HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1929-10-03, Page 2i. ► ,A� has the finest flavour
in the *otid, Slid it costs only
onse-totarto of cent a cup.
11
(GREE 4) ose
A
''Hersh grim:•' the gardens,
-
Arabs
Becoming More
Humane
London,—Antral lovers will learn
with satistaeti0n that kindness to ant -
male is becoming much mere general
than formerly among the Arab popula-
tion along the Southern Meditet'raueen
coast.
Miss Nina M. klosall, hon, secretary
of the Society far the Protection of
Animals in Northern Africa, writes,
appealing for funds to further the
work of the society,
In Algeria, Tunisia, and French Mor-
occo, with the collaboration of the
authorities, animal protection work is
yielding rapid and moot encouraging
results, she says, Kindness is being
taught in the schools, and the Arab
'boy of to -day is beginning to regard
the patient donkey as a sentient crea-
ture needing intelligent caro, and not
mere thing with huge untended
sores, to be goaded by a eat" or pack-
ing needle, .
The older men gratefully bring their
animals for veterinary treatment to
the free elinics which have been es-
tablished.
In the larger towns, such as Algiers,
definite reforms have been made, in.,
eluding the abolition of the "serette,"
an iron instrument with sharp teeth
which is used on the noses of horses,
mules and donkeys, The barbarous
practice of "hanging"' unwanted dogs
at the pound is also being stopped.
Humane killers have been provided.
for animals injured in street acci-
dents.
Almost every day appeals are being
received from fresh dlstriets for the
formation of a branch of the society,
4•, a �. E & RI BUT1 ON
tbleell) edeneael11.1.
e y„ •tVS
t\raASEaY
Rseseeleeeee.e.e.e iee to
Wending weird and hollow as the voice
of the dead in that immeasurable
abyss, came back in answer;
„Hero I am, Fess," he said, "You'll
have to work qus.
-
CHAPTER XXVI•
efelGIN fiEttk; TODAY
Ned Cornet, Lenore liardenwoeth
A11,1 Bess Gilbert are shipwrecked. Ned
Y Lenore, The three
mars e
is engaged to
take refu„ a on an island they find sole-
ly osenpled by a titian named Deems-
wort and hie Indian wife,
Doomsdorf turns out to be e brute
and takes Ned and the two girls pris-
oners, He tells them that they are to
be his d
labor, but Hess ands. Ned spared
n by.
their master until they fall une0n-
scioes.
The prisoners build a cabin for
themselves and, after ib is finished,
Deonm dart tells Bess and Ned that he
means to have them do all his winter
trapping, Lenore is allowed to remain
with the squaw to help with the hortse-
work, Ned •fells into a deep crevice-
and
reviceand expects to .lie.
NOW GO ON WITH TI•IE STORY
CHAPTER XXV.
He did not hear it again; but the
truth went home to hint in one de-
spairing irtstftnt. Try as nerd as he
could, his jaws had released their hold
upon the knife, and it. had fallen into
the depths of the crevice below.
Bess had made good time along her
tine that day. She had nob forgotten
that this was the day of her rendez-
vous with Ned, and by walking swift-
ly, eschewing even short rests, carry-
ing her larger trophies into the cabin
to shin rather than halting and thaw-
ing them out over a fire, she arrived
meanwhile workin0 e ward,heed over.
hand. To fall meant to die -bet Ned
didn't fall.
It was a hard fight, weakened no
he was, bet soon the girl's reaching
hands caught his :deo% then his coat;.
finally they were fastened firmly, lift-
ing with all the girl's strength, order
the great awns, Ills hand seized the
pole, and he gave a great upward
lunge, And then he was lying on the
ice beside her, fighting for breath, not
daring to believe that he was safe,
But the usual 1001, half -mirthful,
remark that, in many little crises, Ned
had learned to extonight. m BNess,w wass
noforthcoming
merely sounds in'the twilight those'
of heavy breet:,ing, The strain was
ever, and Bess had given way to the
urge of her heart at last. Her tears
ftoweu unchecked, whether of sorrow
or happiness even she did not know,
The man crawled toward her, moved
by an urge beyond Nein, and for a
single moment his strong arias pressed
her close. "Don't cry, little pal," he
told her. Ile smiled, a str'tngely boy-
ish, happy smile, into her eyes, Very'
softly, reveren.':y he kissel her wet
eyeliis, then stilled her trembling lips
with his own. He smiled again,, a
great good -humor taking hold of him.
"You're too big a girl to cry!"
(To be continued,)
It was bitter hard for Ned to fight
his way through death's twilight, The
cold had hold of him, its triunnphwas
near, and it would not set hien go with
out a savage battle that seemed tie'
wrack the matt in twee..
lie summoned every ounce of cour-
age and determination that he had
and tried to shake the frost from his
brain. "'You'llhave to work quick,"
Ile warned again. Ills voice was
stronger now, but softened with a
tenderness bbyoncl her most reckless
dreams, "Don't be too hopeful -•-I
haven't much left in me. What cam,
you do?"
The girl who answered him was in
no way the lost and hopeless
mortal
rhl
that had lain sobbing
fighting side of her that Ned had seen
so often swept swiftly into dominance.
At once she was a cold blade, true and
sure; brain and body in eerfect dis-
cipline,
"How far are you?" she asked, "I
can't see—"
"About ten feet,—but I can't get up
without help."
"Can you stand up?"
"Yea." Forcing himself to the last
of his nerve and courage, he
010—Slip on dress, fronts of dress
in three sections' upper sections tuck-
ed at shoulders, lower section cut dr-
essier and joined in pointed outline;
applied bands around neek and down
front; dart -fitted sleeves perforated
for short sleeves. Fos Ladies and
Misses,
Years 10, 18, 20, Bust 34, 30, 38, 40,
42, 44, 46 inches
HOVo TO ORDER PATTERNS
Write your name and address. plain-
ly, giving number and size of such
patterns as you want. Enclose 20s in
stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap
it carefully) for Bash number, and
address your order to Wilson Pattern
Service, '73 West Adelaide St., Toronto.
Patterns sent 'v an early mail.
at the Forks hat at midafternoon• S e
began' .,t once to makdrew e preparations drew himself erect. Reaching upward,
his hands were less than a yard from
t Ned's coma: the top of the crevice,
Bess did not make the mistake of
She built a roaring firs 1,' the little,
rusted stove, knowing well time bless-
ing it would be to the tired trapper,
conning in with his load- of furs. She
started supper so that the hot meal
would be ready upon his arrival, Then
she began to watch the hillside for his
coining,
On the glare ice of the glacier, a
mile straight up the ridge from the
cabin, she saw the figure of a man.
It was Ned, of co.trse, taking the per-
ilous path over the ice, instead of
keeping to the blazed trail of his trap
line. On the slight downward slope
The higher Cwli:tare toward her, clearly outlined aga
Ransas City Star: It is said that the ;the white ice, she could see every step
per capita book sales in this country the took, ld over the
are eomewbat less than one book each
year, This must be very depressing
to those in the book business, but
they'll just have to be patie-tt, We're
busy just now making every family in
America a two•car family, When that
is accomplished, then we'll see about
the two.book families.
1011 that corn wlth Minard's Liniment
�HE knowing hostess takes
advantage of every oppor-
tunity to give individuality
to her table.
She always znnloes her own
salad dressings. She prefers
to create her own desserts.
And she makes her own mus-
tard pickles.
In this way she can develop
her own combination of veg-
etable ingredients—and be
sure they are firm and fresh.
She can use the purest of
vinegars, peppers and spices.
.&ud, most important of all,
she can give her pickles that
superlative, indispensable
ting of flavour imparted only
by
a real
0l
l
Englishe
1
isz
Mustard
like I EEN' S I
PICILLED BEANS
String a quarter of a
peck of tender green
beans, throw them into
a kettle of hailing
water, add 1 teaspoon-
ful Salt and bon 25
minutes, when done
drain in a colnndcr, let
stand until cold, than
tit Into fare, Serinhlo
lightly with cayenna
add one tahlatpoour'i
of 'Leone Mustard,
1 tablespoonful chop-
and
radish t rho r
DInd ,o
e
cover the w1,nYo with
along alder vinegar.
TREE Send for a copy of our book listing many recipes for
really wonderful pickles and relishes,
rEEIV UTA.
Chiral
Aids Digestion.
He was walking ho y
glassy snt•face. Didr't he know its
terrors, the danger of slipping on the
icy shelves and falling to his death,
the deep crevice shunned by the wild
creatures? She watched every step
with anxious gaze. When lie was tomost el -
back a few paces, and thenty she saw him come for-
wardat a leaping pace.
What.happ ,ned thereafter came too
fast for her .yes to follow. One in-
stant she saw his form distinctly as
ho ran. The next, and the ice lay
white and bare in the wan light, and
Ned had disappeared as if by a magi-
cian's nagic.
Pot one moment she gazed in grow-
ing horror. There vas no ice promon-
tory behind which he was hidden, nor
did he eeappeae again. And peering
closely, she made out a faint, dark
Tne, :ike a pencil mark on the ice,
just where Ned had disappeared.
She turned into the cabin, bent, and
added fresh fuel to the stove, Its heat
scorched her face, and she put up her
hand to shield it. The cabin should
be warm, when she brought Ned home.
She menet let the cold the creep in, She
always
must not forgetlittle opening.
watching for every 'tone was pleading. Keep t tie
Perhaps he would want food, too: she moving for ten minutes more, Ned.
glanced into the iron pot on the stove. Oh, tell me you'll try—"
Then, acting more by instinct than by Deep in the gloom sae thought she
conscious thought, she began to look heard him laugh—only a few, little
e
Tested Recipes
Moat and Vegetables En Casserole
Take 1 pound of stew meat, out in
inch pieces. Place a toyer of 'Meat in
bean pot, sprinkle with pepper and
salt, then a tablespoon flour, next a
layer of shoed onion, a layer of pota-
toes, and so on, until the creat 1$ used
tip. Cover with a tip of cold water;
place in oven covered, and bake slow-
ly 3 or 4 hours, adding more water as
necessarY.
Oatmeal Cookies
One egg, 1 cup sugar, % cup short-
ening 1 tablespoon molasses, 4 table-, Snowden, mach to the Joy of his • el -
spoons sweet milk, 1 teaspoon elnna-
tying to reach dowe to him. She
conquered the impulse at once, real-
To fall meant to die.
izing that any weight at all, unsup-
ported as she was, would draw her
into the ravine. Even the rope world
be of no use antil she haiksomething
firm to which to attach it.
"I've dug holes most of the way up,"
he told her. "I might try to climb
'em, -with a little help—"
"The bottom is hundreds of feet
below me. I'm on a ledge about three
feet wide"
"Then stand still till I can really
help you. I can't pull you now with-
out being pulled in myself, and if
you'd fall back you'd probably roll off
the ledge. The ice is like glass. Ned,
are you good for ten minutes more?"
"I don't know—"
"It's the only chance." Again her
1 blood
STATiDfaRID Of QUALITY
FOR OVER 50 YEARS
Hybrid Plant to
'?reduce'Cotton
"l3roteXA latest SubstiAlt0"
Discovered by English
SGierrtist
Considerable interest to being triton
in textile circles 10 England in con-
nection with a. development of a iry-
brid plant whieli ham: been nomad'
"Pretax" and which has 'heels diseov-
erect by Leonard Browning, n research
horticulturist, it is leashed front Mc-
Gill Ualversity.
It is statist that the plant le hewn
From ascii Ault niaturas' rapidly, re-
quiring about 16 months, It attaltis.
a height of eight to 10 feet and
a.
stens cir0umferenee of from eight to'
1,0 inches,
It is anblennial and produces a cow '
mevelal crop 01 fibro In the lest year
and seeds at • the end of the secant'
year, It Is claimed to yield three raw•
materials of great common -eat value::
a fibre for matte purposes which it is
stated /100015: an efficient substitute
for cotton wood c011010so in the see
and year from the fibro' shim twhtebi
Dan 'be 'used In paper malting, a
need which can be used in the menu -
Mature of cattle fcocl:
Apparently the experimental trials•
have proven highly satisfactory to:
those daau0ing the scheme and this•
coming year tlroiisantls of . acres are,
to be planted with seed obtained this.
fall.
In well-hifornied quarters it is con'
sidered there are a na rk tope ossibilities'
for the dovelep
a' eubstitnte for ootton ,poselbly ire
part for wood and undoubtedly expose -
oat
e Upire to try
meantts will be made in Canada and'
i the n rpossibilitiesparts et lfor growth o1 the
pla,
Prot. ,Harold II{bbort, professor of'
industrial and cellulose chemistry at
lgieGill University, states that tlie
facts hitt' been brought to his atter•
tion in the course of scientific re-
search and he believed, eerier As he,
knew, that they were accurate.
Tasty Sandwiches
2.3 cup sugar, Much of salt. Scald
milk, Add' Neaten eggswith sugar coon
Pined, add salt; Bake until set, about
en hour,
Steamed Blueberry Dumplings
Put 4 tablespoons berries in bottom
of cup, .Place a tablespoon of the fol-
lowing batter on top; 2 ups flour, 4
teaspoons bakingpowder, oae•half tea-
spoon salt, 2 teaspoons butter and
three-fourths cup milk, Steam and
twin upside down in deep sauce diehes
and serve with mita sauce,
Minard's Liniment—The King of Pain,
The Worm Turns
London Sunday Express (Ind.): Mr -
mon, 1 teaspoon soda, 1/4 teaspo01low-countrymen, at last has Week a
iblow for the overburdened taxpayers
,.neo
salt, 1% cups flour, 2rla cups
oats.
Canned Blueberries
Pick over berries and wash by plac-
i,ng in a strainer and rifting up and
down in a pan of cold water, then put
them into a -preserving kettle with
a small quantity of water to prevent
berries from burning, Cook until soft,
stirring occasionally, and put in Jars.
leo sugar is required, but a sprinkling
of salt makes an agreeable addition,
This recipe may also be used for
huckleberries.
Peach Cream Pie
One teaspoon cornstarch, 1 cup thin
cream, 2 egg yolks, ea sup sugar,
Cook over hot water as fort sipuddin
g.
Add leis cups peach pulp,
or canned fruit. Cools for 5 minutes
then fin ea baked pie shell, Cover
with meringue made with the 2 egg
whites and brown in oven.
Banbury Tarts
One-quarter cup each of raisins,
dates, figs, nuts, 1 up brown sugar, 1
tablespoon flour, 1 egg, juice and rind
of lemon. Chop fruit and nuts, mix
with flour and sugar; add beaten egg,
lemon :rind and Juice, Mix all in
to-
gether. Roll out plain pastry, aut
squares, place spoonful of mixture on
each, Fold diagonally, press edges.
Bake at 400 degrees.
Shrimp Wiggle
One can peas, 1 can shrimp, amen
highly with a little Worcestershire
sauce. Make a cream sauce, season-
ing •with salt, pepper and paprika, and
Pour over them, Serve on toast with
a slice of lemon.
Egg Daisies
Two level tablespoons butter, 2
tablespoons riots, 1 cup mills, salt, 4
hard-boiled eggs. Make a sauce of
butter, flour, milk and salt; add whites
of egs, chopped fine. Cut buttered
toast in pointed pieces an dee-range on
plate to form daisy petals, Cover
with sauce and Ise egg Yolks through
Potato ricer,' 1n the centre.
188
of England, Foreigners feel as If the
rabbit had , suddenly turned and bitten
the gamekeeper,
The way to keep young, says Dr.
Mayo, is to live with young people.
And the way to goy/ grey is to try
to peep up with them.
about for such tools as she weedd nee
in the work to followof repo, used
There was a piece
once on a hand sled, hanging on the
wall; but it was only t bot uteight not feet
in length. Surely
ong
enough to aid her, yet it was all she
had. Next, she removed a blanket
from her cot and threw it over her
shoulder. There might be need of
this, too—further protection against
the cold.
Heretofore she had moved slowly,
badly aware of her own acts; but
now she was beginning to master' bee -
self again, She mustn't linger here.
She must make her spirit te
waRni rel
life, her muscles spring
Carrying her rope and her blanket,
she went out the door, closed
see rbe-
e-
hind her, and started up
he
glacier.
At last she stood at the very edge
of the yawning seam, staring down
into the unutterable blackness below.
syllables, wan and strange in the me
ante—and it was all the answer she
needed. Ile would fight on for ten
minutes more. He would le
against the cold until she could rescue
him•
"Here's a blanket," she told him
swiftly. "Put it around you, if you
can, without clanger of rolling off."
She dropped him the great covering
she had brought; then in a single,
deeriike motion, she leaped the narrow
crevice. On the opposite side she pro-
cured Ned's axe; then she turned, and
half running, hall gliding on the ice,
sped toward the nearest timber --a
number of stunted spruce two hundred
yards distant at the far edge of the
glacier.
Bess had need of her woodsman's
knowledge now. Never
efofn had
on the
blows been so true, eg
tough wood. Almost at once she had
clone her work and was started back
ith a tough pole, eight feet long; and
Not even light could exist in the dour inches in --' -ter, balanced on
murky depths of the crevice, much less her sturdy shoulder.
fragile human life, The day was not NDtI was stillodtrong enough to set-
ter;
was still gray about she retughet, and
t;but11 g her call when
ye dead, awes
hfr; the oils itself seemed full the dim light still peruitted him to
eels a
And N as
rut
axe, ink lying
to its mouth.see her lay the pole she had .
lying jedt ath the edge of the bridge across the crevice, cutting
chasm, showed when be bad fallen, t
She called his name into the chasm
depths, and some measure of self-
control returned to her when she
heard the weird, rolling echo,
And that cry did not go unheard.
Ned had given up but a few moments
before Bess had come, and her full
voice carried clearly into the strange,
misty realm of semi -consciousness into
which he had drifted, And this man-
hood that had lately grown open himeee
notches m the ice to hol
] it limn.
Swiftly she tied one end of her rope
to the pole and dropped the other to
him.
"Can you climb up?" she eslcotl him.1
"Just watch me," was the answer,
Prom that instant, she knew that
she had won. The spirit behind his
words would never falter, with victory
so nem Ile dug hie moccasins into
rho holes he had hacked in the ice,,
1110 Amherst out., Montreal I walbd not apt him shutlhis ears to this ISSUE No. 38-29
eKeen (Canada) Limited,sobbing appeal, Ills own voice,
Custard Pie
Two and one-half cups milk, 3 eggs, Jetkirla i8 a ereeeatark'Re5Ystcre1
Apple Sandwiches—One ripe apple.
1 stallscelery, 'lt green pepper; chop•
together and moisten with mayon-
naise, Use with white or graham'
bread.
Peanut -Pineapple Sandwiches—Use'
2 parts piieapple to 1 part peanut but-
ter and spread on white bread.
popped Meat and Nut Sandwiches
—Use equal parts chopped. chicken,,
beef or other coldmeat and walnuts,
Moisten with mayonnaise.
Jain and Cheese' Sandwiches —
Spread 1 slice of buttered white bread'
with cream cheese, the other with hon.
or jelly. Sprinkle with nuts and put.
together.
Raisin, Celery and Nut Sandwiches
—Cook 1 cup of chopped raisins 'till
soft, Add 1 cup chopped eelerY,1 cup•
cltoped walnuts, and moisten with 1
teaspoon ot lemon Nice and
mayon-
naise, Keep in cove ed ear'for use.
Here is anothe1 nice flll{ng to have.
on hand: One cup peanut butter, 1%
ems blackberry Jam or jelly, 11/4 cups
alienped raisins, 1 cup pecan or al-
mond meats, chopped.
Cheese Sandwiches—One hal£
cheese, 3 sweet cucumber pickles.
Grind through the food chopper. Thin
out with moyounaise dressing and
place between buttered bread. For 12
Dried Beef Sandwiches
sandwiches, soak 3F, pound dried beef
in cold water one hour. Then dry,
roll in flour and fry in dripping;
place between thin slices of buttered
bread.
Indian Sandwiches — Mix mashed
sardines with yolk of bard -boiled egg
and cooked salad dressing. Spread on
unbuttered bread.
New Sandwiches—Thin out peanut
butter with a little water and add 2
tablespoons ketchup. Mix well and
spread on buttered bread.
Salmon Sandwiches—To 1 cup sal -
mom chopped fine, add 3 tablespoons
cooked salad dressing, Season and
spread on buttered bread.
Date Sandwiches—One-half cup of
dates, 1/4 cup walnuts 'chopped, le cup
sweet cream; mix well all together.
and spread on buttered bread,
Celery Sandwiches—Equal parte 01
finely mired celery ane cheese,
moistened with 2 tablespoons salad
dressing. Season with salt and papri-
ka, spread on thin slices of buttered
bread.
Ham Sandwiches—One pound ham
(ground), 6 hard-boiled eggs, 10 sweet
pickles, eh cup nut meats; mix with
salad dressing and spread on buttered
bread.
Sausage Sandwich --Fry sausage un-
til a nice brown. When cool mix a
little fine cut celery with pepper and
add a few fine cut pickled.` Take thin
slices of buttered bread cover with a
lettuce leaf and place the sausage be-
tween.
NEVER wait to see if a headache
i@l will "wear off.' Why stiffer
when there's always Aspirin? The
millions of men and women who
use it in increasing quantities every
year prove that it does relieve such
pain. The medical profession pro-
nounces it without effect on the
heart, so use it as often as it can
spare you any pain. Every druggist
always has genuine Aspirin tablets
for the prompt relief of a -headache,
colds, neuralgia, lumbago, etc. Fa-
miliarize yourself with the proVere
directions in every package.
SPIRIN
.
la Canada
e'
1st ?� >;auti. u
ll
LACE u
® pie
ver.� �t�7.t®��
"THE most beautiful black you've
sL ever scent" "All my friends
admire my new black silk 1" 'Tire
coat I thought was hopelessly spotted
is now a new, beautiful 'blackl"
(These are typical comments from
wick clp So have used these true; jet
blDiamond Dyes Black never gives
cloth a greenish or bronzy look, as
so many black dyes do. Like Diamond
Dyes Red and all the other Diamond
colors, it 1e easy to use and gives
ft i
s
e
results because
such beautiful
9
rich in pure anilines. It's the am1
ines
in dyes that give them brilliance,
depth and fastness; .make thci i
on smoothly and evenly, wout
•
1.,:`:nd.
Dyes
streaking or spotting. 'And Diamond
Dyes contain. the highest quality
anilines that money can buy. The
white package of Diamond Dy
is the highest quality dye, prepared
for..generai use. It will dye or tint
silk, wool, cotton, linen, rayon, or
any mixture of materials. The blue
package is a special dye, for silk and
ue
valuable artic esrof silk or wo 1 ou can dye with
xesults equal to the finest professional .
work. When you buy—remember this.
The blase package dyes silk or wool
will dye
i e y
a
' pact
only, The white Y
every kind of goods, including silk:
and wook Your dealer has both
Packages.
Dial>no.nd , J) l9 wail n¢¢ M1an l »c
hflt{tes Otilitd tt is listerrc Me We icft
D
limes; the s orce�of their
n invite.
dols% �briltianaeatt per
001001,
Sun Proof
EASY TO USE-DBTTE111 Rbis1JL' s
The Difference
.Mother (lecturing Billy after tb9
„
know company had gone)— Dont you w
the di'ffer'ence between 'sufficient' and:
'enough'?".
,,, t bo
"Sure,
Mother?" r.
answered he le
e
,,sumcienf is Whe
n
a oH
ow
s
moth.
ler thinks it'e time for him to st0)
'eating dessert, 'Enough' is when he
.thlnlcs it is,
Llmlted Edition
Visitor—"l understand you have a;
circulating library?"
Native --"We 'ave, zur, but your
Just too 'late, That young latlys ' coil(
this minute borrowed it,"
5'