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Zurich Herald, 1950-11-09, Page 7lob Probably I've told you before 'l 1 cup honey about the small boyknow whose 1 teaspoon vanilla mother was coaxing him to -eat 3 eggs or 6 egg yolks some food he disliked, "Mom," 1% cups sifted all-purpose .flour he said solemnly, "when you tell 1 teaspoon baking powder axle something is good for me, it % teaspoon salt makes me want to dump A on the 1 cup chopped dates floor," 1 cup chopped nuts k * k Confectioners' sugar I'll leave it to the child psycho-Confectioners' Method: Blend shortening, honey,to ists to figure out whether such and vanilla until creamy. Beat in a remark betokened something eggs one at a time. Sift dry in- deep-seatedly wrong with the lads gredients into egg mixture. Blend. inner nature. That's what he ,said, Add tints and elates and stir just to and there are lots of youngsters distribute evenly. Spread in a like him. But few of them, thank greased 9 x 12 -inch pan, Bake in Goodness, need to be coaxed to moderate oven (350°F.) until gold - eat honey; and honey is definitely cn brown, 30 to 35 minutes, Cool. good for most of us. The Hindus, Cut in bars and roll in con fee - in ancient times, believed that eat- tioners' sugar, Makes 3 dozen ing honey made people strong, 1 x 3 -inch bars. anise, happy, rich, even that it made ;k them good-looking. That's cover- The island has a suicides'- ceine- ing quite a stretch of' territory,' Hone Frosting y n g Still, it's a fine food, and one that 1 cup honey far .more families should eat far iz teaspoon salt more of. 2 egg whites :k =x Method: Heat honey until it spins For baking, the ability of honey a thread when it drops from a spoon. Add to absorb and retain 'extra moist- salt to egg, whites. Pour honey slowly over acre adds a lot to the keeping qual- egg whites which ' have been beaten ity -of the product. Calces, cookies, stiff. Beat until frosting holds its desserts and candies dry out slow- shape. Easiest to do on an elec- ly, and may even improve with tric mixer. standing. 1* ,R Honey Spiced Broiled 1•Iam To :replace sugar with honey in 1 slice liam, 1 -inch thick cooking, here's a simple rule. In3� j cup honey cake or cookie recipes catling for X% teaspoon `cloves sugar, use the same amount of z tea^p.on allspice honey - but reduce the liquid by a / teaspoon cinnamon quarter -cup for each cup of honey used For example, in a recipe Method: -Wipe meat with damp calling for 1 cup sugar and a half- cloth. Place nicat on broiler rack, cup liquid, use one 'cup honey and allowing 3 inches between top of a -cup liquid. nicat and source of heat, if pos- •quarter ,f k * Bible. Sprinkle with spices, and Fig and Apple Crisp , cook until browned, basting with the honey occasionally. When /2 cup dried figs brown, turn. • Sprinkle other side 4 apples. t tablespoons lemon juice with remaining spices and con- tinue cooking, basting occasionally 3/4 cup honey -itli remaining honey. 2 tablespoons sugar % teaspoon cinnamon f cup flour These Atom Secret Y4 cup brown sugar Are a 50 Years Old V4 teaspoon salt Y4 -cup butter New light is likely to be throwta Method: Pour boiling water over on the structure of the atom by figs. Let stand 5 minutes. Drain; cut-cparsely with scissors. Slice Br:tish Museum experts who are apples and spread apples and figs now trying to decipher a manu- script half rotted by mildew, mud in shallow baking dish. Pour .and soot. lemon juice and honey over them. Add 2 tablespoons and cin- Much of tits abstruse formulae "sugar mamoa..hfake the crisp part by contained in the manuscript is Me- P working flour, brown sugar, salt, gible. It was the work of a "mathe- and '`butter „ together until matical ,genius, eccentric and curly_ crumbly. Spread crumbs over haired Oliver Heaviside, who lived apples and figs and bake 45 min- ' a hermit -like existence and of whom utes :at 350° F. Serve Avarm. with scientists now say: "He was born top milk. a century too soon." After publishing _hree volumes Honey Hermits on electromagnetism, he set to work 2% ,cups sifted flour towards the end of the 19th cen- t teaspoon baking soda fury on a vital fourth volume deal- 3/4teaspoon salt ing with atomic phenomena which • -teaspoon allspice would have startled the world of • teaspoon cinnamon science -lead it ever been published. Y-4 cup shortening It is the half -legible manuscript cup honey of this work that is now under yi cup .brown sugar close scrutiny in the British Muse - 2, eggs, well beaten um. Iii 1927, two years after Heavi- 3 tablespoons milk side's death, a collection, of his I cup seedless raisins papers was bought by the Insti- 1 cup 'dried currants tute of Electrical Engineers, and 3 cup chopped dates when the war came in 1939 the cup chopped nuts papers were sent for safety to Methods .Sift flour, soda, salt, and North Wales, spices together 3 times. Cream Shortly before the centenary cele- shortening- with honey and brown brations of his birth were to be sugar. Acid eggs. Add milk, dry held (he was born 1850) someone ingredients, fruits and nuts and chanced to remember the docu- mix thoroughly. Drop from tea- ments and .they were retrieved. A spoon -ongreased Baking sliest cursory study revealed that they and bake at 400° F. 10 to 12 min- included notes for Heaviside's fourth utes. Makes about 4 dozen. Keep volume. eery well, These dealt in detail with his Honey Hard Sauce important research on what is sci- a cup butter or margarine entifically described as 44a unified V4 cup honey field theorem covering electromag- Beat shortening until soft. Beat netic and gravitational phenomena." honey in gradually. Mix thor- And this research, so far as it re- aiughly. Especially good on gin- lates to atomic phenomena, is said :gerbr'ead. to be even more complete than the x latest and much publicized dis- Honey Date Bars coveries of Einstein, the famous a cup shortening exponent of relativity. 1. Stand for a 84. Oriental wokA �P b C Int 0,S S�0R D pIctura for 10. Kind of tree 36. Age ate PUZZLE 11. Salaman part 37, Athletic 13. Salamander assemblies 21. Taverns 38. Book of maps 23. Looks aft.tt 40. Slender ACROSS 2. Implement for 1. Away abrading 24. 26. Rim 41. Walking stick Movable 42. Language of 4 Exhibition S. Hawks of a. 8 Percolate certain sort 26. barrier the Scottish Couple highlander« 12. By way of 4, Meager 13. Third power of Y,, Injure 27. Small island 43. Anger 28. Cogitated 43. Japaneso a number 6. Japanese sash 14. Story 7. Marriages 3t. Scraped linen pagoda 32. Exacted sat- 46. Masulin• 15. Addition to a 8. Adhesive isfaction name building 16. ( 2 3 4 5 7 NO 9 10 11 U. Doctrines Ia. Late 20. Gaming cubes Z 13 14 22. Frequently 28, Made small 15 16 7 metallic sounds 26. Half quart 28. English coin 18 19 20 21 29. Perform _. 30. Stupid person 31.3ioarns 22 23 24 ' Y 32. Past 33. He ((Fr.) 34.'Varieties 2G ; 27 i 2g 29 36. Always 36. Causes to 3Q 8t 32 remember 38.1 xist 03 34 _ 35 39, Princely ItHouse 40, Mode of stand- ing ? • 3g 43, Separate curry in an account 39 4 0 41 4B. Small stream 47. Kind of fish 43 4 45 40 47 48, R nIt 40, S'ikworuY w 51. Di 4 ect risures 59, Bolds back 51'- 5G 53 93. ;Scotch river DOWN w 1. Enileq ... .. __ 4tiswer Pulsewhere Oft This Pag6 4 �Y{ti r�,y.' K� � fir. 3�v✓ _'/%. �' .'R' h�Jf � i �✓ ' ., 3 Esc°'! a�4a 7 A � � �&'a5 �R Sii 9 d ! r 3 !its iNi5.1F.y�'•yl'+ 4'�'< f i .� i '6.ro r� . y + Y. ,1a , w.: RkM��d �/H jn>/ ,}iR a iYv :03%gy9'YRY ••4^xzr' 64yL'g hf ke•, f �fi. ,�4'x a a 3 What's All That Stuff ?-Julnbo. ; a five-year-old Mexican hair- less, investigates the unfamiliar foliage of 'Electra, a Maltese lap dog two years younger. Both canines were selected as chan-iplons in their class at the 23rd International Dog Show held recently in .Paris. Slept In Coffin shoulder. A youngYank onleave Wore Black PyJamats, from the U.S. sector of . Austria .From the blending of the cultural walked the Piazza for two days dressed up as a Tyrolean 'peasant, Ever since the mid -thirties, when feather and all. When no one took the popular and somewhat syrupy any notice of that, lie changed into song, "The Isle of -Capri," was first frill cowboy costume. launched, most people have dream- A Irian who came from the inain- ed of visiting that romantic haunt land six months ago, shaven and off the Bay of Naples. apparently normal, first greti his Mr. Charles Graves calls it the hair long, then his beard, and now answer to the psychiatrist's prayer- parades the Piazza in straggling the cure for frustrations and inhibi- black beard and locks, hoping he tions, where you can behave in a idill be photographed. That's what way that would get you locked up Capri did to him. One oldgirl still or certified anywhere else. plays her tambourine and dances An Italian princess lie 'saw there the tarantella -though she's eighty always wore a black skull -cap', black if she's a day.1 pyjamas, black sun -glasses, and'slept The island has a suicides'- ceine- every night in a black coffin, Daily, tery, well patronized by people who to the Piazza came a mail in red jump- off -the precipitous cliffs that cummerbund with red cap tassel, yawn over the sea, especially on blue canvas trousers, smoking a Mount Tiberias. ludicrous meerschaum and carrying An artist, Lucy Flanagan, who three embroidered baskets over his won a travelling art scholarship at 0 Boston, US,A., liked Capri so much Neapolitan songs. With the full that she refused to go back home moon overhead, a bottle of chant- and lived for thirty years in the pagne at the table and the crickets Hotel Webber, whose dining -room chirping, it is more glamorous than is still hung with her pictures, Only any scene out of Hollywood," writes during her last illness did she ever Mr. Graves, in a first-class illus- visit the e mainland #ra ted book, "Italy Re-visitedu w•lucli When the news reached Capri tells the traveller all he wants to that she had died in Rome, the local know of the country from the Lakes peasants raised a subscription to in the north to Capri, bring her body back to her spiri- "Say," lie heard a Yank visitor tual home. But the cost of trans- ask, "are there any snakes on this Porting the coffin proved too great, island?" so they had her cremated, the urn "`Sure," replied a 'New Yorlc girl, being sent by parcel post more and they've all got lovely villas." cheaply. Everyone, v gone, however, had forgotten that the 'Roman Catholic church disapproved of cremation. The loeal priest therefore refused to bury her `00MERS ashes, the local C. of 1�, representa- tive also refused to perform the last An everlasting reminder of rites because of the R.C. priest had baby's first toddling steps been asked first. So for months the Your Baby's Shoes ashes stood on a shelf until the Priest relented to the extent of giv- ing her an unconsecrated burial, as Preserved she had been a suicide. Visiting the many grottoes for in which Capri is famous, Mr. Graves GLEAMING BRONZE found that ,the most entertaining or spectacle was a series of floating COLORFUL PEARL-KOTE junk shops selling postcards, -coral Ash Tray, Book End and Pic - necklaces, pocket knives, scarves, ture Frame Mounts, An ideal gift and so on. Entrance to the celebra- For descriptive literature and special offer, 'write ted blue Grotto -sixty yards long, THOMAS ENTERPRISES thirty wide sixty deep -was throngh } OX 525, a narrow opening so low that the A71dTJV1DQ1r1?TT10l1 nM'r boatman had to pull his boat in by a hawser, with .himself and passen- gers lying almost flat on their backs. One visitor had dived into the fan- Upsidedown to Prevent Peeking tastically blue water -which turned to an uncanny phosphorescence when an oar dipped into it -and his S N 3 b l lar.3 .911 V2f body looked like a pale blue nega- b' `� '1 '7 ! I b W 3 1 1 tive. 3 DIN V 1 E;1M 3 1 5 3 A lovely spot is the night club of 3 d S O N 1 W.3 a' the Hotel Caesar Augustus at Ana- 3 A 3 SS 43 Capri, with pine; fig, and pepper O91 V S `3 N O 7 S trees and oleanders lit with conceal- c o A N N I 3 d 1 N/ d ed lighting round the dance floor. ® 37 >4 N 1 1 1 3 O "On a breathless June night with 3 3 f Q 1 N 3 3 b the perfume of jasmine in the air it s, S 0 O 1 2�► ti' ? 7 3 is a great place for lovers. The or- i b J. /� 3 9 i°P p' 1 chestra 'is first-class and the singer 3 3 3 3 S AA t3 hi' S I O is as gay as a lark as he sings his t: ..i rn C F fa44 Ulla IINOrV��[�F l� , G/.i Pd47 ® e e v or, Calvert DlSTll.l_,IlRS (CcliliRdc`l) LIllilted AMHI,RS7BURG a 0 N T A R 1 0 Calvert, head of the famous Calvert family, founded Canada's first colony at Newfoundland in 11522,. Calvert's ideals of democracy, ideals which were perpetuated by Ills descendants, helped set the ,pattern for the freedom we now enjoy„ W • a J A Tribute from Calvert to Canadians of Polish Descent Y. The great Canadian Family is comprised all the more notable, now that they ••:•,.i of peoples of variolas racial origins. have attained that freedom here. .From the blending of the cultural The Poles, with their innate love heritages brought from these many of music, have produced such lands, Canada derives much of her famous musicians as Chopin and M strength and vitality. Paderewski. 'Their engineering skill B''A.. The tragic history of Poland, once was personified in Casimir Stanislaus v 1 the largest and most powerful state in Growski, who engineered the original .Europe, has resulted in the migration International Bridge at Niagara. of tens of thousands of Poles to In addition they have given Canada Canada, seeking freedom and security, some of her best lawyers, doctors, Unquenched by centuries of oppression, farmers and teachers, contributing they have retained an individuality, much to Canada's progress. or, Calvert DlSTll.l_,IlRS (CcliliRdc`l) LIllilted AMHI,RS7BURG a 0 N T A R 1 0 Calvert, head of the famous Calvert family, founded Canada's first colony at Newfoundland in 11522,. Calvert's ideals of democracy, ideals which were perpetuated by Ills descendants, helped set the ,pattern for the freedom we now enjoy„ W • a J