HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1944-06-22, Page 6hese days, when tea must yield
the utmost in flavour, quality
us®o f supreme importance. Ask for . .
TABLE TALKS
Meat Varieties
Roast .Kidney Loaf
1 pound beef, veal. pork or lamb
kidney
1 cup milk
8 slices bread
,4 cup bacon drippings or butter
2 eggs
9 green pepper minced
1°a teaspoons salt
+1 teaspoon pepper
8 tablespoons grated onion
3,5 teaspoon powdered sage
Wash kidney in cold water.
Drain well and grind, ineudiug
the internal fat, Pour mills over
'bread and ,soak. Combine all in-
gredients and mix thoroughly.
Pack firmly in a loaf pan. Bake in
a moderate oven (350 degrees) for
134 hours.
Serves 6.
One of the most difficult tasks
that faces the housewife is that of
getting variety
into the meat
dish. Meat, in
itself, is delic-
ious, but if ser-
ved in the same
way, with the
It same vegetables
- or without con-
k -none, :, ecu se chatty it smacks of
e humus.
There are many who will always
bake hats without varying the
glaze to add interesting flavor to
the meat. There are others who
don't realize that a bit of natural
]tome -grown herbs will pep up the
good, old-fashioned pot roast.
As simple to sew et it is fun to
sun in, Pattern 4799 makes dash-
ing playsuit. You'll want the trine
Jacket and button -front skirt, ton.
Pattern 4799 conies M misses'
acres: 12, 14, 16, 19, and 20. Size 16
-lakes 134 yds 35 -in material for
elle brief top of playsuit and shorts.
Send twenty cents (200 in coins
(stamps cannot be accepted) for
this pattern to Room 421, 73 Ade-
laide St, West; Toronto. Write
plainly size, name, address, style
number.
Some .always serve luncheon meats
cold on a slab of bread or evith
potato salad, and so on. For once
let's try things new and inter-
esting:
Liver Leluae,
6_ tablespoons bacon drippings
1 large onion, thinly sliced
6 cups shredded cabbage
1 teaspoon salt •
teaspoon pepper
1 pound cubed Jiver
'A cup water
1 tablespoon soy sauce
Brown onion in 4 tablespoons
drippings, Add cabbage nod sea-
sonings. Cover and cook over low
heat for 11 minutes. Remove from
pan. Roll liver in seasoned flour
-.and brown in remaining drippings.
Add water and simmer 6 minutes,
'Add soy sauce and cabbage.
Serves 6,
iy�TimiEIAFT
HEALTH NOTES
Natural Feeding
Natural feeding, that is, breast
feeding. is best for the mother and
tears, o best for the baby.
. , Breast feeding is
ro a natural proceed -
O, ing, and any Hepar-
'' ture from it should
of be regarded as an
• elsabnortnality. The
failure of so many mothers nowadays
to nurse their babies often arises
through lack of knowledge and
wrong advice.
Why Baby Should Be Breast Fed
1. The breast milk is created
for the baby, therefore it is the
baby's perfect food and his birth -
bright.
2. It is a food quite free - from
germs. Cow's milk has to go
through many stages before it
reaches the baby.
3. Breast milk is ntorceasily di-
gested than any other baby food.
Also it may be called the digestive
of cow's milk, Baby will digest
eow's milk better if given even a
small quantity of breast milk pre-
viously.
4. A baby has better nutrition if
he has been correctly fed.
9. Baby tends to have better
teeth as he gets natural exercise
for his mouth and jaws,
6. There is a low mortality rate
in breast-fed babies, compared with
those who are bottle-fed.
7. The mother has better )health,
and then too there is economy in
time and money,
8. 1\'e see that the natural food
produces a well nourished and de-
veloped child, who should be a joy
and comfort in the home not a
fretful, weak, sickly baby, who is a
constant worry to his parents.
— By permission of the New
Zealand Mothcrrraft Society.
Dodo as Food
The flightless dodo bird of Mau-
ritius Island, near Madagascar,
became extinct before 1700 A. D.,
less than a century after its dis-
covery, because three or four of the
birds furnished a meal for a whole
chip's crew, says Science Digest,
a1
NABISCO
SHREDDED WHEAT
with
$traveerries
Serve this delightful breakfast
treat to your family often. 'It's
good—and it's good for
them! Nabisco Shredded
Wheat is made from 100%
Canadian whole wheat—
contains energy -building car-
bohydrates, proteins, and the
miherals, iron rind( phosphorus.
Ready -cooked, ready to eat.
Try the tested, practicalre-
cipes found in every package.
THE CANADIAN S&1EDDED
WHEAT COMPANY, LTD.
&441X Niagara Fulls, Canada
VT -PLENTIFUL -FOODS 1[O SAVE tomFtcg fotiDS
et SERIAL STORY
Murder on the Boardwalk
BY ELINORE COWAN STONE
Last Weeks As gtf'estioning pro—
ceeds, it is revealed that Mrs. Tal-
bert was Yardley's silent partner,
Christine's identity is also made
known. Then the inspector hands
her a letter written by her cousin.
She has been cut out of 'Cousin
Emma's will.
CHAPTER IX
Since Christine had first caught
sight of that pitiful body on the
concrete bench, she had known
horror and remorse. Now she knew
terror.
'I see for you a very real dan-
ger," a voice echoed in her'meni-
ory.
"Bat," she faltered, "Cousin
Eninia knew that I are not extrav-
agant—she never suggested that
the thought so. And she has
never mentioned her will to ate.
I cant imagine that she wrote
this letter. But—who did?"
"Miss Thorenson," the inspector
asked softly, "could you identify
your cousin's writing?"
"I—I don't know. This certainly
looks like hers."
"Isn't there anything you can
tell tae," the inspector went on al-
most gently, 'That might throw
ponce light on this business?"
M *
Christine thought, I ought to
tell • him everything—about Jas -
par, for instance—about that tele-
phone girl; and about the swami's
wearing that dagger.
But all that—with his inevitable
questions—would take time. And
if the clairvoyant had had any part
in this, why should he have tried
to warn her? Now she wanted only
to get to her room and satisfy her-
self that there was, among her
belongings, nothing sinister—like
this letter— to complicate the in-
credible position in which she
found herself.
"Nothing," site said, "that I can
think of."
The inspector's face hardened;
and he swung upon the disrepu-
table figure in wading boots who,
with Bill had just returned front
the next roost and had resented
his seat in the corner by the door.
"Thank you," the inspector bark-
ed, "suppose you tell me just when
and where you have keown this
young 'lady."
Some one—Christine thought it
was Bill—cried out, "Watch him!"
Then all the lights vent out,
and a chair fell with a crash, ,
After that there was in the roost
nothing but the sound of scuffling
feet and heavy breathing until the
door opened—and slammed shat,
I,atcr, sounds of shouts and
running came from the darkened
corridor outside.
\Vhen the lights flashed on
again, there were left in the roost
only the inspector, who stood with
his hand on the light switch, Mr,
\'trilntet, cowering behind a chair,
and Christine. , . Almost at once
Bill Yardley, opened the door and
carne in.
Inspector," said Bill,
"Puss -in -Boots pulled a fast one,
didn't he? I think your -ten have
Jost hint in the dark. I've been
wondering just how long it would
take you in notice that the switch
was right beside his chair."
"And I'm wondering"—the in-
spector's eyes were far from
friendly—just )tow mach , you
helped him, Yardley."
P 1'
The telephone rang. Inspector
Parsons picked up the instrument
and'. listened. 'then, as if the call
had been a signal he Was waiting
for, he suggested almost pleasant-
ly, "You might as well all, go and
get some sleep."
Hardly daring to believe that
they were free,Christine funnel
herself, with 13111 and Dir. Wiluet,
going downstairs and into the
street. As slie and Bill were tnrn-
ing away toward Christine's lodg-
ing, Mir, AVilmet coughed apolo-
getically,
"Miss Thorenson,"' he said, "of
course you wouldn't care to go 0n
sketching in that booth now -but
suppose I find a quieter place?
Conic) you meet mite tomorrow
morning—say at that drugstore in
the Crestview — and talk things
over?' , , Working with yon has
been such a -a pleasure."
"Why — Christine hesitated--
"frankly
esitated-"frankly I shall have to earn some
money somehow, Mr, Wiln)et."
"Until 10.30 tomorrow then?"
the little man beamed. "Good
night."
"Listen, Christine;" Bill said as
lir. \5filntet pattered off into the
darkness, "1 wish you wouldn't;
Didn't you see those flashlights
going off all around yon down on
the Boardwalk? After tonight
you're a marked woman.'
Christine stopped short,
"Was that what those Wren were
doing:?" she demander!, '7t hadn't
occurred to Me that they were
sniping at ate."
"Well, it had to be. Tomorrow
your pictures will he all over the
front page. If you're really
hard up, why not let me help in-
stead of a complete outsider? Any-
how, I don't trust your .funny
little boss,"
"Not trust him? , .. That help-
less old babe -in -the -wood?"
"Old? Ile's probably not got
much on me. Lots of men are bald
at 30. And he may be Helpless, but
he doesn't handle the irnilt any
too carefully."
"What do you mean?"
* * >~
"Ile didn't go to any moving
picture tonight—or if he did it
was nearer 10 than nine as he said."
"How do you know?"
"I saw hien elowo on the beach
after 9,10. Yoti sec, after Labor
Day, :Pm permitted to take my
horses to the beach. The hitching
posts are right behind that studio..
Tonight I went down to see what
condition they were in—and there
was your little babe -in -the -wood,
poking around behind that booth."
"Poking around?"
"He seemed to be cenntining
'time foundations of his booth. Just
before I came along,' he went orf
up to the Boardwalk. I don't think
he even saw• me."
They were strolling along the
promenade toward Christine's
Street.
"Bill! Christine said suddenly.
"You don't suppose any one could
—hear us, do you?"
:k * *
"Not unless the inspector man-
aged to : wire us for sound while
the lights were out," Bill said with
a short laugh. "But it's a sere bet
they're giving us pretty short rope.
Well stickto the wide open spaces
in time middle of the walk to dist'
courage eavesdroppers, anyhow,"
"Bill," Christine hurried on,
"I've got to Imow—whywere von
beating up Jas—that man down
on the beach tonight?"
Bill was silent for a long moo -
ANNUAL MEETING OF THE FIRST CHURCH OF
CHRIST, SCIENTIST, BOSTON, MASS., JUNE 5, 1944
lieadctuarters of The Christian Science Publishing Society
While holding -military -tight essential to the victory of allied
nations over the anti -Christ claims of injustice and intolerance. The
Christian Science Board of Directors told the annual meeting of The
Mother Church, The FirstChurch of Christ, Scientist, in lil,ston,
Massachusetts, that freedom is essentially a spiritual gift "to he realized
only through spiritual understanding and attainment"
Directors cited the universal determination. to win the peeee as
advance evidence of a world-wide realization that "righteous victory
under amts will not suffice t0 guarantee freedom to mankind,'
Freedom front want and fear, freedom in warship and speech,
the Directors stated, constitute 1111.16 more than a political slogan
or governmental ideology, "for 'our great Way -shower, Christ Jesus,
proclaimed centuries ago that freedom accords With tincl's will and
law; furthermore he gave simple; clear direction for the atta ebur "t
of hill freedom for the individual, and through the incliv" 1'•' 1 ire all
humanity.
OF EI 'SY CANADIAN HOUSEWIIVES.
Kellogg's cereals have .an
important place in Canada's
kitchens-41ow, more then
ever. Appetizing anytiine
for breakfast, lunch,:betweelt
meal snacks. Add flavone to.
'leftover' cliches, too!
meet before Ile replied, "1 am go-
ing to tell yon because—well, you
have got to know—for your own
safety, Christine, he was following
:you" -
"•He - was—whit: "•-
".Ile was skulking in a Shadow,'
Bill said. "when you came out of
that clairvoyant's joint; and ile
slunk along the Boardwalk behind
you, evidently waiting for a chance.
to stop you when there- was no
one else near."
* • a *
Christine's spine crawled at the
picture his words conjured.
"Of course," Bill went -on. "the
reason I know is that I was trailing
you, too. While I was down on
the beach. 1 saw you standing
under a light an the Boardwalk,.
reading something. I was trying
to- catch up with you when von
went into that 'temple of Truth
place, and -e -well, .I waited in a
parked car just off the Boardwalk.
And now I've got something
to ask you, Christine. Jest - now
you - started to call Truss -in -Boots
by Mame, didn't you?"
Christine said, hardly bee
Bering it yet herself, "he's Jaspar—. •
Cousin Flounces butler At least
he was her butler the last 7 knew.
It's incredible, but suppose he
did kill her?•'
"I am supposing it," Bill said
shortly. "But what's a lot more
vital to me is that he -wasn't fol-
lowing you for any gooel."
"But, Bit] even if-- he stabbed
Cousin Emma—why should he
scant to Stant me?"
"God knows -unless hes a man-
• iac. , , And only God knows •
where he's skulking now. .
Christine, you recognized hint at -
Omirc, didn't yon? I was sure that
you had."
Christine's blood chilled.
If even Bill had been to stove,'
Inspector Parsons had not, as she
holed, been just guessing, , He
knew,
(Continued Next Week)
Rabbie Would Hage
Been More Sensible
"Vc thinks a fine lot of Shakes-
peare"? I do, sir." "An' ye think
he was inair clever than Robbie
B•.irns "Why, there's no compar-
ison between them" "Maybe no';
int ye tell us it was Shakespeare
who wrote, 'Uncnsy Hes the head
that nears a crown,' Now', Rob-
bie world never hae written sic
nonsense as that." "Nonsense
fiir1" "Ace, jr1St Ilonsense. Rob-
bie would bee kept fine that a
king or onceu either disna gang to
heti wi' a croon 00 their head.
He'd hae liens they hang it over
the hack u' a chair,"
Has No Chance For.
Pros cation --Poor `Ike"
As t r feral Dwight 1). Eisen-
hower, r aunandcr of the Allied
lnvaoi nt Forces, 'Inc cur sieg by
alt Army hospital: in hip big
linunlsiec, with its four stars and
attrectile girl driver, one of too
soldier patients watrhiug the rt'
go by pointed to it.
"Gosh," he said to the ether, "i
sure wcnld,lile that gay's jar. Just
look at that buggy and all the
trimmings." The other soldi', dis-
agreed. "I wouldn't take 'let job
on a bet," he said.
They argued and finally -1., dis-
senter was asked why he weald not
take the general's job. "\le.1, you
see, there's no chance for :romo-
tion," was the reply.
General Eisenhower to1.1 the
troops this story on himself whet
he visited the Can:ol ,t -is ,shortly
before "D -Day,'
Hatching Eggs Static
Test. Of Long Flight
People in occupied c u ttries
will want poultry during 1 -con-
struction, and if hatching e;1 1 edit
be flown to theni instead of ',Ircis,
there will be many econooa,'s To
determine whether egg wt_ hatch
after the Y:iriations of tent; stature
and barometric pressure uu'idcnt
to flight, the University of Mary-
land and Ainerican Airline re-
cently flew 15 dozen egg' from.
Washington to Los Angers.: and
back, and thea put them s:.ta iu-
cubation, with an equal a 11111 c'
that had not been flown, as cheek.
Results — 157 chicles from -lice 180
eggs that flew, and 162 from those
used as a check. l'on:',n.:inn:
Hatching eggs ran be Boon to
Europe.
Perk Up Your Ve SL
In these days, when goo' veil-
ing is scarce, it is a disc po;;'y t0
care for what one iies !) ary-
looking veil can be restore) to
crisi ness by pressing ,ender ".axed
paper with a warn) iron;
You 'Will Enjoy Stetting int
The ST. REGIS HOTEL
a t 1 ,'rr R0,,,,. Willi, 1:15111, : 4nN••
e n ;tot Telephone..
c tl ores
$2.50 110—
taoable, $3.50 Ira,
c timid Food, Airing anadl ltm,e-
irrae Vtg•le 5'I '.
Sherbourne at Cisrlton
Tel. RA. 44735
Easy Wady To Tret
Sore, Painful Rios
Tlere is the ah:uiee for ever;' Par-
son in Canada suffering tram sure,
itehing, painful piles t0 try 0 cimtrte
Lime rautecly with the plontiao Ot
a reliable firm to refund the cosi
of rat, tvon rntenc itr.: note tura not
salistJed with the result'-,
RhnWy go to any d uegIst and
get a bottle of Tiem-110 e1 0114 tine
as directed, Nem -Rota id an inlein-
al. treatment, easy and t)toasant to
use and Maiming rasutts are Ouieh-
tS' not eed Itching unci sortmeaa,
are rot eyed, pato anbaides and as
the 1110 111601 is continued' the ranee,
painteit nue :tumors heal over ICS V. -
Mg the rectal nlaniheones eaean.
•old healthy. Get a battle of Item.
'Hold today and sen for youreetC
what an ens5; pleasant way this is
to rid yourself or ,your ptic mtacry,.
11.011;, The Rilaelsar OS 15145' nonan
is a reti:nllte• firm, teeing bulslnen,,
tee tiaao;rdn for over 20 -,s eanir". 15 y051
nth tron-feel with sore, itching,
painful pite•a. Froin-tUetd anaeet -sdp
you outetl}' or the...moll(' 13nreunao
"•Sha will he gladly rerinn 4110c0.
ISSUE 26-1044