspoon salt, 1/4 teaspoon grated lemon rind, and I tablespoon
Lemon juice. Place on lowest heat for 20 to 30 minutes. Serve
with vanilla ice cream, plain cream, or sweetened, whipped cream.
Blueberry Ambrosia (6 servings)
One-third cup boiling water, 4 sprigs mint, 2 tablespoons
sugar, 2 cups fresh cultivated blueberries, 1 to 11/4 cups shredded
coconut.
Pour boiling water over mint and steep for 5 minutes. Strain.
Add sugar and stir until dissolved. Cool, Alternate layers of
blueberries and coconut in serving dish. Pour mint sauce over
fruit. Chill. (Note: For variation use fresh fruits, such as apri-
cots, pitted Bing cherries, grapefruit, honeydew melon and
^antaloupe). Blueberry Plantation Salad
Crisp lettuce, cottage cheese, large, cultivated blueberries,'
fresh peach half, salad dressing.
Arrange crisp lettuce leaves on individual salad plates. Place
scoop of cottage cheese on each leaf and heap blueberries on
;op. In the center of the plate put a fresh peach half, cut -side up,
and fill with berries. Serve with mayonnaise or any favorite
fruit salad dressings.
Desserts Other Than Pie
Blueberry sauce for ice cream is a delicious; seldom -used topping
with which to surprise your family one of these days.
1D -4B -1D -4B -4M -4A -1C -3A.
12th Row: 4A -1C -2A -6M -2B -
1D -6B -1D -6M -2A -1C -4A.
13th Row: 5A -1C -8M -1D -8B
1D -8M -1C -5A.
14th Row: 5A -1M -1C -6M -1D -
1M -8B -1M -6M -1C -1M -5A.
15th Row: 4A -3M -1C -4M-113
3M -6B -3M -1D -4M -1C -3M -4A.
16th Row: 3A -5M -1C -2M -1D -
5M -4B -5M -1D -2M -1C -5M -3A.
17th Row: 2A-7M-1C-1D-7M-
2B-7M-1D-1C-7M-2A,
A-7M-1C-1D-7M-
2B-7M-1D-1C- 7M -2A,
TABLE TALKS
eiane
Steadily growing in popular-
ity, both because of their deli-
ciousness and the ease with
which they can be made, are
pie fillings made with gelatin,.
used either plain or whipped.
As Eleanor Richy Johnson
writes in The Christian Science
Monitor, all you need do is
mix your filling; cool,• and pour
it into a crust of plain pastry —
or one made of graham crack-
ers, corn flakes or cracker
crumbs — and then let your
refrigerator do the balance of
the work.
* * *
Something really new in the
dessert spotlight is cantaloupe
chiffon pie. It dramatizes the
delightful flavor of these popu-
lar melons. Pour. this filling in-
to a graham cracker pie shell,
decorated with whipped cream,
and chill.
CANTALOUPE CHIFFON
PIE
1 medium cantaloupe, peeled
1 tablespoon unflavored •
gelatin
SALLY'S SALLIES
I "If It hoe white wall tires, I'll
buy it."
3 eggs, separated
s/4 cup sugar
14 cup lemon juice
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 cup heavy cream, whipped
1 9 -inch graham cracker crust
Mash half the cantaloupe, or
enough to make 1 cup pulp.
Soak gelatin in pulp; then com-
bine with slightly beaten egg
yolks, 1/4 cup sugar and salt in
top of double boiler. Cook over
boiling water, stirring occa-
sionally, until mixture thickens;
remove from heat. Add lemon
juice and cool. Cut remaining
cantaloupe into pieces and add
to cooled mixture. Beat egg
whites until foamy; gradually
beat . in remaining sugar; con-
tinue heating until whites stand
in soft peaks. Fold meringue
and half the whipped cream in-
to cantaloupe mixture. Pour in-
to crust and decorate with re-
maining whipped cream. Chill.
* * *
Cottage cheese and crushed
' pineapple go into a pie filling
with a crumb crust that makes
a "company" dessert for your
next party meal.
PINEAPPLE -CHEESE PIE
1 envelope plain gelatin
VI cup water
3 eggs separated
1 cup crushed pineapple, un-
drained
1 teaspoon grated lemon
peel
2 tablespoons lemon juice
34 cup sugar
1 cup cream -style cottage
cheese
3 teaspoon salt
Add gelatin to cold water; set
aside. Beat egg yolks slightly in
top of double boiler or in heavy
saucepan. Add .crushed pine-
apple, lemon peel, lemon juice
and 1/4 cup sugar. Cook, stirring
until thick. Add gelatin and stir
PLIGHT OP THE CENTURY — Mrs. Mary McCoy of Miami, goes
for her first airplate ride—on her 100th birthday. The centenar.
ion is shown receiving a big birthday cake from Stewardess
13,arbara Davey during the flight to Nassau. Mrs. McCoy shoo
ed the cake with her fellow passengers.
until melted; remove from heat.
Put cottage cheese through wire
strainer and add to hot mixture.
Cool until mixture begins to
thicken. Beat egg whites with
salt; when stiff, gradually beat
in 1/4 cup sugar; fold into pine-
apple -cheese mixture. Heap in
chilled crumb crust; sprinkle
with crumbs and chill 3'lours
or longer.
Crumb crust: Crush 4 cups
corn flakes and add 2 table-
spoons sugar, and 4 tablespoons
melted butter. Mix well. Press,
on bottom and sides of 9 -in.
glass pie pan, reserving 3 table-
spoons crumbs for pie topping.
Chill pie shell thoroughly.
x *
Garnish the following eggless,
strawberry chiffon pie with
whipped cream and sliced',
sweetened strawberries. .. This
chiffon filling may also be used-
as
sedas a dessert piled into serving
dishes, or it may be molded in
a large or in individual molds
Reflective Clothes
To Keep Kids Safe
A midwestern salesman, driv-
ing along a dark road one night,
in 'a hurry to reach home after
a heavy week on the road, sud-
denly saw strange, bobbing
lights ahead. He applied his
brakes. Pulling his car to the
side of the road, he got out to
investigate and found four boys
who had been calmly walking
in the line of traffic.
"What do you fellows think
you're doing," he asked, "walk-
ing out here in the dark? I might
have hit you."
"Not with our reflective
clothes on," the smallest boy
spoke up. "We're safe at night
with these on."
"What do you mean, reflective
clothes?" the driver demanded.
"Didn't . you see lights when
the beam from your car hit us?"
DOUBLE DELIGHT — Stop your squinting, because you're not
seeing double. You're looking at airline hostess twins Inez and
Irene Zeol'i giving a few grooming tips to trainee twins Marilyn
and Marlene Nagel. The Zeoli girls and the Nagel sisters posed
for this picture at the TWA school for hostesses.
and garnished with whipped
cream and whole strawberries.
STRAWBERRY CHIFFON
PIE
1 envelope unflavored gelatin.
1/2 cup cold water
cup sugar
1 tablespoon flour
2/4 teaspoon salt
1 cup crushed strawberries
2 tablespoons juice
1 cup heavy cream, whipped
1 9 -inch pastry shell
Soften gelatin in cold water in
saucepan. Blend together sugar,
flour, and salt; add to softened
gelatin; mix thoroughly. Place
over medium heat; stir con-
stantly until gelatin is dissolved
and mixture is thickened. Re-
move from heat; add crushed
strawberries and lemon juice.
Chill until mixture is slightly-
thicker
lightlythicker than consistency of un-
beaten egg whites. Fold into
whipped cream. Turn into
pastry shell and chill until firm.
* * *
Try this orange -glazed vanilla
pie in a rich coconut crust made
by crushing coconut cookies to
make 11 cups; combine this
with 1/4 cup softened butter.
Press on bottom and sides of
9 in. pie plate and bake at 375°
F. 8 minutes,
AMBROSIA PILE
1 package prepared vanilla
pudding
Milk for mixing
3 large oranges
1 tablespoon cornstarch
3/4 cup sugar
H. cup strained orange juice
Coconut cookie crust. -
Prepare vanilla pudding ac-
cording to package directions.
Cool slightly. Pour into baked,
cooled coconut cookie crust. Sec-
tion- the peeled oranges and
place in pinwheel fashion over
pie filling. Combine cornstarch,
sugar, and orange juice. Cook,
stirring constantly, until mix-
ture clears and comes to a boil.
Spoon over orange sections.
Chill°
the youngster asked.
The boys all stepped into the
rays from his headlights. Im-
mediately the tops of their caps,
the stripes in their sport shirts,
even the cuffs on one boy's sport
jacket, took on bright gleams.
They were the bobbing lights
that had caused the driver to
stop his car in plenty of time.
"We're playing visible men."
the little boys laughed. "Our
clothes are made with reflective
yarn. They're new and we're
trying them out to prove drivers
can see us in the dark."
"You've got something all
right, fellows," the driver had
to admit. "But keep to the side
of the road and make use of
your reflective garments when
you have to cross over."
He went home and told • his
wife about the new clothing. The
next day they went on a shop-
ping trip and found many types
of clothing, well styled, which
reflected light when headlights
hit it, making the wearer visible
to a driver hundreds of feet
away. The bonus in such gar-
ments was the fact that they
looked no different from others
in ordinary circumstances. They
found a snow suit for their little
daughter, sport shirts and jack-
ets for the boys, a knit hat for
mother and gloves for Dad him-
self. Best of all, they found rain-
Wear
ainwear for the whole family, even
to umbrellas.
They were told that the ele-
ment in the new yarn is the
same as that in reflective. sheet-
ing used during World War II to
mark inilitary supply routes, air-
port runways and reflectorize
Life -raft paddles. It is made re-
flective with millions of tiny
lenses imbeded in the material,
the same process that is used
to make traffic signs visible to
motorists at night,
A number of leading manu-
facturers are now producing re-
flectorised f a!ments for siores
throughout tlxe country,
Rabbits Nibbled
Tops Off Trees
An ever-present hazard in the
Canadian Rockies is the forest
fire.
During the hot, dry summer a
carelessly discarded cigarette -
end, a smouldering camp fire, or
even an old glass bottle intensi-
fying the rays of the sun, may
start a devastating forest fire.
Forest Rangers and look -out
men at high-altitude vantage
points never relax their watch.
for the tell-tale wisp of smoke.
Dangerous though they are,
forest fires are not the only
perils .facing Rangers. In his
" book, "Smoke Over Sikinaska"
the story of a Forest Ranger —
J. S. Gowlaiid relates a hair-
raising experience he had while
acting as look -out in a tiny log
hut perched on the top of a 9,000 -
foot mountain. With the aid of
powerful binoculars, he could
keep an eye on well Over 2,000
square miles of territory. But it
also gave him an unwanted
grandstand view of all the might
and energy of an electrical
thunderstorm.
The crashing of thunder seem-
ed to make the mountain
tremble; soon the whole atmos-
phere was filled with a sulphur-
ous smell.. The cabin itself was
well supplied with conductors,
large copper strips leading clown
from each corner of the fan-like
conductor on the roof, the strips
earthing themselves through a
thick cable running down to
water 2,000 feet below. The light-
ning played vividly round the
conductors in a brilliant firework
display, and on occasion the
earthing cable, hefty as it was,
glowed red with heat. Steam
hissed angrily from the cable and
rocks each time the lightning
struck through the torrential
rain.
After the storm ended, the
amount of electricity stored up
inside the cabin was sufficient to
cause a four -inch spark to jump
from the handle of the door
when the author went to turn
it. Even the metal stove was
"alive".
The author liked his Forest
Ranger's job, and laved nature;
he records same delightful anec-
dotes concerning the furry in-
habitants of his territory. One
can visualize the look of disbe-
lief on the face of a tourist who
asked his guide what sort of
creature gnawed the lofty trees
so close to their tops, "Rabbits,"
replied the guide truthfully.
During the winter months
heavy downfalls Of snow cover
the ground almost to treetop
height and provide a sufficiently
firm surface to permit the snow-
shoe rabbits to stand on their
hand legs and feed off the upper
leaves.
Bears, with their amusing ha-
bits andatural inquisitiveness,
gave him quit a bit of fun, These
amiable amblers are peaceful
enough if treated with respect,
but can be tough customers if
annoyed. Even the youngsters
carry a terrific punch.
A party of holidaymakers on a
fishing expedition went off to
fish, leaving in charge of the
camp a heavily built dog. While
they were away, a small brown
bear invited himself in. Seeing
at Once that his, visit was un-
welcome, the bear turned tail
and fled, bellowing ferociously,
with the hound in close pursuit.
The young bear, realizing the
futility of trying to outpace the
snarling hound, suddenly slither-
ed to a stop, whirled round, and
struck the dog a mighty blow in
the ribs that echoed through the
forest. The rough dog went
somersaulting over and over for
several yards, picked himself up
and made a bee -line back to the
peace and quiet of the tent.
An extremely enjoyable book,
and the author's description Of
the grandeur and beauty of the
Rockies is so vivid that the
reader almost links arms with
his guide step by step through-
out his travels.
A Curfew For
Teen-age Drivers?
Should there be a midnight
curfew on teen-age driving?
This would be a drastic pro-
posal, but unless milder res-
traints have some effect there
may be serious suggestions in
this direction in the interests
of safety.
A group of state traffic and
law enforcement officials con-
ferred recently with Gov. Abra-
ham A. Ribicoff of Connecticut.
Among several recommenda-
tions resulting from the con-
ference was one that parents
should restrict the use of fam-
ily ,cars by their children unless
the) youngsters returned home
by midnight.
This was based on the facts
that although the Connecticut
accident record is lower this
year than last, the number of
fatalities is higher, and that
early morning crashes by teen-
agers using family cars have
contributed significantly to this
total. Any parent with a teen-
age driver or drivers in the
family knows the difficulty of
keeping control of the family
car. It is a problem on which
parents need the support of
each other and perhaps of pub-
lic officials.
Some parents perhaps would
welcome the backing of a law
which ruled drivers of under
20 off the highway after 12 or 1
o'clock at night. This, however,
would penalize many for the of-
fenses of a few.
If extreme proposals are to be
averted, the answer must be
sought first in driver training
with an emphasis on safe-
ty, in resolute parental con-
trol, and in a sense of responsi-
bility -which in this motor age
has to be acquired early or else
some privileges becomes too
costly for society to sustain.—
From The Christian Science
Monitor.
M•�!'�. ZY ?'Sy�i' C•'L A
UNITED, TEMPORARILY * Germany is reunited—on a small.-
fry
mall.-fry sale—as children from the East and West zones of Berlin
are entertained at a street party in the U.S. secior. Pouring is
Mayor Willi Kressmann of the border suburb of Kreuzberg,
where the party was held. Some 500 children, most of there
from the 'Soviet sector, attended the gay affair.
is