HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1943-11-18, Page 2NO MORE "DOSING"
MY CONSTIPATION
•-I'VE CORRECTED
THE CAUSE!
.,uAVW fir\G`+ \,�
'"Regularity" is important any time,
but it's vitally important in these
busy war days when all of us are
working harder than ever. Don't you
be "slowed down" by that common
type of constipation due to lack of
'bulk" in your diet. And be sensible
.... correct the trouble right at its
:source instead of "dosing" with harsh
purgatives that give only temporary
relief.
Eat KELLOGG'S ALL -BRAN , , grand -
tasting as a cereal or in hot, crispy
muffins ... eat it every day ... drink
plenty of water ... then see if you
don't forget you ever had common
constipation. For ALL -BRAN sup-
plies the "bulk" your diet needs ...
promotes natural regularity. Your
grocer has ALL -BRAN in two con-
venient sizes. Made by Kellogg's in
London, Canada.
TABLE TLKS
SADIE B. CHAMBERS
Christmas Cake Time
Here we are — our fourth
Christmas at war — and we are
again discussing the Christmas
Oake problem. Of course, those
who made cakes for the over-
seas boxes will already have them
on their way. Many bought this
year, as the bakeries and con-
fcetioners do have some appetiz-
ing looking cakes, neatly wrapped
up, ready for packing. However,
many of us still adhere to the
tradition that there is nothing
quite as satisfying as the cake
with the little home touches and
flavorings, and for these we are
giving you three recipes. They
were given two years ago but as
I have had many requests for
them again, I am repeating them
this week.
Dark Fruit Cake
% Ib. butter
1 lb. currants
11% llbsh raisins
le lb. almonds
2 cups brown sugar
234 cups flour
1.4 teaspoon cinnamon and
nuerees
6 „ggs
1 teaspoon vanilla.
34 teaspoon almond flavoring
1 cup cherries
1 slice candied pineapple
1/2 teaspoon soda
1k lb. citron peel
1/2 1b. lemon peel
Cream butter and sugar in the
usual way and add the eggs well
beaten. Beat all thoroughly, then
add the prepared fruit. Stir in
well and allow to stand while
preparing the flour and spices.
Stir sifted flour and apices into
fruit mixture and add the liquid
flavoring. Bake about four hours
$1.22 SENDS 300
"BRITISH CONSOLS", "LEGION",
"MACDONALD'S MENTHOL",
"SCOTCH BLENDS" or "EXPORT"
Cigarettes
or 1 ib. Tobacco -- BRIER SMOKING or any
MACDONALD'S FINE CUTS (with armors) aim
DAILY MAIL CIGARETTE TOBACCO Postpaid to
Soldiers In Ph. Canadian Army OVERSEAS and
CANADIANS IN UNITED KINGDOM FORCES.
Men Order and Remittance toa—
T4Ia0tasciesatoanyehangeln GotunmsntRetulations
; t
NE ...Immunity
Treatment" prevents
COLDS
lasts VfcVax Capsula Contains:
Cold Vaccine -specially prepared
to combat common cold bacteria.
Vitamins approximating amounts
In foods listed below, without
fattening calories.
A IA pound Butter
B1 1$ slices Whole Wheat Bread
C % elan Orange Juke
D 5 teaspoonfuls Cod Liver Oil
Developed by. Roberts
Biological Laboratory,
Toronto.
OA 01 viiir
tabAY
I to 2 months' treatment $2.5O
v-�
in a very slow oven. This makes
two medium sized cakes.
White Fruit Cake
1 cup sugar
1/2 cup white corn syrup
1162 cups butter
8 eggs
1 lb. sultana raisins
1/4 lb. mixed peel
Iii cup chopped cherries
2 teaspoons vanilla
1 teaspoon nutmeg
1 teaspoon almond flavoring
2 slices candied pineapple
21/2 teaspoons baking powder
1/a cup milk
8 cups sifteld flour
Bake 11/2 hours in a slow oven.
This makes 1 large cake.
Economical Fruit Cake
2 eggs
11/2 cups brown sugar
1/ cup sour milk or buttermilk
1 teaspoon soda
2 teaspoon salt
2 cups seedless raisins
1/2 1b. chopped cherries
1 cup chopped pecans or
walnuts
1 L teaspoon cinnamon
1yA teaspoon nutmeg
2 cups flour
1 cup butter or shortening
Cook at 300' to 350°F. 14
hours.
Makes 1 medium sized cake.
Miss Chambers we1eoms.n personal
letters from interested readers. She
in pleased to receive suggestions
on topics for her column, and Is
always ready to listen to your "pet
peeves." Requests for recipes or
speclnl menus are In order. Address
your letters to "Mies Sadie II.
Chambers, 73 Went Adelaide 5t.,
Toronto." Send stamped self-ad-
dressed envelope If you wish a
reply.
Britain To Deliver
Warships To Canada
The navy will be glad to hear
that there is to be no delay in the
delivery-:• of, two..... -British -built
cruisers and possibly six destroy-
ers to Canada, says The Ottawa
Citizen. According to the Naval
Minister, Angus Macdonald, there
is a friendly difference between
British and Canadian authorities
over financial arrangements. The
British would like Canada to ac-
cept the warships as a straight
gift without cash payment. At. Ot-
tawa, however, it is the Depart-
ment of Finance's view that Can-
ada should buy the ships; they
could easily cost $20,000,000.
Whatever bookkeeping trans-
actions may be agreed upon, the
transference of a pair of modern
cruisers and six destroyers from
the British Navy will be a hand -
scene addition to Canadian naval
strength. It is going to be more
than ever needed as Canada's part
in the sea war is extended across
the Pacific Ocean and, doubtless,
through the Mediteranean Sea to
the Bay of Bengal. It is presum-
ably one fruitful result of the
meeting of British and Canadian
naval chiefs at the Quebec con-
ference.
"WHATAYA DOING SATURDAY NIGHT, SIGNORINA7';
In the best accepted+ boy.meets-girl manner, a Canadian soldier unreels his line of chatter for the
benefit of a coy and smiling group of Italian signorinas in Avigliano.. While his buddies stand by in -
mute admiration of the pretty Italian girls, an urchin sidles up to get an earful of this strange lingo.
CHAPTER IV
He reined in beside her and
raised his hat. He looked into her
face. The hard -set eyes of gray
like his own, flashed like stormy .:
pools as they met his.
"I wanted you to understand.
how it came about," said Dave.
"I'd just rode up to Ferris' ranch,
hopin' to strike a job. Curran told
me I could have one if I could;,
break Black Dawn. I didn't know
the horse was yours. I thought
they was all Ferris' broncs.
"After I got on his back I saw,
he was a killer. It was his life
against nine. I broke him, and he
pretty near broke me. That's all.
I got to say except I hope you un-
derstand."
"That's all you've got to
asked the girl. - '
"I'm askin' you to accept my
apologies for what I done. Don't
seem to me there ought to be hard
feelings between us."
"Your.feelings don't interest me
one mite, stranger," the girl' an-
swered. "There's Mescal, over
there." She pointed. "I reckon
that's your way. My way Iles over
yonder." She pointed up the
branching trail. "You ride on and
don't cross my path again. Good
morning."
* • •
Dave couldn't see the touch of
her knees upon the flanks of the
black, but instantly it had wheeled
and was loping along the trail that
ran up toward the mountains. And
Instantly the whole remuda had
wheeled and followed In its tracks.
Before Dave quite realized it, he
was sitting on his bay alone,
watching the rapidly disappearing
herd thudding across the grass.
He sat there with his eyes on it
until it vanished from sight be-
hind a long hogback. He saw it
appear again, toy horses running
ALL -BRAN BREAD
For a loaf of bread that beats anything Grandmother used to
make, next time try this recipe for All -Bran bread. This bread has
a flavor and goodness all its own—but better still it provides valuable
food elements so necessary for good health. Because it uses bran
cereal, it provides extra vitamin B1, niacin and iron for your family's
diet.
2 tablespoons shortening
% cup molasses
1 egg
1 cup All -Bran 21h teaspoons baking powder
Blend shortening and molasses, Add egg and beat well. Stir
in All -Bran and milk. Let soak until most of moisture is taken up.
Sift flour, salt and baking powder together; add to first mixture and
stir until liquid and dry ingredients are combined. Fill greased
muffin pans two-thirds full and bake in moderately hot oven
(400° F.) about 25 minutes; or turn batter into greased loaf pan
and bake in moderate oven (350* F.) about 45 minutes.
Yield: 1 loaf (Oh x 4164 x 3 -inch pan),
% cup milk
1% cups flour
Ve 'teaspoon salt
in the wake of the black, and rap-
idly approaching the sage patches
and scrub that clothed the base
of the foothills.
It was barely two hours since
he had ridden up to Ferris' ranch.
The sun was still high in the sky.
The things that had happened in
those two hours seemed now in-
comprehensible and almost like a
dream. He was aware that he was
aching from head to foot after his
tussle with the black. And his
knuckles were bleeding from their
contact with Curran's teeth.
The valley narrowed, the track
ascended. Once over the neck
Dave saw the little cowtown hud-
dled on either bank of a muddy
stream, with the arid, sage -cover-
ed lands on either side of it,
"!tree tchingmoun'ta,ins.
away endlessly toward
* • * '
Mescal was not much different
from the other cowtowns Dave
had ridden through on his journey
southward. Rather smaller, uglier,
dirtier, but the same half-dozen
stores with their false fronts, a sa-
,loon masquerading as a hotel, and
a few frame or adobe houses set
down on Iots of all sorts of angles
to one another.
A swinging sign that creaked '
dismally in the wind, proclaimed
the hotel to be the WAYSIDE
REST. Four horses were tethered
to the rack in front of it. They
were the only living things visible
in the short, dusty street.
Dave rode round and 'found the
inevitable rusty, galvanized iron
tank, fed .with a .trickle of water
from a pipe. He gave his bay a
drink, placed him alongside the
others at the rack. Then pushing
open the swinging doors of the
saloon, he went inside. Two men
were seated at a table.
* * *
One was an individual of middle
age, wearing striped trousers and
a faded cutaway coat, with a ring
on his little finger and a pearl pin
in his tie. The other was an elderly
man with a shock of gray hair
under his dilapitated hat, an un-
kempt beard, and clothes that
might have been exchanged with
any average scarecrow without
either getting the better of the
bargain.
Upon a wall was a notice, ap-
parently struck off from a hand -
press, the ink smeared all over the
paper. It announced the sale, at
an early date, of a valuable ranch
property of two thousand acres,
under foreclosure.
Dave poured himself a small
drink from the bottle that the bar-
keep handed him and filled up
with ginger ale. The barkeep and
the Mexicans watched him drink
in silence. Dave had just set down
his glass when there came an ex-
plosive outburst from the eld man
at the table.
"You can't do that to me, Loner-
gan!" he shouted. "It's twelve
years since you brought me here,
and you can't put me out this way,
with the girl you—"
"One word more, you old fool,
and you'll be sorry you opened
your mouth," snapped the other.
"Twelve years? Yes, it's twelve
years, and the ranch has gone to
rack and ruin. You haven't begun
to pay off the principal, and now
you're a year behind with the in-
terest. I'm tired of you, Hooker.
You're just a drunken pest, giving
a bad name to the district. Hook-
er, you're through."
* *
Both men had risen to their
feet. Old Hooker, blind with rage,
swayed across the *table.
"So that's what you think. Lon-
ergan, is it?" he. sneered. "Well, it
may be that you're wrong." Dave
• noticed that In- spite of the old
man's condition his accents were
those of a man of education. "I
haven't lived in Mescal twelve
years for nothing, Lonergan. It
may be you'll change your mind
when you look into it."
"You doddering old fool!" shout-
ed the other, drawing his hand
smartly across Hooker's face.
The blow was not a severe one,
but old ,Hooker, reeling back, lost
his footing and fell, bringing down
his chair in the crash. Next mo-
rdent Dave was at Lonergan's side,
hand gripping his shoulder, He
swung him around.
"You ain't partic'Iar about Pick-
in' somebody your own age for
fightia', are yon, Lonergan?" he
asked.
Lonergan whitened, backed.
"Who are you. and what are you
butting. into this business for?" he
shouted.
"No business of mine at all," ad-
mitted Dave. "I thought you was
lookin' for a fight. But I guess
you're the kind that likes to play
sure and safe."
"He -owes me two hundred dol-
lars hack interest on his mortgage
and he hasn't got a cent to his
name," shouted Lonergan. "Drinks
up every cent he makes in this
saloon. I'm tired of him—if it's
any business of yours. And we
don't like strangers interfering
with our affairs in Mescal."
(Continued Next Week)
FEELS SEW -SEW
In 12 years of hockey, one of
the Chicago Black Hawks has had
160 stitches used to close cuts
and gashes—and so, we suppose,
he feels just sew -sew.
—Stratford Beacon -Herald.
Pimples cmd Blackheads
Relieved by flies Medicinal Ointment
Whether in bathing suit or evening dress you become very much embar-
rassed by skin affections and irritations on the shoulders and back as well
as on the face. Why not do something about it—something worth while.
Dr. Chases OINTMENT is a medicinal product on which you can rely for
clearing up skin troubles of this nature as
well as itching and eczema.
Mothers who are accustomed to use Dr.
Chase's OINTMENT for baby's skin troubles
and eczema find it so delightfully healing and
soothing that they soon acquire the habit of
using it for their own skin affections.
60 cts. a box. Economy Jar, five times as
much $2.00
Dr. Chase's
Ointmeni
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CANADA NEEDS YOU STRONG +a't0't»�:•:r':':y;:'i?8ikti`:. Ski':"+•.\�'>\R,'a$;ti >,y:�'a•.��.�•
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Follow Canada's Food Rules
for Health and. Fitness
FREE! A Valuable Recipe
Book—"Economy Recipes for
Canada's Housoldiers" contain-
ing many recipes suited to
today's requirements. Send a
postcard with your name and
address with the words
"Economy Recipes": Address
Dept♦ KIK, The Canada Starch
Home Service Department;
49 Wellington St. E.,
Toronto:
Published in
the interests
of
CANADA'S
NUTRITION
CAMPAIGN
by the makers
of
The CANADA STARCH COMPANY, Limited
Britain To Garner
A Record Harvest
Despite cultivation .of the small-
est acreage since official records
have been kept, Great Britain will
have gathered by the end of the
year the greatest harvest in its
history, according to R. S. End -
son, Minister of Agriculture. The
harvest, Hudson said, is due to 'the
untiring efforts of farm workers
who succeeded "by the grace of
God, Who granted thein for three
years seasons that have made
record harvests possible.
'Because we have had to give
up more and more land every
month for airdromes, battle -train-
ing grounds and such purposes,
we actually have grown that
amount of food on the smallest
acreage of Iand devoted to 'agri-
culture since official records have • '
been kept."
The harvest, Hudson said, in-
cludes a million more tons of
bread grains and thousands
tons more potatoes than last year.
The solution to
MALNUTRITION
is given in
"WHY
HUMANITY
SUFFERS"
By W. E. HOLDER, M.1✓.
Fellow International Faculty
of Science (London, Eng.)
IS THE CAUSE OF
MASTITIS AND BANG'S
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REDLOH PUBLISHING
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We can often Mame nervous tension
for mi•erable feelings and fears. And
in these days,, thousands of nervous
people long to get a real grip on them-
selves ... they yearn for quiet nerves.
Many are taking Dr. Miles Nervine.
This is a scientific combination of effec-
tive sedatives. Nervine helps relieve
general nervousness, sleeplessness,
nervous fears, nervous headache and
nervous irritability. It has been used
for this purpose for sixty years. Take
Nervine according to directions and
help things along
with more rest,
wholesome food,
fresh air and exer-
cise. Effervescing
Nervine Tablets:
35c and 75c. Ner-
vine Liquid: 25c
and $1.00,
ISSUE No. 47-43