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Zurich Herald, 1930-09-18, Page 2It gives. more pleasure that you thought tea could give "SALA. TE A 'Fresh front the gardens/ 124 The Gringo Privateer By PETER 13. KYNE SYNOPSIS Kenneth Burney, adventurer and one- time gentleman, comes to Braille Bar - din, king of,,the cattle country, for h 1l a a jot. ng in Burney has had a who has been stealing the king's Bruce, a rival cattle stock, aided by 'Mig- uel Gallegos, a Mexican bandtet' The offer's king, liking young Burney's sty him the job of getting etti nghe a tie -the est Burney accepts Means a fight to the deaf daughter meets Muriel, the kings CHAPTER VI. --(Coot's;.) "New this was net to be a' rodeo ride, where you stmt out of a delta and finish when the liistel goes oir, which is when the judges figure you've clone your best :.nd the horse ha odone o5e his worst. This was to be a t to a finish, winner take all. Fortun- ately I knew this horse's. habits. When you first forked him he'd make Our broad jumps, with his back arched,, and come down hard each time. It that didn't do the trick he'd stop and do his stuff within an area of twenty feet, He'd let you get comfortably sat in the saddle if he was kept blindfold- ed. So I faced Bins in the direction I desired him to buck, an assistant re- moved the blindfold,. and we were off' "On the second broad jump lie was off the firm sandbar and into the n • ani where about two inches of Economy Corner Cherry Mousse One pint thick (nevi, 1 cup cherrY juice, 2 drops almond extract and pow- dered sugar, Mix the ingredients, Sweetening to taste; •chill and whit until stiff, then pack 'in tee and salt for three hours or more. scones Two cups flour, 4 teaspoons baking powder, 1 teaspoon salt, 2 tablespoons sugar, 4 tablespoons butter, 1 egg yolk, 1 cup mills, X egg white. Mix and sift dry ingredients. Curt in the butter with a knife, Add egg yolk, then milk gradually. Toss on floured board; pat out to 1/4 inch thick- .ness. Cut out with diamond shape. atter: Brush top with egg white staf 1 water flowed over something my obeaten with 1 tablespoon water. Lay mandidn't know existed Mathis spot on a greased pan, and bake in a 450- --and that was a patch of ,quicksand degree oven 10 to 15 minutes. about eighteen inchesdeep, A sen- Walnut Date Meringue ' "Are you going to employ him, Dad?" "Of course I am. He needs a job; I have it to give and I might as well take a chance on him, for his father's sake, as on anybody else. But he's the country gentleman, even in his chaps, so for the good of his soul I'm going to put hint over the jumps tomorrow. The El Ranchito riders with whom he will have to associate will despise him for a dude—there's such a thing as blind class hatred, you know ---until they realize he knows his business and that, dude that he is, he's a man, too. •o ten sec - When the king and the princess found themselves alone, the girl asked: "Dad, who is he?" If he stays on old Geronun "He claims to be the eon of old Felix Burney, a California cattle man odds they'll know him for a rider and nce• If this be true a game one. And that -will help a of my acquaitaoin to take his word great deal." nd I'm not going litrlit , "But suppose he should be thrown sible horse would have whirled out o it the moment he felt his ,font feet going down, but this horse was a lunatic and a creature of habit, be- sides. He just had to make his four broad jumps or bust, so he made them —and discovered I. was still aboard. So he stopped and started_to work on me in earnest, onl;r to discover i'cl outfoxed him aswell as ray ,old man. "That horse just couldn't dohis stuff because, in that shallow 'quicksand, be couldn't get any traction, and in about a minute he was blowing and sweating and trying to climb out. 1 wouldn't let him, and there he worked until all 1 the ambition was out of him, and scratched him fore and aft until he stood still under it and just bawled like a spoiled baby. "Of course Father screamed murder and tried to make a charge of 'swindl- ing stick, but he couldn't .go,baflk oid � the written bet, so'finally he p Years later he admitted I'd saved hien a million dollars by giving hint a lib- eral education in the ;matter of cover- ing all the possible contingencies in a contract." (To be continued.) for it) he's an American with a s strain—say one-eighth—of Castilian blood in him. Just enough to give him temperament and make him carefree, easy and prodigal. His alleged father is one of the finest gentlemen in Cali- . The old stock, you understand. forma. Fifty yeads behind time with his code.,vantages unknown to Grandfa "I have always liked old Ielloaned but Bardin's day, he had also raised Brad - r 1 Bardin a thorough cattleman, in and hurt?" "Cowl:oy luck," the king replied differently. "His father has been a cowman andlaid the vast foundation fortune; of the king's presentanent al- though he had given his heir -app. ' certain educational and cultural ad- ther Two eggs, well beaten; 1 teaspoon baking powder, 2 tablespoons flour, 1 cup chopped dates, 1 cup chopped wal- nuts, 1 heaping tablespoon sugar and a pinch of salt. Bake for 80 Minutes in a slow oven. Serve with rich cream. Bangor Brownies One cup sugar, creamed with % cup butter; add 2 eggs, well beaten, and stir • until free. from lumps. cup chop•, squares melted chocolate, 1 flour. ped walnuts ,and 1/a cup pastry Spread thin. Bake 15 minutes•and cut' — in Strips. • De Luxe Chocolate Cake never lmew he had a son. him money from time tan time, whileth I his catty as security, era tor, he realized that, as an op wasn't a gilt-edged risk, still I could always send a man to count his cattle at any time and find more than the number he represented he owned says when making the loan. This. boy, , my lawyers .:lone in on him a year ago and took the cattle for the loan. Well, we were abroad then, Muriel, and I never knew anything about it. My head can't hold every detail of my business. However, if we took the cattle we gave him the best market price for them and remitted hirn the difference between the selling pt' iee and his debt. Of course; with his ranch unstocked, old Felix has to lease it to some other csttletnan, and now Ken says he's retired, and tit, dialers tell him he hasn't many years to live. I imagine I'll be able to buy that ranch some day at a reasonable figure, ts himself particularly if this boy g killed, which he's extremely apt to do." "Hew dreadful, Datil I wouldn't like to see him killed," the girl re- marked thoughtfully. "He's so young and merry and gallant, and so filled with the joy o fliving. He seems a trifle frivolous but somehow, I think that's just a smoke screen to hide a lot of real courage and sound common sense. He strikes tie as a gentleman who has been a sort•of dilettante cow- man." "Oh, I imagine he knows cows well enough. He war brought up on the Santa Inez Rancho and they ran about three thousand :lead. The trouble is old Felix spoiled him for the business by raising him a gentleman and giv- ing him too much money to spend. Why, the young jackass used to play polo. Now that old Felix can no longer support another gentleman in the family, the boy's broke and a wanderer in search of a riding job. Apparently he realizes that cows are the only thing in life he really knows. anything about and it has occurred to him to cultivate his scant knowledge and forget polo. A wise decision, ey order to fit him for his heritage and equip hint with ability to add to it. And how well the old man had wrought the Western cattle world now knew. The present king had started his practical •education in the bunkhouse with his father's riders at thirty dol- lars a month, and had worked up slowly; in the process he had been thrown many a time and oft, and had broken bones to prove it, but it had never occurred to Lim, in the pride of his youth, to avo=1 a horse just be- cause the animal -was disrespectful. He chuckled now as he recalled his• own days as a broncho twister. He was in a reminiscent mood-. "I'd been working for your grand- father five years, Muriel, and saved and won at poker sixty-four hundred dollars when the old man got wind of my bank account and decided it would be fun to take it away from me. I t -•ink he was testing me tori eef there was any truth in the saying h a fool and his money are soon parted, for he offered to bet me ten to six I couldn't ride a red roan outlaw we'd best riders in the country had never stayed on that horse after the four:h jump and my father was very proud of that horse. He'd maintain any- thing and anybody that was a top- notcher in his own particular line, whereas if this outlaw had been a mediocre bucker Dad would have shot to make me extend myself. "Muriel, this horse had everything. Why, he could wrinkle his back and throw a good man, but his slitacpye throw a good man, but his specialty was whirling like a pin -wheel, simul- taneously taneously pitching high, hard handsome so continuously he was a four -footed advertisement for thet ec- ret of perpetual motion. He j jar- red you groggy, and if he didn't throw you in thefirst' four jumps you fell off. And 1 kaow this because I'd tried him out in private twice—and in those days it required an extra bad horse's to make ma extnd myself. CHAPTER VII. "Well, my father was always a bit stingy with tie. He made me work for every dollar of spending money I ever fingered. Consequently,I yearn - e ten thousand dollars away What New York Is Wearing One and one-half cups sugar cream Diet Revolution X N E er 1�( p ew P ed butter, yolks of 2 egg They melt in your mouth. No one. ever says "No thank you" to such a dessert Sere thems tm' s Water Ice Wafers.to anyone at any time and you are sure to please. Just tasty water ice sandwiched between crisp pure biscuit wafers. Delicious . . . and dainty too. Chruthes WATER ICE n.ent beaten fine, 1/ cup sour milk. 1fa cup NX.—Here is unusual 3I milton hot water. Sift 2 cups cocoa and 1 teaspoon socaI eating. Add whites of 2 eggs beaten stiff, Scientists at Colgate University this threeVanilla. e ittu sift the flour two ori l fall are going to digress frons the three times makes any cake very i usual routine of finding out what is fine good for a person to eat, n see and Timely Hints To Tourists' Cup Hamilton, who enjoy • fl our, 1/s scientific news for those ltogether. If you bunk your car in a strange . down the mileage shown on the speed - I garage when you are on a trip, jot ometer so you can tell the next mo ing whether anybody has used the car during the night. If you do this some- what conspicuously, the men around the gui age may see you and decide to leave your car alone, knowing that use BY ANNABELLE WORTHINGTON Il1ustraiecd Dressmaking Lesson Fur- vialted'1Vith. Every Pattern NE0 Cream Filling For Washington Pie i whether there may be tn. One cup milk, 1 tablespoon corn-. from eating according to what a per- of it will be detected. 1.3 cup sugar', 1 egg, salt, son likes. Automobile thieves sometimes hats,; starch, Colgate will analyze the benefits of ,din front of roadside restaur- illa. Heat milk. Put dry iugred• ia and eye filling op tourists because anot , ants frequented by they assume that any one who leaves his ear to eat will be gone for half an hour or more. That'siasure that therefore, to be especially everything is securely locked. Make a practice of adding water to your batteries just before you aro going out in your car rather than after you come in. It is a good thin;; to run the car after the water has beer, added. It doesn't save much gas and it dam- ages your motor to shut off the igni- tion when coasting down a long hill. Unburned gas is sucked into the cyl- inders and cuts the oil so that its effi- ciency as a lubricant is impaired. Also, the gas may explode in the muf- fler and blow it out. Possibilities Never judge your future possibili- ties by your past failures._ -- "Congratulations, my dear," cooed his sweetheart's mother after he had been accepted. "So you're to be my son-in-law!" ' "Good gracious!" he ex- claimed. "I hadn't thought of that!" Van into it. ents into a bowl. Break eggflavor, sa', oryness Pour mixture into milk and cook until pearance. thick. This work will be done in the de- i partment of psychology under direc- Banana Griddle Cakes The Mix and sift 2 cups flour, 2 tea-' tion of Dr. Ronald A. Laird• spoons baking powder, 1 tablesp0onl 11/z plans are announced in the Colgate ti 1/y to , sugar. Add in order given cups milk, 2 eggs, 2 tablespoons but- ter. Dredge 1 cup chopped bananas in flour and add to griddle cakes. Serve with syrup, honey, fresh crush- LabLog, which. Says. "There has been a tendency in diet work for the past decade to treat man as a purely chemical machine working on calories, vitamins, minerals, carho- ar- ed strawberries or jelly. hydrates, etc. Taste, odor an Coffee Whipped Cream Roil \ ance of food have been largely neglect - Six tablespoons powdered sugar, 6 ed, anmost d d it is these ` our attention.which will occupy eggs, 3 tablespoons pastry flour, 1 tea- "Authorities recognize that the pro- • spoon baking powder, 1s pint cream, cess of digestion is directly influenced iwhipped, 3 tablespoons strong coffee. by the chemical constituents of the Cream the yolks of the eggs and sugar ,food eaten, and that'the eater's temp together, add coffee and flour mixed erament may be affected by good or 1 with baking powder. Whip whites of bad digestion. ' eggs very stiff and fold through mix „Two of the world's most famous ture. Line a rhallow pan with greased pessimists, Carlyle and Schopenhauer, and floured paper, spread mixture on suffered all their lives from bad diger this and bake from ? to 19 minutes in tions. We may find evidence that a an oven about 359 degrees F. When psychologically sound diet—a cream baked place between damp cloths. Let puff at the psychological moment, for (ooh Whip the cream stiff, flavor with instance, might have contributed to Vanilla and 1 on the tablespoon powdered turning those biaek-spectacled authors Spread theeon cake.oRollu it• into member's of the optimists lub. top with coffee butter "Coming down to more practical' frosting. matters we may discover that properly Fruitage — Serves Four selected flavors and odors, together S tablespoons crushed pineapple, 2 with attractive appearance, r a tablespoons lemon juice, harassed wife the surest means of 1. cup orange juice, 2 cups boiling water, 4 table- turning a moody husband into a conversationalist." spark - spoons sugar. Drain pineapple, if can- ling table ned, but do not extract all juice. Add4�_ lemon andorange juice, boiling water A Scotchman's Rise and half tris sugar. Allow to stand urn- T$e manager of an Aberdeen firm til cool. Add remaining sugar, strain called his book-keeper into his private and serve very cold. room• Spaghetti Luncheon Dish "Sandy," he said, `.'the accountant is .. Ilere is a spaghetti loaf that is de- leaving and I'm galtn tae gie you his licious for a luncheon dish: One and job." young book -keeper's face lit up one-half cups boiled and rinsed spag- hetti, 2 cups soft bread crumbs, 2 dips with expo you, he replied. "And milk, 2 cups grated cheese, Ye cup e melted butter, 4 beaten eggs, 1 pimen- what will the salary be now?" -to, cut fine, salt. Bake in a moderate The manager shook his head. t 11 Over about 45 A jaunty red and white linen print that you'll find so useful for all -day occasions for mid -summer, can be copied for a very small amount. The becoming scarf collar of white linen accented with plain red gives it a sportive air. Style No, 2961. affects Princess shaping through the moulded bodice and cleverly low placed fulness of the circular skirt. 18 years, It can be had in sizes' 16, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. The medium size takes but 31/a yards of 39 -inch material with 1/a yard of 35 - inch contrasting for collar with 1/a yard of 35 -inch bias binding for skirt hem, cuffs and collar trine. Peach shantung with.collar of self - fabric is chic. el - Shell pink fiat wasnable erepe, yel- low and white dottd pique, orehid and white printed batiste and nile green shirting hi candy stripe are attractive suggestions. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Write your name and address plain- ly, lain-ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number, and address your order to Wilson Patter,, Service, 78 West Adelaide St., Toronto. ed to talc No other sweet lasts from him, and after a while I figured so long, costs so little or out a way to swindle dieis hien and reduced does so much for you. thousand against nil r the bet to writing so there wouldn't be any argument about it afterward, be- 6 cause I knew mY father would craw- e i£ I gave him a. real open- Promotesfish every good health when used ing. So I carefully stip regularly after every meal. tyre old tman saw to ihatey were routurelaxin!,; or It cleansesoteeth and throat, "We argued so much ab streng h mouth and.breath, and the rules that I got his mind off one strengthens the gums. I important point and he signed up Youri1ehealth is aided without noticing his error in failing while, your pleas. ����1 \ to stipulate the place of execution. urs is served. y,,>4, y ��\\� That left me free to choose it, so I chose the dry, sandy river bed of the San Ardo. The old man made no ob- jection. He figured I'd picked the sand of the river bed to save myself .,.you powc ei Good and from being as badly hurt, when I was •Book agent (to farmer) I would be on the hard to inti an . encyclopedia; now s stir well. Add Y/z cup of floured rale, Good for You ground as' ground of the comae. willing e was t that oughtyour boy is going to school."' itis. hake in slow oven at least 1/a ORA his son and he was willing enough r harmer: "Not on your ilfe. Let hirn. hour, USG a shallow pan. filet I should have the best of it in walk, the same as I'did." falling; so a satis a, our debts of a in minutes. Quick Cake One cup sugar, 1'/a cupslours/� tea- . spoon baking powder, 2 eggs, up milk, 1/4, cup melted butter, pinch of salt. Put ingredients in bowl in order Mentioned; do not stir until they are all in. Then stir up the entire mixture well, Put in a small (about) and beat 8 ins.) square pan and bake in a mod- erate oven, Yum Yums Blend % cup shortening, 1 cup brown sugar and 1 egg well. Add 1 cup sour 'milk. Stir in 2 cups flour, 1 teaspoon cinnamon, 1. teaspoon nut- meg soda sifted together. Add 1 cup raisins and 1// cup chopped nuts. Pour into muffin tins and bake 15 to 20 min utes at 350 degrees Fahrenheit. Makes 18 cakes. Cabbage Salad "The same as you're gettin', bu ye bare a hat -peg to yourself turned, Minard's Liniment for Foot A m INS No matter how severe, you can always have immediate relief: Aspirin always stops pain quickly. It less to the heart; hoes it without aarmless ony ill eanybodcts. y.mBut it always brings relief. Why suffer? now,t•e- TRADE MARK REG, One niecliuni-sized cabbage, chopped with 1 shall jar red cherries; add 1 :clap shredded pineapple. Mix with salad dressing, Inexpensive bark Cake Into a howl put 1% cups of milk (if sour) a teaspoon of baking soda dis- solved in the milk and / cup of sugar, 3 tablespoons• cocoa, 3 of molasses, 2 tablespoons melted shortening (I use lard), 1/z teaspoon ginger, 1/a teaspoon cinnamon, 1 teaspoon nutmeg, 2 heap- ing cups flour to which has been added a pinch of salt and 3 teaspoons baking i Aricl to the milk, etc., and Speak what You think, be what You I FVf�iIY MEAL h h horse an grin-! 11 kinds. I houlsehoT 1 tr1end, are, Pal Y 155�.1E No. 5%----'30 boys helped me saddle . _..... ned like a fool 'whole a. couple of file i:the outlaw. Minard's Liniment a ®1, 1L - be it oci� n this' waq,. A faded, battered hal; is hardly respectable ... yet no worse than dull, gray -looking shoes ...your morning toilet should always include a "Nugget" shine -which waterproofs the shoes as it polishesr SHOE POLISH e NNW TIN client) with a tfriiit 1N ser I. Il, II