Lake Scugog Historical Society Historic Digital Newspaper Collection

Port Perry Star (1907-), 3 Feb 1944, p. 6

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SAL NOTE MEER PRON} : v4 BA SS a Af ----a R She Ea, ON |HARPERS MALARTIC HARPERS MALARTIC An Interesting Speculation R. A. HUTCHISON & CO. 19 Richmond St. W., Toronto ADelalde 1882 Hydro Preparing Post-War Program Bervice To Be Extended To Additional 5,000 to 6,000 Farms In Ontario Rural Ontario will provide an an- nual market for about $4,000,000 worth of electrical appliances and equipment and accessory materials after the war ends, Dr. T. H, Hogg, chairman, Ontario Hydro Power Commission, stated last week, Hydro is already post-war program of rural electri. ficatlon, and representations have already been made to the Federal Metals Controller to release addf- tional materials during the present Year. It this request fis "granted, the Commission hopes to extend service on existing rural lines and add new short extensions making - Hydro available to an additional 5,000 to 6,000 farms, thus aiding tood pro- duction for the.war. The plan calls for construction of 300 files of line. Two Advantages Under the new rate structure to rural users, Dr. Hogg states 97 per cent. of rural consumers haves Te; celved reductlons in cost of elec- tricity. Existing consumers on farms are using an average of only about 12% per cent. of electricity they might consume. Dr. Hogg sald there are two basic advantages to be enjoyed by using electricity to a greater extent on the farms. preparing {its bor and the farmer. "MONTY" INSPECTS RUINS OF CHURCH Generdl Sir Bernard Montgomery is shown here amid the ruins of an Italian church in Fossacesia. First is.an increase in production with a minimum ot farm help; and second, farmers can make their farms more comfortable and cone venient places on which to live by installing not only a water pump- ing system but modern household appliances and equipment. . Dr. Hogg emphasized the Inter- dependence between industrial la- In post-war days there must be recognition of the fact that industrial workers " and farmers are equally important to the stability of our economic system, - Old Favorites in a New Delight In All-Bran Prune Turnovers, juicy prunes are hidden away in a crunchy coat of bran pastry. The result is a glamour dessert from two foods which may be found on almost any Jaa shelf! ALL-BRAN PRUNE -TURNOV 24 cup All-Bran 134 cups flour (sifted) 14 teaspoons salt 34 cup. shortening Jaabléspoon lemon juice | 1 teaspoon grated lemon rind Roll All-Bran until fine and combine with flour and salt. shortening. to hold together, inch in thickness. [§ boli hod cold water (mare or less) gs 134-cups sweetened, chopped, cooked prunes Cut in Add water, a little at a time, until dough is moist enough Roll' out lightly floured board to about one-eighth Cut into rounds (5 inches in diameter) with cutter, On half of round place a spoonful of chopped prunes which have been only partially drained. dough. using a fork or pastry crimper. baking sheet. hot or cold with cream if desired, Yield; 6 turnovers, Put a dot of butter on top. Fold other half over to cover prunes and crimp down edges, Brush with milk and place on a greased Bake in hot oven (425 F) for 12fto 15 minutes. Moisten edge of Serve « S cOV SIMPLE SORE THROAT eras Wei fo GH THE FAMOUS HOME REMEDY s\ VEN COUGH SYRUP JIN Invaluable for COUGHS COLDS BRONCHITIS -=BUY A BOTTLE TODAY! « "feet, thrust into_his holster, - back and found Lols trying to lift A Reading Course For Winter Months In 1930 Wiliiam Lyon Phelps listed what in his opinion were the "best books in the world": The Bible, Homer's "Odyssey," Dante's "Divine Comedy," "On the Nature of Things" by Lucre- tius; Goethe's "Faust," Dickens' "David Copperfield," Hugo's "Les Miserablas," Virgil's "Aen. eid," Milton's poems and Shake. speare's plays, How many of us huve read them? If Wwston Churchill is a master of the Eng- lish language it is because he is intimate witn the best in knglish literature, says The Lethbridge Herald. How would it be if we took Phelps' best books as a read- ing course for the winter mionths? Chinese Flag Flies Over Indian Camp From a flagpole above the tents of an Indlan Army camp in the desert near Basrah, a silken flag with 12-pointed stars on blue and green background waves in the Stop Dosing Constipation There Is a Better Way to Correct a Common Cause Yes, you can free yourself from slavery to "dosing" --with its griping unpleas- entness, 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-BRAN 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-BRAN at your grocers, 2 convenient sizes, Made by Kellogg" (] in London, Canada, breeze. It 18 the flag of China, flying above the hothe of the first Chinese company to serve with the Indlan Army. It consists of 850 techniclans-fitters, carpenters, welders and eail-makers. " By VICTOR 3 ROSSEAUL CHAPTER XV saddled Hooker's horse, while Lois "SYNOPSIS dla the same to the black. Then Dave Bruct, out of a job, arrives at Wilbur Ferris' Cross-Bar ranch, Curran, the foreman, promises him a Job If he can break a horse cal- ted Black Dawn... When he suc- ceeds, he, discovers Curran expect- od the horse to kill him. A girl named Lois rides up, angry with Dave for breaking "her" horse. 8he refuses to speak to Dave even 'when he uses -hia savings to pay off the mortgage on the small ranch she shares with her foster father, a man named Hoaker. When Hooker is killed by a shot fired through the window, Lols has Dave arrested for murder. But when the local people, en- couraged by Curran, attempt to lynch him, Lois and Black Dawn save him, but Lois Is wounded. They are now back at Hooker's ranch house. . "You think I'm goin' off to leave }. you like this?" Dave said. "I didn't think you would. I'm going with you. bf) But And we've : Dave wrapped the package of food in his slicker roll and placed it behind the cantle, "Listen!" Lois whispered. Stralning his ears, Dave could hear the sound of horse hoofs somewhere below, There must have been at least half a dozen animals, to judge from the showers of shale that were being dislodg- ed. The posse was upon thelr trail. Dave darted Into the cabin and put out the light. He had no doubt It had' heen seen. A yell from. the lower mésa indicated that fact, and there sounded the thud of horses galloping over the stretch, "We' re just in time," Lois whis- pered. Dave swung her info her saddle and mounted Hooker's horse. Cur- ran and his men were close at hand now, but they still had to surmount the slope. that ran to the Dave found two' saddles and bri- | dles. He brought them out and He gathered the girl Into his arms and staggered into it, And the next In--| stant the black was moving silent. ly away into the scrub, and Dave's horse was following. . The horses knew the il in the )i{ got to start right now. be on their way here." 'Where to?" "There's a place I know where they won't find us. It's a cave in the mountains I found once, long ago. You'll be safe there till they get tired of looking for you, or think you've got clean away." "You ain't strong enough to ride, Lols." They may "I reckon I'm all right. Give me"- She struggled up in-. your hand." to-a sitting posture. "I'll be all right," she sald, slipping to her feet. "See!" she swayed for a moment, and Dave put out his hand anxiously, then stood firm on her "First of all, you want a gun, Mr, Hooker had a forty-five and a box of cartridges under his "bunk. See if you can find them." PA oS 2 BN Dave went Into the adjoining room and found the gun which he a slab of bacon from a hook beside the door. ; He lifted it down, got some flour and coffee, and carried them outside. Lois came to the door. "Black Dawn will come when I call him," she sald, "and Mr. 'Hooker's horse. We'll be all right, The saddles and reins are in there," She pointed toward the shed behind the cabin, its outline Just visible In the dense darkness. Then she whistled twice, A moment or two later Dave | heard the sound of a horse's hoofs scrambling up to the edge of the mesa. In the light that came from the cabin he could seo the big stallion coming at a slow lop toward the girl. Behind him was ths vague outline of another horse «Hooker's. Feeling bis way Into the shack, He-went topmost mesa. darkness, for they oked their way through what seemed an ale most impenetrable growth of stunted 'jack-pine and aspen. The fugitives had been just in time. They could not have been more than a hundred and fifty yards from the cabin when there came an outburst of savage yells, and the rattle of a fusillade of gunfire. "We got yuh, Bruce!" Dave heard Curran shouting. "We saw that light. We know you two is thar, Come out and take it, or we'll burn the shack over yore Jdeads. We got youn surrounded." But the black and Hooker's brown horse had already penetra. ted the tangle of undergrowth and were ascending a trail run. ning steeply up the mountains, - The utter silence of the moun- falns mow. Dave and Lois riding side by slide over the uplands, A sense of joy in Dave's heart such as he had never known. He leaned toward Lois. "Yuh feelin' better?" he asked. "It ain't far to that cave yuh spoke of, 1s it?" y "Not far now," she ailswered, and he noticed with apprehension how weary her voice gounded. Lofs, in the lead, turned Black Dawn aside, and Dave perceived, in 'the faint starlight, a narrow trail that ran away from a ravine through a spindling growth of as- pen, The horses were golng down a deep nlope mow, bracing thelr shoulders firmly, half walking and half sliding. It was evident that they had been along this trail be- fore. (Continued Next Week) -- A Child's First i Visit To Dentist Your -ehild's first visit to the family dentist shonld not await his first toothache: it should be made @8 soon as his baby teeth have appeared; that is, shortly after his second birthday. The wise dentist will make friends with the child, allowing him to examine the dental equip. ment and ask questions about fit, In the rheantime, the dentist can observe the child's breathing habits, the shape of the mouth and other Indications as to whether his teeth and jaws are developing properly. The occasion also will give the dentist an opportunity to look -at the child's teeth after relations be- tween the two have been estab. Jishd on a 'friendly basis, and to determine the condition of the enamel and the formation of the teeth. With this good start, subsequent visits to the dentist should be anticipated by the child with pleasure, Frequent visits will en- able the dentist to stop tooth troubles before they start and so avold the resultant discomforts. Contrast this method with that" of walting until the child com- plains of a toothache before he is taken to the dentist. Under such circumstances, the child will arrlve in a fretful state, nervous and fear- ful. No matter how gentle and patient the dentist the nature of the necessary work will leave an unpleasant impression and make it difficult every time ths child has to return in the future. Give Dry Cows "| Better Attention Better care for dry cows will mean much better milk production when the cows freshen, according to studies recently conducted by leading research veterinarians. During the dry period, the cow is rebuilding, herself and storing up reserves which will make her a better milker when she freshens, these studies show. She should be given good, balanced rations, and the same caro and attention as it she were on the-milking line, The veterinary authorities who made these studies recommend that the dry period should vary from thirty to sixty days. Less than thirty days does not give the .cow opportunity to store up suf- ticlent reserves to develop a vig: orous calf, it is said, while a dry period of more than sixty days Is uneconomical and does not serve Carolina coneerned, steadily is declining, . dropped an average of 89.4 tons. an any useful purpose, HEROINE Eg Coast. Guardsman C. G. Evans embraces Nora, pet of a North Coast Guard station, with reason, She was guest of honor at ASPCA dinner in New York, where she was awarded the medal he displays. On beach patrol by herself, she re- turned to station . wtih Evans' cap. Search party found -him=-- lying near water's edge, where he had fainted and might have died but for Nora's action, Bombing Odds One of the most encouraging aspects of the bombing front against. the Nazis is brought out | by Brigadier General Sewell of the British Information Services ' in New York. He shows that the proportion of losses to' damage, as far as the British heavies are Thus in the second and third quarters of last year the R.A.F, 65 tons respectively for every aircraft, including fighters, lost, But in October 37.56 tons were dropped for each ajrcraft lost and in November 65 tons, , Japanese In U. S. Are Treated Well" The Examiner, San Francisco, sald recently Spanish government assurances that Japanese interned in the U.8. are being given clv- lized treatment are enroute to the Japanese government, The re- | port to Japan, the paper said, is being cleared through the Span. ish embassy In Washington, and is based on an Investigation of Japanese relocation centres In' The © United States. The Investigation was conducted at' the request of the Japanese government, ds 200 BAY ST. Sue " og ogee Money Making Possibilities: We suggest the following low priced shares as having excellent possibilities for handsome market profits, with a minimum of risk TOVARICH.-LARDER; MARTIN-BIRD; DER; PELANGIO LARDER; OLIVET; MARY ANN; LAR- ADD; MOOSEWOOD; LARDER Uj; LAVALIE; RAYMOND- | TIBLEMONT; NORTH MALARTIC; DACK CREEK. Information on individual issues supplied on request. GEORGE CHAPMAN & COMPANY SHELDON LAR- - TORONTO . MACDONALD'S Canada's Standard Smoke TABLE TALKS SADIE B. CHAMBERS Dessert Sauces Saucs add zest to 'most desserts and add vitamins and extra nour- ishment too. Many a stale $ cake, or bread crumbs, or rolls have made a royal 1 dessert by the addition of a new sauce. Whipped Cream Without Cream (1)--1 cup of ground apple, 1% cup white sugar, 1 tablespoon lemon juice. ad these ingred- fents to stiffly beaten whites of 2 eggs and whip. (2)--Add 1 cup of mashed ban- anas and 2 tablespoons 'powdered or fruit sugar to 2 stiffly beaten" egg whites and whip. A dash of lemon juice adds variety. Lemon Sauce 14 cup sugar - 114 tablespoons corn starch 2, teaspoon salt 115 cups bolling water 1 tablespoon butter 2 teaspoons lemon juice Combine sugar, salt and corn- starch. Gradually stir in water, then slowly bring to a boll, stirring constantly, Boil only 6 minutes. Remove from heat, add butter and lemon juice. Serve elther hot or cold. Custard Sauce 1 cup whole milk 1 egg ; 1 tablespoon sugar Dash .of salt .% teaspoon of 'vanilla Scald milk ja top of double boiler," Add sugar and salt to beat- en egg, and beat well. Slowly pour in- the scalded milk, Return to top of double holler "and cook, stirring - constantly until mixture Quick Gift Doilies These small erocheted doilies, eo useful in every household, are yours for the making! They're just the thing for that gift 'that should be small and yet will be cherished for its loveliness, Every housewife will find endless uses for them. Pattern 716 contains directions for doilies, illustration 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, ' coats the spoon. Remove from heat and add flavoring. If a custard of thicker texturé is desired mix one level 'teaspoon of cornstarch with the sugar and egg mixture, Caramel Sauce 1 cup brown sugar 1 cup boiling water 1 egg 1 tablespoon cornstarch Julce and grated rind of 1 lemon Dash -of nutmeg 1 tablespoon butter 14 teaspoon salt v Mix cornstarch, sugar, grated lemon, nutmeg and salt in top of double boller. Add eggs lightly beaten. Pour in the boiling water slowly, and ceok antil thick and clear. Add butter and beat for a ~ few minutes. It you wish you may caramalize the brown sugar. 'This sauce is deliclous with spice cake or any fruit pudding. Miss Chambers welconita personal lettera from interested readers. She is. pleased to recelve wsuggeations on topless for: her column, and is ~ always rendy to listen to your ¥pet peeves." Requests 'for recipea or special menua are {n order, Address your letters "to , "Miss Sadle I. Chambers, 73 Weat Anelalde St, Toronto." Send' stamped ~ self-ad- dressed envelope If you wish =» reply. : : ted '* Normal sight occurs in the case Fey fifteen. of only one person out of rely Ge EoueHS coiss: YOU'CAN'T BEAT jon i Ba 58 Up piiehte i Sag feist hess pee or as passagest 1t-80, Te: ber | BYe- mi may be due these s ms ma ue health an [3 that the mptoms arb , Jus ah Lies lex fe Pris ot and fi Sisonont cess Wastes. Y in ring i agreement aEsates A te! in oF Journ Ton, .on_return, of empty package jnless, fu atisfied. Don't er Ta . Get Oystex (Bivs-tex) from your of Lily Shug lieny ion 1st today. 'Pimp les Curbed Ast Day Bi Tones okt Hema ines? fo* YEE hos Ave now A egies gu hive me:like Tash, DEWOrm ¢ An in irritations ver ap- feat oF of a new Shel ed ed Nix xo: I enter fer, s--1n fact is » ew day rst rs I El a or Yost ast Fi works, oad ol peter sou Took, 'Sutterers of bleeding und protrauing piles should Know Bunkers, (.erha). Bllls treat the cause at ils. sourdd, Money back' {f° the 'first bottle does not satisfy. Buy from your druggist ISSUE NO. 6-104

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