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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1944-04-13, Page 6mous for flavour since 1892 the 'St -dada' name assures you of a uniform blend of quality teas.. � � {�,( i'� E'� gt1i:"E'G E $ 1,,E CIGARETTES E ..,....•. MAY.E 0011. )11% ty i .,. �C9TOBACCOO YOU IS'Oft 5 tdt�E(.�� 'tg�L �EE�5S5'i T ELF T LKS SADIE B. CHAMBERS A Luncheon Ash These Supper or Luncheon Dish- es were sent to me by a friend, whose cookery ability ranks very high. I thought I would like to ;ass them on to you, 1 8 -oz. pkg. spaghetti quarts boiling water . 345 cup butter (bacon fat, crisco, • any kind) 1 green pepper 3 tsp. salt 1% cups mushrooms 1 tsp. sugar 1 Ib. ground steak a% cups tomatoes 6 tbsp. grated cheese Crisp bacon and parsley Cook spaghetti in salted water. Drain. Melt butter in frying pan. Add onions, pepper, mushrooms. Cook slowly until golden brown. Add steak and salt. Cook 10 min- utes. Add spaghetti, sugar, tomatoes. When all is hot transfer to butter- ed baking dish. Sprinkle with grated cheese. Bake 20-30 minutes 350° F. Garn- ish with broiled bacon siicea and parsley. Serves 8. Corned Beef Cover a 4 -ib. piece of beef with 2 quarts cold water. Dissolve: 1/2 cup salt 1 teaspoon saltpeter 2 heaping teaspoons •brown..segae l ew shoes garlic if desired 2 teaspoons pickling spice Pickle far 2 weeks. Keep well covered and in a cold place. We had some of ours after being in brine only a week and it was grand. I used the thick end of brisket, It was quite fat, but the meat is tastier. Cook the cabbage and vegetables in separate water. London now has fewer than 5,- 000 taxis plying for hire; it is es- timated that 4,000 have gone off the streets since 1930. INSTITUTE NURSING. COURSE FOR CWAC The Canadian Women's Army Corps has expanded its activities again, this time in the field of nursing, with a course now being conducted at Charley Park Military Hospital in Toronto, Twenty-five CWAC's from across the Dominion are taking the first course which will fit them to assume the duties of nursing orderlies on the same standard as male Army nursing orderlies. It is planned to ultimatey train 150 CWAC's for this work. Two phases of the course are shown above. Top --Cpl. M. Corbett, CWAC of Montreal, gives a drink of water to a becl patient under the watchful eye of Lieut. Nursing Sister Elinor Pettit of Hamilton, Ont., instructress in charge of the course. Lower--Lieat. Pettit 'lectures to attentive CWAC's CHAPTER XXV SYNOPSIS Dave Bruce, out of a job, arrives at Wilbur Ferris' Cross -Bar ranch. Curran, the foreman, promises him a job if he can break a horse call- ed Black Dawn. When he suc- ceeds, he discovers Curran expect- ed the horse to kill 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 roan named Hooker. But when Hooker is shot and Dave is charg- ed with murder, Lois saves hirn from being lynched. Wounded, she guides him to a mountaincave where she thinks they will be safe from Curran and the sheriff's posse. .A quarrel between Ferris and Judge Lonergan reveals that Fer- ris had killed his partner, BIane Rowland, many years before. Thor- oughly scared, Ferris takes Curran into his confidence. When Dave is there was no noon Dave could see his way clearly in the light of the stars. He was descending from the last mesa to the range when sud- denly he heard the sound of riders,. He drew rein and listened, In another moment the riders cane into sight, four men ridi,ag almost abreast: ,But these men wore riding breeches, or trousers tied at the knee, not chaps, and it was light enough to see that they were not waddles. "Hold her there, feller!" shouted' one of thein, as he espied' Dave rein in. * * * Dave, sitting easily on the' black, waited for the four to gallop up to • him, There was no demand to ele- vate, but each of the four had his hand on his gun butt. It was the horse they recognized before the man. "Black Dawn!" shouted the fore- most. "Yeah, Sims, and I'm Dave Bruce," answered Dave. - "The sheriff told the this afternoon he'd got four deputies. ridin' around the away from the cave, Curran kid- naps Lois. Meanwhile Dave dis- covers a human skeleton with a bullet hole through the skull. When he later finds Lois gone he enlists the aid of Sheriff Coggswell, who is now convinced of his innocence. They go to the cabin where they. have learned Lois is being held prisoner, unaware that Ferris and Curran have already brought Judge Lonergan there to kill him. Curran, however, double crosses Ferris and kills him instead, just as Dave and the sheriff arrive on the scene. In the fight tli:at follows Curran es- capes. Dave dismounted again, ran to the body of Pedro, ands b'ettt downs A glance showed ilii r that the ilial • was dead. lie ran back to Lois. "1 want yuh to try t� make yore way along the trail back to the cave," he told her, "1'm goin' after Curran. and there ain't no time to lose. that snake 'gets away, there'll be no peace in the valley, no peace for you, darling. 1 got to go" The night was clear, and though Novel Chair Set r rtttitx� e, Ctochet hook and embroidery needle go hand in hand to create this decorative chair set. Make the peacock its colored floss; crochet the tail in the pineapple design. Inexpensive and fun to do. Pat- tern 761 contains a transfer pat- tern of peacock bodies; crochet directions; stitches. Send twenty cents in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for Dthis pattern to Wilson Needlecraft ept,, Room 421, 73 Adelaide St, West, Toronto. Write plainly pat- tern number, your manse and ad- dress. mesa. Well, 1 want yuh feliers, and I want yuh pronto." "Not so bad as I want you, Bruce," said Sims. "Yuh best put up yore hands. Yuh can't shoot it out with the four of us:" "Sims, yore head seemed kind of thick to me when I saw yuh in Mescal," said Dave. "Sheriff Coggs- well and me trapped Lonergan and Curran in the shack at the end of the blind gully up there." He point- ed with his right hand toward the heights. 'They'd .lured Ferris there and killed him. Lonergan's its cuffs, and Curran's got away. He's ridin' hell- bent for the Cross -Bar house now, ,,wi , doubt, to_ get his greaser gang. I'm after him." "What the—!Lonergan? I'ut cuffs? Yore a slick talker, Bruce," "Maybe, but .every second we stay here taikin' gives Curran a few yards more of leeway," answered Dave. "We got to git Curran, Sims," shouted one of the four. "That's what the sheriff sent us here for. Maybe this hombre's lyin', but I'm for takin' a chance he ain't." "You'd best take • that chance Sinis," said Dave grimly. I'm with yuh, Bruce," said • Sims: "Takia' yuh at yore word. But I'll take yore gun." C`Htil SY i iv' Ita.sa, bre for 4.:COJGIi.ey—COLDS nE NCH/TIS W.0— ASTHMA 'WHOOPING COUG SIMPLE SORE THR*AT Wren pkv ; ice e's The five turned their horses and raced across the range. And soon the lighted bunkhouse of the Cross - Bar appeared, far out over the range. Between the house and the riders nothing was Visible but the rolling grassland. They were nearing the ' ranch - house now. They could see the sil- houettes of men, passing and re- passing in front of the door, blot- ing out the lights as they' moved. "IIe's there," called Dave. "He's gettin' his crowd together. \Ve got to take Curran alive. They'll make a fight for it—" His words were cut short as a gun cracked at a distance of fifty yards. The five had been sighted, but the Mexican who had fired pre- maturely had extinguished Cur- ran's hopes of another ambuscade. As they paused for an ,instant to jam in fresh cartridges, Curran's voice could be heard somewhere among the shadows, cursing his men. There cane another volley. * * * Dave felt a searing pain in his left arm as a thrown knife gashed the muscles. The thrower came on with a leap. Seeing a knife uprais- ed, Dave brought down his revolver muzzle on the man's head, srliash- ing it like an eggshell. Two men flung themselves upon Sims, who was swinging his gun in an arc about his head. Leaping forward, Dave sent one of thein senseless to the ground. Sims swung his gun and knocked the other cold. "Thanks, Bruce," he gasped. Then Dave whirled as a matt dame breaking through toward It was Curran. The foreman had hung back, intending to let the Cross -Bar crowd do his fighting for him. But the sight of Dave had driven suint mad with rage and transformed his face into the mask of a wild beast. He leaped, gun in hand, and snapped the trigger, the muzzle a foot from Dave's fore- head. (Concluded Neat 'Wel:) Poverty is that cruel state of af- fairs that deprives a.lot of people of things they are better off with- out. 38 - Hour Air Service New York To Cairo An amazing but increasingly re- gular air freight and passenger ser- vice from New York to Cairo in 38 hours now is an accomplished fact. The old route to North 'Africa, Egypt and the Far East is still the usual ne. On it you fly from New York to Miami, Natal, across the south Atlantic to Accra, up to Cas- ablanca, across the Atlas in.'un- tains and along the Mediterranean to Algiers, with the climax a long, eight -hoar pull across the desert to Cairo. But now an increasing number of Army Air 'Transport Command 'planes have been landing at a new American desert airfield after a di- rect hop from New York to the Azores,' Casablanca, Algiers and Cairo in little more than a day and a half from take -off to final land- ing. The airport has been open only five months. The commandant 'thinks nothing of putting up 500 or 600 transients overnight, " said good-bye to Constipation T." "I've given up pills and harsh cathartics.' 1 found my consti- pation was due to lack of "bulk" in my diet -and, I discovered that KELLOGG'S ALL - BRAN is a perfectly grand way to get at the cause,, and, aelp correct it!" If this is your :rouble, stop "dos - ng' with harsh pur- tatives—with their ack of lasting relief !Try eating .a serving ofALL-13RJ..N daily, with milk, or apt inkled over other zereals. Or, eat several ALL -BRAN muf- fins daily 1 Drink plenty of water. Get KELLOGG'S ALL -BRAN at your grocer's today—in either of 2 conveni- ent sizes. Made by Kellogg's in /..cm - don, Canada. ISSUE 16-1944 1 SUPPLIES SNOW WHITE CLOSET snow 'White Closet, chrome plated--.triaumin;Ts, non -break - aide seat, hrnsss ctnd rubber 'floor ftnlige, c 4lna $29.95 tank and bowl.... 'P Porcelain Enamelled BATH TUB t'orcetatn Enamelled Tiathtab-5 feet long. 80 Inches wide $32.85 (Fittings extra) 17" \ la" F:\A.Hl;1.LI.7D 1110: BASIN with (i;+_" bock that V' cateran. ConiiNs in gltvten- ing %%Idte Wirueltiln enawol, Peke of haasiei on- $.10.25 ly JACKET HEATEIS DOME TOP •Users t() bent ,vaatea• in n range honor for honae Herviee, also, it desired, can 'Ie con- fleeted( to a radiator to bt..tt $errral r00111H. 30 -gallon JACKET' HEATER $10.05 40 -gallon JACKET HEATER $12.75 60 -gallon JACKET HEATER .$22.50 60 -gallon 'JACKET HEATER $24.50 We prepay freight on orders of $50.00 or more, innmediate ship. ments guaranteed on any of your plumbing requirements. Mail orders a n d inquiries handled by return mail. OPEN 0 r tid i i3 iiii yea EVENINGS, as diii TILL 9 'O'CLOCK SEPTIC TANK Self-eeeetaineal, 'r(ecl sep(ie iauh, f(i'e 48", foe r person hert,ve- Iaold. Flatstly t[13blee-@ �} a N 1. a l l �e 5�*V0/� PLUMBING t CALL US AT 2975 DUNDAS ST. (at Pacific) LY. 0700 .,,...i i.i.ratam . ,ir zatha 'ataimu .w iummak + s a i¢i'Ienn 4}tr±ut