1938-09-06 — Page 2

Hongkong Telegraph 港電新報 士蔑新聞 All

*

Take yourself in hand-

Choose your hair style to

Flatter

1 If your're a “BABY FACE”

your weak points

you should wrar your hair well groomed, brushed away from your ears, and curled high on the top to give length to the face, and not hanging round your full face in fluffy tendrils.

2 If you've a “RECEDING CHIN"

you should brush your hair flatly across the top and up in

a roll round the back to give width to the jawline, and not swept

up and forward with high forchead curls.

3 If you've got a LONG NECK

pou should wear your hair long and curled to cover it, not

up and up so that you look like an angry swan!

4 If you have LARGE EARS

you should hide them with hair softly falling over the top of the car in a becoming accp, and not brushed away to leave the cura exposed.

DON'T WASTE THAT

STALE BREAD

WARM weather. produces slack ap- quarters pint white

W

petites and the housewife will and sugar to taste.

often find an ever-increasing amount

of stale bread in the bread-pan.

breadcrumbs,

While the custard is cooking and

Much of it will be made into brend- boiling add the breadcrumbs and a crumbs for future use, but even so dessert-spoonful of butter, the sugar, there will be much over, and the and any flavouring if desired.

housewife will be loath to give the Allow to cool. Make the jelly, and family still another bread pudding when cold and set, beat three parts'

Here are a few suggestions for of it into the cold custard. Pour into using up the stale bread, and so tasty a glass dish and decorate the top with are the dishes that Biey are likely to the remaining Jelly. Cream im- make the housewife nelually look for proves this sweet, but it is nol more stale bread later on.

Swedish Caramal Bread

necessary.

Palu Pertu

Put 4 oz of leaf sugar and a still of Cut some slices of stale brend half water into a saucepan; bring it to the

an inch thick Remove the crust, Loil, and boil until it is a light brown and then cut into squares or trinn- colour. Cut some bread Jato neat gular pieces. Take 1 pint of milk- squares, removing the crust, and cook

more or less according to the

quanti

it in the caramel, a few pieces at a ty of bread used--sweeten it, and time, until crisp and brown.

flavour with vanlita or lemon, and Here Is Polish dish called bring to the boil. When cold, pour "Kugel." Soak I bread in water into a deep dish and add the bread, until soft: then squeeze dry, Meit oz of butter and then a well, and drain

it almost

on

a

clean

cloth.

Beat up one or two eggs.

Then

mix in two peeled and cored apples chopped up. 2oz stoned raisins,

lemon.

Onc

uz ground almonds, and the finely carefully dip each piece of bread in grated rind of

Stir in the the egg, and fry brown on both benten yolks of two eggs, and then sides. Dish up, sprinkle with castor the whites stiffly beaten,

Bugar, arranging in a circle, When thoroughly mixed, turn into plece overlapping the other. File up a buttered ple-dish. Pour little jam or marmalade in the centre, and butter over the top, and bake in a serve at once,

moderate oven till brown. very hot.

Pic Alla Torinese

41

Serve

MA

M

*

Prunes and Treacle

CHE

worst frull going," was how small boy described prunes But like most children he

Make 8 oz of bread into crumbs and divide in half. Soak one half sofi in sufficient milk to cover. Fry the other hult ir 2 oz of butter. Then mix the two halves together and add 2 oz currants, 2 oz white

gor, half a teaspoonful of mixed recently, spice, the grated rind of one lemon, a loves treacle, and when he tasted dessertspoonful of

orange flower water and two eggs. Mix thorough- Prunes sweetened with it instead of a butter cloth: put into with sugar, he, declared them "quite ly: turn into n

and coolc

for 30 boiling water, and

To serve prunes and treacle, cover When dishing, minutes.

pour a

A pound of large prunes overnight sauce made in the following man- her:--Put 1 oz butter and 1 oz flour with boiling water. Next day add a Into a saucepan. Stir till smooth, tablespoonful of black treacle Add 1 pint milk, sugar to taste, add bring them slowly to simmering

Slomer them for atteen grated rind of an orange, and then point. stir over a slow fire until it thickens. minutes and boll them quickly for

A Wolth Jelly Custard

"'different."

Ave.

and

A thick, liquorice-like syrup is the result, and the prunes themselves are For this you require 1 pint good rich and sweet.

W. B. custard, 1 pint raspberry jelly, three-

HONG KONG SOCIETY FOR THE PROTECTION

OF CHILDREN

Change of Address

All communications should be addressed to OLD CITY HALL: Or to Hon. Director Mr. G. P. de Martin Tel. 91 2025. Hon. Gen. Secretary — Mrs. D. J. 5. Croxler ------ Tel, 30689. Hon. Treasuror Mr. A. McKollar Tel. 27721.

HAIR STYLES CAN HELP YOU

more than anything to cover up your, weak points, or alternatively to emphasise them. Take a look at yourself in a triple mirror and see if you conform to any of these four types, and if an whether you are wearing a coiffure that flatters your face. or one that draws attention to your dran-

hacks.

3

4)

Sigrid

Order for the Bath

AN EASY WAY TO SLIM is to take a bath not just an ordinary bath, but one in which an extract of aca-wrack is dissolved.

An aromatic bath salt containing sea-wrack extract costs very little and is sufficient for at least 12 baths.

03

The scent is unusual and attractive and as this seaside plant is strongly antacid and contains todine salts it helps to eliminate rheumatism as well

Blenderiae, For the cool suminer bath, which should, by the way,

be taken with the chill definitely of, or one only gels hot again immediately, bath salts are unsuitable.

bath A concentrated essence compounded by a royal per- 'fumer is not as expensive a luzury as it sounds, since only three or jour A. W. drops are needed at a time.

2

HOW WELL DO

YOU WALK?

ONCE knew a girl whose life was completely changed because she happened to see herself in a news film. She saw for the first time her own ugly and ungraceful walk, and realised, with a shock, how it spoilt the effect of her carefully chosen outat.

So she took steps. When she was married, a year Inter, her husband tok her he was first attracted by her beautiful carriage..

It only needs a little perseverance to learn to walk weli. And the results include not only admiring glances but definite improvements in health. After all, how can you breathe properly or digest your food if you do not hold your body as nature intended?

Step Out Freely

THE Arst thing to remember is to keep your feet absolutely straight. This not only makes for gracefulness but for the minimum of fatigue, because the mechanics of your body demand that the knee must bend in line with the ankle over the foot, and if you turn your toes out, or in, you can see for yourseif how you upset things.

Your Victorian grandmother was taught to take short, mincing steps because it was "ladylike," with the result that she was olderly at 40. But in good walking, which means healthy walking, you should walk from your hips, not from your knees swinging the leg forward freely.

The heel should meet the ground first, but not with the kind of thump which a German soldier displays when he does the "goose-step." Use it merely as n lever to .transfer your weight to the ball of your foot.

In this way your progress will be smoothly. because the weight of your body will be always carried steadily forward.

easy

יי

Good Carriage Counts

Now you can't walk well unless you carry yourself well, so keep your body erect, with your heud held high and your chin tucked in. This position will have the effect of making you luck tall in as well.

You'll And that this will improve the shape of your skirts as well as of your body.

A simple exercise, which will help you to attain the perfect balance which in the secret of a on your good walk, Is to raise yourself slowly toes while they grip the ground, arms stiff by your sides, while you gradually inhale; then slowly sink back, letting your breath out, contracting the lower axiominal wall as you do so.

Persevere for Beauty

TERE'S another.

Stand erect, tail and

H chinuched in, hand high. Now bring your forearms up sideways to shoulder level, at the same time raising your left knee at right angles to your body; next throw out your arms and straighten your leg so that it is stretched straight out in front of you.

Return to your first position and repeat, using the right leg. Be careful to keep the knee of the standing leg braced during this exercise. It won't be easy at first, perhaps, if your balunce is really bad, but persevere for a week, or 10, morning and night, and you will find you are gradually gaining control of your body.

Moreover, if you are one of those nervous people who are frightened of traffic because they feel they cannot move quickly, this exercise will help you to retain your balance in an emergency.

Scientists Seek To Suppress

War Inventions

"VAN scientists not be stopped from porfecting instru- ments whose only purpose is to destroy or malm mankind, devastate the countryside, and instil terror into Its inhabitants?”

This is a question men and women have been asking for

years.

Scientists will try to provide an answer when the British Association for the Advancement of Salence meets at Cambridge. *Since 1888 the British Asso-world und that it is time they ciation, has met annually, but did something about it. this will be the first time it is researches on radium, helium, and Lord Hayleigh, best known for his suggested that scientists have other rare elements, is to be chair social responsibilities to the man, and in his address will give a

THE HONGKONG Telegraph, TugsDAY, SEPTEMBER 6, 1988.

RADIO BROADCAST“

(Continued from Page 7.)

8.0 Local Time Signal, Weather Report and Announcements.

8.03 Alfred Cortot at the Plano, Papillons (Butterflies). Op. 2 (Schumann),

·

KING'S THEATRE NEXT CHANGE

8.15 London Relay Selenes and TODAY.

the Public'.

The British Association at Work. 8.30 B.B.C. Recording-"Tho Old Contemptibles,"

The Record of the British Ex- peditionary Force from Mons to Ypres, between August and Novem- ber, 1914.

In Two Parts by Beatrice Brice; Produced by Felix Felton and Val Clelgud.

0.30 London Relay-The News. 0.50 Negro Spirituals.

Were You Dere? (Negro Spiritual arr. Edna Thomas) .. Edna Thomus (Soprano) with Plano. Dere's A Man. Goin' Roun' Takin' Numea (Brown); Work All De Summer (Coll. by L. Gellert); Didn't My Lord Deliver Daniel (Arr. Lawrance Brown)

Paul Robeson (Bass)

with Plano accumn. by Lawrance Brown.

10,0 London Relay-'Looking West- ward.'

A poster in sound-designed by Cyril Wood.

Presenting the West of England from various angles, familiar and un- familiar; and showing among other things, the Countryside, Dialects, Diversions, Games, Somebodies, Wea- ther, of Cornwall, Devon, Dorset, Gloucestershire, Somerset and Wilt- shire. Musle of Songs composed by Geoffrey Wright; Produced by Cyril Wood.

10.30 Dance Music.

Quickstep Around And Round The Old Bandstand.. Sydney Lipton & His Orchestra. Fox-Trots

And Then Some; China Seas

Whiteman Paul

& His Orchestra.

Rose Marie (From "Rose Marie");} Indian Love Cali (From "Rose Marie"). Roy Fox & His Orch. Tungo The Tango Of My Heart... Robert Renard Dunce Orchestra. Fox-Trots-Saddle Your Blues To A Wild Mustang: Poor Little Angeline

Jay Wilbur and His Band with vocal refrain. Sing Me A Swing | Song: A Little Bit Later on Chick Webb & His Orchestra with chorus.

11.0 Clore Down.

Ten Die As R. A. F. Plane Is Wrecked

London, Sept. 5.

In North London to-day an Air Force training plane overshot the ground while landing and crashed into some houses. The plane ex- ploded, killing the pilot, Sergeant S. R. Morris, woman and her two sons, aged seven and eight.

Twelve others were injured and six diet later in hospital-United Press,

The death-roll has now risen to ten, while the father of the two boys is seriously injured, adds Reuter.

HOW CLEAN ARE your false teeth?

THIS TEST WILL TELL

1. Give your dentures

your evetomary “cleaning" treatment, and

then examine them carefully.

2. Now get surne 'Staradené at your chamiota. Pour a fittia of le into a cumbierful of warm water and stir well. Insert your dentures and leave them while you drees or overnight 3. When you take them out you'll find *Eteradanthea made an armsaing difference-- your dental plater will be clean and fresh.

This simple taex has convinced thousands. It will convince you. It is guaranteed to do w vo, or the cost of 'Stecadent will be kumediately refunded with out question. The Dental Profendon bas endorsed * Sieradent*

* as the finest preparation aver produced. for cleaning and purifying false teeth. Over 10,000 dentiate prescribe iz

No matter how discoloured, stained or old your dental plates are, Sterndent lauaranteed to make them clean and fresh, and natural-looking' #1 the day you Aret got them--tot kwao them that www.very stain verlabes like magic), even the blackest tobacco stains of years' standing vanish completely after a few treatments. Mosein, tartar end all insanitary accumulations are also removed, Your plates, regain their wholesome, flesh-plea colour. Dull, yellow-tinged terils are made clean and lustrous. A powerful stcrülaing agent purifie your plates and leaves a petreching taste No brushing.

Absolutely harenlere to No ackle. denture materia

Agenta: IMPERIAL CHEMICAL INDUSTRIES (CHINA) LIMITED, HONGKONG,

Kate Carr Steradent

lead in the discussions on science and warfare.

Some people emphasise that if there were no selence, there would be no need for Air Raid Precautions, and equally we would be without anaesthetics, modern dyes, rayon. a thousand other things that moke modern life agreeable to the majority. But the dyes are

are oflen explosives, the rayon is akin to cor- dite. without either of them,

and millions would need no anaesthetics. The proposal will be made that special divison of the British Association be formed to study,

the relation of scientific discovery to human happiness and to; diroties how, if at all, scientists cAN DOM- trol the two, or, abuse of, their in- ventions.

Meetings will be divided into 12 sections, and 30 women are among those who will give papers.

"TELEGRAPH❞

WAR MAP

A specially prepared map of the Northern War Zone in China. 152 by 11 inches, printed on art paper.

Price 20 cents

Postage extra,

more beautiful........ more inspiring THAN EVER BEFORE!

NORMA

SHEARER

FREDRIC MARCH LESLIE HOWARD

SMILIN THROUGH

STARTLING !.....

REVEALING !

ONLY THIS MAN KNOWS

a thousand prison secrets!

ONLY THIS MAN CAN

TELL why

desperate convicts go

OVER

THE

WALL

WARNER BROS,' Smashing Now Prison Drama

WARDEN LEWIS E. LAWES

Duected by FRANK MCDONALD A COSMOPOLITAN PROD'N Screen Play by Crane Wiltur and Georite Bricker

NEXT CHANGE

At The

QUEEN'S

COUNT THE "TELEGRAPHS" EVERYWHERE

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