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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1955-12-08, Page 6A _ BLE r. ALKi . Cu Cupcakes aro always popular, tin vani ut one 'es a w cu i4 fu c h e befo: ct rin a nut in and Stir and of ripe cialIy with the "junior lana have the advantage set" z2 egg's, �inbeaten ,.t cup sugar of hg e teaspoon vanilla easy to decorate for festive yx Occasions, ions. Here are a few reci es rs pup shortening 1% pups sure }•ati'11 be glad tried. you sifted Elaut 1 teaspoon baking In powdt �;� teaspoon soda teaspoon these cupcakes ypu;ll often i2 salt come Upon a bright red cherry � teaspoon cinnamon a�ey, re doubly � teaspoon nutmeg y pretty frosted �.s teaspoon cloves With a cherry -red icing. Q1IIESift RR'Y SURPRISE CAKES 2c CUPS sifted flour sodasaltuandispices theca( 3t easpoons baking powder Cream shortening and adding sugar 1t teaspoon salt l! i/s c CUPS sng'ar gradually light and fluffy, Add eggs, Y2 C up shortening is tip milk a time, beating well after addition. Add flour mixture 1 to teaspoon vanilla 3 °g apple sauce. Beat until blended. Fill paper baking eb whites (about ? cup) 1 et clip drain��1 sour or greased muffin pans pitted c berries Piinsweetened) Bake at 3^5 ° F. until springs back when T o u Sift t together the flour, baking (about 20 minutes). Cool powder, salt, and sugar. Add frosting. Makes 14 large asborten ing and milk, Beat cakes. minutes 2 Add vanilla and egg whites. Beat 2 minutes more. Grated orange and Lemon .gold i n cherries, Fill 2 -inch give these banana muffin cup cakes pans, filling each cup z/3 elusive taste, while chopped full. B Bake at 350°F. 30-35 min- add to their richness. Ates. 112 Makes 3 dozen. Frost with the following: BANANA CUPCAKE � 2 cups sifted flour B CHERRY FROSTING 2 teaspoons baking powder I1h cup CUPS sugar ?a teaspoon soda 6 tablespoons unsweetened teaspoon salt ch p try juice ° 3- clip . shortening 1 tablespoon tarn syrup 1 pup sugar 2 egg whites � eggs, beaten 1 teas poop vanilla 1 teaspoon vanilla Fetiv drops red food coloring 1 teaspoon each grated orange Combine e all ingredients ex- sept vanilla and food cup mashed ripe bananas aIP nd lemon rind coloring In top Of double boiler, Mix rN tablespoons milk well.. Place over bailing water. '�' cup chopped nuts Beat constantly nstantIy with rotary un til mixture holds its Sift together flour, be powder, soda, and salt. Cream aha$e, R Remove from heat; add together shortening and sugar vanilla an d food coloring. Beat until light and fluffy. Blend until cool. Frost sides and top beaten eggs. Stir in vanilla of cup cakes. orange and lemon rinds. -Chin a. At this stage he managed to desert flour mixture into cream mixture Applesauce and spices make these cup cakes favorites with alternately with bananas milk. Fold in nuts. Fill greased the younger er crowd, Frost them muffin pans or fluted baking cups icing You've colored pink (you'll need 18) about 2/a full• green, yell ow and chocolate (do Bake at 350° F. about 25 min- this by se parating white icing Into 4 is Utes. par and coloring each part with a drop or two of col- Here's a plain cake to frost ®ring in a different color.) and decorate with halves APPLES APPLESAUCE CUPCAKES Pecans. 11/4 cup a applesauce QUICK NUT -TOPPED BARES �— ;� Cups sifted flour vebut vete ticking off for his lapse of s mAnother 3 teaspoons baking1 Powder 4f G 1 teaspoon salt left his home in Woolwich one Saturday morning. "I'm 1i/ 'pups sugar just go - mg out for a drink," he told his x/� pup shortenfing wife. "Shan't be long." The day passed, darkness fell, and.. he Y Cup milk .YM c 1 teaspoon vanilla wife was thoroughly alarmed and xos, and when thereon 2 eggs was nosign him day she went to the police. Butter cream frosting They were sympathetic, pro - mised to make inquiries. Pecan halves . Then at about ten o'clock'on the Mon - Sift together flour, baking e� •': ' " Powder, salt, and sugar. Add shortening, Add vanilla to mil �{ fW'' :: add cup milk to flour mix Y 24• tore. Mix to blend. Beat 2 min_ tri Yorkshire. He had completely Utes at medium speed on electric Z v�•4 `uY\ �2 S^2• mixer ar 300 strokes by hand. Add was the father of a girl. Fortu- eggs and remaining milk, Mix to blend. Beat 2 minutes or natel Y. the mans memory re - turned, and there was no further 300 strokes more. Spoon into 3 , s Y greased or Paper -lined muffin cups. Bake at 350 ° F. 25 minutes b Y �}y5 •vY 1 4 girl herself was a man of forty or so who had eagerly looking forward to the begged. him for tion: what causes loss of memo - ry? "A blow on the head, a job. He was morrow, unshaven and his clothes were Yet during the ixight she dis- shabby and badly torn. When cool, frost and decorate will pecan halves. SALLY' --S S,gLLIES , t CONTRAST f — Here's the long a m,�. F•Nmlw.rw.Ir.rmVr.N.•wmJ N•t° II and short of it at the Western "2'arden me, but these are big p Specialty dog show. Evangers words you're dictating. Please d Blitz, the Great Dane, and Fis- use ones that we both can spell." p Tel's Sassie, a Chihuahua, show w iheir good breeding by remain bi ing friendly while posing for sl ,,,his picture. DriveWith Care v' pi P.,..,..._.._......... do co. aft shy he we rec in cal. Ing beg dit( A am( Chu Mr. tout girl cam TfiY A "TROUSE" FOR TRICKY TRAVEL — The automotive con. hast traption above is both truck and house, sa its owner, Joe Sinko- the wick, calls it "Irouse", A University student, he's used it as liv- tiff Ing quarters and transportation for four years. The unit con. out tains bunk, sink antwo love seats, a table, a stove, an icebox, a a he d a closet•, In it, Joe goes home every summer and has shou made one trip cross-country and back, all in complete comfort. a. se` The coach unit is designed so it slips handily on or off the bed and Of his 1948 half -ton Ford truck, sten 11e c Shop for NggrSwimstlit w' 1 BlizzardWeath W 1I �p DN,p MILES �v �'1q\�f A, ^j N �.�J'11.i'IL LTJ#WE/J �y,4� �� +tv. }a' t v,g, fig, 4 ♦ }. �'' ��S �� �• ;q�p •,�"' t � ', . Buying next summer's Swimsuit this pe- rY Ceisn't mbar isn t really a wild Idea. The resort'>"`" SN. e s:•y�,s3 >.:<spa;;f:: collections offer the newest ideas, the prettiest fabrics. 'E�• .?� ri... r. its, You can shop at leisure ��;a.N{ ��;•� without thatfeeling " �:>�•:: •�°r:.s`��} -,,� •°" :��: :�ti\'Y:�•zJ:,...;rY;:.., . of pressure that stems >� sr from the blies tat �}`x..,. '. .�i. ":�s�x•.�,�;'�:rv;,.�• :.f�:�<: •K;}'>:;:a: :, ,<. t M yi you MUST get a suit very day, F., }: : :'. ✓• r., : j.,'.:.:,� } ow You You may want,q `, for Ak IBM et suit a winter vasa tion. There's a brand-new group o swim- f ,�.t3; suits by Schicia p velli in French prints. These � � � �•:;fi:n3����}t��� are authentic ler, reproductions in color and design of original les g nals b y Chagall and Picasso.X. lla. They're used insuits with matching skirts that id are. ideal for wear from poolside at through the casual luncheon hour. ch Flared skirts take care of the hi rid le m; other p prob-*ti designs fi s x minimize the bustline. all There's ps c a group of suits with necklines - that 11 an be changed at will to alter the re look completely, .One of these is black lastex with removable jeweled collar. .e There's a crossed halter that switches to a Y P plunge or that ca n be used as a cuff for � `? ` sl x � • a strapless tap. - Each suit in this newWarm idea collection is made for cold winter: Shop for next . summer's swimsuit. Styled by Schiaparelli d with a built-in boned bra that's adjustable in n 'contours. 'contours, to your print from - marc Chagall original, suit S shown features halter neck, pleated skirt. SpentI Anyway, Night�� "°: siblle. when he woke up the next morning, he had of the slightest recollection of- en- ::;;;;, �~ listing in the Legion for five years. But he had—an d his sig_ While on holidayhis '~'"`ice''" "'? with wife ' �}°.�?� and. two littlegirls<• .'•';' -a!,r ::..::.v" last nature on the appropriate docu- June, a s< '"'`^•`� •'�•}��.•}> •'?�• bank official went. f ` """ }`' Yeovil ba for <_?'>?:;:>; <:><:?:.>>'_•:.: F<i men? was proof. His protestations swim— p y'><<<':':::: . and disappeared. Sixty- four days later he returned. "" were o f no avail. The luckless young fellow was Deur- ::<;: Ing that p '' •': >€': g period his memo rs,i's."�w lw��:'s.=�,�:�;• < :,;,�, memory had :}. r;.,..,,>,.,::.:. '�A a`:aY::=a:: been shipped to Algiers given relentless g n ntles5 trainin in t g he desert a complete blank, :;�•._.,>`<<€_:.ti:,.,<:: ,h, :���<:�a.: nk. He ::<'•>:'�.:;.•:::.<�.•;'�;ak :�...: _,�... remembered nothing from ` .€'_'` :w>"<:} >" the and eventually ' all found himself on the way to Indo time h ;•i;, :,.�.���.�,`<<.+>.<n ,. e entered the sea. until ,• :s: fi;:;> ; : -Chin a. At this stage he managed to desert he found hi : w >}: a- himself in a Bristol �'���`�>„>�-•�,��'��� restaurant. <«':>s'< t:.;: "`>, ai id eventually reached Britain. to It taught him .;,fit>� ,. His case is unusual,but it is is�t ` ?k ti a lesson. `No more holidays in Paris for me!" he by no means a record. ne morn- vowed. ing in the eighteenth centuryYou "''"'"'"'`' would think it impossible a Norfolk man left as usual, for .�•�ti'`°?sl>;">' ',�� to n;Yet forget your own children: Yet his work on the farm. Nobody when a father took his small boy saw him after that for nearly., five years. Then .he was dis- forday at an Essex seaside place he arrived home without covered wandering in the fields him. Fortunately the child was near his home. being looked after b the y Police Where had he been all that BRAID WAVE — Britain's min- tim? He hadn't the the father received se- haziest idea. ister of labor, Sir But it was obvious that he vebut vete ticking off for his lapse of s mAnother had Monckton, hasn't gone in for a travelled extensively • and had zany method husband and father of curling . his spent many months abroad in a hot climate. He was burned al- straight -as -a -poker hair. He's left his home in Woolwich one Saturday morning. "I'm most black by the sun, and his submitting to test ' run of a broad Norfolk brain - just go - mg out for a drink," he told his speech was. in- wave recorder during terspersed with numerous for=' opening ceremonies at a mental wife. "Shan't be long." The day passed, darkness fell, and.. he eign words and 'strange expres- health exhibit in London. hadn't returned. By now the sions. Snatches of Arabic and Hindustani mainly, plus queer his address, or why he wife was thoroughly alarmed and xos, and when thereon had come• which nobody recog- Rather than look a fool in nized. In addition, he had picked front of the receptionist he was nosign him day she went to the police. filled up a lot of nautical terms— and in the register with the first the sailor's picturesque slang particulars which They were sympathetic, pro - mised to make inquiries. came into • his and full-blooded oaths. head. Followed a week of worry, Undoubtedly, he had . Then at about ten o'clock'on the Mon - somehow a week of frantic brain -flogging• or other boarded day morning a�telegram arrived a ship and AlI without result. Then he voyaged to the East. But why bumped into a"woman at the woman's house. It was from her missing husband. He who had he axe so ane how lie came heti just arrived at the hotel. By was never was at his mother's home in a discovered. remarkable coincidence it was Even more aramatic—and his tri Yorkshire. He had completely cer- wife's sister. They hadn't ta"uy pathetic—is the story of met for quite the q along time, but forgotten that he had been mar- tied for nearly two y years, ai}d s ssex girl who vanished on they instantly recognized each the was the father of a girl. Fortu- eve of her weddingto other, a Thanks to that the man's young farmer. It seemed an ideal memory returned and he natel Y. the mans memory re - turned, and there was no further return- mate". The young couple were ed also—to his wife trouble. genuinely in love with each A Hampshire farmer engaged other. :Che All of which invites the ques- girl herself was a man of forty or so who had eagerly looking forward to the begged. him for tion: what causes loss of memo - ry? "A blow on the head, a job. He was morrow, unshaven and his clothes were Yet during the ixight she dis- shabby and badly torn. worry or overwork mainly," a ,doctor tells me. "But sometimes a But he appeared. With her went her looked strong, and labour was bridal dress, per - son subconsciously wants to for - and this was found too short for the farmer to ask get — and he does!" n a river near by. Of the bride, questions. •iowever, So if you feel the urge to run there was no trace, Despite the new man's dis- away from your worries, to in- trad after a long and heat reputable appearance 1 dulge in a spot of escapism there ,reeking search her frantic pa- ,ents and intended husband ;ave her up for dead, believing hat she had been claimed by he river. And so the weeks passed, Then ne evening the parents heard weir 'dog barking joyfully. A knock )wed, andhe f ther t oor o threw it pen. On the doorstep was the aughter they had never ex - Noted to see again — obviously well educated. He spoke with a refined accent and his manners were very different from those of his fellow-work- ers..After he had received his first week's wages he went to the nearest town and had a shave and haircut. .The transformation was strik- ing—and it rang a bell with the farmer. He recalled seeing a photograph'"in the newspapers Of a schoolmaster who h d is only one sensible thing Ito do, Forget it! �. Fewer Rubbers Canadian manufacturers pro_ duced 3,407,248 pairs of light and heavy rubbers in 1953 as compared with 3,746,231 pairs in 1952• Real Skyscraper The 984 -foot Eiffel Tower and New York's 1,472 -foot Eroplra State Biulding have long vied In friendly rivalry as the world's • tallest structures, Now they are to be challenged by a 1,373 -foot builidng designed to make the Tower of Isabel -- be- lieved to have soared to 450 feet -- Just a baby. Appropriately enough, the Magnel is to be the centre- piece of a multilingual World Fair to be held in Brussels in 1958, Gustave Eiffel built in his tower for an outsize exhibition sixty-six years ago and the Bel- ' gians have instructed Grusta- o Magnel, an, architect specializ- ing in prefab concerte units, tc try for something bigger and better. On wasteland outside Brus- sels 2,000 concrete piles sunk deep into the ground will. give foundation for a thirty -storey building made in pyramid style Of great concrete blocks, On the top floor of this sk%-,- scraper yet another structure will contain ten floors topped by a panoramic terrace restaurant capable of seating 1,500 people at a time. The project will cost $12,000,- 000 and the main building will contain radio and TV studios, concert halls and a TV school to give Belgium the finest radia centre in Europe, There ars Prospects that the 442 -foot high TV mast will be used for coin- mercials beaming ten hours I day to this country. In the h f g h e s t. tower an observatory a n d meteorological station will keep watch on the weather. Yet this building is to be only the dominating big brother to a startling inverted tower which Will also be an attraction at the exhibition. Beginning, where our own skyline left off, a metal structure resting on a base fifty inches square will bevel out- wards, supporting at a height of 500 feet a platform fifty yards wide. This inverted Eiffel Tower is to have four novel escalator lifts climbing outward, a carillon and a restaurant. Though it will look absurdly top-heavy, the full thrust will converge .forty feet below ground on a point as fine as a tin -tack. DOLEFUL DOVE — A mourning dove that has a right to mourn is this one being held for the Photographer. The b i r d was mysteriously w o u n d e d and grounded by a short twig, im• bedded in its neck. The wound had healed around the twig sc the dove has to go through lifs with a chip on its shoulder. e was a one eary, and pale with exhaustion, 4n a walking tour some weeks it otherwise unhurt. Above all, before and hadn't been seen i e was alive. To her parents it since. as a miracle. Undoubtedly the m i s s i n g tq . Eventually they were able to schoolmaster and his new work- " ace together the events of er were the same. The farmer ose lost weeks. There is no reported the matter, the man's ubt that the excitement of her wife came to identify him, and .rung wedding had tem almost at once he remembered ected the who he w girl's brain. And so as. But a had no id( -.a had wandered off, clutching of what had happened after he r wedding -dress, lost in a left home. ; rld of her own. She had no All these are serious incidents, » k ollection of throwing the dress but loss of memory --of the tem - the river. But she diml re- porary kind—can have its amus-� *i bK) !ed tramping the roads, sleep- Ing and embarrassing side. After seeing his bride settled in the beneath hedges and ha ricks ' ` 'x `` � R •� ' x + hotel where the were to spend ':<' .h<.. ' ` �t ging crusts and drinking frons y � ,:>• ,hes. g their 'honeymoon, the bride- ° ' X.,: t last she foundgroom went off to ark the car, t.....�. .� herself Then he found he c couldn't re - mg a crowd outside....::'•<,.• s; .AS •., r :� a village < : } •, .;:... roll. A bride enteredmember where lie was staying, oix the ,�,. • '. ' . `' • of her father _ and after searching for hours ''�` a: ? ` •t�� and this ave u r t } <t<s hod some chord in the poor g p in despair and ,dozed .,:. x s clouded brain• Memory fitfully in the car till dawn, Ima- `;::` l a flooding back, and she gine the feelings --•not to say kik,,:, •: _' Y ` ened home, anxiety — of the unfortunate it so serious case of bride --left alone in t'� g IS the a strange a?s�>y"?`�< _�., Young husband w place on her wedding night! :< fi who hada A lot of men are said to join with his wife s' ` '°• �• } and stormed ::� if the house. "I'm pin the over -romanticized FrPnch u , g g for 1%day," he shouted over his Foreign Legion "to forget." A TH9 SMILE'S GENUINE Emmet London youth found himself' in Kelley, dean of circuscicm''x [der. " el on" He wens to sad -faced clowns,, breaks tradition to smile side hotel on the 1;ast Coast thin tough carps for the opposite ai a through his grease was about; to sign the re is reagon. He had a mental Mack- Paint. He has reason—the picture, shows his wife ar ' newborn g but while on 'holiday in Pts,i;G.' daughter, Stacia. Kelley was playing a seasan's•end e,.auEnienit when his mind misted over. perhaps the drinks h� fin when the•, stork .arrived at Ringling's winter quarters, where suldn't reinem`ber his namo$ t¢onsumed were partly respon- Mrs, Kelley met him at the hospital, N ♦ <, , ,M