HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1943-12-30, Page 2• „ �. TBE1, .SS
"HAPPY LANDING N'V�R
110
*c+^.L+YA,'zv''aS ,rc.rh`.2,w, a ♦ :•: .t.. <w . 7
.'l ff Sask.in , captain of a. Royal
Flying Officer Tupper of Saskatoon,
Air Force Liberator, eMediterranean
war z zone. During operations,one
3. disorder during a.
recent flight in the
ed the bomb -doors was Cornfaco tubed to fly his aircrafteaa
edge of the'port tail unit. Tapper
dis-
tance of 250 miles and landed safely. Above, Flying Officer Tupper
examines the damage after, grounding.
We Can Get Along
On Less Butter.
Nobody should get excited over
the possibility that the butter
ration in Canada may have to be
out this winter, as it was last,
rays The Ottawa Journal.
If there isenough
half poundter
to give every person
per week we must, and can, get
along on less. That is all there
is to it.
Look Cheerful!
Actually war rations of Cana-
dians have been maintained at a
very' high level, and we have
small cause to grumble. To be
fari there has been extremely
little grumbling, and most of that
has been concerned with distri-
bution rather than with quantity.
So whether for part
winter we get eight ounces or
only five and one-third of butter
each per -week is not a matter of
terrific moment. So long as all
are treated alike we shall do very
nicely on whatever is available.
CHAPTER X
Pave was hustled back to the
cell and the door 'slammed ltpon
him. The two men went out. ;An
hour passed, during which Dave
amused himself by looking out the
window, Mescal certainly seemed
to be wrought up over the killing.
fol: there were little groups of
people in •thb streets, arguing, and
all looking toward .the jail.
After an hour Sheriff Coggswell
•
came back with a pitcher of water
and a plate of food: He openee;the
door cautiously, set the pitcher.
down inside, then the plate, .and
slammed the door again r o
"You seem to think I'm a
desp'rate man -killer, sheriff, Dare
suggested.
"Krell, I'll say yuh done yore bit
to keep up that impression since:`,
yuh struck Mescal," answered
Coggswell. "And yore talkie? that
way to Mr. Lonergan was just•nfiain
crazy. He's the coroner."
"Seems to me he holds a good
many offices in this town," s°r,d
Dave.
"You said something there,' I-
ler. What you said to him in .ere
courtroom, coupled with yore
tin' in and payin' that money11',.9r
Hooker, means a sure verdirw
against You." Dave,
sheriff,"said
"suppose I was to convince re.; I
didn't kill Hooker?"
"yuh couldn't do it, but ''it
wouldn't make a mite of differewle
anyway. I got my duty to perforin
without fear or favor.* +
Sheriff Coggswell had impreesed
ireeee
Women Filling
°itis Wl ; spits
swered the sheriff. "I got my job
to dq;, and, I'm doin' it to the best
of my powers. There ain't nobody
ldiu buy me, and I act on evidence.,,
x.
* *
Lois lead always' known 'by in-
stinct that James Hooker wasn't
her father, nor: the old woman who
had tended her since babyhood her
mother. Her earliest remembrances.
were •of the westward trek in the
big wagon le which
mewbe'ey had
tomthe
ed from, -
heights above the valley.
Growing up alone, save for the
two old ' people, she had somehow
acquired the art of taming the wild
horses that frequented the waste
•
lands above the valley, and some.
times,carne down to the mesa.
Most of them were scrubs, but a
few of them were worth breaking
in for cow -ponies, and gradual
Lois had begun to eke out a feW
dollars by selling them to 'er.ris.-
It was after she, ,lad tamed Black
Dawn that Fare had gained. complete
contvui over the herd, which fol.
Towed her like sheep at her signal.
To sell Black Dawn to Ferris had
almost broken her heart, but she
knew that Lonergan had been
pressing Hooker for his money.
Once the judge had made advances
to her, and she had struck' him in
the face. That was just before ha
began pressing Hooker for the
mortgage money.
Then Dave Bruce had come along
.and broken Black Dawn, a noted
killer, who had taken the lives of
lour men. Worse than that, he had
come to the cabin to be the part-
ner of her foster father.
.Y� o S .,woW1N i i•�%�s v�,, •� •�§ S`<, >.. A"": a7t'�k.'^?3:: / m••:N ?:-e. ? ,s.arr .:.-•'
In an effort to tighten anti -invasion defences, and perhaps to
forestall an anti -Hitler pence plot by. Junker generals, high Nazi
l are reported planning to appoint Marshal Erw iacBona l to
officials i?
supreme command of the German army. IGen.epaltven Hanne]den iri `"' ••••
Stockholm, Rommel is shown, right,
Copenhagen,. Denmark, during the marshal's recent inspection of the
defences of northwestern Europe.
y.r
TA L Til
SADIE' B. CHAMB
New Year's
Dinner
out into the world and see . some-
thing of life. Now I been thinkin'
for some time, ever since that sale
was announced, I could get you a
place with my :sister-in-law' over to
Hampton."
"I'm staying on here," answered.
Lois. "But I'll be in town. when
Dave Bruce hangs for shooting Mr.
Hooker."
It was the simple code that Lois
had always known. There were
plenty of shootings in Mescal, and
self-defense was generally accepted
els excusing the incident. But the
few cold-blooded murders that
occurred in recent years ha
variably been followed by -
ing party. Lois' f
Dave was aim
one.
Demand For Women Preach-
ers Result of Clergy Joining
The Armed Forces
So ' manyi3Eisli clergymen are
in the armed forces that there is
a great demand for women preach-
ers to fill the vacancies—and, re-
markable to relate, the Church of
England, which has hitherto been
adamant against admitting women
to the ministry, hos about 400
deaconesses, both at home and
abroad, many of whom are licens-
ed to preach on Sundays as well
as week -days; in fact, to carry
out the full service, says the
Stratford Beacon -Herald. The dea-
conesses are not required to wear
any prescribed robes, but they
must wear their deaconess's cross
when officiating. . . .
The deaconesses are not con-
cerned in such matters as "calls"
or preferment. They serve in their
capacity of deaconesses wherever
needed at their salary of about
}1,000 a year.
All churches are experiencing
increasing difficulty in finding
candidates for the ministry, and
the probability is that after the
war many young men who have
served in the armed forces and
who might otherwise have gone to
the training colleges will take up
other lines of service for which
their army life may have been
some preparation. Wars bring
about many changes, and one re-
sult of this war may be a wider
use of women in the Christian
ministry,
Look
ck-
)Ing n? your cheerful
efire
a
in this be-
coming, deep -yoked frock, Pattern -
4589. It takes no time to put to-
gether, as a glance at the dia
gram should prove. Make it with
contrasting trimming or In one
fabric.
Pattern 4539 comes in misses'
and women's sizes 12, 14, 16, 18,.
10, 80, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40 and 42:
faze
skes 2 5-8 yard yardcontrast.trast. inch
ch
and3-8
Send TWENTY CENTS (20e)
n coins (stamps cannot be ac-
teoted) for this pattern, to Anne
Adams, Room 421, 73 Adelaide
St. West, Toronto. Write plainly,.
Size, Name, Address, Style Num-
ber.
Asthma Mucus
Loosened 1st Day
Choking, gasping, wheezing Asth-
ma and Bronchitis ruin your health,
The Prescription ,%ztno.Tab$ quick-
ly circulates through the blood,
promptly helping to curb these at-
tacks and usually the first day the
easy
rnucus and res s giving'
sfree
leep.
lust send your tame, card will ocost,
for $1.00 Asmo-lrai w free. No
If it
stops �youtr?n. Astlmajusttattacks. ell si nor
CaSrtsnany, 7r'iq Knox Bldg., Port
'. l'ir'e NortlS, Ciota rlo. :.....
ISSUE 1-1944
Dave that way from the start. The
sheriff wasn't gifted with a. brit
liant brain, but he seemed an hon-
est man.
"It ain't occurred to you, 1
•s'pose, that other folks mlg okarve
something to gain by
death?" asked. Dave. "It don't seem
queer to you, Lonergan briugin'
him in here and orderin' him out
after twelve years because he was
threatenin' to talk?"
"What yuh mean by that?" de-
manded Coggswell
The Hun Unchanged
Through The Ages
You may rest assured that an
"inquiring reporter" would be
Ilbie to find at some street corner
of a North American city . couple
of people who would say: "The
Germans don't destroy libraries!
That's bunk! Just a tall tale!"
The fact is that it is difficult
to believe that anybody could be.
as repetit_ous as the Germans.
They burned down the Louvain
Library in 1914, they did so again
in 1940, and in 1943 iiliey burned
down Naples University. Euro-
peans are familiar with the Ger-
man mentality of systematic
thoroughness.
They are not astonished art
anything the Germans do, for
they all know that little quatrain
which a Dutch poet of the 17th
century, Jacob Cats, wrote after
careful obser"ation and at a time
when his country had never been
at tivar with Germany:
"When the Hun is poor and down,.
He's the humblest man in town.
But once he climbs and holds the
rod
'rile smites his , fellow men. and
God."
"Well, Hooker talked to me—be-
fore he died," said Dave. "And
maybe that slimy murderer outside
the window heard what he said
and figured to kill him and put the
blame on me. I guess you ain't liv
ed here too short a time to know
some of the things I know—about
Miss Lois, for instance."
"Now listen here, Bruce," ` an-
NO
sNO Chocolate? Then Use Coc •>a
When Sheriff Coggswell an-
nounced
nnounced that Dave had murdered
Hooker in: his sleep, probably in
the hope of finding a hoard of
money Lois had never doubted him.
She knew that nearly all men were
like that. Sheriff Coggswell was
the one man whom she trusted.
He had performed many little
kindnesses for her in the past.
When her foster -mother lay dying,
he had ridden all the way
to
HThetto bring back a doctor.
sheriff had roped Hooker's
body across his horse to carry it
down to .Mescal for burial. "What
you aimin' to do now, Miss Lois?"
he asked the girl.
"Stay on here, just I've • always
done, I suppose," she answered.
"You can't stay on here alone,
runnin' wild with that herd of
bronco, Miss Lois," the sheriff an-
swered. "What yuh want is to go
For These Crunchy Cookies!
Have you been thinking nostalgicallyof
chocolate latcookies? D e
o
you inquire hopefully each time yougo if he, perchance, has a box of chocolate? Then perhaps you have
more
n chocolate. You
discovered that cocoa is available e which ten than chocolate with
can use cocoa in almost any p
good results. ]For similar flavor substitute 31,E tablespoons
of acocoa
t
and % teaspoon of butterourfor family willunce cheerr at the return of their
is very simple and y
Here is one of our favorite recipes coorecipesfalready i st dap ed for cooa.
Try it, we'wager it will be on the too!
COCOA SQUARES
2 eggs % cup shortening
% cup All -Bran 1 cup teaspoon salt sugar
/2 cup eocoa
1/4flour
1/a
1 teaspoon vanilla extractcup meats
cup chopped nu
Beat eggs -until light; add All -Band, sugaralt and
together fvorhig and let
stand a minutes. Blend n sening and bake id
add soaked All -Bran and mix- well. Stir in cocoa and flour, sifted
together, and nut meats. 3Spread6i m ceased baking pan
'moderate oven (350F.) 8-inchnutpan) •
Yield: 16 2 -inch squares (8
DID YOU KNOW THAT?
t s e. blood-stained blankete.
h9 suii to dry, to be washed later,
,,,,lowing in her heart all the while
that she would never return.
She was going far away into the
mountains, beyond which, in her
imagination, there lay a sort of
fairyland: She felt that all the old
life had come to an end. And she
worked like a person in a dream,
sweeping out the dust; then milked
the cow and threw the milk away,
and let the animal amble out to
find what pasturage she could.
In the. early part of the after-
noon she heard
e sound f
an
approaching r idAt first she
thought It was the sheriff return-
ing. Then she recognized the gait.
It was one of the Cross -Bar horses.
Going to the edge of the mesa and
looking down, she saw Curran, the
Cross -Bar foreman.
It was more than a month since
Curran had been to the cabin, and
Lois' attitude toward him on the
last occasion had been far from
friendly. Her instinct had told her
that it was not pure benevolence
of heart that brought Curran there.
iSho watched hint ride his horse
over the steep edge and on to the
mesa. She stood in the doorway
of the cabin and watched him raise
his hat, then climb out of his sad-
dle and come forward.
(Contin,ued Next Week)
CURE FOR HITLER
A Missouri chap cured his in-
grown grown toenail by chopping
the toe. This prompts a column-
ist to suggest similar treatment
for Hitler's dandruff.
—Kitchener Record.
Clinic
R:oa
Cr
g
vlr iotNigRY0,45 YI7ouILE5
a , .h,�s1T51'�CK(r�
1 FIN�DDDrilyaMILE NERVI!'I, E-
MEI,PS 1'0 RELIEri''E NERV US:
Sal:FES 1�N"i��r -�cey
1 ' til aed • pimento
e
Coo mio.A.S ver.• Melt butter,.
add flour, salt, water and vinegar.
Heat to boiling. Add pepper and.
pimento. Pour over cauliflower.
Ginger Sauce
2 tablespoons butter
1 tablespoon cornstarch
% teaspoon salt
2 tablespoons ginger syrup
1 cup syrup from some canned
fruit
cup chopped preserved ginger
1 tablespoon lemon juice
Happy New Year To All
Misr Chambers welcome persona
letters from Interested readers.
cstl She
le e
on' pleased
to for here column nod le
always ready to listen to your "pet
peeves." Renuestw for recipes or .
special menta are In der. 'Address)
your lettere tee Mor
Chambers. 73 West Adelaide St.,
Snd
dressed 'enve7 pe s Ifotped you wvishaua
reply.
Only one make of cigarettes,
of a standard size, is now on sale
in Germany.
?�. •
On the west co:�?.,•iF'.>O�ast of British G�`,A.''vU•..i'�Y<rV;'#:ri;'> �Y.;YS.-. moi., ..^S:H•.c.:n+rt•:: .... , ....
i h Columbia they go imam,:
rlr�Cks
with a spade? These are not, feathered ducks, but "l."cnrv'�lucks
large soft-shelled clams that burrow in the tidal flat saada.
k waa�wtttti�r•� l
There's plenty these days to make
people nervous. And overtaxed
nerves can turn nights and daysinto
misery! If you suffer in this way,
try the soothing, quieting effect of
Dr. Miles Nervine which contains
well-known nerve sedatives. Take
Nervine according to directions for
help in general nervousness, sleep-
lessness, hysterical conditions, ner-
vous fears; also to help headache
and irritability due to nervousness.
In the meantime, eat more natural
food .. get your vitamins and take
.suffi.'iout rest. Effervescing Nervine
Tablets are 35c and 75c. Nervine
Liquid: 25c and $1.00.
IN Toronto it's The
Ste Regis 1-lotel
* Every Room with Bath,
Shower and Telephone.
* Single, $2.50 up ---
Double, $3.50 up.
* Good Food, lining and
Dancing Nightly.
Sherbourne at Carlton
Tel. RA. 4135
If You
Get tip Nights
YOUCKTFEE RICHT
If you hayO to get up 3 or more.
times a night. your rest is broken
and it's uo wonder if you feel old
n.ncl run down before your time.
;Kidney andUt
a ddttroublesoftit
na
may ?eotuY
n• 'symptoms simply because the
l;!dneys
ma tir,•u and not w?arnd
ing vin enough rtating' efiltering acids,
removing
Poisonsblood. Soand. if youastget uptanii,hts�or
suffer from inirning scanty n , o hafie.
qquent passages. leg p
ache, or nervousness, due to Eich.,
net* and l:ladder;, troubles,
make no mistake in trying Cyri
Because it hes givens such Joyous,
poppy results in so 'high e. percent-
age of MOW, ('' ti•r is sold under
an agreement or money baukle n
ret.urrl .i' empty p to yau,
Cv r iron.&.'h' �nt9�fnrtij1u
('s ste' cn .lits lithe
t'` art. ciru:i
onoy 'rarcl< oC
Circ m
7'lc'Sr,., "•-.nn fer prot;eets yetr.
lacyw