Zurich Herald, 1937-03-25, Page 2Canad
s Favourite Tea
LTEA
11R
Sti [YS
By KATHLEEN NORRIS 6w
Synopsis of Preceding instalments:
During a summer's outing, Sheila
Carscadden, who worked in a New
York office, met Peter McCann, son
of the wealthy Judge McCann. She
was with him only a few short
hours, didn't learn his last name, but
when she returned to the city she
realized she loved him. Months
later -t a sale she bought
W 4,
tbough
WATCH YOUR YEAST!
Royal is always
dependable
sole
uGHI
OUL'
USED LOVA L
Every cake of Royal
is sealed in an .
air -tight wrapper
. It stays fresh?
\7OU can't make successful
bread with weak yeast.
Your yeast must be full strength
and pure if you want bread to be
appetizing—sweet-flavoured and
light in texture.
That's why seven out of 8
Canadian housewives today insist
on Royal when they bake with a
dry yeast. Every cake of Royal
comes sealed in an air -tight
wrapper ... the only dry yeast
that has this special protection.
It stays fresh and pure for
months.
For 50 years, Royal has stood
for reliability= - . unfailing good
results. Don't trust your bread -
baking to inferior brands of yeast.
Be sure to ask for Royal.
Send for FREE Booklet!
To get uniform re-
sults in bread-hak-
ing, it is important
to beep the sponge
at an even tempera.
torte. The `Royal
Yeast Bake Book"
gives instructions
for the care of
dough. Send cou-
pon for free copy of
the hook, giving 23
tested recipes for
tempting bran cis,•
coffee cakes, buns
and rolls.
BUY MADE -IN -
CANADA GOODS
•
Standard ]!rands Ltd.,
Preset. Ave, & Liberty St.,
Toronto 2, Ont.
Please send ane the free Royal
Yeast Bake Book.
Name
Address r..• �W.--
a hand -bag in which she found $50.
The bag was marked with the former
owner's address and although Sheila's
family was poverty-stricken, she re-
turned the money. The house to
which she went was that of Judge
McCann and while she was there,
in walked Peter McCann. Peter and
Sheila met secretely the next day in
a library. Peter told her he loved
her but was to marry another girl,
Gertrude, Keane, who lived with the
McCanns. When they tried to leave
the library, they found themselves
locked in. Making their way over
several roofs in a snowstorm, they
descended to what appeared to be
a studio. Two young men, bootleg-
gers, who addressed each other as
Ken and Inky, suddenly confronted
them. They forced Sheila and
Peter into an automobile and took
them to an isolated farmhouse. Ken
explained to Sheila that they could
not let them go just then, after what
they had seen. He said they would
send telegrams to the McCann and,
Carscadden families. On the third
day Sheila and Peter were driven to
within walking distance of a station.
"Well, you came back," Mrs.
Carscadden presently observed out
of the most terrible silence that in
all the days of Sheila's life had ever
existed between herself and her
mother.
Sheila stood still, growing pale.
She swallowed with a dry throat.
"What—what's the matter?" she
whispered.
Neither mother nor sister, spoke;
they regarded her steadily with sor-
rowful :yes, quiet eyes. Sheila, after
another stammered question, which
was choked with sobs, sat down 4
the table and burst into wild cry-
ing, her hands over her face.
"Oh, don't, Sia," Angela now
said, whimpering.
"But— but what's the matter!"
Sheila demanded again, looking up
through her tear -soaked eyelashes.
• "Whets happened?"
"Where's your husband?" Mrs.
Carscadden demanded, steadily.
"Where—? Where's my what?"
"Where's Mr. McCann, Sheila?"
Angela asked, weeping.
"Peter4l"
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In 2 seconds by stop
watch. an "Aspirin"
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Drop an "Aspirin" tab-
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By the time it hits the
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• happens in .Your
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what you want is quick relief.
"Aspirin" tablets give quick re-
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I•Ience—when you take an "Aspi-
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And thus is ready to start working
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s "Aspirin" tablets are made in
Canada. "Aspirin" is the registered
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cross on every tablet.
Try it. You'll say its mar ; clrius.
Demand
and Get.
A5INMARKRCG.
ROOK PON MS BAYER CROSS
A Tip for Tea Tim
There are few r
more deli,;ht.fui and moreofouwoge
serving than 4 o'clock tea a
trouble is that in modern life i.
often forgotten or because of i'
hours, not indulged in by the
ty. Meals are routine events an
be prepared, but tea in the a
is a luxury and should be enj
such. If at all possible, e
should takea few minutes foil
L I' tea and a bits' to eat wheat
begin to drag. This pause
break, refreshes one and adds
the closing hours of the day.
Whether your guests have;
in unexpectedly or have bee
ally invited, serve sonrethiii
ent, something one doesn't ge
other time but tea time. Y
want elaborate or anything';
wolves extra work as that w
feat the purpose of the tea=
a time for relaxation and co,
ty and no one wants to
much at this time because 1
spoil their appetite for dinner.
Create Scones are ideal.becat
provide just enough in the"
food and are a fine accomp,
to a fragrant cup of tea.
By
Lenon Creani Scone
2 cups sifted cake flour
2 teaspoons baking powder
3�a teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons sugar
4 tablespoons butter or othe, ort
ening
1 teaspoon grated lemon gin
2 eggs
2 eggs
1-3 cup light cream
3 tablespoons sugar
i/ teaspon grated lemon rin;
Sift flour once, meakure, a
ing powder, salft and 'sugar, a
again. Cut in shortening an
rind. Reserve about lh egg, w
glaze. Beat remaining eggs- \
add cream; add flour •mixtu
stir carefully until all flour is
ened. Then stir vigorously ilio
ture forms a soft dough and
spoon around bowl. Turn .o
slightly floured board and knit
seconds. Roll 1/ inch. thick and, ut in
triangles. Place on ungreasede'sheet.
Brush tops lightly with •reser vel egg
white, slightly beaten; sprinkle;!; vIth
mixture of sugar and grated leinoiid
rind. Bake in hot oven' (00 deg. F.)
12 minutes, or until browned. Makes
e
he
Cerner
NUR °ALL
0 -
0
on
as
no
ono
to
ped
eci-
fer•r
any
(et
iu-
de-
ali-,
cry
ght
ey
of
ent
)ak-
sift'
mon'
for
anad;.
aa:d
amp
ix-.
lows
on
d 80
18 scones.
SPRING DISHES
Macaroni A -La. King
Four ounces (1/ ib.) macaroni un-
cooked, 2 tablespoons butter': slice
onion, ', . green pepper, ehbp x -.(i,
Pimiento, chopped, cup niue "pis,
fresh or canned, 1 tablespo
cup,' mi11;
"The - the fellow you ran' away
with, Sheila."
Angela began to hiccup, but anger
dried Sheila's tears and made her
voice hard.
"You don't think I ran away with
Peter McCann?"
"Ooo --- Ooo !" Angela moaned
softly.
"I never thought to think it.iif
of mine, that she'd king her *good
name down in sorrow and shame!"
,Mrs. Carscadden began. •
Sheila stared at her, stupefied.
"Well!" she said, with 'i mirthless
and edked laugh, -"I get a fine • wet-
come home, I must say, after being
kidnapped by bootleggers ,and car-
ried off into Canada!"
This apparently made no iinpres-
cion. -
"Sheila, what have we ever' dae�
to you, that you'd -do that to
her mother reproached her.
"That I'd do well, I guess every-,
one's gone crazy!" Sheila" stammer
ed.
"We had your wire, Sheila," An-
gela said.
"Mama, you don't think I ran -off
with Peter McCannl"
"An' his mother as hear',rt-broke
as me!" Mrs. Carscadden observed.
irrelevantly.
"I'm no more married to hint
listen to me, Mother! I say I'm: no
more married to him than you ate!"
A light suddenly narrowed the
mother's eyes.
No flame stands bilirii> it
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Issue No. 13 -ne '37
Cook the macaroni in plenty of
boiling salted water until tender,
Crain, sarin:; half cup of the water
to make the sauce with, later on.
Rinse macaroni with cold water, if so
directed old the box. Prt macaroni into
buttered baking dish, cover with
sauce made as follows:
in a hot frying pan, cook chopped
onions, Inuc•'rr.oms and pimientos in
2 tablespoons of butter until tendo',
Remove the vegetables from the pan,
leaving t..e ve e'.tll i lleuld for the
sauce. Stir flour to a smooth paste
and add, together with the milk to the
vegetable liquid in the pan. Bring
slowly to a boil and add to the chop-
ped vegetables,
Pour white sauce and vegetables
over the macaroni and sprinkle a little
grated cheese on the top. Brown in
a moderate oven.
Creamed Noodles
• One cup fine noodles, 1 tablespoon
fat, 2 tablespoons flour, 1 cup milk,
2 tablespoons grated cheese, 1/.. tea-
spoon salt and paprika, 2 hard cooked
eggs, cracker crumbs for the top.
Cook noodles in boiling salted water
for about 5 minutes or until tender.
Make a white sauce of the fat, flour
and milk. When the sauce comes to
theboiling point add the noodles and
get very hot. Reprove from fire and
add th'e cheese and coarsely cut eggs.
Season and mix well, pour into but-
tered casserole or baking dish, top
with cracker crumbs, brown quickly
in hot oven and servo immediately.
Cheese Souffle
2 tablespoons shortening, 2 table-
spoons flour, 3/a cup milk, 1 cup
cheese, I/2 teaspoon salt, 4 eggs, Cay-
enne Pepper.
• Make cream sauce of the shorten-
ing, flour, milk. When cooked take
from fire and add the -well-beaten
yolks of the eggs, and the grated
cheese, mixing them in well. Replace
mixture o nthe fire oyer a low flame
and cook until the cheese is melted
and the paste is smooth. Pour into
a buttered bowl' and set away to cool.
When cold beat in the stiffly -beaten
whites and bake in hot -oven in a Deo -
ding dish for twenty—twenty-five
minutes. Serve atoncewhen cooked
as like all souffles, it is liable to fall
if not taken directly from oven to
table. Serve with toast.
Finnan )Ekcidie
In milk: Place fish in frying pan
and cover with milk. Heat slowly and
remove from fire before milk boils.
Cover with butter and garnish with
parsley.
Creamed:—Add white sauce to de-
sired quantity of finnan haddie and
place in buttered baking dish. Slice
hard-boiled eggs over the top and•
sprinkle with buttered crumbs. Bake
''in hot, oven until crumbs are browned.
"Indade, I'll grunt you that!" she
said, bitterly. "Indade you're not
merrier to hint—you an' your dis-
thrict attorney or justise of the
p'aie, or whativer! An' let but
Peter McCann put his head in my
door, an' I'll disthriet attorniy himl
Taking a fine ger'rl that nivel done
a mane thing in her life, although
she might scald the hear'rt out of
pie wit' her nonsense—".
She stopped, overcome. Sheila
spoke patiently.
"I suppose you know what you're
;talking about, Mother?"
"Sheila," Angela said in quick
warning, "don't you talk like that to
Mal"
"Well, how am I going to talk to
her!" Sheila burst our angrily. "I
come home half dead, why Pm not
filled itself I don't know, what with
racketing over the country in trucks
and having men in my room all
night—"
"Ah," Mrs. Carscadden observed
significantly, in the pause, "you'd
have that!"
"Ma, don't talk like—well, like an
'idiot! I tell you that Peter McCann
and I were kidnapped—kidnapped by
bootleggers, and taken 'way up into
the country—"
"You didn't send the tiligram, I
suppose?"
"Certainly I sent you a telegram!
I didn't want you to die of fright,
did I?"
"And he—the pian-- he sint his
folks one, too?"
"Peter? Well, of course he did 1
Sett relay night. After we got
in the library. That is, they sent
them for us."
"The bootleggers sint thim for ye,
was that it?"
'Well, they did, Mother. We
couldn't."
"You cudden't?"
"No, ma'am, because—" Sheila
hesitated. "We were being kidnap-
ped,' she explained.
"I see," said her mother.
"And this morning they drove us
tie some place called Capitol Junc-
tion, and we came down on the
train."
"I see.'
There was silence.
"I thought you'd be ;lad I got
home," Sheila began, childishly.
She stopped, red-cheeked, angry.
"Don't you believe me, Ma?"
Mrs. Carscadden pursed her lips,
"Well, you're home again, any-
way, she said noncommittally. "So
take off your hat an' make yourself
BUY
and have
SOMETHING LAVISH IN CROCHET
01111111
Your guests will find it enchanting and this elaborately dailLty
tablecloth will.please the Most meticulous. It is a simple pattern: to••
make, and- once you start you will not want to stop.
The pattern includes ,a sainple of the crochet cotton in which,
the original article was wor lied, full crocheting insIructioris witholrt.,
abbreviations and directions for assembling.
• • HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS
Write your name and a -=dress 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, 73 West Adelaide Street, •Toronto.
a ,cup of tea, . if . you're hungry..
Ye've cone to your senses sooner
than I thought ye wud: We'II see
what can be done."
Sheila did not move; She sat look-
ing at her mother and sister fixedly,
the red deepening in her cheeks, her
Hp bitten.
(To be Continued.)
More than 700,600 bicycles were
sold in the United States during the
year 1015.
Returuisg home, the Bishop Si
London says Canada will cditinue
to have railway deficits nnIess birth
control propaganda is stamued out.
Will we choose shoo -shoos and shite
dren ?•—',Vindsor Star.
The world's deepest guide is
Robinson Dee?' in South Arita. Hex;
gold is mined at a depth of .5,500
feet below the surface .of the ground.
The temperature in the loWetit work-
ings is about 100- degrees.
AS THE GREATEST
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FOR SNOW AND
UNIMPROVED
ROADS
HERE the going is toughest—
through deep mud, snow or un-
improved road's — Firestone Ground
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set of Ground Griptires on your car or
truck today. No increase in price.- See
the local Firestone Dealer.
GROUND GRIP TIRE:
FOR CARS, TRUCKS AND TRACTORS