The Seaforth News, 1948-05-27, Page 6The Quality Tea
ALABK
ORANGE PEKOE
i
BY
JA C K S 0 N• C 0 L E
Synopsis
Chapter XLI: Valdez tries to per-
suade valley men not to run down
Pete Haskel!, whore they believe is
the culprit they seek, until more
evidence is produced.
CHAPTER XLII
"Then you can't do anything —
legally."
But otherwise we —" began the
cattleman.
The rancher brindled like a cat
with its back up and tail fluffed out.
"You've got a nerve telling me
what we can't do without bucking
the law!" he roared. "You're a shin-
ing example of a law-abiding—"
"No matter what I ant!" Valdez
sn..pped curtly. "I'ni asking you to
hold your men in check for forty
hours, Sabe?" •
"And suppose none of them feels
like taking orders from an outlaw?"
Haskell growled.
.:
"Then you can all face the farmer's
guns! Somebody tried to burn out a
farmer named Pringle a few hours
back, And if things had gone the
ty they started, after that, at a
farmer's meeting tonight, your bulid-
ings might have been ash piles by
now. And if you had tried to stop
t' em, you mightn't be able to sit
here talking now."
"I've got eight punchers in the
bunkhouse!" blustered Haskell.
"They-"
"Then there would have been nine
dead men, Thirty or more settlers
were ready to ride down here and
burn you out, Haskell."
Haskell stared. "You mean you
stopped 'ern?"
Valdez shrugged. "I'm giving you
orders now. They're for your good.
For forty-eight hours you and alt
cattlemen keep out of the farmers'
valley Sabe? If you don't-"
Through the Sen window came
the mud -muffled pound of a gallop-
ing horse. Vatlez shot a glance out-
side. He could glimpse a rider be-
. A whirl skirt like Sister's for
little "Me Tool" letake Pattern 4820
as a simulated juniper with puffed
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(25c) in coins (stamps cannot be
ccepted) for this pattern to Room
4, 371 Bay Street, Toronto. Print
'p airily SIZE, NAME, ADDRESS,
STYLE NUMBER.
ISSUE 22 — 1948
low, already half out of saddle. By
the wide split skirt he kne the
rider to be a girl, even before she
cried out Haskell's name.
The old rancher was amazed and
alarmed.
"Tim Callan's daughter!" He
thrust his head out of the window.
"Alice! Up here!"
A dark-haired girl inoved into the
oblong of light on the ground.
"You've got to come, Mr. Has-
kell!" she cried "Dad's trying to
p a crowd from riding to the
valley. Bartle's brought in more
settlers, and there's barbed wire on
wagons."
"Get house and telt your dad I'm
coming pronto!"
* *
Haskell spun from the window,
snatched a boot and jammed in his
foot as there came the sound of the
girl's horse racing away.
"You can stop those hot-headed
fools if you try hard enough," Val -
de said tightly. "You've got to."
"Maybe I can. If not—"
"I will." Valdez slid over the
cyindow sill. "There's a forty-eisht-
hour truce on, I told you that."
"Not on You, hombre!" Haskell
snapped. "Looks like you're dead
set against us cattlemen. That maks •
you fair game wherever you're met
up with."
Valdez vaulted lightly through
the window into the blackness. He
was out of sight when Haskell
pounded down the stairs and out
to the corral .
Pete Haskell raced to Tim Cal-
lan's spread in a lather. There he
heard the sorest news he had heard
since the first tobacco farmer had
thrown up a long fence in the south
end of Deep !;rater Valley.
* * *
"The men have already gone, Mr.
Haskell," the cook told him. "They
all ain't more'n three-four utiles
away by now."
Haskell raced on. He tuttst stop
them!
caught up with them at Chin-
not; Pass, the main entrance to Deep
'.'ater Valley, He rode with gun
in hand, grim determination in his
steel -blue eyes.
"I'm not arguing," he told them.
"But for the last time I'm telling
you that the man who rides this
way and gets by this pinto of mine
does so after he drills me. .
"I'll ride with you to town to
Bartle's office," he offered, "provid-
ing you let me speak to him alone
—and let me get away before one
of you draws a gun on hint. I
don't want even a buzzard's blood
on my hands or conscience. Sabe?"
The men agreed to follow the
level-headed Haskell. They turned
their horses' heads toward Gold
Creek.
* • * *
Ellen Maxon lay shivering with
dread as the man she had once
thought she loved came storming
up the stairs and to the door of
her bedroom,
He did not even knock, The
knob was twisted, and Clark Weber
stamped into the room and over to
her bedside. She could hear his
breath coming in fast, b i t t e r
snatches.
"Have you 'been in the barn
loft?" demanded Weber.
Her denial died at sight of what
lay in the palm of his outhrust
hand. It was a hairpin, one of
the rubber kind she used. He
stooped, grabbed up one of her
shoes from where it lay beside the
bed and spat out a curse as he dis-
covered the sole was caked with
moist mud.
"Yes!" Ellen flung at him de-
fiiantly. "I have been In the barn
loft. I set that poor little Mexican
peon free! And you set me free
when you tried to do such a con-
temptible thing as to kidnap him,
to try to get gold from his father!
You'll find your ring on the
dresser."
Rage shook hien, and his eyes
blazed fire. "You little empty-
headed—"
(To Be Continued)
New Canadians—Three httndred immigrants t o Ontario from Holland arrived in Toronto re-
cently. Most of them are farm folk and will settle in rural sections. Six fine-looking new •
Canadians rest on their baggage while waiting for a train to their new home in Owen Sound.
Froni left are Adrianne Van de Steen, her sisters Josephine, Betsy, Annie and Maria,
LANN€ 14I R ST
"How Do 1 Know
He Loves Me?"
"I've been going with a boy for
two years," writes a young fiancee.
"I love him more than life, and he
says he feels the same way about
etc. Yet so
many of my
married friends
said before they
married. 'I know
nothing will
happen to Tom
and use's"
"How car
they be so sure?
Must we just
take the boy's word for it? I'm
afraid to be too sure, for fear of
getting hurt."
And many a girl, in the weeks
before her wedding, feels the sante
fear.
We cane . retli,. the future.
We never can be sure that "nothing
will happen' between ourselves and
the one we love. A safer thought
is: "if anything does happen to us,
I know we'll come through all
rigit t."
That faith is based on the know-
ledge we have of the man we are
to marry—knowledge accumulated
through the years of our friend-
ship.
Knowledge and Faith
* Alt lovers have misunderstand-
* ings. How has the young man
* measured up through then all?
* Is he quick to cot lemn you, or
* anxious to give you the benefit of
* any doubt?
* Doe:; he think ofyour pleas-
* ure first, or of his own?
* Is he tender when you are ill,
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Laura Wheeler's new, improver'
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Send TWENTY-FIVE CENS
in coins (stamps cannot be accepte,'
for this pattern to the Necdlecra'
Dept., Room 604, 371 Bay Street,
Toronto. Print plainly PATTERN
NUMBER, your NAME and
ADDRESS.
* or impatient with any sickness?
* Is he jealous when ypu talk to
* to an old friend, or does rte trust
* you?
* Is he pleasant to your girl
* friends, or does he resent your
* seeing them?
4“ Does he get along well with
* your family?
* Does he help with the dishes when
* you do them at home, or sit by
* and read a newspaper?
* Is he strictly honest (1 mean,
* has he real integrity) or does he
* just get by?
* Is he generous with money, or
* a penny-pincher? (Of course
* you've discussed budgets, and
* who will handle his salary?)
* And (this is important) do you
* two laugh ,at the same jokes, like
* the same foods, enjoy the same
* sports and entertainment? If you
* differ, does he compromise, or
* think you should go along with
* him?
* Check your answers, and you
* will know what love he feels for
* you and your chances for a
* good .marriage.
To "S.V.," "A Little Afraid,"
"Wondering"
Instead of doubting the affection
of these young men, be intelligent.
They have singled you out to mar-
ry, from all the girls they know
that proves they love you best.
Remember, though, that when you
marry you'll live together pract-
ically 2.1 hours out of 24. It is im-
portant that you trust each other.
Make sure you do, And learn, dur-
ing this engagement period, to talk
things over when you don't agree,
each in the spirit of eager com-
promise.
* *
Have faith in the man you're go-
ing to marry, and let him know it.
Don't fear the future—you cannot
escape trouble, but you CAN learn
how to erect it. Write Anne Hirst
at 123 18. Street, New Toronto,
14, if you think she can help.
111n3:on
The color experts have conte up
with a tip that can be a big help in
making that long, narrow room look
more livable They suggest that
such a room can be made to look
wider and shorter by painting the
two end walls a darker color than
the long side walls! By the same
token, square rooms can be given
the illusion of extra length by paint-
ing the side walls in a lighter shade
of the sante color as is used on the
end walls.
Advance • Notes
From the "Ex."'
Its five days recently, Mrs.
Kate Aitken, women's director of
the ,Canadian National Exhibi-
tion, flew the Atlantic twice and
'visited Berlin, Paris and Lon-
don. She had Exhibition business
to do, as you might guess! It
was nothing short of arranging
to bring Princess Elizabeth's
beautiful wedding dress to this
year's C.N.E., for one .. and alt
to see. Elwood Hughes, general
manager of the "Ex.," had made
the preliminary. arrangements on
his trip overseas. While in Lon-
don, Mrs. Aitken also went to
tea at Buckingham Palace, the
guest of the King and Queen. If
you haven't yet got your C.N.IL
prize list, there's no time like
now to sit down andwrite for
it. Just send along your nerve
to Mrs. Kate Aitken, Women's
Director, C.1N''t, Toronto,
Your Handwriting
and You Alex. S.yArnott
Roy Rogers'
Handwriting
Our readers should be especi-
ally interested in this week's analy-
sis as it is that of the handwriting
of Roy Rogers, king of the cow-
boys and famous motion picture
star.
If you have followed Roy's pic-
ture exploits you willknow that
they feature especially his gallant-
ry in protecting the weak and un-
fortunate. His script is written
with light, fine lines, a strong in
dication of a spiritual nature which
tends toward idealism and nobility
of thought, Independence is shown
in the letter "d", revealing Roy's
desire to do things according to
his own inclinations rather than
those of other people—typical of
the pioneering spirit. Extra large
loops in his capital letters are also
typical of the adventurous type of
person, always willing to take bold
steps.
The smallness of the writing gives
an appearance of concentration —
a sign of power to focus attention
on the more important issues. In
some of the other letters, having
decided loops with tight knots to
close them, we see tenacity that
will stick to a problem until it
has been solved,
On the whole Roy's writing is
a good illustration of sincerity of
purpose, really remarkable energy
and a !sigh -spirited personality.
Sunday School Lesson
By Rev. R. Barclay Warren.
Daniel Stands By His Convictions,
Daniel 1;8-20.
Golden Text:— But Daniel purpos-
ed in his heart that hr would not de-
file himself with the portion of the
king's `meat, nor with the wine
which he requested of the prince of
the eunuchs that he might not de-
file himself: Denial 1:8.
Daniel has always been "a boy's
,hero". As alad'he was taken a cap-
tive in Jerusalem end led off to
Babylon, the capital city of a pagan
empire. He was to b' fed with the
portion of the king's meat and with
the wine which he drank as part of
his preparation toappear befofe the,
king. In such circumstances it
would have been easy to ignore the
teachings of his youth concerning
clean and unclean •ata. But Dpn-
ie. purposed in his heart that he
would not defile himself. Yet he
was not offensive about it and court-
eously requested thathe and his
companions be tester for ten' 'aye
on a diet which would not be in
conflict with his convictions: God
blessed them physically, 'intellect-
ually and spiritually for this noble
stand. When they appeared before
the•king, he, found that in all mat-
ters of wisdom and understanding
they were ten times better than alt
the magicians and astrologers in his
realm.
King Nebuchadnezzar was am
azed—and convinced. For the bal-
ance of their school days Daniel
and his companic • were permitted
to continue their siv-ede diet. With
the courage of ' convictions. Dan-
iel dared to "sta alone" and, even
in the face of possible danger to
himself, to do what ,he had been
brought up to regard as right and
proper.
The pledge of abstinence from all
that defiles was the safe course for
those young visitor to Babylon,
magnificent capital of the greatest
empire then upon t' globe. 'There
is no wiser course for those, young'
and old, living in the present era,
more than two thour ad years ater.
PIMPLES AHD
BLACKHEADS
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"PP - C.N It. STATION
Anyone wishing a .more complete
analysis please send self-addressed,
stamped envelope to Alex S. Arnott
123, 18th Street, New Toronto 14.
There is no charge for this service.
What About It?
The team's leading batter hhd
stepped up to the plate and soundly
smacked the first ball for a two-
bagger with three man on base. The
husband, a rabid fan, turned to his
wife in high glee and shouted: "Did
you see hint hit that hall?"
"Well, wasn't he supposed to?"
coldly countered the lady,
"...and to be a polished gentleman,
use NUGGET every day!"
29.49
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9t,YOUR SHOES
'THIS
ut°," MORNING? '