Grey Highlands Newspapers

Flesherton Advance, 5 Jan 1944, p. 3

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DON'T DELAY BUY A BOTTLE QUEEN OF TRANSPORTS Blitz Children Overcome Children Lose Nervousness oVr Expert Care In Foster Parents' Nurseries The war may produce a gene- Mtkm of neurotic children, as ome .scientists predict, but the specialists who have cared for Britain's blitz babies do not think Mi The staff of the two Foster Parents' Nurseries in London has a way of putting it that epitom- fces .riuch. "The best shelter," it ays, "is the shelter of the mind." One mother, a comfortable and very placid woman, the other of eig. children, when asked whether her rooms had ken damaged by bombing, an- werej with a beaming smile, "Oh, no, we were ever so lucky. We had only blast and my hus_ tend fixed the window frames fain." "Bias; which removes the win- dow frames, not to mention, .t window panes, can be a mfortable expcreince. Cold Sore Throat Swallow one Paradol tablet. Gargle with two tablets dissolved in water. Go to bed and rest and sleep. Boon the pains and aches disappear and vou may avoid a disagreeable old." Paradol ia a fast relief for head- Mbes, neuralgia, toothache, rheuma- tio and sciatic pains. It is pleasant to use and leaves no disagreeable after effeeta. Paradol does not disappoint. DR. CHASE'S R, CHASE'S I RADOL IF BACK ACHES HELPS KIDNEYS I>o you feel older than you arc r Buffer from GettlnK I'p Nights, Backache. Nervousness, \.> ^ r.iins. Rheumatic Tains. Burning, scanty r freiiurnt passages? If so, re- member that your Kidneys are vital to your health and that these jrmptoma may be du to Kidney nd Bladder troubles in such cues Cynlrx usually gives prompt nd joyous relief by helping the Kidneys clean out poisonous ex- e*M nclds- and wastes. You have rerythlntc to u nn and nothing: to loe In trying; Cyntex. The Iron lad money-back agreement assures a refund of your money on return ' emnty package unless fully satisfied. Don't de- (Siss-tex from your Helps v-lenii drucKlst today. Kidneys Mother's Example By way of contrast thre was the mother of a vjounjj &y nam- ed Jim. She neve^^pt to bed so long as an air ririvufarning last- ed, but stood atijSJ-'Tioor trem- bling, insisting thjfehfr boy, only five, stand besiJ.<?*!ier. Separated fr >m her, he lost almost all his nervous habits and showed no special alarm when the sirens sounded. "The point is." ?xplaiued a staff member, "that children rely .jk>:-much upon the adults around them. So long as the grown-up remains calm so does the child." Apart from fitting a child into tl.e next best thing to his own home a nursery where there is a continuing happy family the therapy employed is mainly an application of the well-known principle of child psychology that the best way to overcome fright is -to play over and over again the experience.- that caused fear. Thus, the children beyond th baby stage have taken up air raid games, and more recently commando games, .he 11)43 eijuiv- alent of "cops and robbers" or "cowboys and Indians.'' Grouse and Quail Scarce In Ontario Sportsmen who iiuve visiiod Northern Ontario ihis lall report that the ranks of the partridge (the American ruffed grouse) are becoming pretty well depict- ed, according u> The Chatham News. Some yar< a^o this splen- did game bird, after a period of protection, increased tu num- bers and afforded some good hunting. Here in this section if Ontario they have been scare* this fall, i'osiibly the severe weather and heavy snowfall ex- perienced last winter, which cov- ered their food supply, destroy- ed some of them. Probably a g<xd many others fell victim to the gunners. If the ruffed grouse are again to become plentiful in the swamps and on tl.e wood- ed ridges they must be left un- disturbed another year or two. As to the quail or bob-white, it is very questionable whether there should again be an open season for thsi handsome game bird whose habitat in Ontario practically is confined to the southern corner. The quail falls easy prey to the gunner, and is but Ill-equipped to make much. of a fight for existence. The huntsmen could well leave the bob-whites unmolested, and con- line their hunting to the part- ridge and the pheasant, which are better adapted to look out for themselves. Armistice Coach Said Destroyed . The newspaper Aftonbladjt quoted Swedish eyewitnesses as saying that last week's raids on Berlin had destroyed the famous French Compiegnc railway coach in which the 11)18 and 19-10 arm- istices were signed. The eyewiti e^ses said the Zeugrhaus (war museum) on Ber- lin's Unter den Linden, contain- ing this and other war trophies, was leveled. The Germans sign- ed their armistice in the coach at the end of World War I. In a l'-eatrical gesture, v Hitler forced the French to sign there in 1940. Seldom photographed since she donned war paint and sorted ng Allied 1 expt iliaonary forces to global battle fronts, the giant S.S. Qu .(. n Mr.ry is pictured as loaded to the gunwales wtn troops she recently entered an unnamed port. BLACK DAWN ROSSEAU CHAPTER XI SYNOPSIS Dave Bruce, out of a job. ar- rives at Wilbur Ferris' Cross-Bar ranch. Curran, the foreman, prom- ise* him a job if he can break a horse called Black Dawn. When he succeeds, he discovers Curran expected the horse to kill him. A girl named Lois rides up, angry with Dave for breaking "her" horse. She refuses to speak to Dave even when he uses his sav- ings to pay off the mortgage on the small r.Tich she shares with her foster father, a man oamed Hooker. When Hooker is killed by a shot fired through the window. Lois has him arrested for murder. Faced with almost certain hang- ing, Dave is awaiting his trial when Curran goes to call on Lois. "Well. Miss Lois, this bhore is bad news." Curran said, and Lois couM see that his face was black- ened and his lip badly swollen from the beating that Dave had given him the day before. "It doesn't make any difference now," said Lois gravely. "Hook- er's dead. I guess you follows are going to hans Dave Bruce." "You betch;i we are!" shouted Currau. "\Ve don't aim to have no dlrtv murderers livln' rind ?ar- saiil Lois. "You were never a spe- '.ial friend of mine, as far as I remember. ' .\I:iy:u- I could be." said tha foreman. "Maybe I've :ried to be. Listen. I guess you know I stand in party well with Mr. Ferris. Fa i. 1 ' is. he couldn't git rid of me even if lie wanted to. It ain't no sern-t to you that Lonergan's got the mortgage on the Cross-Bar, a.n'1 pat me in to run it?" * * * Lois was silent, .ind I'lirran con- Mniied. "1 shouldn't l>e s'prlsed If I was to be the owner of the Cross- Bar one of these days. Half-own- er, anyways. And that time ain't so far away. I be^n watchin' you for ;i good while. Miss Lois. You're growed up to be a woman now. It ain't fair to yoreaelf, llvln' up here la the hills and run- nin 1 as wild as a scrub pony. And now Hooker's gone, yuh can't go on llvin' here alone." "What d'you want me to do about It?" "I'll tell you what I been "hlnk- !n'," answered the foreman, su- premely confident. "How about you and me gittin' hitched? You'll find yoreself livln' like a rtueen, compared to this." - sure some picture vou're draw in'. Mr. Curr:i:i." i.;s- "Yoa try that trick again, Mr. Corran, and I'll set the herd on yon." tenin' in the jail at the expense of the town, and saddlln' us with the cost of a Jury trial at Hamp- ton. We always acted on that prin- ciple, and we're always goin' to do so. There's goin' to be some fun tonight, Miss Lois." "I'll be there." said Lois. "Meaniu" yuh want to see the feller dance?" * * * Lois nodded. Curraoi looked at her curiously at first; then, as his eyes took in the lines of her slen- der body, his face flushed. He took another step toward her and stood looking down at her. She hardly reached to his shoulder. "What yuh aiinln' to do now yore dad's dead?" he asked, as the sheriff had done. "I haven't made my plans." Lois answered. "I reckon I know how to mind my business. Mr. Curran." Curran flushed. "Why the Mis- ter?" he asked. "And how come you call yore dad Hooker?" "Maybe you can tell as well as I can." answered Lois. That was Curran's first intima- tion that she knew Hooker had not been her father. He had souse enough not to pursue the sub- ject, but it acted like the fuse-cap on a stick of dynamite, clinching his resolution. "You never acted very warm to- ward me. did yuh?" he asked. "1 don't know why I should." wered Lois. "Only it don't seem to register somehow. I'd rather have my brou.cs." Curran glared at her. a self-pos- sessed little figure, standing erect in her chaps and stained over- alls. With one hand he could have swunK her into the air. Desire and thwarted will united in t'.ie resolve to overcome here, to break her. as Dave Bruce had broken Black Dawn. * He seized her in his arms and tried to pre,ss his lips to hers. A resounding slap reddened the foreman's cheek. Lois broke away, confronting him with fists clench- ed and heaving breast. "You try that trick again. Mr. Curran. and I'll set the herd on you." she said. Curanfs glare had something of feur In it. He had seen enough ' of Lois' strange power over the wild broncs. He turned away, went slowly back to where he had left his horse, climbed into the saddle. "You think over what I said." be j called. "You'd be crazy to turn down a proposition like that. Think you'll be gittin' a better one, huh? I'll see yuh at the haugin'. and I'll he couiin' back here for my answer soon." Lois watched him ride away. She felt perfectly secure. A whistle from her would have brought the herd miming head- SURPRISE CREAM FILLING IVi tablespoons butter l^i tablespoon s BENSON'S or CANADA CORN STARCH % cup milk 34 cup icing sugar \ teaspoon salt 1H tablesponos lemon juice H cup shredded cocoanut oi" ' : i cup crisp cooked cereal or H cup stale cake crumbs Melt butter in saucepan : blend in corn starch, stirring to a smooth paste. Add milk ami stir until boiling point is reached. Allow to boil for 2 minutes, itirring constantly. Adil icing; sugar, salt and 'emon juice. Blend thoroughly. Cool and stir in cocoanut. crisp cer- eal or stale, cake crumbs, before putting between layers of SALLY'S LAYER SPONGE CAKE. Air Travel Speedy To Airman's Home Here is an example of speedy air travel. Squadron Leader D. S. Florence, D.F. C.. now serving: as a navigator in the Atlantic Serv- ice operated by Trans-Canada Air Lines for the -"ai.adian Gov- ernment, not long ago reached his home in Edmonton just 52 hours after leaving: a North Brit- ish airport and only 37 hours were spent in travelling, times down at Montreal, Ottawa. To- ronto. North Bay. Winnipeg, Lethbridge and Calvary making up the remai nder. The air dis- tance covered in the trans-At- lantic crossing and Trans-Can- ada Air Lines flights represent- ed approximately 3.600 miles. long with H:.I i Dawu leading, a fighting, tearing, kicking, -much- ing fury. "I hate him.' she said 'o her- eslf. 'You're bail medicine. Mr. Curran. I'm slad that you got beaten ip yfs'.'i-day." 'Continued Next Week) DRESS UP YOUR BED 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 and Dancing Nightly. Sherbourne at Carlton Tel. RA. 4135 There's No Short Cut to Victory For nearly two years we have been bombing Oeraian cities many times more heavily than London ] was ever bombed. The Nazis haven't yet shown one definite sign of cracking, warns the Fin- ancial Post. Three month* ao we landed on the mainland of Italy. At no time havf we registered a sustained advance of more than a few miles. Alons the whole coast of Western Euro[rt> the i?otiiury is mined and studded with guns of all callhrea to .i dfpth of a hundred miles. To these formidable defences has | now been added winter. These facts do not point to any ! short cut to victory. As Prime Minister Chun-hill warned in Lon- don the other day, there is no In- dication that we can win this war without a staggering bill In blood and treasure. It Is possible that Germany might collapse before the armies of rhe Western democracies ar called upon to face an Armageddon In Eastern Europe. But we would he blind fools to count on such an outcome: to ease in our war effort, to weaken our national capacity to wi thstand horror and vl'.sa.-ter by a.-.suming that we are now pretty well~out of the woods. It's smart and the newest way to add glamour to your bedroom the large pillow 01; your bed. This lovely one of simple pop- corn medallions with matching: edg-ing will g:o with any type of spread. It positively ffives it new beauty ! Make a dresser scarf to match. Pattern 676 contains dir- ections for square and edging; list of materials required. Send twenty cents in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern to Wilson Needle- craft Dept, Uoom 421, 73 Ade- laide St. West, Toronto. Write plainly Pattern Number, your Name and Address. PROTECT MY GROWTH!; Whole-Grain Qoaker Qals Has the Vitality Btmtot Ibaff Yes, Whole-Grain Oatmeal leads eerr natural cereal in protein the great vitality factor that's meat's main element. Children must have ft for normal growth. Adults must bare it for stamina and to help fight fatigue. i No other natural cereal, hot or toold, restored or not, gives your family the proicciionof ru''VUoie- Grain Oatmeal. So serve , this hot, delicious Whole - Grain breaks fast each monrag. Get a big econom- ical package at your grocer'* today! Itte Qntor ota < QUAKER OATS "Home-Fr >m-Home" For Johnny Canuck Early this year Canadian air- men were posted 'o n spot near a picturesque Yorkshire village with old-world green. Maypole, duck pond ami homely Inn, says The L.'mls Yorkshire Post. They found their 'vay in due nurse to the Inn. where : i :.!',ady was Interesti-d to hear riieni :alking wistfully ef orM-cii !>.. -rob and other ile'icacies of 'ht-ir home- towns. Sli seeds. ;ila:ivd :!'.m in ' ii- i:\:-\' -n belli:!' 1 . -n. a:nl ;'ii:- . T!i;< la :n:i::y . i - v ,.. '.y or' ..-k to Site lie: ' n>! ' home ' For Eczema- Skin Troubles M :.>. V"U . Skill u real IIHM -< ' any , .1 .imt-' >rj '. -.1 >y and :i:i original bottle 01 M'MMII; A Knii-iM Oil ; IMM-: m.itiy ilajs boi-.ui.s,. || itf highly concentrul i. 'I'll- very first i;n>];. ttlon will rtl..-f the itching ot tjui'-kly stopped erup- j> ;-,i , ,:. -.11 [ji i v . : y Thv s;illl. is true of i s 'iri,i Feet, i^irbcrs Itch. S:i!: iUifum .:i.i th.r skin troubles. Heinutnbi'r that M,>.>r, '- Km. : iij Oil is n < i lMn. powerful pen,'' fit ing Antiseptic Oil that ..!..." in i: (| . n or leave j gnsisy residue Com- plete s'itisfrii.-:ioii or money back. give Kcxt' tions ,!ry fW I O Itchiii); u is PILES Try This Successful Combination Internal and External Treatment No matter where you live no matter what your age or occupation if you ara troubled with piles, we want you to try the Page Internal Tablet Combination Treatment. This method not only hol-s stop suffering promptly, but grateful letters from people who have used it testify that it has given quick relief. 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