OCR Text |
Show TIIE BULLETIN, BINGHAM CANYON, UTAH "Joyce, dearest!" he whispered They were silent then, and the moon-bathe- d landscape sped as his foot past pressed hard on the gas pedal. It was early spring, and the cool night air blowing in through the car window had the restless, exciting smell of new growth. At last they were out of the country, coming into the suburbs of a town, where street lights dimmed the moon and houses stood In dark huddled rows. Terry slowed the car, then sud-denly pulled up to the curb and turned to the girl beside him. His arms went around her and his head bent down to hers. "I love you, Joyce," he said against her soft hair. "Are you afraid of tonight?" She fought flectingly of the moment in her room when she said goodbye to her girlhood, but that moment was passed, swept away by the tide of new emotions. 'As long as you love " he me, rephed simp-y- . .Tm n'ot afg oi tonight or afterwards." It w. confident, ready for anything the fu ture might hold. He kissed her gently and the cat moved forward again, slowly nov, as though the future had become oo precious for any risk. A bright y hghted building loomed before hem and Terry stopped again at the foot of a flight of stone steps. He plcked up her suitcase and stepped out of the car, then turned to take her arm. Joyce looked up eagerly at the words cut over the entrance to the building: "LAKEWOOD MATERNITY HOS-PITAL." She smiled at her husband grave-ly, reassuringly, and together they started up the steps toward the welcoming lichtsi of the blue coupe tt 4 in e drive,way 'TH$3 been watching from reached hur- - X lying on her bed. To 't she made a H 'lev of the room to ' forgotten any-- 4 not Sor her neatly packed tit ady. nd even now St deserted, imper- - v .lily little horn hanging jT was a reminder of L bad taken her to L I ie Itill to college. He 1 L that night for the M photograph stuck If Llf the mirror: Terry riWe grimace pretending V .s she knelt In 4 the sand. That had (i day the gang drove Uree Point for a picnic. we were'" she L: ;uiiy. "How terribly-- Tm And we'll never NOB" i that again!" NOSTi id and drew her coat her shoulders. For T le end of her girlhood, I I I careless, silly years. I II (nothing would ever be Jf h sgain- - Better, per-of- e jjs-f- ar, far better! But Jlp 4 ever again. her breath In a L c, nd for one hor-JUl- Jj fairing moment she I don't want to go Alt! I'm afraid!" " V laughing sigh at her ivitj e !hool toe 11100(1 'rom " jrid out of the room . Ur.g back. f tfce car with her suit-j- ) I under her feet, she t.fortably against the i th vnnne man behind "How young we were!" she thought wistfully. "How terribly, carelesly young! And well never be young like that again." fry, there's a new moon ' i that s good omen, do , darling." He looked f sp at the delicate oval ft? childish mop of brown is small hands folded A her lap. I i," he exclaimed abrupt--L you think we should if our mother after all? e that you want to do fr Irry." She patted his tt not go into that too late, anyway. You ir, she thinks I'm still " le wanted us to wait at ff year." k iht be right at that," hi uncertainly. "Maybe If young." J !" She shook her curls " . "A girl 'nows when )dy. Wasn't it lucky Bied to go to California d? Everything worked pi Ifly. Now she needn't tg about it until it's all if her voice grew pen- -' do you suppose it s people can't seem hf what it's like to be In love? Don't they the beauty and the Don't they know J! to come a time when to have it all and even y not enough?" Her H and in the silence the words were like beating. dd down and took her i sard grip. V. w. f AS Vy NS VV. t. S . . S , Vk I It's Easy to Make Strawberry Shortcake j (See recipes below) Strawberry Time For those of you who like straw-berries, the season is too short! But we aim to do our best by them this season, so let's have them several times each week as long as we can. Perfect strawberries are just plain good served au naturel. And if you like them sweeter, dip each in a mound of powdered sugar, before tasting its deliciousness. Some like them for breakfast with a sprinkling of sugar and a quaint pitcher of thick country cream. Strawberries in shortcake make a dream of a dessert. Some prefer LYNN CHAMBERS' MENU Cold Sliced Boiled Ham Creamed Parsleyed Potatoes Buttered Asparagus Carrot Slivers Celery Curls Strawberry Shortcake Beverage Recipe Given white of egg and sprinkle with su-gar. Bake on ungreased baking sheet for 12 minutes in 425 degree preheated oven. Split hot short-cakes, butter and fill with sliced sweetened berries. Replace top and old fashioned biscuit type oi snort-cak- e, split and covered with sweet-ened crushed berries and cream. Others prefer a more cake-lik- e type of accompaniment to the berries. Strawberry Shortcake (Serves 6) t cups sifted flour 3 teaspoons baking powder 12 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons- - sugar 5 tablespoons shortening 1 egg, well beaten 12 cup milk 2 teaspoons grated orange peel 1 tablespoon soft butter 1 quart strawberries, sliced and sugared puur Derriea uver tup. serve wiui cream if desired. Strawberry Meringue Pie 1 pint fresh strawberries 3 egg whites 14 teaspoon salt 13 cup sugar Few drops vanilla Honey Baked pie crust Beat egg whites with salt until stiff. Beat in sugar and flavor with few drops of vanilla. Drain berries carefully; sweeten with honey and fold into meringue. Turn into pie crust and brown in moderate (350 degree) oven about 30 minutes. Serve as soon as cool. (Other fresh, care-fully drained fruits may be used.) Standish Pudding (Makes 1 quart) 1 quart strawberries 1 cop granulated sugar 1 cup water Lemon juice 12 pint whipping cream 14 cup powdered sugar 12 teaspoon vanilla 23 cop rolled dried macaroons Pick over strawberries, sprinkle with sugar and let stand for two hours. Mash, squeeze through a double thickness of cheesecloth and add water and lemon juice to taste. Turn mixture into a one quart brick mold or place in freezing tray. Beat cream until stiff and add powdered sugar, vanilla and rolled macaroons. Pour over fruit mixture to overflow mold. Cover with buttered paper and freeze in a mixture of ice and salt, or let freeze in refrigerator compartment. Raspberry or Strawberry Whip (Serves 4) 1 14 mp berries 1 cup powdered sugar 1 egg white Beat ingredients together with wire whip or electric whip until stiff enough to hold shape. Serve over pieces of sponge or angel cake or pile lightly in a dish, chill, surround with lady fingers and serve with soft custard sauce. ' Sift flour, baking powder, salt and sugar together; cut shortening into mixture with two knives or pastry blender until mixture is the consist-ency of corn meaL Combine egg and milk; add to dry Ingredients, mixing quickly to form a soft dough. Drop the dough by spoonfuls into a well greased two quart heat re-sistant glass utility dish. Sprinkle each biscuit with grated orange peel. Bake in a hot (450 degree) oven for 12 minutes. Split hot biscuits and spread with soft butter. Place the sweetened strawberries between and on top of each biscuit. Serve a pitcher of cream with the short-cake if desired. Fresh Strawberry Fie 1 baked pie shell 1 quart strawberries 1 cup sugar 3 tablespoons cornstarch or flour Sweetened whipped cream Crush half the berries and bring to boiling point. Stir in sugar com-bined with flour or cornstarch and salt. Cook, stirring constantly, until thickened and well cooked.' Spread other half of berries (whole) in baked pie shell. Pour hot cooked filling over top, cool, top with sweet-ened whipped cream and serve. Meringue may be used instead of whipped cream and pie browned in a moderate (350 degree) oven. Special Strawberry Shortcake ..r slftoii enriched Luncheon Dish De Luxe Scrambled eggs with shrimp mak a delicious and satisfying luncheon dish. To prepare, saute one chopped green onion and one slice mushroom in two tablespoons margarine or but-ter. Let cook over a low heat three or four minutes. Add one-ha- lf cup shrimp which has been broken into small pieces, and one canned toma-to. Again cook over a low heat one or two minutes. Add four eggs which have been beaten with two table-spoons cream, salt and pepper. Stir slowly over a low heat until of de-sired doneness. Serve on toast or crisp wafers. Sprinkle with grated spicy cheese. Released by WNU Features flour 3 teaspoons baking powder 1 teaspoon salt 1 tablespoon sugar 4 tablespoons shortening 2 eggs 12 cup orange juice 14 teaspoon lemon extract Sift flour, baking powder, salt and sugar together. Cut in shortening. Beat one whole egg and one egg yolk, reserving one white for the tops. Add orange juice and flavor-ing to beaten eggs, then add to dry ingredients. Stir only enough to make dough hold together. Turn out on lightly floured board and knead a half minute. Roll out 12 inch thick. Cut. Brush tops with LYNN SAYS: These Cookery Tips Give Desired Results If ham is to be stored for any length of time, rub outside thorough-ly with fat so that mold will not form on the lean part. Place bacon in a cold pan and use a low flame for cooking. Pour off excess fat as it cooks. For cutting meat or fish for salads, use a scissors instead of a knife. Marinate in French dressing before mixing to give flavor. Here's a filling combination, made of all vegetables: Corn pudding, creamed string beans with almonds, French fried carrots and radishes. Do you like mushrooms? Bake them in cream, then serve along with turnip souffle, buttered string beans and sliced tomatoes. Serve cottage cheese with assorted fruits or assorted raw vegetables like sliced tomatoes and eucumbers, with olives at the side. Fruit pies will be better flavored if you add a dash of honey to them. SEWING CIRCLE PATTERNS Golobjful GUaVi o SbteUe Set Peacock Makel Jfandiame Spread mm V Tr . mm-- tzz iaf'31 I . J R EAUTIFUL enough to treasure 5568: Sr 4 n heirloom piece this proud peacock is embroidered in all its glorious colorings and will Colorful Chair look handsome on your bed. Easy LOVELY lacy-lookin- g- chair for.h b?Br because the em-- A set with surprisingly hroidery is in S!mple cross stitch, .pansies crocheted in shaed laren- - JilJealsn mcasure 11 der cotton the canter buds are the gam colors, the rest of the pieces To ohl.ln n tramfrr for design. in white or cream. Makes a pretty lor h,rt nd l',rh iu.trnUon tat dresser set, too. tioriou, u.rd d'.u.m N.. 7ti4) Snd iO rents In eoln, Your Nam. Ad To eW.ln eamplrto erochtln Inrtiw nd Pattern Numbor. tlons nd It Itch illutrationt for Shaded Paniloa Kt (Pattern No. (661). Ecad to enta In coin, Tour Kama, A4-d-and Pattern Number. Due to an nnuauallr large demand and current conditions, slightly mora time Is required in Ailing ardera far few ! the art popular patterns. Send your order tot SEWING CIRCLE NEEDLEWORK 530 South Weill St. Chicago 7, 111. Enclose SO cents tor Pattern. No OlderfolkTvT say it's isSjr common fraY'JcM sense. a ''5rv ALL' VEGETABLE Y LAXATIVE In KR (Nature's Remedy) Tablets, there are no chemicals, no minerals, no phenol derivatives. NR Tablets are different off different Purely vegf table combination of 10 vegetable ingredients formulated over SO years ago. Uncoated or candy coated, their action is dependable, thorough, yet gentle, as millions of NR's have proved. Get a 25 box. Use is directed. fl fm 'ittSSSrJl jn!&tyfa QUICK RELIEF MHSKu2 FOR ACID PILES TROUBLE? For Quick Relief DON'T DELAY ANT LONGER! Now, ft doctor's formula you can ana at home to relieve dlatresalna; discomfort of pain-I-tch Irritation due to piles. Tends to sof- ten and shrink swelling. Use this proven doctor's formula. You'll ba amaxed at Its speedy action relief. Ask your druggist today for Thornton A Minor's Rectal Oint- ment or Suppositories. Follow label In-structions. Fur sal at ail drug Mores. 'Q Diaper Rash To cleanse tender parts, ease red, smarting skin, s-- Jx and hasten return of f) comfort, use dependable RE5IN0LS mypay for water? M Royal fare, yet thrifty I Nourishing Oro-Pu- p, only l ffji J Ribbon-typ- e made, Is 92 food one box contains mffi'tl about as much food, dry weight, as five ''I cans of dog food (many axe 70 water). I gro-pu- p i i, fJwP mrm contains about I xil!& I j 'fl I ? AS MUCH FOOD (SiJJfAr. .Jjll JML Xi-- --kSr !t "ftSff1 VossGofaGBQ-?ll- ? I WANTED I Green and Dry Prairie Bones TruckloaHs or CarloaHs HIGHEST PRICES PAID Write to: UTAH BY-PRODUC-TS CO. 483 South 3rd West Salt Lake City 4. Utah to have, and then to think those thoughts and keep on thinking them long enough until thinking them becomes a habit. Let's say that at the present time you are willy-nill- y about every-thing you do. You can't make up your mind. You waver. You post-pone. You can't make decisions. Those things are a sign of faulty thought habits. Decide that for one week you will act decisively, even if wrongly, in little things. During that week act, live, carry yourself like a person of resolute habits. Maybe one week's experiment LET'S TALK ABOUT D1L ' BY CHARLES B. ROTH The Secret of Good Habits Because you have been warned so many times against breaking habits, you may have jumped to the con-clusion that all habits are bad. But they aren't. I think the number of good habits is greater than the number of bad habits. You may be astonished when 1 tell you that being more effective and successful in your life is largely a matter of habit. What I mean is that clever and successful people have formed helpful habits of think-ing and doing, while neurotic and unsuccessful people have the wrong kind of habits. That is the chief difference between them. Look at a habit in this way and you will see what I mean. What is habit except doing or thinking the same thing often enough until doing or thinking it becomes auto-matic, and you do every customary act in the same way. Such action is called "habitual action." When you think the same thoughts often enough until they have become thoughts that come and go without your bidding, really without your control, you are doing habitual or habituated thinking. Now, the secret of winning the right kind of personality and place in life is simply to determine pattern of thoughts that you want isn't going to be long enough tc overthrow the faulty thought habits of a lifetime, but it will help. 11 will be long enough to put you on the road to right thinking and to right habits. Dig deeply enough into the way the person you admire the most lives, and you probably will find that he is controlled by a series of habits right habits. The sum total of those habits is what gives him his personality, his attractive-ness. The sum total of good habits in your life will do just as much for you. ? ANOTHER I ' A General Quiz . THE QUESTIONS 1. Do all deer shed their horns every year? 2. Why aren't the keys on the typewriter listed alphabetically T 3. Does garlic have food value T 4. Are there more golfers or bowlers in this country? 6. Why are tons of colored co-mic sheets shipped to trading posts In the jungles of Africa? THE ANSWERS 1. Yes. Male deer lose . their horns In the spring of the year, but sometimes they shed them at an-other time. 2. The originator of the typewri-ter keyboard tried to arrange the letters In a manner that would make for the greatest ease of oper-ation. He was a printer and placed them as in a printer's type case. 8. Just a trace of Vitamin C. 4. Three million golfers; fifteen million bowlers. 6. Natives won't buy things wrapped in other paper. New Army Technique Aids Plane Survivors GOOSE BAY, LABRADOR. A new technique for rescuing survivors of plane crashes in the frozen Labra-dor wastelands by g dog-sle-teams by parachute has been developed by the air transport com-mand. The newly developed operation "dogsled" will save precious hours for plane crash survivors exposed to the bitter cold and possibly suffer-ing from injuries received when their craft plunged earthward. Conceived by Sgt. George E. Ab bott, Norfolk, Va., the unusual res-cue operation is especially valuable because some areas of the woody terrain in Labrador are so dense that helicopters cannot land. Huskies, sleds and para-docto- Jump from via the silk chute route and gather together at a focal point where the dog teams are as-sembled. Then the unit proceeds to the scene of the crash where it ad-ministers first aid, evacuates the seriously wounded and provides food. The entire procedure lasts only a few minutes, contrasting sharply with the hours and days that it has taken overland rescue teams tc reach some crash scenes in the past WHER than any priceless gift - I ' would bring too comfort if I "r word that I might say '"hing heart, dear friend, giJ Pk that word, be glad to !j LJV, 1 h for your comforting. 11 ' J IbowthauHcnceisapart M lWT tt( I LJt--" greats part, indeed, $ M f Vl i V H isi h dark moment whcn iL 4! & I 1 1 '...butJctmeclasp wnimece Ifif I Twins Are Identical, Even to Toothaches cv.vpar-ol- d Janice and Jear.ette Washburn of Mattapoisett. Mass., twinspainfully iden- - are identical "when they reported to the school dentist. Dr. George M. Teasdale. with toothaches in corresponding molars. Dr. Teasdale insisted he. never before had heard of such a coincidence. however it was; To their mother, The twins lost the, an old story. same corresponding first baby teeth, Similar circum, on the same day. surrounded toe loss of stances also thelr second teeth |