The Brussels Post, 1960-03-31, Page 6',TABLE TAL
60,u,Anaztew5
•
SHE CARES — Care of pets is part of the Camp Fire Girls' pro-
gram. This year's slogan -is: "She Cores — Do You?"
Pay Television
In 'Toronto
saguouras .clanecd through
the heads of pay-TV advocates
last week—danced to the cheer-
ful clunk-clink of :silver. The
coins were pouring into. slots in
more than 1;000 homes in a mid,
' die-class suburb of Toronto call-
ed Etobicoke toronounced re-
TOH-bih.ko),
The COWS summoned up such
recently released movies as "The
Mating Game" (Debbie Reyn-
olds,. Glenn Ford) and "The Al
Capone Story" (Rod. Steiger),
There wasn't a commercial in
sight. It was just like going to
a local movie house, without
having to park the car Or un-
earth a baby-sitter. What was
more, each film cost just $1, and,
of course, the whole tensile
could watch,
This was Telemeter, the fourth
venture into fee-TV and the first
that looked as though it might
succeed. "The degree of reac-
tion so far is .beyond anything
Human Alarm. Clock
Finally Retires
When a still active North of
England eighty-four-year-old an-
nounced his retirement recently
it was revealed that for sixty
years—believed to be a record—
'he had earned fees as a "human
alarm clock." He was a khocker-
uP.
Carrying a long stick, to the
top of which thin wires were at-
tached, this man tapped in the
early morning on the bedroom
windows of people who had ask-
ed him to wake them so that
they could get to their factory
jobs punctually.
The knocker-up himself was
always punctual. With the aid
of an alarm clock, he was -usu-
ally up at 3.30 a.m. He began
tapping at his "clients' " win-
dows at about 4.30 a.m. And it's
his proud boast that he never
broke a window, however heavy
a sleeper proved to be. Nor did
he ever disturb neighbours who
didn't want to rise early.
What will this knocker-up do
during his retirement? "Lie in
bed every morning until 6 a.m.
at least," he says with a grin.
"On Sundays I may get up as
late as seven!"
Pea-Shooter Brigade
Knocking-up is a dying occu-
pation in Britain nowadays, but
there are still several ,hundred
men and women who follow it.
A Lancashire woman of eighty
acted as knocker-up for work-
people of the district for twenty-
two years, 'Even on Sundays she
woke as usual at 4 a.m. and, not
having to go her rounds, went
for a walk instead!
Besides her knocking-up, she
did all her own work, keeping
her little house spotless. She
recalled many hard winters when
rain and snow fell so heavily
that she sometimes had to return
home two or three times to
, change her clothes and get a hot
drink. Yet she was always
cheerful,
Years ago, a Limehouse, Lon-
don, family went through, the
streets in the early morning .with
pea-shooters, firing peas which
rattled "on the window-panes to
wake dock workers.
ISSUE 14 — 1960
Started Too Early—
Channel Seat Him
So many people nowadays save,
elm boat or air fare between
England and France by crossing
under their own power that
Channel swimming is no longer
eegerded as an outstanding feat
Of endurance,
I suppose the reason is that
the modern swimmer is better
trained and therefore more ef-
ficient than the old-timers.
Channel swimming is not exact,
ly easy, but it has become quite
a commonplace •affair during the
August and September "season."
Moreover, average times for
the crossing have been brought
down to roughly normal working
hours, The swimmer who stays
in the water for twenty-two
hours or more is regarded as a
slowcoach rather than the posses-
sor of terrific stamina and will-
power.
So, for a change, I suggest we
salute one of the gallant failures
of the Channel swim, T. W. Bur-
gess. Strictly speaking, Burgess
was anything but a Channel
failure, for he did succeed in
making the crossing, in Septem-
ber, 1911. It was his sixteenth at-
tempt.
This story, however, is of one
of his failures, or rather a week
of failures. For this extraordin-
ary powerful swimmer covered
roughly 110 miles in two attempt-
ed, crossings in the space of three
days in August, 1908, when he
was already forty-two years old.
Each time wheather conditions
were against him, yet each time
he got close to the shore. All
told he was in the water nearly
forty-three hours.
What is even more amazing
for one who was so determined
to swim the Channel, he scorn-
ed the France to England route,
which was already recognized as
being the easier way, and deter-
mined 'that if he was going to
make the crossing, he would do
it from the English side.
He had already made ten at-
tempts before our story opens.
Yet he was in such a hurry to
get to grips with his "old enemy"
that he declared afterwards he
had started off half an hour too
soon,
He left the Kent coast at 9.30
a.m. and climbed out of the
water on to his accompanying
tug at 5.30 the next morning,
when only half a mile from the
'rench shore. For the twenty
hours that he was in the water
he was contending with a strong
north-westerly wind. He swam
or drifted over fifty miles.
Also, he had been carried six
miles off his course by a strong
cross-current. He explained that
had he started thirty minutes
later he would have missed that
cross-current and instead would
have been carried along by a fol-
lowing tide. "Had that happened
I would have hit the French
coast at Cap Gris Nez about
midnight," he declared.
That half-hour miscalculation
was vital, for by the time Bur-
gess had realized his mistake
he was already in the grip of
the current. Strong swimmer
though he was he could not force
his way through it, writes Jef-
frey Wyndham in "Tit-Bits,"
At this distance of time, it
seems that the sensible thing
would have been to turn and
swim back towards England as
soon as he found he was being
ARS GRATIA ARTIS This
messy lassy is Leslie Crane,
model' who Mingled with live
Q dead fish, n motorcycle:,
.106 pounds of popcorn and
gallons of chocolate syrup ih
New York, Suttee Salvador
obit mixed the Mete up in a
and OSeated d canvas .over
if during: a Vieleblespirigs. The
:results he eddied. .'"Chnos arid
• trentioet
carried off his course until he
got clear of the current. Thee he
should have waited for the fox-.
lowing tide,
But Burgess's dotted spirit
was not the type to consider
turning back,_ even as a tactical
manoeuvre, He pressed on, using
up his energy but making little
or no progress,
He reekoned that at the tin.w.;
he gave up he ;had strength left
to continue the fight for aue
other two lnses. But his ad-
visors told him that it would
be six hours before the adverse
current abated sufficiently for
him to be able to close the gap
between himself and land. Even
Tom Burgess's Yorkshire stub-
bornness saw no point in con-
tinuing a struggle that he now
realized he could not win,
But he was not one to accept
defeat * lying down, Six hours
later when, had he possessed
superhuman powers, he would
have been treading ashore on
the French coast, he had return-
ed to England and was out in
Dover Bay teaching a young lad
to swim! Then, to prove that he
was not really tired, he walked
up the steep hill to Dover Castle!
Three days later Burgess's
mother and sister, who were
staying nearby, took a boat out
in the Channel. The sea was any-
thing but calm, and they had
not been out long when waves
began breaking over the bows
of theircraft. Wisely, they re-
turned to harbour, and were
amazed to hear newsboys call-
ing out: "Burgess off on new
Channel swim."
It was true. Defying the wea-
ther Burgess's indomitable spirit
had driven him into the water
again. He was heading for
France. Once more, as we now
know, he was doomed to failure
— but what a gallant failure it
was.
This time he had made more
careful calculations as to the
hour at which to start, and for
a long time it seemed that he
had overcome the troubles that
had beset him on his previous at-
tempts.
He had also decided on a new
plan for this attack on the
Channel. As soon as he saw
Calais lightship he was to swim
straight for it, and then go in
towards the shore. He saw the
lightship all right, and made for
it, according to the plan.
It was at this precise moment
that the weather turned against
him. The wind changed, the sea
became even more choppy, and
once again he was forced off his
course.
Twenty hours had passed since
he last touched solid ground.
Still he struggled, grimly on.
Again, we now know that his
stubbornness was a mayor cause
of his failure this time. He had
set a course, and he was deter-
mined to stick it out, but at what
cost of strength and achievement
we cannot know,
He had been going for nearly
twenty-three hours when there
came another dramatic develop-
ment. So strong was the wind
and tide that not even his ac-
companying tug could keep to
its course, Though it had been
sheltering him from the worst
of the gale, the skipper now ran
the terrible risk of being blown
into him and running him down,
Even Burgess agreed that it
would be madness to continue in
these circumstances. Land was
still two miles off, and there was
no telling how much longer the
gale would last. Reluctantly, he
agreed to concede victory to the
Channel once more. Despite his
long ordeal, he was able to
strike a defiant gesture by climb-
ing aboard the tug unaided.
He reckoned he had covered
sixty miles, and a total of 110
in the three days. In that time,
he had made roughly seventy
thousand arm and leg move-
ments, and his only physical re-
action was slight stiffness in' the
muscles of his left calf.
Eventually he did achieve his
ambition. He swam from Dover
to Grin Nez in September, 1911,
when forty-five years of Age.
The successful crossing took
him over twenty-two hours,
World's Most
Precious Button'
The struggling Pacific mother-
of-pearl industry received valu-
able aid recently—from a Parts
fashion house.
In one of his collections, fa-
mous designer Pierre Balinain
introduced the South Seas shell
into several Of his creations, of
which the critics wrote: "The
colours, line, fabrics and acces-
sories were inspired by the perle
occane,"
One of his suits wr.s reported
to have been decorated by the
"most precious button in all the
world." It was crf gold-lip
set with one of Australia's first
cultured pearls.
"This was just the boost that
we needed," said the spokesman
for a leading Australian shell
exporter. "Fashion houses all
over the world are likely to fol-
low M. Balmeires lead---v rid that
will brine prosperity bark to our
divers."'
Behind. The Sceles
In.110.11ywpod..
Ile wept frequently — some-
times from "paralyzing . depres-
sion and .emotional instability
when be had .an appointment
to see someone he regarded as.
"big", sometimes as .a means of
getting his Way. He often threw
himself into "seizures" toward
this same end, For eight years he
was the highest salaried man in
the nation, .and almost certainly
the most powerful in Hollywood.
He was a master of persuasion;
on one occasion he agreed. with
an actor who complained that
he was underpaid. — but told
him the arrangement was only •
just, because there were so
many overpaid executives that
someone had to be underpaid to
keep the studio from bankruptcy,
That was the late Louis B,
Mayer, head of M-G-M for almost
30 years, as .chorecled in a biog-
reehy "Hollywood Rajah" writ-
ten by New York Times movie
critic Bosley Crowther, and the
story is neither happy nor petty,
Savage, vindictive, sentimental,
enthusiastic, a n d ambitious;
Mayer quarreled with most of
his co-workers and with most of
his family as well. A stickler for
morality in his films and friends,
toward the end of his life he
became a notorious roue. : A
friend of the famous — Herbert
Hoover, Hearst, Henry Ford,
Cardinal Spellman — he, was
an occasional associate as well of
men with underworld connec-
tions.
Critic Crowther devotes most
of his space to internecine studio
warfare, and to the details of
ELVIS IS OUT — Singer 'Elvis
Presley waves his mustering-
out pay upon being separated
from the army at Ft. Dix, N.J.
Mayer's rise after he landed in
Hollywood in 1918. The person.;
al glimpses of him along the way
are fascinating — Mayer knock-
ing Charlie Chaplin into a potted
palm, punching Erich con. Stro-
helm in thenose, choking an
editor who had bored him with
a dull description of a scenario,
forcing Francis X. Bushman out
of films because the actor's valet
once innocently barred him from
the star's dressing room.
Mayer's death, Crowther makes
plain, gave rise to mixed feel-
ings. David 0. Selznick, one of
his former sons-in-law, "pro-
claimed that 'Louis B, Mayer was
the greatest single figure in the
history of motion-picture pro-
ductione" Danny Kaye declared:
"He was great!" On the other
hand, reports Crowther: "Sam-
uel Goldwyn, a rugged individ-
ual who never loved him, re-
marked tersely at the end: "The
reason so many people showed
up at his funeral was because
they wanted to make sure he
was dead'."
The last years of his life had
been bleak and discouraging —
he had been forced to resign
from the studio after losing a
power struggle with Dore
Schary, he had tried unsuccess-
fully to get back in, and his
personal life was more quarrel-
ridden than ever. In 1057. when
the millionaire Louis B, Mayer
was lying near death in a Holly-
wood hospital, he was visited by
a friend who tried to give him
news about Metro-Goldwyn-
Mayer, the studio to which he
had given his name and from
which he had finally been oust-
ed. "Don't let them worry you,"
he muttered," "Nothing matters,
nothing inetters,"
Considerably annoyed by the
persistent howling of a dog at his
home in Haifa, Israel, Leon
Shaticlinischky Made an houie
long recording of the animal's
noise.
Later, when the dog attempted
an encore, the man played the
recording back at full volume,
His reprisal was effective; the
howling animal has riot visited
the premises since.
DATE PUDDING
1 c. pitted dates cut
1 c. boiling water
c. sugar
3/4 c. brown sugar
1 egg
2 tbsps. butter
11/2 „c. flour sifted
% tsp, baking powder
1/2 tsp. salt
1 c. chopped walnuts
1 recipe brown sugar sauce
Combine dates and water.
Blend sugars, egg, butter. Sift
dry ingredients and add to sugar
mixture. Stir in nuts and cooled
date mixture. Pour into oblong
baking dish 11 by 7 by lee
inches. Top with following sauce:
1% o. brown sugar
1 tbsp, butter
1% a. bolting water
Combine brown sugar, butter
And boiling water.
Bake pudding at 375 degrees
for 40 minutes. Cut in squares,,
invert, on - plate. Serve warm
with whipped cream. Serves
nine. *
FRUIT PUDDING
3 cups fruit, canned, fresh
' or frozen
11 cups sifted all-purpose flour
54 tsp. salt
2 tbsps. baking powder
2 tbsps. sugar
14 cup butter
1 cup evaporated milk
Drain any juice from fruit and
save for sauce. Sift dry ingredi-
dients. Cut in butter. Mix in
milk. Knead on floured board 1/4
minute. Divide in half. Roll one
piece ee inch thick. Fit in bot-
tom of buttered 9 by 5 inch pan.
Spread with fruit. Roll remain-
ing half to fit on top of fruit,
Bake in a hot oven (400 degrees
F) 50 to 60 minutes.-Serve with
whipped cream or sauce made
from juice.
PEACH SUPREME
1 pkg. strawberry-flavored
gelatin
1 c. hot water
1/2 tsp, grated lemon rind
11/2 tbsps. lemon juice
c. peach juice and water
1 c. sweetened sliced fresh
peaches or 1 pkg. quick-
frozen sliced peaches, thaw-
ed and drained, or 1 c.
drained, canned sliced
peaches
Dissolve gelatin in hot water.
Add lemon rind, lemon juice,
and peach juice- and water. Chill
until slightly thickened. Fold in
peaches. Pour into 13/4 pint-mold.
Chill until firm. Unmold. Gar-
nish with whipped cream and
additional sliced peaches, Makes
4 or .5 servings.
CHERRY COBBLER
c. sugar
2 tbsps. cornstarch
21/2 c. (No. 2 can ) red pie
cherries
I.14 tsp. almond flavoring
1 c. pancake ready-mix
1/3 c. sugar
c. shortening
1 egg beaten
2 tbsps. milk
Blend together the sugar and
cornstarch. Mix with the cher-
ries and almond flavoring. Put
cherry mixture in six individual
casseroles or custard cups.
For the topping mix together
pancake ready-mix and sugar.
Cut in shortening until mixture
resembles coarse crumbs. Add
beaten egg and milk, mixing
lightly only until mixture is
dampened. (Add another table-
spoon of milk if mixture seems
too dry.) Roll out on lightly
floured board to about ee inch
thickness. Cut with tiny biscuit
cutter (or centre of doughnut
cutter) into thirty rounds. Ar-
range five of the rounds on cher-
ries in each casserole. Bake in
a hot oven (400 dgerees F.) 15
to 20 minutes. Serve warm or
cold with plain or whipped
cream. a
COCONUT CREAM
1 pkg, orange-flavored gelatin
1 c. hot canned pineapple juice
1 c. milk
c. whipping cream
c. flaked coconut
Dissolve gelatin in hot pine-
apple juice. Chill until silght-
ly thickened. Add milk and chill
again until slightly thickened:
Whip cream. ' Fold cream and
coconut into gelatin mixture,
Spoon into individual molds or
large mold. Chill until firm. Un-
mold. Garnish with canned pine-
'apple halves and fluffs of coco-
nut. Makes 8 servings.
*
BAKED BANANAS
4 firm bananas
11/2 tbsps. melted butter
salt
Cut off tips of both ends of
each banana. Remove a length-
wise section of the peel, about
one inch wide, extending 'from
end to end. Brush exposed' por-
tion of the pulp with butter
and sprinkle lightly with
salt. Place in baking dish
and bake in moderate oven for
20 ,minutes at 375 degrees or
until peels are dark and bananas
are 'tender and easily pierced
with a fork, Serve hot as a Vege-
table.
we anticipated," reported Teie,
meter president Lou Novios,.
thipackaged only two and A.
half weeks ago in 1,000 guinea-
pig homes, the system now hag
some 2,000 panting subscribers
on its waiting list. Originally„
the plan was to limit the trial
to 13,000 subscribers, but now
there is talk of expanding into
40,000 living rooms. The demand
was so greet that employes
iginally trained as coin box col-
lectors were being drafted to in
stall new units instead,
How did it an work? First,
the .operators of Telemeter in
EtObiCOIce-Famous Players Cana-
dian Corp„ a movie chain with
370 houses—a.rranged to tap lines
into some 93 miles of cable laid
by Canadian Bell, The tap lines
are now being strung into the
homes of subscribers (who pay
a $5, installation charge and then
25 cents to $1 for each show
they watch) and. hooked into
TV sets, A box about the size
of a table radio, affixed atop
the TV sot, contains a coin slot
(the hex - gives future credits if'
viewers overpay) and a dialing
gadget, The dialer splits the
local Channel 5—hitherto un-
used in the area—into three.
channels, On two 'of these chan-
nels—A and B—subscribers can
bring in movies which begin at
7 p,m, The third channel, C, is
a Rind of combination huckster-
entertainer: During the day, at
no cost, it announces the attrac-
tions for the evening, and inter-
laces this with music. Channel
C also is being used for public-
service programing—such things
as Canadian Red Cross reports
to the community and religious
shows. To vary the movie fare,
channels A and B also are beam-
ing out weekend children's
shows for 25 cents.
Telemeter is already hatching.
plans to expand its programing.
with full-length operas, full-
length ballets, and perhaps a
current Broadway show. One in-
triguing possibility: Pre-Broad-
way plays which might be fi-
nanced by viewers' coins during
their tryouts.
Sports projects also are a-
cooking. Right now, Telemeter
is showing some away-from-
home games of the Toronto
Maple Leafs hockey team. Base-
ball, football, and basketball
games may follow in season,
One secret—until now: There is
a chance the Ingemar Johans-
son-Floyd Patterson heavyweight
title fight in - June will bie
shown on Etobicoke TV.
Why Etobicoke? It was pick-
ed, say the Telemeter people,
because it is in an area where
the competition of commercial
TV is strong. Viewers in the
suburb can receive five chan-
nels—three from. Buffalo, N.Y.,
and one each from Toronto and
nearby Hamilton, Ont. If passe
TV works in Etobicoke, the
theory is, it can work anywhete.
It is too early to tell yet just
how much has been racked up.
toward paying the bills for the
$1.3 million installation. But,
even as with commercial TV,
the Etobicoke operation has al-
ready faced occasional com-
plaints. One came from a sub-
scriber who squawked: "I'm get-
ting my pay-TV picture for no-
thing." It seems he had sub-
scribed in order to control the
viewing of his kids, But with
the movies coming on free, he
couldn't keep them away from
the set. The Magic box, atop his
set was promptly fixed,
—From NEWSWEEK
PAY-AS-YOU-SEE — All eyes ate oh termite these days to tee-
how ef .seeently 'begun expeeihierit pay lefeeiaidie works out,
Sponsored by .6 ,..hiovie Telemeter peovidm three thoh,
heft, for ifs 2;600' '§olimtibett, Two service movies
ofid newt Of no cost, The third shows movies -currently playing
theettret. wtth, ,eceliiiiiiitalede 'Of ileterreptlette. Cost varies
from 50 cents fo• $t .,depetiditio--UOoti the hania.
viewer just deposits The Money :in the tela box eletethett to
.§ef.. The bog .uhtootiiblet- the, picture,
STATUE STAND-IN Goldie, a golden retriever; SeeliiS be
to.yingt . "Anything. .you. can d'o, 'edit do belie," 'Ouf for a
GOldie carne across this denied. statue 'deeded to solicit
funds for driihatile on a Letideeis • Engl'arid, eideWeilk.