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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1944-04-20, Page 3TABLE TALKS Sundaes For Sunday Sugar may be sr,arco at your atonic these flays. Perhaps your supply of other "sweets" is hardly worth mentioning. But the fancily still luta a sweet tooth and you hear a constant call for dessert. Necessity is lite mother of invert - firm. Prove your own inventive ability during war days by locating substitutes $(r many of your old food .favorites. Here's a dessert that should please. No sugar is needed. The sennet -custard is already sweetened and the crushed peppermint stick candy does its bit toward catering to that "sweet tooth", And a dessert of this kind fur- nishes liberal quantities of milk to those tiny tots who refuse to drink plait( milk, yet need this food so Thatch, Chocolate Sundae Rennet-Cuetard 2 cups milk (trot canned) 3 trackage vanilla rennet powder Chocolate sauce • Peppermint stick cattily • Set out 4 or 5 sherbet glasses. A slenderising, feminine frock that's easy as fatting off a log to make is Pattern 47461, Note how few pattern pieces. What's more it but- torts down the front s0 that you can slip into it without spoiling your hair -do.• A style to wear at the of- fice, at home, or on the street, Pattern 4746 conies its size's 12, 34, 16. 18, 20; 30, 30, 31, 30, 38, 40, 42, 44. Size 16 takes ZiN yards 35 - inch fabric. Send twenty cents (20e) in coins (stamps cannot be aceepted) for This pattern to Room 421, 73 Ade- laide St. West, Toronto. Write plainly size, name, address, style number. Warm the tttillc until just lukewarm (t10 1.), not hot. Test a drop on inside of wrist frequently. Remove from heat and immediately stir in •the rennct powder until dissolved -It not more than I minute.. Pour at once, while still liquid, into the sherbet glasses and let stand at roost temperature, w ithout 'moving, for about 10 minutes, or until firm. (hen place in refrigerator to chill. Prepare a chocolate sauce by melting sweet' milk chocolate in a double boiler and blending with enough 'create to make a thick sauce consistency (about eft cup cream to 3 ounces chocolate): Cool, and just before serving, pour a pool of chocolate sauce into the center of each rennet -custard, Then sprinkle crushed peppermint stick candy over the chocolate sauce, and serve immediately, (falces 4 or 5 servings. NOTE: If peppermint stick candy is not available (which it probably is *at) a few drops of peppermint flavoring may be added tc the sauce. Month Of April A Problem Child That's the thing aboe April; it has tantrums, says the New York Times. It is by turns a backward, child among time months and a mis- chievous youngster with disarm- ing wisdom and consideration. It will bring frost and cold rain and evert snow flurries; and it will bring days that belong to late May, warns mornings, hot afternoons a n d balmy nights. It will get you nut in the garden in your shirtsleeves its the morning and have you shiv- ering before a hearth fire he same evening, It will flatter you off guard, then kick y'ott in the shins. A part of it is our own impa- tience to see Spring move in with flowers in her hair. \\ere weary of waiting. But the greater part of it is simply April being April. We know what's coming, and we'Il welcome it, but we still don't Iike the way that April brings it, April's a problem child. An Actual Truth Stranger Than Fake •- A man in whom I iru•e complete trust once looked rite in the eyes and told me he'd seen a snake, when alarmed- open its mouth and allow its six young to crawl down its throat out of sight, and what dao-- -ger was past, permit them to reap- pear, Beryl Markham a..'tes in -Col- lier's, Now . , a' strange thing about nature fakes is that they are almost. always gone one better by actual truths. The snake -swallow- ing sanctuary idea becomes a minor stunt when compared with certain •common tropical fish, which look like little perch, If you want to see sheer magic, tap on the glass of tut aquarium whicltholds a mother, father and 100 (comet them) tiny young. The moment after an alarm, there will be only two fist visible; every youngster being snugly hid- den within the mouth of a parent. When dormer is over, the whole •snob is gently spewed forth. roll- ing head over tail to forst a dense, orderly cloud arntutd and behind their parents. ISSUE 17-1944 QUICK RELIEF:FOR t- COUGHS COLDS 5RONCHiTI5 ASTi'IMA WHOOPING ;CATARRHAVAiSTl'ifiAA PL 50 DON'T 2T DELAY- tlUY A Et TTL TODAY! 11,-v , tgdr {�t„�,`3)1411'I,�vki-^t�'Y41. „I,i,•T,r,Ytpi CHAPTER XXVI Date had ghat warning enoughto swing, his head aside. The blast of the powder burned his cheek black from chin to temple. 1(c swung his revolter muzzle in a narrow arc and lander( on C'urran's face. Shtielcittg horribly with anguish, Curran turned and ran. Currau's course of flight was tak- ing kris toward the horses that the attacking party had left standing, And then of a eudrlen a stout of,e triumph .burst from (errata's throat and at the ,salute moment Dave site: the five horses, bunched together. 1:fe. fired his [:1st shot, and it went wild. Curran must have heard the click of the hammer n] a :spent cartridge as Dave pulled trigger again, for he mimed and roared curses at his pursuer. "I'll see yuh tgttin, ytrh swine!" he bellowed. "111 gat yuh, Bruce1' And blindly Curran grasped at the inane of the horse that stood nearest him, and thrust foot into the stirrup. That was where fate intervened and :stacked the cards against hint, For that horse was Black Dawn. * :k * With a squeal of fury, Back Dawn whirled and seized the fore- man's leg in his strong teeth, crush- ing it, and dragging Curran shriek- ing from tate saddle. He flung hint to the ground, and shrieks of man and horse blended together hi a hideous pandemonium as Curran struggled helplessly, to escape. Dave tried to whistle to Black Dawn, but the stars were circling overhead, and be collapsed, halt conscious, on the ground near the de4t11 men. The stinging taste of whisky in his mouth revived hint, Dave open- ed his eyes and saw that it was dawn. He was lying where he had fallen, hut a blanket had been spread beneath hint. Ile felt a stab of pain in his left arm, look- ed at it, and saw that his shirt sleeve had been cut away, and that the wound had been bandaged. "Dave! Oh, Dave, are you all right: It was Lois beading over hint, her tears dropping upon his face. Beside her stood Sheriff Coggswell. The horses and t'urrau's body were gone. I'm all right," Dave mumbled, "Black Dawn? He's safe?" "He's safe, Dave." it was the sheriff who answered him. Dave was getting on his feet. "Curran Black Dawn trampled him—" he began. "Yeah, he's eked," said Coggs- well, "Set dowit, if yuh won't lie down." He rolled a cigarette attd handed it to Dave, squatting be- side him. "Sims got . then] Mexi- cans rounded up and hogtied I picked up Miss I ois when I was ridin' in. Everything's Lake, boy, and yu're cleared. t * "Lonergan talked to a certain point last night, and then he sltut up tight. So 1 went down to ex- amine Ferris' body in the gully. Ferris was still alive, and anxious to make ata ante -Mortem state- ment, He just had time to come. through with it before cashin' in. "That skeleton yuh found in the kneed it siilre yllli spoke about his leg Navin' been broke. Row- land was kicked by a hawse and broke his leg. He always limped after that, on account of its havin' been badly set. 'Terris lured Rowland into the Mals with a ,tory of gold deposits, • and murdered him. 'flien he cooked rap that story about .Rowland's hay - in' inrged the cheek and skipped the country, do as to git the whole rights to the Cross -Bar in his own. hands. "Then he got into difficulties. Either he went to Lottergan,' or Lonergan found out. Lonergan had Terris where lie wanted Mian after that. Ire got that twenty thous- and, and he got a mortgage on tine Cross -alar by means of a fictitious loan that Perris never received. He bled hint sternly, till Ferris was des- p'rate. e N * "Then he pit Curran in. Curran Wile wanted for murder in Mis- souri, and Lonergan knew Curran would do just what he told him. So, when Ferris refused to quit and leave this part of the country, there was nothing to do hut put hint on the spot, Ferris bein' ready to face a life sentence if he could git back at Lonergan, Curratt got Ferris to the cabin, purtendin' he'd litre Lolt- ergan there and kill hint, but he double-crossed him. That's what I got from Ferris before he died. "Went back to Lonergan with them facts, and Ferris' cross under the signature I wrote out in the dark, at the bottom of tate gully. Lonergan broke ciown and told the rest, trough he refused to sign a confession. Ile fanned Curran murdered Mr. Ilooker, but it's a safe het Lonergan sent him to do it. R e ,att't prove that, but we got enough evidence to send Lonergan up for a stiff tern]." l'oggswell paused in his story and rolled Dave another cigarette. "Miss Lois is Blane Rowland's daughter," he said. "Rowland's wife had divorced hint, and he'd conte West, leavin' Miss Lois with her mother. He'd never spoke about Itis wife and daughter, but Lonergan found out when he went through his papers. After that, r-on- ergau's main idea was to keep Miss Lois from gittin' her share of the ranch. * :k '5 "Ire got the hookers to take her front the orphanage where she'd been put after her mother died, and kept her on the mesa, so as to have tier under Itis cyc. Well, 1fooker had been findin' out things, :eel got to shootin' off his mouth, so l.ottergan sent Curran to the cabin to kill hint and put the crime on"Way ay things stand now, hiss Lois is half -owner of the Cross Aar, and if Ferris had any heirs, they got to pay up that twenty thoteatl that was stolen, wliich means, in effect that Miss Lois is the sole owner. And non 1 told volt everything, 1-1'11 see yutl later, Bruce." CHURCH PARADE AT WINDSOR CASTLE For the first thne in World War II, Canadian troops held a Church parade recently at the world famous Windsor Castle in. England. Photo- graph shows Canadians marching into St. George's Chapel in the Castle k:rotattda, Windsor Castle k the "home" residence of the King and Queen "A Boole everyone should read"—Tate Montreal. Standard, MAKE THIS YOUR CANADA By The National Secretary .and National Chairman of the C.C,F. Price $11.10 Postpaid Mail to: THE CENTRAL CANADA PUBLISHING CO., 45 Russell Hill Road, Toronto Prurifi 111bile se Itching Relieved quickly by this Medicinai Ointment There are two forms of itching which are especially distressing. First prtiritis vulvae- from which only women suffer and second pruritis ani—itching at the rectum from piles, pin worsts or varicose veins. The causes of both these forms of intense itching are often difficult to locate but what you do want, at once, is relief from the severe and depressing itching. Theta let Dr. Chase's OINTMENT help you for it brings relief almost as quickly as applied. Once used it will always be kept at hand for quick use when the need arises. 60 cta a box. Economy eize jar 22.00, r. Chase's Ointment Coggswell got up and strode away, "There goes the whitest man I ever knew, Lois," Dave said. "I can't tell yith how glad I am things have cleared up in this way. Yuh won't need to be ridilh' through the mountains with the now. Why, yo're an heiress." "Yes, Dave," answered Lois wistfully. She kneeled beside him and laid her cheek against his. "Is that all that you have to tell me, Dave?" "I reckon I told yuh all, Lois. But things have changed now, and yon_.." "I shall never be any different, Dave. I never change, Dave, don't tell me you—aou've stopped car- ing?' "Stopped carina? Why, I-1—" Dave caught the little figure in his arms and looked into her woeful face. "Now stop that," he said, "or yuh'll find yuh've got a caveman for a husband instead of just a range waddy. Don't cry any store." "I — I'm not — crying. 1'm I -1 -laughing, Dave," Lois sobbed. THE END Fined For Tossing Rationed Food Archibald E, Brown lost this battle on points—ration points. He was fined 216 in Wincanton, Eng Iand,•police court after a represen- tative of the Ministry of Food de- plored his selection of missiles .in a home battle. Brown tossed such rationed items as butter, cheese, lard, bacon and preserves at his wife, and was convicted of wasting food. Since the beginning of the war, 41,000 officers and men of the Royal Nary have been lost — 30 percent of its pre-war strength. tI: EASY. TO MAKE... DELICIOUS TO EAT-. Pit 'Ill rGtjj'l[ !1 LIVERWURST SPREAD SOYA SPREAD Pound liverwurst 2 teaspoons minced onion 1 cup prepared soya 1 tablespoon chopped spread 2 tablespoons Pepper cup finely chopped 1 tablespoon horseradish I teaspoon Salt and pepper celery Mayonnaise andmn)salt Mix all ingredients and to taste salt season, Combine all ingredients Fill small dishes with these rem and mix. ti Let each with plenty of Christies Premium and guest spread his own, Soda these a a crisp, flaky Christie's Premium Soda Crackers add extra good- ness nessrosoupsand nd ember, these rano salads, Always keep a parka exrra good. geor two on hand. 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