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The Seaforth News, 1924-09-25, Page 6None ill satisfy' like pure. delicious GREEN TEA 111473 The finest green tea produced in tine world. — Ask for a, trial package. FREE SAMPLE of GREEN YEA UPON REQUEST. "SAMNA." TORONTO A DOG OF THE STREETS BY ARTHUR WALLACE PEACH. PART II. They rode slowly to the outskirts. of the town, and the horses picked up their pace. Now and then the girl stopped, breathless with the beauty of the change; and often on a ridge she would pause long enough to call Mat- eo's attention to the mountains far in the distance, Mateo listened and looked in silence. He saw not the mountains but La Santita, rising like the figure of a robed saint, beyond them. Jose and his partner were hiding in the shadow of the mesquite thickets at its base. Mateo knew his life was safe, but he was worried for two reasons; per- haps she did not have the money after all; perhaps Eason might decide to follow immediately. La Santita rose higher and sharper in outline as they drew near, and suddenly the shadow of the towering rock fell upon them. They turned to take the downward trail to the flats, and the horses slowed up. Here was the place! Two figures darted from the brush. The horses reared. The girl exclaimed sharply, then screamed in a voice that went through Mateo like the thrust of a knife, as she was dragged from her horse and thrown to the ground. Mateo watched her gasping strug- gle. She fought wildly at first, then gradually weakened. She spoke just once in a weak, spent, pleading voice: "Oh, Mateo, (help mei" They were using her roughly. She was pinned on her face, and Mendel, Jose's partner, was binding her arms behind her. Jose turned from the saddle -bags. His voice was harsh with threat. "The money isn't here! Where is it?" Mateo cringed, and the horses he was holding shied as Jose stepped to- ward him. "I know not, Jose." "Search her!" Jose said angrily. The girl faintly answered. "Don't touch me, you beasts! Let me go— I'll get the money if that is what you want!" With one arm loosed, she drew from a fold in her skirt the package. Jose seized it and laughed. "Dios! Here it is!" He shoved it into his shirt. "Now, hurry, put her on the horse," he snapped. She caught his meaning, "You have the money—won't you let me go?" Jose's lean face looked almost plea- sant in the moonlight. "You go!" he repeated in English, then said in Spanish: "We are going over the border to the Ballo Hills. Prom there we shail send Mateo to your father for money for you. If he does not send it" "You aren't so contemptible as that!" He was bringing up her horse but turned at her words, catching her meaning if he did not understand her words. "Would you lock at me? Am I handsome? No! not In your eyes! But I shall have if I want it—what Eason would have!" The girl murmured as she moaned; and at the sound something clattered M Mateo's soul. after every meal Cleanses monde and teeth and aids digestion. Relieves that over- eaten 8eeling and acidrl mouth. Its 1 -a -s -1-8-n- J Flavor satlsiles the craving Cor sweets. Wrigley's is doable value in the iseacellS and pleasure it (provides. Scaled ire its Parity Package. He said fearfully to Jose: "Jose, you havo the money, let the girl—" Hard against Mateo's teeth came Jose's hard fist, and Mateo staggered. "Peace, dog," Jose said sharply. Mateo felt a warmish, sweetish something on his lips, and he knew it was blood. The clattering in his soul grew louder. They started away, breaking sharp- ly from the main trail, and taking the one that crossed the alkali waste be- yond the river. The girl swayed weakly it. the sad• dle for she had undergone rough treatment; but Jose knew better than to force her to ride with h while rg ° ay p Combine the fruit, cover with her strength lasted, is unable to depend on their stability. and let stand for several hours. Cook Mateo rode behind. Only once did But the woman who gives rest does until the consistency of any conserve. a not change her attitudes or her con she turn to him, and then her faint Place in sterilized jars and seal, or in words had shown no trace of anger, victims or her moral standards; she jelly glasses and cover with paraffin. is no romanticist, but because she is in tune with life and her own setting she creates harmony around her. About the House WOMAN WHO' GIVES REST 15 have the •(cess bit of respect for me MOST ATTRACTIVE, again?" Discussing half a dozen women! Evelyn was leaking at her strangely. friends a few days ago, guests at a! "What is it?" Marcia asked. little dinner party were surprised to "It's ---Marcia dear, if you knew discover the popularity of a woman how hungry I've been fora home;and whom none had believed to have. an home things and old dishes and neigh. original personality, says the Conti- nentalout edition of "The London Mail" of everyday errands! I'm so tired off Pleasant, kind, lively, interesting living to hotels and autcimobilee. I'll she undoubtedly is, but it was a man be so happy over this old ankle i£ who explained the attraction which' you'll only take me into it alll" z makes her companionship desired' by And testi the two girls Ware hold- al1 her friends, ing each other's hands, and Marcia "Sire gives rest," he said. "And rest was crying, "Oh, aren't snobs fool - is the greatest gift a woman has to ish!" give. No one in Helen's presence San 1 long be conscious of life's enormous TASTY THINGS FROM GRAPES. disarrays; she heals. Her very pres- "We have a fine harvest of grapes ence is harmonious; she gives a sense this year but I don't know how to use. of serenity to the- restless. That is them," is often the plaint of many why every one loves 1er." housewives.. But his delicious Very few women are able to bestow housewives fruit makes excellent' filling the gift of peace on those whom they for many empty jars. meet in daily' life. These recipes are especially recom- No woman whose mind is restless, mended by home economic specialists: who has not accepted with gracious- - Spiced Grapes -8 lbs. Concord the reconciliations between the grapes, 8 lbs. sugar, 11qts. vinegar, ideal and the real, has power to give 4 tsp. each cloves, cinnamon, nutmeg rest. i and allspice. Wash and . stem the For this power does not conte from grapes before weighing. Cook grapes anything as superficial as the pose of and vinegar together until skins are languid ease, nor does it belong tor the tender, strain, add sugar and spices, quiet woman who so often is also the dull woman. and cook until thick. Only the woman whose mind has Grape Conserve -4 lbs. grapes, 6 found rest through discipline, through raisins, Select, tvashes, 8 lemons, 6 land bs. astem fresh courage, through strength, can heal ripe grapes and heat until seeds are the wounds of the disturbed soul. loosened, Pulp. grapes, press through Women who have thispower give cullender to remove seeds. Peel the to their friends the assurance of se - entity. Very many women who d oranges and lemons and put the rinds light to -day displease to -morrow. One' through food chopper, also pulp. im only a deep, dreadful pity—"Mateo, you poor, little coward!" The dry powder began to drift up, and soon the girl called for water, but Jose did not stop. An hour passed, and the moanings of the girl grew into broken mutter- ings that almost seemed, and yet were not, the speech of delirium. Mateo heard her speak her father's name again and again with a love and yerning that made his small soul sick within him. Before her might lie something that was worse than death, and the chances were, Mateo knew, that it might dome; for Jose was infamous in more ways than one. The girl aroused herself and beg- ged piteously for water. "Jose!" Mateo called hesitatingly, "won't you give—" Jose turned and said savagely: "Peace, you! There is none! Peace— or you sleep long!" Mateo, already dumbfounded at what he had heard himself say, for he had spoken before he thought, sank into quick silence, Another hour passed—an hour of the same terrible desert silence and the girl's low talking to herself. She was drooping far over the saddle, and her hair had fallen like a veil about her. They climbed a ridge, and beyond it Mateo saw a small valley. In the centre a small spot gleamed like a pool of silver. His parched mouth opened in a murmur of joy—"Del Carte." It was the famous spring of which he had heard many tales. The horses caught the scent of the water and hurried on. Soon it lay before them, down in a deep cut. Jose and Mendel gave their reins to Mateo, and slid down to the pool. Mateo stepped beside the girl's horse. "You shall soon have water, Senorita," he said softly. The girl lifted her sagging head; clear consciousness seemed to some to her at the familiar sound of his voice; she stared at him with eyes that were bright and wide in the moonlight. Ina tone that started the clattering again in Mateo's soul, she whispered: "Mateo, oh, Mateo, if you were only a man!" "A man, Senorita? I am a man," he answered in surprise. Then he understood how she had used the English word. He looked up into her face, white in the moonlight and he swore softly. "I not a man!" he muttered slowly. His lips drew tight over his teeth; a warm something came from his lips again, from the reopened bruise where Jose's fist had landed. "I not a maul" he muttered, and something seemed to burst within him. Jose and Mendel were drinking slowly, and therefore wisely, stopping to rest, then drinking again; their thirst was great. Jose was sprawling on the spring's edge, as was Mendel. The two dark figures against the brightness of the silvery pool made two splendid targets, and the auto- matic was hair -triggered. Mateo drew it from its holster. The dull barrel caught the moon- light and rested in a line on Jose's chest. In that brief moment, the clattering in Mateo'e soul died to a beautiful peace. He heard the girl's low gasp'. of great wonder and understanding. Ile ran his tongue across his bat- tered lips. He did not tremble -he was a man! With a sigh of some new, deep, rich content, he touched the trigger once—twice. (The End.) TWENTIETH CENTURY METHOD, Washing dishes, what a bore! Woman's drudgery, nothing more, Shake the soap (powder) have water hot— Turn the hose upon the lot. Rinse them well, polish the glasses, My! how fast dishwashing passes. —W. S. WHAT MARCIA DISCOVERED. Green Grapes for Pies—Many wo- men are constantly looking for a var- iety of fruit to use for pies during the winter months. Select grapes, wash thoroughly and stem. Place in clean jar, fill with hot water, place rubber and partially seal. Process in hot water bath for thirty minutes. Grape Juice --Wash and stem grapes. Fill can half full of grapes. Add quarter -cup of sugar and fill the can with hot water. Place rubber, spring wire but not bale of jar, place in water bath' and process for thirty minutes. Remove and seal. The doctor had come and gone, and This makes a concentrated grape Evelyn was resting, and the household juice which 'can be diluted and is most was quieting down after the accident. refreshing, But up in her room Marcia was fac- ing aning one of the biggest battles of her life. Evelyn Rogers, Ma:rcia's "fairy princess," for whose 'three-day visit PICOT EDGE. Every housewife knows how hard Marcia had compelled the house and it is to hold ;the hem to a hemstitched everyone in it to put on holiday garb, tablecloth after the hemstitching has would now have to stay for several weeks until she was well enough to be moved. And Uncle Garland and Aunt Lydia were coming next week! They were dear people, but Uncle Garland did all sorts of things with his knife and fork, and Aunt Lydia said "you my old, everyday tablecloths and nap - was" and "ain't" and wore gingham bins than the worn or much -mended aprons all the time. And Miss Prissy hemstitching. Conway would come trailing in and; I have also used this method with out, and Nelly Barnum—all the neigh-. worn towels and handkerchiefs, -R. bora with their everyday grammar , H. O. and manners and interests. By a great effort Marcia had managed to keep DRIED PEACHES HAVE MANY them all away for the three days 02 USES. Evelyn's visit, but nothing she could! As my family is fond of fruit of all do could keep them away for three kinds I dried a quantity of peaches weeks. !last year and was surprised at the Marcia sat grimly facing it all.' number of palatable, though inexpen- And because she was honest she did; sive dishes made with the peaches more; she faced herself too. Anybody, chopped and used instead of raisins who does that needs to be brave, for+in fruit cake, pork -cake and puddings, he is sure to make unpleasant dis- also used them in place of dried ap- coveries. (pies in a recipe for dried -apple cake "Murcia Eldridge," she said to her-• and found it delicious. self, "you are a snob! As much as' Dried peaches covered with water Tess Clayton, whom you've despised 1 and allowed to stand for twenty-four for years. Are you actually ashamed' hours, when a little sugar is added, of Uncle Garl and Aunt Lydia and makes a good sauce, tasting almost plucky Nell Barnum and all the rest like the fresh fruit. Another favor- of them! Their courage and honesty.ite recipe for dessert: Soak dried and dear warm hearts don't seem to, peaches until large and soft, drain, you half so big as their Little slips in. and spread upon squares of sronge grammar. Oh, but I despise yep,: cake, top with a spoonful of wis!pped Marcia Eldridge, just despise you! j cream.—Mrs. R, L, I'm going to 'fess up to Evelyn this minute." Evelyn looked up anxiously as Mar- cia opened the door. "Marcia, I'm begun to wear out, which invariably happens before the rest of the cloth shows much sign of wear. I found that cutting carefully through the hemstitching would give a neat picot edge which looks much prettier on A UNIQUE SHOWER. A gingham shower was given re- feeling so dreadfully to put you to all, cently for a little bride-to-be. She this trouble! I'll take myself away' was a business girl and, therefore, the first minute the doctor will let me. had little time to devote to needle I promise you that!" (work. Her stay -at home friends plan - "Trouble!" Marcia retorted scorn- ned and showered her withdainty fully. "I've discovered something gingham garments galore: Gingham that is trouble! I've discovered that bungalow aprons, tea aprons, sweep - I'm a great big snob! I am ashamed ing caps, curtains for her bungalow, of all sorts of little foolish trifles- windows (kitchen, bath, etc.). OfI that when Uncle Ohrl and Aunt Lydia course, her preference for this `ria -1 some ion will have to be moved into terial was known, hence the "shower,"j my room and will discover all lands' -W. S. of makeshifts that I have been keep -I ,p1111111111.111. 11111%1111111111110 So king t : G kws the place of r bbin — UST by soaking the clothes in the suds of this new seaF,dirtis gently loosenedowned and dissolved. Even the dirt that is ground in at neck- bands . and cuff -edges yields to a. light rubbing with dry Rinse. Not a thread• is weakened. The mild Rinso suds work thoroughly through and through the clothes without injury to a single fabric: Rinse is made by the makers of Lux. For the family wash it is as wonderful as Lux is for fine things. All grocers and department stores sell Rinso. LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED: TORONTO 0-450 ncocorscomcsocoracksocicsosomosamccoccocssai Th Game of Life. It's a wonderful game if you play it right, If you use every one of your team- mates white, If you never cheat and are fair and square And learn the lesson of bear and for. bear; If you meet with a failure now and then, To never giveup but to try it again, And through it all keep smiling and sweet, Though looking straight in the face of defeat. 1f you stick to the rules of the game, my friend, You're sure of a victory in the end. While some are unfair, be it said to their shame, if you play it right, it's a wonderful game. Ida M. Thomas in "Success," Too True, Alas, 'foo True! The family was discussing the in- stallation of the new minister . that morning. Jimmie took account of "in- stall," "Daddy," Ile said, "does it mean put- ting a minister in a stall and feeding him?" "No, my son,". the father replied so- berly. "It means hitching hirer to a church and asking him to haul it." For Bore Feet-Minard's Liniment. His Money's Worth. An Atlanta man, visiting the shop of an old darky who had formerly been in his employ, -observed that the color- ed man wore a most unhappy expres- sion. "What's the (natter, Uncle BIM?" asked the visitor. "lee jest been done outer some money, sub;". wasthe reply. "Had a terrible misery in mah tool, ten' went to a dentist an' got it pulled, an'.he charged mea dollah—a whole dollah!" ----- Some motor -ear drivers are inclined to divide the public into two classes, "the quick and the dead."—Lord Hew - art, Lord Chief Justice, ing from you. I've found that I hate Map of The Pas Mineral Area. like poison to haveyousee the every- A map of Tho'Pas mineral area hes' day dishes and clothes and the kind(jllst bean issued' by the Topographical , of neighbors that come in and out all, survey of Canada,, taking in a district day. Evelyn Rogers, can you ever180miles wide and 130 miles nortlx and south, the anthem edge of which is about twenty-five miles north of 1 The Pas. it is compiled from surveys I made by the above organization and 1 by the Geological- Survey of Canada and presents all available geographical. I'informtion that may be shower on the scale used, that, of one inch to six miles. The map may be Obtained upon ap- plication to the Topographical Survey, 1 Department of the Interior, Ottawa. -� Mlnard's Linimentit'leala Cute. The 'Toronto Hospital tor, Incurables, Io ofdllatipn with Bellevue and .Allied Hospitals. New York City, otters a- three years' Doane at Training, to Imam 'women. ;hnvinp the required education, nhd dedioas of becoming nurses. This Hospital has :adapted the eight. hour system. The pupil, receive uniforms of the School. o.. monthly 5110wnne 1111 Irnvcll10 ezoonsfe to and. from Now Vora, For further Information apply do the Superintendent. ISSUE No, BEAUTIFY IT WITH "DIAMOND DYES" Perfect home dye- ing and tinting is guaranteed with Dia- mond Dyes. ,fust dip in rod water to tint off, delicate sl ode„ cr'boil to dye rich, • permanent color s, Tho Whole Family. Sunday -school teacher—"And you have no brothers and sisters?" Little Marie—"No, ma'am, I'm all the children we've got." The conditions of conquest are al- ways easy. We have but to toil awhile, endure awhile, believe always, and never turn back. Beans and Peas Send Samples—State Quantities Morrow & Co., 39 Front St. E. Phone: Main 173S, Toronto, Ont. �( WEBSTEwpRi� A GNN 0 -I PARTS and SERVICE Auto Starter and Generator Repair Company. 659A Yonge St. - Toronto BETTER THAN EVER That Is the secret of the won- derful demand for "Prince Edward" Fox Wire. • MOST DEPENDABLE FOX VIVRE IN THE WORLD Shipments received regularly frum our Mills in England. Write or wire for samples and latest Price .List. R. T. HOLMAN, Limited, Summerside, P.E.I. Sales Agents for Ontario W, H. C. Ruthven J, M. McGillivray Alliston Priceville ' iaxr017,21t MSIMnlonr Poch 15 -cent 1?ael1a go contains directions' so .simple any wo- man can dye or .Lint lingerie' silks, wa'sds, dresses, coats, -stc 11 ;vnaters, draperies, cover - tugs hangings, every.thiug new. Buy "Diamond Dycr'—uo ptherhin1 d. -and tell your druggist whether the material you wish to color is wool or. si11c, or whether it is linen;, cotton; 'or mixed goods. . HUNGARIANS VN CANADA By Merle C. flail, Winnipeg. • One of the Most valuable coutrl'bu Lions to the settlement of Canada's Pr irie Provinces during the past ,80, yoars.!has taken the form of a gradual influx of imn,inrairts froth Hungary,a country which trains Its rural inhabit ant to .stress the importance of mixed farming, getting' the best out of small locations, and to, occupy' all the spare time provided by 'months not devoted. actually to tilling the land, in the most fruitful ',Meaner possible, following' various handicraft arts, for example. Since 1894 there havo been brought, to the Dominion some 82,000 Rungrai- ens, and of tli?s number 98 per cent. went right to work on tate land, indus- trious capable farmer's. Of the new- comers, 40 per cent. took up their to- matoes. on Saskatchewan's plains, where they are now 'considered a very real asset t'o the welfare and advance- ment of the province. They own and control vast strips of land in some of the most sought-after districts of the province, among the largest Hungari- an settlements being Punnchi, Beke• varm, Stockholm, Melville and Bather- azy. Following Mixed Farming Methods.-' And not only do the Hungarians own and control the land, but they are add- ing to its value from year to year, by excellent care, and adaptation to mixed farming ae best applied to this country. Individually they operate from a quarter section of land up to as lunch as three sections. Practical- ly each one arrived in Canada with little or no capital other than that re. qutred by the immigration regulations, or actually necessary to get them to the scene -of, their present homes, In- dustry, courage and strength saw them through, and Canada's goad dark earth wasquick to respond to their atten- tion, rewarding them well for their struggle. In. addition to the actual tilling of the soil, spare hours have been turned to splendid account, as a visit to the permanent exhibit of Hungarian craftsmanship at St. Andrew's Presby- terlan College, Saskatoon, will con- vince 'even the most sceptical. At tractive as well as useful -articles are there, including samples of weaving, rug -making, fancy needle -work, ham- mered brass and wood carving. Visit- ors to Saskatoon seldom miss the ex- hibit,'as it is reputed to be execptlon- ally fine. Connected with St. Andrew's College at Saskatoon is one of the most out- standing Hungarians in Western Cana- da in the person of Dr. Frank Hoffman, missioary for the Presbyterian Church, whose headquarters are at the college. Dr. Hoffman has eleven preaching sta- tions in a circuit of 850 miles. These "stations," as he calls then`, are financed by the Preabyteriau Church in Canada. Dr. Hoffman visits every station between ;the lst of May and ,the 1st of October. He travels by sad- dle entirely and often is obliged to camp out at night when he canna get to a convenient town oy village before darkness sets In. In addition to his work as missionary, Dr. Hoffman is a resident master at Saskatoon College, where over one hundr•ei Hungarian students follow courses to lit them for professional and agricultural work, Lured to Mexico but Cama Sack. But not all through the 30 years since the first Htuigarians came to the Western Prairies have these settlera been contented "New Canadians." Two or three years ago it was rumor- ed that the United States and Mexico night prove more fruitful fields for their labors. Great fortunes awaited those who would move from the prairie west, it was' stated by those who set themselves up as authorities. Credulous and eager to seize any such golden opportunity as was described, many of the Hungarians who had al- ready become well started in Sas- katchewan sold their farms with what possessions they could not take with them and joined the trek of foreigners from the west who were making their way south across the border. however the promised fields were prickly with. 'cactus and not flowing with milk and honey as had been re- presented. The wonderful fortunes were not forthcoming as the farmers had been led to beligte, ` The result was that Canada was once more to have an influx of Hungarians, but tht's time not from Europe. They were just as "broke" as when they origin- ally arrived in the West, in point of worldly posaessions, but infinitely wiser in the experience which taught those who had remained in Canada as well as thee° who had gone south, that Ma the Dominion and her prairies, after all, offered the best chances to the hardy industrious farmer who was willing to. work.' Coal and Water -Power. A rodent study of the total coal con- sumption for all purposes in the United. Stales and Canada, taking the. average over the past five years, shows that the average' Coal consumption per capita is 20 per cent, less in Canada than in the United States. Consider- ing that the climate of Canada is Gold- er than the average of the United States the opposite resdlt might be ex- pected and analysis shows that this result is mainly due to the saving of coal in • industries by water -power de- velopment. The water -power develop. ,n5nt: in Canada is now 360 h.p. per 1,000 of population as against ;95 h.p. In the United States. Kelsey- ; eafang 1s.e�yht He Ming The Kelsey warm air gen. erator will heat every room in your house. Itis, easy to operate and costs less for fuel than any other hosting method. Heath boths. pil and large houses with equal satisfaction WRITE FOR. -.PARTICULARS CANADA FOUNOROrS RFORGINGS � M,ra. 'JAMBS SMART PLANT 8ROMOI1015 0055 ., 9, 49—