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The Seaforth News, 1944-03-16, Page 6Britain Increases Area -Under Flax, The -area under 'flax in Britain has been increased from a few hun- dred acres in 1939 to over 50,000 acres in 1043, Northern Ireland has also made a remarkable increase in acreage from about 20,000 to 00, 090. Front this effort have come large quantities of"high =grade wing fabric for aircraft, jtip Kidneys 11 Bac ches Do you feel older than you are or suffer from Getting Dp Nights, Backache, Nervous- ness, Leg Pants, Rheumatic Pains, Burning,,. scanty or frequent passages? If so, remem- ber that year Kidneys are vital to your health and that these symptomsmaybe due to Kidney and 'Bladder troubles—In such eases Oyster usually gives prompt and joy- ous relief by helping- the Kidneys clean out poisonous excess acids and wastes. You bee everything' to gain and nothing to lose in trying. Oyster. The Iron clad money -back agreement assures a refund of your money on return of empty package unless Sully satisfied, Don't de- e. 'J Z19 lay. Get oyster wilco, n.., 10..'' dI ruggist today. yor Stop smg Constipation There Is a Better Way to Correct a Common Cause Yes, you can free yourself from slavery to "dosing"—with its griping unpleas- antness, its lack of lasting relief if your trouble is due to insufficient "bulk" in your diet! Do as thousands of others have done! Try the gentle -acting; ALL -BRAN way! KELLOGG'S ALL -BRADS really "gets at" this common cause of constipation by supplying the missing "bulk -producing" material needed for easy, natural elimination. Try eating.a daily serving of ALL -BRAN, or several ALL -BRAN muffins. Drink plenty of water. Get ALL•BRADT at your grocer's. 2 convenient sizes, Made by Kellogg'_ in London, Canada, £"JO OTHER idATURAL CEREAL GIVES iT SO itICHLY With less meat today, wise women are Taappy to know that by serving Quaker Oats for breakfast, they can give their hard-working family a rich source of meat's main element—proteie No other natural cerealis so rich in this vitalfactor for energy and growth as who e.grain oatmeal. And it es richest of all natural tercels in Vitamin Bs mended for sound nerves and energy! No wonder more families than ever are calling delicious, hot breakfasts of Quaker OatsdaiIya"must"for !wartime diets: 2ueoia c°gym �wcw�ar TABLE TALKS SADIE B. CHAMBERS For Vitamin "C" Eat Oranges Oranges top the list as an ex- cellent source of Vitafnin "C" and Vitamin "C" is the bestpossible thingin-theSpring for that groggy feeling. So drink copiously of the juice and serve oranges in many other .healthful dishes. When the small fruit is selling at low prices they are the best for juice, Do the squeezing at the last moment, as orange juice exposed-. to the air over a long period loses its vitamin content. Orange slices with a creamy sinooth,custard is a favorite des- sert, especially with children. An- other favorite is sliced oranges and bananas. Then there are the com- binations in which milk and eggs appear to make them doubly nour- ishing for the children and grown- ups, too. Here are a few favorite orange recipes: Orange Blancmange 4 tablespoons cornstarch b. tsp. salt 4 cop sugar cup cold milk 2ti cups hot Milk - 1 egg 3 tablespoons grated orange rind 2 oranges, cut in sections Mix cornstarch, sugar and salt - au'i blend ,with cold tuiik. Add slowly to hot milk in top of double - boiler and stir constantly until mix- ture thickens. Cools 20 to 30 min- utes. stirring occasionally. Add well -beaten eggs and orange rind. Cook 3 minutes longer, Remove from heat and partially cool. Ar- range orange sections in serving dishes. Add blanc mange and garn- ish with a little grated orange rind, Orange Layer •Cake N cup shortening 5 cup sugar 2 eggs, yolks and whites separ- ated 1 teaspoon lemon extract 1.2 cup -strained orange juice - - 15 cups sifted cake flour 2 teaspoons baking powder teaspoon salt Cream the shortening and sugar thoroughly; add beaten egg yolks, lepton extract, orange juice, then flour, baking powder and salt sift- ed together, Lastly fold in the egg whites, beaten stiff, and bake in 2 layers about 20 minutes at 375F, When cool, frost with this icing: 2 tablespoons butter, melted 3 tablespoons orange juice 1 teaspoon lemon extract 131s cups sifted confectioner's sugar Mix ingredients and beat 1 min- nte. Let stand several minutes, then beat again until creamy anti spread between the layers and on top of cake, Allam Chambers welcomes personal letters from Interested renders. She to pleased to receive suggestions en topics- for her column, and lq always ready to Iloten t0 your "pet peeves." Bequests tor mottoes or Npeelet menus. are In order. Address your letters to "M1es Sadie 51. Chambers, 73 West. Adelaide St., Toronto.' Send stamped eels -ad- dressed envelope It you wish' a reply. Enough material to line a war flier's sheepskin -lined jacket is con- tained in a woman's Mouton coat GIVES FASTER RELIEF ?FROM CHEST COLDS MUSCULAR ACHES & PAINS CHAPPED HANDS HEADACHES NEURALGIA ECZEMA PIMPLES Price ETC,. 30c & 50c ACHING BURNING FEET ly, sate ffiteck, ivlake a new and charming bed- room for guests or one of the family. Transform a roost at little expense with these matching bed- spreads and clressiag 'tables. Dress up that bedroom! lnstrttc- iien5 401 contans directions for varied bedspreads; dressing -table skirts; screens; list of materials.. Send twenty cents in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern to Wilson Needlecraft Dept., Room 421, 73 Adelaide St. West, Toronto `rVrite •plainly 'pattern nnntber, your nano and address. SYNOPSIS By VICTOR ROSSEAU Dave Bruce,; out of a job, arrives at Wilbur Ferris' Cross -Bar ranch. Curran, the foreman, promises hint a job if he can break a horse cal- led Black Dawn, When he suc- ceeds, he discovers Curan expeeted the horse to kill him, A girl nam- ed bots rides up, angry with Dave for breaking "her" horse. Sloe re- fuses to speak to Milli even when he uses his savings to pay off the mortgage on the small ranch she shares with her foster father, a man named Hooker. But when Hooker is shot and Dave is charg- •ed with mnrder, Lois saves Dian' from being lynched, 'Wounded, she guides him to a mountain cave where slie thinks they will be safe from Curran and the sheriff's posse. A quarrel between Ferris and judge Loncrgan reveals that Ferris had killed his partner, Blanc Rowland, many years before. Thoroughly scared, Ferris takes Curran into his confidence, ,Vhen Dave is away front the cave Curran kidnaps Lois. Still unaware of Lois' danger, Dave has just discovered what he believes to be a human skeletoli near the cave. He is e; aminiug the .skull. `CHAPTER XXI There was a clean, count, hole at the back, such as a bullet would have made, and the frontal bone was mostly missing, with jagged edges about it, "Yore horse didn't slip, hombre," said Dave to the skull. "Yores is a case of plaits murder. Yore part- ner shot yuh front behind, the dirty murdering hound!" Dave put on his socks and shoes again and began to reascend the side of the ravine. Arrived at the top, he looked at the suet and con- cluded that it was already well past noon, He had told Lois that he would be back to see her around midilay. But when Dave reached the cave, he found it empty. "Loisl" he called. 'Lois, girl, where are yuh?" The echoes of his voice floated back mockingly from the cliffs across the ravine, and that was all, geance. Dave ran back to whe'e Black Dawn ovas standing and sprang into the saddle. Ile adjust- ed his belt, bringing the holster close to lois right Nand. When le stet Coggswell, i1 would be just too batt for Coggswell. Softly Dave edged the stallion along the trail, peering right and left for any hidden ambuscade. But the bootprutts had changed to the prints of two horses'' hoofs, If Coggswell had set an ambuscade along the route, he had certainly not joined it himself. Dave trailed the hoofprints as far as the canyon, and then lost them It was impossible to dis- cover any signs of them on the flinty ground. But Dave was pretty sure Coggswell had taken Lois to Hooker's cabin, Perhaps to leave her thereandcome back in search of him, * * * It was an hour after the discov- ery that Lois had been kidnapped before he suddenly saw Hooker's cabin before hili. No horse was visible, but Dave dismounted and crept softly for-_ ward, peering through the under- growth. Foot by foot he edged his way forward. The plaintive lowing of the umftilked cow caste to his ears from somewhere on the mesa, Otherwise --- nothing. And when at last Dave entered Hooker's 1 cabin, he fouitii it empty, with no sign that anirone had been in it since Lois and Ile had left it. Gristly Dave turned the stallion and rode back through the canyons. Again he found the ltoofpriuts, and again, in spite of casting about in a wide circle, he was unable to discover which way the horses had gone. The sun was well down in the west when Dave rode back toward Hooker's cabin, reckless now. He was almost through the scrubb when he reined in abrutly. He could see the cabin again, and this time a horse was standing saddled in front of it. Listening, Dave could hear foot- steps in the cabin. Someone was walking to and fro inside it. "Hold 'em hIgh, Sheriff. of i'11 blow sour head off!" Then Dave's pupils contracted sharply as ho sap the footprints of a man's boots on the other side of the cave, faint, but urunistakable n the groun.t softened by the rains, Here, too, were the prints of Lois' little boots, and where they ceased there was a furrow in the soil as if she had been dragged. Beyond, the prints of the man's boots were deeper, as if he had been carrying a burden. * * * It was all perfectly clear and un- mistakable, and told its story only too well, Coggswell must have got upon the trail and taken Lois away. The waddy's face was trans- formed into a grim mask of vcn- Dave didn't dismount this 115110. IIe edged the black horse.forward, its hoofs making no sound on the soft mesa, Now he was immedi- ately behind the house. IIe -could hear the footsteps inside distinct- ly. Now he got out of his saddle and went quietly around the shack, As he reached the front angle he saw Sheriff CoggsweIl come out of the door and move toward his horse, Dave leaped forward. His -at- titude was the crouch of a beast of prey, his voice a rumbling snarl: "Hold 'epi. high, sheriff, or I'll blow yore tread off!" Takes utterly by surprise, Coggs- well put -up his hands. "Well, you got the aro on me all right, Bruce," admitted Coggs- MAJOR TRIQUET AND. JFAMILY There is no prouder family in Can- ada right now than that of Major Paul Triquet, of Cabano, Que., who has been awarded the Victoria Cross, highest award for valor in the British Empire. His wife and two •children are shown above, with Yolande, e, on the. left and Claude, 10, on the right. Mrs. Triquet, centre, is the former. Alberte Chenier of Ottawa., The picture„of Major Triquet was taken when he was a regimental serg- eant -major with the' Royal and Regiment, AT INVASION REHEARSAL The Allies' three invasion chiefs, Gen. Sir Bernard Montgomery, commander of British land forces; Gen, Dwight Di Eisenhower; supreme Allied commander; and Air Chief Marshal Sir 'Arthur Tedder, General . Eisenhower's deputy, are pictured as they watched pre -invasion maneuvers somewhere in England. well, "But killin one won't do you no good.” (Continued Next Week) Casualties Heavy —Among Workers The office of war information reports that the United States has lost four tidies as many work - hours from industrial accidents as from wartime strikes; that indus- trial accidents have killed five thousand more people since Pearl Harbor than the guns of the enemy, and that 00 times as ninny people have been injured by such accidents as have been wounded in ba.tttle or reported missing in action. ISSUE 12-1044 amous for flavour since 1892 — the `Salado' name assures you of a uniform blend of quality teas. Invaluable for COUGHS—COLDS BRONCHITIS SIMPLE SORE THROAT 11, Niini PREMIUM LIVER PASTIES 1 pound liver 1 cup fine ,Christie's 2 celery oons chopped pr e in in rn Sotla 2 tablespoons chopped 1 cup water Cracker etnmbs green pepper 2 small °aloes 1 egg, beaten 11/2 ta green, Poon lemon cup liver 1 teaspoon salt et juice it .+ stock 1/2 teaspoon pep Levet and simmer fol five ?il; stet In shallow pan.1 fot , 11 ? place liver erw Drain water and reserve , (.1 j++it minutes over low Mame• round liver with �i Premstock. m soag.Cra and onibs and d stock 8 liveover r and 11 rem Premium ingrediiien s, crumbs web. Shape addtog j le eve inn hot fat. The flaky goodness bf Christie's Peensium 11,1 soaps,cheese'o fruit spreads, . Adds $odalraekers brings out the blit flavor of other foods. fid s (li+I r extra a arelish ackage or salads,jtwo ohand. 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