West Grey Digital Newspapers

Durham Review (1897), 3 Jun 1937, p. 2

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C1 *SALADK Claud‘a â€" Townsend â€" meets â€" Dick Whalen at a hockey game in Seattle ene night. Her interest in Dick inâ€" fur‘ates Wallace Bornell, rich young lumberman, who wants to marry her. To get Dick out of the way, Wallace gives him a job in one of his lumber camps in British Columbia. At the camp, Dick accidentally discovers that Bornell‘s men are working stolen timber lands. He asks for an explanâ€" ation, but Braddock, the boss, puts him off and next day leaves for Seatâ€" tle. _ The following day, Claudia stops in at Bornell‘s office and, by chanee, overhears Bornell and Bradâ€" dock plotting to do away, with Dick. Claud a goes to the camp at Burns Lake to wara PBick. At the camp, she learns from Ching, the Chinese cook, that Braddock, who has arrived first, bas sent Dick off on a long trip, with a man, Morlarty, who hates hom. Morlarty has instructions to "Come back a‘one!‘" It took about half an hour to cross the lake at the speed they were goâ€" inw,. then Ching turned to help her up the bank. They were in the woods acain, threading their way through thin timber where the going was not bad but necessarily slower. Again Ching flashed his light, showed her the tracks, winding in among the trees. She left it to him, following his litt‘e figure in and out among the trees,. Dead silence all around them, no sound but the swishing of the snow under skis and snowshoes. . . . Would they be in time, she asked, with every heartâ€"beat. What might be happening on ahead somewhere! The thought spurred her on, made her forget the cold, the distance they had come without a bait. Fortunately Claudia was in excelâ€" lent athletic trim, otherwise she "I tink you one velly clever woâ€" man, missee"" said Ching presently, turning with a chuckle. She noticed the band of ice on his muffler where his breath had frozen, put up her hand to feel the tendriis of hair unâ€" der her cap all stiff with ice. "You think they will come after us?" she asked anxiously. "Maybeâ€"maybe not. Not savvee where we go. No one t‘ink ole Ching go with Missee! All busy with fixe ** "I go ahead," he told her. "You follow." nl fleeze now if sit for rest He was right, she knew. He slackâ€" ened speed, and she moved after him, feeling the bitterness of the cold at once with the slower pace. They nent f1 INC Love Huntress udia t Tea for every Taste he imitive murder 1APTER XI ange white thourht, ns i1 keep moving, missee d more than once, i point into a stump, saving herself from a Ching turned to help ie spoke, begging for dia was in excelâ€" otherwise _ she pt pace with the : in front of her. ce an automaton, ht pointed at the m. She wondered not stiffen, even ons, because her Ask your dealer about the new Coleman Stoves that make their her orldâ€"â€"passions revenge, love. the primeval mnese COOK Bv H. GLYNNâ€"WARD world this hing alive She stood there, weak with relief, and would have called out but that her breath was coming too quickly, and she felt the tears stinging her eyes. Also the Chinese had enjoined silence! Ching Lo, where was he? She looked round her among the dark treesâ€"looked back at Dick swinging his axe. Then she saw a sight that froze her stiff with horror! She had to skirt a thick group of poplars, and then there was a great fallen log to be negotiated. As she came up to it, she saw the flickering fire in full view, saw by its light the figure of a man swinging an axe, chopping at a tree. That man was Dickâ€"Dick Whalen! What had Ching Lo sensed? What was going on in the mind of that little shadow weaving his way through the trees? There were only two men Another figure, a man who came out of the shadows just behind Dick â€"a man with an axe raised with both arms above his headâ€"behind Dickâ€"crept slowly nearerâ€"nearer. Claudia tried to scream a warning, but no sound came. The man raised his axe still higher. The tree needed but one more stroke of the axe to fell it. It was swaying, and she knew that the moment Dick stopped swinging his axe and let it fall, the figure behind would strike! WINDSOR.â€"Life is going to ask a great deal more of the mother of 1950 thin is asked of mothers in 1937, Mrs. W. E. Mathews told a large gatherâ€" ing of mothers and daughters here. Then through the trees she caught the red glow of a fireâ€"her heart leaped, and she sped on towards that flickering light. Ching Lo had vanâ€" ished, but she no longer Tooked for him. She wanted only to reach the fire. Mother‘s Role Becoming Harder "It is going to be much harder for a mother in 1950 to bring her daughâ€" ter up in the fear and admonition of the Lord than it is to do so today," Mrs. Mathews said. She is the wife of a former pastor of Temple Baptist Church and is a mother. She now reâ€" sides with her family in Detroit. "If I had the opportunity to live my life over again, I would know some one thing and be able to do it in the very best possible way in which it could be done. I would also have more interests aside from my chosen carâ€" The Chinese turned, whipped off his mitten and iaid his finger across his lips. Claudia nodded. He had silenced her at the very moment when she wanted to scream out! Ching Lo had assumed naturally the position of leader. Claudia gave him her full trust. He had quickened his pace; Claudia knew somehow that he felt as she didâ€"they must get there before that tapping stopped! Speaker Predicts Much Hardship For Mother in 1950 "Life has demanded a great more of me than I had any conception of when I was a young girl but it is go. ing to ask a great deal more of you," she declared to the daughters assemâ€" bled. "More and more, the world is becoming a place for the woman who is prepared. By that I mean we must bâ€" able to do something exceptionally well. The world is asking for specialâ€" ed workers. He was off again like a gliding shadow among the trees, guided only by the direction of the sound. Claudia followed as best she could, her breath coming quickly in her exâ€" citement and effort to keep up with Ching. She felt that he had guessed something definite from that regular tapâ€"tap that sounded monotonously â€"neurer now. in the woods here at this time â€" which of them was cutting a tree down? And what of the other? now Almost sobbing with anxiety Clauâ€" dia threaded her way after Ching Lo. The tapping continued, nearer, louder. They must be almost upon them now. All at once Ching Lo stopped dead. He held up his hand. "Listen"‘ he said in a whisper. From far off came a faint tapâ€" tap . . . tapâ€"tap. . .. "Axe!"‘ he whispered. _ "Quick had gone now all of six miles from the camp. And still the tracks led Olk : & . 9 (To be concluded) eer. 1 would have vocations begun when I was young so that I would have numerous things to turn to in later years when such things are so much needed to withstand life‘s knocks and bumps. ‘For you who are not trained for special work it is going to be a rude awakening some day to wake up and find that your best isn‘t just good enâ€" ough. There are t 0 many already like that. Positions are not waiting for such as them. Housewife Paying More To Fill Grocery Basket The bureau said in a monthly surâ€" vey: "The marked upswing in busiâ€" ness which began late last summer apparently is not continuing." Whether the development will prove a minor setback or a serious interâ€" ruption in the business upturn, it said, will depend on the amount of increase in private spending for conâ€" struction and capital goods. WASHINGTON. â€"â€" The U.S. bureau of agricultural economics reports the business upswing bas levelled off, but commerce department officials said the industrial pace has quickened in recent months. Parts of the present business slack may be due to expansion of consumer goods lines at a faster clip than conâ€" struction and capital goods, the urâ€" eau saic. Commerce _ department _ officials agreed the heavy goods have not movâ€" ed upward as rapidly as consumer goods. ‘They asserted, however, that in the aggregate business is lengthenâ€" Ing its stride. "Others there are who let a snapâ€" py, quick temper ruin their lives beâ€" cause they will not curb their feelâ€" ings. Scores of other handicaps are the common lot of all of us. You all know them. "But there are others who seem to thrive among the thorns of life. Those And You‘ll Jump Out of Bed in the Morning Rarin‘ to go ‘The liver should %:n out two ds of Hiquid bile into your bowels daily. }( this bile is not flowing freely, your food doesn‘t digest. It just dm{ in the bowels. Gas bloats up your stomach. You %ectbdcouurud Harmful pokonlnjo into the body, and you feel sour, sunk the world looks punk. A mere bowel movement doesn‘t always get at the cause. You need something that works on the liver as well. It takes those good, old Carter‘s Little Liver Pills to get li-. two round- of bile flowing freely and make you leel "up and up". Harmless and gentle, tL‘ make the bile flow freely. They do the wor! of calomel but have no calomel or mereury in them. Ask for Carter‘s Little Liver Pills by mame! Stubbornly refuse anything else. 25¢. WAKE UP YOUR LIVER BILEâ€" 1 It‘s a "Love Set"â€"this matching beret and bag! You‘ll love crocheting it, tooâ€"in a simple crochet stitch, alternated with puff stitches. Smart in white, or pastels, crocheted in white cotton. guimpe or yarn! Pattern 1181 contains directions for making the set shown; illustrations of it and of all stitches used; material reâ€" quirements. . * ce m is ce e bnlne to Needlecraft Dept., Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. § Write plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS. CROCHETED ACCESSORIES Crochsted Beret and Bag Make Up Laura Wheeler Issue No. 23â€"‘37 Send 20 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred) for this pattern TORONTO "Love Set" Not all salmon spend their lives alternately in fresh and salt water. In Maine, Canada and Norway are landlocked salmon that spend their entire lives in fresh water. who have an unbeatable philosophy. Can you find that secret? It is life‘s greatest gift â€" a philosophy of life that will not let life beat you even in its worst moments. My wish for all of you is that you may find it." Bureau of Investigation of the Deâ€" partment of Justice, in Washington, contain more than 4,000,000 sets of Industrial production for the first 1937 quarter was 21.9 per cent. over the same 1936 period, these officials said, and this rate of increase wa» maintained through April and early May. This advance, they added, i1 greater than that during the last half of 1936. Young Calgary Woman Cost of filling the U.S. housewife‘s grocery basket is the bj_ghest in six years, reflecting the tribute levied against the consumer‘s . pocketbook by the 1936 drought, a study of food prices in Chicago wholesale and reâ€" tail markets disclosed. To Teach Jobless A U.S. department of agriculture survey showed the market basket‘s cost is about 10 per cent. higher than a year ago and 50 per cent. higher than the low point of early 1933. CALGARY. â€" cottage . school girls would |1 science is adve Duncan, young science is advocated by Miss ] Duncan, young Calgary woman yer. â€" Something definite, be clubs, is needed for young girls are jobless, she believes. Miss Duncan expects to start a school this summer where would be taught cooking, sewing signing, interior decorating, how to meet people and how t« tertain. At first volunteer workers will be obtained to teach the girls, if Miss Duncan is successful with her plans to establish the school, but later she hopes to interest the government in what she believes will prove a worthâ€" while enterprise, and secure teachâ€" ing aid. "If the girls are not working," she said in an interview here, "they may as well be doing something worthwhile for themselves and the community." An appeal for furniture and equipment will be made. "Practicalâ€" ly any old things will do to begin with," she said. "We‘ll paint them and fix them and probably learn a great deal in the process." Mr. Aberhart says he has no desire for a general election in Alberta. This is one item in his policy which we can understand.â€"Ottawa Jourâ€" The fingerprint is a sure Is Advancing New Plan PATTERN 1181 Establishment where unem; taught dor to start : where | ; , sewing, hment of a unemployed t domestic Miss Mary woman lawâ€" te, â€" besides t such girls ig, deâ€" . and to enâ€" who Jellied Ginger Pears gives a fine finish to a chicken dinner. 8 halves canned pears, drained 1 pint warm pear juice and New rhubarb on the market now is a little costly, but it has a welcome summery tang. This simple dessert gives a delicious fresh fruit sweet, most attractive in color and flavor. 1â€"2 cup sugar 1â€"2 cup water 1 pound rhubarb, cut in small picces 1 pkg. quickâ€"setting | strawberry jelly powder Combine sugar and water and heat until sugar has dissolved. Add rhuâ€" barb and simmer until _ tender, Measure; add water to make 2 cups. Dissolve jelly powder in warm rhuâ€" barb mixture â€" only quickâ€"setting jelly powder that dissolves in warm solution will be satisfactory. Turn into mold. Chill until firm. Unâ€" mold. Serves 6. In the early summer season, someâ€" thing with a dash and even "swank" should pep up the dinner menu. The desserts suggested here have a banquet air with their sophisticated flavor combinations, yet they are very easy to make. Ginger implies sunny lands, and fine preserved ginger bring a prosperous feelingâ€" an emotion that permits forgetfulâ€" ness of the long rainy season we‘ve finish for a light dinner or lunch, 1â€"3 cup quickâ€"cooking tapioca 1â€"3 cup sugar 1â€"4 teaspoon salt 3 thin strips orange peel 1 egg yolk 1 egg white, sitf®ly beaten 1â€"4 cup orange juice 11â€"3 tablespoons ginger syrup 2 tablespoons chopped preserved ginger 2 cups milk 1â€"4 cup cream whipped Combine â€" quickâ€"cooking _ tapioca, sugar, salt, orange peel, egg yo‘k, and mix in top of double boiler and stir enough to break egg yolk. Place over rapidly boiling water, bring to scalding point (allow 3 to 5 minutes) and cook 5 minutes, stirring freâ€" quently. Remove from boiling water and remove peel. Add orange juice, ginger syrup, and preserved ginger. Fold small amount into egg whites, add remaining tapioca mixture and blend. Coolâ€"mixture thickens as it cools. When cold, fold in cream. Will serve 6. Sophisticated Sweets Improve Early Summer Menus chopped 2 tablespoons ginger syrup 1â€"8 teaspoon salt Ginger Minute Tapioca is flavorâ€" water 1 tablespoon preserved ginger, saves hours of heavy workâ€"clears _ clogged drains, scours dirty pots and N dis pans, quickly flushes away ugly The octior toilet stains. Keep a tin handy. the water. THERE'S no risk of offenâ€" sive outhouse odors when you use Gillett‘s Pure Flake Lye regularly. Just sprinkle half a tin over contents of closetâ€"once a week. There‘s no need to remove contentsâ€" Gillett‘s does it for you. FREE BOOKLETâ€"The Gillett‘s Lye Bookilet tells how to use this powerful cleanser for dozens of taske. Send for a free copy to Standard Brands Ltd., Fraser Ave. and Liberty St., Toronto, Ont. "How do you keep your outhouse clean?" "I use GILLETT‘S LYE regularly ... it keeps things clean and sanitary‘"‘ §° A «i otemmmnmne,, C . Wws . l «M eR A P . *A % e se se S m w ; t > 8 i e T «o mmr i ; es ‘ ‘ e Fei ;5:, es % x 3 e *1¢ \ s *" # (OR . . 0# 23 CAeâ€" a o m . * C % " als B xCoul "*pa. }. 3 P r ce & 5 s ts wt\> P s â€"ocane w . aby (Cs PS _ sse0 , k . Eo k ol Faee C 4 o o2 > Ne Sss /‘ $ 0 e trok: $ I s : t C _\;,.:. / % C e‘ es .«‘ ie Pnihe ..\ o. * ; ~t ‘;?’J'fâ€"“‘?"" J # NO a*"., ~ s ‘owe. C i) J P Ex | x % # Outside closets kept clean this easy way! Woman’s * World By Mair M. Morgan And why not? The whole idea these days seems to be to beautify your job with a fancy title. We have seen the press agent blossoming out as a public relations counsel, the underâ€" taken becomes a mortician, the hairâ€" dresser becomes a beautician and the movie actress becomes an artist, If the plumber wishes to become a saniâ€" tary engineer, why shouldn‘t he? Samuel Fassler, commissioner of buildings in Manbatan, urged the other day that master plumbers adopt for themselves the new name of "sanitary engineer," so as to make A better impression on the public. Crisp lettuce, watercress, pineâ€" apple, grapefruit cubes, sliced stuffâ€" ed olives and tart French dressing are the ingredients. Combine the fruits and greens in a salad bow! and toss lightly with dressing shortly before serving. Mealâ€"inâ€"one Salad This salad calls for shredded cabâ€" bage, tiny shrimps, pincapple, sliced celery, and tart French dressing plus curry powder (1â€"4 teaspoon to 1 cup French dressing). Combine the first named ingredients in a salad bow!l and toss lightly with the dressing shortly before serving. Be sure the cabbage is crisp. Shakespeare once asked, ironically, | "What‘s in a name?" The answer of today seems to be, "Everything", -] melts, add cream gradually and slightly beaten eggs. When mixture is smooth, add the cooked sausage and serve on toast points, These simple, inexpensive, yet very tasty and aristocratic looking salads may be made quickly for the bridge party, or unexpected company. 1 pkg. quickâ€"sctting lemon jelly powder., Heat pears, pear juice and ginger syrup to boiling. Remove pears; add salt. â€" Dissolve quickâ€"setting jelly powder in 1 pint warm pear juice and water. Pour into mold and arâ€" range pears in jelly mixture, having rounded side up. Chill until firm. Serve plain or with whipped creom. Serves 8. Beautifying The Job Few grains cayenne 3 eggs, slightly beaten Cook sausage until done in frying 1 pound sausage 2 tablespoons butter 1â€"2 pound soft, mild cheese, cut in 1 cup thin cream 1â€"4 teaspoon salt Never dissolve Iye in hot water. The action of the lye itself heats Melt butter, add cheese and The tourist trade last year mognt an additional revenue to Canada o( $25 for every man. woman and child in the Dominion, or about $125 po family,â€"a not unimportant sum She goes on to write, "and t when at last we had torn ours away, down the eastern coas Margaret Bay and the white‘M« village of Chester, settled by Englanders â€" after the Revo when these lands were opened to onization, â€" Past Liverpool, w‘ grassy lawns slope gently to waters, and a rowboat is practi~ the back steps of every house. | a wild beach which is the only o« have ever seen that showed a‘ lutely no trace of humanity. 1t there still and old and turbulen: it must have been in the days of : Vikings, or in an infinityâ€"if j can imagine that infinityâ€"before. Doesn‘t it make you want to venturing in our sister provinces So far as the District of Algoma and the city of Sault Ste. Mare is concerned, the revenue per porson was probably 40 per cent,. hichor than the average for the Dominion, which gives some idea of the 1« portance of the tourist trade to ts area. And that revenue is fairly w .pmd. The U. 8. Chamber of ( merce estimates that of every d the American tourist spends in ada, 41 per cent goes for hotels other lodgings or to restaurant that it is in turn passed on to grocer, the butcher, the dain picked larkspur seed from the old church at Grand Pre and brought i home to my garden for a blue momâ€" ory of sea and sorrow." They went on to MHalifax whore the man of the family found a lake with delicious trout and they had the thrill of having their own fish {« breakfast. Mrs. Booth says she can still taste them with "the johnn; cake and puffed potatoes and swe~ butter and thick country eream th: came with them." grocer, 1 and the : with the passes it tion of And revenue Algoma ities fo worth The year 1935 saw the b of trade between that count» Canada for readyâ€"made do: began with doors of Douglas tis, now includes some white pin« has grown so rapidly that las Canada gained by far the |: share of the Soottish trade i ported doors. Their totals, th®R Glasgow and Leith, amounted t 750, or roughly 76 per cent. principal competitors were the ! ed States and Sweden. Annapolis Royal, to break “""W‘ to Wolfville, where the shop winâ€" dows are crowded with amethysis and whence buses leave every how for the country Evangeline loved. | trip she and her family took one summer in the "Evangeline" counâ€" try. They put their car on the boat from Boston to Â¥Yarmouth and then took what she «escribes as a "circle trail" up the west shore and hback by the eastern coast. She says: "There is a very special hoio! at Digby and a marvellous old fort at Scotland, which knows g when it sees it, is buying 1 adian timber than at any t history. w sber of Good Housckeepiny, ay» der the tide "Let‘s Go Visiting," in which she refers to Canadians as "the nicest ne‘ghbors anybody cver had." Nrs. Booth says woe are "friendly, honest and hospitable" and goes on to talk of a vacation In a larje «.. 6 AAerit ~KB xk der a sitâ€"down strike haes becR8 ed among the workers and all ments have been halted. It wou impossible to imagine the now going to any further extrome American Woman Speaks Warm. !yofAV_a_e.t_iq- Trip in the There has also been a ma crease in the Scottish consw of Eastern Canadian spruce. | in fact, been the most impo:= Eastern timbers into the / market, and accounts for thr« ters of the year‘s imports of | Canadian soft won‘« The friendliest of stories is writ. t~» by Aheg Boogl in_lht‘A( wrent Out in Canada for ‘Good Neighhorg 1 Dulnci, IDRHWLq & MERONET Tradesman All Share in !| Means $175 for Each Family for roing farmer, e money t along t the popt an indus mlong to ai the populat in industry of about $1 and which o m much | sed the wh We ti and to) A dashing through a pa sters at play, The dri azl" a couple of mi h no time to think ple and their safety pr those minutes, having destination, in filling ) ting about the weather indignant about traffic Ottawa Journal, 1 hich ap V OI (1 M t t Our New Co Master of the Min ur hearty conght if ic Ki THE WOR AT LARG Savino id in all oth mnost disting urt CANAD Q if wA t}

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