Press Alt + R to read the document text or Alt + P to download or print.
This document contains no pages.
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Goderich Signal-Star, 1941-09-11, Page 7"t •
• 'o
tei,
Y.
d: •
crou DAx, E ''m'LT:I)R.11t , 1911
That , BrewedThi ;��a�k a War
Conden ed .frown A1Crai€Jftt1cr iia Orinolin to" -Forrest Wilson ,
plate in. Nove li't'er 1S6 so the stor3 vision d,urind :' ,Gaminunioia service, A
goes, Abraham Lincoln received at the clearly as if she lad' been there, she
White'Liuuse a diminutive; nniddle-aired .sai,Y an: old slave .being beaten to'death
lady. 3 Clasping her tiny hand in 'his ' by n white ruffian.- • After the benedic-
great knotted one, he xclaimed: "So tion (Tarries had; walked ,home ftghtint
this is the little lady who • made thin ',back her tears. • "tom though in. a- trance,
pig war;" she .went to her :bedrpom acid wrote out..
the vision: as she had! seen it, W 1xen
.The little lady `vas. Harriet Beechero
Stowe, author ~of Uncle Tonfes ° Cabin. she 'read it to the famil3°, ttlie children,
Publication of ;that novel: r ten years wept' convulsively. And ;her • husband
-earlier had contributed largely to Lin told her, Mattie, you must make up,
coin's election as president, Contem- a story with this for .the climax,. The.
Lord intends it s4,"
Llarriet -.planned 'the story as "three
or foua' sketehes and offered it to
Born and raised In Oonnectieut, Har-. Editor Bailey of the National Era, a
riet had lived for 18 years in Cinein-1 small Washington publication. alEIe ac-
cepted it `sight unseen, the prick to be
'
Poor Harriet I Her "three orfour"
sketches became,40, and almost a year
elapsed before she filially gathered all
the threads of "her tapestry :together,
Bailey did not raise : the price' as the
story went on and on.
In the National Era of June o, 1891,..
on page -one, appeared the first install-
,
co it on
.meat of the novel that would rid �
a Whole generation ,of • children --=-Har-
riet's son 'Fred among them—to march
ip the spirit of crusaders ten, years
Miter up to the cannon's -mouth.-
It all came' oat of her 'own life ex-
perience.. Her only' visit in the •South
had been ti few •days spent on the
Kentucky plantation of a school chum;
so Uncle Tom -would have to be: a
slave there, But since the only people
she met in Kentucky were -.nice people,
;she 'would have to • have Uncle Tom
sold by his kindly TKentitcky master.
She would want to show that anyhow
—the sale of a :slaved and the result
porar ' statesmen and historians hailed
it as the greatest single influence to-
ward the abolition of slavery, . a
pati, a station of. the Underground Rail-
road. Here she had seen antislavery
riots ; she had helped runaway :.slaves
and listened to, their stories. Then in
• 1850,- the Stowes moved to Brunswick,
Maine, where Calvin Stowehate' been
made a professor at 'BoVvdoin College.
But it was impossible°°t "'escape slavery,
a
'even in :'Maine) The newspapers were
full of it., The Senate chamber was re-
soundi with the impassit"ined Aboli-
tion :�peeci�ies of Charles Sumner'' of
,'.Massachusetts, Harriet's brother, the
already- famous Rev. 'Henry Ward
Beecher, was conducting .his maddening
tr "slave auctions"' from • the pulpit. a
Harriet had written a - number of
short ,stories ,to' eke out the ever in-
adequate ';Stowe income. . Her ° deeply
r ' spirit
'religious crusadeearned to Y
'give to the world it liictire of the
.,„, -brutality of slavery. as she knew it.
Show people slavery in 016 human
terms of ravished girls, mothers be-
reaved by the auctioneer's hammier,
families broken, masters debauched by
arbitrary power—show them these plc- in his family.
tures and they would tolerate slavery Uncle Tom was modeled after the'
no longer:" But to write on a political ; Rev. Josiah 'Henson, colored preacher
and social' worker who had bought his
freedom and whom 'Harriet had met in
Boston. In :his youth, . "Father" Hen-
jlemanently crippled b' a
'flog$tiig °a 'the hands of a brutal Mary-
land
aryland master. Then there was the over-
seer her brother 'Charles had met on
av . New Orleans boat. Displaying- a
fist hard as an oak burl, he' 'bragged
that he "got that from knocking own
niggers." So Harriet had her Simon
-degree. The sinister name '•of the
hairy, apelike master was sheer, in-
spiration. Celeste was a` stall black
question , went • against a lifetime of
training. A letter from her si'Ster-in-
law furnislfed the—Spank. "If I could
use a 'pen as" you can," • wrote, Mrs.
"-Edward "Edward -Beecher, "I 'would write some-,
- thing to make this whole nation feel
_what an accursed thing slavery is."
Harriet's: children well remember her
reading the letter to them. , She' rose
' to her feet as if in an act of ,solemn
eonseer'ation, the letter crumpled: in
:0i1e small, clenched' 'hand. "L will
write' something,." she, said. _
And so ene day she sat dawn her
desk and began.: "Late in, the afternoon limb .of -Satan whom Harriet bad tried
of a chilly day in February; two gentle-- vainly to 'Christianize in her Oincin-
men were sitting•alone over their wine nati Sunday school class. ,_:Celeste be -
in a well=furnished dining parlor in came Topsy. .
the town of Pa---, Kentucky" It is often brought' forth as a modern
The hairline of ink •was starting on discovery that the. Southerner under
-
a long journey. 'Harriet did not know stands •the . Negro better than the
where it would endue, but it ended at Northerner, and knows' better how' to,
• Gettysburg and. Appomattox. - • get along with .him. Yet Harriet with
Harriet had no preconception •of",the writing. this very thing in, 1851 and
• terrible 'power.
power. to he unleashed by 1+852: 'She did not overlook the pleas -
Uncle Tom's Cabin, She regarded her ant, •patriarchal'side of slavery, which
story as ;a messenger os peace. "The was one thing that made her book so
Lord Himself wrote it;" she said many hard to answer.. Some of the kindest
since. - and most •.upright characters in the
The 'scene in which ,Uncle •Toro is novel were Southerlies and slaveholcl-
-
flogged—written weeks 1be1bre,,she had era. And she made .Simon (.entree, the
worked out a -definite plan .for her arch -villain of ri.merican literature, • a
v
THE GODERICH SIGNAL -STAR
lig%44; ICAT�SAVINGS
t
C
S
New England eou
siu
,
,could not
bear
earto
touch T�pay, butLittle va s° f Yorite
'perch was , Thicle °Tolw's knee. It took
a shrewd eye to note that point a
century ago. •
One of • the miracles wrought by
the story was the national furor it
created while funning as a serial in
an obscure paper. ,Almost every cam-
munity had at , least One Abolitionist
who subscribed to the Era, and his,
copy would be passed about freta hand
to 'hal d until it leas literally worn out.
Letters began pouring in to the Era,
-.affrce, Each new character and in-
cident •vas greeted with applause: And
when in the fall 'Harriet failed to get
her copy in • in time for the edition, a,
storm of protest descended on the hap-
less publisher. °
As she 'worked on and on,.. the .end
ever eluding her, 'the story more and
more became Harriet's tyrant. What:
ever she dist, wherever .she went, the
specter of next week's installment
s obd forever at her elbow: She had
to 'keep up her cooking aiid housework,
and her boisterotas family -drove...her
frantic. To, complicate matters, old
D etot Lyman Beecher Came- to visit
his daughter, quite unaware that she
was --.turning out a masterpiece--to-upset
the world. So while he and his secre-
tary fussed about the house with his
all-important sermons, the neighbors:
saw 'little Mrs. -Stowe sitting on . the
back '-steps) her Writing portfolio .. on
her ma� ��pettTcoated knees. •� .. Ii `I�. �IclYimuan who rest r
not person was regarding the shackled 1e-groes,'of the United States , bRe
Era pdzbliial+wed the snggestion that since
the story lead' already run.. to great
length,....airs. Stowe - eould aaish• xt
(11zi ly. in ,u fev' Matter—of—fact papa-
gra/418 :telling how, everything turned
out. Vox"lapilli '•answered a ttiunder-
inr No. Editor Bailey hastened to re.
stss ne hfs" „subscribers, and. kU,arrtet
wrote on.
The installment wilier), appeared in
the Christmas Day issue of the Era
portrayer the, death' of • ,Little Eva,,
When it was written, Ilarriet tools to:!
her bed for 48 hours, ••hausted, It
had been, almost a personal bereave.
ment. Anci what .,agonized letters she
received frn;a her readers deploring the
Willful murder of the saintliest child in
An erica by al heartless author for a
literary effect:
But the way ahead was now !clear.
Harriet had only to write tel.the scene
of Uncle Tiara's. death, 'tie a few loose
ends, and be done.
In February Jewett ,made a :hna1' at-
tempt to, save seine Qf ;his' slender
cape tai., he propsed to tke•I,Stowes That
they put up" halt the CoSt:01 publishing,
and share ` equally' with izim profits
from its sale, if any. : Bat the Stowes
had no money atall,so Uadv
e-'
d
elided in favor of a; royalty of1.0 Per
Dent. on all sales, If Harriet . had
Owned a. half interest in' Uccle Tom's
Oabin,' the first year's sales in this
country alone .would have made her
independently rich.
Harriet, however, was well pleased
with The contract. "I hope," she said,
"it Will maize enough so I may have a
silir ,dress,a'
The book unheralded by advance
• f r
publicity, wide bora in complete silence
so far as the reviewers were con-
cerned. But 'publication day, March
Thomas Storey, Sea. ford?, riding zl" and Nirs. " Jer, `Camp ll, • became t ,e
horse to• �pastur'e was thrown oft and bride Richard; ..yotte, soaiof Mr. and
htacY a twig broi?.e1ti.
Mrs. T. Ayotte, frys(lale. The wed-
Joiia I'.a'mb lleudersou¢ .,of 'Egioond. dint; dinner was served at tine (:Toted
ville, died on •'rhurs4a,' last 11:t
Ials ImI)erlai, tt rand 7 erul., 3Ir. and Mrs' ei ht-utinth ear. - iAyyotte will reside; at Windsor.
g y y ,
Decoration. Days; Was ,,,observed .at
Ues le .. xaz><
Clinton, en !Sunday byh Legion Dtr-awneal at Grand ,)sand
u ay the Lep on and
the"1Oran e rand Oddfeliows' lodges, John', iS eitse1, he tiler `baker) . was
James 'Showers ioneer' resideib of drowned bn Sunday fteritoou while
Turnberry township, died - is li a stivinamillg in l alae +(futon at Grai%d
in Win ri � • in at his _oixaI3e1ad. IIe tivtas a mood :�avlatanler, bat it
rr 4m Vin,; Donday,• his eighty_tls thought' he moa have hada hear
fifth year. attack while in the- water. Il b t.
is odq
Sirs.- Florence Bateman of Turn- was. , washed up on the bo
e a uC
twenty minutes after he disappeared;
file was forty-three years of age,
A 'Noteworthy Couple
A: nein 'the .malty' iiepPy' •families in
the i'rench Settlement, says The•G'uricli
late W inline . Bielell, died at Seaforth Herald, II old, is` that of fir. and Mrs. s •, ph Save ,sour $milk. It,,,Makes tender calci
0 August 31 ix
n � t st, �.
her, Bedard, who live on their.fine and. and 'Uisuuiir�..,,
year. tSiie leaves a daughter, Miss comfortable farm just° north
Marjorie 33' 1 � of . St. Save dry bread. , It makes crumbs ;Or
3o e iekel , is school teacher in deseplr. , Mr. Bedard is eighty' ea ca u d i h s dressing*
Tpro t .
t9 y y 1"s • es a ope d e , trr.
n
0
berry', widow of 'Walter tEateman, died
en August 29th in the 'Wingham' hos-
pital at the age of sixty' -seven years.
One son, Iiarry, slarv,ves."
Ne11iej,ouisa Freeman, Widow, of the
PAIS
row Mizt�to
TORONTO
HOTEL WAV'
Locatallal•n WId* 11041Jtea
at CtlUsij. lilt.
Euy P'atrkitn�l FasIlltla" s
Convsnlotit to Highwsy11
�, ° , °. � M $t*
N
M1t
rior 10 log.0, me le sue
Masa t. «the Uislverslty,
ParIIam.nt Unbolt asr
Maple Lott. CtaTrdensr
Th.attre., Hospltai.,•
Whotss+tlo i.•tous•a, and,
the -
he Pash>Iena[ite 1Ml.tall
"phopptnp. Distd.t. v
MA
It'�►4tat e'tac�ftfvp
•
an;
of age and Mrs. Bedard is..seventy-
seven. They have been married' fifty-
nine and �' v
ne wee r - 1s
grandchildren -411=4r �e g y- our and
>+heir greatygrandchild�ren 'thirty four.
Accident ,
4• • lifelong .resident of Wingham, near Seawol th . ' -
Miss Elora ‘Bina C.isemore, passed 'Charles'Kenn�eth Jennings, airman at
-away oil August.110th in her fifty eiinth a ..Huron .county training school, and
'year: She, was the daughter ••of the Margaret McDade,. of .Seaforth, were
late Mr.'and Mrs. John .Oasemore, taken to the Seaforth .h�osil?ital Thurs-
?0, '11352, saw great excitement in the «ringham Junction, day night last after an' automobile a,c-
publis)1er's oflice. The first edition of
Ephraim Snell, well-known sheep cldent on the 'Seaforth-$russet's road
G000 copies, was devoured im lately, breeder of Mullett, won twenty due about a mile and a quarter north_ of
Within the' week Jewett had three, prizes for his sheep at the Toronto Seaforth: Their' ear skidded and hit
Exhibition this pear. Ile was„,_,o-the.„? ,telephone pole and both were thrown
largest •prize-winner in the •sheep out. Jennings had numerous Iacer€i-
classes.tions about the face; \Tisa McDade
The tUl1inton Board. M' Education has n'as 'badly bruised. . The ctar:..-•-,-w=,i '
Fl ing Officer Thomas Pr de of ` Satre wax from �iellies, jamas, etc. Wash:: r.
f y Dry: Melt'and use again.
}Exeter was "fareweiled” by the Exeter nine lid iia a ten sons whose Save vegetable wateir for soupy or
Lions Club' acid presented with a conte d lit ' 20 pounds. Their sauces,
fountain pen prior; to his departure to i ht f Save vinegar from ickles, Th., icy
take up his new duties at the Trenton .avor adds zest to salads:
airport. , Road
Ai `d t Save ' celery tops, parsley or gree
onion 'tops,' Dry for seasoning.`
Save butter wrappers. • The e x 4 '
'lam yam �;
celient for buttering pans ” •
Save energy by planning ahead.
power presses running 24 hours a day
except • Sunday, 100 bookbinders, at
work, and three mills running to supply
the paper. Harriet's first royaltj.
check for four months' sales was $10,-
300. 'On the first tinniversary _of the -
book's pullication, Jewett announced
the year's sales at {15,000 copies, "with
deman4ds heavy ase ever."' In propor-
t. topr aaillttion,'u•.novel toc�a3•; to lo`
appointed 'two members to fill. the wrecked. fi..
vacancies created by the unseating of
A. --T. -Cooper and W. E. Perdue: The FOODS FOR HOME DEFENCE
F NCE
new members are Dr.. J.1 S. Evans and • under a hot flame. When eggs axe
A. A. F. Oudmore, • �: z in a baov1 :t-iss1ed. for the.:immediate. e. e' i '
air, and Mrs. Thomas ins re, two table coons 'roux' re- -.
Bz•ussel- h rr of �' use of - home tinkers in Canada; the places one egg for thickening. When
COOKING.
Good cooking makes • it possible'to
serve appetizing meals from low cost
nutritious foods. •„,..-...
Cereals. --Soaking cracked or roiled
cereals hi cold water overnight short-
L'ggs.-••Slow cooking. with low heat
does not toughed eggs. „A' meringue •
cooked slowly does not separate. and,
run as does tiie one quickly browned '
as well would have 'to sell, 1;500,000 �. announct' t e en�,agement of , •
iiia Year: _ • their -only da=ughtez ; l�i�onu, -rtta: Freema tlonaurne-•_ Section,.'Marketing Selw ice,
Archibald Tunnel', youngest 'son f Dominion Department of Agriculture
Uncle•• TOM ,.was soon pirated in • a Benjamin •-•
dozen- co>x,nti and -translated Mrs, Benjamin Taylor, Blyth, the mar- outlines_ •a' pattern .01' "Good \lean;”
IL dozen: languages, The iainto rine to,take place quietly ,this month. and stresses practical 'points regarding
b g trodden r 4 g
A. W. Kerslake was the =winner in cUtlserratiotr and c�oohing of-f7aod�s:.°
classes of"1''urope-took the book to their the municipal bye -election at-
hearts and read i• : it their own. miser ! Hensall GOOD MEALS
A on Monday to -,hoose a. successor to There is no shortcut -til good nutrition,
les, witheiircely a thought fol the d his seat 'Well balanced meals are necessary.
tl C Be sure to include plerifty of the prof
• tective foods.
An excellent rule -is.: Every day—one
pint of° iniIk for -each adult; one
• and a -half pints to, one .quart for
each.°• ehild, or the equivalent in
buttermilk or evaporated milk.
ever-increasing length of the novel with
dismay','' John P. Jewett, head of . a
small Boston publishing house, had
agreed to publish' the serial in book
form. He had foreseen a slender
about who'in it was wi'i'tteil. )n • Loll- oil le .ouncil• to join t -he R.C.A.F.
l The -defeated candidata was -•fFreder ick
doll, 'gem, York and Boston, draiiratiz- Deters. -
atidns of Uncle Tom were plying to Mr.s. F-izll.letli Reid Edmunds,
hysterical iiedienees. Americans were-, widow of 'i1110.111.G. L. +.dmunds died
-engine,'• 'Iract Tom anti °I ittle P' '
volume which could sell at a•low price. songs, A Rhode Island manufacturer ; the on Frie1.1y,,last at, her home in Seaforth,
By* the el...of October i; ncle Tom was advertised a card game'" called "Uncle re1,4rTt of n str=oke ,siltle>•ed two
beginning to look like a two -volume Torn and, Little• Eva." line - months. ago. ° Her husband' predeceased . One serving potatoes ' (preferably with. during
ration liter 1 d cooking -preserves calor.
•should t.s41•;''be • facWed as it destroys.
survive. � O d g _.,
as reeipe es I1S fir:. g ¢kites "u 2 ell
ill salad dressing, eookies,~etc, ,
Frit is easily canned -at home for
winter •use. Sugar added during-cook-
ing
cook
ing tends to toughen stewed fruits, •
Meat should not : be epoked at too
high a temperature. Cheaper cuts
need long, ;slow, cooking'in moist heat.'
Soups: -•-A, stogk pot made- from
bones, gravy, vegetable (ester`, left-
overvegetables, 'maces excellent sower : 1
V g ables. Gook in small amount
of: water and ,save every drop.;, ,The
juice on Calmed' vegetables should also.
• be used. Do not overcook vegetables, -
Keep crisp And flavorsome. Salt added-.
novel'; Jewett was apPalied:-He begged atone ' ditto' - -..Anti-Toni'' • propaganda ler am three sons and two daughters skins)
-One serving int preen vegetables or tomato vitamins and -flavor.•
�1r anti lire 'James Flynn Clinton juice
was writing on an unpopular subject, mount,. Lhillis�.s, Cabin ; lir.. :;outlierh •<,n �.11nda� last • of sery
he said two volumes might be' fatal Lift ale•IG Is, ed th --k golden C__ serving vegetables. ,cv CALL ..AT .O VEN SOUND
tothe work's ,success. ••-• wedding. anniversary. They Were mar- Two •servings fruit' or .fruit',juice.- Join
Iu the ('tilted States the editorial Tied .in St. Joseph's church Clinton n Uli se vI W. Se lford, president and
Jewett could not have addressed a , p oa r ng whble grain cereal, owner of tile.-Seawa.y,,=Lines ,announ
silence vas' finally broke uu April 15 ' epteimier 7th, 1891', ,b3° Rev: Father One meatorf ccs'
1 serving fish. •that Owen,,,,,5ound will be • a regular
as the New York Independent, in na ' West of Goderich, Mr. Flynn has car- One egg' or at least three or four per o
tional • influence second • 0nly to, Horace I lied on ii, blackamithing business in week, • port of call next season for ;«take. phi
.Greele3's Weekly Tribune, ran a col- Clinton for d. ►4enger steamship Georgian. The '°
`mak, year, .•
Harriet to terminate the. story. She filled' bookstores with titles' such as •
more receptive -listener. A weary Har-
, story --did, in fact, come to her in a Vermonter.. Aunt .Ophelia, St. Cla.re's riet was ready to qrt- for Mercy. The
tl
Os
.. N OU C TNG DRE
A N N I A VITAL �-MEAS
TO HELP CANADA'S WAR, .��EFFORT.
1
TO - CONSERVE RUBBER
. � To Aid Uur ilrmed Forcesand 1'o Save You Money
By Waking Your Tires Last Longer!
Rubber is vital 'to Victory ... an essential material
for all our ARMED'FOFCES. Their requirements
...and the requiretn•nts of our War Industries ... .
must cozrie firs`. • .
Et is the duty of every Canadian motorist to•see that
they da come -first ... to conserve rubber by making
tires last as lung as possible, consistent with -safety,
during this emergency. •
1 .
To help Canadian motorists to carry out this patri-
otic duty ...and at tae smile time save money by i
making their tires Inc' 1 Inger ... Dunlop -Canada
• has initiated this War Sa ilig•Plan for Tires. Under-_ _
this plan Dunlop Dealers throughout Caiiada� place
themselves ... and all.tie skill and experiehce of;
their or ;anirations ... at.the service of -motorists.
Simply by presenting yr•ui Service Card at your
• nearest Dunlop Dealer y<1u will be entitled to pre-
• ferried service en every tire check-up'listed here, at
° minimum labour cost.•
`
Thinlc what this Dunlop plan 'means to • you: the •
• `opportunity to serve Car.ida in yet another useful
way; the chance to save m iney by getting moremile-
• age than you ever enjoy .d before from yqur tires;
the increased driving saf4ty that will be yours by -
having your tires regularly inspected and main..
tained in perfect running order.
o Drive z�1 today to four nearest Dunlop Dealer. Ask him for
your Preferred Service .Curd and have your• first 'tire • .
chock -up udder the Dunlop War Saving Pl&-for Tires.
A 7 Point �elrvioo• to Help
• Canada lnd Sava • Mon>y -
For 1VMotoritts ,,
,1 A regular inflation check will
be made on all your tires., and
your tires, including the spare,
will be changed over regularly
to balance tread wear, whhiill
should increase your tire life
*bout 20;x.
1-
r' DRIVE ` .
YOUR TIRES
FARTHER
AND BRING
• VICTORY
NEARER
.DUNLOP
111410.1p RUddCR 10001
COUP100(IU,T,D
A1456
This Card Entitles Dearer
To Preferred Service Undo---
THE DUNLOP
WAR HAYING PLAN
FOR TIRES
2. You will be informed about any uneven tread
wear that indicates wrong alignment or defective
brakes.
3 Your tires will be r•egulc rly checked "for danger-
ous hidden cuts and brazises. The inside fabric of
your tires will also be checked at necessary
intervals.
You will be advised when your non-skid treads
are losing their effectiveness,
5 Your tubes will be iz bpected
for signs ofpinchingaachafintg.
6kThe purchase of a Bever tire will
be recommended only. when it
is €llmohiteiy needed for
your' safety.
7 'fou will be given cd Preferred
Service Card entitling you to
epochal call on your Dunlop
Dealer's time): tend cervica
facilities. l'io• deafer will issue
More cards than he can service
efficiently. -
DRIVE YOUR TIRES
FARTHER
AND BRiNG VICTORY
NEARER
£LJrILOP- C4&M4&IA
• tin -a half review-urg111g readers iRowe= Rowe—Archibald Georgian, operating between. Detroit °
to 'Spread `'t d theworld!" o CONSERRVATION and •Georgian Bay 'arid 'V rth Channel
fIurfrrrti in Sf Thomas' •-�.ti;•l. S• 1 ,y .1 t Z. �'• y g Its season- .in: 1942 in
i around wor d .. ! In a ceremony Tiedeii by Rev. Dr Save pennies
by right ,toying' ports will be hi it 1
.'�sthe press ,tool: up the acclaim, the I - _ g scan .tie . urge us ioc uc s lv o
p . home canning :l he Juno, 'cnntinrring t3lropgha f 'TUT ,
copies elf thN:nocel_AviiiUr..lewet.t_ was church, Seaforth, on' August :39th,, and join making. and August. It will call
- at Owen •
sending n •' g
Saye food value by proper preparation,„,Sound either .once or. twice 'a week
Sate --.fuel b3• cooking s€%eral-d1qh s. ;in depending on whether or not it is found
oven mit one time or cooking possibleto arrange the. schedule • so.-
-•13ot:atoe nn•eereal for two .meals. that a ---pall can be "'fade on both, up-'.
Save 'tinge • by knowing cool:i•(rg short bpnnd and clownbound• trips, Mr. ;viol-•
cuts.
• -to various influential figures Jess is V allanc'e Craig, daughter Of 'NIT.. 1
bean . to bring daily gratifications. and Mrs. W. R'. _Archibald, wa united
-Longfellow. wrote: "Uncle Tolll',5 Cabin in marriage to Osmond 'Jennings Rowe I
is -t11e greatest triumphs.__ in ' of s'Ime0e, 1 ►nt., son of Mr. :and lira I
recorded litefar3. hist -ors, 14) a,is• not11 1`(=1 i)1,,t' Rowe' of. '1'orutit�i, ,fir, and
Ing of the higher triumph of its moral �Ir.<, Iluwe' avi11 reside in �inicuc�?
r - 1yotte"-Caul ellen
effect' `Whittier wrote to t press • � o
"ten thousand thanks for thy imtnnrtal ; . +►nr Lady of lit: Carmel- church, Mt.!
drool:." and .fenny 1 111(1 ended a. letter I ('311114'1,'ss i the s ce11e of :l 1)retty «ed-
of praise. with the word,: ' ('txrtainls j ding when France. da tighter 'of Mr.
(10(Fs hand will retrain with a.1►lessen'
over- your. 11c'ad." •
-
S11rprisingly, the first aftack on the.:
veracity of the novel cane. from the
North, HIarriet had ,tecognizo<l, t1in.
• '1 she could . nor pill the sin of slavery
escltlsive?ty on the Suufh, for there was
plenty .of 'Sot-tlieru niciuey inVested in
the1 (.01 6•11' • businiess. .which •Iiit'd ;b•3'
slavery. • The spokesman • for that
money was the Now York .Journal of.;
1 Commerce, 'which at the end of..Maylil
tired the first big gun against i'ncle4
'Twin's-Y':tbin. Editors througllunt
country at Once picked -11p tile.;a;;{',
• Por (ii.d ago hist -Harriet, and Mi great '
•
newspaper debate 1►t' ;a 0.
i - Ileretofore, Uncle Toni's Cabin had I
beell•111e1"'13 :i c'oiltrotersiail novel. (11'-
'ii1:riiJtg freely In the North and Staub
and 5.•iunilig converts from both sec-
tion,. ti11dde'11•ly there was' ,Iloaltitn- I
guns suppression r,'f t°hk' 1)001, in. the 4
Sout11 and 1t became• dangerous to own
a 'col►1 • southern} lnuther i liegan to
hold Iiarrlet • up 'l,a:fore their children
as a wicked_ ogress. ILer fan mail now
included auwnloils letters, threaten-,
ing, scurrilott..., blathering Der a4
fomenter of slnvf' rrl:ellion.• -
1 Beetle shies wt'l•a' n„w,:rlvare that this
wits iint just :l W,v,14'I, ° '1,11t 0 1)11tie
planted. :tt 'the'-fotilwtiatinns of the re-
.,IH1hlio, the ,fust, Hissing. IIarriet's
pr.:Dagail1.111 hrlt). fired sectional hatreds I.
that were not to 5111)51(11; 1111o1 the
114'1 11,4 • th:lt beat oo hotly with thenl •
had gonebac 1c 10 the dust .
-Forty, y, -; Kirk-- Mfonr'ri},
a• nted Nett° York ,•retic, estimated facie
-Tom's iil4Tr•e, in history`: •'I'IYe` abli'(,',tion
of slavery teas lint, x11(1 (4,iitd tl+'t he',
• 11 11111)1 i114d by any on<' i(1'rsinl. It
w• as the result c4' united efforts. .
fent the greatest and 1t11i5t far -tea 11111 ; o
of 011..the51 in flrtelrct's Was 1'ne•le 'T'om's'
• Cabin. the 110014. that ranks, fourth in
l,puint of circlrla.tion :lvluii 'ail tilt'
bai3Oks of the svnr'ld."
ford , contemplates' laying up the
Save 11(11)1 by proper cooking. r Georgian at that port this winter, She
Save 011 fat.' Clarify and use for is expectc7f to go there after 'Making
cooking'., ,i 'x:oritine dry-dock call at the close
Save . b3 kit axing how Illllt'h to bay of her '1st scheduled. trip.
The
check Discharges:
From the -,Bowels
Bowel troubles, although happen-
' ing at any time of the year, aro
more prevalent during the hot num-
m6r and early fall .nienths.,
Summer Flu 'in' one of the word
41.2, CraNpa.nnsi _pains tho in.
teatimes, dr any lyoneness of the
'Ilhe action Of Dr. PoWler 'a Extract
of Wild'. Otrawberry in pleasant, °
rapid, reliable an5l eifeetual in help-
ing to li.eck the unnatural dis-
I charges,
xt Ito been on the market for' 4e•
' past OA years, el° why experiment
with new and.untried remedies?
•
1St
AND EVERY DOLLAR MU$T DO ITS FULL it,UT '
DURING THE, STRENUOUS DAYS AHEAD,
13P SU BSCRIPTIONP0, A NEWSPAPER IS JUT A
STRIA -1041T �
041T le USIN 'Si- INVESTMENT ON - SMALL
SCALE, tUT IT USUALLY PAYS .TREMENDOUS
DENDS.
Y tAxING ADVANTAGE OF ,THE ,SALES OR AN -
QUITE OFTEN SAVE nig PRICE OF THEIR SUB-
'SCRIPTIONS SEVERAL TIMES IN A SINGLE. YEAR,.
IF YOU HAVE SOIVIETHING YOU DON'T NEED,
ok IF YOU NEED SOMETHING, JUST SEE HOW
EASILY YOU CAN, dET IT Y INSERTING AN AD-
VERTISEMENT IN THE
',The..SigohStar •
,n.