The Seaforth News, 1949-06-30, Page 6"S LABA"
TA
Outstanding Quality • Delicious Flavour
COM
A Serial Story
by
JOCHAHDW LEWIS
siNtIPS15
The mars thus rare Virginia Antes reaves.
her home its' %'axbinwrion lunaedlntels
atter reeei int: ar letter , from her Ilium
Phil Iniureueo, angina iter to 00170 Co him
Grossing the Arizona ninths by atageeuneb,
and within a hundred milt's of Santanon
its.. where Phil has o ranrh, the stageens
seekers are held up and n money box
addressedto a titan named Barron at Santa
Bonita is stolen. A cameo min le taken
from Virginia but that is alit the bandits
let her keep her letter. Lt. ,nim Randall,
whom Virginia one0 knew- and 10red. ex
torts the etnge from Lnnnasu. Baron. who
deans the group at Lemma, aecmnponiee
them 00 the 70 -mile trip to Santa Bonita,
Halfway there they are stunned by Apnehes.
Mal:Matly bent on intxrhiet.
CHAPTER III
Natchi accepted the statement
with a stoic face. He made a gesture
that ended the talk. then swung his
pony and rode to the bank. He dis-
appeared into the shadows.
Virginia watched Jim Randal
ride back from the stream and knew
genuine relief. The atmosphere was
thick with danger. She could feel
it. The men about her were nerve -
taut, their faces grim and sober.
She heard Jim Randall's clear
strong voice giving orders.
"We'll camp here tonight. If we
move on, well invite attack. O'Hara,
have the men erect breastworks of
rocks. Keep the pickets well in.
Light no fires. Easy does it."
"Yes, sirl" the sergeant's voice
rang with confidence.
O'Grady was raising Virginia's
tent and she watched him, feeling
helpless and out of place, a woman
in a Man's world. She heard some-
one step up behind her and knew it
was Jim Randall. Site turned slowly.
His smile lay easily on his lips:
his only wariness lay in the nar-
rowness of his eyes. But, too, his
voice had lost it banter,
"Did those fellows give you a
scare, Virginia?"
She dared thaw a. little, He (tad,
after all, just faced possible death.
"Yes -a little," site told hint. "When
you were outnumbered. What did
they want?"
"The Apaches?" He knew she
meant that: he was stalling for time
while he thought of the reply he
wanted, His hesitation betrayed
him. "Oh, they thought we might
be talked out of some tobacco."
"Tobacco!" She gave hien a thin
-mile. "Jim, you're still treating me
like a child. But I'm not trembling
with fear, 1-1 feel quite safe."
1 uu(.ing for handy pickup work,
easy crochet? Foundl Here's the
most wonderful medallion -- it
forms a double design, joined!
You'll memorize this medallion
castle; 41/2 in, in No, 30 cotton 1
Pattern 851, crochet directions.
Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS
in coins (stamps Cannot be st-
em tcl) for this pattern to Box 1,
12o Eighleeeth St. New Toronto
Ont.
Print plainly PATTERN NUM-
BER, your NAME and ADDRESS.
"Thanks. That's a cotnplimeset,
your trusting me,"
She laughed at him. "1 was think-
ing that the soldiers look depend,
able."
His laughter joined hers. "Score
one for you!" he said, and turned
away,
Y
Mel Scarlett reappeared and this
time squatted down, apart from the
others, his back against a boulder
near the tent. He relaxed wholly.
his gaunt, roughly -clad person
drooping dejectedly. He glanced
at Virginia and.smiled. She crossed
to him,
She asked hint if his excursions
into the brush weren't dangerous.
and he merely smiled again in an.
swer, Then she asked:
"What did the Apaches want?"
"What did the lieutenant say they
wanted?"
"T don't think he said," Virginia
replied.
Mel Scarlett looked up at her, his
eyes wistful. She realized suddenly
that he was a very old man and the
years hadn't been kind to him.
"All I got are my suspicions," he
said. "i figure by .their tactics that
they wanted to capture Lt. Ran-.
dall."
"Capture bio!"
Virginia's voice became a little
thin. "Why should they want to Cap-
ture hint -especially?"
r e *
"Natchi, the chief," Scarlett said
in Ids taciturn way, "hates the lieu-
tenant. Natchi's son stole horses.
Lt. Randall arrested him, I figure
Natchi planned to capture the offi-
cer and hold hint 'as hostage to
force the release of the young buck."
Virginia watched Jim Randall
while the}' ate their evening .rations.
For the first time, she realized,
she knew something definite about
hint. Finally knew after three years
SERIAL STORY -SEVEN .
that he was more than a handsome
man in uniform, more than a dash-
ing officer who handled his social
obligations well. It suddenly Mat-
tered less that she had known him
as a gay dining and dancing com-
panion, as a matt with a way with
women and who made love lightly.
He was a soldier and the ways of
his life were hard and dangerous.
Quite suddenly she found hitn look•
ing at her:
"Wish you were back home?" he
asked.
"No . . Well. not exactly, site
said.
"The Territory Isn't Washington.'
he told her, "Tire country is hard.
The mea too, You'll see our other
nature here, And I don't think
you'll like us."
She did not answer, but glanced
across the camp at Stephen Barron.
He sat apart with bis two com-
panions, hard looking men, not eat -
saddle bags. Barron's face was
ing army rations but food from hit
sharply handsome. in the moonlight
(Continued Next Week)
The Little- Man Who Came Back -Revived 10 minutes after
being pronounced dead, four-year-old Larry Page, is recover-
ing In a hospital. Here he is visited by iais parents, Mr, and
Mrs, Francis Page, His left leg, broken in the auto accident
that almost cost his life, isin a traction .splint.
AN€ RIRST
Why is it that a man marries the
girl he professes to love, brings
children into the world, and then
goes his own away alone, leaving
them to get along the best they
can? How can he think he is being
fair or kind? Yet he will dismiss
the situation with, "But of course
I'm a good husband!'
The plaint of one neglected w'te
touches me to-
day. She writes,
in part:
"1 am the
mother of .four
sons, the oldest
being eight. My
husband goes
out every night;
he says he can't
sleep till he has
a few bottles of beer. He takes us
out only once a week, and says
that's enough. He likes bulldog,
and has plenty of friends, but 1 get
so tired and lonesome I nearly go
crazy'
"He doesn't' want us to go out
by out'setves, and when I fuss at
him he gets mad, and says he ,s
boss, I only get enough money to
pay bills with. He keeps the rest.
"(le will not have anyone conte
in to stay with the boys so I can go
out with hint. (We never leave
them alone, of course.) When :one
of then' is sick, he won't help me
at all.
"I don't think he is happy with
me, but lie says he is."
* A husband who takes his pleas-
* ures alone, and leaves his wife
* and children to get along as beet
th'y can, is missing the very
* spirit of married life.
* He is cheating himself of a
* father's role He is allowing his
e children to grow up practically
* unknown to him. If a man has
* any hope of eternity, he sees him-
* self projected through his chit-
* dcen and unless he wins theirs
* affection and confidence, he is
* losing that precious companion-
* ship that enriches life, and that
* close fellowship with growing
* minds that is so compensating
* for tile responsibilities it involves,
* itis children grow further and
* further away from him, and he
* will, inconsistently enough, charge
* then' with being ungrateful for
* all he does for them, What does
* he do, excepl pay for their food
* and clothes? It is his wife who
* deserves all the credit for their
* training.
* A wife's love for her husband
* cannot subsist on neglect. It mist
CROSSWORD
PUZZLE
rP.Oss
1. Li tub
4. English
troll eqa
9. Tablet
12. htxelatuatlon
13. Restttclt
14, No matter
wh lent
16, Uu sway
with
15. Fearful
19 Beek or the
neck
20.Withered
33. name
23. Secular'
37 Flow:. 'altaed
20
30. Flows
ay
Fragment•
31.
31.Seating
34. Troo
nti
39, At home,
Yf. ifleb hot
pprophet
H. ,son un etatlos
mark
3s. Moderate.*
42. Charges
41. Wrignoon lin
44. Encouraa
46. Ose
92. Originator
61, .'rind of
electric light
62, hoot eoverinere
Period
r, moon
66 D'Tue'Thes
Ritmo meth
4701
2.. Steal 110 cloth
2 tea
i
11, Large not
5 Peeler
10. Cuckoo
11. .0101
16 Tardy
13, Cod of lova
_ 20. Self-ahttsfled
-- 21. Ridingeostui
0. Illuminated 22, Stra gliton
bythe noon 24, 0511 erst.
6. Readjust 96. Mus. wad
6. Tree instrument.
7. Myself 38. Ano tymoue
33. Small bona
39. Vibrate
18. Copies
30. Notion
40. Conint:salop
41. I3ad courage
45. Girl's niek-
name
46, Gentle afroke
47. Sin
98, Study
99. Native. metal
60. tCnosk
63. lib a man
Answer elsewhere 881 this issue
* be nourished,'like any other emo-
* tion, if it is to bloom and bear
e fruit. Deprived of her husband's
* true friendship, shut off from the
* innocent amusements. she' needs
* so much, she is walled in her
* own (louse 1%'itla active youngsters
* claiming almost every moment of
* her waking hours. She must
gander sometimes whether her
husband wants anything but a
* housekeeper!
* If any of 101' masculine readers
* today sees himself in this picture
* -I-urge you to get to know those
* children of yours and liecome an
+y' important influence in their lives.
* And see your wile as a personal-
* ity, an individual with the same
* needs and appetites which you
* indulge for yourself. Renew your
* courtship, plan your lei -are hours
* together (and 0t011 away front
* home) Ad you will have again
* that sparkling girl you married
* and whom, if you will think a
* little. you miss so touch. Your
* own life will be enriched beyond
* your Relief.
To "C. L. F."• Thi, young wo-
man may be cold to roer repeated
attempts at friendship Because she
is conventional, and sea izes that
you two have not been properly
introduced. It to wild be playing
safe to find a -mutual acquaintance
to present you properly, •
Ordinarily. since your acquain-
tance Inas progressed without the
usual formalities .it min,ht be quite
all right to ask her to go to church
with you one morning. Vet she is
not inclined to encourage dates with
you, andel suspect the lack of intro-
duction nuns be the only reason
Try this. anyhow. Von have noth-
ing to lose.
r , «
A man who neglects his wife and
his chiluren cheats himself of all
the beauty in marriage. Anne Hirst
has opened the eyes of thousands
of blind hu^hands, l --rite her at
Box 1, 123 Eighteenth Street. New
Toronto, Ontrr.°.
A Little -Known
Cerner of France - -
One of the most individual and
little-known corners of France is
Provence, which sometimes resem-
bles Italy, sometimes Palestine, and
sometimes loolcs like like no other
place on earth. Provence is mostly
dry, scrubby, rocky, arid land,
flowered with endless miles of olive
trees, and bordered with' rows of
towering.- deep -green cypress ,
Provence is a triangle of land
bordering on the Mediterranean -
roughly speaking, be,ween the Ri-
viera and the Spanish peninsula,
it has a language quite its own,
which is sometimes spoken, some-
times sung in folk songs, and some. •
times used on restaurant menus for
old times' sake. .
The biggest city of Provence,
and the most untypical, is Mar-
seilles, which is also France's larg-
est port and second largest city.
Big and brawling Marseilles is the
plaque tournante for southeastern
France. East is the Riviera, south
woes the sea lie the island of Cor-
nett* and the cities of North Africa
and up the north road are Nimes,
Arles, Avignon, and She ruins of
the. empire that was Rome, -From
"Foot -loose in France," by Horace
Sutton. �- -
One' of our friends sees a narked
similarity between some minds and
concrete. Both are all mixed tip and
permanently set, - Mason City
Globe -Gazette.
ISSUE 23 - 1945
New Gadgets and Inventions
You'll Probably Be Seeing
'WO -FREEZE" FOR ROOF
DRAINS. ' This unit contains a
chemical that prevents roof drains
from freezing and causing water
damage to ceilings and side'walls.
The charge is designed to last an,
average winter. Onesize fits pipes
from 2 in,' to 6 in. Installation is
simple. Rain will not deplete the
chemical; it is affected only by the
ice and snow.
FAUCET SET. New faucet set
available in Canada is said to pro-
vide a new sealing surface and ,re-
duce tap dripping. Neoprene sealing
faucet fills in cuts and ,crevices in
old faucet seat surfaces.. For water
at any temperature. No friction be.
tureen washer face disc and the
seat. Seat and washer are designed
to snap into position in standard
faucets. Comes in four standard
sizes to fit seat boles from 5/16
in. to 9/16 in,
FOR THE BLIND, n "pencil".
which enables the blind to read a
printed page, and a "flashlight"
wl i penpits them to explore their
sai,. .(dings, have been developed
m a study of elec,ronic aidsfor
the blind, The 'reading device.
which resembles apencil, 1
scans -
83Y
page' of ordinary y type. The blind
person using it wears an earphone
connected to the instimment. The
device "reads," then 'talks back"
to the blind by transmitting sounds.
The second electronic aid devel-
oped, carried in the hand like a
flashlight, is a substitute for the
tapping cane. The sounds, which
vary with the nearness of objects,
are transmitted to the blind- per-
son, allowing him to scan scenery,
detect trees. rocks and water.
REEL FOR VACUUM „CORD.
"Cordonatic Reel" which fits on at
one end of tank -type vacuum clean-
er•
keeps electric cord out of oper-
ator's way, Winds and unwinds cord
like a fishing reel. Is enclosed in a
circular metal housing and will take
up to 20 ft, of cord.
AUTO CLOTHES CARRIER.
A precision - tooled automobile
clothes carrier which holds eight
garments or more. each on' its own•
hanger, is said to keep garments
from being crushed or wrinkled on
motor trips. Unit is Inade of stain-
less steel; can be adjusted to fit be-
tween top and bottom frames of any
car window, Clothes and carrier
itself wi 1 not project into car, Does
not interfere with oueration of the
windows, dues not touch the glass.
Rubber -cushioned mounting said to
prevent damage to the finish,
EASY TO FIND SWITCH.
"Glo-Switch," a wall light -switch
with tiny neon bulb inside the on-off
button, is offered. Bulb comes on
automatically when light's turned
off, soft light tnalees switch easy to
locate in (lark, �-
CHILDREN'S PAINTS. Child-
ren's painting colors, are said to
wash out completely when spilled on
tablecloths or clothes.
PLASTIC PLAY-PIIN, Plastic
play -pen which weighs only 1
ounces is offered, 'Is washable ai d
has a water' -proof "ground -sheet
base.
PLASTIC FISH FLOAT. "'frip-
Bob" fish float made of plastic may
be used for both casting and still
fishing maker states. For casting, a
special trip action releases float the
instant it contacts tip of rod. Impact
causes Patch which Bolls the double
float sections together at top to be-
come ,tmhooked, and al ows fish- to
be played to top of rod and landed
without float interference.' Float can
be adjusted to proper fishing depth
with one hank. For fixed -float fish.
ing, line is threated through holes
in ends of float, with latchin the
905111on.
Rugged Performance
The male half of a nein dance
team was pleading with a producer.
"You never saw anything so sen-
sational, the .dancr ray.d, "At the '
finish of our act 1 take nay partner
by tChe hair and whirl her around
for exactly 20 spins. Then I wind up
the 'whole thing by heaving , her
• through an open window." -
The producer paled. "Heave her
through an open window!" he re.,
peated. "Do you do that at every
performance?"
The, young man shrugged. "No-
body's perfect," he admitted. "Some-
times I miss!"
Discovers Horne
Skin Remedy
This clean stainless antiseptic known all
over Canada as atomne'a Emerald 011, le
such 9 flue beating agent that Eesema,
Barber's Itch, Salt Rheum, Itching Toes
and Feet, and other Inflammatoryskia.
eruptions are often relieved in a few days, i
ritoono's Emerald 011 1. pleasant to twee
and it la an nntieeptie andpenetrating that
many old. stubborn eases of long etandies
have yielded to lie influence,
atoone's Emerald 011 la cold by drug.
slate everywhere to help rid you of stub-
born pimples and unsightly elan troubles
-sntisfnction or menet' back
DOES
INDIGESTION
WALLOP YOU
BELOW THE BELT?
Help Your Forgotten "26" For The Kind Of
Relief That Helps Make Too Ririn' To res
below the belt-liof our 28 feat] o! b wells
9) 111 heSo 1paadigestion strikes,
n they try
AND
below the belt.
What you may need ie Carter% Little Liver
Pitt, to give needed help to that "forgotten
28 feet" of bowels,
Take
alLittle Liver
and e aerr mes Taktem according
to
directions, They help wake. up. n larger Sow
of he 3 main digestive fuicas in your domed:
AND bowels -help you digest what you have
eaten in Nature% own Way,
makes yen ou feel better from your headof lto your
toes. .2,,,u be sure you get the genuine Carter%
Little I -fiver Pihs from vallr dntggisl - 35e
Sweet Swedish Tea Ring
0
Recipe
Measure lute large bowl, 3; c. juke.
warm water, 1 tbs. granulated sugar;
stir until sugar is dissolved. Sprinkle
with 3 envelopes Fleischmann's Royal
Fact Rising Dry Yeast. Let stand 10
minutes. TION stir we1L 8ca14 35 c -
milk and stir inX c, granulated augur,
134 taps, salt, 6 the. sitorteningrcnolto
lukewarm. Add to yeast mixture and
stir in 3 well -beaten eggs. Stir in 3 r.
once -sifted bread flour; beat well -
Work in 3 c. more twirled bread flour.
Knead until smooth and elastic; place
in greased bowl and brush top with
melted butter or shortening. Cover
and Int in warm place, free from
draught, Let rine until doubled in bulk.
Punch down dough and divide into 2
equal portions; form into smooth balls.
Roil each piece into a 34" thick ob-
long; loosen dough, Cream X cr butter
or margarine and mix in 1 c, brown
sugar (lightly pressed, down), 2 tape,
cinnamon. Spread this mixture on
dough and sprinkle with 1 c, raisins or
currants $ ginui"g at a long edge,
roll each piece up like a jelly roll; place
each roll on a greased largo baking
sheet and shape into a ring, earning
ends together. Grease tops. Cut 1"
slices abnost.through to mitre with
seiesora and turn each slice partly on
its side. Cover and let rise until
doubled in bulk. $rush with 1 egg yolk
beaten with 2 tbs. milk. $ l.e in
moderate oven, 350 25-30 min 30
desired, spread tops with a plane
Ming. Serve hot, with butter,
NEW FAST -ACTING DRY
YEAST NEEDS NO
REFRIGERATION!
Stays fresh and full-strength hs your
pantry for weeks! Here's all you dot
In a small amount (uspally specified) of lukewarm water, dis-
solve thoroughly 1 teaspoon sugarfor each envelope of yeasts
Speinkle with dry yeast. Let stand 10 minutes.
THEN stir well. (The water used withthe yeast counts as •
part of the total liquid called for in your recipe.)
Gee a morns sr,/y/