2 THE COLBORNE EXPRESS . COLBORNE, ONT., THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 9, 1928 Chimpanzee Stories J. L. Buch, Veteran Animal Hunter, Tells Interesting Tales of Our Animal If Cousins EASY TO TEACH Many tales are told of the ferocity of the chimpanzee, but I am convinced that non of the great apes--not even the gorilla--will attack unless he feels in danger. He may attack when not in danger; then it is merely a differ ence of opinion between man and ape The "outlaw" chimpanzee is ai amazingly interesting individual. Hi is a groat male who roams the woods alone. Some authorities say such the deposed leader of I the females correctly. For the "weaker sex" among these great apes art never belligerent unless the young ar< concerned. Ladies and leadership--these an the chief causes for which chimpanzees go to battle, as I suppose, these have been potent causes for battle between men since ever our race began. Leadership brings bands of apes to th< fray. When it is a "lady" two contesting apes do battle together, while other members of the band go about their business in strict neutrality. I can remember one terrific counter I watched as I lay prone my stomach looking into a leafy closure where a band of chimpanz came regularly to nibble the "kratch kratch," or Christmas tree leaf, of which they are very fond. They were fairly evenly matched, these males. Each was about five feet troop, cast out by a younger rival.; broad of shoulder, possessed of the Others believe these exiles have been most amazing pairs of long sent forth for feeble-mindedness or other eccentricity. At any rate they roam the forests, repeatedly repulsed when they try to join a new band. Like Ishmael of old, their hand soon is against every man and every man's is against them. Such outlaws often reduce a native village to the extreme of terror and hysteria. Once, when I was on a snake hunt in the Kono Oriental Business Methods 'drops almond extract. Put the sugar and milk in a large saucepan and stir until the sugar is dissolved. Then boil without stirring until the thermometer registers 236 degrees or a soft ball is formed when the mixture is tested in cold water. Let stand until cool and then beat vigorously; when it begins to get creamy add the nuts and extract. Pour into a buttered pan and when h i Le 1 tba gho t gli 3 hu: mystified. They fought with amis and claw: and great jaws. Sometimes it wa: such a tangle of members that I could not tell to whom the battle was going. Along toward the end I could see they were fighting in a mist of blood, but fighting desperately still. At the be- ginning their cries had mingled in ^owe<l that he associated oratory with fierce rage. Sometimes these cries *eAc « exponent °* *nndamentahsi were quite treble, but as the fight! Another extraordinarily able ^ thickened they became throaty. The managers of rugs, for 1.000 years, designs and colors ai days of Confucius. ARTISTIC SURROUNDINGS i factory that has Ken turning out tin It i~ tlie largest rug factory in Pekin. Cliina. where the wrought on looms that have changed little Sunday School Lesson rns that squares with dipped in boiling water. Persian Creams 3 cups brown sugar,'! cup s coffee, 3 squares chocolate, m 3 tablespoons butter, 1 cup nut :: Boil together, without stirring, first four ingredients until 23 grees is reached or the mixture a soft ball when tested in cold i Remove from the fire, let cool the nut meats and beat until comes thick and creamy. Pom a buttered pan and mark in diar before it becomes quite hard. Cocoanut Cream Candy 2 cups granulated sugar, ?. sweet cream, 1 teaspoon butter, fresh cdeoan and butter i a soft ball \ Remove fro February 12. Lesson VII,--J•.•;«« tures the Kingdom of Ccd. Mark 26-34. Golden Tex'--Th/ kingd< se -kingdom of % have seen, theme of his The Je\ d" would"! .nd all their tt bound u'p witl- is right-all their noughts of :epan and let boil i Always they seemed to be baffled in the grand gesture. I knew very well what this was, from the boys' talk. Each was trying to wind his fierce rms about the other, to lift himself y this hold, and to tear the enemy apart with the cruel claws of his hind legs. So, also, does the leopard deal with his human enemy. But neither successful, and still the fight went Finally, after many minutes, one down. The victor stood upon his ed like an outlaw chimpan-, body, stamping up and down with flat-when I reached Kanjama! footed emphasis. Then Hector, my biers told how he had come! head boy, who had been crouching at mp, tramping through the j my side, motioned for me to follow >ne old woman left behind: him through the underbrush. It was ;ad fled went shaking up a! time to go--"Not good, massa; we be i rice loft. The old villain! here when"- id killed her. -F decided toj Of course the chimpanzee battles in his family circle, as do most animal: I chop (eat)." They | : [attack) the women! ns. He kill pikin! down, dancing in i patch. He make ke you kill him for j c i to ' for nets. I j but the battles i of great ] ---Candy Recipes him-1 - I the cocoanut and beat until c panzee named James I sold to the | .Successful candy making depends ! Pour into buttered pan and cut Zoological Gardens at Chicago. Three! to a large extent on accurate measur-] long strips when partly cool o years after we had said good-bye at (ing. and cooking to a correct tempera-' by spoonfuls on buttered paper. Camden I visited the ape quarters. I ture. There are other tests which an J A differenl candy may be made frorr Suddenly there was a scurrying and j experienced cook can use to guide her, the same ingredients by letting then a stampeding from a far corner of j but; the only sure way to determine j boil for fifteen minutes, adding tlu the park. Then an older James, now temperature is to use a candy ther-j cocoanut and pouring into the pan grown nearly to my shoulder, came j mometer and watch it closely. Candy ; This will have a somewhat sugarj rushing upon me, crying, "Go-- Go-- should be cooked in a deep saucepan, 1 texture. Go"--the chimpanzee cry of emotion, where the mixture will be several j Dislocated cocoanut can be substi He thrust his arms about my neck, 'inches thick, which prevents too rapid uited for the fresh if it is allowed U He lavished his love ui ion me. After ,and too great evaporation. ; stand in milk for a few minutes bp sugar than it fore using and the milk is drained of?. 2 cups granulated sugar, 2 cups milk, % cup butter, 2 cups blanched almonds, 1 cup English walnut meats, 1 teaspoon almond extract. Boil the sugar, butter and milk together until a little of the mixture tested in cold water will form a soft ball or 238 degrees is reached. Remove from the fire, add the extract and the nuts. ; the most part after a .... ;he' overthrow u 'and the triumph of tr over the peoples of the i Now Jesus, while s people the same thou; dom of God as the gave it an entirely < He did not mean the < i>h his lines for I reign upon and repent- Fudge year; You may keep your pet cat or bird or pony or rabbit or raccoon. You may even keep your pet dog. And I say this slowly, for I have loved more than one noble dog in my day. But when my African voyages are over, . and I settle down at home I will find |w*' form rapidly and be me a teachable voung chimpanzee for j voIvet-v- This aids in el: pet and companion. Of the animals j c(*ne- sugary fudre. The first secret I have handled they interest me most. In3aking fudge i: can-hold in solution, so it will crystal izefcut when the solution is stirred or beaten. If this crystallization takes place when the fudge is cooled sufficiently so that the bottom of the pan is just warm to the hand, the crystals fine and eliminating the between men and the face of the 1 Father in heaven did not exist for j Jesus. He had seen the heavens opened, and knew thai blessed life of c.vvu-jmunion with hinwir which God desired for ail men. In all hit teaching he sought to make men partakers of the same knowledge. So, in speaking of the kingdom !Jesus emphasized, first of all, the realization in human hearts of God's ! presence and his holy will. He called men to quit selfishness and sin. and ,to give themselves to God. But, as : hai tion and : i remember t They r r be o ' again - approach to the vil-j moment. I have watched mother' may n"ot j,e_ gut they a v snare. We dug the j chimpanzees cuff their young. I have. unquenchably fascinating.'Whimsical, I I Chocolate Fudge t deep and five feet, peeped upon tiny battles between little! joculal. mysterious, morose-supply-1 *!cups granulated sugar. * it with huh* hmbs fellows fighting for the same green ing antics for a merry hour and medi-' bjtt1 avmg it to look as we {leaf or wild nut kernel. And, on the tation when the hour of play is passed ' * " <•<»•" j.anzee would . happier side, I have watched these lit- alMj an old animai man sits quietly, jsual path, treau ->r.»ii - ik- chap?, in then- leafy retreat*, press pondering the riddle of life. ooled suffl- i the oider members of j ^'^mlg^e^LZ"^- i C°L Amery !mmigrati°n' i among animals that what I might! Quebec Evenement (Cons.): Once the "domestic behavior" of the j again we £ee this strange pheno-npanzees. Each band invariably mell0!1 occurring among some of our a leader. I have imagined he has; confreres, of a British sympathy so i chosen at some conclave of apes, I pronounced as to overwhelm Cana-mse his wisdom was most mature | dfan national feeling "M^y. be, "^TfTniTie^^^ chocolate, 1 cup cream, ve the chocolate and put >an with the sugar and the ingredients over slowly until the ^solved and the mixture com-to boil. Continue cooking, ig frequently, until the candy Irmometer registers 236 degrees irenheit. Remove from the fire, stand until cool; then beat un*il enough to turn into a buttered --£ - teaM)-..-..u of vrniili Orange moderate jdied dapple, 2 . teaspoon vanilla. Blanch the almonds. Break the ■h!s'i^"tth ,;eaks the ] 'form our present less of the coming of God's | retarded by the unbelif I yet1 be an^accompUshe (says that the kingdom [harvest follows upon -preaches the message, like seed cas into the ground. The rest is in th . I hands of God. Thus, Jesus sought t . | encourage a brave and active faith o , I the part of his believing follower: i They were not to be discouraged b the ith which l sedtto i by his loneliness for ape co iship. Once I had laughed ered. And c these old fellows felt the respon-sibil-1 terests of the British Commonweal Marma|ade Fudge ity of their leadership, though I can iof Natons. they considered it-an j 2 cui)s srs,nulated sugar, 1 cup thin I then beat to a cream to a crea think of one rather cowardly excep- urgent matter to offer the assistance cream, Vs teaspoon cream of tartar, ' Melt the cream by standing In a bo . jtion. I of the daughter nations to the mother , V* cup orange' marmalade, V2 tea-10f boiling water' stir-'ng constant J This happened once when I had laid! nation of tlle Empire. This agrument ' sPoon orange flavoring. Put the sugar, I and add the fruit nuts and 'v '•f!a pit along a path where a certain Iis "Snarly abused for the purpose , cream and cream of tartar into a Turn into a buttered tin and cut li n I band often passed. Though I had j of Persuading us to take a greater , saucepan, stir until the sugar is dis- fudge or knead and mold into pie. ,i carefully strewn the top with leavesilnare in the naval defence of the Em- ] solved, and then let the mixture boil 0f the size desired ,ti to make" it appear as the other ground,jpire- 1 "nU1 238 ?tTT 1' rea°hed °r " I Dlied frulta form the basis of il; the old leader wa« - Wciou* Ue=entl ~ "-*~--- forms a soft tall when tested in cold Uor.fe, tions which. ■ ,i wool- utii,. ••„„. i i „„ ] . i 4- 4. C r> J C" . ' water. Renu.-.e ln»in the fire, let cool : rich n« nnnv m- iS! tormina And wheTJhi fS into SeCmg Fmt H «™ ^ -«1 thick and cream, . £s ZicZ£ ■"my trap he ritrht about wheeled li Boston Transcript: The allure of' Toward the last of the beating add . Ic'l his familyin quite a aiff t the WOOtls and fie,ds and streams in -the orange marmalade and the flavor- Apncot direction ' erent the Canadian scene, the fascination 1 in6- Pour intoo a buttered pan. 3i cup dried aj 'i , ,j . , , , o' Quebec, the city, and the Quebec' Pecan Creamc. I meats, %i cun fres ^ Vrienci with'chiil^f ^ ^"1 c™>">^- ""Sgestlve of a bit of! 2 cups light brown sugar, % te, iSTv 7f ' tor each the Old World, the appeal of nonh-lsp0on salt, % cup hot water, £ cu r lie-,-' PPTk.™ t3 Z!i aaven- era latitudes in summer months, have j meited butter, 1 cup pecan meat: - \," 7 : " , . m.,Knl ^eak«f Joeja compelling influence with a great Put the first three ingredients into -iMendez, whom I took at Cape Mount. !„lay people. go year by year the ,! saUcepa„ and stir until the sugar the fire, let stand until luki although . .Test must ng I tethered a yo ?ar the spot where, >utlaw came out of the'lie was a wild, scratching, spitting, | tide ratchets in a hut within,' fighting little biute when brought to1 tion? oon I found that idea, j camp. But I knew him on the spot1 motc omnia, as a last resort-for an unusual chimpanzee. The mon- Good where all the old meth-jke..' who will bite is the monkey that I term if same afternoon I had j learns tricks. So it is with chimpan-jada first, there will be enough of wn when my boy Hec-1 zees. y lett on this side of the ]ine tQ croW(j mt, he pointed toward I I kept Joe Mendez Without food for the cut in thejnud side of several days and then I approached j the eating a banana. Finally 11 meats, % cup fresh cocoanut, 1 tablespoon lemon juice, 1 teaspoon grated lemon rind, 1 teaspoon grated orange rind. Wash the apricots and put them through a food chopper with the nut Add the cocoanut, lemon juice boundary is no barrier to car. It is well that it is leighbors should be on visiting And if some of us see Can- dissolved. Let boil until 238 degrees ' ™* K,a,ted orange and lem°° the is reached or it forms a soft ball when ! M,X a"d ,knead well= ro» out sugared board to about one-1 thickness; cut In squares ai ted States. wonders of ive in the' smeared the banai animal is j aEm and held it ou peephole, offering to bite n of the hot | reduced him. It v & fore igged a rather hea\ it distant e.xr-l--rati< U the riok of see st confess that Jo< fe ate it off, not So had hunger j t 't long before I j e. Soon he did j : A Requisite. line ■•alesm tested in sold water. Remove from;' the fire and add th butter. Beat i til creamy and stir in the nut mea which have been slightly browned the oven. Pour into a buttered p and cut in squares or break in in gular shaped pieces when cold. Walnut Panoche 1% cups granulated sugar, iy2 cu light brown sugar, 1 cup milk, % te spoon salt, 1 cup chopped walnuts, tion which would appeal to all who | knew country life in Galilee, compares I the preaching of the message of the kingdom with the sowing of seed by I a farmer. The farmer sows in hope. I When he has put the seed in the field ihe has done all that, humanly speak-I ing, can be done. The event must be I left to the mysterious operations of 'nature and to time. So he sleeps in jhope, and meantime, as the days pass, ! the seed sprouts and grows. The farmer does not understand the process of growth. He only knows that, as he sows, so he shall reap. V. 2!). The harvest day arrives, and ithen the farmer realizes the reward of his toil and of his long patience. He now knows that his sowing and his waiting were not in vain. Thus, Jesus illustrates the mystery of his own fortunes as the Preacher of the kingdom. He reaches the Word, and in spite of opposition and unbelief, the word will prove its dh Ine character as a power subduing human life to God, and producing the results towards which prophets and saints ha-1 looked when they spoke of God's kingdom. In other words, Jesus rows that in his teaching about God he has the divine solution for the problems of human life, and he ca:; await the result with confidence, gonl nAkk 5 he kh. $ kk -kk-&to II. Till A Far Cry From the Old Balloon Days much to the fin ppeal-ed to me ! marked liking for nurdering exile.'did not take me a^cinated. But:joe to wear clotl grew fond ofi ne. as he showed those cool evenings in Cape Mount, when he took his •ourage in both hands and scrambled jp upon my cot. Joe dearly loved to ■over himseif with a blanket, and soon he little rascal indicated that he pre- ! erred to have me to peel his pineapple 'ather than to prick his fingers byj iceling it himself. He quickly developed many of the | aught and i It : thumb penings. I have heard ! I other, while the females wai quite passively. Though it .„ , s-ju-y to take all stoma the natives tell I ■with some skepticism. I still believe' ■ they have described the attitude of our stand like William : Jennings Bryan speaking against : evolution." I finally sold him to some i people in Dayton, who used him as a ! mascot at the famous opera-bouffe ! trial that happened there three years ago. I do not claim that Joe understood the significance of his position at the famous litigation, but he plainly rigni'it anc-e of the been already achic whom Jesus had a!: . Jest ed^ Think c tion of the tiny seed of mustard ! grows into strong and vigorous | almost a tree, large enough to pi a resting-place for the hedj ; birds. The wonderful thought I great a plant from so small a ! should give the disciples heart a' j consider what results have Jesu ssage.