Prince Rupert Daily News Thursday, August 9, 1951 THE EXPERTS -h-' A?. ; A - F.y Park Atom" "J Bv KAY REX Canadian Trc.t f'.UH Write . WMS a M .'l'VBomb' Punch MFN'S RECIPES Did you ,CI iy . :rtyii:R the method of pre-think collecting recipes is strict- ! paration reminds him (if "brirk-ly women's work, and mother is j iayiI1B " p0r ht-k of a better the only one In the family wholtio vvi'il call It 'Bricklayer's can whip up a frilly rivscrt? cp dai." vy J . . Bft. I ".. ' AUXILl.HsT BLSiiOF-Aauj tiaditiona! u-.xp and ceremony in Ottawa. Adeudato Just ask dart. I Ever since we Issued a rail for d'slira than men lik! to concoct. ' we have been flooded with re- I plies. A Montreal newspaper man i sends along a couple of new ideas for "those who get tired of eat- Cardinal Piazza of Rome, s.-cr. tary of the Sacr.d Consistorial Congregation of the Roman Catholic Church, officiated at the consecration of Msgr. Maxime Tessier, newiy-appolnted auxiliary bisln p of Ottawa. Repi -sentatives o . the fedeial government and a large number of church dignitaries attended Here, left to righ . a: ;: Archbishop Alexandre Vach'.m of Ottawa; Mse.. Tessier: Cardinal Piazza: James Cardinal McGuiEan of Toronto: and Msgr. Ildebrando this over a casserole preparation of the above. v WOMANISH KNACK" Another Toronto man confessor to have a "womanish knack" v.hr-n it comes to preparing de-fvrts Ht produces the following ingredient? One package of je.iy o.niei: o:io tin crush d p'.neapplc; one-half pint of; vc!;ip:lnK cream; one bottle of ted Mavacliir.o cherries; three ' crushed wa'.nuts. 1 r. . pare Jelly and allow it barely to si t before whipping Return ti refrigerator until firm. Whip cream. f Comes the "bricklaying" part:! St rvr in tall dessert dishes. Add ; two dessertspoons of the Jelly to 1 each glass Add the same amount of pineapple. Continue and finally cover with whipped ctvam. Sprinkle walnuts on top. Add ; cherry Serve five. j ' CHILD MARRIAGE Margaret, Queen Of Denmark, Norway and Sweden in the 14th century, was married to Haakon VI of Norway at the age of 10. i (!witn rig-boater until creamy. (CP PHOTO I 11 ft. MODERN PLUMBING is a wise invctmrnt terms of family ll0;,thanj home economy. Coll eiuc 846 PLUMBING SaanicH HEATING 11 CHANGE 81A0S -PRESTO -MM The Handi Guum I DSPSR tin ourcotcs toes oioecoe engineer says raindrops park the punch of an atomic bomb. Drop by drop, he says, they are blasting North America into the seas. W. D. Ellison says floods occur and farm land is damaged by rain 'because most soil conservation is aimed at preventing damage from running water, with dams, terraces and contour plowing. Ellison says the emphasis should be placed on preventing rain from striking earth with full force. Even in a gentle rain, he said, the millions of drops in one storm strike earth with the combined force of a bomb. The remedy, according to El-' lison, is a simple one. It Is lo keep the land covered heavily 1 with grass, crops, brush, treea, even weeds. ! He has close-up. slow-motion moving pictures showing how blades of plant life break rain's , full force. Each drop is scattered 1 into many tiny droplets. They trickle gently downward to the roots of plants and thence Into the soil. Eventually they reach nature's great under ground storage reservoirs and may be held there for use In a day of drought, Ellison says. LIKE GIANT SPONGE The navy engineer, who worked more than 20 years on soil conservation investigations for the United States Department of Agriculture, says that when land is covered with plants it is like a giant sponge that can absorb many storms. But when it is denuded of vegetation, he says, land is like a great concrete cover. When rain strikes, it rolls off, forms sheets of water rushing downhill into rivers that swell to liood crest. but wmle flood damase to houses ana bridges, is spectacular, even more costly damage is done to the land itseif, Eili.srm says valuable humus ana mm- erals are churned up into mud and float away, with the heav, ier parts, like sand, remaining behind, "Ellison acknowledges m a ny soil conservation methods no Antoniutti. apo:;t.)lic delegate. 1 r a'i- p&"tef . , " i 4" rf..K -i . . I i J Shaving's a breeze, quick, easy and refrcihing with today's super-keen Gillette Blue Hlades. Precision-made for your Gillette Raror double-edged for economy ihey last far longer than ordinary blades. For extra convenience buy them in the handy Gillette Dispenser. ing eggs jrK'd, scrambled seramojea p-ached an tne time. ! Ho suggets "Oevifs a la Neige" tsnow eggsi. This takes two : hard-boiled eggs to each person. Mak a white sauce using corn starch and milk. Slice eggs in the sauce and serve either French-fried' or mashed potatoes and green peas. To make the saucr: Otic cup of ,milk per person ;allow milk to reach boiling point; mix three 'traspoonsful of corn starch in water and add it to milk. Cool until thickens. KAGOI T 1)E BOl I.F.TTES This Montreaier, who describes himself as perhaps "A Canadian traitor for disliking oca soup," b. lit ves that not many persons; know how to serve pigs' knuckles aivl meatballs, or "Ragout de Boulcttc." ; His recipe: Roll meatballs in flour and brown in frying pan before placing In cauldron. Brown flour in pan and make, sauce. ' Boil wat';r in cauldron and add pigs' knuckles. Add meatballs to cauldron. i We're told this dish is tasty i "when served with boiled pita-! ,toiF and salads." 1 Better not believe all the stories you hpar about dad s wasteful-m s. when permitted to roam the kitchen. He may have more economical recipes up his sleeve 1 than mother ever dreamed pos-1 1 sibl". A Toronto chap suggests the li'.iliowing as "cheap and useful wl r the tag-end of a roa.-t is 1 not sufficient to make a Rood , showing on Its own." Boil some rice, drain, then add a can of undiluted condensed to mato soup. Toss in small cubes of meat "and use your Imagination with the spices " Cayenne, garlic and curry combine well in this dish which should also In clude a couple of finely chopped small onions. Heat and serve As a "fancy touch" our friend suggests browning cubes of bread with a little butter. Sprinkie Ut f1 FIGHTING OVER i Continued from page 1) geological surveys of the proposed damsite had been made. T. G. Norris, KC, counsel for B.C. Natural Resources Conservation Leasue, suggested the commission "might go in, denude this area of its trees, ruin ts spawning grounds and then md they couldn't build a dam." He aoked why the commission had set off the cost of logging as against the price of the timber. He said the timber didn't belong to the commission at all out to the people of British Co-.umbia. "Ycu have not estimated the cost of buying the timber from the crown." Former minister of trade and commerce and customs, Hon. H. H. Stevens, threw a verbal bomb-iheil into the already charged atmosphere of the hearing when ne reierred to "rumors'' that imber Interests were behind the move to log the area preparatory to building a dam. "An application for industrial development must not be measured in ioiiars and cents," he said. "We must a5es5 the value of the jeauty and cultural and recrea-lonal assets. These intangible is.'ets must be assessed against .ne monetary value." Refuting cairns that Buttle is a "rich man's paradise," Mr. fatever.s ?aid: "The industrial worker of this province depends on the -sett.ng aside of just such recreational areas." He said wealthy people can afford tj buy wilderness property for vacation playgrounds. "We have lived to see our natural resources rapidly depleted. It brings home to us the wisdom of the Lezisia- ture. in 1911, setting aside this park area and the necessity of iewing these things- with great care and a determination to re sist any encroachment. I was amazed to hear today the merchantable t.mber there was 25 million feet. I would estimate there is between 75 and 100 million feet (in the area to be flooded' and we can submit evidence to support that." e Mr. Stevens spoke on behalf of B.C. Natural Resources Conservation League. Other petitioners were Alex McQuarrie, representing the B.C. Antn PnnrTc and Rpsnrtc Acsn. ciaU and A,yin Campbell River and District Ratepayers' Association, who said: "Buttle Lake has some of the scenic wonders of the world ocautiful virgin forests, glac- iers, crystal clear waters, and red snow. Any action to alien-, a-te any part of this park is looked upon by our people as a breach of laith by this govern- ment. Campbell River Chamber of Commerce was represented uy Leonard Rossiter. He charged the Power Commission "has not, in the past, shown any consideration of the value of natural teauty." WOII.D DAMAGE PARK When asked by the comptroller of water rights if the Cham ber of Commerce thought th damming of Buttle Lake would 1..WOCLNT dliFjTER A heavv tail cf the young, innot.nt and o is u.'.a'Tcale m v,ir-t:jrn countries. Tne expression on th. lacrs of these Canadian soldiers show their feelings of f-ympathy tor this North Korean bo. The lad was found in an abandoned ?hack v.he.e he had been suturing unattended for two months. A sergeant of the Royal Canadian Army Medical corps examines the wound bcfoi-e evacuating him to hospital. (CP frcm National Defence i mm,' use, sucn as contour larminji.Now they can do the ironing. RADIO DIAL CFPR U'4U Kilocycle tsuhject Chins THURSDAY P.M Step Lightly The Sunsninc Bocii ly 20.000 Leagues Li.dcr the Sea Stock Quotation and Int 3:00 Int. Comty. 5:10 The Weston's s-30-Intimate Revire 5:15 - Young Man with a Song 5:55 CBC News 6:00 "Canada at Work" 6:15 Vaughan Monroe and Orchestra :30 Musua! Varieties ;:00 CBC News : 1 5 - CBC News Roundup J. 3d- Eventide 8:00 Radio Cartoons 8 15 Points of View 8:30 Tales of the 7 Seas 9:00-Gtiestin's with Krstin 9:30 Vancouver Coiiicrt Orch iu:00 CBC News 0 : 10- CBC New s 10:15-Let's Find Oat 10:30 Winnipeg Dram.i j 11:11 -Fi.sh Arrivals ; FRIDAY-AM. 7:00 -8:00 Musical Clock CBC News 8:10 Heie's Bui Gimo. 8:15 Morning Kong i 8:30 Morning Dcvollo.is 8:45- Little Concert 8:00 - B11C News and C ..my 9 IS Mlfslr for Moderns 9:30 .Smu'isr Re.enadc 9:45 - Your Music Appointment 1 .il.e ollili.l. 10 10 Morning visit 1 1 "v .' liirnins Melodies 10:30-This Week's Am." 10:45- Invitation to the Walt;'' 1 1 : 0C- A Man and His Mi; ic ' Ali.u.Uup 1. nc H '31 Weather Forecast '' '" "' NX Via li.d ; 11:33 Rec. Int. -i ... . aiidii.av tat. ,'e'oJies 1 FnruAY-F.rt:. U:0l Mui-Daj ..:.;.,.-.., .. 1 ., CMC N. w-Procram '2:25 - Resume . : 1 H ( Fhi 111 h. uh.ieas: 12:55 Rcc. Int. t:0fl The C.ncctt Hour 2:0J--tRsy Listen!:!!: J-if- H(.'ni.is of R;-plom Do wbit .. like; Canity 3:00 The Music Box 3:15-Don Mess-, r and His Islanders SALFORD, England (CP) The municipal laundry here has long provided facilities for house wives to do their weekly wash. too, on machines which require Inserting coins In the slot. mum protection from rain. Ellison believes the grass cover on pastures could be Increased sufficiently if fewer, livestock were allowed on them for a season or two, providing moisture conditions meanwhile were good. On other lands, where crops are raised, Ellison says if more care were taken to keep the ground covered at all times of the year it would make a great difference in water run-offs during storms. If crops can't be kept on land at all times of the year he says the trash from previous crops, such as stubble from wheat and stalks from corn, should be left on the surface and now plowed under: 'Hospitality and Good Food That Is Our First Aim rhnnc 17 for Orders To Take Out Commodore Cafe VANCOUVER VICTORIA Sunday. 8 p.m.. Coquitlam Tuesday, 12 Noon Camosun UCV. ARM. STEWART AND POUT SIMPSON Sunday, Cainosun, II p.m. FOR NORTH Ql'EF.N CHARLOTTE ISLANDS ss. Coquitlam August 3, 17 and 31 FOR SOUTH QLFEN CHARLOTTE ISLANDS SR. Corrtiltlam. August 1C and 24 9 put. FRANK J. SKINNER Prince Rupert Agent Third Avenue Phone 568 1 "-Ml Radioactivity From Past Sought WELLINGTON. N Z. (CP) The j tell-tale click of a Geiger count-jer is being used by New Zealand ! historians to explore the past. With the Geiger counter they have to solve many of the country's time puzzle-s: when tha first human inhabitants arrived in New Zealand; when the huge ostrich-like moa became extinct; the date cf a great eruption which overwhelmed a large area in the centre of the north island. This use of atomic age science was developed in the Uniced States. It depends on the fact that materials containing carbon decrease in radio-activity at a known rate according to aoe. A series of complicated chemical processes extracts carbon from the materials and their radio-activity is measured witn an advanced type ot Lreiger counter. TeU can determine the age of substances containing carbon as far back as 20,300 years. The technique will be used 'o find the date of early settlement by analyzing wooden paddles and tools and charcoal from fireplaces. Historians hope to discover the age of moa bor.es and timber buried under vol--anie eruptions. Srirnlis's plan to use the fhr.ique in so.! and agricultural studies. It can also be used in gcolocv, velcanoloay. glaciol-oqry. botany, zoology and archaeology. J ( ) V 1 Avenue West r.n. itnx 721 Kirchcnware Lord Calvert 3 iCana5anU)hskit 1 i IS Served with pride 1 -on those special occasions J 1 1 ' ...1 I.. ii r: 'IT1 VUlt 1 11 wiicii oiiiy uie 111101 7, . . ... .. ,. -, v-u iKn advcHiKfMnl it not pitblithd o dnplyd by thf Lmwof Contfl Bo'd or by tkc Gewcmmtnl Bth Coluotbia. r ft PORTRAITS Films Developed nod Printed PROMPT SERVICE rinxm.ts's su mo 218 4th Street Box 015 Phone G-een 3;i9 prinre Rupert will suffice j: .r. 8."d terracing, are good as' tat as they go. But he says'! "They are of little value as water savers in heavy iain-storms. About all they do is to prevent runoff water from carving gullies. The valuable, light parts of the soil float away with flood waters that roll on and on. "The trouble with my theory, from the viewpoint of many conservationists, is that it involve-, nothing spectacular or dramatic like the construction of great dams and contours only a drop of rain and a blade of grass." Ellison doesn't say that the farming methods he champions would have prevented all of the high water that has occurred in tne M ssouri and other Midwest- ern river basins this summer, vffu ffufr mi He believes dams and contour farming are necessary But ne ays tne dams woudn't have to be so laree or sn nnmprnns i r ! more water was held back on ' the soil by vegetation. j He estimates that in the great Plains country it takes from 2000 to 3000 pounds of grass on each acre to protect range lands from raindrop damage. A great' deal of this land has less than 100d pounds of grass per acre1 today. His experiments indicate that after land is covered with from RUPERT TOBACCO STORE 3rd Ave. - Opposite Ormes ALL MAGAZINES and PERIODICALS j'OBACCO and CONFECTIONERY Stock Always Moving and Frcfcti GEORGE DAWES AUCTIONEER ' Phone Green 810 Moving, Packing, Crating Shipping and General Cartage and Storage Complete. Reliable and Efficient Service. Also agents for Canadian Liquid Air Co. Ltd. for Oxygen. Acetylene and all welding supplies. LINDSAY'S CARTAGE & STORAGE LIMITED Cor. ""nd and Park Avenues Est .910. Phones GO and 68 2u()0 to 3000 pounds of grass pee damage Strath- acre it has reached almost max.-Mr. Rossiter said " m Lord Calvert mi t II 4 LS. 1 For NEW CONSTRUCTION and REPAIR WORK SEE irretrievably cona Park, emphatically "Yes," and he sug-Power gested the Commission ! aj "behind the move to keep' the trial to the lake impassable. ! Emar Andersen, Campbell River j Fish and Game Association, bjg-' ged the water comptroller not j .0 destroy something you can ne ever replace." Mr. Andersen ! sal aid "future generations will ! th. ank us for saving Strathcona 1 latk. ' He forecast a population ; : growth th.ughout the province! wl when the people would need 1 i : nc.se h ' provincial parks. He said: i il you we went to the Parks Board at Vancou' ncouver and offered to pay a million dollars for a 50-foot ' lot in Stanley Park, they would j.iay, No, of course you could not j buy it. There is no place in the , world to compare with Strath cona Park. It is rich in game tic, oeer, geose, otter and many other anirrals." Alter sut.ns an hour overtime, tne hearings adjourned unt.l today. GREER & BRIDDEN LTD. I "lb; l LIMITED t A SIS 1st l hone fldtt Hordworc CALVERT DISTILLERS BAPCO PAINT PRODUCTS Brushcr . . . Po'isVics . . . Dust Mops Thompson Hardware Co., Ltd. (CANADA) AMHERSTBURG ONTARIO Ihis advertisement is not published ot displayed by the Liquor Control Uoar J ot py mc 1 K)vernrnrnt ol Biiluh r-olumbu. ! . ,.$'