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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1929-03-14, Page 6if you seek the finest green tea«ut'h s is it JAPMt TE 'Fresh om thegardens' ^WW1 s PERI NG Ac (E. &iAit'i/ ,ItsCt.AiC DRAeo MO dO�FPH totagd. c o by IIM PIT,tt'1C °1 10Y ,i•8 • A. 511 RV, C &, ,wc BEGIN GIN HERE TODAY 1• Itlln big hos or tate Double A riineli iu 1: uia,tise 1 i11e.•, and Iluc,t Bodine, • ,,ew ()wrier of the old Webster place, rob. the Basques of their Stater supply. A, lt- 1he sec etlY builds a dant awl cuts off the+ nGuta,• from liodino's 1•anelt. To re- venge himself upon Acl:lin, Bodine plots u ith the Basques to blow up the dant. 331».%e Kildare, one of Acitlin'.s men, is love with a beautiful Basque girl, . 1ercedes Arrascada. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY This last statement carried weight with Basilic- By the time Blaze had turned My Man into the ratio gate, the child had recovered his smile. Mercedes had been' aware of • Kil- dare's ndvent for five minutes or more before Blaze dismounted. A warm glow of happiness enveloped her as she saw him approach• Grief and the brooding misery of weeks left her ini- mediately. Yet she held back and trembled at the thought of meeting hila. Nervous fingers performed mir- acles with her beautiful hair. Maid- enly modesty bade her lower her eyes, but a flash of the carefree tomboy eame back to her as she darted a quick glance into her mirror. There was calor in her cheeks for the first time in many days; a sparkle in her -eyes. Blaze, with Basilio in his arms, reached the verandah as she came out. Language is useless to convey what they read in each other's eyes. Hat in hand, he stood before her eilent. A word would have jiroken the spell the pie with his scheming, Ilie darn l she cried acoi?ltfuily, "lt- is a monnel went to lois •thieving, He is big and. strong, and he makes war or the weals and helpless.. You know what 1. say is true." • Blaze diose neither to deny rev;• affirm her statement. "At leagt," ho said instead, "the+ dan, was a blow to l3'odine's. plans. It sore sat him down: with a dull thud. But he isn't through yet. You. tell Esteban" what I've said; but see that, he; keeps niun'i about it. -If'1 were him I'd stick to Kent. Ile's got vision enough to see this thing through: Anyway, T'may get hi tomili with Esteban soon "Don'trisk coming again, Senot," she begged, her •quick airmail fox his safety immediately overshadowing all thought of her own mise -y. "It is too dangerous. Even now some sne may come at any moment. I know it is best you go." Blaze saw her lips tremble. The urge to take her in his arms was great. "You'll go round by the river, won't you -please?" she implored further: "Don't go through the valley." Kildare turned .and held oil" ' his hand to My Man; otherwise he would have been unable to stop the words that were an his tongte. He vaulted into his saddle lightly; Mercedes' eyes followed him. • near I was to the hacienda, I had to risk corning. I wanted to talk with Esteban. Basilic, tells me he has gone to Kings River," "As far as that?" A note of anxi oty crept into her voice. "He left .without telling me where he was going." "He wouldn't take ire," the little fellow chirped up. "He said it was too dangerous." "Dangerous?" Both Mercedes 'and Blaze asked the .question. Basilio repeated his words. • The same thought flashed into the minds of both. If any clanger was attached to Este- an's trip, it could only be because he was taking a short cut across the Double A country by way of the buttes, "Eo ought to know better than to try that," Blaze said with a shade ,f annoyance at the boy's foolhardiness. "Did he have a good horse?" "He took the buckboard and a team." - "Why, you can't get through there with a rig. I've been over every foot of that country " He pointed to the child, and tapped his lips with his fingers as he went on. "He's going around by the crossing, all right. There's three or four hunch ad Indians fro nithe reservation over on the Kings right now, helping with the morning cast over them. (haying. I guess Estel_meg y;as afraid. Bnsilio's demand to be let down of them." fiFtiti$:'r1 i3acis tag lala'g a realization. - (4 why he was t11a ge .ere began to spay solei;;; ng, but as Mercedes put 91'.i Tier hand and his fingers closed over it he became speechless again. "Oh, Senor, you do not know what you do when you come here like this•" Blaze nodced his head ever so slightly. The risk was worth it, "Men like Ortega or. Ugarde will kill you on sight" A sudden impulse made Blaze lean ic:waid her: •'I wonder if you'd care very Coach if they did get me?" ereedes tried to reward him with a smile, but her misgivings were only aroused the more, by what Blaze had said. Basilio ,did not take kindly to his words either, "Injuns!" he cried sarcastically. "I'm not afraid of Injuns. Teresa is an Injun. Wish I had a horse of my own." Basing relieved himself of this weighty statement, the little chap wandered bock ae the been. When he was out of hearing, Mercedes appeal- ed to Kildare. . 'What can I do?" she asked. "That He had won fron. her the confidence is not Esteban's habit to go away i a woman usually gives only to one man; but true to her sex, the thought of being forced into the open filled, her with alarm. And because in such matters women are so much more the masters of themselves than men, she answered Blaze with a tantalizing laugh that carried him• back to that day up the river, when she had awak- ened emotions long dead in ,him, To atone for the confusion she caused hint, she added: "Of course I would care. You have been kind to me. I told you once I Would speak true words to you. But why do yo • come?" • "I've been into town ---Winnemucca; some things 1 had to look after for myself, I kept clear of the valley, 'but when I looked down from those Bilis below the hip*er and saw how "You know," he began, more at ease from the safety of his position, "I once said that I was going. to see this thing through. Did you ever see that before?" He hele out the charm Melody had found. • No trace of recognition showed in Mercedes' eyes - "The man who owned teat," Blaze went on, "murdered your father." "You mean," she gasped, "that you know who did it?" "I'm not giving him a name yet, but I will before I'm through!' Mercedes bowed .her head, her hand against her cheek. Blaze pnew the memories that were flooding her mind, His voice grew husky as he went• on: "I told you the ,Horning we found your father's body that I would stop at nothing in your service. I haven't forgotten. You wonder, I know, why I stay with Acklin. He's as hard and unrelenting as a steel trap; a throw- back from thirty-five years ago when the big cattlemenwere all like him. He's got an evil name—well earned, no doubt—and with good reason, in that 1 am in his employ, you find it hard not to suspect me at times. Yet these days without 'telling me where he is going. He is not himself any i longer. The. fire, and all these other things—" There was color in her cheeks for "I understand," Blaze responded. i the first time in many a day; a. "Will you take my word for- this? ' sparkle in her eye. The Double A has. had ro hand in • SCHOLES HOTEL 40e SUPPER A SPECIALTY YONGE ST., Opposite Eaton's Hotel Rates: $1 Per Day and Up. NaheVourOwn: SOA.P. and Save Money! AU seuatsdwtfan GILLETT'S PURE I VC :FLAKE 1110 t/ Oireelions With.,tvery t' YOUR GROCER SELLS i1' teeerie leu Preserving Scenic Beauty In Country ed her to put the two pieces together. HIer heart stopped as she read the words they made: "Dynamite—Dan'- gerousl" • (To be continued.) egt € ares —44 rc:+r these reprisals" Mercedes eyebrows lifted at this seeming heresy. "I saw Liotard's sheep killed." "You saw it, ar.d did nothing?" "There was nothing I could do," Blaze answered her. "I was in the. buttes opposite his cabin, but it takes, hours to come down and get up to his place. As far as the fire goes, I know there wasn't a Double A man in the valley that iime of night." Mercedes was silent in the fact of his amazing statement. "What you say is ,hard to believe," she murmured at last. "But I do be- lieve you" She trustingly raisecieher eyes to his. "I am not to be blamed lis tremble. .sweet and low, her if I seem hard to convince. Senor Ack- words reached him. lin has crushed the heart of myiaeo- «Goodbye, Blaze'" Minutes passed as she stood there. Kildare was long out of sight before she sank into a chair, her eyes strain= ing at the distances that lay beyond the Rebel, her ears dulled tc ordinary sound. She knew Kildare must be safe in the lower Santa Rosa hills by now. Thoughts 'of her father hovered in her mind. She wondered why she found. Blaze so much like him. Suddenly there burst upon her con- sciousness the mad gallop of a horse. Estean was coming back! She felt relieved. She became alert, her senscat on edge again. The pattering hoofs' sounded very neat; they eeeiued to be on the porch itself. Rising, she hur- ried round the corner of the verandah and, came, upon Basilio beating out a barbaric rhythm on an abandoned dower -tub. In lieu .of drumsticks, he had possessed himself of part of the lid of a box; and despite sharp nails, the little tot held the sticks in a vise- shade Trees, Mean Much to The Beauty and AttrraG.' tiv'eness in Our Rural DistriCt,� The spacing and condition of street and roadside trees has a great influence en the beauty of the colla- ' ii • u ban t tip. horticulturists throughout o g t he country are tatting a, keen interest in the subject and• last year appciiited a ,csMitnittee to make recommendations that may be followed lit cit es, towns, and .rural 'districts• While nianY miles of highway and the streets in some towns aro , bare of trees, the tendeltcy in the towns has been to Plant more trees than are necessary, The committee made their report to the Ontario Horticultural Association et their annual convention Ibis year. For narrow streets forty/feet is re- commended asthe minimum planting, distance, and fifty to sixty feet on. boulevaitds and wider streets; on Public highways sereenty-five feet was given as the proper distance for planting. Such trees its White Ash, Hard Maple, Pin Oak, Tulip Trees, and Oriental Plano, were recommend. ed 'for southern localities iu the pro- vince: .For northern areas the Soft: Maple and the Laurel heaved Willow were recommended. For provinclal higb ways and other. country roads, the varieties that are indigenous to the locality should be chosen, includ- ing Elms, Red Oak, • Sugar Maple, White Ash, and Black' Walnut. On rolling landscapes where trees are grouped for ornamental 'purposes, Birches, the Mountain Ash, and Na- tive Evergreens may be used to sup- plement other native trees. The committee urged strongly against the planting of the Manitoba Maple, Pop- lars, including Cottonwood., and Soft Naples except in northern parts of the provinces where they make rather . slow growth and smaller trees than in milder localities. Willows are also regarded as unfit for plant- ing except .in wet low ground where better trees will not thrive. In con - eluding their report the eoinmtttee urged the members of horticultural societies to do their utmost to save the shade trees and so help to pre- serve the scenic beauty of the vil- lages,. towns, and tato countryside.— Issued by the Director of Publielty Dominion Department of Agriculture Ottawa. FOR SMART JUNIOR A smart model for the junior that creates new interest in dainty neck- line, with applied bands that simulate a•: diagonal. closing, fastened with buckle. The back shoulders extend over shirred front forming yoke ef- fect, The circular skirt ripples gracefully at every move of its wear- er, Any little miss of 8, 10, 12 or 14 years would be glad. to be the proud owner of this attractive caress of wool jersey in .:ealing- wax reel, printed in floral pattern in deeper tone, with plain faille silk crepe in sante shade for band collar and cuffs, worn with black patent leather belt. ]flannel in bright red with black velveteen col- lar, cuffs and belt is striking for the dark-haired miss, Patou's slate blue flannel in tiny self -check pattern with plain matching flannel contrast is flattering for the little blonde. Brown and beige checked tweed with trim- ming contrast cut on bias, navy blue wool crepe with bright red crepe and bottle green velveteen are chic ideas for tSyle No. 326. Pattern price 29c in stamps or coin (coin is preferred.) ROW TO ORDER PATTERNS. in spite of that I have tried to be a real friend to you. Men have called this valley a desert. But it bloomed once. The fields were green; flowers fought for your favor here in this patio. Little things sometimes are able to win great good from most hopeless clay. If you ever have cause to think of me, remember that. Yon know nothing of my past, and my talk: tells you little; but I'll be keeping my word with you. Goodbye!" They shook hands. Blaze saw her eyes were misty. My Man had reach- ed the gate when ho turned for a last look at her. She was leaning against a pillar of the veranda. He saw her You can get results --after a fashion --with any old dye; but to do work you are proud of takes real anilines That's why five put them in Diamond Dyes. They, contain from three to five titres more than other dyes on the market! Cost more to make? Surely. But you get them for the same price as other dyes. Next time you want to dye, try them. See stow easy it is to use them. Then compare the results.. Note the absence of that re -dyed look; of streaking or spotting. See that they take none of the life out of the cloth. Observe how the colors keep their brilliance through wear end washing. Your dealer will refund your, money if you don't agree Diamond Dyes are betted dyes. The white package of Diamond Dyes is the original "all-purpose" dye for any and every kind of material. It will dye or that silk, wool, cotton, linen, rayon or any mixture of materials. The brie Package is a special dye, for silk or wool only. With it you can dye your valuable articles of silk or wool with results equal: to the finest professioriat work. Remember this when. you buy. The blue Package dyessilk or wool only. The white package will dye every kind of goods, including silk and wool. Your dealer has both .packages. arrionit011 to use yP,yer� jectweQsults Write your name and adaaer.s plein• ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want, Enclose 20c in stamps or• coin (coin preferred; Wrap it carefully) for each number and address your order to Wilson Pattern Fervico, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by an early mail. • .;eeh- Minard's Liniment prevents Flo, First : ;is "I know there wait for me (The common lot of all) Sorrows and toil and weariness and loss • Before the long nightfall. "But, ere I bend T head Before the griefs to come, Grant me somo joy to know, some song to sing Or ere my Bps grow dumb, "Grant ire warmly to live, C4:'ant me greatly to love, T. taste the banquet ere despoil years 110 varied sweets remove. "Qh, give inc golden grain 'Enough foe scanty years, like grasp. ,s Garnered in reeniory's storehou "Where goat get these.titings? Then shall ago Mercedes demanded as she stooped Bereft os lf her tears, down to take them away. "Xn the barn. Don't take' thein "Out of Om lovely past • "But, lim avavant,i B itiTi i p e o, ()hey ere covered with:A n. treasureteuse of beauty, where to re nails. Feel!" As she held out, ono of the sticks 1 I shall breve indicted me dwell Te sweet serenity." to Mini, site saw, some strange, mean.. "—Annie Sophia "GVaples, in The Wo- g impipsimiwomimmaiwrosio I've Forgotten I ever had any newels Your doctor will tell you how dee act of chewing,relases and . soothes strained .reeves, and t pw the beady. ful < cleansing action of Wriakies refreshes and tone you .up 01 round. Aids digestion. . Honesty a Public Meet Brooklyn Eagle: Julius lei`, . aakas;' president of the Hebrew Flee Loan Society, nevertheless asserte in enak-1 ing his annual.report that (P703.117 per. cent. of the small borrowers' from the , , society have repaid.. - , 11, fa:acerns everybody in 'a credit -ran o,eonormc system that honesty should iie'somo ats nearly universal as poseible. The ,. offender against. good 'faith •IA the matter of debt does not merely de- fraud a bank, but raises the rate of interest for everybody arta, with the interest rate, raises the eoist :o1 call goods. The record of the 'Hebrew • ,• Loan Soelety's borrowers le an admir- able one, but it would pay America to do more' to teach the habit pf Hittite honesty to all its inliabitatta. MEAN INDEED "You say Jack's father is miserably mean." "Yes, so mean he wouldn't give Jack a liberal education.." even "A girl ntay take a inai,'s .pleco; but she still let's itini take her places." The harking problem awaits the in- ventor who can make the epare tiro telescope into the radta,br.—Dallite News. FARMER Requiring British 14113 --Single men, women or families, to assist vauh farm work, should write Rev. 4aoGregor, 43 Victoria St., ` i Tonto, These, people will be. arrita g ;Byer March 15. ingletls marks on it. Curiosi,e liromltt- 1 )nailS I,fagasine. ISSUE No. 10-79 Vas 'Mlnklra's Lininterlt for the Flu, (x 1 EN a cold or exposure Y y brings aches and pains that penetrate to, your very hones, there is always quick relief in Aspirin. It will make short work of headaches or any little pain, Just as effective in the more serious suffering .f rom neuralgia, neuritis, rheumatism or lumbago. No ache or pain is ever too deep-seated for Aspirin tablets to relieve, and they don't affect the Heart. Aspirin r'ltiadthi.tk il'raiirarlid lu i'z,irrs 1