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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1943-02-18, Page 744. z'a•?cr%1S1:•`y�,,•'`Xr %.G.�•'Hy2'''0 ...r'i'.. I'VE FOUND A GRAND WAY TO CORRECT MY CONSTIPATION! rN .'°2•,;:,i t;5ti fi,.ti.'s .? * ii : ¢„:?Sk' '....4:M.. ,PV?.?4b4 'a2•�i'.ana:.•'. 2.4.x\ }.w A 11 Here's the sensible, enjoyable means that so many people take to correct the cause of constipation due to lack of the right kind of "bulk" in the diet: they eat ALL- BRAN re&ularlyl This delicious cereal keeps thou: sands regular naturally ... stops their trouble "before it starts" eliminates their need of harsh per. gatives that give only temporary- relief, Try RELLOCrG'S ALL.- BRAN, in cereal or breakfast muf- fins, drink plenty of water, and see why it's called the "better way". Ask your grocer for KELLOGG'S ALL -BRAN today. In two conve. nient sizes; and in individual serving packages at restaurants. Made by Kellogg's in London, Canada. 40 SERIAL STORY SPECIAL INVESTIGA ■ OR BY BLANCHE ROBERTS THE STORY: Judith Kingsly and Tom Burke, employees of an airplane factory, are en route to the west coast. When foreign agents kidnap Toni from an air- liner,. 'Judith" leaves the plane with the new bomber plans which Torn; lfnad slipped to )ser.' 'rair'sued bg th!,Nagents, she finds .Tom .in a cabin, leaves him fighting ,with his captors, thumbs tivo rifles and, after many narrow escapes, eldddes e pursuers and reaches San ego. WHERE IS TOM? • CHAPTER VII -Vas after 1 o'clock in the d'fternoon when Judith opened her tired :and swollen eyes. She :hailii'Vi into ided to sleep so' long, Tut once asleep she could not *ken, Every bone and muscle 'ii her exhausted body ached. It took;; all her strength and will power* get 'ot1t of bed. She Walked 0—the window and looked down on the crowded street. For no apparent reason her heart quickened its beat' and intuition told her the car marked - across from the hotel belonged to ,:the . spy,. ring, A man walked slowly 'tip ' and' clown the street, :occasionally• glancing at the hotel .entrance. "They Made found out in some way that 1 em here." A gleam of light came Into her eyes ea she turned from the window to the . telephone. "Please send me a maid," she told the ellen at the desk. And while she waited, she mused: "I've •come this 'far ail my own and 1 can go the rest of the way: I'll delieterethese plans in person and nothing is going to ,stop me." To the maid she said, "Could 1 rent ea uniform from you?" "Oh,'yes, miss," the girl replied eagerly at the sight of the bill in Judith's hand. "Pll get it for you now." a * * Judith left the hotel by the servants' entrance Without being t accosted and found a cab. An hour later she entered the man- ager's office at the west coast factory. He looked up, startled at seeing a smiling, redheaded maid stand- ing there. He cleared his throat while Judith enjoyed his embar- rassment. "I don't blame you for being amazed, Mr. Mathews. I'm Judith Kingsly of the eastern office. I have the plans Mr. Burke was bringing to you. Sorry they are late in arriving." Mathews got hastily to his feet and cane around the desk to take her hands. There was deep ad- miration• in his eyes. "You got through 1" he ex- claimed, overjoyed. "When we heard Tong' Burke was missing we had just about given up hopes of the. •plans, Mr. Watson has been frantic about.; you. You'd iiettel call :the home officei't; lit avr ay: Here"—he pushed her info a chair ---"I'll have • the call 'put right: throt;gh for yon:'' , 1 ,r F' "Ilut. twbat happened to "•Gong Btir14 ?' Ji}';flint asked fearfully. • E? Look out for Trouble With •:.Your .MONEYS • If ypur back aches -or- if you have distuibedsleep, burning or smarting, look out fol' trouble, This condition is a sure sign that. your kidneys 'ate fbt'frilly,, • ridding your blood of poisonous acidd' el and wastes. When the kidneys slow, up, wastes collect Backache, dizzy shells;' puffy eyes hiid rheumatic pains may follow, ' Your kidneys ween! he 1-•ancl there •is ss time -tried, proven way to help them known as GOLD MEDAL ilaarlem Oil Cahebles14These Capsules contain Brite; fully'li'neasured,ateautieles o tliaE r9ldbls+ know,i„eiiur et;r, balled Defteli ]drops You will find their: udfibn fest' and effective. Be sure.you get GOLD MEDAL Haarlem 011 Capsules, the genuine and original Dutch Drops .parked in Canada. Get a 40c.package from your druggist. , a ISSUE No. 8-4;3 "is hr all right°" * Mathews shook his head slowly: "We don't know. . The• plane was located yesterday and brought in. The passengers told us what Happened before and after your disappearance, ' but they were all . hazy about the looks of' the nien." "The last time I saw Tom," said Judith, her voice low and her eyes misty, -"he was fighting with his captors. He ordered nie to leave. I had the plans. He dropped them in my seat when they were taking him .off the liner. The spies had hhn in a Shack near where .the plane was brought down." "The FBI men found the shack, It was empty, of course," `02 course," she repeated. ".They would•have Tom -with thein. So he nest be all right," she said, more, for her own benefit;, than for'the manager's. When the' long. distance .cast came through, Judith gave Wat- son a brief resume of her ex- periences. "1 didn't know I was letting you in for all that," Watson told her contritely. "I want you to stay out there in California for a''rest. Three weeks' vacation— and a raise, too." She 'hung up, and lifted sad, speculative.eyes to Mathews. Blit .immediately another idea made her -eyes sparkle with ad- venture. "I can help find Tom Burke and the spy ring. I'm sure of it." "How?" She shrugged her slim shoul- ders. "Just leave it to me, Those spies have been on my trail kcon- s-stantly..._Tust because .1 haves de- livered. the plans doesn't 'mean they will let Inc go.,free. I rather imagine they'd like to get hold of mE-if,•,for no other reason than to Put me out of the picture." * * , �a . Mathews sat silent and eon- cesned. Judith walked to a win- dow and looked out. "I wouldn't be surprised if someone was waiting for me right now." `,,' "We wouldn't think of letting you take such a chance," Mathews exploded. "I'm going to send you back east in a private plane from the field here." Judith shook her head. "Tong's life may be at stake," she said crisply, then added sniil- iugly, "Besides, I've just been promised three weeks' vacation." "Let's hear your plan, Miss Kingsly." "Those men won't let Tom go nob while be knows things they can use, or Whirr's" he knows thein' hideouts, If 1 earl help the Fed- eral men catch the spies and res- cue Torn, I think it is my duty— a duty I want to perform." She pat a paned •on Mathews" mrrn, "The only way to find Burke gwiickly is for them to take me, You can have someone trail me, can't you?" He nodded, but there was a deep frown between his eyes. "I don't like it," he said stub- bornly. "There is no telling what mighthappen to you." "I think . T realize that more than anyone else," she answered. "There is no guarantee that they won't kill you before you can . be rescued. We just can't take that risk." "I insist, Mr. Mathews," she told him firmly, "I'll do it any- way, you know," she added de - tautly. "Torn . Burke would do the same for me and not even ask ',permission;" "'Aiay man who had ever laid 'eyes on . that red head of yours 'would fight -for you, Miss Kings - 1y!. She blushed, but continutf14'" her .afgument. "You see, I know three to ;the ;naen in the ring -the ones on the plane, •.If they aren't caught, I'd live in terror all niy life,- :.; They would know I could identify them and they would want me out of the way. And as long as they are. at large, our country is in real danger." Mathews threw up his hands. "All right," he laughed. "I never could win an argt;unent•with a pretty woman. I'll get in touch with the government men right now." • She grinned, elated over her ,quick victory. As soon as he put . through bis call, she said: "I'd like some money. My boss •said nothing was too good far me.". , "That's •right,• .young lady. We will take down the serial numbers just•to be on the safe side. They might take it away front you," "And I'd like a new outfit to wear, This maid's uniform doesn't do me justice: She Ieughed' "I want to at least look goy best if I an to be captured by • the ens emy. I night . be able to flirt my way out. Can you order some- thing sent here, right away?" "Here" — he handed her the telephone -- "get anything' you want. I'll send my secretary to help you." Just before 5 o'clockshe was ready to leave the plane factory. She said goodby to the Manager, a -bright smile on her .face, and walked out, head: up.,: She. knew there was a Mari., watbiiing her, ready to take' up`tiie`0iil if any - think happened to hesbe'Tett secure and unafraid as settee-' lied into a waiting taxi. , "Take the ocean way 0r1t Ate the hotel," she told ttlie riven: She did not even look back tb see if she was being followed; . Continued Next Week) Hun Version The German ,high command's version of the 'retreat from Tri- poli, as broadcast by the Nazi radio,. said:. "The German -Italian panzer., army disengaged". itself last iii ht from the enemy, ac- 'c`tirding...,te plan; after warding off heavy enemy attacks. ' In the course of this movement toward the ••,west; Tripoli was evacuated •nfithout fighting after all supplies and war materiel had been re- moved and the harbor destroyed." EIGHT POINTED 'STAR DOILY .,Ciroehetc'd doiliee with a central slat design are popular ai:d retluii o little time to create. Pattern No. • 11713 contains complete • instructions. To o.>•:c1er pattern: Write, or send above picture with your nanw and tcidieiss with 15 cents in eoiu or stamps to Carol Aiwes, Rollin 121, 78 Adelaide St. West, Toi"'oeto. • Optical Glass Production In Canada Heavy Precision instruments Also Made In Dominion 'Until a year and a half ago Canada lead. never manufactured :optical glass; nor were precision instruments for war purposes made in the 'Dominion, Research Enterprises, a Government-owned company, melted • its first optical glass in June, 1941, and is now producing many thousands of pounds of It a day. Canada needed more optical glass than ever before just at the time, in 1939, when its importation from Germany stopped, Great Sri - taro and the United States, the only two possible suppliers left, had their hands full meeting their own needs. Therefore, Canada set up a crown company which i,s • making history today in an intri- cate production field never before entered upon in this country. •6,000 Workers Employed Output of optical glass, however, is by no means the full span of Re- search Enterprises' - activities. The amazing instruments this country turns out Include gun sights, dial sights, periscopes, range finders, fire -control devices and other work on the secret list. More than 6,000 workers are employed in this crown company's huge plant, 60 per cent. o1 whom are teehuiciau's or highly skilled workers—a higher percentage by ,far than in the usual munitions plants. At the same time, in au. old ga'ra,ge building in Montreal, a small concern is making test tubes, ampules and other lines of ruedical glassware no longer avail- able from the regular foreign sup- ply sources. The work there is car- ried on 'under the guidance of a small group of highly skilled glass- makers from Czecho-SIovakia, who were brought to Canada after • Munich. These Girls Hear Big Secrets First • Handle Messages To and From British Battlefronts Four of them were on duty when Rommel's rout began, says a writer in The London Chronicle. They had to keep the secret be- fore the Cabinet was told and the censors had decided on the re- lease of the story. These girls assist the Royal Corps of Signals, :and have been doing the job only four months. They work in shifts throughout the 24 Hours. Through their head- quarters pass all communications to and from the War Office to British troops, whereever they inay be, By special permission I visited this secret H.Q. You go down a wide concrete stairway' through gastight steel doors. It seems a' long time since you left daylight, It is warm, cosy and air condi- tioned, and the hunt of a dis- tant dynamo fills the air, The girls sit in one long room at chromium -edged control and switch panels. Wires. from any secret .radia reeeiving posts are carried be- low the street in steel -clad con- duits to the signal room. Cypher messages from Cairo and the other battlefronts, re- ceived on aerials at lonely sites, are passed to this secret "sta- tion." found Jean, Margaret and IioIndfd Kathleen on duty at their robot- like apparatus. ,lean, who has a brother in the North Africa fighting, told me they have to be very accurate. "You see," she explained, "Wavelengths are changed .at var- ious hours of the day to ensure secrecy, and gabd reception- and switching have to be timed to • a second. "• Margaret is chiefly concerned with the reception . of radioed battle' pictures. Not all of these are for publication in the press. -- Some • are confidential pictures of Axis tanks and guns, aircraft and ammunition. There are'direbt transmissions from Cairo tri Lon- don and New York. • • Margaret has a' sweetheart in Cairo who .is on the radio "can- nel" to her every day. "But I dare not talk to hint;" she said, "for this' channel' is only for the transnnission of pictures." Small Boys Help .Ora English Farms In some, Ontario cities objection' days been raised to the enlistment of school pupils in farm work. In this connection the editov' bf 'The Fanners Advocate has received an interesting letter • from' H. 3, Purser who farms near Maiden- head in England. He says: "Would it interest you to know that. since your visit about 50 small boys, aged 10 to 14 years, have helped inc with' my small staff, to har- vest 250 tons of potatoes and 500' hits of niangels, all put safely into .clamps for the winter?" mow: -,y NO WE CAN sUY WAR SAVINGS STAMPS AT Ti1E GROCERY STORE NOW IIM,av Riese 'ere eels nett i.0O1C, MOT,IE R - I'VE GOT THG. WAR WINGS STAMP) eles rAI.,. THAT'S 6WE11,CH01S$1E, 14- SAVE 16 STAMPS AND 'YOU'LL GET A$SCERT1tiCATE EAT MORE OF THE NOURISHING FOODS t TA + LE iii ar,`:.LKS SAD)E B. CHAMBERS The Grads Field Products made from. grains such as wheat, oats, rye, barley, corn and others are known as cer- eals. Flour is one of the cereal prod- ucts and bread made from flour is one •of the main items in our meals. Cereals and bread are the cheapest foods in our diet, That: is why a generous amount is in chided in the literature prepared and recommended by the Cana- dian Red Cross. The' amount of food value we get. from bread and cereal in re- turn for money depends on: (a) the !rind we buy (b) the form in which we bay it. , Both points are important, but particularly the first one. Refined cereals such as white flour have had the most valuable parts of the grain taken away. When we eat white bread we are not getting. the most health -giv- ing parts of the grain. Whole grain products have Vitamin B which is needed for good health and growth, and iron for the blood. This is the—reason eason doctors recommend that everyone have at least half whole wheat bread and whole grain cereals in the diet, The less money you have for food the more whole wheat bread you should buy. However, even if you have unlimited money you should still buy half whole grain products. You can start today buying better health for your family by following the above suggestions. When the food budget is lim- ited it is cheaper to buy the cer- eals in hulk. Even in the summer the chil- dren need a dish of hot cereal at breakfast. A certain amount of care is required to produce a tasty dish of cereal. Cereal that is lumpy and has no salt does not appeal to the child and may be the cause of his dislike, of this nourishing food. Following are general , direc- tions for cooking some ,of , the common cereals: 1. Lightly grease the pap (up- per two inches) in which cereals are to be cooked, This prevents }roiling over, 2. Have water boiling and add salt. = :, • . :;3. Sprinkle cereal gradually hit =the iigiiing water. Cook 5 iniiiutes. eei. Place in double boiler or slightly larger saucepan filled two-thirds full of boiling tater. : ';Cereals may be partly' cooked the night before. To prevent skin .• ,ftd,nting doves ;rtsith ,thin layer of cold water. •`To save fuel cook terpin as directed for 5 minutes. °;1'luce over boiling water, 'remove :from stove, wrap up,:»}iell 'Mid -spat in warm place, 4,1Ali cereals may be cooked in f¢f elesa cooker. ' ,•, , "Cracked wheat, whole brown rice and other coarse cereals may be • soa.ked over -'night to reduce cooking time and improve the flavor. Next week --- sonic twee] re- cipes and r:aey Graham ),read. Mas Chambers welcomes t,er:tmato tellers from Interested readers She is pieased to revolve *uggeHtiinitn. On topics for Ter mouton,tnnil':ts vn rend), 1.0 listen to Your ::pet peeves." !Requests for regi loos or special menus ore in order, Address your letters to "iIIIss Stalin R. xa,am• bsrs, ::I West lielelai,le Street, Tao - con to,'" a-costo," weal atntuprd Ae11'-terdra9!.54) envelope it yep wish a reels-. Coventry, Eng„ is to stools the library of the nen' cruiser H.M.S. Coventry. , "He That Killeth With the Sword?� "Barbaric crimes;". said Presi- dent Roosevelt, must',, "meet with fearful retribution." The Arch- bishop of York has just urged the British Government to make it clear that "when the hour of de- liverance comes retribution will be dealt out not only on the cold- blooded and cowardly brutes who order these massacres, but also on the thousands of underlings who appear to be joyfully and gladly- carrying out these cruel- ties." An occasion might well be taken to repeat and emphasize the warning Mr. Eden gave in the summer; by their support and toleration "the German people ac- cept ever-increasing responsibility for the actions committed in their name," The savagery which they practice at the orders of the F uehrer has roused against them invincible forces. Every state every nation has learnt that there can be no peace, no justice,- • no civ itization while the German people worship their power cult, The free world will not Iay down, its ar:ns till it has enforced the law: "He that leadeth' in cap- tivity shall go captive; he that kilieth with the sword must be killed with the sword." Ski Trbops to Wear Wolverine Parkas C' nadian ski troops will Iiays. parkas trimmed with white wolv- erine e fur beeause wolverine is the only kind that- does not become froi.teci, the Munitions. Depart- ment said. Tlie white is to allow it to blend with the snow. More than 20,000 parkas have been ordered. dsi . kik of it .:. one of the fastest pain r'elie's known today for fess than V a tablet g . No need now to suffer needlessly from headaches,,, neuritic painyicii' neuralgia. For to - ,day, ,ygu cart; get real Aspirin • one of the fastest rel}efs from oaii t ever known —for less than one cent i a 'tablet! So get �tliiy bargains today„See how..4spirin goes to work ,irtiost instantly -to .1.itt'e..aaeNreie headache or pain of t{euirjjis'in,tninutes. Millions now use, it and heai'•tiiy recommend it. At •this; low price,why take anything else? Get the big economy bottle of Aspirin at your druggist's today. Look for This Cross Every tablet you buy must be stamped "Bayer” in -the form of a cross, or it is NOT Aspirin. 'And don't let anyone tell you it is. Aspirin is made ,in Canada and is the trademark of The Bayer Company„ Limited. 8 A BAYER E R sAitotstAtsokso"soits