HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1944-01-06, Page 3wn04:1' . C,tOIuGFi,�
CATAltI2HAL.I {STFdi4td
SIMPLE 5ORE THROAT`
CHILDREN
LOVE
VENO'S
DON'T DELAY -
BUY A BOTTLE TODAY!
.re
Blitz Children
Overcome Fear
U
Children Lose Nervousness
der Expert Care In Foster
Parents' Nurseries
The war may predate a gene-
ration of neurotic children, as
some scientists predict, but the
• specialists who have cared for.
Britain's blitz babies do not think
so.
The staff of the two Foster
Parents' Nurseries in London has
a way of putting it that epitom-
izes much. "The best shelter," it
flays, "is the shelter of the mind."
One mother, a comfortable
and very placid woman, the
mother of eig: children, when
asked whether her rooms had
been damaged by bombing, an-
swered with a beaming smile,
"Oh, no, we were ever so lucky.
We had only blast and my htivs-
hand fixed the window frames
again,"
"Blast which removes the win-
dow frames, not to mention :the
window panes, can be a very 1n
comfortable expereince.
Sore Throat
Swallow one Parade' tablet. Gargle
with two tablets dissolved in water.
Go to bed and rest and sleep.
Soon the pains and aches disappear
and you may avoid a disagreeable
told.
Paradol is a fast relief for head-
aches, neuralgia, toothache, rheuma-
tic and sciatic paine. It is pleasant
20 use and leaves no disagreeable
after effects.
Paradol does not disappoint.
IF BACK ACHES
HELPS LIMEYS
Do you feel older than you are
or suffer from Getting Up Nights,
kiackache Nervousness, leg Pains,
Rheumatic Pains, Burning, scanty
or frequent passnaes? If so, re-
member that. your Kidneys are vital
to your health- and that these
oymptoms may be due, to Kidney
and Bladder trouble =in .such
eases Cystex usually g es prompt
and joyous relief by ielping the
Kidneys clean out poisonous ex-
cess acids and wastes, You have
everything to gain and nothing to
lose in trying Cynte. The iron
clad money -back agreement assures
a refund Of your money on return
of empty package unless fully
satisfied. Don't de-(
(: e t Gynicx
(Siss-tex frown your
Helps Clean
druggist today.
Kidneys
Mothers Example
By way of coni rest there was
the mother of a 1!t3}ing bgy nam-
ed Jim. She net e J -pt bo bed so
long as an an rearning last-
ed, but stood at» *'i'loor trem-
bling, insisting th n -boy, only
five, stand besid er. Separated
from her, he lost almost all his
nervous habits and showed no
special alarm when the sirens
sounded.
"'fhe point is," explained a
staff member, "that children rely
so much upon the adults around
them. So long as the grown-up
remains calm so does the child."
Apart from fitting a child into
tee next best thing to his own
home—a nursery where there is a
continuing happy family — the
therapy employed is mainly an
application of the well-known
principle of child psychology that
the best way to overcome fright
is to play over and over again
the experience, that caused fear.
Thus, the children beyond the
baby stage have taken up air ,
rain games, and more recently
commando games, the 1943 equiv.
alent of "cops and robbers" or
"cowboys and Indians."
Grouse and Quail
Scarce In Ontario
Sportsmen who have visited
Northern Ontario this fall report
that the ranks of the partridge
(the American ruffed grouse)
are becoming pretty well deplet-
ed, according to The Chatham
News. Some years ago this splen-
did game bird, after a period of
protection, increased in num-
bers and afforded some good
hunting. Here is this section of
Ontario they have been scarce•
this fall, Possibly the severe
weather and heavy snowfall ex
perieneed last winter, which cov-
ered their food supply, destroy-
ed some of them- Probably a good
many others fell victim to the
gunners, If the ruffed grouse
are again to become plentiful
in the swamps and on the wood-
ed ridges they must be left un-
disturbed another year or two.
As to the quail or bob -white, it
is very questionable whether
there should again be an open
season for thsi handsome game
bird whose habitat in Ontario
practically is confined to the
southern corner, The quail falls
easy prey to the gunner, and is
but 111 -equipped to make much
of a fight for existence. The
huntsmen could well leave the
bob -whites unmolested, and con-
fine their hunting to the part-
ridge and the pheasant, which
are better adapted to look out
for themselves.
Armistice Coach
Said Destroyed
The newspap4r Aftonbladat
quoted Swedish eyewitnesses as
saying that last week's raids on
Berlin had destroyed the famous
French Compiegne railway coach
in which the 1918 and 1940 arm-
istices were signed.
The eyewitr esses said the
Zeughaus (war museum) on Ber-
lin's Ureter Glen Linden, contain-
ing this and other war trophies,
was leveled. The Germans sign-
ed their armistice in the coach at
the end of World War 'I. In a
1'•eatrical gesture, Hitler forced
the French to sign there in 1940.
QUEEN OF TRANSPORTS
Seldom photographed since she donned war paint and started
ferrying Allred expeditionary forces to global battle fronts, the giant
S.S. Queen Mary is pictured as loaded to the gunwales with troupe
she recently entered an unnamed port,
CHAPTER XI
SYNOPSIS
Dave Bruce, out of a job, ar-
rives at Wilbur Ferris' Cross -Bar
ranch. Curran, the foreman, prom.
Ises him a Job If he can break a
horse called Black. Dawn. When
ho succeeds, he discovers Curran
expected the horse to kill him,
A girl named Lois rides up, angry
with Dave for • breaking. ''"her"
horse. She refuses to speak to
Dave even when he uses his sav-
ings to pay off the mortgage on
the small ranch she shares with
her foster father, a man named
Hooker. When Hooker Is killed by
a shot fired through the window,
Lois has him arrested for murder.
Faced with almost certain hang-
ing, Dave is awaiting his trial
when Curran goes to call on Lois.
"Welt, Miss Lois, this shore is
bad news," Curran said, and Lois
could see that his face was black-
ened and his lip badly swollen
from the beating that Dave had
given him the day before.
"It doesn't make any difference
now," said Lois gravely. "Hook-
er's dead, I guess you fellows are
going to hang Dave l3ruee:'
"You heteba we are!" shouted
Curran. "We don't aim to have
no dirty murderers linin' and fat -
said Lois. "You were never a spe-
cial friend of mine, as far as I
remember."
"Maybe T could be," said the
foreman. "Maybe I've tried to be.
Listen. I guess you know I stand
in putty veli with Mr. Ferris.
Fact is, he couldn't git rid of me
even if he wanted to. It ain't no
secret to you that Lonergan's got
the mortgage on the Cross -Bar,
and put the in to run it?"
a * *
Lois was silent, and Curran eon -
tinned, "1 shouldn't be s'prised if
I was to be the owner of the Cross -
Bar one of these days. Half -own-
er, a.nyways. And dist time aln't
so far away. 1: been watchin' you
for a good while, Miss Lois.
You're crowed up to be a woman
now. It ain't fair to yoreself,
HAW up here in the hills and run-
nin' as wild as a scrub pony. And
now Hooker's gone, yuh can't go
on livin' here alone."
"What d'you want me to do
about it?"
"I'll tell you what t been think-
In',"
hinkin'," answered the foreman, su-
premely confident. "How about
you and me gittin' hitched? You'll
find yoreself Irvin' like a queen,
compared to this."
"That's sure some picture
you're drawin', err. Curran," sus -
"You try that trick again, Mr. Curran, and I'll set the herd on you."
tenin' in the jail at the expense
of the town, and saddlin' us with
the cost of a jury trial at Hamp-
ton. We always acted on that prin-
ciple, and we're always goin' to do
so. There's goin' to be some fun
tonight, Miss Lois."
"I'll he there," said. Lois.
"Meanin' yuh want to see the
feller dance?"
a * *
Lois nodded. Curran looked at
her curiously at first; then, as his
eyes took in the lines of her slen-
der body, his face flashed. He
took another step toward her and
stood looking down at her. She
hardly reached to his shoulder.
"What yea aimin' to do now
yore dad's dead?" he asked, as the '
sheriff had clone.
"I haven't made my plans,"
Lois answered. "I reckon I know
how to mind my business, Mr.
Curran."
Curran flushed. "Vi'hy the Mis-
ter?" he asked. "And how come
you call yore dad Hooker?"
"Maybe you can tell as well as
I can," answered Lois.
That was Curran's first Intima-
tion that she knew Hooker had
not been her father. He had sense
enough not to pursue the sub-
ject, but it acted like the fuse -cap
on a stick of dynamite, clinching
his resolution,
"You never acted very warm to-
ward me, did yuh?" he asked.
"I don't know why I should,"
wered Lois. "Only it don't seem
to register somehow. I'd rather
have my broncs."
Curran glared at her, a self-pos-
sessed little figure, standing erect
in her chaps and stained over-
alls. With one Band he could have
swung her into the air. Desire
and thwarted will united in the
resolve to overcome here, to break
her, as Dave Bruce had broken
Black Dawn.
Ile seized her in his arms and
tried to press his lips to hers,
A. resounding slap reddbn.ed the
foreman's cheek. Lois broke away,
confronting him with fists clench-
ed and Heaving breast.
"You try that trick again, 1'!i'.
Curran, and 1'11 set the herd on
you;" she said,
Curarn's glare had something of
fear in it. IIe had seen enough
of Lois' strange power over the
wild bronca.
He turned away, went slowly
'melt to where he had left his
horse, climbed into the saddle.
"You think over what I said," lie
called, "You'd be crazy to turn
down a proposition like that.
Think you'll be gittin' a better
one, huh? 1'11 see yuh at the
hangiii', and 1'11 be amain' beak
here for my answer soon."
Lois watched him ride away.
She felt perfectly secure. A
whistle from her would have
bronght the herd running head -
SURPRISE CREAM FILLING
1% tablespoons butter '/e teaspoon salt
1% tablespoon s BENSON'S or 1% tablesponos lemon juice
CANADA CORN STARCH 4 cup shredded cocoanut
is cup milk or .% cup crisp cooked cereal
a/� cup icing sugar or iia cup stale cake cynmlbs
Melt butter in saucepan; blend in corn starch, stirring to a
smooth paste. Add unlit and stir until boiling point is reached. Allow
to boil for 2 minutes, stirring constantly. Add icing sugar, salt and
lemon juice. Blend thoroughly. Cool and stir in cocoanut, crisp cer-
eal or stale cake crumbs, before putting between, layers of SALLY'S
LAYER SPONGE CAKE.
There's No Short
Cut to Victory
For nearly Igo years we have
been bombing German oities many
times more heavily than London
was ever bombed. The Nazis
haven't yet shownone definite .
sign of oraeking, warns the Fin-_
anelal Post;
Three months ago we landed on
the mainland of Italy: At no time
have we registered a sustained
advance of more than a "few miles.
Along the whole coast of Western
Europe the country is mined and
studded with grins of all calibres
to a depth of 'a hundred. miles.
To these formidable defences has
now been added winter.
These facts do not point to any
short ant to victory. As Prime'
Minister Churchill warned: in Lon-
don the other day, there 15 00 In-
dicatlori that we can win this war
without a staggering bill in blood
and treasure.
It is possible that Germany
might collapse before the armies
of the Western democracies are
called upon to face an Armageddon
in Eastern Europe. But we would
be blind fools to count on such
an outcome; toease in our war
effort, to weaken our national
capacity to withstand horror and
disaster by assuming that we are
now pretty well out of the woods.
Air Travel Speedy
To Airman's Home
Here is an example of speedy
air travel. Squadron Leader D. S.
Florence, D.F.C., now serving as
a navigator in the Atlantic Serv-
ice operated by Trans -Canada
Air Lines for the Canadian Gov-
ernment, not long ago reached
his home in .Edmonton just 52,
hours after leaving a North Brit-
ish airport—and only 37 hours
were spent in travelling, times
down at Montreal, Ottawa, To-
ronto, North Bay, Winnipeg,
Lethbridge and Calgary making
up the remainder. The air dis-
tance covered in the trans-At-
lantic crossing and TransCan-
ada Air Lines flights represent-
ed approximately 5,600 miles.
long with Black Dawn leading, a
fighting, tearing, kicking, crunch-
ing' fury,
runch-ing'fury,
"I hate him," site said to her-
esif. "You're bad medicine, Mr.
Curran. I'm glad that you got
beaten up yesterday."
(Continued Next Week)
DRESS UP YOUR BED
w;;
�-- r,�peg o o iii', , � ' s
j;i� ,l lunabyri %'
• D®o
to
cl
c
949
It's smart and the newest way
to add glamour to your bedroom
—the large pillow on your bed.
This lovely one of simple pop-
corn medallions with matching
edging will go with any type of
spread. It positively gives it new
beauty! Make a dresser scarf to
match. Pattern 676 contains dir-
ections for square and edging;
list of materials required.
Send twenty cents in coins
(stamps cannot be accepted) for
this pattern to Wilson Needle-
craft Dept., Room 421, 73 Ade-
laide St. West, Toronto. Write
plainly Pattern Number, your
Name and Address.
IN Toronto It's The
Stn Regis Hotel
o Every Room with Bath,
Shower and Telephone.
O Single, $2.50 up—
Double, $3.50 up.
e Good Food, Dining and,
Dancing Nightly.
Sherbourne at Carlton
Tel. RA. 4135
ISSUE No. 2-1944
Whole -Grain Quaker Oats Has
the Vitality Element That's.'
'''Short" In Duration Diets!
(Yes, Whole -Grain Oatmeal leads
every natural cereal in protein—
the grea tvitality factor that's meat's
main element. Children must have
it for normal. growth: Adults must
have it for stamina and to help
Ifight fatigue.
No other natural cereal, hot
cold, restored or not, gives your
family theprotecdonofreol Whole.:
Graig Oatmeal So serve
this' hot, delicious
Whole -Grain breaks
',tut each morning.
Get a big econorm
kat package at your
igeocer's today!
of Canada mites°�$
"Home -From -Home"
For Johnny Canuck
Early this year Canadian air-
men were posted to a spot near
a picturesque Yorkshire village
with old-world green, Maypole,
duck pond and homely inn, says
The Leeds Yorkshire Post. They
found their way in due course to
the inn, where the landlady was
Interested to hear them talking
wistfully of corn -on -the -cob • and
other delicacies of their home-
towns. She bought some maize
seeds, planted them in the 'garden
behind the inn, and eventually
gathered and cooped genuine cobs
for the delighted Canadians.
This is just one of the many
stories the Canadian airmen tell
about the inn where they enjoy
the warmth of Yorkshire hospit-
ality when off duty. Many of
them. dratted away, come hack to
spend their Ieavo in the village
—and the inn. It is a hone -from.
home for thein.
ikh Troubles
Mahe up your mind today that
you are going to give your -skin.
a rens thence to get well, Goto
any good drugstore to -day and get
an original battle of Moone's
Emerald 011—it lasts many days
because it is highly concentrated..'
The very first application will
give you rellef—the itching or
Eczema is quickly stopped—erup-
tions dry up and scale off in a very
few days. The same is true of
itching Toes and Peet, Barber's
Itch, Salt Rheum and :other skin
troubles.
Remember that. Moon's Emerald
011 is a clean powerful penetrating
Antiseptic Oil that does not stain
or leave a greasy residue. Com-
plete satisfaction or money 'back.
MOO
ILES
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Name
Address"
Olty 9trdr..