HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1944-03-30, Page 3TABLE TALKS
SADIE B. CHAMBERS
Some Mushroom
Suggestions
We feel that the fine quality of
mushrooms on the market just
now cntitiles then toour respectful
attention. Here are one or two
recipes worthyof the best efforts
of the best mushrooms -.end ° the
best cooks,
Mushrooms Atz Gratin
Ib. mushrooms
1 sliced onion
2 tablespoons shortening
2 tablespoons flour'
1 cup mushroom stock made from
stems
ee cup bread crumbs
dash of pepper
J teaspoon paprika
1 tablespoon butter
ee teaspoon salt
juice of one lemon
Peel mushrooms and sprinkle
salt over then; to extract the water.
Fry onion in shortening; add flour
and brown; add stock and then
seasonings; cook until it is thick-
ened. Drain mushrooms ae:d add
to the settee. Place .in baking dish,
aprinkhe with buttered bread
crumbs and bake until crumbs are
slightly browned.
Rice with Mushrooms
1 tablespoon chopped onion
1 teaspoon chopped parsley
2 tablespoons chopped carrot
2 tablespoons chopped celery
tablespoons butter or oil
ee cup hot water
ISSUE 14-1944
That's Why l Need Whole Grain
Seeker Oats ... Richest of All Natural
Cereals to Growing Factor Protein!
Yes, realoatmezl Ieads all natural cereals
In protein, the very thing that is meat's
main element. Children must have pro-
tein for normal growth. Adults must have
1t for stamina and to help fight fatigue.
Nature richly stored somnnyimportant
food elements in Whole -Grain Oatmeal.
It stands alone among cereals. Give your
family its wonderful protection daily,
now that so many foods
ace scarce and rationed.
Get n package at your
grocers today --start
each daywith this whole-
some, delicious, Whole.
Grain breakfast.
txe caear, oee.eamoewl
1 of lased. L1 .
te!
said good' bye
to Constipation t "
"Tye given up pills and harsh cathartics.
1 found my consti-
pation was due to
Lick of 'bulk" in
■ay diet—and
1 discovered that
KELLOGG'S ALL -
MAN ilia perfectly
grand way to get at
the cause, and,
help correct it 1"
If this is tvotrr
trouble, stop dos-
ing.' with harsh pur-
gatives—with their ack of lasting
relief 1 Try eating a serving ofAtee neer
daily, with milk, or sprinkled over other
cereals. Or, eat several ALL -BRAN muf-
fles daily! Drink plenty of water.
Get KELLOGG'S ALL•BRAN at your
grocer's today—in either of 2 convent
gat sizes. Made by Kellogg's in Lon
den, Canada,
ARMY NURSING. HEAD
Principal Matron (Major) Dorothy
1, MacRae, R.R.C. of Gould, Quer,
whose appointment as Matron in
Chief of the Royal Canadian
Army Medical Corps Nursing Ser-
vice and promotion to the rank of
Lieutenant-Colonel has been an-
nounced,' She succeeds Colonel
Elizabeth L. Smellie, C. B, E.,
R, R. C. whose retirement from the
R;C.A.M,C. and return to the Vic-
torian Order of Nurses for Canada
took place on March 23.
2 teaspoons salt
'/q teaspoon- peeper
10 small fresh mushrooms
;4 cup rice
3 cups hot water
f4 cup grated cheese
Iv1ix together onion, parsley, celery
and carrot. Put in saucepan with two
tablespoons of oil, and cook about
7 minutes. .Add hot water, salt and
Peeper. Cut mushrooms into small
peeves and add to the sauce. Sim-
per 20 minutes. Place 9 table-
spoons oil in pan; add rice and
saute until rice is dry and brown.
Add 3 cups of hot water gradually
and simmer 12 mhtr.tee, Cook until
rice is tender. .Add grated cheese
just before serving. Serves 4,
Mushroom and Egg Stuffing
2 et:ps bread cruntbs
stock or water to moisten
2 finch cube cf far salt pork wfinriy
chopped)
1 hard cooked egg
?i lb. mushrooms !sliced end
sauted in butter)
Salt and pepper
4 teaspoon poultry seasoning
The amount of mushroom may be
varied. This recipe retakes 3 cups.
When making for turkey of ten to
twelve lbs use 10 cups of bread
crumbs and add 1 beaten egg,
Mao Olumtbere h•eteomcs personal
[suers from latereated readers,. Sgte
is pleased to receive aaggeettona
00 topics for leer eoionin, and Is
always ready to listen to sone utpet
peeve,." Requests for recipes or
,pedal menus nee to order. Address
your letters to "•,Mas Sadie 11.
Tioronto., Send stamAdelaide
ed[slk tf-a0.
droned envelope If you wish a
reply,
Hydro May Build
More Rural Lines
Three hundred miles of rural
Hydro lines will be constructed in
Ontario next summer if the prob-
lems of labor and materials do not
interfere with the program, hydro•
Chairman George Chilies (P.C.,
Grenville -Dundas) informed the
Legislature recently.
Mr. Challies. said the commis-
sion has accepted 4,000 farm con-
tracts and 2,000 urban contracts
for electrical services, the largest
volume in the history of the Prov-
ince for a like period,
"Last year 44 miles of rural Hy-
dro line were constructed," said
Mr. Challies. "We are asking the
Dominion authorities to let us con-
struct 300 utiles of rural line this
summer. If we can get labor and
materials we will carry out this
program as fast as possible,"
In reply to an Opposition ques-
tion, Mr, Challies said the 300 -mile
program would be divided among
all parts of the Province on the
basis of need. Abolition of the rur-
311 service charge would result in
a possible loss of revenue to the
commission of 0527,000, but increas-
ed use of power would offset that,
It was explained.
Stubborn Dutch.
When the captain of a Nether-
lands coastal vessel now operating
in a British port received a remark
about the extremely soiled flag
he Was flying, he replied: "With
this flag I left the Netherlands dur-
ing the invasion. I will not take
it down till Holland is free again.
Then my wife can launder it as she
always did." -- The Netherlands
Government Information Bureau,
Montreal.
CHAPTER XXIII
SYNOPSIS
Dave Bruce, out of a job, arrives
ar Wilbur Ferris' Cross -Bar ranch..
Curran, the foreman, promises him
a job if he can break a horse called
Black Dawn. When he succeeds, he
discovers Curran expected the
horse to hill him, A girl named
Lois rides up, angry • with ,Dave
for breaking "her" horse. She
refuses to speak to him even when
he uses his savings to pay off the
mortgage on the small ranch she
shares with her foster father, a
man named Hooker. But when
Hooker is shot and Dave is charged
with murder, Lois saves him front
being lynched. Wounded she guides
him to a mountain cave where she
thinks they will be safe from Cur-
ran and the sheriff's posse. A
quarrel between Ferris and Judge
Lonergan reveals that Ferris had
killed his partner, .Blane Rowland,
many years before, Thoroughly
the pen. Curran, who was stand
ing:beside Ferris, interposed.
'You. was speakin' of killin'.
judge," he said, "and that sure hurt
my feeling:, and lsIr. ferric'.. Be
sides Which, there was a little leis-
understanilire, We got tbe- funeral
staged all fight, but we ain't got
the, right corpse."
Lonergan turned around. "Just
what do you mean by that he
demanded.
"You!" shouted Curran—not at
Lonergan but at the ranchman,
With a bound he was upon Fer-
ris, and had twisted the revolver
out of his hand. At the same in-
stant Lonergan's hand appeared
from the flap of the saddle, holding
another glut in it.
In the brief interval before the
shots that followed, Ferris saw the
trap, and understood that he had
foreseen Curran's .treachery quite
well, in the depths of his subcon-
sciousness, He screamed twice as
the two heavy slugs from the guns
of Lonergan and Curran ploughed
"Leis:" His voice treed oat in a cry of fury.
scared, Ferris takes Curran into his
confidence. When Dave is away
from the cave, Curran kidnaps Lois.
Meanwhile Dave discovers a human
skeleton with a bullet hole through
the skull, When he later finds.
Lois gone, he heads straight for
Hooker's ranch and there finds
Sheriff Coggswell, He convinces
Coggswell of his innocence and
together they start for the cabin
where they have learned Lois is
being held prisoner and where un-
knowtt to them, Ferris and Curran
are pdannig to kill Judge Lonergan.
Lonergan sat down with a scowl.
"I've got no time to waste, Ferris,"
he said in his most judicial man -
nor., "I consented do come here
and talk with you, because Curran
told inc you had something here to
chow me. ,Well, where is it, and
what's the point of it all?"
Curran winked at Ferris as he
stood behind Loncrgan's back. Lon -
(igen went on:
"I understand you're willing to
cceept my affez,. But what is it
that you've got to show me here?"
"Here's what I got ee show yuh,
Lonergan!" shouteci the ranchman,
suddenly drawing a revolver from
hie armpit, "Desperate? Yeah, and
you miscalculated, because yots
trusted the wrong party when you
let Curran bring you here, You've
hounded me too long, Lonergan. I
warned you the other day in Mes-
cal.. Now you're going to sign an
agreement malting over to enc all
yore claims on the Cross -Bar, or
I'll kill you!"
* * *
Lonergan had sprung to his feet.
But Curran was at his side, cover-
ing hint too. The foreman stepped
forward and drew a revolver from
Langergan's pocket:
"That's right, Lonergan;" grinned
Curran. "You slipped up some when
yuh come here. Now set down and
sign the paper on this table. Yule
don't need to read it. All yuh got 4o
do is to affix yore signature, Mr,
.Ferris and me will do the rest "
"And suppose I do sign," said
Lonergan, apparently weakening,
"how do I know you're not plan-
ning to kill me afterward?"
"Kit yell, Mr, Lonergan?" jeered
Curran. "Why, we ain't murder-
ers, and you and Ferris has got
too much on each other to make it
merely for to kill yule, He's just
aimin' to git back what yuh took
from him by the processes of fraud.
Nobody won't interfere with yule
arter we got yore name signed.
Yuh can ride straight home."
With 'a shrug of his shoulders
Lonergan gave in. "My pen's in
my saddle -flap with some papers;"
he announced.
"That's all right, Mr. Lonergan,"
maid Curran. ."Mr. Ferris and Ina
will just accompany yuh outside
and help yells find it. Keep hint
covered, Ferris. I guess he's full
of tricks."
* * *
Lonergan moved slowly out of
the cabin to where Inc horse was
standing, a little beyond thw others.
the reins thrown over the stump of
a tree. He lifted the flap or his sad-
dle and affected to be Basking for
their wav- through the upper part
of his body, reeled, and dropped
like e cog down the slope into the
ravine.
e « *
Curran fired a second shot as
Perris' body was in the ant of
fallin and turned to his companion
with a grin.
there -s .me hombre won't
ENVASION BLOCKADE?
Framed by the barrel of what Nazis say is a long-range coastal;
defense gun, are concrete fortifications built by Germans along
English Channel "invasion coast." Photo from neutral sources,
make no more trouble," he said.
"I'll spade hint under in the morn -
in';"
but Lonergan was shaking, "Get
me that drink, Curran," he said,
"Why did you make that play?
.There were moments when I wasn't
sure you were not double-crossing
me..
"Double-crossin' yuh, Mr. Loner-
gan? Why, I thought yuh had more
confidence in me than that," replied
the foreman, "I made that play
so as that girl inside wouldn't know
just what was happenin'. Ferris
had to go. He was gittin' too wise.
It sure was hard to keep from
!augbin', him thlnkin' it was you
who was goin' to be bumped off in-
stead of himself. What's that?"
iContinucd Next Week)
Flak Suits Given
Airmen In Pacific
The flak suit has arrived in the
South Pacific airfields and while it
is an uncomfortable item of haber-
dashery the boys are glad to have
it.
It is a sleeveless shoulders -to -
hips packet cont fining sheets of
armor plate nabrirated into soft,
FORCCIAWSIMYOU CAN'T BEAT
BUCKLEY'S MIXTURE
spongy material which itself bee
some shock -absorption qualities.
Bomber crews wear thein only;
over a target where the ack-ack is
heavy and as soon as they are our
of range they remove them. The
garments weigh around 40 pounds.
A navigator in a B-25, says et
knows of only one instance in which
a man was saved by flak suit—
"but one was enough to convince
me they're worth wearing,"
Modern,
fireproof,
conveniently
Waled,
easy Perking
as low as
150
no hiccgyyher
21,00 —
per person
Ma MAC or
FOLDER wale
[Ole a0TELS CO.
Montreal
y2S0 fn $350a
per person,
tto higher!
400 'lovely rooms with .radio!
QUEBEC
STANDS FOR CANADIAN. UNITY
Quebec, cradle of the Canadian people, believes in and works for greater
Canadian unity. She knows that her destiny and that of her sister provinces
are one and the same. Quebec today is fighting and working all-out for
Allied Victory. Quebec welcomes visitors to this great scenic, historic
vacation -land, whether on wartime duty or holiday, today or after the war
As always—Bienvenue! Welcome!
Descriptive Literature par request
PROVINCE e Q 4 EBEC
TOURIST AND PUBLICITY BUREAU
200 TORONTO, AND QUEBEC CiTY
BAY STREET,
s