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Zurich Herald, 1942-01-22, Page 3!O ,QORED IC URES FAR'.:F�9 4 ARANO BRITAIN'S MUTING PLANES AND WARSIIIPS Cie ®attractive B" x 10" :inouniy, each With a description of the War machine ,portrayed. Every true Canadian win prize theft' W� eeadsw�' Bomber . 'Torn havid' t" Fighter r"Lysander" "'Situp" Olive Bomber . "Sunderland" flying Boat Ti.tL7.. °Aitodnev" . "Hood" . "Warapito" . "Etopuicen "Ark Boyal" .' Itin George V" . irl.ft'i.C.S. "Saguenay" WWI. Submarine • Motor Torpedo Boat and many others For each picture desired, send a complete "CROWN BRAND" label, with your name and address and the naive of the picture you Want 'written on the back. Address Dept. J.12, The Canada, Starch Company ltd., 49 Wellington St. D.. Toronto. The Syrup with the Delicious Flavour SERIAL STORY FOOTSTEPS IN THE FOG ~� BY !ELI MORE COWAN STONE sa— SYNOPSIS Angela's announcement that she OW Stephan in the newsreels of the Bund riot, leaves Deborah puz- zled, awaiting Stephan's explana- tion. But Stephan doesn't return to oiass and Deborah and Angela strive home to Cape Cod. There Is a letter from Stephan. He explains Ire hurried departure, thanks her Tor her kindness to him. e * N STEPHAN RETURNS Chapter V. There wasn't much more. The letter was written on hotel sta- tionery, and Stephan had not sug- gested any address to which she Might reply.... Deborah read It again and again. What it all amounted to, she told .herself in the end, was—just noth- ing—except that he remembered ties as a chance acquaintance who . ,,Trod been kind to him that summer and that he felt he owed her the courtesy of this non -committal note. One afternoon shortly afterward, Deborah went for a long walk nnong the dunes beyond the town .: She had often dreamed of bringing Stephan here if he came to see her - . . He would love the schilling wind, the fury of the waves Not quite sate to think about that yet, though nor about, Ste - Veen. She walked fast and furiously, as if she could run away from those forbidden thoughts which, always e ouc'hed, waiting, in the back of her mind.... What, for instance, would all this mean to Stephan? Strange that he had not been re- called home! Except to say casually one day that his visitor's permit in the United States would be good for several mouths more, he had never mentioned returning to Europe. It was one of those things he had not talked about. But the point of View of a soldier had crept out of- ten in little voluntary ways. x fi e Toward dusk Deborah struggled home through a fitful wind. On the wind came the tang of the sea; and on her lips was the Taste of brine. A low scud of rac- ing dun -colored clouds seemed barely to clear the house -tops, and drops of moisture hung heavily on her tweed -covered shoulders and in her halm. Just now it was mist the wind was driving in from sea, in slant- ing, semi-translucent screens like softly swaying white draperies. Through it filed a line of fishing boats, scurrying toward the docks. Already it was too thick for her to make out the weather signal on the hill. By the time Deborah reached the water tront, the Harbor was half. curtained offs Soon --unless rain • came instead—the fog would be. not just a curtain, but an opaque wall of gray. Over thea bulkhead that reinforc- ed the little park across the street from the Lovett house, spray tossed flecks of spume across the sanely FiOW TO RELIEVE PILE TORTURE QUICKLY AND EASILY iaare eca(with or rectal soreness, do ode - toy treatment and run the risk of letting this condition become chron- ic. Any itching or soreness or vain tai pa, `;age proper l rnatu i s warning and ent should Le secured et once. For this purpose get a packngo of Bern -hold ft ort any druggist and use ups directed. 'l.his formula. which is used internally is a small, sell evectiic14iettching wille laTn(i s0l'ene.`1.S loud aid in heali11 the sore tender spot.. :!:term-I.teirl is pleasant to use, id highly rrrormnnded and it seems the height of roily. for any one to risk n upturn) an(1 chronic pile mon- ,iition 5 hep ody May 1 . had at such 0 ''Mail cost. 1f you try !tele-I.tnld end are not entirely pleased with the results, yetlr druggist will gladly return your money. SSUE 4—'42 turf, while above, "'Uncle Sam's. hens" swooped and wheeled, pro• testing in raucous angry cries .. . And now, even two trim Coast Guard cutters had taken cover in the Harbor, their ships' bells add- ing their warning to that of the fog horn. Altogether, Deborah decided, a day for a cheery blazing wood fire But the fire refused to be cheerful. It refused even to blaze. Deborah was choking with streaming eyes in a smother of smoke when she realized with a sense of ultimate insult that the draft chilling her sweatered back came froze the open front door. "Bridgie!" she called. "Bad cess to you, you crazy Irishwoman! For Heaven's sake, shut that door!" Bridgie did close the door --but conspicuously not with her habitual belligerent b A g; and emwhen to see announced, e you, Miss Deborah," it was in the honeyed accents which Bridgie saved for occasions of high social luster... In the bosom of the fam- ily, Bridgie's communications were easn•ied on in a jovial bellow. Deborah pivoted about on her knees, tongs in hand, to peer through the enveloping murk. Then, borne by a current of air from the eutrance, the smoke swirled aloft and she could See a little. In the, hallway, the formality of bis precise little foreign bow dis- counted by the holiday flash of his smile, stood Stephan. "Mind your manners, .child!" Deborah lieai't herself saying. obediently, "Of comae, Stephan,; You know I'd love to have you." "But really, I had no idea," be'. said hastily. "I can't--^" "Als, owe an' 'tis no throuble; avail at=all: r Bridgie dismissed itis objections with a Hospitable wave, "An.' now, Miss Deborah, I'll be makin' the Masther'e room rlddy' fer the Captain." "I ;say*" Stephan, Deborah was, puzzled to see, wheeled to look with a kind of startled consternation after Bridgie's broad bank -^-,"but how did site ltriow—?" He broke•' off, frowning, shrugged ,and lighted a cigarette. "That you fate the `Captain'? Oh,` Bridgie can spot gold braid and" shoulder straps even when they're not in the show case. I suppose she's developed a kind of sixth, sense far rank from working for seagoing families most e her life. To Bridgie, having 'a fine Tigger of a figbtin man' as a guest is the next thing to entertaining royalty But does it matter?" • "I ant flattered, naturally," 1te smiled; but his eyes were all of a sudden guarded, watchful. As if, Deborah thought, les had Shut a door in my face. To be continued, New Zealand has called tip all single men of military age not already in the army for service in the expeditionary. force. New Zealand married men without children and between the ages of 18 and 26 also will be mobilized. n * 0 During the heartache of the past days, Deborah had often reminded herself that even if she would ever see him again, nothing could be quite the same. But now, standing there, he looked so like a small boy who has planned a tremendous sur- prise, but is not quite sure how you will receive it, that struggling to her feet, she ran toward hi hands extended, crying "Ste- phan! How splendid to see you! I didn't—" She broke off, small cold Angers clutching at her .heart, ae imperfectly Behind him, latched door had swung open again, and for a moment he stood against a No -Man's Land of misty sea and earth. From the gray smother, wisps of scud drifted, wraithlike into the hall, and swirled about his bright bare head —as they had done that first night in California. Beyond, tate foghorn droned its unearthly warning. Suddenly, like an ominous over- tone, Deborah heard again in mens ory Angela's drowsy voice, repeat- ing epeating that fantastic tragmeut of fish-. ernsati's lore: "Ill fated is that which comes. i out of the fogl For always, in the end, it must return whence it came." For the first time she realized how inescapably her feeling for Stephan had always been laced with fear --fear for him. ' "But you are looking at me as if I were a ghost!" he cried taking her cold hands into his warm ones, and laughing down at her. "Just the way you did that first night," "Are yoti sure you aren't?" * She tried to laugh, too, wonder- ing if her voice sounded as strained • and thin to him as it did to her. Before he coud answer, Bridgio, who had closed the door again, coughed diar.reetly !!rom the hen. way. "You'll excuse me, Miss Debar- tth, she said, "but I took the lib- erty of Irwin' the grocer's boy run .the gintlennatl's car into the garrige an' carry his bags upstairs Wit this weather not knowin' is it wind or fog 'twill turn out to be, you'll be ''skin him far dinner an' the night, I doubt not." The "Miss Deborah" and the unctuous deference in 13ridgios manner were assumed purely for guest. consumption. !Behind Stelsh- an's back, 13ridgie's left eye wink- oil---niidgiug, prompting, as It used I n do be 1)rbora1b's school days: ases In Alaska. For Raiding Japan The bombing of Tokio by planes shuttling between certain points in Alaska and Russia was pictured as a possibility by a young scientist who itas spent .a dozen years studying by aerial exploration the topography of the northern territory. Bradford Washburn, head of the New England Museum of Na - tura! History, said in an inter. view that he thought it was pos- sible for bombers to blast Tokio by swerving from the direct course between the nearest land points en route from Alaska to Russia. The route he visioned would be approximately 1,Q00 miles short- er than flights from Hawaii to Tokio and weather conditions would not be insurmountable, he asserted. He said that the bombing of Japanese cities by Alaskan -based planes would be even more prac- tical than ferrying bombers to England or shipping them across the Pacific to Russia for the ul- timate purpose of blasting Ja- pan. He pointed out that it would not be necessary for planes sur- viving attacks on Tokio from Alaskan land bases to return. They could keep right on going to Russia and confine future op- erations from bases in that ter- ritory, he contended. Toli SAVE MONEY" ... lir IYOU PAY LESS --- Caluret is priced surprisingly low, probably less than the baking powder you are now Wing, YOU U5t ASS -- Calumet's d ubk- action means double leavening--- ,during mixiag and hi the oven—per- mining ven—permltting you to use less. SETTER 1tESULTS -- Calumet's contin- atons leavening means finer, better textured results for all your 'baking. 112 CHOCOLATE ALL -BRAN BARS Let your party refreshrnenis be simple — but inspired! Here's a pair that's both: crisp, cruelly chocolate bran bars, half candy, half cake, and a pot of pipins hot, fragrant -smelling coffee. Hap- pily, it's a party formula tha'V feeds six as well as sixty and fits coffeeanr for secondsom a ballefit around bridge nd follow this recipe for the chocolareunion. Make te bran bars: Chocolate A11 -Bran Bars 24 cup flour % cup All -Bran 3 cup chopped nut heats 1 teaspoon vanilla extract 3 squares unsweetened chocolate (3 oz.) % cup butter 2 eggs 1 cup sugar Melt chocolate and butter over hot water. Beat eggs well, add sugar and continue beating until light and fluffy. Add chocolate mixture. Stir in flour, All -Bran, nut meats and flavoring. Pour into greased baking pan, making layer about one-third inch thick. Bake in moderate oven (375 F.) 25 to 30 minutes. Yield: Approximately 16 bars (square or oblong pan). Variation:! cup cocoa may be substituted for chocolate. Omit chocolate and sift cocoa with flour. Melt shortening and add to egg and sugar mixture. If other shortening is used, add i/s teaspoon salt.' New Year Greeting For Mr. Churchill British public opinion handed a special New Year greeting to Prime Minister Winston Church- ill in the form of a British Gallup Poll, "In general do you approve or disapprove of Winston Churchill as prime minister?" the Poll ask- ed men and women in all parts of the United Kingdom... The study was part of a continuous index of the popular support for Brit- ish prime minister: since 1936. Eighty-eight percent of those interviewed said they approved of Mr. Churchill as premier, His crit- ics numbered only eight percent and few percent were undecided. Befob"G the Empire sweep into Libya a few weeks ago, a similar poll showed Mr. Churchill with 84 percent approving him. Yet Relieve ttlf.4 COLO 9jt Got purl. relief from the sniffling, mo n,-ahoked misery of your head cold ... soothe your sero, in- flamed nostrils , breathe freely again .. , sleep better. Menthoontism penetrates to the remotest . air passages . , , helps cion head and nese and keep than clear... instantly relieves your dis- tress, or motley Lack. Ask four druggist for Menth.,otahrns today. Jars or tears, $0c. A2 A U. S. Using Blimps For Patrolling Coast The navy has put a fleet of blimps armed with depth bombs, machine,guns and cannon at work guading the coast lines of the United States from subar- ines and prowling raiders. On the Atlantic coast the first squadron of six blimps has al- readsr taken the air, the navy said today. They are the first of scores to be used. The navy apparently is con- vinced that patrolling airships are among the most effective weap- ons against submarine attacks on shipping in coastal waters. Capt. C. E. Rosendahl, .veteran dirig, ible commander and proponent of lighter -than -aircraft, calls the blimp the "dread of submarine captains" and credits it with an important part in halting the fast Great War submarine "scourge." Carrying a crew of eight, the patrol airship can hover, drift or, under power, travel mote than twice as fast as a submarine. It -has been demonstrated that it is possible to spot even deeply sub- merged submarines from e blimp under favorable conditions, If the blimp's own depth bombs don't finish it off, the spot can be marked and destroyers sum- moned, DISLIKE WASHING DIRTY 190 SINGLE 'PISS tilos 10e i"i s: IIANDKERCHULFS2 here's freedom from your most unpleasant task, . . Instead of washing dirty handkerchiefs, Uibson's !'issues arse so cheap you simply destroy thcln— germs and all!, TRIALOt'A'1r11L NOW. 1111 — t.11i:^,trl1'S T1iSL1t:S, t''louston Ave„ Toronto, Out. .. Enclosed find .lac for genor0us trial offer of 11U tiel'ues in dis- penser box. t I Name -. ---- cuts of meat, use of which will out dollars from the weekly meat bilk of a large family. The big secret is to water the neat during roast- ing and be sure juices and fate that collect are not the least bit burned, but just richly browned. When meat is tender, remove from the pan and pour off all but three tablespoons of fat. Be care- fal not to disturb the rich brown sediment which contains the flame or and savor and color for gravy. Place pan over direct heat; stir lit 3 tablespoons flour, stirring con- stantly until very smooth and a rich brown color. Then add 2 cups of cold water, stirring constantly. If hot water is added the mixture• will form lumps and the gravy will have to be strained. Seasoin with one-half teaspoon salt and one-quarter teaspoon pepper; cools and stir for five minutes. These proportions make a ratede iurn gravy, which will complete mashed potatoes or for those old-" fashioned or very young persons, give a treat of bread and gravy which is "tops" for them. TABLE LKS By SAME 3, CHAMBERS To continue our few remarks on the National Campaign for Health, we have learneta many more things recently. Our stat- istics show our laboring men are the best fed on an average and sad, but true, that our elail- dren and housewives are the lowest nourished on an average. Many reasons are given for the findings, that suth a large per- centage of our population are not receiving the proper nourishmen'i, Shall income is only partly a reason, for many suffering from nutritional disorders are found in our wealthy homes. -Another rea- son is large families, overcrowded homes, and a poor choice of foods with budget money for that pur- pose. Please remember to use one leafy vegetable as well as two others each day. This is a splendid time for those home-grown to- matoes, so carefully canned, and tomato juice. If using the latter as a substitute for orange juice it will take about three times the amount each day to suttrply ihb same amount of vitamins. Here is au appetizing recipe for the cheaper cute of meat. 1`dfl reSS 1116.. 1.1.,.....•I Y W .,,. l MACARONI SWISS STEAK % ib, short cut macaroni 11/4 lbs. round steak 2 tablespoons flour 1. can tomato soup Salt and pepper. Buy a good piece of round steak about 132'inc'hes thick. Pound into it flour, salt and pepper on both sides. Brown meat in okillet, add canned tomato soup and allow to simmer slowly over moderate fire until savoy and tender. Remove meat and cut into de- sired portions. Cook macaroni in boiling salted water until tender. Drain. Saute it in thick gravy. Pour on large platter and garnish with steak, Now a word about gravy. Po- tatoes and gravy or biscuits and gravy; how appealing that sounds when "wintry blasts do blow!" Time CapsuleHas it occurred to you, that gravy as well as beiug the essence of the A short historyof America's' meats maybe the essence of Econ first three weeks in the second ou�y too? Velvety smooth, reeking of the World 'war: meats savory juices, seasoned to Chapter 1: Pants down. the Ding's taste, gravy makes it Chapter II: Shirts on. possible to serve the inexpensive Chapter III: Sleeves rolled up. SLIPPERS AND BOOTS FOR COMFORT Miss Chantbers welcomer personeUl letters from interested readers, SIa® is pleased to receive suggestions on topics for her column, and Ta even ready to listen to your "pee peeves' Bequests dor recipes or special menus are in order. Address sour tetters to entree Sadie D. Chum. bers, 73 West Adelaide Street, 3'o. ronto." Send stamped, salt-address3e41 envelope Lt you wish a reeve. Had Always Warned Against 'Geary Wars,' Premier Churchill has never tried to delude the ),:,inpire witty easy optimism. In a book about his youth he wrote: "Let us learn our lessons. Never, never, never believe any war will be smooth and easy,, or that anyone who embarks on the strange voyage can measure.. the tides and hurricanes he will encounter . . Always relneln.- ber, however sure you are that you can easily win, that there would not be a war if the othor man did not think he also bad a chance." i i Warns woolio slippers are always a comfort. Both are knitted. One is trimmed with large rosettes, the other is called a slipper hoot with turned back lapels at the instep. Patten' No, 81)1 contain: com- plete 1 mplete instructions for making both, 'Co order pattern, Write or send above picture with your msec and 'address with 15 cents in coin or stamps to Carol Aims, ('!tors i, 'its .lrlolaide St. West, Toronto.