Daily Times-Gazette, 22 Sep 1949, p. 7

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THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 22, 1949 THE DAILY TIMES-GAZETTE PAGE SEVEN {| on The Home. New England Chef Voices Scorn Of Tin Can Cooks and "Packagers" By DOROTHY ROE Chittenden, Vt. --(AP)-- The trouble with most women cooks is that they are lazy. 80 says chef Eddie Mansfield, a born-and-bred Yankee who believes canned foods and prepared mixes will be the ruination of North American cookery. ' Try to tell Eddie, for instance, that canned clam chowder (with tomatoes) is as good as the home- made variety, New England style, and you]l run smack dab into trouble. Or suggest to him that you can make Indian pudding from a packaged mix, and the ensuing storm will make the pots and pans rattle on their hooks. Further, he stoutly maintains that for soul-satisfying, stick-to- the-ribs goodness, there's nothing to compare with the traditional New England baked beans, clam chowder and boiled dinners that nourished the stout hearts and brawny arms of the Puritan fath- ers. For an authentic view of an ar- tist in the throes of creation, you should watch Eddie preparing his weekly pot of baked beans at the Mountaintop Club here, where world travellers have been known to return year after year from far- away places just to sample their rich delights. 'The little woman who rushes home from a bridge party and heats up a can of beans for the family din- ner might well blush when she learns how. real baked beans are prepared, New England style. Eddie starts on Thursday night to pre- pare the beans for Saturday din- ner, but if youre the impatient type you can do it overnight. brought down to family size, here is the recipe: : Soak one pound of pea beans overnight, first washing and pick- ing over thoroughly. Next morning drain, cover with fresh cold water, season with salt and pepper and simmer slowly until tender but not mushy. Cool and drain. Now prepare about two quarts of beet stock, add three tablespoons ketchup, the same amount of black molasses, one teaspoon dry mus- tard, one-third cup vingar, three- fourths cup brown sugar, salt and pepper to taste. Place a whole onion in the bottom of the bean pot, together with a quarter pound of salt pork scored. Add the beans and put in enough of the stock to cover. Bake, cov- ered, in a slow oven for eight to ten hours, adding more stock from ime to time as needed. Remove cover to brown for last two hours. For Neat Grooming I0--4; 4770 12, Scoop pockets on a scoop-news classic! Smart side-front fastening, rounded collar and cuffs. In spite of those huge pockets, this. frock is smooth over hips! Pattern 4770 comes in sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20; 30, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42. Size 16 takes 4% yds. 35-in. This pattern, easy to use, simple to sew, is tested for fit. Has com- plete illustrated instructions. Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS (25¢) in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern, Print SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS PATTERN Send your order to DAILY TIMES GAZETTE, Pattern Department, Oshawa. Skinny men, women gain5, 10,15 bs. Got Now Pop, Vim, Vigor Thats wari Bony lbs 8 out; ugly hollows Clam chowder, New England style, is pure ambrosia as Eddie makes jt: Dice and fry a quarter-pound of salt pork (rind removed) in a deep iron skillet or pot. Add one large onion, diced, a couple of diced stalks of celery and a small chopped green pepper. Fry all to- gether until onions are transpar- ent and yellow in color. Meanwhile dice and boil about three medium- sized potatoes. Add two cups chopped clams with broth to mixture in skillet (can- ned chopped clams are satisfactory for this) and dump in the potatoes and the water in which they cocked. Season with salt and cayenne pep- per and let simmer for about an hour, until flavors are well blended. When ready to serve, scald a quart or more of milk and pour into the chowder, thickening with a little white sauce if desired. If cream is used instead of milk no thickening is needed. Brides Stay on Job Bank Ends Dowries London, England.-- (CP) -- The young lady who works for the Old Lady of Threadneedle Street is go- ing to lose her dowry. In other words, the Bank of England has decided that its 3,600 single women empolyees will no longer receive a cash sum on mar- riage. The dowry was started in 1914, when it was still thought that a woman's place was in the home. Women with long service some- times received as much as £100 ($400). The ban on dowries follows a decision 'last March that women who marry may remain in the em- ployment of the bank, which for many years has been familiarly known as the Old Lady of Thread- reedle Street. Fashion Flashes NOT SO MANY big hats but, when they do appear, they are charming. Black velvet makes a hat with a wide, softly curved brim, with part of the crown and the brim embroidered elaborately in jet beads. * +b SHOW PIECE of a recent collec tion was a short-shirted evening dress, a mass of six-inch ruffles in rose pink nylon net, strewn with bouquets of matching pink satin roses. The bodice is of black satin, draped around the bosom and up over one shoulder with a cluster of roses. Over this a very full coat of black satin lined with pink. * +b MANY VERSIONS of the day- time dress in wool are already in the shops, with more arriving daily. Pepper and salt mixture tissue- weight woollen makes a useful dress. It has inverted fullness in deep folds over the skirt seams, and black velvet collar and cuffs on the bod- ice, Skirt has big, hip patch-pock- ets, flapped and extending to the back. * + SEASON AFTER SEASON the silk theatre suit goes its merry way. Black yarn-dyed slipper satin is used for a beauty cut on slim lines. Big tear-drop pockets at the front of the jacket are solidly encrusted with - jet beads and are fringed. * % $ THE GOLDEN TOUCH appears in many new accessories. A wide tailored belt of black or brown suede is dotted all over in gold leaf and is piped with gold kid. * + » IT'S BEAUTIFUL, TO BE SURE, but many women like to cover up the very deep or wide neckline, A good cover-up agent might well be a wide cape of filmy black lace with wide stole fronts, * + » IN KEEPING with the new fash- ions, handbags are smart and quiet- ly elegant. - Polished calf is used for a roomy, oblong, oval-shaped bag, its o] a curved "door" on hinges, the sides studded with big gilt nailheads * b @ INTERESTING indeed is the new of costumes designed for later afternoon through to all but the most formal and gala of evening occasions, Velvet is used for a handsome short, curved bol- ero with one button closing, very deep, wide neckline and push-up ~ OF INTEREST TO New Lightweight Wool Fabrics Assure Warmth Without Bulk the biggest news in back-to- i fort. Decked out in any of the new free fitting styles, Junior is sure to feel at ease. Jackets drape comfortably, trousers are action-styled, and the new lightwe wool fabrics affo; warmth without bulk. " Amon, new fashion comfort, according , to the Wool Bureau's Fall pre- view, are the three-button single breasted Jacket with four patch pockets, leather or metal but- tons, and the California style slack featuri self belt and Pleated waist. blem-studded lagers and Swealers With, Hes. orations ranging from swoo ski figures to galloping Ho a also go to show that Junior is no shrinking violet when it comes to being a man of distinction. Patterns are manly---hound- Jooths, Rlaids, granite tweeds, and bright mixtures as well as solid tone flannels and natural coverts. And the boys will get a real kick out of the new 'land- scaped colors, Top fashion scouts tout the blues and browns as big favorites, with just enough gray around to prove it's still classic. Topcoats and overcoats are something special. Gone are thick, bulky fabrics which made the lads feel as if they were tot- ing a ton around. The new light- weight wools are just as safe against the sniffles--and they're full of comfort too. Style choice from coast to coast by quite a handsome margin is the single breasted, fly front, 3-button top- coat, popular in either bardy covert or gabardine and usually equip with an all-wool re- movable lining witch comes out with a zip when the occasion demands it. Teen-age fashion plates are Comfort Keynotes Back to School Styles NEW YORK-For little men, |i school togs is the accent on com- |' the highlights of the | : il Wool Bureau Style LITTLE. MAN OF DISTINCTION: This jacketed youn, smoothie looks as if he knows all the fashion answers for stylish i scholastics, His lightweight tweed sports jacket in Shepherd's | check pattern, with contrasting flannel slacks and Eton topper,' mark him as a sterling contender for popularity honors. breasted, belted polo coat, stylishly crowned with a feather- tipped hat. While for a snow- swirly, cold-cutting day there's a vivid selection of mackinaws and ulsters, all-wool and stove- warm, and also equipped with handy zip-out linings. |» In sweaters, boldness has definitely triumphed. Action- dominate, with cowboys and indians first scenic chéice. And the new colors are equally ex- citing with bold combinations of reds, blues, greens and yel- lows offering an attraction few lads can resist. All in all it's a banner school! season with Junior refusing to' take a back seat to his fashion- also strong for the double- packed . outdoor patterns pre- | conscious Dad. &leeves. This is worn over a strap- less, ankle-length dress of black lace over taffeta, with stiffened hipline and deep velvet hem band. * + ¢ AT LAST, a use for those odd earrings that collect -- since usu- ally it is but one earring that is lost. At one showing the designer stresses beautiful berets worn very deep, far down to one side, with an earring for the exposed ear, * + » LATEST THEME for separates is different fabrics dyed to match. Jersey and wool, dyed a tawny camel brown make a nice twosome. The sweater-like jersey top has a round, ribbed yoke and a tiny col- lar. The wool skirt has a snug fit and an inset wide leather waist- band and one big patch pocket. * + » NEW DETAIL marks many of the newest fur c¢ .~ Chinese lamb--inky black and "beautifully moired -- is used for a full-length, fitted coat with a very deep cape that folds into the collar line, The skirt swings full below a snug black suede belt, and the sleeves are tapered at the wrists, * +h NEVER SUCH A SEASON for jerséy as this is going to be, what with a raft of delightful wool jer- sey casuals and a host of skirts and blouses. Gray jersey, with an all-over tiny black dot, makes up well into a simple, casual, but aw- fully smart dress detalled with loose fitting top cut in one with the push-up sleevés. Dress 2ps from high petal collar to hem and retails under eighteen dollars. * KEYED for wear with colorful velvet costumes are little clutch bags in matching velvet. Such shades as deep plum, burnt brandy brown, deep garnet, true American Beauty red, winter navy and deep green are featured. Many such bags have contrast linings in sa- tin, and are detailed with jeweled clasps. SL: 5d. 3 ELECTRIC REFRIGERATORS Immediate Delivery Cash or Terms -- Write Toronto Radio & Sports Ltd. 241 YONGE ST. -- TORONTO, ONT. Fi ALL 72 SIMCOE ST. N. | A "NOTICE! We Will Be CLOSED Saturday, September 24 Please call for gll WEEK-END alterations and lay-aways before that date BLACK'S LADIES' WEAR DAY. - , PHONE 179 | Child's Tendancy to Bite His Nails Sign of Inner Tension, Doctors Say The child who bites his nails or| "How about his emotional well- develops similar nervous habits | being?" parents are asked. "Here does so to get relief 'from some |is likely where the real trouble lies." pressure or anxiety that's become | The folder then goes on to outline too strong for him, say mental several of the conditions which may health experts in the federal De-|be contributing to the child's wor~ partment of National Health and| ries and anxieties--lack of self- Welfare. The road to cure, there- confidence, overdependency, ' too fore, lies in finding out what's| much excitement, difficulty at causing the emotional tension. { school, nagging and unhappy home environment. \ To help parents faced with this J ; problem, a folder "Nervous Habits-- | Tics or habit spasms are also What Causes Them In My Child?" dealt with in the folder as well as has been published by the de- "compulsion" habits, the latter partment's ° mental health _divi- | common to children eight to 10 sion. It is the ninth in its ser-|years old who require -things to ies on child training. be done "just-so", and worry if The habits of twisting a strand of ais gro in the series on hair or biting the lips are simil- hild trainin tr "Nervous Hab ar to nail biting in their basic |S Br M8 le Yony " causes. "The tendency in a child its" folder may be obtained through past the age of infancy to bite and local health units or ; provincial chew things is a common signal of departments of health without cost. inner tensions." the folder points out. "Telling your child to stop it, tieing his hands, using mechanical gadgets. or putting bad-tasting stuff on his fingers won't correct NOT LEGAL > Fredericton, NB. --(CP)-- A re- cent judgment by Chief Justice C. D. Richards holds that pinboards Finds Rhubarb Pie Is Good Bear Bait Dawson Creek, B.C. -- (CPy -- Take it from Mrs. Joe Dill of this northern community: rhubarb pie is the best bear bait. A harrowing three hours alone in "her cabin with freshly baked thubarb pies and two bears make Mrs. Dill reach this conclusion. Mrs. Dill"s rhubarb ples--as so often happens, with fruit pies-- boiled over in the oven, giving off an aroma of burnt sugar that brought unexpected results. It" wasn't long before two huge grizzlies, both with noses sniffing the air, ambled out of the bush to- wards the cabin. Unarmed, Mrs. Dill used her voice to frighten off the grizzlies. ' But two black bears arrived on the scene and paid no attention to shouts or even hot water thrown in their faces. For three hours they circled the cabin sniffing through windows as the pies boiled away. Return of Mr. Dill with a bunting rifle finally drove off the curious bears. . 'Easily' Memoriyed Flowers by the basketful -- the | basket in the popular spider-web | stitch. Each flower is"a separate, | quickly-memorized medallion. | You can crochet a few flowers in | an hour. Pattern 7493 has crochet | directions. | Our improved pattern -- visual] with easy-to-see charts and photos, | and complete. directions -- makes needlework easy. | Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS | (25¢) in coins (stamps cannot be | accepted) for this pattern. Print| plainly SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS | PATTERN NUMBER. | Send your order to DAILY | TIMES-GAZETTE, Pattern Depart- | ment, Oshawa. i Let us help you are slot machines and are thus lia- ble to seizure and confiscation by police, but applications to test their legality were suspended pend- ing the chief justice's decision. it. In fact, they may only serve to intensify the anxiety and strain in the child and thus aggravate the habit." $ Factors which may be setting up such tensions are then discussed, and parents are warned that the causes are often hard to discover and that patience and understand- ing on their part are required if the child is to be helped overcome his nervous habit. It suggests reviewing the child's eating and sleeping habits and whether he is getting sufficient outdoor play and enough rest. EDNA WARD'S SCHOOL OF DANCING BALLET e TAP e ACROBATIC Registration at CHRIST MEMORIAL CHURCH HALL Every Saturday -- 12 till 1 p.m. TE % Perhaps overeating is the most common dietary indiscretion. The natural result of overeating is obes- ity. . It has been said that we in America eat ourselves into: a pre- mature grave. The pendulum then frequently swings back to the other extreme. We go on a diet. Many self - imposed reducing diets wouldn't keep a bird alive, and often serious vitamin, mineral, and protein deficiencies result. In recent years great strides have been made in our knowledge of nutrition. For the maintenance of optimal health one must be assured that proper balance of var- ious foods is maintained. For dietary advice of any kind see your physician. You can then be certain that all bodily needs are being adequately met. Bring your pre- scriptions to us. KARN'S DRUG STORE KING ST. E. OSHAWA, ONT. Next to Post Office Phones: 78 & 79 Prompt Delivery | choose between ------ WOMEN .~ 2 'Teen-Agers Abandon Studies As Schools' Fail to Meet Needs A shocking number of teen-agers are dropping out of schools during the most important time in their lives because high school programs do not meet their needs, say Ameri- can education authorities. ' More than half of the boys and girls who enter high school drop out before they are graduated. Educators have come to the con- clusion that the main reason for drop-outs is that the schools don't offer youngsters enoligh to hold them, "If we didn't have effective com- pulsory education laws," says Dr. | Harold J, Dillon, executive director | of the Public Education and Child | Labor Association, "who knows, we | might not even be holding in| school the number we do!" | Under Dr. Dillon's direction the | National Child Labor Committee | recently made an intensive study | Correction of this problem is not formidably difficult, say author- ities. They recommend that schools adopt a "life adjustment" program to provide a more meaningful edu- cation. 'This probably would in- clude, says the magazine, blue- collar vocational education for seme; marriage courses, community activity and consumer education for others and the classes of arts and sciences for still others. But gen- erally what high school youths are taught must relate to life as they know it. BACK ON THE JOB Montreal --(CP)-- General Car- los Jaraomillo Isaza has returned to Montreal as consul-general of Colombia, a post he left 15 years ago. For 12 years he -.has been Colombia war minicic* or member of the Colombian senate. of the reasons for leaving school. | The results of this study and of a| similar study made by the U.-S. Department of Labor are revealed | in an article "Why Teen-Agers | Quit School" in the October issue | of the Woman's Home Companion. "Why Children Leave School," | says the magazine, "needs serious | community consideration if "our high school appropriations, our fine | high school buildings and the edu- | cational goals to which we give lip | service are not to be at least fifty | per cent dust and ashes." | Parents are largely unaware of | the problem, added the magazine. | But educators are thinking seriously | about the high rate of school drop- | outs. And all have come to the same conculsion, the youngsters left | school because in one way or an-| other it failed to interest or satisfy them -- "the teacher didn't pay me » attention," or "I couldn't see | any sense in what I was learning," | - _ could learn more outside." | Another point made clear in this | article is that, contrary to the | general belief, dissatisfaction with | some phase of school life loomed | considerably larger than economic | reasons. a "For some students, of course, points out the Companion, "there | is a money problem. But there is| little place in the complex indus- | trial set-up of today for half- | educated teen-agers. In a recent] survey taken in Louisville, Ky., ined thirds of the youngsters who quit school still unemployed al month later, although jobs were | said to be plentiful at the time." were HOT WATER LOTS OF IT! 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PHONE 389 man here Smart Young We ® KINGSTON ® CORNWALL eo Bengaline Housecoats men Shop' at the lowest price in town! $7.95 Very fashionable indeed . «. this beautifully tailored robe in Bruck's floral print bengaline!! You'll adore the generously cut skirt, the three self-covered buttons . . . the big patchpocket, and the tie belt . . . Take advantage of this offer and choose yours without delay! Black, Wine, and Royal Blue . . . Sizes 14-20. ABRIC MONTREAL © QUEBEC © SHERBROOKE je 23V2 Simcoe St. S. Ph. 5303 VINHYS = YMYLLO = TINH ' KITCHENER © HAMILTON = OSHAWA LONDON eo WINDSOR e BRANTFORD ©

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