HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1944-11-30, Page 7Pr
You'll enjoy our
lend
Orange Pekoe
ALAN
TEA
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Sapphires and Diamonds
by
DOROTHY TROWBRIDGE
CHAPTER XIV
Stanley was looking at her, a
hopelessly perplexed expression on
his face, "Woman, 1 certainly am
taking you on faith. You either
greet your guest and your sister
wearing an engagement ring after
you have broken your engagement,
which, my clear, just isn't done. Or
you greet them properly engaged,
then through a process of mental
telepathy — Maxine says he hasn't
been around and you say he is out
of town — you break the engage-
went, And that, my dear, just can't
be done. But you don't look queer,"
he added judiciously, "You look
plain grand. I knew that yesterday
when I met you on the road, and I
knew it again when I met you in
town and I knew—"
Ho paused: Then his face sud-
denly brightened. -"You promise
that once you have the ring you'll
DOES MAN'S JOB
A girl holds a unique job in Can-
ada's aircraft industry. She is
Betty Harvey, the only feminine
member of the test staff at Boeing
Aircraft of Canada in Vancouver,
where giant Catalina flying boats
are built.
Until recently the operation of
the big plant's two-way communi-
cation with planes on test flights
was done by a man. Now, like
many an important job, it's done
by a girl and Betty does it well.
A plane being tested will check
with her just after it takes off,
keep her informed of its progress
and then call her shortly before
it comes in to let her know the
time it will be back and the list
elf snags -and the equipment needed
1 fix them up.
This information is relayed to
Pat Howard, chief of the depart-
inent, and to the ground crew. By
the time the plane lands every.
thing is in readiness and the
necessary repairs are made with
no time wasted.
give it back to him?"
Peggy nodded quickly.
You're sure you won't let him
talk you into reconsidering the en-
gagement?"
* * *
Peggy shook her head vigorous-
ly,
"Of course I can't imagine any
man ever taking :no for an answer
after'ayou have once said yes, but
1'11 have to trust you. Now you
run along and get your beauty
sleep, or something, since' you
don't need that, Anyway you come
back here at six o'clocic and I
think you may find that there is a
Santa Claus after all."
"You mean you honestly believe
you can find the 'ring this after-
noon?" Peggy jumped to her feet
with her eyes shining. "Have you
any idea where it is? Wherewill
you look?"
He shook his head at her reprov—
ingly. "Don't ask questions. Don't
you remember I told your grand-
mother I had my own method?"
William's small grandson ap-
peared at the entrance before she
could answer.
"Dey's done rang de gong for
dinner long time ago," he an-
nounced. "Mis' Ma'y said for me
to come find yo' all, Ah'se been all
aroun ."
"Why, are you sure?" Peggy
asked in 'surprise. "We didn't hear
any gong."
"No'nt, Ah reckon not. But it's
done rang. An' yo' can sho' hear
dat gong when dey rings it, way
off. Ef yo' mine ain't wand'rin."
Stanley chuckled and threw the
boy a piece of silver that made the
little darkey's face shine like opl-
ishcd ebony, Peggy ran through
the path of the rose garden with
Stanley close behind her. The oth-
ers were still on the back terrace
waiting for then/.
"I'tn sorry," they both began,
breathlessly.
"Peggy must have told you a
lot," Maxine said, with a mischiev-
ous smile.
"She did," Stanley assured her.
"I found out a number' of things
that encourage me immensely,"
"Oh," said Mrs. Horton, in satis-
faction that her granddaughter had
been of some help.
"Ohl" queried Maxine, in' a tone
that implied "Now what?"
"Ohl" cane Nancy's startled
tone, and
"Ohl" exclaimed Peggy.
While they were at the table Mirs,
Horton suggested that she thought
it would be notch better if Mr.
Newton would remain at the house
,while he was looking for the ring.
"I'll have William drive into
town this afternoon and get your
bags, if that arrangement suits
you," she suggested to her guest,
"You are most kind, Mrs, Hor-
ton, I can't tell you what it would
mean to me to stay here fora day
or two. I believe, however, it would
HITLER'S LATEST PHOTO
Said to be the last picture taken of the Fuehrer before his mysterious
refusal to appear in public, the caption accompanying this photo
radioed from Stockholm says it shows Adolph Hitler at his head-
. quarters on September 23 greeting Leon DeGreile, Belgian Quisling
and leader of the Belgian Rexists, whowas awarded the Knights
Cross to the Iron Cross.
be better for me to go into town
and' get ney things myself. 1 am
afraid r have things pretty` much
scattered about my room, and as.
1 have any car it won't take me
Jong. l shall be back very sbortly."
5 R. p
• Maxine and Peggy had exchanged
surprised glances at Mrs. I-Iorton's
invitation to Stanley. Gran, was al-
ways hospitable, but site did not
ask people to visit in her home un-
less site genuinely liked them, and
counted them her friends.
"What do you want to do this
afternoon, Nancy?" Peggy asked
guiltily. She had forgotten all about
having a guest whorl she must
keep entertained. "Shall we go for
a drive?"
"No," Nancy reeled. "To tell
you the truth, Pidge is coming,"
"Pidge?" Mfrs, Horton 'asked,
"Yes, that's the man I am going
to marry."
"Well, it seems to me that we
must alt get busy and find your
ring. We. can't . have you meeting
your fiance without your ring, Don't
stay long in town, will you, Mr.
Newton?"
"No;" he assured her, "I'll be
back in a very short time."
Maxine and Peggy exchanged
worried glances, and Nandy mere-
ly smiled.
"Oh, Nancy, I think that is
splendid," Peggy cried as they left
the table. "That you all have made
up. Did he' call you this morning
while I was out?"
"You'll learn all about it ,this
afternoon when he comes," Nancy
assured her. "I' think I'll go up-
stairs and dress. I don't know just
when he'll come. You don't mind,
do you?" •
"Why of course not. Do what-
ever you like," Peggy told her.
Maxine followed Peggy on to
the terrace, while Gran went up-
stairs for a little rest. Stanley. had
already driven off to town."I wish
we could have found that ring be-
fore this Pidge person comes. He
will arrive bringing Nancy her ring,
and how will we look then? I think
Nancy only told hint to come to-
day to put you on the spot."
(Continued Next Week)
SUNDAY SCHOOL
LESSON
December 3
WORLD-WIDE CHRISTIAN
FELLOWSHIP
John 17: 18-23; I Cor. 1: 1-3; 12:
4-14; 2 Cor. 8: 1-9.
Golden Text.—Neither for these
only do I pray, but for them also
that believe on me through their
word; that they may all be one.
John 17: 20, 21.
The Lord was concerned about
His disciples who were to carry
on His great work, and in this
prayer Jesus tells God the Father
that the disciples are not of this
world even as He Himself was not
of the world. He says they were
sent into the world as the Father
had sent Him into the world. They
were sent into the world to be
His representatives and messen-
gers. They were to he witnesses
of Christ, and to preach the gospel
among all nations.
Jesus prays for their sanctifi-
cation through the Word of God,
which is Divine Truth. He de-
clares that He sanctified Himself
that His disciples might be sancti-
fied through the truth. Christ
sanctified Himself by His own
sacrificial death, and the believer
is sanctified through the offering
of the body of Jesus Christ,
One In Christ
Jesus had been referring to the
eleven, but enlarges to include all
'believers who would believe
through hearing the Gospel, pray-
ing that all those who would be-
lieve down through the centuries
should be sanctified and made one
as He and the Father were one.
"The glory Thou gayest me I
have given thein." These words
were probably spoken in antici-
pation of the clay of His second
coming, when His children will be
glorified together with Him.
Paul, the writer of the epistle to
the Corinthians was Divinely ap-
pointed, called through the will of
God for Jesus Christ. Writing to
those who are sanctified in Christ
Jesus called to Saints -at Corinth and
to all who acknowledge Jesus as
Lord elsewhere. His love for them
is shown through His wish to them
of Grace and Peace from God the
Father, and from the Lord Jesus
Christ. •
Spiritual Gifts
Paul goes on to speak to them
of the gifts of the believers. There
is one spirit, but various gifts ac-
cording to the believer's calling.
Using the body as an illustration
typical of the church, Paul points
out that, as many members such
as legs and arms are important
for the human body, so are be-
lievers of many capacities essential
for the successful operation of the
Church of Christ. .ily one spirit
we are baptized into one body, and
tray we be content to fulfill .the
position 'our gift mt':es us fitted
for, knowing that ,re are all one
in Christ Jesus,
MASS KILLER?
Dr. Marcel Petiot, who was wear -
Ing the uniform of a captain of
the FFI when arrested in a Paris,
France, suburb; is accused of mur-
dering more than 50 persons in
a death chamber. He has denied the
charges and awaits trial.
TABLE TALKS
Tempting Desserts
CRANBERRY PUDDING
2cups cranberries
1 cup water
1 cup sugar
cup raisins
2 cups Quaker Qttix Flakes or
Quaker Corn Flakes
2 tblsps. butter
tbsp. lemon juice
Pick over and wash cranberries.
Cook until tender in the water to
which the sugar has been added.
Grease a baking dish lightly and
place in it a layer of Quaker Quix
Plaices. Cover with half the cran-
berries and half the raisins. Dot
with one-third of the butter and
sprinkle on the lemon juice. Add
another layer of Quaker Quix
Flakes, the remainder of the cran-
berries and raisins and dot with
another third of the butter. Cover
with the rest of the Quaker Quix
Flakes, and dot with remaining
butter, Bake in moderate oven for
about one-half hour. If desired,
cover /with meringue and return
to oven to brown.
PRUNE PUDDING
1 cup Quaker Oats (quick cook-
ing or regular uncooked)
tsp. soda
tsp. salt
VF tsp, cinnamon
lb. prunes (cut fine)
2 eggs (well beaten)
14 cup molasses
30 cup water
1% tbsps, demon juice
Mix Quaker Oats, soda,. salt,
cinnamon and prunes. Combine eggs
molasses, water and lemon juice,
and add to the dry ingredients.
Pour into bettered pudding mold,
cover and steam for 3 hours,
A shirtwaist frock's the mainstay
of a wardrobe, Pattern 4008 is fash-
ion wise, and as figure perfect for
size 48 as for 121
Pattern 4068. conies in sizes 12,
14, 16, 18, 20; 80, 82, 34, 30, 38, 40,
42, 44, 40, 48. Size 30 takes 3 yards
39 -inch fabric.
Send twenty cents (20c) in coins
(stamps cannot be accepted) for
this pattern to Room 421, 73 Ade-
laide St. West, Toronto. Print
plainly size, name, address, style
number,
You Will Enjoy Staying At
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Double, 8:1.50 en.
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Tel, RA. 4185
ream
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Surptisinglyfast, Va-tro-nol works right
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(NOTE: Va-tro-nol is also grand for
relieving.sniffly, sneezy distress of held
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A FeW prays
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- Invitee Restful Sleep
V
CliflOWLES
of SEK FON
By
Gwendoline P, Clarke
• * a • *
1
It's a white world outside. It
looks so strange after the perpetual
fall we have been having. But
still, it isn't really cold so maybe
winter hasn't come to stay. If it
has we are a lot nearer being ready
for it than we were a week ago.
The tractor has gone to its home
In the driving shed until spring
shall come again. And that is
really something. We began to
think the fall ploughing would
never get done with the ground •so
dry as it has been. Certainly it
wouldn't have been done had we
been obliged to depend on the
horses. Weather conditions are
different in England. We had a
letter yesterday which said — "It
Is such a wet, miserable autumn—
so dreadful for the bombed -out
people in London". It also added—
"G—is getting fly -bombs now".
"G—" is that part of England
where both Partner and I were
born and raised.
Weather in Canada is often a
topic of conversation—we like it,
or dislike/ it, as it affects our
work or pleasure. It is very rarely
we are constrained to think of it
in terns of safety or personal hard-
ship. If the winds blow or a deluge
falls we possibly look through the
window and say "Isn't that an
awful storm?"—and we stay under
cover until it is over. There are no
spaces in our homes where win-
dows shoudl be; no gaping holes
in the roof over our heads ... and
yet 'how seldom we realize how
fortunate we in this country have
been, and how much we owe to our
boys who "go down to the sea in
ships". I was thinking that a little
while ago as I packed two extra
ditty bags that were donated by'
the members of our Institute. It
seems such a little thing to do. I
believe the bags are supposed to
value about four dollars each. How
little each, one of us would
miss that four dollars if
we ]sept a box on hand
all the time, dropping into it some
little extra that we had picked up
when we were shopping each week,
until we had enough in our box to
fill a ditty bag. Perhaps you say—
"That is just what I do for my
boy who is overseas." Well, of
course you do, why wouldn't you?
He is your own flesh and blood,
isn't he? And I am sure you get
a lot of satisfaction in doing it,
But a ditty bag for a stranger—
that's something else again. But
those sailor boys have friends and
relatives, you say. No doubt most
of then/ do but I never heard of a
sailor yet who had too many par-
cels, to many ditty bags, or too
many letters. How about it neigh-
bours --there is still time before the
first of December to fill a ditty
bag?
I can hear a lot of hammering
going on down in the cellar. That
is one compensation for a stormy
day—jobs get clone that wouldn't
even be looked at if it were still
possible to wort/ outside. We have
never really _caught up with the
work since our new furnace was
part in last spring. It is something
like buying a new hat—you just
have to get a coat to go with it
and then a pair of shoes, gloves
and a purse, At least that is how it
was in pre -tear Clays. With the
furnace in so many things have to
be changed, Ily fruit shelf frust
be hung in a different cellar; the
potato bin moved; coal bin en-
larged and divided. And as for
the rest of the house—there is no
end to the work I can find to
do. -
Partner has started getting quite
mad at me. He says whenever he
comes in I an: tramping- around
from one end of the house to the
other. No doubt he is right but
then I never had a chance to do it
before. When one side of the house
was akin to the Arctic circle I
didn't stay around very long,
Really the fcrnace is bringing us
more confort than I ever thought
possible. '
And now if the government.
would only matte us the present of
a hydro permit. But it will come—
it will come, if we wait 'long.
enough.
A Lot Of Nylons
In One De -Icer
.A. statistician at the B. F. Good-
rich plant has figured that a sin-
gle installation on a B-20 of the
new Type 11 de-icer — though
thinner and lighter than earlier
models of the pulsating wing -edge
ice breaker — requires, among
other things:
One mile of seaming tape: 5,000.
spools of household sewing thread;
enough nylon for 100 pairs of hose,
and enough "stretchable fabric"
t. make 100 girdles.
This 20 -page booklet
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You will find the new Kellogg's
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inside the top of every package of
Kellogg's ALL -BRAN— thedelicious food
that aids natural regularity. Get
your copy at your grocer's now.
Now E se
C'BDL a ..SORE IROM
PAIS
Here is a clinically -proven, two-
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Take ALLERGI-TABS to "blitz" that
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Take VITAVAX to speed recovery,
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Remember: ALLERGI-TABS. for
speedy relief from colds; VITAVAX
to build immunity to colds: Ask
your druggist. Roberts Biological
Laboratory, Toronto: caa
ISSUE 48-1944
r.
Aspirin Relieves Pain
Almost Immediately!
Drop an Aspirin Tablet in
a glass of water. See it
start to dissolve almost
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this same speed is duplicated in your
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Aspirin is so fast, so effective—above
all, so dependable, that millions of
Canadians have come to swear by it.
Get Aspirin today:
Follow these simple directions:
For pain due to
•
SORE THROAT: Crush 3 tabletoIn 11 glass
of water, gargle deeply.
COLDS ...HEADACHES: Take two Aspirin
tablets with full glassof water.
NEURALGIA ... NEURITIS; Take two tablets
with gloss of water.
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Family sioo of I00. ...... ....now 70e
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