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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Expositor, 1923-06-29, Page 6y1i�,�. pi101 �A;�;,:::7:.a.tt!1„ i ht t"X44�„ac if `" ;:w.e�,'f ��� ia�'�`jl,`.r ASTHHMA BEMEDY', battle. Mance Desk le sot er sale at HortadVei or'!b mall, from le. •�, Oat 1111�1111UIIUIIIIIillllllpl11111t1111N1E r' t( 11*. cotton mitt Rlekte NTa $1, 1i lbs.t$2, 10 lbs I8. 28 11st. 28. elle or velvet patches 11.80, to 12. 2 The cotton remnants gu 4 lengths for children', drowse. shirts, eto. 51.80. 1 lb. yarn all shades. 51. A. Y h CO . Imporbn, TEAM. Oat. WILSQN'S IStratford, Ontario. C WINTER TERM FROM JANUARY 2nd. rs The leading practical train- = tug school of Western Ontario. The school where yon get a E ZG thorough course under compet- ent instructors in Commercial, = I Shorthand and Telegraphy De- E = pertmeppta. We assist gradu- E ates tb positions. Write for E a free catalogue. E D. A McI.A ,paL `�1 W I lUIUl I UI H h 111111111111111111111 f t11111L GRAND iRUhiit S4'YIS EM TRAIN SERVICE TO TORONTO Daily Except Sunday Shoe Polish Sa.".'s You .41071 (51 le eave Goderioh . 6.00 a.m. 2.20 p.m. Leave Clinton ... 6.25 a.m. 2.52 p.m. Leave Seaford' .. 6.41 am 3.12 pm Leave Mitchell.: 7.04 a.m. 8.42 pm Arrive Stratford 7.30 a.m. 4.10 p.m. .Arrive Kitchener 8.20 ami. 5.20 pm Arrive Guelph .. 8.45 a.m. 5.50 p.m. Arrive Toronto ..10.10 a.m.. 7.40 pan. RETURNING Leave Toronto 6.50 a.m.; 12. 66 p.m. and 6.10 pm. Parlor Cafe car Goderiek to To- mato on morning train and Toronto to Goderieh 6.10 F.m. tri Parlor Buffet car Stratford to To- ronto on afternoon train. fere the 0 0* cap 1, kreason*tot. kneW the meat -Map° , fruit t1 overripe ler cesaful jelly. ' Now, to make clear jelly that trill turn out in shape and yet have .that quivering consistency that is the very acme of perfect jelly is by no means difficult, provided a few simple rules are followed and the fruit and sugar carefully weighed or measured. The rule for making currant jelly holds good in ' all jelly -making, al- though those fruits rich in pectin (the jellying quality), such as cur- rants, partially ripened grapes and sour apples, are the fruits • most easily made into jelly. Then, too, these fruits are of a decidedly acid nature, and acid is a prime essential to fine jelly. When fruit for jelly -making is re- ceived from market look over it care- fully and that which is overripe in any way set aside for the making of jam, conserve or a fruit syrup. Do net put it into the jelly kettle, The main points to remember aro not to have the fruit too ripe ; to heat in a double boiler or waterless cooker; to drain in a jelly bag through two thicknesses of cheese- cloth; to measure the drained juice and allow an equal amount of sugar. Cook the drained juice for twenty minutes, add the sugar that has been heated in graniteware shallow pans in the oven and have it hot enough so that it sizzles as it goes in. Bring to the boiling point, skim carefully and cook above five minutes. This receipt will give perfect cur- rant jelly and it is one that I have used for many years. It was also my mother's and grandmother's and I have never known it to fail. Of late years they have also been making what they call second ex- traction jelly. For this the currants from which the juice has dripped are turned into a saucepan, barely cover - e t with cold water and brought to the boiling point. Again drain and proceed as for the original jelly. Raspberry Jelly. Fruits like raspberries and straw- berries will not make good jelly by themselves, but cooked, drained and mixed with apple or strained cur- rant juice they give a delicious jelly The proportion of the juices com- bined may be varied to suit the taste, but one-third raspberry juice to two- thirds currant or apple juice will give a splendid jelly with a strong rasp- berry flavor. . Hard fruits, like quinces, apples and crabapples, have to be covered with water and cooked before the juice can be strained; and although ail varieties of apples may be cook- ed with the skins, cores and seeds, never allow the quince seeds to be cooked with the fruit. There seems to be a mucilage quality in quince seeds that is fatal to jelly and in- stead of a clear, firm product, the result is a syrupy mass that never will jell. Sometimes, especially when mak- ing grape jelly, the finished product is not quite firm enough to unmold, although the texture and flavor are perfect. In this event place the glasses in the hot sun, covered with pieces of glass, and let them stand until as firm as you wish. If, despite all your care (frequent- ly from overlooking some little but all-important point), your jelly will not jell, the only remedy is to use the commercial pectin that comes with full directions on the bottle, or you may bottle the boiling hot liquid sad use it in making sherbet, water ices, gelatine preparations, iced bev- erages or to flavor pudding sauces. Blueberry jelly is quite a novelty and the borate caterer should acquaint herself with this delicious variety of jelly. Te make it, cut a large lemon in very thin slices and let stand over night in cold water, well covered. Add the lemon and water to three quarts of blueberries, set over a quick fire and heat to the boiling point. Strain, let boil for seven minutes, add one cup of frit juice and boil for two minutes longer. The glasses must he ready in a pan of hot water; as the mixture will often jelly in the sauce- pan. To make a delicious currant and orange jam, seed two pounds of rais- ins, cutting in halves; place in a saucepan with the shaved, chopped rind of two oranges, cover with cold water and simmer for half an hour. Squeeze the juice of the oranges over seven pounds of currants, cook for fifteen minutes and add the rais- ins, cooked peel and six pounds of hot sugar. Simmer down until quite thick and store like jelly. el: igY exit cake' nomblliatta}' mends Of. al proportio4" had 'goha� with Penal cess seager+1 nd were forced ,to, pre- vent the'"g2eater loss. .Or 'they were building t0;,i:ilell, on the expectation that thyteOuld be able tp pass on M a matt {slimy demand the nien•tnight make. In, that event they world be working in.caccord with the law, of supply and`.ikemand-though the de- mand would be largely due to the. scare workeai up by the press that many would have to go homeless. The regular contractors spoke of these as speculative builder* and ad- vised the battles not to advance money on such reckless enterprise, If the banks should act thus because of the jeopardizing of their security, it would be 'good business. If they did it. to support the builders' combina- tion, as some, speaking for the latter, implied, it was playing into the hands of the socialists. The various trades used to denominate themselves mys- teries, implying that they were be- yond the cotuprehension of those who had not served an apprenticeship to them. Long apprenticeship is not essential to many of the highly spec- ialized trades. It chiefly means a prolonged initiation into the union. War-time_exigency showed that there was little or no mystery about some of the trades, that ordinary intelli- gent people; could become expert in a few weeks. tai. 'S`tA ' w or bee n la,* imps Ions, lava O earns d. Nitta* On untelie ea shown Ay.,*JAI*, 'which though' those 'in ,agreed to refuse -the de e union, a coh$derable them. ca itulate6l These undertaken contracts greater than the our WHE McKILLOP MUTUAL WIRE INSURANCE CO'T. HEAD OFFICE-SEAFORTH, ONT. OFFICERS: J. Connolly, Goderich - - Presideal Jas. Evans, Beechwood vicepreddeW T. E. Ram Seaford' - Secy -Trees. AGENTS: Alex. Leitch, R. R. No. 1, Clistoa; Ed. Hinckley, Seaforth; Joh Marra , Bruce/field, phone 6 on 137, Seat ; J. W. Yeo Goderick; R. G. Jar• moth, BTod.agen. DIRECTORS: William Rinn, No. 2, Seaford': Jokes Be@newies, Brodktagen; Jamie Evans, Beachwood; M. McEwen, Clinton; Pas. Connolly, t?oderick; D. F. McGregor, R. R. No. 3, Seaforth; J. G. Grieve, No. 4, Walton; Robert Farris, Har - lock; Geo. McCartney, No. 3, Seaforth. beetles "the lift of eieweel" fa ie.•flei.l foam. Helps to efeatme the teeth sat! lamp them healthy. Stop! Look! Listen! CREAM WANTED We are not only a Cream Market for you, but we are also a large Dairy Industry in your community. We respectfully solicit your Cream. Our Motto: Guaranteed Accurate Weights and Tests. Courteous and Prompt Service. Highest Market Values. Cream Grading. A difference of 8 cents per pound Butter Fat paid between No. 1 and No. 2 Grade Cream. Cash For Cream. Cash paid to any Patron wishing it when Cream is delivered. Creamery open Wednesday and Saturday Evenings. The Seaforth Creamery. OLIVES A cold roast has an appetizing zest when served with these delicious olives. Chopped up in a salad, they add a new piquant flavor. Imported direct from Spain for the Canadian People. Every olive perfect. Every variety At all Grocers Insist 0n McLAREN'S INVINCIBLE MCLARENS LIMITED, Hamilton and Winnipeg knpo411 tit; veil .sen`si kllg xity tots,.J my ice. Potatoes .bty eervente, 11 sleep '4140' sa �1;# AP��y�ellai e0� to k p °$roes ,made the .h0, , enc I ; stopped euddeniy, a( y,. t w r; whose baby is it?. Not yours, Pro sure." , To my surprise her eyes filled with . tears. "Yes. She is my baby, Mr. Smartt," My face fell.. "O.lti' said I, and gigot no• further' for 'a moment or two, I -I -please .don't tell me you are married!" "What would you thinkli of me if I were to tell you I'm not'" she cried indignantly. "I beg your pardon," I stammered, blushing to the roots of my hair. "Stupid ass!" I muttered. Crossing to the fireplace, she stood lookipg down into the coals for a long time, while I remained where I was, an awkward, gauche spectator, conaci- ohs of having put my clumsiest foot into my mouth every time I opened it and wondering whether I 'could now safely get it out again without .further disaster. Rer back was toward me. She was dressed in a dainty, pinkish house gown -or maybe it was light blue. At any rate it was a very pretty gown and she was wonderfully graceful in it. Ordinarily in my fiction I am quite clever at describing gowns that do not exist; but ,when it comes to telling what a real woman ig wearing I am not only as vague as a savage, but painfully stupid about colors. Still, I think it was pink. I recall the way her soft brown hair grew above the slender neck, and the love- ly white skin; the smooth, delicate contour of her half -averted cheek, and the firm little chin with the trem- bling red lips above it; the shapely back and shoulders and the graceful curves of her hips, suggestive of a secret perfection. She was taller than I bad thought at first sight, cr was it that I seemed to be getting smaller myself? A hasty bit of com- parison placed her height at five feet six, using my own as something to go by. She couldn't have'been a day ever twenty-two. But she had a baby! Facing me once more she said: "If you will sit down, Mr. Smart, and be patient and generous with me, I shall try to explain everything. You have a right to demand it of me, and I shall feel more comfortable after it is done." I drew up a chair beside the table and sat down. She sank gracefully into another, facing me. A delicate frown appeared on her brow. "Doutbless you are very much puz- zled by my presence in this gloomy old castle. You have been asking yourself a thousand questions about me, and you have been shocked by my outrageous impositions upon your good nature. I confess I have been shockingly impudent and-" "Pardon me; you are the only sauce I've had for an excessively bad bar- gain." "Please do not interrupt me;! she said coldly. "I am here, Mr. Smart, because it is the last place in the world where my husband would be likely to look for me." , "Your husband? Look for you?" "Yes. I shall be quite frank with you. My husband and I have separ- ated. A provisional divorce was granted, however, just seven months ago. The final decree cannot be is- sued for one year." "But why should you hide from him ?" "The -the court gave kim the cus- tody of our child during the proba- tionary year. I -I have run away ith her. The are lookin f -dl e ' ve a :" ve sw of sly Banti. -'!ever is ' algh All u've , a uer on p e, CURRENT WIT AND WISDOM 1 want your prayers more than your congratulations. -Prime Minis- ter Baldwin. There are .times when every small boy wonders what parents are good for. -Calgary Herald. Our young lady friend says her dad declares it isn't Christian charity when a man forgives a fellow he can't lick. -Galt Reporter. The gentleman who declares it is as easy to grow -wise as to grow foolish will find it easier still to grow cab- bages. -Halifax Herald. It is not a world to dip matches in. -Mr. Lloyd George. A cruel driver is the angry man who deliberately kicks his automobile in the chassis. --Ottawa Journal. One way to attract a committee of ladies to your office is to neglect your morning shave. -Rochester Times - Union. The greatest part of a man's re- ligion is what he does from Monday morning to Saturday night. - Lord Astor. A Chicago woman displays an egg on which nature has embossed a plain 1666. Likely the year it was put in storage. -New Orleans Times Picayune. One economist declares this is "the age of steel," but there are times when we believe that last word should be spelled differently. - Manitoba Free Press. It is an easy matter to collect a crowd, but another thing to collect from it. - Burlington Junction, Mo. Post. The American Society of Teachers of Dancing announces that "dance week" will he observed throughout the country, commencing June 17th. It probably will, but the trouble Will be to distinguish the difference be- tween it and any' other week. -Pitts- burg Post. Sir Oliver Lodge says that amongst the inventions that are urgently re- quired is "glass -that will bend." Housewives, too, would appreciate crockery that will bounce, -Halifax Herald. I really think it beneath the dignity of the British Empire to show this timorous state of mind at propaganda everywhere. -Sir Edward Grigg. The statesmen are in favor of all appropriations and against all taxes. -Philadelphia Record. ' One curious thing about the new British Prime Minister is that he is an Englishman._ Kincardine Review. "After the ceremony a reception was held at the home of the bird's parents" -an Ottawa Newspaper. As a typographical error that one is a coo-koo.--Ottawa Journal. M INVINCIBLE' rNCt OliV ES.' NOTICE 'Any Patrons with Seaforth Creamery Cana and not going to nee then! to send cream to us this --season, 'will Idndlp return them Creamery, These are OW h and only loaned, to J , tains, and most be returned od order. t eaforth Creamery. A. R. CAMPBELL, V.S. Graduate of Ontario Veterinary College, 'University of Toronto. All diseases of domestic animals treated by the most modern principles. Charges reasonable.. Day or night calla promptly attended to. Office on Main Street, Bewail, opposite Town I6O1L PbonA.12& WHAT IS A DOLLAR WORTH? Forty-three years ago it was one of the wonders of the Winnipeg boom that bricklayers were actually getting seven dollars a day for working out at from twenty to forty below zero. Things, it was thought, must be working toward a smash; and the smash came in due course. Forty years' before that men counked their day's wage in pence, not in dollars. Ter years ago it was a world's won- der that one Ford was paying his mer. five dollars a day. Now we have bricklayers in New York striking for fourteen to eighteen, dollars a day, and about a quarter of them getting it. Of course bricklayers' wages are dffierent from those of factory hands, as it is not every day that a brick- layer can be at work -at all events, at his trade. Still, the figures are startling. A war time change we have been saying, when such develop- ments occur. That was all right half a dozen years ago when all the moat active men were at the war and the rest of capable men were largely drawn off for war work. But since.• the war the cry of distress most heard has been from out of Work ebnditions. It 29 all trade unionism that ie an - Calgary, Alta. -Great excitement prevails on the Canadian side of the international border as the result of the striking of a real oil gusher in the Kevin -Sunburst field, fourteen miles sodth of the town of Coutts, on the boundary. The well, known as the Midnorthern Howling, drilled by a subsidiary of the Standard Oil, came in with a flush production of 5;000 barrels, settling down to 3,500 barrels daily. Several new wells are being started on the Canadian side. 1 "You are in distress, in dread of something, madam," I cried. "Con- • a L aider me your friend "i I 1S just h a*.1 She shook her head ruefully. "Your J. l dila VV poor man! You don't know what ° av are for, I fear. Wait till I eight have told you everythinga Three paste weeks ago, I laid myself liable to mprisonment and heaven- knows what else by abducting my little girl. That is really what it comes to -ab- duction. The court has ordered my arrest, and all sorts of police per- sons are searching high and low for me. Now don't you see your peril? If they find me here, you will be in a dreadful predicament. You will be charged with criminal complicity, or whatever it is called, and -Oh, it will be frightfully unpleasant for you, Mr. Smart." My expression trust have convicted me. She couldn't help seeing the dis- may in my face. So she went on, quite humbly. "Of course you have but to act at once and all may be well for you. I -1 will go if you -if you command me to-" I struck my knee forcibly. "What do you take me for, madam? Hang the consequences! If you feel that you are safe here -that is, compara- tively safe, --stay!" "It will be terrible if you get into trouble with the law," she murmured in distress. "I -I really don't know what might happen to you." Still her eyes brightened. Like all the rest of her ilk, she was selfish. I tried to laugh, but it was a dismal failure. After all, wasn't it likely -to prove a most unpleasant matter? I felt the chill moisture, breaking out on my forehead. "Pray do not consider my position at all," I managed to say, with a resolute assumption of gallantry.. "I -I shall be perfectly able to look out for myself, -that is, to explain every- thing if it should come to the worst." I could not help adding, however: "I certainly hope, however, that they don't get on to your trail and-" I stepped in confusion. "And find me here?" she completed gloomily. "And take the child away from you," I made haste to explain. A fierce light flamed in her eyes. "I should -kill -some one before that could happen," she cried out, clench- ing her hands. I -I beg of you madam, don't work yourself into a -a state," I implored, in considerable trepidation, Noth- ing like that can happen, believe me. I-" "Oh, what do you know about it?" she exclaimed, with most unnecessary vehemence, I thought. "He wants the child and -and -well, you can see ' why he wants her, can't you? He it making the most desperate efforts to recover her. Max says the newspap- ers are full of the -the scandal. They are depicting me as a brainless, law - defying American without sense of love, honour or respect. I don't mind that, however, It is to be expected. They all describe the Count as a long suffering, honourable, dreadfully mal- treated person, and are doing what they can to help him in the prosecu- tion of the search. My mother, who is in Paris, is being shadowed; my two big brothers are being watched; my lawyers in Vienna are being trail- ed everywhere -oh, it is -really a most dreadful thing. But -but' I will not give her up! She is mine. He doesn't love me. He doesn't love anything in the world but himself and his cig- arettes. I know, for I've paid for his cigarettes for nearly three years. He has actually ridiculed Ire in court circles, he has defamed me, snubbed me, humiliated me, cursed me. You cannot imagine whatit has been like, Once he struck mg in-" "Struck you!" k cried. , (continued next week.) c Summerside, P. E. I. -While it is premature to venture a prediction as to the probable 1023 production of. silver black foxes on ;the island,. it ie 'estimated that the crop of young fox- es will come close to the average of previous yearE3 despite the unfavo}�- able winter. Whlie some ranches re - peed losses, others report vnilsual sac- cesees. w y g or me everywhere. That is why I came here. Do you understand?" I was stunned. "Then, I take it, the court granted him the divorce and not you," I said, experiencing a sud- den chill about the heart. "You were deprived of the child, I see. Dear me!" "You are mistaken," she said, a flash in her eyes. "It was an Aus- trian court. The Count -my hus- band, I should say -is an Austrian subject. His interests must be pro- tected." She said this was a sneer on her pretty lips. "You see, my father, knowing him now for what he really is, has refused to pay over to him something like a million dol- lars, still due for the marriage set- tlement. The Count contends that it is a just and legal debt and the court supports him to this extent: the child is to be his until the debt is cleared up, or something to that effect. I really don't understand the legal con- ditions involved. Perhaps it were better if I did." "I see," said I, scornful in spite of myself. "One of those happy inter- national marriages where a bride is thrown in for good 'measure with a couple of millions. Won't we ever learnt" - That's it precisely," she said, with the utmost calmness and candour. "American dollars and an American girl in exchange for a title, a lot of debts and a ruined life." "And they always turn out just this way. What a lot of blithering fools we have in the land of the free and the- home of the knave!" "My father objected to the whole arrangement from' the first, so you must not speak of him as a knave," she pretested. "He doesn't like Counts and auch things." "I . don't see that it helps matters. I can hardly substitute the word brave for the one I used," said I, trying to conceal' my dielgust. "Please don't misunderstand me Mr. Smart," she said haughtily. ") am not asking for pity. I made My bed arid I shall lie in it. The 'only thing I ask of you is -well, kindness" She seemed xo falter again, atld The dinner dishes are washed, the children are in.bed, and Mrs. has settled down to a night's darning. A hundred miles away, in the Hotel, • 31111 has finished .dinner , written the day's report and looked over t h e local paper. Time hangs heavy till, happy thought, he remembers Long Distance. "Hello Mary! How are the children? How are you?" Just three minutes at home and yet it makes all the difference. The . hotel seems brighter. And Mary well, the holes in the socks don't seem quite so large. Just the effect of a voice you love to hear. Keep the home ties strong, the Long Dis- tance way. Every Bat! Talephona es a Long Distance Station Yeo ACRE FARM FOR SALE. OWNER will sell on reasonable terms for eotsh sale, Apply to R. B. HAYS, Seaforth, Oat- 280841 at2808.11 FARM .FOR SALE. -THE FARM CON- taine 100 scree ; bank barn, 66260, with new stabling put in three years ago: water in barn, brick house, kitchen, 2 good wells: 12 acres fan wheat: 20 acres plowed out of sod, balance seeded to grass. No waste land or open ditches. Rural mail and phone. Apply to JAMES FLANNERY, or to Thomas Brown, Auctioneer. 2668-t! TWO CHOICE FARMS BEING. LOTS 14 and 10, on the 7th Concession of Mo- xrlion, ivy mile. from school, 2% miles from church and 6 miles from tae town of Sea - forth. on good gravel roads. On Lot 15 there. is an over -flowing well, good withers!' and buildings in good repair, On Lot 14 there is a good brick house with woodshed, two. never -failing wells and 80 scree of the @neat hardwood .bush. Both farm are In grass and have no noxious weeds. . For bay, pasture and grain farms they am not be beaten. Win ba sold together, or separately. Forfurther pat - dentate apply to MISS TENA 11EATTnB l0e 1. Dublin, Ont. ' 269Oa8 1' VA= FOR BALE. -FARM OF TWO MS - drill acres adioining the Town of Sem forth, conveniently situated te all amass. school. and Collegiate, There is a comfaSS- able. brick cottage with a essufetst kitchen 1 barn 100x56 with stone atablint undsrpadh fear 6 hearses, 75 bead of cattle =Was Mn with steel stanchions and water befaOsa �1 stock; litter carrier and feel carrier slid' two cement silos;. driving shed, and pts. form scales. Watered by a rok well and Windmill. The farm L well drained and IS a high 'state of eultivatlon. The crop is in the ground -choice els' loam. nnmed4 ate poen � pion. Apply to M. BEATON !. @. 2, 8eaferth, Ont. 2787-42, 'PARR FOR SALE. -FOR BALE. LOT 5., Oonceselon 11, and west half of Lot 8, Conoeseien 10,, Hiatt., TackammkSint, S. tattling 160 acres, There are on the pre�enps� a'good two-story. brick honee watt sista roe, lenge bahit barn 100s60' feet with fitet /2iW stabling, water In the barn, drive Odd Matt' pig home and hen home. Two good 00 wells, also an over -flowing eyriiS,, The farm '1s all cleared but about' 20. aerie: The good hardweed bash, prinelpally maple.+. A11 well fenced and tile drained.'. Milt"geiW of fall wheat sown, 60 sexes ready., 887 limnserre. The farm I 'situated 7 er tinea Seaferth and 4 miles• from, innns' , en4-hs* mile from school': rural. mall end Dion. WIR,. be ppOld on easy. terms. VVitien,sold 67 Beelne ft -020 be for root. For 3ltrtber".eartloolera suety en the ppee'm___ieeei er. ppdd�r01eqt.& 1.. Na 2.' Stppen. ANOUB. Ma ii citoN 281104f .