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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1936-12-17, Page 2Y4 i.iF Y 1 it SPI .PZ v no,oz,,,,, oov-W,4P;.*e,q"40:'.P 40744:,.0 0;41-`, °14.4„0;,9N A:.4'+Y:01•'ww.'r,,K4 .4 i4 ip4 !44 Y;4 !�4 4 9 se4 •4 4 Y4l I4 IIIPIISII IEVI - By KATHLEEN NORRIS The Home Corner By ELEANOR °Aix o o -.s o o:� va a^�.o:+a a:4•�. ~+1 •0 .. -. Puddings For Codd Days ti .' ' "Some like it hot and somelike it she need not have been so brief m de. cold." The temperature at which dining. After all, he had meant it pudding is served depends somewhat well. Anter all he wa,, the oldest of on the nature of the puding aid the McCanns, and the McCanns had 'somewhat on personal preferences. Certain types such as steam puddings and baked batters and doughs, be- come very soggy when cold, Other puddings such as those conte:ping tapioca, rice or cornstarch, lend themselves to chilling. Dutch Apple Pudding RECIPI: 1/d cup butter, 14 cup sugar, 1 egg, 2-8 cup milk, 2 eups flour, 3% teaspoons halting powder, SYNOPSIS Sheila Caraeaddeu. blue-eyed, cop. pery-haired and ., lost her lab in a downtown New York office because she took it too Hauch upon hreself When she reached her home she found that her older brother. Joe, had also lost his lob While Angela, her younger sister. who had been crippled by infantile paralysis. was admiring a blue leather purse Sheila had bought at a church rummage sale for a dime, Sheila was nervous in the office the next morning; always pale, today she was unwontedly pale. The other girls, looked at her respectfully; they knew that she had been fired, and although to their care -free ranks this meant lit• tle, ye' it was impressive to have the invincible Sheila Garscadden subdued' and complaining of headache and of a bad night. The hours trembled for he . She would be free at two o'clock; would she go to the library for the appoint- ment with Pe;.er at half past three? "Indeed I'll not!" her thoughts said indignantly, even while she watched the clock. Long arguments with him under -ran all her other musings this morning; she felt languid and broken, after the too violent emotions of the night before. Dreaminess - torpor possessed her. Tho girls questioned her sympathetically. "Sheila, what arc you going to do now?" "I don't know. Maybe I'll go to Hollywood-" "P11 bet you in six months Ann Har- din; resigns." "I'll bet you in six months no de- cent person will speak to me." "Sheila," said Mary McCartney, in a grave tone, "that isn't a nice way to talk in Lent." "I don't feel nice," Sheila said mor- osely. Toward mid-morning she was want- ed at the telephone. This was a quite unprecedented occurrence. Nobody had ever called Sheila before; it was a custom not encouraged in the office. She went to Miss McCartney's desk with her heart beating fast. It must be Peter. It was not Peter. It was Frank Mc- Cann who had called. "Are you doing anything this after- noon, Miss Carscaddeu?" Sheila was bewildered. IIcr wits deserted her completely. "I mean - my 'oung lady has an engt.geeeent this afternoon," Prank said in his easy, self-confident way. "The Cahills are giving Gert and Peter a big blow-out up the country somewhere, and of course we have to go. But I have several hours free, and thought maybe you and I could go to a movie." She felt, a few minutes later, that Learn to Dance ., pion or l•atrot it waltz Stamps :ew tii-page book. SO ph.rograpns write Dept. 4,,, tx, J- 3egtnner s burse at Flume c PROF. Vat:liUN 1_ Box. L04, Station "0", Montreal LADIES' APRONS Made it beautiful patter no 01 tub fast prints, Two coverall i4tyles, one pinafore style Colours: hose. Blue. Green, iced, Mauve, ellow, Sizes Small, Metiunt, Large 42foe $1.00 Postpaid Lambton Textile Company Lambtoa fluffs, Onta-io suddenly become to Sheila the most important family in the world. Bu' - well, it didn't matter. Frank McCann didn't matter. What did matter, su- premely, was the .sternal question: was she going to meet Peter In the library or not? Not to do so meant - just blank- ness. By this time Ma'nma would have settled Mrs, McCann's charitable in- terest in the family once and for all. Leave that to Ma. When Ma chose to 3/z teaspoon salt, 2 apples, 1-$ tea - be magnificent, there was just noth-spoon cinnamon, 2 lb, sugar. ing to it! Ma would squelch the other METHOD: 1. Cream the butter, A Great Book "flow to Be- come a Hockey Star" by T. P. "Tommy" Corman, manager and coach of the Montreal "Maroons", profusely illus- trated and containing many valuable tips on how to play the game. also At1Tp GREAT PLAYERSgb of (mounted for framing) Croup Montreal " ititaroune't Group "Lea Canadians" or endivirmai pictures of: t3aldy Northcott Paul Ilaynes Dave Trutt Marty Harry Russ 13llnco Fete Roily thrl Robinson Dave Kerr Roy worters Ace" Bailey Art lesieur Bob Gracie Gus Market Howie Morena Johnny Gagnon Frank Boucher wilt, Code Marty Burke George Menthe Alex Levinsky • Your choice of the above • For a label from a tin of "CROWN BRAND" or "LILY WHITE" Corn Syrup. -Write on the back your name and address- plainly e ---and the words "Hockey Book" or the name of the picture you want (one book or picture for each label). Mail the label to the address below. EDWARD SOUPS CROWN BRAND CORN SYRUP woman completely, After a very short tussle with Ma, Mrs. McCann would never want to hear the name of Cars- eadden again. She would say to the judge, supposing him to continue to feel any interest in Sheila, "that girl was just fooling us, 1 aul. She he,... very nice comfortable home in the Bronx, and her mother said that they. wanted for nothing." And that would end it as far as Sheila was concerned. There remained her tie with Peter, her shadowy claim on Peter. He bad recognized it, quickly enough. He had known that they two muV have an hour together before he married Gertrude Keane. That was all she, Sheila had ever wanted - it was all she wanted now, One talk with him. Still, she did not intend to go to the library. She t:ouidn't anyway, because Joe as was usual on Saturdays called for Cecilia, and it was natural that they should all walk out into the cold streets together. Joe took them to the drugstore counter, and they had cof- fee and toasted three -decker sand- wiches. It was then almost half past three o'clock, and Sheila was a long way from the Law Library on Broad- way. Then it seemed that Joe wanted to see a man in Brooklyn about a job. Cecelia said she would go, too, and they could stop and see Aunt Teresa. Joe, as always when he was with his girl, looked darkly radiant; .Cecilia as usual composed and quiet under his attentions. Apathy was Cecelia's role; she left the love -'.baking to Joe. At twenty-five minutes of four she found herself alone in the cold, dirty, dark street. Snow was threatened; the sky was ominous and low, the air had a cool, fresh rush. She hesitated; walked a block east. No, she wouldn't keep this date with Peter? She turned and went resolute- ly westward, and into the subway hood. She was going bonLe. In the train, rushing homeward, she looked at herself in her. pocket mir- ror- Her blue hat was infinitely be- coming, the very feeling of the big soft coat with its luxurious collar was one of becomingness. It was now a quarter to four; in twenty minutes it would be too late: She wished that the time would pass, and this indeci inn be over. (To Be Continued) add the sugar gradually; 2, Add the well -beaten egg; 3: Mix and sift the flour, caking powder, salt; 4. Add the flour alternately with the milk; 5. Spread in a well -greased pan; 6. Wipe, quarter, core and pare apples, cut in eighths; 7. Place apples on batter in rows, pressing sharp edges into the batter; 8. Sprinkle with sug- ar and cinnamon mixed; 0. Bake in a moderate oven 30 to 40 minutes; 10. Serve hot with a pudding sauce. METHOD: 1. Melt the chocolate over hot water; add the milk and crumbs very slowly and let stand until very soft; 2. Beat the egg slightly, add sugar. salt and milk mixture; beat until very smooth; 3. Add butter and vanilla; 4. Pour into buttered baking dish; oven -poach Who Wants War? kien make war, it is said, because the fighting instinct is ineradicable - as if some ghost of caveman days went stalking through the dark cor- ridors of every human heart, ready to come out swinging his club the moment the bars were let down. cause of this, we are told, we can never have permanent peace. It may be so. But if it is, why do the ordin- ary soldiers of the world take ad- vantage of every chance to frater- nize with their enemies, and substi- tute comradeship for killing whenev- er their officers aren't looking? This ingrained savagery of ours - where is it, anyway? Isn't it just a myth, after all? Men would be friends - they would like one another, and play games and sing songs, instead of killing - if noly they were al- lowed to. Wherever this lust for war comes from, it does not come from the ordinary human heart. - Schen- ectady linion-Star. Twenty-three Bank of England five pound notes weigh only one ounce. womemenommuimmun FREE HOME COURSE WITH EVERY STIt1Ne tNSTnUMENT NEW aumnea SYS OEM - Net MUSIC PLAY A FU?4B IN 20 MINUTES 1 (surround the baking dish with Wa- ter to food level while baking) until firm --'about 1 hour. Temperature 325 F. Caramel Pudding RECIPE: 11/:t cups sugar, brown or white, 1/4 cup boiling water, 2 cups scalded milk, 41 tb. cornstarch, tsp. salt, 1/z cup cold milk, 1 egg, 1/4 tsp, vanilla. METHOD: 1. Melt sugar to a car- amel; add boiling water gradually; cook until caramel is fairly thick. 2, Mix cornstarch, salt and cold milk; add gradually to hat milk in a dou- ble boiler. 3. Stir constantly and as mixture be- gins to thicken add caramel; 4. Cook 45 minutes, stirring at intervals of 10 minutes; 5. Add the well beaten egg; cook 5 minutes longer; 6. Add the flavouring', pour into a serving dish; 7. Chill, serve with cream and sugar. Apple Tapioca RECIPE: 3-4 cup pearl tapioca, 21/4 cups boiling water, 1/4 tsp. salt, 6 or 7 sour apples, whole cloves, 1/4 cup sugar. METHOD: 1, Soak tapioca several hours in enough water: (cold) to cover; 2, Drain; add boiling water and salt, cook in double boiler until almost transparent; 3. Wipe, core and pare apples; stick two or more cloves in each; 4. Place in buttered baking dish; fill centres with sugar, 5. Pour tapioca over apples; bake in moder- THE FAMOUS ENERGY FOOD A product 0) the CANADA STA R(111 COMPANY Limited TORONTOsessesumertiersisitiatiminialiftritinlifiliniti Tb 1 LOWEST PRICES EVER Guitars, from Violins, from --. Cornets, from Saxophones, from Accordions, from $ 6.45 3.95 16.95 39.00 3.45 5,000 instruments to cheerio from. dead for our New Bill Musical tnattlement batalop, the Fineei doer Gleee FRES PEATE MUJSICAL CO.. LTD. 1429-01-33 MANSFIELD MONTREAL, P.O. Knit for Town and Country 'tb 1414,*�aw� 'w'�'.�s.r�,raa,.,sr:.. Mayfair Needle -art Design No. 148 A chic sweater, "pour le .sport" bur feminine withal. The straight neckline and deep yoke will give farhionabie width to your shoulders. It niay be worn as e jacket over a frilly blouse - or buttoned up se- verely for your more sportive moments. You'd like to own it - which proves it's an ideal gift. There are separate: instructions and a separate pattern tor each and every size including 32, 34, 36, 38 and 40. The pattern includes: a sample of the yarn from which the original garment was made, a tis- sue pattern fur blocking the garment after it is knit, -easy-to-fo:low working instructions without abbreviations, etnd an assembling chart. Write your name and address plainly, giving number of pattern wanted. Enclose 20 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred) wrap it carefully and address your order to Mayfair Pattern Service, Room 421, 3 West "tieiaide Street, "oronto. i TEA ate oven till apples are soft; 6, Serve with sugar and cream. THIS WEEK'S WINNER "Banana Rice Ring" 11/4 cups rice, 4 bananas, 1 table- spoon cornstarch, 1/4 cup sugar, 1-8 teaspoon salt, 14 cup boiling water, 1 egg yolk, 2 tablespoons butter, 11/4 tablespoons lemon juice. Pack cooked hot rice in a ring on a platter and fill centre with raw sli-ed bananas and pour over this the sauce; mix cornstarch, sugar and salt with little cold water and boil 5 minutes after adding the 1/3 cup hot water, stirring constantly. Add beaten egg -yolk, cook one minute. Remove from heat and add butter and lemon juice, Serves 4 persons. - Mrs. Lorne Raymer, Creemore, Ont. Will Eiffel Tower Go? Writes the Detroit Free 17rese:- The Crystal Palace, one of the "sights" of London's Great i xhite tion of 1851, was one of the longest buildings in the world, as the Eiffel Tower, erected its one of the "sights" of the Paris Exposition of 1389, was and still is,- one of the tallest struc• totes in the world, WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILE AndYou'll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rnrin' to Go The liver should pour out two pounds pf Rebid bile into your bowels daily. If this bile Is not. flowing freely, your feed doe'tdigest. It just decays haa n the bowels. Oita bloats IM your atamach. Youget conedpaced. Vern 'ul • Poisons go into the body. and you feel song dank and the world looks punk. Arnett bowel movement doesn'talways get eft the cause. Yoe need something that work*. on the liver as well. tt takes those geed, old Carter's Little Liver Pills to get these two Mounds of bile flawing freely and make Von feel "up and no". Iiermires and gentle, they Make the bile flow freely. They do the work of calomel but have no calomel or meteor's, in thele. Ask fol Carter's Little Liver Pilbi by tame I Stubbornly refuse anything else, VC. Attention Send in your favorite recipe for pie, cake, main -course dish, or pre- serves. We are offering $1.00 for each recipe printed. HOW TO ENTER CONTEST Plainly write or print out the ingredients and method and send it together with name and address to: Household Hints, Room 427, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. Stage Problem Solved Simply Tombstones Writes the Saint John Telegrape- d'ournal-This is a despatch :from Berlin: -Tonibstone are the latest objects) of Nazi co-ordination. Beginning with metropolitan cemeteries, plain flatmemorial slabs, of one ,standard size, will replace raised mounds and ornamental erections. "Symbolic of the &quality of mortals after death, all graves shall be alike, and prleed alike," Joseph Pertl, the official in charge, announced. "No pompous monuments, no mixture of styles, will be permitted to veil the majesty of death." And this is from Chicago: Frank Lloyd Wright, famed-archi-' teet, urged the memorial craflsnieni of America today to "humanize the cemeteries. Humanize the burial places of your kin," he to.d the craftsmen's national conventben. "If we are to be regimented . -while we are alive, for God's sake give its room enough to lie its, grae'-efuily, separate, and beautiful, informal in arrangement, when we are dead." It is valuable to compare VW:el 'such oppt.site views, in favor of loth of n'hirh there is a great deal to be said. Al: know the impressive grandeur of t military cemetery where the 'bodies' of officers and mer' lie marked in precisely the same manner- all kno':►� equally the sentimental chord that is ,track when a monument t, setm0.- body betrays evidence of the 'affec-! timate remembrance of aoitiet'oiiy left behind. All have felt the pathos of graves so indciatec' as t t give the intim ession of a deta hsd card index 'system; all mast Poznetivi ,us have shuddered at the peetentiou3 lace of tette displayed by those who erect etar'e'rate memorials plainly ssi"ned to glorify the inh riturs of the aced per..<on's fortune. It is not easy, especially in time of sorrow, to view this question dispas- sionately and impersonally. Few can attain the unique distinctivertes;, and simplicity of a grave and memorial such as Cecil Rhodes planned for himself in the Matoppos Hillis. Some- thing between the -Berlin and Chi- cago ideas seems to be indicated. Reversible, Jointed Wing Of Wood Helps Theatricals Berkeley Hall, private preparatory school in Beverly Hill, California, has solved the stagecraft problem common to auditoriums of the barest stage facilities. It has developed a reversible wing of wood, jointed so as to stand alone. No overhead guy wires, struts, or braces found on professional theatre stages are necessary to create the illusions now being adequately provided by the new, simple and economical stage setting, says the Christian Science Monitor. halls boast raised platforms or even proscenium arches, Berkeley Hall considers itself fortunate to have both. But its stage -setting elements are adaptable to any room with handy eye -bolt fastening places on walls and ceiling. First is the back -drop, then the reversible side wings, and then the sky -cloth. The back -drop is a cloth curtain fastened to a wooden strip on floor and ceiling. Through this strip rope "bridles" are strung at each end. in the ceiling eye -butts are secured to - convenient ceiling joists. Ropes from the bridles are passed through nulloys secured to the eye -bolts. The back -drop can then be raised or lowered without d'fficu!ty. it is usually painted on each side, so that a reversal will change the background The wings are merely two -leaved screens. double hinged, so that each side may be used. In height. they match the back drop. The wing is a skeleton panel, ably reinforced, and covered- on both sides with unbleach- ed muslin. If foliage affects are needed. strips of three-ply wood cut irregular contour with a jig -saw are nailed to the edges. While these w'ngs can stand alone, it has been found that bustling players can jostle them no end, so that a steady- ing brace on the side away front "It's roan's egotism that gave rise . the audience has been found practi• to the idea that woolen haven't a cal sense of humor,"-- Viae Eastman- The "sky" effect is obtained by ---- stretching painted cloth over two stage wires close to the ceiling. "First Bottle Helped leis writes Mrs. Joseph Render, 1629 Lillian Street, Windsor, Ont. "Your Vegetable Compound helped me wonderfully. Since I started taking it I have no more pains or dizzy spells. I feel well and strong now. 1 eat well and sleep well and I can do all my work." Why don't Y011 try this medi- cine? 98 out of 100 Women Re- port Benefit. Get a bottle from your druggist 'TODAY, LYDIA E: PINKHAM'S VEGETARLE COMPOUND i nue i''-; i - D. 2 True perspective illusions are the greatest Contribution of this simple stagecraft. Other important advan- tages include the,, fact that much of the scene material can be built in the school workshop and carried by hand to the stage after it has been made; that shim all the scenic mat- ter is portable, it does not congest the stage-r'ooint, and that the back- drops and wings can be repainted .:tg<ain and again. A doctor may give a patient hope, but he charges for the time it takes him to give it. -Detroit News. Unless n woman is wearing a new dress she is most likely to appear at the parte a little ahead of the sahed- ule.---Brandon Sue. "The school should always have as its aim that the young man leave it as a harmonious personality, not as a specialist."--Albel:'t Einstein. POISONED KIDNEYS Stop Getting Up edtg nts To. harmlessly flush poisons and; Acid from kidneys and Lorre(: irri-j tation of bladder so that you can, stop "getting up nights' get a 40-i cent package of Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Oil Capsules and take as direet- ed. Other symptoms of kidney and ladder weaknesses are scant, burn -j ing or smarting passage-bnekache- leg cramps --puffy eyes. AH Merl Use Them and Save Do Haus etauutaetuter wants to introduce qutdtly, Singer Lie Luxe Razor Blades - New Process Latast Type Daubie 'C 4ge - Lein - est, Smoothest Cutting Edge. None Made Better - Fut All New and 010 Double ildge ltacors Free Samples will tie matt- ed on request - Send isle to cove' cost ut packing and dusting. DIRECT SALES DE,OT W P Past e)rfhee Br 72, (mttoiph, Ontu it Be `Leaf' Santa Claus! He knows every Roll -your -owner wants DEN'S Ln FINE CUT 'I2'ib. tIf 75c■ la a Cheerful Christmas Carton