HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Lucknow Sentinel, 1942-05-21, Page 2ti t
•
co Found
tarm fatmer
used In • tilanufacture �t
•Spark Plugs For Airplane
Motors
A •report. that muscovite, white
• • 4010a, had been found by tarrn-
er
in Eastern Ontario was con;
Stroied by.M. Tremblay, statia*,.
*tin of 'the tnitatiO'' Departinent
of Mines. He Said' this Miele is
•eoraliined . with amber Adel: for
, • Use in: the manufaettife of heavy-
duty spark plugs „fer4,..,Oirploue
• motors.'
• [" ; Mr. Tremblay •• said • ainber mica
• ,
is found extensiyely',In .astern
•$';•;„:. OfitArteend Central Qiiebec.•
;•• •
eipal producers •white
'ie Indis- and Ceylon.•
Samples of.muneovite,.: getteraI4,
kiittini 'as. white mica, ,recently •
ItlattawaaatarNerth,
indicate the•Ai*Ihilitytr
• af a 1461Y -important soiree& 'itk
• ;• war material. Mine e -Depart-
• natant official said. •• d' • . •
,a There is quite. large .deposit
White •--mica near' •linftheP City
and smaller pockets„ hAve' been;
•• found in, Ontario,'`' he said. "There,
:are possibily other deposits in. the
While muscovite is • commonly
Sound in Canada,• sheets ',et' the
size and quality taken trent the,
new ,- deposit 'are unusual, Officials,
•••intld.,the discovery was made by a
; resident of the district who . has
Ince received 0-0.490 •for
inden%
understood. His name was not die- •
•;•elOsid, • • • r s • •
.•••• • l'far dementia have .created an
acute Shortage of.all types ef,d.
geed ,reica .from nem.:
•Le..."--Ificiarces.. in. Judie.. andLtitatlea_.
7 •
simsfip . :has been Sharply reduced.
"The' samples wed have Seen
•7.----4"-Ifrirni•"Ahlt-lteit-,-Ontnrin•--d0POstti"----'-
s • are exceptioital.qualitY and the'••
•' sheets are- unusually large," one
Mines Deportnient source "It
hOs• • not yet been . determined
*lietker, -a-large,. !wittily. is _terth.-
miming; trent, this .Sentee but if it
Is :the diaeirvery; Is
aut.” • -•'- • • a • -•
,•• • • .;
' .
• '••;:d‘ `•::
Thy- Luxembourg
Resists -4eirrfans
,
• ' •Cluietle's Premium Soda Crackers
are. 'made 01".. quality ingredients, baked with Christie's
traditional care, and hoaxed to your store to assure
•-•. •
dependable freihne;s. Cet the economical 2-potpid pack.
. • „
. age. Serve with c‘op.tRe, Raladt3,
spreads—any food -or leverage.,
And "don't forget, 'Chrisiie's
•
Bi its are always welcOmed
'•• Py tile boys ovcrseas. •
Red Cross
69 WILLIAM:M64.406 RAINE.
, ... . •
CHAPTER 56 ask d .
Jim did not see Anne while he co"co"Yeshe, Heenr.letta replied. "With '
, . .
_:...was_hdt_the„hoopital Ile der.:__..her_husbancEs_b' oily She ard_hts
stood the reason why she did not ,, brother Phil decided to bury him
come :fint „sent by Heitriette a ' there. Phil is a nice boy."
little chiSter of roses. • • "Yea.. Anything new about the
• "With her love," Airs. Windom ; fend?"
„ a. I don't think there is •
• Population IS. &On: '
: • • ,*--0'-' 0 - - - • Het-, looked at her seeptically. 'Lone any More: The Gandara- ' , '..-'-a--- • • 'tip ' • . "Weren't you'ever taught to tell tern ,will' decide the case. So
let-
TinyiLuxembourg, iiiiidett and 1 the truth?" ' everybody says., And nobody
annexed by Hitler two 31.-ark..laily, • Her .blue eyes ;-ilanced. "Well, , wants • to push the fight against
„., Jo.,,‘ne no "ae.410„...inwetlto.,..JA _she ma eant it if she didn't say it" the settlers now. ,Rufe says t
•••'• .tate; • ' : ,- ' . -;•:. :.:. - -•• 1(7' :'• °S44'°'"Yrd€'re'd ellarkt-SW-•`":"."e-'''71..fit- Kande Wilf disl.ft-•a*afa.ii,
• : After the territory. was •everren . . hoped so." •• Just •noW , her, mind l• I k f
Mass •Deportatien..of Itefierit ' •
, • . . • •
00h, I (fillet like thot," pro,
teated,, •Wve been awa
cony bya.Y.• 1': don't want to
be a stranger",
Her eheeks' tedk ona e0har to
match:his. 'Tine. If you aren't,
Work.• We hove a lot to do and
a $tranger •Oa had 'better get to
hayen't much, ttine. push the
blizzard story •tii; an inside page
and make a spread of this. :Sit
clown at the desJ and write the
lead. Follow it up With a history
of the, whole fit from the be-
ginning, 1 can give you, two .co -
Wins. Let yourself go. It will
be the biggest story of the year"-
Jhn took off his coat,'
sat down, and. reaChed or copy
. paper. • His embarrassment had
vanished.
This `' -was like otd
I times!'
',You sound like a hard-boiled
:editor," he said.: "And '1 can te
-
member .vIren• I did the, bossing
in this ottice." • • .•,ar't^/
They worked Until late
After the forma • were locked up
they Went together to an all-night
Chinese restaurant and ate a de-
layed meal, Both were hungry,
and they hedlitaematniodn'eggs, bis-
cuits, apple pie, and Coffee.
Acebra'
He walked back with her to her
boarding holise in the enaionlight,.
• and the comradeship that hod
•been renewed as they worked te-•
gether gave place to 'shyness. He
•hada great deAl• to say, but 'it
• was all damined up in him. At
-the gate he found no words but
a 'stiff "Good night." . • .
She echoed the words and. turn- • sopa, thoroughly. Add egg and
TO-ge 'dea' Thefath toTh4mix wellgdrixi aiiiriii177
house, •Her loveliness knocked at ingredients, whieh•have been sift -
hip heart. He could not let her ' ed. Sake in- a moderate oven,
go like that about 350° F. ter '25 Minute!).
' "Wait!" he cried.. "Let's walk -4 HONEY • HERMITS
• up Round Top." , • I cup butter •
ife-nrAde--n-0--answer in Fords 1 Mg honey
but came •back at once to join ' . A eggs
_ him ',.Tegetherethey climbed• the 2 tablespoons' milk
hill and looked 'down on the few 1, 2 caps rolled oats •
•late lights of the little town.. Un- .W cup walnuts
tit they had reached the summit 2% cups floor
they had filled with commonplace % teaspoon salt
silences that threatened to grow "1 teaspoon baking poWder
too SignifiCant. Now again
speech" failed them. - teaspoonteaspoon
soda
And suddenly the dam broke: 1 min chopped raisins •
"Dooyou remember that first • Cream hotter and: honey titer-
.. • "Yes," she said, andd
hight-you.came-here-r--he-askedr-- Add°. milk, ciat.
did not mealstirianndn•usti6fteadnddrsaiistrignrsed.
add what wail in her mind ---that iDenrot;
'life then had, begun for her. from ,a teaspoon on an oiled
"I fell in love that night, itheugh • cookie sheet Bake in moderate
I did not know it at mice," he oven for 20 minutes.
continued: "I had never been rn, " • •
love before." • •
• Mins teal:neer* stalemates pereonal
"You mean ----with ine, ?" tttezi tertintereated readers. She
TABLE ,
By $ADIE B. CtiAMBERS
•Afore About Honey
Now for more of those recipes
•'using honey as a subetittite for
@agar, which we ail/Wised YOn.
' HONEY SOUR CREAM COOKIES
2 eggs
1% cups hrown. sugar
% pup sour cream A
41/2 cups, flour,
% teaspoon salt
• 1 cap shortening
1 cup honey •
1 -te poen .soda
• 1..e.up..nuts, (pecans) relied
• 1.'teaspoon vanilla- . •,. ' •
'Cream Shortening, . sugar, :honey
autt eggs tliorcinghly. Add sour
creana then sifted.iiiiingredienls,-
••wainute .and :Dion :by
.spoonfule greased cookie sheet
• and hake At 350' for 12 ,;:to 15
minutes•.Cern:. syrup,. preferably
the substituted -for '
the honey. • ••••• .1 .,
GINGEREMEA,ti.
• %,,cap butter "'
•
:cup brown sugar
• • % • cep sour milk
% teaspoon 'salt
.,% 'teaspoon.,ginger • •
teaspoon. 'cloves •
%cuphoney
1 egg
• • ,1 teaspoon soda • •
' 1% cup of any';' gsoocl . cake flour .
teaspbon cinnamon . • •
• 2. teaspoons 'baking powder .
' .Cream butter 'with' • honey and .
Anne --replied, and ineW the •on look: to: hreerievol teurgart!"6
•e rums eeves Requests
be answer, -knew it .•b• y" d VII rosily to listen to
yOur sapeill•
na••-•••••:• •• oa jai annum ea Ein.Fa30a, a-a-eeird: vaeaeta °01.raer:ek2ne
Other jobs, least all •
Ara-ad.Ditehisi 'CliaelOtte -left - Preuceipied ivith the menitnii"
of them who have beenitixed. up
witty hieldindriterain-- pretest 0 theman whose- name she had;• -
der the savaglidirectiop et
•leiter S imon, lattemhpyrgere,•
who Speak both Prelacy. and Ger-
• • --nitin,-,Were 'taught . thald:thdi :Were
Pareei .the Germanic
iroce. Then a •census wait taken.
Asked' •to state their nationality
and mother tongue; 97 'pr - cent
ei -the-urban• and -4-99-;•. per -cent el
• Vie rural.population:Said-that their
• nationality ' was LuxembOur.geois
• and ,their Mother tongue was Dix-
insbeurgeeis. • . • •
Stace there so Much lang-. •
• • !age,' that was not help.tula'So
. Gauleiter SIMMS • calle,d off the
census and announced that° Iteleh.
xperts would summon individual
. •Lniembourgers to determine what,
• •pelt nationality and language
toady' were. • • •
• So far as rknoWn Only. one ,put
In an appearamee; M. Thill, ,*the
local 'Quisling -rand .soon afterward
be was'Sound with bis "throat int, ,
' in kollerieh. •
Gauleiter Simon thereupon or-
dered the arrest of 8,000 citizens;
Most of thein, members • of the-
• Luxembourg Patriotic League, the.,
Undergroued erganization, Were
deported' Gettean•-banteraration
• .amps. '
At the same ihne. the head of
•the civil adnainistration, issued an
, order that arias of ever y deserip-
. Hen Shoidd be turned in to the Pe-
, lice if each district, •
• ' Sabotage is, rife- an is inerecue
lag in spite of executions and
, ether cruel repressions. •
- •.
Plant Drawn For .
'-'New. Dionne Horne
•Blueprinta of the nevi residence
- which will house the quintuplets
• end nine other members of the
• Dionne family before neht winter
• 'isave arrived in iNtorth Bay."
Plans for the home, which 'will
, be erected almost opposite the
*resent 'Dionne , homestead .in
*Which the quints were bora itaarly:
• , • eight years ago, were drawn Up
by provincial architects.
• When construction will begin
not been Settled as 'et OT
the cost been' -specified al -
'though it may , run to 4s,•bout
•• 460,000. -
' • When • the tiew,borrke . is cent.
egted, Mr. aind We, Qlivs Di -
Tent, the quints and the Other
seven children in' the family will
t reunited, bringing to an end •
. , iva Dionne's' long struggle to
gave his family all under one roof.
, The nursery now occupied by
•
; Vie quints will be used as a school:. •
•
rouse for the children. •• It is
."-
, about two hundred yarde from
, . the site of the new reSidence.,
,..... +
i;;,-.• • :'
, taken. There had been no hap -
Pineal; for her in the marriage.
.Jt.had, been the silly mistake of
.agirl who' had let her jiidgment
be-,stvayed toe much by moon-
light a,nd romance. But he was
• dead, and the decent proprieties
• must be observed. Months must
•.1'pass. before she ,and., Jiin Could
• shoW•any interest in each other.
Whatever thought' and emotions
they might have must, be hidden
in liteir hearts:
• "Hee. she Blare;
gone
back
to
• Waled ea Giveu
210e:
4froCu_44..eet
Here's your chance to own a
beautiful heirloom. You rain
make this jiffy filet crochet cloth
easily for it's done in two strands
0.1 string", Pattern 398., ontains
chart and directions for cloth in
various sizes; •illustrations of
stitches; materials required. '
, Send twenty cents in coins
stains cermet be Accepted) foz
this pattern to Wilson Needle-
craft Doti. ROM Ado-
•Iiiide At. ."West, TorOnto. • iArrite
%lairdy pattern durniler, your
name and address. •
1.0 ta‘
•
JD any of M•osely's , meanness."
4 "I reckon so. A -sister of Mose-
• Iy lives. at Colorado Springs, •
• believe. She will prbeably sell
. out The Hat_ will likely be
broken up into smaller ranches."
• A Good. Guess • , •
.His guess was a good one.
There was, quite an •inflax of new
• settlers -hi- the •Bearder Horn. -Tho
political group which under the
leadership •of Russell Mosel' had
dominated the county fell apart
epd new alignments were. made.
The most influential leader of the
group in. control -was Sileott. Ile
had been the first to challenge
the dictatorship of the. Hat T,, and
almost single handed, except for
' the constant help of One young
'Woman, had broken the strangle-
hold of Mosely, on :the !district.
Since he wanted nothing for Min-
.• self his views held more weight
with the people. The "Sentinel"
,supPorted strongly bhose standing
•,for the abolition of graft and the
return of power to the voter.'
• . During , those months, though
Anne . and -Jim were working for
• the same ;cause, they 'saw very
• •little of each other, and then at-
' ' Ways in' -• the company of• Others:
Sometimes , she wondered if his
interest in her had flickered out.
Men -were that way, she ,retninded
• herself. They kook fancies to
•new girls until the novelty had
worn off. •
• Meanwhile Anne was busy, as
Rufe put it. "Collecting, broth -
She received propbsals.
without the slightest winning. A
goixrieeking scowhei wouid drefi
into the office, hang around for
a while, remind her' that they had
met at a church "socia!, and ask
• her to share his indigence. Ibis
was a man's conntry,and "attrac-
tive young women were scarce.
But unfortunately for •these im-
petuous suitors Anne had decided
exactly whoth she was going to
marry --if 'she ever did marry
Spt4ingtiane
It was in early Spring that Jim
came into the office of the "Sen.
tinel" waving a telegram jubil-
antly. Anne was busy, her
sleeves rolled up to the elbows,
,for the paper was going to press
a few minutes,
"Message from Stratton," Sit.
cott told her. "The case has been
•(Jecided in sur favor. • You'll have
to rip up the front -page and get '
the -good iiews in it"
:Anne's eyes lit. up. She gave
hirli a firm ink -Stained hand to
shake, "'Congratulations, Mr: Oil -
tote
"Ur: Silcott?" he 4ueried..
"Since When?". A , ,
'Since you have •become a
stranger to. me," she said lightly,
' 41
"Of course. It could net ever
have been anybody but •you:"
"I've. telt that so- long abent'
you," she mnrinnred.
There were a million stars shin-
ing down on them.
"All cl...thern out to 'celebrate
with US," Jim told. Anne ten min.
tite.s iater. . • •
-- THE END --a
'The
Courtship
• • •o• f
AndyHardy
Adapted frown; the Metre.
Goldwyn -Starer "Piettuli
starring IVIieMey Rooney.
• Beginning Next Week
• British Columbia
1 Producing Mercury
• Mercury deposits 'discovered in,
. 1937 in the Phial LAke area
• of northern British Columbia by it
DoMinion Government Geological
Survey ikarty have Made Canada
an important producer of . this
metal,. reports the •epartment of
Mines and Resources.'
Prior to this diseovery, little
• mercury was produced in Canada,
• but now production from. the Pin?
chi Lake deposits is. eonsiderably
in excess- •of ,Canadian ' require-
• ments,, and, Supplies the 'United
Kingdom with a large. share -of
its needs, , Which before the' war
•; were obtained mainly from Italy.
Production was started in June,
1940, and, as the metal has im-
portant war use, further geok
ogical *ork was carried out in
the i'inchi' Lake area during the
summer of 1941 '
Merefiri IS. urged for the most
part in electrical instruments and
apparatus and in the manufacture
,of various drug4 and chemicalst-
In the term of the oxide it it$
used in large qudntities for anti-
• fouling paint for ship bottoms.
Mercury is employed also in spec-
ially designed boilers to replace
steam in the producton of power.
'Chief luiports
Textiles, • inotir chassis • and
parts, machinery and metal manu-
lecturer's, ,petroleum products, pa-
per and paper products were „the
chief imports into Australia be-
fore dthe war.
• Mentfacture, of pianos in Eng-
land is expected to end this year
betause of materials shortage.
'Your letters to "Mise $udie it
beta, 73 Wiest Adelaide Street, Ire-,
ronte.".Send stamped Nelf-addresated
envelope it you maxis n aepip. • '
e
&ple Snow
•
-
poen ithe • frequency of the
• aprhelaanise'," • inS, ereeeip.eswitehver disniaywhipped
you a bit in these days .of rising
prices'• ' - -
• There is an eld familiar recipe
used as "ersatz' whipped
cream, , will fulfill the require-
ments •of a garnish in looks and
• taste, says H. S. F. in Tho Chris-
tian Science Monitor. Yet- it is
inexpensive, and a delight to the
• coOk, because it can be stored in
,the refrigerator for days. The
tanswer is Apple Snow, well.knoWn:
to •many cooks as a quick, ear
• icing ,for cakes. Try it now on
Your fayorite puddinge, tapioca, '
butterscotch, chocolate;op gin-
gerbread; cottage pudding, and
•• sliced fruits, and see if the family
isn't delighted to meet • this old,
friend in a new role!
• Beat the white of 'one egg until
stiff, but not -dry. • Add 1 cup .
(I'm using •only 2/3 cup these
days) sugar, graduhlly, beating,
all the while. When perfectly
. blended, add 'one large? apple,
which you have scraped to the
•core on ,e grater, putting in a
little at a time,•and still beating
constantly. If it is not very stiff, •
you should add more grated apple
until it ts. turns brown as ' you
grate it, for it will turn white as
snow again, like magic, when
Ybw wiir he" alliazed'
the quantity, if 'you are niaki'rlg
it for the first time. Store it in
a tightly c�vered bowL
•
Port Of Colombo
Island Of Ceylon
Ranks Ahout Seventh
Among Great Ports of The
;World , •
•
•
The first key to • the Indian"
Ocean is the, port of Colorilbo,•
Ceylon, whici; is the • natural
clearing house for the commerce
of five continents, C. E. Elliott
writes in Asia Magazine. -
In peaCetime, ',Colombo ranks
about seventh among the great
ports of the World. The harbor,
protected by three breakwaters,
is 850 acres in extent; has two
modern drydocksant excellent
facilities for world" wide shipping',
with engineering shops dose to,
the docks. years ago, the
government constructed immense!.
workshops at Delliwelk; near Col-
ombo, far in excess of its iinmed.7
• 1
it
ALIBRAN REALLY IS
DELICIOUS AND IT Kars
US REGULAR...NATURALLY
_ —
Says Mrs. George K Tremblay,
• Chiceinimi, Quebec: "I can tell you
that I wouldn't care to be without
ICELLOCTG'SALL-BRAN neW-
The cause of constipation that's due
• to lack of the.prOper bulk is banished.
by ALL,BRAbl. Yes, the best part
of it is that it gives more than just
temporary relief,'.
•
Why don't you ALL -BRAN'S
"Better Way" to correct the cause
• if you are troubled by constipation
due to lack of the right kind of
'bulk' in your diet?. But remember. ,
• AL.L-RAN doesn't work like
cathartics takeCtitue-J' gat it
' regularly and drink plenty of water.
Get ALL -BRAN at your grocer's. .
in two. convenient size packages, or.
• ask fOr, the individual•-servieg '
package at resteurentsMade by
Itellogg's' in London,- Canada. : • . •
• :ECONOMICAL,TOO!
* You're sure of finer cakes and biscuits- with
4'. Calumet. It's a double-acting bakingt. powder.
Actually lifts your baking continuously! 'First
in the mixing bowl, then again in the oven. Try.
Caluinelioday. It gives you three bene1iiliette3r
Lakin' g—low price—economy.
•
late requirements, .4rfuld admix-
,- ably equipped with modern ma-
• chinery. • The port is well de-
• :tended, for the hilly mibitrb of
Mutwai .:rises around' and above
the docks, and is heavily fortified
with big guns. • There t ample
space to enlarge, the ,spreaerit air-
drome, and doubtless Other air-
• fields hove been constructed.
• The second' key to the Indian ,
•
Ocean is the naval port •of Trine
einalee. Trinco—as itli is univer-
sally called--,-ts normally a small
town of some 10,000 peopI. It
has, a niagnificent• inner harbor,
landlocked •and covering • four
square miles. There is ample
water " all round, in many places
• elude in shore. 'In, former• 'day*
• Trincomalee !Was bitterly contend-
. ed for by the Portuguese, Dutch,
French. and British, and was fin-
• ally captured from the, Dutch in
, 1,795 and ceded to the Rritish iii
1802. Ever since, it has been:
the naval base of the East Indies
squadron, under ein admiral,
working in with the Royal Indian •
Navy. This latter force is mon-
• vied almost entirely by Indians,
with a sprinkling of British offi-
cers. The sailors are mostly re-
cruited from utacoyntry tribes
around Bombay. ,
• War Brings New •
Customs In Food'.
To
exam-pfes ef clianging con-
ditions in the food markets have
• caught my eye during the last
few •aiys, writes "Polyeritie" in
.an English paper. One is the num-
ber of horse -meat 'shops springing
up everywhere; there are two
within a few yards of One an
• other in a 'welt known, Soho street: •
• The horse. Meat is "for. human
• consumption - only", and coats a
shilling for the best cuts. The'
other example was more pictur-
• esque. In .a Small butcher's shop
facing. Smithfield Market, I saw
a swan hanging head, down, in'
all its plumage. The price was
one pound. •You buy the whole
bird or not at all.
• British Craftsmen
Return To I3enches
Craftsmen who made beauti,
fully , worked, diamond brOochei,
bracelets and other examples of,
fine' jewelry •for •the court of
Queen Victoria are among those
who have come back trent retire -
meat ,to lheir benchoj, London
workshops, to add 'their -skill to
• Britain's war effort, says British
Ihdustries
• They are now fashioning deli-
cate parts for airplanes, tanks,
ships, torpedoes and bombs, as
• well as surgical and preeision in-
• struments .•
Somthe4e of -areas• old as
eighty; in one workshop elope
there are as many as thirty ex-
pert craftsmen between the ages
of sixty and eighty. At least one
principal has returned from re-
tirement with the; others. He is
R. C. AntrOhui, whoorganized •
the jewelry trade for ,war work
in the last way.
It was Antrobus who, in 1930,
offered 140,000 for the, famous
Napoleon necklace which the Ere-
peror Napoleon I 'presented •tb
the Empress Marie Loui& on the .
birth of 'their sun, the. king of
Rome, in 1811.
s
NE CUT
•
Located on Big Hill Creek,
Ranch, founded 1887 im-
Cinfirane, the 0,cyoke
mediately foliowing the Riot
Rebellion, is still maintained
by W. Hutchinson, one of the
founders. Comprising 10,000
• acres of range land, the, lunch
• annually grazes more than*/
1,000 head of fine beef -cattle.
BRAND OF THE
OXYOKE RANCH
ISSUE 21:2
It