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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1949-05-26, Page 6m, WEST OF THE SUN A Serial Story by JOSEPH LEWIS CHADWICK $4'1'.A i sers....1.'„ k=`il't ',ter i .s.;;';,.. $Y\OPSIS The store thus fart Virginia Amen leaves ser horse in '1Vashhtgton immediately after reeelrintc a letter from her fiance Phil Lawrence. urging her to conte to him. Crossing the Arironn plaints by stagecoach, and within a hundred miles of Santa Bon- ita, where t'Itil has a ranch, the stage pas- sengers arc held up and a money box addressed to rt man named Barron of Santa Bonita is stolen. .t, cameo pin is taken from Virginia but that is all; the bandits let her keep her letter. Lt. Jim Rendall, whom Virginia onee knew and loved, es- corts the stage front Larinnsa, Baron, who joins the group at Lannast, neeomannies them on the 70 -mile trip to Santa Bonita. Halfway there they are stopped by :tpsehes, apparently bent on miseblef. CHAPTER III Jim Randaff surveyed his position with challenging eyes. It wasn't pleasant, His force was bottled up in a small clearing. The terra'n was rough, Trees and brush and rocks 'formed dense walls which could have concealed a thousand Apaches. He didn't iike it. His mind was uneasy. He had the officer's fear of leading his command into a trap. Jim watched the Apache warrior pause at the water's edge and sig- nal with his 1^^ce, He I~ave a ••'•t when he saw the second Indian ride from cover. There was son:rt about this warrior that marked his). He sat on his droopy pinto pony with a definite dignity, a fine figure of a man. His twace was dark and impassive and intelligent. Scarlett at his side muttered la awe, "Natchi!" Jim felt a quiver of excitement run over his muscles. Natchi! Natchi himself! Leader of a marauding band that had cut a bloody, fiery trail through southern Arizona and New Mexico and down into north- ern Mexico. Head of a raider band which had eluded the army with the ease of a phantom cavalcade. The two warriors rode out into ,midstream and halted before the whftenten, Natchi was in his prime: his body lithe and muscular. He was naked to breech -clout and moc- casins and cartridge bandolier across his chest. A head -band held hack his jet-black hair. His face looked cast in bronze. an impassive 'mask. It was one of character, the char- acter of treachery and savagery. ISSUE 22 - 1949 .Merry Menagerie-ByWalt Disney I warned you -always eat from the OUTSIDE in!" rt .::;''i"i, 'kau ..:;'tit;✓ ,iq..,:, i`1ttlr• ,,n".N?kk,..,• Mel Scarlett talked guttural Apache, using sign language, too. Natchi answered, his voice throaty and gripping. The scout interpreted. "He says you, the man with the blue eyes. arrested his son Banana. Yon hid him away in the white man's fort." "Tell hint," Jim said, "Bunato stole white man's horses and must be punished." It was while Scarlett interpreted that the third warrior appeared and silently joined them. The Apache chief talked long, and before he had finished the fourth Indian rode from cover and entered the stream, When Natchi's voice stopped. Scar- lett said: "He wants to know how his son will be punished. Lieutenant." Then, his voice uneasy: "1 don't like this, sir. They're tip to some- thing. Four against us now, and here cones another. Looks like a trap. Did you notice those rifles?" Jim Randall nodded. "All sharps. And brand-new. Plenty of car- tridges ton. It's trouble all right." The fifth warrior had appeared and was easing toward theist. The two white ;men betrayed no sign that they noticed the ruse. But the situation was danger -filled. Tien said: "Ask hint if he sees that soldier kneeling' behind that fallen tree-" The answer came quickly. Scar- lett interpreted. "He says he does, lieutenant." "Good. Tell him that soldier is a sharpshooter. Tell him he has his rifle trained on the space between the eyes of ?Natchi. Tell him if one more warrior comes to the stream, the soldier will shoot" Natchi's face remained expres- sionless as he heard the interpre- tation. He studied the officer's face with smoldering eyes. Then he made a sign. His warriors turned their horses and rode from the wa- ter, then on into the screening brush, Natchi remained alone. Scarlett said. "He says the man with tete bine eves is a fox." "Tell him Natchi is a wolf. Tell hint his son must go to prison until the second winter ends. 'Cell hien it is bad medicine for an Apache buck to steal white men's horses." Natchi's face grew hard and cruel as Scarlett spoke. and his voice was bitter when he answered. The scout interpreted. "He says the white man's law is not for the Apache. And that the man with blue eyes should know that the wolf is stronger than the fox," "Ask hits where he got those rifles." Scarlett obeyed. Then said, "He won't tell, sir. But he says he has many such rifles -more than you have." "Tell hint my soldiers shoot straight and fast." Jim said. (Continued Next Week) .CROSSWORD PUZZLE ACROSS 1. Hummingbird 4. wooden tattoo 8. )Decompose 12. fuided 13. Crimped fabric 44. (4irl's name 41:5. Self it. Disposed to take off rns*e . 8. )Leveler ,0. Othererhes 1. reize . `;rooked (deal.) 46. Castironttoerr Making p4te g About 30. Obstructed tih.e view 81. Pit ttntuo.t4ott marl[ 32. Couple 63. .English letter td.. More r.,ertatit 38. Sleigh 241. &ra,rice& 8.8. Time instika so 44). Insael. 46. 1.1 n a et no positron 417. rastnfe °48, VIanze ;48. 'a1 ••rang 5 h. Vet 1s 'Mob PTA 41' 031 f'ss'os• G52 2. fn Ynt,s lyra••,. ,1 DOWN 1. V1,11 seneNt 2. First mngniP osln May 3. k.'mbollished 4. Second team S. Metric land measures 6. Ignob e 7. Drives n. ' al[ see 5, I'ireitt'nl 10. Burden 11, Yarn 17. And ten (suffix) 10. Tree 23. Liquor 24. Article as, l:dg,r 26. Ship wit+dow 27. Palm leaf 28, Actnow 30 yens,. u.tst 31 Plongrel 32, A»»ruI.a 34. Iltndu garnren2 ab. Itevo itlu•nse t1Tu1'1ed 37. Trlsi� 17, Filament 30. A si;,g':e tune 41. Nurse and 42. Bird's home 47. weird 44. Alleviate 46. atan'e name answer e sewhere in this issue T,.ey're Rolling the Waves on Rollers -Director Betty Hand rehearses members of her roller- skating troupe aboard the liner Washington in mid-Atlantic. En route to Europe for a 12 -week tour, they are the first roller-skating troupe ever to undertake an extended overseas engagement' comparable to ni ajor ice ,shoe's. From the tune"the first of your "garden truck" is ready to use right up until you've picked the very 1a -t string bean you have the makings of wonderful plank and platter dishes. * ai * Such a dish is practically a whole meal -meat, vegetables and stash- ed potatoes -all cooked together on an oak plank or oven platter. Oven time is short and hot -375F or 400E usually; so it's best to choose meats that cook quickly, such as steaks, lamb chops, hale, tweiners or fish. . 4. * The planks are 10 by. 14 inch ovals, an inch thick, and you can buy theist in department or hard- ware stores. But if you have a nice block of oak around your place, your husband or son can smooth it with steel wool and snake your plank for you. Ask him to make a scooped -out place at one end with three grooves leading to it to drain meat drippings. * * Before using a plank for the first time be sure and brush it with oil or melted, unsalted shorten- ing, and warm in a slow oven -the same as you'd. pre -heat a new fry- ing pan or ivaflie iron. After that, the only care it needs is washing and drying. * * Here's one combination that I think like. Arrange lamb chops on the plank, and oil the wood around them. (Plank should always be completely covered with food, or ,well oiled, to prevent charr- ing.) Put in a 375E oven for 10 minutes, to brown the chops on one side. Meanwhile, cook asparagus in a small amount of boiling water, and pressure -cook potatoes for stashing. (If you haven't a pressure cooker, you'll want to start the potatoes boiling well ahead of putting the meat in the oven. of course). * * Now turn the chops; border them with asparagus and mashed pota- toes. Return the plank to the oven for 15 minutes. Now put the whole thing on the table and serve, with any sort of sauce or relish you fancy. There are those who claim that it's all imagination to say that "planking" lends a flavor all its own -but I don't think, after you've tried it, that you'll agree with that. * * * Here's a cake that can be eaten just "as is," or cut in squares and served with whipped cream. The recipe came to me from a woman out west who's famous for the table she sets. Site calls it: MAHOGANY CAKE 1 cup thick, sour cream 2 cups sugar 4 eggs 2% cups flour 2 level teaspoons soda NE VA - Z//iiJL t'aienheigf a u e-ei t "When a girl falls in love with a married man, site is a pathetic creatul c indeed. She swallows every statement he makes about his wife. She pictures hint as the mar- tyr in a marriage where he is al- ways "misunderstood." She feels complimented that he chooses her for his confi- dante, and draws her oven con- clusions - usu- ally, it trust be said, to the det- riment of ,,the wife who sits patiently at house. One wife tells her side of the story:: ' "Your advice to 'WAITING, Anne Hirst, was excellent. But as the wife she might have been writ- ing about, I'd like to say this: "I really feel sorry for the girl. That she is in love with my (?) husband, I don't doubt. But what she doesn't know is that she is not the first one he has professed to love, Every time Ile has become in- fatuated with a girl, he has talked of a divorce. Rather than make a scene, :I brush it off with, `Go ahead, if you want to. 'Brut he has .never gone ahead, and probably never will, ';Does this girl think that after nearly seven years together, we have nothing hut disagreelnc140 It is,, true we have outr trouble's. But there have been many, tnatly wonderful days of joy and happi- ness which cannot be overlooked. "We have no children it is true. But she has known us only a year, or she wouldn't have said it was because f didn't want them. I have lost two children. God only knows how it hurt. ''Girls who fall in love with mar.. ried men only ask for heartbreak. They don't• seem to realise that, if • these men really loved thea], they would wait till they were free be- fore telling of their love -not subject them to anxious waiting that may only hamper the girl's chances of • finding someone who could offer more than, 'maybe if 1 get a di- vorce.' • "This is the other side of tete story --which this girl could have found out if she had been the 'good friend' she claimed to be. "I sincerely hope this will help any girl who lets herself fall in love with a married man, and is left 'waiting'. "`'hese words should surely make any girl in such a situation stop andwonder. Aside from the ignominy of dat- ing a ratan who has a• wife, she should question what sort of man is this who tells her only one side of his story. Who never confesses his other light o' loves, but al- lows her to believe she is the only one in the world who ever appealed to him. Who has not the slightest • intention of divorcing the patient wife who forgives and forgives and takes hint back again and again, with a new hope rising everytine in her heart. How foolish are these emotional creatures --and bow evil the men ho tempt then! To 'The Wife:" Whether the man involved is your husband or spur (ober �' rouged ly ttnati'sj yon iievelation should ward dvei'y girl who thinks a married man is in love with her She is, as you say, only asking for heartbreak ---Thank you warmly for your letter. "What would his wife have to say to tine?" '.!'hat should he the problem of every girl who dates a married ratan. Anne Hirst's long observations of such sad affairs can be useful. Write her at Box 1, 123 New Toronto, Oak 1 heaping teaspoon baking powder _/ cup cocoa dissolved in 1 cup boiling water 1 teaspoon vanilla r/ teaspoon .salt Method. Beat eggs. Add sugar and cream. Next the flour, baking powder and salt. sifted together. 1\1ix well. Next add dissolved cocoa. which has been cooled, and lastly the soda, which has been dissolved in vanilla. Bake in a moderate oven for about an hour, This can be cut its squares and serred with whipped creast. * * Does the cooky jar show signs of getting empty again? Foolish question, if there happens to be "young-'uns" around the place. I think they'll go in a big way for what another noted cook calls: DOUBLE DATERS 13/4 cups brown sugar 1 cup shortening 3/4 cup sour milk 1 level teaspoon soda 2 cups oatmeal (ground) 2 cups flour Filling' 1 cup dates 1 cup sugar 1 cup water Boil filling until thick; cool Mix cooky ingredients in order given (creaming sugar and shorten- ing). Roll, then cut in rounds or any desired shape. Spread filling on half of cookies, then place an- other cooky on top of each and pinch edges together. Bake in a moderately hot oven. * * * Which will have to be all for just now, but 1'11 be back again next week. The two survivors of a shipwreck, a seaman and a stockbroker, had clambered on to a raft. "If a ship doesn't sight us soon," said the seaman, "we'll starve." "Don't talk nonsense!" snapped the stockbroker. Tye got plenty of Money." NEW mid USEFUL TOO .- ,- DRAPERY FIXTURE. Sil. way drapery fixture stakes small windows look larger, wider and higher and can be adjusted to suit each problem. Non -rusting, off- white enamel finish is sprayed on and baked for permanence. Steel rod can be changed in size front: 1634 in. to 24 in., thus adding'two feet to width of window. Projection from window can be adjusted from 2/ in, to 534 in. allowing drapes to hang straight despite venetian blinds or radiators. STEAM IRON. Steam iron at- tachment which converts electric iron into a steam iron is said to eliminate all possibility of explo- sions. Stearal is formed on the "flash -boiler" principle by water dripping into the steam chamber a little at a time, instead of boiling; a quantity of water to produce steam. Water tank never gets hot, can be refilled any time during ironing, and uses any tap water available. CHARCOAL GRILL. Com- plete outdoor grill is scientifically designed for cooking and boiling over lump charcoal or charcoal bri- quets. Is built of grey cast iron with ten -bar malleable iron flush top grill. Is finished in aluminum paint. Unit measures 1934 in. wide, 17% in. deep and .13% in. high. Has two hinged grills -lower one close to the coals for fast cooking and -upper one for boiling. Weighs 84 lbs. Comes in seven simple parts with all necessary;, bolts and nuts and each oart is easily identified for 'assembling_ MOTHERS! [For Your Peace e8 (Mind and the Safety of Your Child ... GET THE NEW ROTARY HARNESS This snarl-proot,twist-proof and rust -proof harness is precision made el the finest quality materials. Gives your child complete freedom to play cut' doors: No further need for fences or playpens. $2.50 Postpaid MCao,h,y OCheq rderue of ne Sole Distributors Money Back Guarantee JONES BROTHERS 1082 ate',,, ts•'• u est/it Recipe Measure Into large bowl, 3-5 c. lukewarm water, 1 tsp. granulated sugar; stir until sugar is dissolved. Sprinkle slowly with 1 envelope Plcischmann's Royal Fast Rising Dry Yeast. Let stand 10 min., THEN stir well. Scald 1 c_millccand stir in 5 tbs. granulated sugar, 2 taps. salt; cool to lukewarm. Add to yeast mixture and stir in 3-5 cup lukewarm water. Beat in 3 c. once -sifted bread flour; beat well. Beat in 4 tbs. melted ehorteuing. Work in 3 c. more once -sifted bread hour. Knead until smooth and elastic; place in greased bowl and brush top with melted butter or shortening. Cover and set in warm place, free from draught. Let rise until doubled in bulk. Punch down dough in bowl, grease top end let rise again until nearly doubled. Punch down dough and roll out, half at a time, into a rectangle a scant Xi, thick; lift dough, cover with cloth and let rest 6 min. Brush with molted butter or shortening; cut into stripe 13x'1 wide. Pile 7 strips together; cut into 13xn pieces. Place cut -side up in greased muf- fin pane; separate slices a little at the top. Cover and let rise until doubled in bulk. Bake in hot oven, 400°, 15.20 rain, R �F�.., 1jANN� OSTIVISIW AD,RXYEA ST h. New tact-Act,.tg Pry Yeast Needs 140 Refrigetalibn1. It'b a fact! Fleischmanu's Royal Fast Ris- ing Dry Yeast keeps for weeks and weeks on the shelf, And it's full•strength fled fast -acting whenever you're ready to bake! ffyostLakeat %come -use thismodernfornsof yeast for 11 nest results lin your Weeds, rolla and buns, Get Fleischmann's Royal Inst Rising Dry Yeast at your grocer's to -days -,r alai 2 14 5 ft w;' ° q 10 11 13 x 14 M il20 % f4 aa1 4A :%.1i14 .. cert,°. s• Fes' 8 24 , i be e :• 3' i n ft d6• Gw^Cse: o .:3.??r e- 5 • �4V `F"`!`40 41 Q ^GMti .7 43 44 v .�. s. 0 answer e sewhere in this issue T,.ey're Rolling the Waves on Rollers -Director Betty Hand rehearses members of her roller- skating troupe aboard the liner Washington in mid-Atlantic. En route to Europe for a 12 -week tour, they are the first roller-skating troupe ever to undertake an extended overseas engagement' comparable to ni ajor ice ,shoe's. From the tune"the first of your "garden truck" is ready to use right up until you've picked the very 1a -t string bean you have the makings of wonderful plank and platter dishes. * ai * Such a dish is practically a whole meal -meat, vegetables and stash- ed potatoes -all cooked together on an oak plank or oven platter. Oven time is short and hot -375F or 400E usually; so it's best to choose meats that cook quickly, such as steaks, lamb chops, hale, tweiners or fish. . 4. * The planks are 10 by. 14 inch ovals, an inch thick, and you can buy theist in department or hard- ware stores. But if you have a nice block of oak around your place, your husband or son can smooth it with steel wool and snake your plank for you. Ask him to make a scooped -out place at one end with three grooves leading to it to drain meat drippings. * * Before using a plank for the first time be sure and brush it with oil or melted, unsalted shorten- ing, and warm in a slow oven -the same as you'd. pre -heat a new fry- ing pan or ivaflie iron. After that, the only care it needs is washing and drying. * * Here's one combination that I think like. Arrange lamb chops on the plank, and oil the wood around them. (Plank should always be completely covered with food, or ,well oiled, to prevent charr- ing.) Put in a 375E oven for 10 minutes, to brown the chops on one side. Meanwhile, cook asparagus in a small amount of boiling water, and pressure -cook potatoes for stashing. (If you haven't a pressure cooker, you'll want to start the potatoes boiling well ahead of putting the meat in the oven. of course). * * Now turn the chops; border them with asparagus and mashed pota- toes. Return the plank to the oven for 15 minutes. Now put the whole thing on the table and serve, with any sort of sauce or relish you fancy. There are those who claim that it's all imagination to say that "planking" lends a flavor all its own -but I don't think, after you've tried it, that you'll agree with that. * * * Here's a cake that can be eaten just "as is," or cut in squares and served with whipped cream. The recipe came to me from a woman out west who's famous for the table she sets. Site calls it: MAHOGANY CAKE 1 cup thick, sour cream 2 cups sugar 4 eggs 2% cups flour 2 level teaspoons soda NE VA - Z//iiJL t'aienheigf a u e-ei t "When a girl falls in love with a married man, site is a pathetic creatul c indeed. She swallows every statement he makes about his wife. She pictures hint as the mar- tyr in a marriage where he is al- ways "misunderstood." She feels complimented that he chooses her for his confi- dante, and draws her oven con- clusions - usu- ally, it trust be said, to the det- riment of ,,the wife who sits patiently at house. One wife tells her side of the story:: ' "Your advice to 'WAITING, Anne Hirst, was excellent. But as the wife she might have been writ- ing about, I'd like to say this: "I really feel sorry for the girl. That she is in love with my (?) husband, I don't doubt. But what she doesn't know is that she is not the first one he has professed to love, Every time Ile has become in- fatuated with a girl, he has talked of a divorce. Rather than make a scene, :I brush it off with, `Go ahead, if you want to. 'Brut he has .never gone ahead, and probably never will, ';Does this girl think that after nearly seven years together, we have nothing hut disagreelnc140 It is,, true we have outr trouble's. But there have been many, tnatly wonderful days of joy and happi- ness which cannot be overlooked. "We have no children it is true. But she has known us only a year, or she wouldn't have said it was because f didn't want them. I have lost two children. God only knows how it hurt. ''Girls who fall in love with mar.. ried men only ask for heartbreak. They don't• seem to realise that, if • these men really loved thea], they would wait till they were free be- fore telling of their love -not subject them to anxious waiting that may only hamper the girl's chances of • finding someone who could offer more than, 'maybe if 1 get a di- vorce.' • "This is the other side of tete story --which this girl could have found out if she had been the 'good friend' she claimed to be. "I sincerely hope this will help any girl who lets herself fall in love with a married man, and is left 'waiting'. "`'hese words should surely make any girl in such a situation stop andwonder. Aside from the ignominy of dat- ing a ratan who has a• wife, she should question what sort of man is this who tells her only one side of his story. Who never confesses his other light o' loves, but al- lows her to believe she is the only one in the world who ever appealed to him. Who has not the slightest • intention of divorcing the patient wife who forgives and forgives and takes hint back again and again, with a new hope rising everytine in her heart. How foolish are these emotional creatures --and bow evil the men ho tempt then! To 'The Wife:" Whether the man involved is your husband or spur (ober �' rouged ly ttnati'sj yon iievelation should ward dvei'y girl who thinks a married man is in love with her She is, as you say, only asking for heartbreak ---Thank you warmly for your letter. "What would his wife have to say to tine?" '.!'hat should he the problem of every girl who dates a married ratan. Anne Hirst's long observations of such sad affairs can be useful. Write her at Box 1, 123 New Toronto, Oak 1 heaping teaspoon baking powder _/ cup cocoa dissolved in 1 cup boiling water 1 teaspoon vanilla r/ teaspoon .salt Method. Beat eggs. Add sugar and cream. Next the flour, baking powder and salt. sifted together. 1\1ix well. Next add dissolved cocoa. which has been cooled, and lastly the soda, which has been dissolved in vanilla. Bake in a moderate oven for about an hour, This can be cut its squares and serred with whipped creast. * * Does the cooky jar show signs of getting empty again? Foolish question, if there happens to be "young-'uns" around the place. I think they'll go in a big way for what another noted cook calls: DOUBLE DATERS 13/4 cups brown sugar 1 cup shortening 3/4 cup sour milk 1 level teaspoon soda 2 cups oatmeal (ground) 2 cups flour Filling' 1 cup dates 1 cup sugar 1 cup water Boil filling until thick; cool Mix cooky ingredients in order given (creaming sugar and shorten- ing). Roll, then cut in rounds or any desired shape. Spread filling on half of cookies, then place an- other cooky on top of each and pinch edges together. Bake in a moderately hot oven. * * * Which will have to be all for just now, but 1'11 be back again next week. The two survivors of a shipwreck, a seaman and a stockbroker, had clambered on to a raft. "If a ship doesn't sight us soon," said the seaman, "we'll starve." "Don't talk nonsense!" snapped the stockbroker. Tye got plenty of Money." NEW mid USEFUL TOO .- ,- DRAPERY FIXTURE. Sil. way drapery fixture stakes small windows look larger, wider and higher and can be adjusted to suit each problem. Non -rusting, off- white enamel finish is sprayed on and baked for permanence. Steel rod can be changed in size front: 1634 in. to 24 in., thus adding'two feet to width of window. Projection from window can be adjusted from 2/ in, to 534 in. allowing drapes to hang straight despite venetian blinds or radiators. STEAM IRON. Steam iron at- tachment which converts electric iron into a steam iron is said to eliminate all possibility of explo- sions. Stearal is formed on the "flash -boiler" principle by water dripping into the steam chamber a little at a time, instead of boiling; a quantity of water to produce steam. Water tank never gets hot, can be refilled any time during ironing, and uses any tap water available. CHARCOAL GRILL. Com- plete outdoor grill is scientifically designed for cooking and boiling over lump charcoal or charcoal bri- quets. Is built of grey cast iron with ten -bar malleable iron flush top grill. Is finished in aluminum paint. Unit measures 1934 in. wide, 17% in. deep and .13% in. high. Has two hinged grills -lower one close to the coals for fast cooking and -upper one for boiling. Weighs 84 lbs. Comes in seven simple parts with all necessary;, bolts and nuts and each oart is easily identified for 'assembling_ MOTHERS! [For Your Peace e8 (Mind and the Safety of Your Child ... GET THE NEW ROTARY HARNESS This snarl-proot,twist-proof and rust -proof harness is precision made el the finest quality materials. Gives your child complete freedom to play cut' doors: No further need for fences or playpens. $2.50 Postpaid MCao,h,y OCheq rderue of ne Sole Distributors Money Back Guarantee JONES BROTHERS 1082 ate',,, ts•'• u est/it Recipe Measure Into large bowl, 3-5 c. lukewarm water, 1 tsp. granulated sugar; stir until sugar is dissolved. Sprinkle slowly with 1 envelope Plcischmann's Royal Fast Rising Dry Yeast. Let stand 10 min., THEN stir well. Scald 1 c_millccand stir in 5 tbs. granulated sugar, 2 taps. salt; cool to lukewarm. Add to yeast mixture and stir in 3-5 cup lukewarm water. Beat in 3 c. once -sifted bread flour; beat well. Beat in 4 tbs. melted ehorteuing. Work in 3 c. more once -sifted bread hour. Knead until smooth and elastic; place in greased bowl and brush top with melted butter or shortening. Cover and set in warm place, free from draught. Let rise until doubled in bulk. Punch down dough in bowl, grease top end let rise again until nearly doubled. Punch down dough and roll out, half at a time, into a rectangle a scant Xi, thick; lift dough, cover with cloth and let rest 6 min. Brush with molted butter or shortening; cut into stripe 13x'1 wide. Pile 7 strips together; cut into 13xn pieces. Place cut -side up in greased muf- fin pane; separate slices a little at the top. Cover and let rise until doubled in bulk. Bake in hot oven, 400°, 15.20 rain, R �F�.., 1jANN� OSTIVISIW AD,RXYEA ST h. New tact-Act,.tg Pry Yeast Needs 140 Refrigetalibn1. It'b a fact! Fleischmanu's Royal Fast Ris- ing Dry Yeast keeps for weeks and weeks on the shelf, And it's full•strength fled fast -acting whenever you're ready to bake! ffyostLakeat %come -use thismodernfornsof yeast for 11 nest results lin your Weeds, rolla and buns, Get Fleischmann's Royal Inst Rising Dry Yeast at your grocer's to -days -,r alai