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Zurich Herald, 1936-12-03, Page 20000 GOT 00110601,14 ORDEIN —Olaf 00'01 `1414 CTo,d 'because it 'bettor'heft t Wes . Lt less Cost?' 0,0001 1a3i$. i { 7-30 11P:11SHI [Y1ES ay KATHLEEN NORRIS SYNOPSIS Sheila Carscadden, blue-eyed, cop pery-haired and ., lost her job in a downtown New York office because she took it too much upon hreself When she reached her home she Found that her older brother, Joe, had also lost his job 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, "That's the one, Ma." "They were fine people," Mrs. Carscadden said. "And the girl their son's going to marry—the ward that their son is going to marry, Sheila," Angela asked wistfully, is she nice ?" "Gertrude Keane." "Is that her name?" "It was her purse I found, you know." "Oh, sure. And is she stunning, Sheila, like we said?" "Oh, I'll bet I saw his picture in the paper with her last Sunday!" Cecile, said with animation. Shabby and tired and poor and young, talk- ing sadly of their prospecst with her Joe, she could nevertheless brighten into interest at the thought of this more fortunate girl. She and Joe had been engaged for three years; she knew that they easily night have to wait three more. "Mamma," Sheila demanded, her arms stretched across the table, the dangling light bright in her eyes, and upon the shining, flattened fringe of hair across her forehead, "if mfrs. McCann conies tomorrow, will you talk poor?.." "I will not!" Mrs. Carscadden re- plied. "If you ch000se to draw down the anger of God by pre- tendin' to be in trouble whin you're not, thin it'd be a fine job draggin' your another into it!" "Mama, if you'll just stick to the truth but sort of make a poor mouth of it," begged Sheila, after an in- terval of unhappy thought, "I had us all but starving in the streets!" "Well, they'i: find out we're not thin. They'll not put their little toobs down my children's throats, or tell the how many pairs of shoes I'd buy thin in a mon't," with some dim yet still smouldering memory of settlement worker's long -ago visit. A Great Book "How to Be- come a Hockey Star" by T. P. "Tommy" Gorman, manager and coach of the Montreal "Maroons", profusely illus- trated and containing many valuable tips on how to play the game, WV) AUTOGRAPHED PICTURES of GREAT PLAYERS (mourned for framing) Croup Montreal "Maroons" Croup "Imo Canadians" or Individual pictures of: Baldy Northcott Paul Haynes !Java Trottter Marty Barry Russ Blinco Pete Felly Earl Robinson Dave Herr Bob Gracie Roy Wolters Gus Marker "Ace" Bailey Pelvis Morenz Art Lesion. JohnnyCagnoo Prank Boucher Wilf. Code Marty Burka Gcorgo Mantic. Alex Levinsl y • Your choice of the above e For a label from a tin of "CROWN BRAND" or "LILY WHITE" Corn Syrup.—Write on the back your name and address — plainly — and the words "Hockey Book" or the ammo/ the picture you want one bookor _ for (picture p each label). Mall the label to the address below. E0WAP05euRG fy�;''RAND EOM SYRUP THIS FAMOUS ENERGY . FOOD A product of Ilia C.I 1. l).' STA ItC11COMPANYLimIted TORONTO Ts 044 V44 'd4 P4 r4 '.4 ►4 '.4 r4 'G4 „ '44 171.4 )04 "Mamma," Sheila began, now genuinely appalled, "Mrs. McCann is not a charity worker! She's coming as an old friend—how could I stop her! If you'll only be decent to her, Mamma, if you'll only be just polite—" "Polite to one and all I'll never be—" her mother began, in an un- yielding tone, "but beholden to one I niver seen—" "Oh, Mamma, for heaven's sake! Beholden!" Shelia was tired, emotionally shaken, close to tears. Joe spoke suddenly. "You made her think we were something we aren't, Sheila, and even if it was only a joke, it seems to me that it isn't fair to drag Ma into it. If Mrs. McCann does come tomorrow, which she probably won't, why, Mamma will have to explain to her that it was just some of your nonsense!" "I get a chance to meet people like that, and then you queer it!" Sheila muttered bitterly. "Maybe she'll just think it was funny, Sheila!" Angela said. "Who but you would ever think of such a thing !" Cecilia, who enormously admired the spirit of the younger g3.rl, said shaking her head. "Oh, that one !" Mrs. Carscadden observed, with a glance in which motherly pride, mollified resentment, and a desire to show herself friendly again were all blended. "You couldn't stop that one wit'a thruck!" she claimed. It was a boast. Sheila felt the friendlier atmosphere, and but for that scalding memory of Peter, might have been reasonably confident and content as she went to bed. As it was, a jealous confusion of thoughts and fears raged in her heart. She hated Gertrude, because she was lovely and rich and beloved nad happy, and she hated Peter, be- cause she, Sheila, loved him. She got into bed, seeming to the interested and talkative Angela to be in a strangely unresponsive mood. Sheila Iay awake long after her mother had crept noiselessly into bed beside her. The strange events of the day pass- ed through her miner in fretted con- fusion. She had recovered Peter after all these months, only to feel him more completely lost than ever. All the new hopes and dreams that this evening's strange adventure might have launched had turned to new fears; new doorways had proved to be open only into new prisons. Peter had wanted to see her. Well, what else could he do? He could hardly pretend that that last half- hour of theirs, that tremendous end- ing to their great day, had not oc- curred at all. They had ,net at a hotel lunch; Sheila had been with Robby Blake— not that either Sheila or Peter re- membered Robby afterward, at all. Peter had taken immediate posses• sion of her, they had watched the yacht races together, they had been together—alone In the snob—at the barbecue and clam bake supper, they 300 Candlepower "Live"Pressure Light -'5IE these beautiful new Coleman lamps that are actually brighter than 6 ordinary Rem - gene MantleLamps ero-geneMantlelamps or 80 old style oil lamps. ASK YOUR DEALER or write for FREE POLDER b,cturin tba many oautiful modeta , . , both KEROSENE and GASOLINE. THE COLEMAN LAMP AND STOVE co.,LId. Dept: WLI50, Toronto, Canada. Model 1280 shade and Globe Extra. • sort,. 96% air—only t% fuel. 4 Costa lose than ;MM 10 hour to operate. A Uoos a LOB mantle: • No cggqtehmoeye clean, or or • Safe—fuel confined in aturdymetal fount. restos The Home Corner By ELEANOR DALE The Pudding Turkey `-- gravy --- rich chestnut dressing — cranberry — vegetables — by the time you have eaten through this delightful course, you feel that the traditional Christmas pudding is just a. bit too much and yet Christmas wouldn't bo Christmas without a "Plum Pudding", Here's a grand solution to the problem and two recipes .either of which will make a gorgeous fruit pudding that will have the ' real Christmas pudding appearance and yet is easy to digest and tastes cool, fresh and fruity. Put the pudding in the centre of a large platter and around the pudding a row of alter: nating tiny moulds of red (rasp berry) quick-sotting . jelly and green (lime) quick -setting jelly to accent. the Christmas colors.. On top of the pudding itself pile a mound of Whip- ped cream which gives the effect of snow and on this place a sprig of real mistletoe or a replica made of green angelica and white candy. Around the edge of the platter real holly may be arranged. This is : ' a: Christmas pudding that will please. the oldest and youngest of tale party and even the diet cranks. Fruit Pudding 1 package cherry -flavored quick - setting jelly powder, 1 pint warm water, 14 teaspoon salt, 1/a cup chop ped raisins, 12 dated, chopped, 6 figs, chopped, 1 banana, diced, cup chopped nut meats. Dissolve jelly in warns water: Q.du salt. Chill. When slightly thickened; fold in fruits and nuts. Turn into mold. Chill until firm. Unmold. i'Servo as directed above. Sugar Flinn Molal" 1 package cherry -flavored quick - setting jelly powder, 1 pint warm` water, glazed apricots, prunes and pineapple: Dissolve jelly in warns water. Turn into mold, Chill until firm, Unmold. Garnish with glazed fruit. Serve with whipped cream, Servos four, For glazed fruit, prepare thick sugar syrup of 1 cup sugar, 3-4 cup water and 1 tablespoon light corn syrup; boil 2 minutes. Sinner half -rings of canned vineapple, then soaked; dried apricots and seeded prunes, in syrup for 20 minutes, or until glazed. Cool. Glaze only a few fruits at a time and do. not allow syrup to boil hard; this avoids breaking of fruit. THIS WEEK'S WINNER Citron Preserve., Peel citron and cut in dice about 1 inch square. Weigh it and to every pound of citron add 3-4 pound of white sugar. Sprinkle sugar on citron and let stand overnight. Allow 1 lemon to every 2 pounds of the mixture and flavor with root ginger to taste. Boil until fruit is transparent and thick. Then remove ginger root. Candied orange or lemon peer cut up fine can be added in place of ginger root and lemon. — Mrs. Wil- lard Taylor, R.R. 1, Bolton, Out, 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 ha ingredients and method of your favorite main -course dish and send it, together with name and address to; Household Hints, Room 421, 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. Clever Knitting for Cam' Its Wear I!iA FA1R NEEDLE -ART DESIGN NO. 145 On the Campus or off --any gentleman will appreciate this sweater made in his favorite color. In it he cart travel light—and warm. The allover block pattern is simple and quickly completed. There are separate instructions and a separate pattern for each and every size including 34, 36, 38, 40 and 42. The pattern includes: a ,ample of the yarn from which the original .garment was made, a tissue•pattern for blocking the garment after it is knit, easy -to -follow working in- structions without abbreviations and an assembling chart. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS Write your name and address plainly, giving number and size of pattern wanted. Enclose 20c in stamps or coin; (coin preferred); wrap it carefully, and address your order to Mayfair Pattern Ser. vice, Room 421, 73 Adelaide St. W., Toronto. had danced at the Casino—strolled out into 'the moonshine to talk, (Tomc- od again. And finally they lead joined an' un- known group at a driftwood fire, down the beach, and had sat there, utterly content, their backs against a sand -embedded log, Peter's arm tight about her shoulders, her slim white -clad legs stretched toward the fire, I The others had been singing • Shei- la and Peter had sung, too, and it had': seemed to them that their very souls had risen to Heaven on the strains of "There's a Long, Long Trail, and The End of a Perfect Day,' Afterward there had been silence; peace about the dying tire, and ?Moon- shine gaining over firelight, and the doff rustle and rush of the sea, Shei- la had been carrying bey pocketbook, through this marvelous week of beach holiday, and she had opened it to find a pencil and a piece of paper-, and had scribbled her name and address, there in the firelight, for Peter to carry away. (To be Continued.) "The only way to keep the Gov- ernment out of the red is to keep the people out of the red." —Franklin D. Roosevelt, GREAT RUN EDMONTON—Lord Tweedsmuir's special train, speeding to bring the Governor-General hdre for a 12.30 speaking engagement, covered the 270 miles from Biggar, Sask., in 260 minutes. • At the end of the run 'Lord Tweedsmuir went to the engine crew and said: "Thank you very Much; 1 never had such a mass in my life." The Governor-General had 18' LAOS to spare on l c thing Edmonton, WAKE UP YOUR INNER BILE— And You'll Jump Out of Sed in the Morning Rarin' to Go Tho liver should pour out two pounds of liquid bile into your bowels daily. If this bile is nottlowingfreely, your food doesn't digest. It Just decays in the bowels. Gas bloats up your stomach. Youget constipated. harmful poisons 'go into the body, and you feel sour, sunk and the world looks punk. A mere bowel movement doeso'talways get atthe cause, You need something that works Mt the liver as well. It takes those good, old Carter's Little Liver Pills to get these two pounds of bile flowing freely and make you feel "an and up". Harmless and gentle, they make the bile flow freely.Phoy. do the wank of calomel but have eo calomel or mercury in them. Ask for Carter'S Lit tie nano 1 Stubbornly refuse anythiY g ciao, er 25e. For a new delight in Tea try Salada Orange Pekoe Blend Talking Clock A Phonograph Gives Correct Time Over the Telephone Before the 97orld War any tele- phone "central would te'I you the time of day. Naw you dial a num- ber—in New Iron: it is Meridian 7- 1212—and a trained voice says me- chanically `'When you hear the sig- nal the time will be twelve twenty- five and . half." Both Paris and London do better than this. l.1 3 ondon, where a me- chanical system was recently intro- duced, telephone subscribers dial T -1- M and aro told the timo of day by a gramophone. The sound record is driven by a ;rotor which is synchron- ized with a pendulum clock corrected every hour from Greenwich Different announcements are required for every ten seconds 01' 7,200 in all for twelve lir 'I's of civil time. Thie sounds much more formidable the- it actually is. The „announce- ments are only combinations of small- er sets of phrases. Jpst before the signal the Londoner hears: (1) At the third stroke it will be (2) four, (3) o'clock (4) precisely. (5) peep-pe:p-peep. (1) ' At the third strik„ It will be (2) five (3) eventeen (4) and thirty seconds (5) peep -peep -peep. Announcements (1) and (5) are al- ways the same. For announcement (2) the machine has to pick out a number ':rom ore to twelve for (3' tri ' words 'o'clock" or a number from 1 to 52; and for announcement (1' the ,word "precisely" or "and X seconds" when the value of X is 10, 20, 30, 40 or 50. The records are four glass disks wt whi":i sound tracks are record- ed. A beam of light is mechanically brought opposite the right track to pick out the right phrase. A photo- electric cell actuates :ht talking me- chanism. A master clock from Greenwich centime the speaking appaeatus much as any master clock controls a dis- tant subsidiary clock. Thur is cor- rectness assured within .one-tenth of a second.' London's talking clock can tell 200 subscribers at Luce just what tithe of day it is. But if some souse tries to listen to the signals continuously 1:1 is cut off: automatically–after three m:7atce. Telephone engineers think of everything. Fashion Combines With Comfort For Once In Its History CHICAGO. — Women have re- vived the old home -spun• fashior of wearing wool stockings. Through many a winter they suf- fered colt ankles rather than sacri- fice trimness to bulky warmth, but the modern woollens, unlike thea predecessors, are considered. by the early exponents of the vogue_ to pay proper tribute to the ankles. The new winter hosiery d!sp:ays entice milady with thin, well -shaped ribbed woollen stoc'tings intended to be worn with street wool clressea and suits, Colors are dark blue, wine, deep green and beige. There are knit- ted styles and giddy patterns for active sports. Shrewd The new customer walked into the store. "How many. chickens have you got today?" "Oh, about six, ma'am." "Tough or tender?" • "Some are tough, and some • ten- der." "Well, 1 keep boarders. Pick out three of the toughest, please." To this unusual request, the ae- lighted grocer complied at once, saying, "Please, ma'am, these here are the tough ones!" Whereupon, the customer coolly laid her hand on the others and said, i"Ill take these, please." Shanghai's linen embroideries clustry is making 'big strides. LADIES' AP fir, k c NS Alecto it beautiful patterns of tub - fast prints. Two coverall styles, one pinafore style Colours: Rose, Blue, Green, Red, Mauve, Yellow. Sizes Small, Medium, Largo. 3for $gip .00 Postpaid 1 Larnbton Textile Company Lampton Mills, Ontario Issue No. 49 '36 D-2' Should Ran Own Errands at Times KITCHENER. — Parents Were uad- vised to get their own evening pa- pers, run upstairs on their ow„ er- rands, and fetch their own house slippers rather than disturb th child who is playing, ir, a lectu-; c: on "Don'ts" by Dr. I1 A. Brillinger of the Ontario hospital, Hamilton, in Suddaby school. "For' your child's own sake, cio not disturb him when he is playing,' said Dr. Briilinger. "Give. him time to himself;- making a clean 'division be- tween work and play hours." Rather than shouting. "Don't .do that," when the child seems about •t,o gc' burned, cut by a knife, )'et him do bith, said the speaker, and he will learn a finer lesson Parents often upset the delicate nervous ey- r'•enh of a caviled by shrieking at it, and do more actual harm this way than by what conies from a burn or cut. "r hildren thcLld not be allowed guns, nor be permitted to attend movies, when under 10 years of age, and then only supervised films;" he said "As fin toys, don't give the children too many and don't have_too many children." ACHE Flush Kidneys of Waste Matter, Poisons and Acid and Stop Getting Up Nights 40 CENTS PROVES IT \\'lien your kidneyr are clogged and your bladder is irritated and passage scanty, and often smarts and burns;' you need Gold Medal Haarlem Oil Capsules, a fine harmless stimulant and diuretic that always works and costs but 10 cents at any modern drug • store. It's one good, sate way to "nut' healthy activity- i.uto •kidneys and bladder—you'll sleep sound tho whole night thru. But be sure and get (,UL• D MEDAL right from Haarlem in Holland—.you are assured of results. Other syluptoms of weak kidneys and irritated bladder are backache, puffy eyes, leg cramps, moist panne. FREE QUICK ACTION HOME COURSE 11'1TII 141;i'Rr STRING tNS'i`NU.,Lsk,. :\Ew NUMBER SYSTEM—NO .14Ua1C PLAY A TUNE. IN 20 M'"iiTES graasvinas nOMC eo, uE LOWEST PRICES EVER: Guitars, from Violins, from Cornets, from $ 6.45 3.93 16.95 Saxophones, from 33.00 Accordions, from 3.45 5,000 Instruments to choose fruit' Sem! for Our New Gig Musical tnstru•owut Tagalog, the Ftnost ever thiels mem PEATE MUSICAL CO., LTD. 1420-31-33 MANSFIELD ST., MONTREAL, P.Q. "My t . rves are otter' writes lairs. P. 1V.1. Peterson, R. R. No. 2, Strome, Alberta. "When 1 was 14 years old I took six bottles of your Vegetable Coln-. pound. Now T am taking it again for painful periods and it is help- ing me a lot. 1 am to good spirite and do my work every day. My mother used to take your meds• cine and always recommended 1t.I 98 out of 100 Women Report .benefit The i4, Graphearl Shows how to read character tr0111: handwriting, at a glance 10c PREPAID Graphologist Room 421 73 Adelaide St. W. Toronto