Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star (1907-), 13 Jan 1943, p. 2

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"Make in jiffy time with -bright "I sure am happy to be able to give up all those pills and medicines for my constipation, They were mighty unpleasant, And expensive, tool 1 found, once I started. eating KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN that 1 was soon "'reg- ular" again, 1 am most cer- tainly pleased with the real relief it gives, believe me!" 21 REA ¢ \ \t See | IA : : x RS NH ETVEDHAT RRR hs {ak MELE ws, Yes, KEL10GG'S ALL-BRAN can really work wonders in cases of constipa- tion due to lack of dietary "bulk" I It gets at, and helps correct the cause, by supplying the "bulk forming" material needed for easy, natural elimination! Try eating a serving daily, 'with milk, or sprinkled over other cereals] Or, eat several ALL-BRAN muffins daily. Drink plenty of water! See if you, too, don't find welcome relief! Get KELLOGG'S ALL-BRAN at your grocer's today In 2 convenient sizes, ; 2 New, nifty and right on the beam is this shell-stitched pill- box with smart envelope bag to match. Right with any costume you have, be it sports or: dressy. knitting worsted. Pattern 674 contains. directions for hat and purse; illustrations of stitches; list of materials required. Send twenty cents in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern to Wilson Needlecraft Dept., Room 421, 73 Adelaide St. West, Toronto. Write plainly Pattern Number, your Name and Address, Fu "Qur Family Regulator is DR. CHASE'S KIDNEY- PILLS (AVA 3 We can often blame nervous tension for miserable feelings and fears, And e long to get a real grip on them« selves, . , they yearn for quiet nerves, Many are taking Dz, Miles Nervine, This is a scientific combination of effec~ ~1ivé sedatives, Nervine helpa relieve general nervousness, sleeplessness, nervous fears, nervous headac! 2d nervous frritability. It has been u for this purpose for sixty years, Take Nervine according to directions and, : : help things along with more rest, wholesome food, fresh air and exer cise, Effervescing Nervine Tablets: 86¢ and 75¢, Ner- vine Liquid: 25¢ _and $1.00, MITE in these days, thousands of nervous | Care of Pastures In Dairy Farming Canadian Farmers Must Do Everything In Power To Build Up Pastures "», Professor J. C. Steckley's warn. "ing _to the Elgin County Holstein breeders at their St, Thomas meet- ing regarding the necessity of pay- Ing more attention to pastures Is, extremely timely, states The Lon.® don Free Press. It comes-at the same time that Ottawa announces a drop of nearly geven per cent fn production of cfeamery hutter for November, compared with No- vember of last year and a decline of 37.1 per cent compared with October, Cheese registered a six per 'cént. declite compared with the previous November and 51 per cent, compared with October. . . . . Until October milk production in Canada held up remarkably well this year, in splte ot labor short- "ages and other difficultles facing the dairyman. There can be little doubt that the lush pastures, kept green and growing by the unusual Jy wet season: had a good deal to do with this. From now on the feed shortages resulting from this year's scanty crops will make jt- solt felt on the dalry output and sharp falling off of production may he expected. In addition there Is the growing pressure of lahor shortages. ' . L Ll "- It the pastures saved the dairy farmer this year it is abvious that every care should be taken to keep them productive. Perhaps this time of year, when pastures are frost-bound and snow-covered is the best time to think of how they can be built up for next year. Mr. Steckley mentioned new types of grasses heing developed to supple- mnt the succulent timothy, which catile apparently prefer. With more electric fences available it should be possible to avoid overgrazing of pastures by moving the herds about and not letting them consume the best grasses in any one spot com- pletely. z . Pastures are basle in dalry farm- "ing. New Zealand and Argentina have the advantage of year-round pastures for livestock, If we are still to complete with them in the post-war period we must do every- - thing In our power to huild up our pastures. And it we are to accum- ulate summer surpluses to main- tain butter rations pastures should be used to the utmost. Life Rafts Carry Oil For Sunk; rn A One-gallon' cans holding oil for ~ protection against sunburn, wind- burn and salt water spray are now 'standard equipment for the life -rafts of each United States Mari- time Commission vessel launched from a California shipyard, ac- cording to E. H. Bell, vice presi- dent of the American Can Com- pany, who said that recently his company has furnished cans to be used for this purpose. Many castaways rescued in the Pacific have told of extreme suf- fering from sunburn as a result of exposure to intense tropical suns, The HUNS 5 and } \~ JAPS \& Gloat over COUGHS «COLDS that delay the day of reckoning FOOL THEM WITH - BUCKLEY'S MIXTURE Qo hs and colds are all.out allies of e Axis, postponing the day of Vie. tory by cutting down our production of tanks, guns, planes, Don't let them #boupe your war effort, At the. first sign ofa cough or cold, take Buckley' Mixinreand stay on the Job This rnd on routs Soughs and colds A-S-T, keeps you FIT TO DO YOUR ia i] medio ukiey or acts faster -- goes farther, 4 od Ser a bottle ack es IT'S BETTER IT'S BUCKLEY'S SSUE 31044 "Regular" again after 2 weeks! WGSERTNE | . By 2% VICTOR 1 ROSSEAU DZANAAN Li \ CHAPTER XII Buddenly, to her astonishment, she felt tears upon her cheeks. It was years since she had: shed tears. She 'had learned to take everything philosophically, Life wasn't meant for happiness, At least, Lols had had no happiness in hers, save for rare talks with Hooker when he was sober, She trled to search her miud' to find out what she was crying about. The discovery came to her as a shock, "Suppose he didu't do it," she whispered to herself. "Suppose Dave Bruce is innocent. Suppose it was--Lonergan!"" She "was thinking of Dave against her will. She was rem- embering there had been some- thing different about the way he had looked at her and spoken to her--different from the ways of all the other men she had known, except Hooker and Sheriff Coggs- well, "I wouldn't lke him to be hung it he didn't do it," Lols whispered. . * * As the afternoon wore on, the knots of men in the main street of Mescal became thicker, Once Dave was recognized as he stood tiptoe at the window. He heard shouts raised, and saw fists shak- en in his direction. It was a little. before sundown when Sheriff Coggswell brought him another meal, and a pack: of cigarettes that he himself had bought for him. "Well, how yuh feelin', Bruce?" the sheriff asked gruffly, "Might be worse, I suppose," an. swered Dave. "When's the coro- ner's jury goin' to sit?" "Tomorrow mornin'. Yuh'll be wanted there to glvé yore story-- it yo're lucky. I may as well tell yuh, Bruce, the Cross-Bar hunch is sort of worked up over Hook- 'er's killin'." "Friends of hls, was they?" ask- ed Dave, "You mean Curran"s worked up over that beatin' I gave. him yesterday. Well, he sure got -what he had comin' to him, after tryin' to get me trampled by that outlaw stallion." ' * * * Coggswell fingered his clipped mustache. "I ain't got nothin' to do with Curran's motives," he re- plied. "I'm thinkin' of my reputa- tlon. I been sheriff here for two years now, since Mr. Brown died, and there's been nary lynchin' bee since I took hold. I don't alm to have my record spoiled." "Well,« I ain't goin' to try to "spoil that record of yours, sheriff," answered Dave, lighting a cigar ette. 'So that's the idea?" "Yep, I'm going' to do my best to purtect- you, Bruce. Meanwhile, I'm tellin' yuh straight, the Cross- Bar is a tough bunch to handle, 80 If yuh got anything to leave, Yuh might as well make out yore will, and I'll have Sims and my- self witness it. And it yuh got any money yuh want to send any- body, I'll take care of it. That's how serious it looks to me." Dave opened his wallet and drew -out the partnership agreement he had made with Hooker. He hand- ed jt to Coggswell. "You tear that up, sheriff," he said. "That'll give Miss Lois the ownership of the, valuable pro- perty 1 bought a half-share in yes- terday. And you can see that the duplicate that Hooker had is torn up too. That's all I got to leave, except a dollar or two, which'll buy drinks for the lynchin' party." . + * Sherift Coggswell stared at the document in his hand. "I'll hold if," he announced. "Dang it, It's hard for to bhelleve a feller like you would. shoot an old man asleep, Bruce. But that ain't here nor there. If they git you, they'll have to git me first." He left the cell robm, slamming | the door hard behind him, A» "That fella"s white," Dave sald to himself. "I sure would like to have a gun in my hand, though, It it comes to a showdown." The sunlight faded abruptly out of the cell. Dave finished his meal and resumed his station at the window. Lights sprang up on the street. And now the dull murmur of volces that had come to..his ears all the afternoon through ou Get Up Nights felpYour Kidneys feel older than you are or suffer from Gettin; ights, Backache, Nervous. fr uent ry 1 so ening: or - oy {dheys are vita)' per A r ur ER a Siig belie ys EL Et ¢ dares n Ay 7 ystex fii : neck and. ears, it not only, the barred, closed window began to change, to a hoarse, menacing undertone, . . . The crowds In the street were growing thicker. The silhouettes surged backward and forward about the front of the jail. Then of a sudden there sounded the hoof-beats of horses, and a body of men rode yipplug down the middle of the street, scattering the crowd, ] } Curran and his Gross-Bar-outfit had arrived upon the "scene, well primed with whisky for the Job that they had set themselves, 'The sudden outburst of yelling "that ensued left no doubt as to their {intentlons. Squeezing his head against one of the window bars, Dave was able to see what was taking place. In front oft the jall Sheriff Coggswell and Sims, his deputy, were standing at the head of the three stone steps. Coggswell seemed to be addressing the crowd, but his words were inaud- ible, drowned in the yells of the crowd. Suddenly there came a rush forward. Dave saw the sheriff's hand go up and a gun was in fit. Before he had time evén to level it, a plece of fencerail, wielded by someone in the crowd, struck the sheriff upon the head, He staggered, reeled, and next mo- ment he and Sims were both down and being trampled upon by the infuriated mob, i L] * . Coggswell, uncoascious, had been tossed to one side, and men were searching his pockets for the jail keys. But the moh was already battering against the door, two men each wielding two heavy logs that thudded with a force that shook the building. The door cracked, splintered, went down, and the crowd came stream. ing through the ante-room and into the cell room. At the sight of Dave savage shouts of triumph broke from their throats, They spat at him through the hars, and some were already lev- eling guns when Curran forced his way to the front, the keys in his hand. "Hold yore fire!" he shouted. "We aln't aimin' to glve this mut- derer an easy death, He's goin' to dance." Ho inserted the key in the lock, and the door of the cage clicked open. With roars of execration the mob laid hands on Dave and hustled him out. Mauled, manhandled, beaten and kicked unmercifully, Dave instinc- tively put up what resistance he ° was capable of. He drove his fists right and left into the savage faces of the mob, but it was only for a few seconds that he was able to baffle their efforts to drag him from the room. * a - . He felt a revolver' butt descend upon the' back of his head, and his knees began to buckle under him. The room became a dark void, lit by the pin-point flame of the dancing lamp. "He's out," he heard Curran say "Handle him gentle, boys; When he comes to be touched 'off, 'we want him to know about it." Incapable of further resistance, Dave was dragged through the anteroom and down the steps of the jail, into the street, where his arrival was greeted with another outburst of savage exavration from the assembled crowd. A little; distance beyond the Wayside Rest stood a tall cotton- wood, with a limb projecting some twelve feet above the ground. About this more members of the mob were gathered, somo on foot, others on horseback. And then Dave's heart thumped, and hls wits came back to him with a rush. For almost, immedfately -be- --neath the tree, seated bareback _on_;Black Dawn, he saw Lols. (Continued Next. Week) FLYERS' FLAK.TOP Bombardier back. from So hwest Pacific combat, tries out new 'anti-flak helmet, Covering head, flyer from flak fragments, also protects earphones, mie phone, oxygen mask and goggles) = Method. . tl Pretty cute is this manoeuvre of Cannonball, a pup bought for a pack of cigarettes in Casablanca and adopted by Yank troopers, Action is designed to dodge shell fragments--but doggone it,. it - didn't work on four occasions. The pup received four shrapnel wounds in Sicily in ning battles, Pickled Vitamins . From Rose-Hips Rose-Hip Syrup Much Richer In Vitamin C Than Orange Juice We've consistently "ignored the real and tangible gift of the rose, says (he Kitchener Record. Rose berries are one of the richest sources of vitamin C we have and a source open to everyone who is wise enough to recognize their value and patient enough to pluck them fro mtheir thorny haunts, 'throny haunts. As vitamin C dissolves in water it is a fairly simple matter to ex- tract it' from the frujt. A delicious pickle is easily made from rose hips of which three or four tea- spoonsful- will supply one person's daily requirements. Here's the recipe as given in a Dominion Bureau of Statistics publication: Cook the hips in water until ten- der, then remove the seeds. Make a syrup of equal parts of water, vinegar and sugar syrup, adding spices to suit your individual taste, Add the seeded hips and simmer for 20 minutes. Place in sterilized jars and seal. This faethod of preparation results in a flavariut' and attractive product which re- tains the- vitamin C "content het- ter, than Is done by any other ith such a wealth of this vita- min so easily available, Canadians need not be concerned about orang- es. The rose hip syrup is sald to be 20 times richer In vitamin C than orange juice. ' In all reports of work done on the vitamin C contént of rose hips in various parts of the world. it 'has been discovered that the fur- ther north the hips 'grow, the richer they are in vitamin. With Canada abounding In wild roses it would seem as If it is no one's fault but our own it we gd short of this important vitamin. Early: Canadian Cheese Factories | " The system of making cheese in factories "originated 4 kimer County, New Yor ate, about 1851, relates S, R. Hod Dairy Products Division. In 1863, Harvey Farrington, a successful cheesemaker of Herkimer County, paid a visit to Oxford County, Ont, 'and was so impressed with its suitability for cheesemaking that he moved his family there and started the first cheese fac- tory in Canada.in the followirg year in the Township of Norwich on the farm of G. V. Long, Four other factories wer: opened in the country the year afterwards, ard the town of tngersoll became the centre of the cheeses industry, - In the same year, 1865, another United' States citizen named Strong, opened a factory in East- ern Ontario near Brockville, At the samp time factories were started in the Probince of Que: bee. It was not "until 21 years inter that the fivst cheese fac- tory was opened in the Prairie Provinces at Shoal Lake, Mun. ito%a, : Although Ontario can claim the first cheese factory, the first creameries and "introduction of: the: first cream separator were established In. Quebec Province,' As far as records show, the first: creamery was started in Hunt. ingdon County" 'in July, 1878, Ontarlo following two years lat- or with a creamery at Teeswater. TABLE TALKS Serve Health Salads By Frances Lee Barton ERVE health ealads, whether you are a pre-war homemaker, or a war worker with meals to prepare after. a hard. day in the BRONCHITIS Now get real relief from coughs, - A congestion of brone slop or factory. Lo 2 WAYS AT ONG, Health 190d 8 Men ATES ¥ + fsucli_as rdlsins, » b cirri | {dep apples may. be medicinal vapors, blended into STIMULATES some: of . the \ chest and back sure . Gi most delfclous Mo faces like a warme " y Salada {magin. %r4,. ing poultice, k able. Here's a recipe to prove my Wo, a8 statement: Kino ron HoV! ETL Carrot and Apple Salad oo 1 package Jemon-flavored gelatin} action, just rub throat, chest, 2 cups hot water; dash of salt; and back with Vicks VapoRub at { 14 cup finely diced unpeeled red bedtime, Instantly VapoRub goes ! apple; cup finely diced : Taw YO Work 2 Vays at once as siown R above - Jory 1° cup seedless ralsins, oa ones oul muscular soreness, and eed 13) restful, comforting sleep. Often % Dissolve gelatin in hot water, Add salt. Chill. When slightly by morning most of the misery thickened, fold in remaining in. is gone. Get rellef from bron- gredlents. Turn into individual chitis distress tonight with. dou- molds, Chill until firm, Unmold ble-action, time- on crisp lettuce, Garnish with |= est icks Va, feos, Vise VIER) Something Unusual - Had Mussolini's fleet come out { to do battle against this weak y British fleet--the only force be- ' tween: Gibraltar and the Red Sea --Italo-German forces might have been free to crash British resist. : } ance in North Africa, to open 1 cup sifted flour; 1 teaspoon Be back dear Sols Rusa i ! a and even rea e i ER Le 2 Ocean to link arms with Japan, gar; 1 egg, well beaten; 3, cup James said. milk; 8 tablespoons melted but- ter or other shortening, 115 cups chopped cooked meat; 2 teaspoons horseradish, 2-3 cup medium white sauce. Sift flour once, measure, add baking powder, salt and sugar, and sift again. Combine egg and milk; add gradually to flour, beat- ing only until smooth, Add short- ening. Bake on greased griddle, (Makes nine- 34-inch thin pan- cakes. Combine meat, horse-radish and white sauce and mix thoroughly. Season with salt and pepper, if desired. Spread 2 tablespoons. fill- ing on each hot pancake and roll. Serve with onlon sauce. mayonnaise, Makes 4 to 6 servings. Next time you have a cup or two. of left-over meat and' are worrying because it's not enough for another meal, try the follow- ing recipe and get the surprise of your life: z Meat Pancake Roll-ups Silent Rooster A crowless rooster and a newly developed chicken called "jeeps" were introduced to poultry fan- clers in New York recently. Along with more than 3,000 fowl of vau$ fous types from 17 states and Cah-. ada, they are on display at the annual Madison -- Square Garden poultry show, IN Toronto It's The St. Regis Hotel ® Every Room with Bath, Shower and Telephone, ® Single, $2.50 up-- Double, $3.50 up. ® Good Food, Dining end Dancing Nightly, ' Sherbourne "at Carlton ~~" Tel. RA, 4135 Loosen ASTHMA MUCUS Sleep Fine Choking, gasping, wheezing Ad- thma and Bronchitis ruin your: health. The: prescription Asmo-Tabs . quickly. circulates through the . Italian Navy Lost - "Chance To Turn Tide Of War After the Battle for Crete, the British battle fleet in the Medi- terranean consisted of only three | . "cruisers and if-the vastly heavier-" gunned, numerically-supetior Ital- ian fleet had beeu willing to risk action, ithe" Allied cause might have been as good as lost. " * This picture was presented by Admiral Sir Williara James, Naval Information Chief of the British Admiralty, in an article for the forthcoming "United States at Hi blood, promptly helping to e¢urb War" issue of the Army and these attacks and usually the first " * ay e mucus is loosene thus, -Naval Journal. : giving free easy breathing and "It was fortunate that the en- ~ emy did not know, or, if he did have'an inkling of the truth, that he failed to put it to an acid test of decisive action", he wrote. Spicy Apple Squares The flavour-combination of Quaker Oats and apples calls for an $ invariable "encore" from family and guests: alike, Serve this delicious . dessert hot or cold, with cream or sauce--whipped cream, when the occasion is an especially grand one, and when you can manage it! 1 cup Saxon (pastry) Flour + 3 tablespoons brown sugar i OR Quaker' (hard-wheat) Flour 1 cup Quaker Oats ! teaspoon salt : 3 tablespoons butter -- $ 14 teaspoon baking soda 4 tablespoons Shortening, Fri 3 cups sliced raw apples 14 cup brown sugar Ground cinnamon restful sleep. Just send your name, card will do, for $1.00 Azmo-Tabm free. No cost. No obligation. Just tell others if it stops your Asthma attacks. Knox Company, 959 Knox Bldr. . Fort Erie, North, Ontarlo. =e. Sitt the flour once before measuring.. Add salt and bakifg soda, sift again, Add 3 tablespoons brown sugar, and the Quaker Oats, Com ine the butter. and shortening, and blend In the 'Quaker- Oats mixture, Sdxead half in a baking dish, cover with the apples, and add the %. cup browy sugar. Sprinkle with cinnamon, and :cover with remaining. Quak- : == -mixture. Bake in moderate oven, 350°, about 40 minutes or oi apples are tender and top nicely browned. HOME REMEDY BR A, sYRup dd "Invalvable-for- COUGHS--COLDS ~ BRONCHmIS: SIMPLE SORE THROAT AY-BUY A BOTTLE TODAY!

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