Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1944-02-17, Page 7r Muffins can help keep youcieguIa r By eating several every day, and drinking plenty of waster, you can got at constipation due to lack of dietary "bulk"! If this is your trouble, try, Kellogg's A!1 -gran Muffins of cup Milk 1 cup sifted flour %teaspoon salt 2teaspoons baiting powder S tablespoons shortening 3/4 eup sugar • 1 egg 1 eup Kellogg's All -Bran Blend shortening and sugar thorough- ly; add egg and beat well. Stir in All -Bran and milk; let soak until most of moisture is taken up. Sift four with salt and baking powder. Add to first mixture and stir only until flour dis- appears. Fill greased muffin pans two- thirds full and bake in moderately hot even (400°F.) about 30 minutes.Yield: 2large a J . „eeee • ese ,v ALL -BRAN Made by Kellogg's iii London, Canada When. Mom's Down When Mother is -under the weather, Our household comes Frim of unglneri! You know what - men::. It's easily seen We're all in an unpleeent Pop struggles c»ownstairs it: py- jamas Anf fixes the furnace and lights The teakettle fire. You'd simply expire To. see Father put things to rights. Re turns on the. light in our bed- room And says, "Mother's staying in bed; She's not feeling mood," Thf,n it's understood We have to vet :area fast, i:s Lead. There's no cheery talk at the :de; We have to prepare ow mil lunch And pack it for soleee,, to rule: 'We're not .,. Whir 11( C i:r :.:. 'filet e's ..is ... k.' .. r,w c...t.:,. necks -:•1 s And nothing seems right either mornitla or night; I'mglad .she's . riot . sick 'ter much. —Casual, in Chicago Tribune, Khaki rayon stockings for. "walking out" are being issued members of the Canadian Women's Army Corps, it has been announc- ed at National Defence Headquar- ters. matmemorammaksumeseagauccsowarie Phonograph Records Thousands of popular dance selections to choose from. Also Automatic Phonographs available for Rent Write for particulars. Vigneux Bros. Automatic Phonographs 980 BAY ST., TORONTO A SADIE B, CiHAMBER8 Requests Here's hoping these "request". recipes will be useful and the. results appetizing. Bran Carrot Pudding 32 cup shortening 1 eup brown sugar 2 eggs 1/ cups grated mew carrots cup ell -bran 1/ cups sifted flour Ye teaspoon nutmeg 1.r/2 teaspoon baking powder % teaspoon salt . 34 cup milk 1 teaspoon lemon. extract Blend shortening and sugar to- gether y. until fluff Ada the tin - beaten egg yokes, beating well after each addition, Stir in carrots andall-bran. Sift flour and other dry ingredients, stirring' into batter alternately with •the milk. • Add 'flavoring; fold in the stiffy beaten egg whites. •Bake 'in a greased baking pan for one hour in moderate oven. erve with. orange sauce. a, eir.a..,Orange Sauce 4 cup sugar 3 tablespoons sifted flour 3 teaspoon salt 132 cups boiling water 3 tablespoons grated carrot 2 table:,pontis orange juice 2 tablespoons lefnoli juice 2 tablespoons butter Mix sugar, flour • and salt to- gether. .Add water slowly, stirring conettentiy. .Add carrot, juices and butter. Cook 'over hot water until thickened an'l flour is cooked, about 20 minutes. Serve hot on pud- ding. Carrot Custard Pie Cook three or four carrots in as little water as possible. Rub through a course sieve and use 1 cupful of mixture. Any left over could be used in meat patties, etc. To 1 cup of sieved carrot add 1 scant cup of sugar, 2 or 3 eggs, 1 cup of milk, 1 teaspoon allspice, pinch of ginger, x2 teaspoon salt, 32 teaspoon vanilla, Pour into • pastry lined plate and gake in moderate oven until done. * • Mincemeat Pudding cup r.:inec.r.eat l•<'la •.4 powder 1 yup' baiter 1 c g cup railk Grease six muffiIn pans. Put a spoonful of mincemeat in each. Sift; flour; measure, and sift with baking powder and salt. Cream butter; blend in sugar. Add egg and beat''until the mixture is light. Add the dry, ingredients alternately with the milk. Add vanilla. Turn into paras over the mincemeat and and bake in moderate oven for about 80 minutes. Remove from pans and serve hot, mincemeat side up, with n pudding sauce. Hiss Chambers weleonms personal letters from Interested readers. She is pleased to receive suggestions on topics for her column, and le always ready to listen to your "pet peeves." Requests for recipes or special menus are In order. Address your letters to "Mies Sadie 11. Chambers, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto." Send stamped self-ad- dressed envelope If you wish a reply. Cr QUICKfEUEF IfOR` 1 csitiopis;--colms S ONCHITIS ASTHMA WHO P1'tio uOH CATARR, HHMA.. OAT PONT DELAY - BUY A ZOTTLE !r- �v,Ti TODAY! 11, CHILDREN LOVE VENO'S CHAPTER XVII SYNOPSIS Dave Bruce, out of a job, arrives at Wilbur Ferris' Cross -Bar ranch. Curran, the foreman, promises him. o job if he can break a horse called Black Dawn. When he succeeds, he discovers Curran expected .the horse to, kill him. A girl named Lois rides up, angry with Dave for breaking "her" horse.. She re- fuses to speak to Dave even when he uses his savings to pay off the mortgage on the small ranch she shares with her foster father, a roan named Hooker. But when Hooker is shot and Dave is charged with murder, Lois saves him from, being lynched. Wounded, .a h e guides him to x mountain cave where she thinks they will be safe from Curran and: the sherif's posse. Meanwhile, a quarrel between Fer- ris and Judge Lonergan reveals that Ferris had killed his partner, Blane Rowland,many years before. • Lonergan ushered Ferris out into the, street, closed the door, and strode briskly in the direction of the courthouse, outside which a knot of men was already milling. Ferris got on his horse and rode slowly hack toward his ranch, tak- easy in the bunkhouse after his night's ride. And when they reached the office, he said, "Cur- ran, I reckon you and me haven't pulled together as well as we might have done, I'm in a jars now. Maybe us two could get together." * * * Curran's eyes narrowed, "I nev- er bore yule no ill feelin's, Mr. Ferris," he answered, "Course I knew yuh didn't exactly like Judge Lonergan's puttin' ane in here, but I done my best for yore spread." "Lonergan's got me by the throat," said the ranchman bitterly, and recounted their conversation of that morning. "But so far as I understood, yuh've kept up the mortgage in- - *est," said Curran. "And the mortgage has got another eighteen months to run," "Damn him, he's got something on me!" exploded Ferris. "Some- thing that happened before I came into the valley, that he could put me behind bars for, He's aimin' to treat me the way be was goin' to treat old Hooker. • When he's cleaned up on my ranch, how long d'you think your job will last?" "Yeah, I been tlrinkin' about that myself," Curran confessed. Ferris asked the question that he 4., 4,1\ ',,t,1:1; ,f1 ,1',,t,-'- gra "?rub ain't -ain't crylrn, girl?" ing the opposite direction till he got clear of the town. Suddenly blind rage filled Ferris' heart. and, according to the na- ture of the main, it did not shoo: itself upon his face, -which became a mask. Stupid,-, blindly trying to find reality in this new rein es - ion, Ferris rode back toward hie • ranch house with a sudden resuiu- . tion formed. Weak, irresolute, he was follow- ing the traditional line of least re- sistance in seeking a confidant. And Curran, the foreman, was the man he sought. He was throwing himself upon the mercy of the man between whom and himself there had been undeclared enmity ever since Lonergan made Curran fore- man of the Cross -Bar outfit, "Want to see you in the office," he told Curran, who was taking it Smart Capelet VI if Priorities on fuel have made eapelets ride the crest of fashion. When the furnace burns low throw this woolly bit of crocheted warmth about your chilly shoulders, Look pretty as only a capelet can make you look. The puff and knot stitch are quick to do. Pattern 761 con- tains directions for capelet, Send twenty Cents in coins (stamps cannot . be accepted) for this pattern to Wilson Needlecraft :Dept., Room 421, 73 Adelaide St. "West, Toronto, Write plainly Pat- tern number, your name and Acs- dress. eta A had asked ;Lonergan: "Why was Loneeeee so interested in that 1'Tcolke !i" 0 * Cur-.tCurteti oriented. "Mot folks think ii- e'; Wisie daughter," he said. "Don't l,ear no resemblance to him, of course, but she may take arter her arother. I never seen Mrs. Hooke;'; she died before I come here," • "I'pe heard that story, but I don't believe it." "You think the sheriff will get Bruce and that girl?" he asked in the meanwhile. "1 dunno," said Curran. "Lois Hooker, she knows the mountains like that herd of brutes she trails arter her. If they got enough food, they kin hide up till all int'rest in the affair has died out, so far as the sheriff's concerned. But I'll tell yuh- something. I'm • gain' to git her." Curran knew his man. "I' dunno what Lonergan's got on yuh, Fer- ris," he said, "but I ain't trustin' that feller further than I kin see him. And I guess there's plenty of folks in Mescal who wouldn't cry their eyes out if anything happened to him." * * * The ranchman's eyes met Cur- ran's. "You mean—you mean—?" he stammered. "I could do with a share in the Cross -Bar," said Curran bluntly. I ain't the kind who'd ride yuh down the way Lonergan's doin'. And what I had on you, you'd have on me, I guess. A third share's all Td ask" • "Suppose— suppose Blanc Row- land ever cane back?" the ranch - man quavered, "He's still half - owner. If he hadn't made that marl break when he thought the Cross - Bar was goiti' snarsh—" "Yuh needn't worry about him," grinned Curran. "He won't come back. First place, he'd be facin' a long term in the pen, and second place, he'd have to make restitu- tion of that money stole, which re- presents purty nigh half the value of the ranch." "What's your proposal?" "I ain't makin' none, Ferris. It come from you. I was only sayin', nobody's goin' to lay roses on his grave." "When -- how — what's your plan?" whispered Ferris, spilling e trail of whisky over the floor as he KE UPVIT ivfivis HOT N*tare stored more of the great~ growth and vitality element—protein—in whole grain oatmeal—than in any other natural cereal you can serve your family! Today, with less meat protein available; your family needs this extra vitality protection of Quaker Oats more than cverl Quaker Oats is so outstanding that it cont tains nine out of eleven food elements short in many present day diets! Serve delicious Quaker Oats dailyl Children simply love Quaker Oats; it's 50 smart to protect your family's health and vitality by serving the one best cereal when so many other foods are rationed: QUAKER OATS girlie Quaker Oats Company of Canada Limited remsasesmos tried to • refill his drink. "Just leave it to me, and I'll keep yuh posted, Ferris," answered Curran. "I've got to give Lonergan his answer within the next two days," the ranchman protested. "Stall hint off;" said the foreman. "String him along a day or two more; and if he insists tell him fo go plumb to hell. All you need to do is keep a stiff top lip. I'm glad you and me had this talk. It clears up things consid'rable. Yuh won't see much of me the next day or two, because I'll be on a lone wolf hunt in the mountains. But I`ll let yuh know when the trap's apeung." He went out of the office, reeling slightly, hutnrning a song. Ferris watched hint with new, dawning hope. (Continued Next Week) The Sunflower As A Grain Crop Two Outstanding Varieties Developed By Canadian Plant Breeders • Interest in the sunflower as a grain crop canoe about largely be- cause of the shortage of edible vegetable oils in Canada soon after the outbreak of the present war, states Dr. T. ;tf, Stevenson, Dc ,.ir'., n A r stol'moi°t. Central iz'ri,ahatai Fiarn, Ottawa. Ti.'Tke epi i1a,'.e . riet"s sii'I? v. tare tall arc ,.. arc! late matur- ing., ,-:are not suited V, 3 a grain cr,p in mic$t areas. However, other types were availalbe. Can- adian plant breeders had, some years prior to the outbreak ..of war, recognized the possibility of using the sunflower as a grain crop, chiefly as a source of vege- table oil. They set about to de- velop varieties suitable for grain production on a large scale. They decided first of all that such varieties must be semi -dwarf in habit of growth and early matur- ing so that they could be harvest- ed satisfactorily by ordinary farm machinery. Furthermore, the new varieties had to meet certain standards of perfection respecting oid content and oil quality. Two Outstanding Varieties The two outstanding varieities which resulted from that work are "Sunrise" and "Mennonite". Ap- proximately 30,000 acres of these varieties were grown for grain in the prairie provinces in 19.3. It is estimated that this crop will yield over 1832 million pounds of seed. This crop is capable of providing 4:2 million pounds of high quality edible oil and more than 2,250 tons of excellent, high protein oil meal suitable for stock feed. In addition there will be an abundance of seed available to enable us to elect the 30,000 acre objective set for 1044. The development and produc- tion of sunflo ; ers for grain con- stitutes another worthwhile con- tribution from agriculture to the war effort. . Men. of Canadian Navy Given Praise A. V. Alexander, First Lord of the Admiralty paid tribute recent- ly to the men of the Royal Cana- dian Navy. "Remarkable expansion of Cana- dian naval and air forces engaged in the Battle of the Atlantic, and their skilful deployment and gal- lant handling in appalling weather conditions have been important factors in the United Nations' ef- forts to get the measure of the U-boat," he said. He added the R.C.N. now pro- vides more than two-fifths of the ocean-going escorts in the North Atlantic, while the R.C. A.F. has undertaken one-quarter of the operations • against U-boats in that theatre. Many Canadians are also serv- ing in the Royal Nary and the R.A,F., he said. The R.C.N: s man- power -strength now approaches tl.at of the Royal Navy ir. peace time. He enumerated the nn.ny orations awarded Canad;.-n i~:r.:•y inert and added that Canada and the United Kingdom now were mainly responsible for the control and protection of the greet North- ern • Atlantic convoys. On the east coast of England millions of tons of earth are wash- ed away by the sea every year. MISTER BIG! He looks pretty small alongside Ruth Nunley, , 6 ft. 1 in., 254: pounds. He's Johnny Houston, 4, ft. 4 in., 120 founds. Both work at Missouri Valley Bridge & Iron. Co., Evansville, Ind. Euro is •t e1,:nn, stool,; +; 1.,.:..-. trating antiseptic oil t.1r't 11 1,iz- speedy relief from the itching ono. discomfort. Nut only does this boo an! i:•-• ept.ie oil promote rapid and Inenit1• healing in oprn sores and wound. but boils and simple ale-r.s also relieved. In skin affet'tions the itchinc' os Rczerna is quickly stopped. Pimple:, —,skin eruptions airy up and scala• off iii a very few days. The wait: is true of Barber's Itch, Salt. Rheum, Itching Toes and Pot and other inflammatory slain disorders.. You can obi ain 'goone's Oinera.ld Oil in the original bottle at ant - good drugstore. Satisfaction guar- anteed or money back. - Eczema itch Stopped in T Mules Your skin has nearly 10 million tiny seams and pores where germs ]tide and cause Itch- ing, Cracking, Eczema -like Rash. Peeling, Burning Skin Blotches, Pimples, Ringworm, Foot Itch and other skis blemishes. The new treatment Nixodeem stops the itching in 7 minutes and goes right to stork curbing, - the germs and should quickly help make attractiveclinrfact Nixodermtniust satisfy you completely or you get your money back. on return of empty package. Get Nixoderm from your druggist today --see how fast it. works and how much better you look. The money -back trial offer protects you, ST PPE fir a 0/1/74 OP Money Book For quick relief froth itrlth gof rezema. pimples, ath- fete,'s ffix,t, orales, sea hies. rasters and other eaernal.y cnirord skin troubles, use fnst•acting. cooling, antis oolitic. liquid 1). D. 1), Prescription. t;rraselrss, ntainlef.s.ti,wthe:•irtitationand quickly tfop,.mte,, a itPilinA. nil trial luntic nr. * itit. rmoney brick. Ask your druggist today for 1).1),1). I'RESCI7I1' IIO.'S, ISSUE 8--1844