HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1946-01-18, Page 6k
y ANNE: ALLAN-.
wilt** sconwiuis
►, ,'1=[o geniakers! Did Saute
tp . bury , .everyone a 'pleasure
No. doubt you hive • boon ex?
?ttenting with yours. We have
beon Fitly making tests se that; we
nSSi answer. the innumerable inquir-
ies' which .are fleoding in. One tact
that has been established' is that, ir-
reispecttee of your cooking, .;Skill;' this
method 'requires special knowledge
and forethought. Be. sure to' paste
the cooking •time table (that comes
with your cooker). en cardboard` and
hang it in your kitchen;
Pressure cookers, irrespective of
• price, operate on•the 'same Principle,'
namely, fast cooking 'under -pressure.
,4lthaugh there are two or three kinds
on the market; now, differing primar-
ily. in the •way the steam is relea.=ed,
other, types are being' manufactured.
These 'saucepans are modern: easy to
-clean and durable. , ' - • •
The operation of a pressure cooker
is streamlined ,to assist the ,busy.
homemaker in , preparing . nutritious
meals quickly. It. requires only a few
minutes to cook a delectable supper
MO, for the whole family or two dr
.three vegetables may be cooked In
the saucepan ;without the miring of
flavor's ., or colors.
_The saving of fuel is considerable.
• Cooking a pot roast or less tender
meat'..is accomplished .with speed ,as
it cuts the, time per •pound in half.
The use. of 'electricity as a fuel 'assists
in 'processing since the heat should
not fluctuate Because- ` inexperisfve
meats are cooked so deliciously, a
tremendous ' saving in' food ' costs re,
salts.
,, Take a Tipr. ; ...,.
1. Care should -be taken not • to , fill
the cooker,too full or •wit$ over-
sized portions .:that will close ` the
vent . pipe when the 'cake?' cover
sealed.
2. When the desired, Pressure - is
t eaob eti--,: wt4icvk is '3.ndicated by a
pointer • on a gauge or by a slight
Tics— i ig sound' and •moVement•_of•
the weight—the :heat should be
'lowered immediately, ' •
3: Foods with short cooking `times
will be over 400ked unless the tem-
perature • •is rapidly reduced. :Seine
\ cookers ' may be placed in a small
amount 'of cold''"water to' release-
, steam.'
4. Bgcaitsse some foods„,,.as..,Iess-tender
meats; 'soups -•and the- like , can 'uses?
longer cooking . times, instant pres-
sure reduction :is not necessary, A
better result • is 'obtained if such
foods aa Opel beans or, whole on-
ion$ are -allowed to drop pressure
by pooling normally,'as, 'a sudden
temperature change may cause
splitting of the skins.
5•. A few minutes • too long •in the
pressure pan can cook vegetab:es
into an unrecognizable mess.
6. The short cooking time also pre -
'serves food values by shortswing
the time: 'of • 'exposure to heat.
Vitamins . B-,1,, and G':•••.are not dr-
. stroyed in pressure -cooked foods
'•�•�to'the same extent as they are in
Longer cooking. •
Beef Stew With eloodles
- 2 lbs. beef,brisket
6 onions
1 cup :celery • '”
1 cup wide noodles
Salt and, pepper.
Cut beef into serving pieces, dredge',
with' • flour and . brown in a greased
frying pan. Put in the pressure
saucepan.. and add a cup of water.
Adjust •/id . of cooker anti When pres-
sure is ' 15 pounds, ,time the cooking
15 minutes. Release pressure accord-
ing •to directions. Add onions, cel-
ery, noodles and salt. ;Again wait for
the pressure to indicate 15_ Pounds
•
tninittes,
Baked Beams
p ,. navy beans ; Y
Leah} eon gait :•'sw
2 tab ep. rids taelasses• :�
6 fable p as o f /brown 1 pis!., s o dt?gar
'/ pound Pork `
4 cups water., . .
Wash -.beeps, •a410beans-'for'"'t'wo
Niers In 'enough water to 'cover. Put
all ingredients into pressure sayce-
pan and. inix. When pressure gauge
is" 15 pounds, cook 44) minutes. ' „
oaten Br w Bread
•
1 •cup pornmeal
1 cup white flour.
1 teaspoon • soda
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 cup whole wheat flour
1/ cup brown sugar
% cup molasses
2 cups buttermilk
1% cups•-•raisi'hs-
Sift together cornmeal, white. flour,
salt, soda and baking powder; " add
whole wheat flour without siftin; add
sugar, molasses, .buttermilk and rais-
ins .and beat .thproughly ; Pour into
four -tin cans, filling each.. one-half
full: ' Place . in pressure- saucepan ' and
adjust lid. When pressure...is' Inc*:
In•
cated as 1, of
'S,,pounde,,�turn electric, ale-
ment to low' and process 45 minutes,
Fig ' Bread Pudding •
2 cups dry bread crumbs
1...cup milk
,2/3 cup-sugara..
'3 tablespoons melted butter
1 cup cut 'figs
, '2 eggs (beaten)
Salt
% cup ?hopped -nuts.
Add' bread crumbs' "to hot milk a
set aside to 'cool. When cool, add
other ingredients and pour into greas-
ed,
ree
ed ..pan. 'Process. in pressure cook
after indicator records 15'pounds .f
25 ' minutes:
' The Question Box '
_ Mrs. J. K. ' .asks, , "What pressu
do you use for' green pea 'soup a
how much -time is required for coo
ing ,, .'
Answer: If , the dried pees . a
quick Booking, it is 4ot._necessafp..
soak them;` the .pressure should be
pounds and the. -cooking period about
60 minutes for six servings,' Dried..
• 5.
Le
US quote you on :_
Expositor
Printed
Forms'
AND.,
13uses5 .:
-tatiortety
mill help You.
RUBBERSTAMPS
• LEDGER SHEETS ,
• COUNTER CHECK BOOKS
• LETTERHEADS
• ENVELOPES
• . SHIPPING TAGS
• STATEMENTS
• , BILL HEADS ..Y
• BILL AND CHARGE FOR1VIS
•; INVOICES
.M- RECEIPTS
• BUSI ES ,AND FACTORY FORMS
• , COPY PAPER
'• :BLOTTERS'
rA
Phone 4i Replenish Your Supplies ,:lilies Now.
ublishe1 S'
Stabighed 1860
pa. sure,
�tete'ii
ce df ifir
�I+ Rr .
33$0,000 itP
ay for
peas,; h
in 35 ins
stewed t
be woke
• Mrs..:..
•er• can b
soft food
steam Pu
Anne •
her c/o
Your
problems'
re,�lfesa�
R
(By V.
This i
Year's"' B
pie -mak
resolutio
who mak
dour hes
resolutio
years ag
ally hear
Mg so'
war took
So no
can •find
themselv
and good res
all members
s already s
cooker who mak
or Now l'll
who: mak.
Mr. Av
re oh .boy, `
and have to t
k- lutions.'
`for him
re
pant=
to times ref
15 Catching
ut moments.
morning
dead-•sh
"Don't
drinking?
moans, a
head.
cut out s
hereplie
-like ,the
that I'm'
stovepipe
Ifa m
man in
almost.
mother -in
team the
they don'
such. thin
I've kn
been tar
walk to
bring 'ino
en Sunda
floors ev
known h
tiny btu
Will get
and quit,.
All of
of advice
and,..that
resolution
into anyt
motto:
leisure. '
And no
- tlb wish
ies, bless
Euro
• A "first
British an
recently
'Russell, A
tarso Mus
has rete
years , of
Army. Dr
,, , museums
• public; th
age or
"damage h
tisif Muse
'Museum,'
Museum;
has'been
sonnet. I
these fust
habilitated
ani ni
Vie public,
4o• normal
from enc
was no a
aims, but
serious pr.
.ly open, a
etim • d'His
aeontolegy
the Marie*
was closed
open, add
French an
are eager
to renew i
' Gentian to
!'ekenberg
-there-..tom.,,
SerleibilY
the Berlin..
, pletety dos
rA
9
�
1 *fir Money 84014
nq
Ger , 4f CII, .O r re•�nss'
4iwml .,NA,. q. tt,Sti'itcfbt
dee. u veeolE cr
y� t� qua ,nti-, ted,;l►g4f
9 4. PIH' nl G seer'
or � p r4. awl, an�
$Yrb . p of ter A k ici
P. A):R4, I ISX(3. t tOtd :
:. ..
ich
xtutete
d
Aian
ve,
e
ns.
r
ns-`
o—whes
inch
w
es—See
olutions
erase
r
by
e
grown-up.
ked
cry
usbands
dgeoned
up
Resolve
'Si1
as
um,
elfin
t
Edinburgh
,
my
oblem.
nd
r2ternatiettal
�
�
F •7A
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K
;.
...r
7■■� e
I � lD v h
1.. ..
. , , ,.
. P -- ■■ w. .� � � r wi�"�'9z�;
- a Y� M �Y�I i , r. f"�
.J :
` ,,. •
- ,
rimer e
k8 IY
. W} ,. n , breY Y (for i !tor) I?'%
poi i'St€+ppet out as:` 4. act m mb0r
e
#, .8o lou ,Briilna thi6 season, ill wad
ng f- . # (i, ...... h" pages
'u r hi a hf � o &ter in t
. 'f st a Y that ruse. stand for
keys.
.1 .;. g time, -.----4.• .� ..
.f ��
oday,. pit, can bonestlY be refer-
re to as the `" and old•luau" of the.
p dints,, for .he has': all the' ereden-
tials •, supporting such a claim. Be-
sides eaabarlung 'on 'his -nineteenth
season in' 'the National Hockey
League` this year, which is a record' in
itself, Clapter ,. is now .iii' his' 40th.
..
•
ea:•
`
For the average hockey 'player;
two score span would 'find Lim with
His pipe and ,slippers beside the: fire-
-side and cullfi• deed's of b e' one
.ng... .. ,.9 g. ,.
days, But C1diiPer•' is the eyceptionM
Where have- been few men in. the Na-tremely
tionai circuit who have. been hanging'
'around at 40. The • only other player
the record books show stili active at.
that age was the noted Ivan. "Ching".
Johnston, the ,Winnipeg . power boy
'who. starred for years on the defence
with `'New;•••York llangera and later
with. ther•Amerks.
„r,.
r .
, But "Chang'a” 12 -year stand in the'
big , time was nothing compared to
Clapper,,, .Only Reginald "Hoo1.eY"
Smth • cemes •.close * .ip,., the, years of
service . among the world's best ice'
performers. The-.Hoeler was. active
for seventeen 'seasons, •• w•hfl'e' Aures
"•
Joliet, of Canadian • fame, was 'under,
the "big top" for.16 ,gears•
However, all . these 'deeds look
small' by comparison with the Clap
,,
Per clippings: .The pompadour guy
has beep .brilliant in his career, His
`general performance over the 'stretch
has left`•''little .to desired. • Off the
ic• e •-he .5 .. • •
s .a able, straight -to -the-,
minute •, businessman,,. who makes no
`'bones a.bout•,hockey`;being hia'.car-ser,
, .Naturally, the wheel of time is
:catching up with 'Dit " Hell be the
first to admit -it.But .even now,
Clapper can , be rated . with the ;first
ten • defencemen in the• N . H ..L. .
"Dit"-ea'lls this semester • his last
yea•r as a -player. • He ,said he plans'
to finish out this .campaign, if pos..eaters
Bible; mainly. to .fill a'•gaps ""u`ntil•.some,•
one else ,comes along„" The tall sol-
dier•.like star' is now; coach'of the.'Bos-
tall Bruins and is well established in
the Rossian inner sanctum,
Most observers'. feel that --Clapper
. will eventually step .Into ,Manager Art
Ross"•'boots, a job be • well deserves,
A product of that hotbed of hockey
talent, Newmarket, Ont., , Clapper
turned to the monied ranitk with Bos-
t,pn in 19'2'7: He has -"been with that
sauce. club ever since, but not .al
ways, as' a defenceman
�
'
�
.Btckaclie
. are isiling to
. KCidap xFills-,
peen t . cawte
, , . contain'esse
... contain n•e><seutl?il
diems wider,.;
...... an k hal - 46*
Get Bed s_Iirrdneyr�irdi4to
•
ak
l ,, � ,
Y be auc`lodne t
Ater ex .a}Sidi and tioisoti-
;tam the;; sy4ew.,,;, 's,
helps relieve "thus: ed�
of backache she
a e rerkt :• '?t, ...
ud » aurk u ,
act,ifiree4ly on `,
_�n
-d st
lay„ ""tis
r •^•
,,, :, _ ..
.; .:
$.o
:ia , ' ' `
r„ .a; , .. ' M1 .;
o fixe, ?•-�
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:i :. A':;...4' �.; .;
:., ,
}$ : xR�'>
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• '
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$:z
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w ,
ar :,
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,� h.t, . .
�:
•`
'I
of
10.
of
of
`
•
of -injury
if
to
its
,'
it
of
by
to
if
a•
of
a
the
-experiments
kiwi_,
that
the
:next
peoted
ra
:.house
._• ;.... . ,•
,
have been soaked, cools`
.,
,.'.
T. Suggests that•. applesauce,
41110464,„ a • inach, 'should not
p
in a pressure saucepan:
B. says : - „A pres,t)ttre. epOk'•
e used with ince i. n
t Pa a•-•
s such as Hasten bread ' or
ddin s,
g
invites +you to write to
Tho Huron Expositor. . ,,Send
au tioihs ;o hom m kin
and watch •this column' .for�
,,•
.•
r
try
later
Kelley,
the
In
Mr..
ton
the
;•Agriculture
ly
work
'''
forts:.
themselves
said
we
He
Ontario
into.
.facilities
tion
totma,tfon
in
- _
closer
up
reduce
'dusts
farmers.
+,.
:
Smit
ships
:lay
the
-share
during
Was
a'. There
and
humble.
•sweeping,
a
a restricted'
. ,.
,
spreader diaea e;" Exte.. . leets'
were made, but the. -results, wer 'kept
. e' '
secret at the time because of **mob-
,
tar y value Of an ' effective ra...
haen-
Dr. Richter -has • ttstry re o i8$-
results ,to 'the Anrefican Medical As-
sociation.. The lists g, he found, lies.
a somewhat less striking effect on ot#t
"•
er species of rats. • :No poisonous of
f Bets on human •beings Lave Veen-
found_ and - m-gdt persona•, would be
Protected, in -.any event by the�ex-
disagreeable taste.. It, is
pRildl oisonous 'to do but ft was
yl? dogs.
found that' 'these aulmats seldom are
able to '•swallow enough to make them
'se seriously •ill,
Mara than '1,300, B 1
a t urke city
blocks were . Heated' wf'th t'he poison
over a period of lIl months,' Dr. 'Rich -
"`' ter reports, with . approximately a 90
per 'cent • kii1 'of • rat$,, based on • the
estimated rat population,"and carried
out, by about X,500 citizen volunteers -
No case yet has Keen reported of
to the ,human being_
"Procedures have been 'developed?'
Dr, Richter Says, "by which i'n's air em' -
e1,gency the rate popuIatfon of a city
would he I brought under control in a
very'., short' time." ' '
-The It son.; Works, he reports,
through its action' on the , lungs' of
the animals.' `'
r-, r- •. :, ._,,,
• •
s
er solut ons
!'
, V. 1 :,,. in 'Gildniripeg Free
Dress)•
a the- time' of. year—New
I mean—when many' pea-
. what• are known' as good
Arid most- of the people:
.thein are 'men- You sel-
of .a woman making .good
There was a time—some
you would •occasion-
a, plump' gal swear off eat-
:sweet 'stuff. But. the'
•care poi that situation.
the women—because they..
nothing at all wrong. with
that • the making •of
. is done entirely by
of the masculine sex.. "I ve
aid .that°'most of the people
e good resolutions are men.
add ,that .most of the men
6 ,them are,, married,
Married Man (and, tidy
- 'he. ever average.... doesn't
kink. up,any New Year -resp
He finds than all thunk .up
• his Sweetie Pie,, his Com;
long Life's Highway, some-
erredSto as his Bitter --Half,.
' fifer in , one, of his weaker
-When he wakes up in the
wishing he were comfortably
puts on the pressure.,
you think yen. should cut out
" she asks.' :'"Yes," • he
s ; he holds, r his throbbing
Don't you think you• should
nokikiga?" she suggets. "Yes:'
;, through a..mouth-that feels
inside ' oele stovepipe ' (Not
sure of what the insid'e'>of
feels like):
an has more than One wo-
his household—a couple of
daugblt.ers, or
-law, around—they form
Vs impossible •'tb be yt""nd
confine their resolutions to
gs as liquor -and nicotine.
own husbands „wtio have
into resolving they will
work three times a week;
puma's breakfast to her bed
y mornings; 'and polish the
Saturday afternoon, I'vethe
who have been Men-
into resolving they
earlier, eat more spinach
reading in bed.
which leads ui?- fip,;my• piecewhieli
for you.. married geezers
is: When it' comes to kood
s — don't let 'em' talk 'you'
king. There should be a
in haste; repent at
•
w --all kidding. aside—I wantthe--err
readers, including the lad
em,• a nappy New Year.to
Decentralization'•of Ontario Indus-
was urged by Ontario's new' min•
'of health „Hon. Russell
at .the annual, convention
Ontario Federation of -Agriculture
Toronto on "Thursday, ,January
Kelley .is the head of a Hamil-
'adver•tismng agency, secretary
Wentworth County Federation
and has;, been, particular-
active in Red Cross blood donor
'during the war. ' , • :
; ; , '''•' -...•:.:
Questioning. the wisdom of the
of Ontario's big, cities to musks•
still,' bigger, Mr- Kelley
that "we *outs.'be 'better off
were building up -.the small towns.''
said that in wou&#.e small fp the
government that Men be•sen't
Ontario's towels to . surveytheir
in shipping, housing; educe-
and: labor,' and to make this `in•
available to industry. Tak-
Ont rio' ••••suede fa
g a s tr l population
to'the farms,' through. building
the towns, Mr: Kelley, said,• would
farm products distribution
and increase cash returns
�►
$ • .ge•
ed• ' ieeta'h
-�Q
,.,..ac ies a SeYen Ly
•
Y�@s 'A► Hciu
''""'
Many animals owe their existence'
to their fleetness of - foot. Grass -eat-
'ins creatures must flee fropat, their
carnivorous enemies, ,and"the' .flesh=
often 'imuatr run down their
'Prey'
The speediest .' mammal .,iii • , the
cheetah.' .'It has- been known to' run
at> a rate of- 70 miles an.•'hour for'
shirt distance$, This strange, long-.
limbed' Cat commonly overtakes the
'swift black- 'buck, one 'of the fastest
of, the antelope _.tribe, ' even' with
handicaps' 'of,. as much . as -'200 yards..
The ether-„ large- cats—leopard, lion
and tiger -are alp' fast-sinihters,' but*
'thgy* cannot sustain the pace for long,
After the cheetah,the larger ,.:$az-.
: Iles' • re runners=u ,, Dr. ;Roy Chafe
man "Andrews once chased a herd of
Mongolian "goitered, gazelles in front
of his car while the,'speedometer reg-
fstered 60 miles per hour. The Am -
erican •prong buck is almost or quite
as•.f'ast as the ga� l,�ies, as clocked by
_ automobile speedo&eters. Even in a
race 'of 27 miles, prong. bucks have
been reported to -averse a speed:' of
g
36 miles an' hour. ' Deer are not so
speedy; they
y go' through. the . woods -
at about 30 .miles •an hour but can -
not keepup long.
this for
Race -horses rarely run the mile
much -
feeder
faster than $speed of 3'6 miles
Per' hour, but. Man (1' War once ran
at 43 miles per hour • for a quarter
mile..: ••
The cheetah and antelope's,.that ea
teed the horse in speed :do not weigh
,
nearly `so much,aud it.is only. fair
to, take the ,size of the •racer into ae- '
'-
Count It Is =Ore extraordinary that
a horse and rider' Can go .a mile -in.
"a out..1
l► r$ ..:lninntea than that ,a 100-
•pound . gazelle car`"i ., ruu a mile in a
minute; , because the 'energy required
Is much greater.
The, fas•
test greyhound cannot quite
k8ep up with the beet horse; hi spin,
of th• e• great advantage of l;g'ht
weight. Their record rate is 36 ,mileb -
per hour. This is as good a9 or:bet-
bet-
ter than the speed of any.of the wild
dogs, Probably the fastest of these
isrunsthe African muting dog, which
p -
down the lwfft'aihave es of the
veldt, Coyotes Whir.b.have a re puta-
tion for speed, ilex p 'reach a tate
faster-than"30 miles per hour.
It Is astonishing to see how riled-
ly some large, clumsy-lookingThe animal
can travel. A rhinoceros has beim .
reported to chase' an sante-Mobile at
36 mile
" s.• per'hour •down a ,slight in-
cline; and the wart=ho • thou •h ehoit
g! g •
legged and heavy -bodied, is able to' .
run at 30 miles per •hour. The ,Afri-
can elephant has been timed with a
stop watch at `24 -•smiles -per ,hour for
120 yards, and it weighs four tons or
more: l The. gangling giraffe gallops
at some 32 ,iinile• per $ojir, and a
charging bison has•'beeju'reported to
go
go at the same speed.—•Prom Natural
Firstory Magazine..
•_
•
s an
Becagse it was
and .because
rather' in the-
Royal Canadian
of. the spectacular
the war.....News
fitful and generally'
was none of
power. of ' the
jobs of convoying.
rile Navy's sphere
to • the North
-
-
I3evils
• - •
built up of small
its type. of. service
long dull routine;
Navy missed.
• headlines
of its activities
.repetitive,
the ,qurek thrust
sea ,battle ' in the'
and mine
of activity was
Atlantic and
pehfo i. a , •
bitter water -be-'
Londonderry,'
news value with
place in the
-�
-- the hot
of the Tribals
D -Day the
M'.T,B. flotillas
Straits, B.they,
most par•t_it was
of a shep-243
30 north from
Farewell .and
reaches . off the
the shallows
landmarks
and Air" Force
of the warpp
a difficult war
would;..iive only
spray whipping
in great gales;
clutching the
•and pitch' of: thg
wet heat of
zest of a shore
Newfie,
and., natter-
id sailing , the
'for- the
Innocence of;the
salty tackiness
had to be sea-
the beat : of
r,.•
cold. All
and' blopd of . the
as it took
with the
because It
story, it has--•
pages of Saints,
Seameni, It is
as Mr. Pugs-
to admit. They-
and farm
meetr'anice, Who
and are note
....
and _good' humor-
- .suer silica,, It
g ob
deck. To re
in some 20
half that number
establishments.
-and. hat-
is 'a very lie=,
mea vtj'ho w`ei`e
.ytiUli th
ne
on the orator, �y
et small ships
p',.„..,,,..„2Fr;ttlrer°�
rs,.a.-drat 0l~asS
-_•
is also a great
g
deVitrs -aii&::aril*
it... .
y
notable as was its
this long stretch of
'iwee'n Halifax and
p'
rould not com ete`in
, the vast projects taking
air and on the land:
There were exceptions
�a eating gun battles
n Bay of Biscay,
se't..
sss' of the small
the Dover
v":e feiv. For the
"� monotony and boredom
;oh north • •of
�;..>:r 11 .t teras to Capse
f the deep open
Avalon Peninsula to
the YIestetn t4 roaches,
•PP
Since it lacks the
which both the Army
can trace the development
they fought, if is
7ub on' paper. Tt
one could catch the
off the black -waters
cit skin clad'°figures,
lifelines in the •roll
w-aves; the crushed
mess deck - and • the
leave in Derryor
.-.... ,....
It 'needed••.the "beefing
fag," the deep pride
ships, the ---Casual contempt
shore pob, the cocky
new hand and the
the veteran. There
sand
'Cknesa and Tiredness
the wind and the, searing
this was the flesh
story.
It had to ' be recorded
place , because it vanished
last••con'voy, Fortunately,
is of its essence . a• great
been. It lies in the
and Ordinary
book ivI#L 90;000 authors
ley would be the first
are •all there, the clerks
boys, bus drivers.ardd
turned' sailor for a spell
coming iforioe.
. e+-
It is sentimental
full.: f, ri es -and
P g p
is, in fact, the dower
cord it, Pugsley sailed
ships and served in
of the Navy's. Shore,
There -is little df. Campaigns
ties a• bout it, • But It
m'an' ace unt of. the
S►
the. Navy,. .They were
sprang tit. erianhood
The whale array
haxze.:_their...t}laee: it
. „ .• ' .
tribute:to thets tai
itlary' seamen' i+ O *ere,.
,•' Orginally he was. a six•foot-two•
195 -pound right. winger. In his first
two seasons, Clapper wasn't: • any
whizz. However, he blossomed in the
season of 192930 With that famed
"Dynamite" trio of •Clapper; Cooney.
Weiland and Dutch :Gainer. From
there on, Dit" Was one of the moat
consistent. point -Makers la" th'e_.league.
His lifetime average attests to his
ability. He has scored 23.Q. -goals and
'assists •for; a total of 473 pointe,
is considerable when- you take
fi to account he has been a .defence
utau, far' the. past eight years,
"Dit" -is among those who. feels that
hockey is due for a radical uplift. He'
predicts great things for 'the future,
but `adds be was glad he came tip in
he did.. Clapper is one of
those players who lived frons the •past
'the present 'in hocke )''..,He
Y l}as
•played at the, time of such 'famed' fig-
•.
ures as the late Howie blot-enz, the
Bouchers and Cooks, Shorenird Babe
Siebert; and today, with modern aces
like Apps, Richard, Schiuidt, Cowley
ad the ,rest.
y,
Cla(iper doesn't lake sides in the
argument of hockey• today and that
of 15 years ago. He maintains" that
any- name, no 'matter what era, is as
you make .it yourself. AP-
patently that has been a great axiom
f°r . Dit has always purveyed the best'
at the same time • ha s been able
to pace himself for•'a long time. .
sen• useums,>the
�(' �,y, '(�•
kn� . +aim ' •► ar
-hand report , on . various,
d Continental museums was
irought ' back. by Dr, L. -.S,•
s'sistant Director, Royal Q.
sum
ted toofh Palaeontology, who
post after three
service with the Canadian
Russell found most of.'the
in London' closed to the
sir collections Were in stoic
disarranged, Minor ' bomb
been suffered by the B'ri-
+
the Victoria and Albert
the. Natural-' History
Geological 1Vfuseum
occupied -by military per•
wills be some time before
w
itutions can be fully re -Devils
- The Royal Scottish Mus-
is' partly open to
and. is' iii'4itideess of return
It suffered no damage,
dation'.. In Paris there
Ctttal destruction. Of mus-
lack of heating has been a
The Louvre is part-
all branches of the Mits.-
toric naturelle except Pal-
are accessible: In Brussels
Royale d'Historie naturelle
last wintery 'but it is now
material is being replaced.
C Belgium -museum officials
to resume their wort; "sad'
Contacts. Many.
riseums, suek as the Sen•g
Museum at r`ankfnrt x:161.,
unioh Mu e#ie*r , ha e. it
e' r seri
:enraged Muse mb baa been com-
troyed.
New -at PPXson
a
"
-" a Effective
Probably the most a ectifve rat poi-
son, yet •known has, been discovered'
at .loons Hopkins University,
a. A dru•
g,
g: 'known• as alpha -naphthyl
thlonrea is • extremely hitter when
+ ..
placed •on the tongues of about 99.
percent of all human beings, A few
Years ago it Was found that to a few
the did g 'was tasteless -L -and. that this
tastelessness was he'redi£a , Thus
'subita;nce, became Important in
-in human genetics and
was tested on thoutands of subjects.
Dr. Curt P..Richter- of 'Solids Bop-
attempted •the same experiment
with rats. 'Tb his sur rise h'e found
p
the first six. animals „on,,, whom
test wee,, made all were dead the
Morning. St: irad, not been sirs-
Oat .the substance now knower.
• q ' 'Virulent -01---° -..1
mesas• : vents s .
it�tle
, p : ;,, uta :shtlWed.-that " :
i(�
_.. ":.;.'*7-7-7",-, po sotl,1 r the NbrwgY•a-'
•t, leas moscomtnob• of America
•riats. aird tkre...greaitesi !rest and :
On' a recent Buticlay ' morni'ng ,dui:
ins a' musical lbroadca;it ' •a little lad
stood before `• the radio raptuousf3i,` °,
conducting some Handel' rnifaie, The .
nein nuiniiex ttas Airussy ''Little
is avid stood". rtvftlt 'baton 'poieed wait.
iri M • ,
g ' the db'tvn be air After a lits
he�ltatio>Y he turned arid, said :l
._..• .
end , fs that nrurlib?" 41 ir. b'eirig
dtlsivered, he aditeds . •Vitelt;'dr th> rl
,. ,, ,.