HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1929-05-30, Page 6•
/.
Try this flavour ' bie*td.
w en $text y o order tea
IP
'Fresh fro the gardens9
rte% ( c`"`
1-1E
gI
By
aDISOM MAI1U161L1.
5:37
"TS`�'i Ittus.RFTED Sy
HERE TODAY today. I'm hoe+:n that it put you in
Ned Cornet, son of wealthy Godfrey a n"od so that at least you can give
me a good hearing."
Cornet, celebrates with his friend, The man spoke rather humbly. The
Rodney Coburn the return of the tat electric when he paused. Ned
Club in a happy framer min cane __ Sea.
h •aid in the drizzling "You've been a very attentive sT. 'you'd start up` for Bering d
ipes
menuf ietured aur nig the booming, Jl tv Rr
dey'e of tlre.war. e told me that til.
finery was made of the most beautiful
d 1 t but all of it was n
puk4h Pudding
silks an
\'e ve S,
good three seasons out of style. Ile . Boil one .teacupful of well -washed
offered me the lot of two thonsand for rice in one pint` and a half of milk
---I'm ashamed to'tell y°a how much.",until quite thick, then add one .cupful
"Almost nothing!" his sun prompt - of powdered sugar, half a pound of
ed him. I currants, two ounces of butter, the
"Yes. Almost nothing. And 1 took grated rind o1 a lemon, or,'If preferred,
him up." ;a little candied peel, When cold, add
His son leaned back, keenly inter-' two well -beaten eggs, and beke in a
ested for the first time, "Good Lord, bake in a moderate oven for half an
why? You can't go into business sell- hour.
ing 'out-of-date women's clotheSi" C'�ocolate Custards (without Eggs)"Can't, eh? Son, while he was tall
ing to rine, it occurred to me all at Put a pint of milk on to boil. Mix
once that the least of those gowns, the two teaspoonfuls of cornflour with r r • g
poorest one in the lot, was worth A qua•
rter 1 the boiliing milk andint of ; boil for Sive Mere Tradition di' , ,o 1 'Tis then theme's never a "might -have.,
„
;STANDARD OF QUALITY FOR OVER 50 YEARS.
•t Sweet Sixteen
ol i�r.�s Inferior]. eriOr 'J •Sin hey for the Joy of sweet sixteen,.
least a marten skin! Think of rt! _ been,
marten stein from Northern Canada minutes. Tante two teaspoonfuls of l4Ir's, Po.hricis•Lawrertce, in her Though careless years be'youthful
andaround Alaska,returned the trapper megetablespoonful
t 01 sugar, pour cocoa,
shalt c a scup of boli g wage
wn$60 sa 1aei)s Now .let gotresidential address to the twenty-IRegret,oft Pens the book of age—
of
down to brass tacks. water on the Iowa, stirring all ole p'When man is cold he okgo for heat,
Women's and, when Freedom League at the Cax• hoto cool he would retreat;
"It's true I don't intend to sell any � into the mixture. eBoilifarl ttiao Alin- second annual ooliference of the
those hairykgow.white But
thiss anyWhen here, he would be there,
old. A little whipped "There are women loaders wino are Unquiet ,there, his fancy flies elsewhere,
warren's silk gowns. ” But was Utes, then pour into custard glasses ton Hall, 'Westminster, said:
what were going to have you dos first and serve co
cream on the top is a great improve- deeply imbued sub -consciously with Whenever tied, he would be free,
you ao hire. . a goodsturdy, seaworthyy ment the tradition of • women's inferiority. If single e rthe'd would be—
northern
strong,afts h as iFried Smelts. Moved by: pity for women's helpless- For life then change and change is life,
northrn tr ding. such as is used in Hess they are pleading for special
'Wash tine smelts mako � legislation regulating the envyiiog strife;
outt wilt a few weeks'
You'd fit that craft Co Contenteeludesd hey of sweet sixteen,.rif1
the holt a a shos and fill opening at the gills Frith tions and hours So then for the never a get"mi
the hold with a couple of two
or thief 1 Ee or scissors draw them between (proposed legislation rn relish they been:'
tho thumb and finger from tarn to'°lass children, Young persons and
thosehave-
gowns. You'd need two or three ad ress the intestines ('1G',11z'C., in the "Glasgow Herald")
men to r run isha lou a fi believe the he p women togehei, g .,______
usual crew , a pilot, a first and sec- i dish doing they inevitably
and engineer, and a cook—and you'd itl salt i 1 status and the Minard's Liniment relieves pain.
lime to have a seamstress to do fitting Ulacis Paper Beat up gg, add a wage standard E vomen
1 on of water and beat g Iii the social flow knowest
a slight ; o r women's condi-
a verysharp 1 is of labour. They .draft
ani , ,
out. at the regardless of the
gill opening, keeping the whole. fact thatby so
Wash and dry and dust with and lower the industrial
an e o
tablespoon a ain. „ and moral sphere,
Dip the fish in the egg and cover thor-much remains to be done to establish
•
ter from Canada. Nei leaves the°air wasland make minor alterations. Tien
Totem f d I leaned forward
and deer es Deere
rain. Ned's car goes into a perilous Godfrey Cornet paused again• e
skid, knocking down Bess Gilbert, .a trouble, I'm afraid, is that I haven't
man
tell on her wayo home. to police- been a very attentive sfatahedr•.little ease
Ron tells Cornet to report Judge nded to my busine
at -
Rosman in the morning and advises . to
Ned to settle for damage done to a
passing jitney. '
Ned is allowed to continue on his
way when the girl is found to be un-
injured. He asks her to ride to her
heme to tell his father on his car. f the ed racc accideturns ent.
NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY lrvhe ,
Godfrey had fought upward from i stead of the good joke
to oft being
the arrest-
utter
rent
utter poverty to the presidency and 'ed. for speeding,
Ned,you
ae.
fin
ownership of one of the greatest fnr;tentiary instead off it would have been
houses of his country, partly through ;had killed the g'
the exercise of the principle of abso-lfull eigh�and just of the bfor you to r years of your
nue business integrity, mostly through a. good
the sheer dynamic force of s a fa through',
ebehindr prixon not I iwallld bringk mys
His competitors knew him a
in -
but remorseless fighter; but his fame fluence to bear, in thate. I'se,a o keep
carried far beyond the confines of his (you from going
ed
resident city. Bearded trappers, "run-1to say that I youldr about that. 1
ning their lines through the desolate "You niay
wastes of the North, were used to see- world know,aze r I can't. t, that you
accuse you
ing him come venturing up their gray 4 should gopelf. Ther,:
rivers in the spring, fur -clad and -without also accusing myself. out of
wind-tanned—finding his relaxation 1 fore I would try ton keep
you ou sof
and keeping fit by personally attend- prison. In doing Die
ing to the buying of some of his furs., in myself further proof of my
Thus it was hard for a soft roan to . when thse weakprdghteto makeaaeman
of : ou."
Ned recoiled at the words, bat his
father threw him a quick smile.
"Your mother and I have a lot to
answer for. Bothe of re were with hers
1 with my business,
"You inay not know it, but along
the coast of Alaska and throughout
the islands srof Bering Sea there are
hundreds of little, scattered tribes of
and now I'm paying the piper. Indians, all of them trappers of the
"Please bear with nie• It was only finest high-priced furs. Nor do their
a little accident, as you isay. s the was women dress in furs skins
k would
trouble of it is that it porn y1 gether, either, as popularlegend
tion have you believe. Through their hot,
that things are going. It could very
easily have been a terrible accident-- long summer clays they wear dresses
a dead girl under your speeding like American women, and the gayer
els a charge of manslaughter in -
theyprettier the dresses, the better
they like 'em. To niy knowledge, no
one has ever fed 'em sills—simply be-
cause silk was too high, but, being
women, red or white, they'd simply'go
crazy over it.
The other factor in the combination
is that the Intrepid, due to the un-
settled fur market, failed to - do. any
extensive buying on her last annual
trading trip through the islands, and
as a result practically all the Indians
have their full catch on hand. The
Intrepid is the only trader through
the particular chain of islands I have
in mind—the Skopin group, north and
east of the Aleutian chain—and she's
not counting on going up again till
spring. Then she'll reap a rich har-
vest—unless
ar-
vest unless you get there first.
"The Skopin Islands are charted—
any that are inhabited at all—easy
to find, easy to get to with a sea-
worthy launch. Every one of .those
Indians you'll find there will buy a
dress for his squaw or his daughter
to show off in, during the summer, and
pay for it with a fine piece of fur.
"This is August. Pin already ar-
ranging for a licence. You'd have to
i get going in a week. Hit as far north
1 as you want the farther you go the ._
better you will do—and then work
• ;south. Making a big chain that cuts
1 off the currents and the tides, the
Skopkin group is surrounded by an
unbroken ice sheet in midwinter, so
you have to count on rounding the
1 Aleutian Peninsula into Pacific waters
some time in November. If you wait
much longer you're apt not to get.out
`before spring.
1 "That's the whole story. The cargo.
of furs you should bring out should
' be worth close to a hundred thousand.
Expenses won't be fifteen thousand in
all. It would mean work; dealing
with a bunch of crafty redskins isn't
play for boys! Maybe there'd be cold
and rough -weather, for Bering Sea de-
-,
;ua `�`` serves no man's trust. But it would
be the finest sport in the world, an
opportunity to take Alaskan bear and.
tundra caribou—plenty of adventure
and excitement and tremendous progts
to boot. It would be a man's job,
Ned but you'd get a kick out of it
you never got out of a ooze party in
your life. And we split the profits
75-25—the lion's share to you."
(To be continued:)
oughly with seasoned bread crumbs.
Fry quickly in deep, hot fat. Drain
on brown paper; dish on a napkin and
serve with Tartar sauce.
feel easy in his presence.
Ned Cornet was somewhat down-
cast and sullen as he entered the
cheerfully lighted hallway of his
father's house.
In the soft light it was immediately
evident that he was his father's son,
yet there were certain marked differ-
ences between them. Warrior blood
had some way failed to come down to
Ned. For all his stalwart body, he
gave no particular image of strength.
He took his place at the stately table
so gravely and quietly that his par-
ent's interest was at once wakened.
Ilis father smiled quietly at him
across the board.
"Well, Ned," he asked at last "What
is it today?"
"Nothing very •much. A very close
call, though, to real tragedy.might
as well tell you about it, as likely
enough it'll be in the papers tomorrow.'
I went into a bad skid at Fourth and
Madison, hit a jitney, and before we
got quite stopped managed to knock'
a girl over on the pavement. Didn't`
hurt her a particle. But there's a hun-
dred dollars' damage to the ji
atd
a pretty severe scare for your young
son"
As he talked his eyes met those of
his father, almost as if he -were afraid
to look away. The older man made
little comment. He went on with his
dessert, and soon the talk veered to
other matters.
The older pian finished his coffee
To Bake a Ham.
As a ham for baking should be well
soaked, it should remain in water for
at least twelve hours. Wipe it dry,
trim away any bad places, and cover
it with a common crust, taking care
that this is of sufficient thickness all
'over to keep the gravy in. Place it
in a moderately -heated oven and bake
for nearly four hours. Take off the
as -
vith i P
• r �
kin and cover crust..and s
ings, the same as for broiled ham, and
garnish the knuckle with a paper frill.
This method of cooking a ham is far
superior to boiling, as It cuts fuller
of gravy and has finer flavour, besides
keeping a much longer time. Cook
a medium-sized ham four hours.
Girdle Scones.
Put a half-cuP of flour into a basin
with a pinch of salt and a pinch of
sugar, also hall a teaspoonful of bak-
ing soda and a. half teaspoonful of
cream of tartar, with the lumps
pressed out. Crumble into these in-
gredients a teaspoonful of lard and
make the whole into a soft dough with
a little buttermilk. If sweet milk is
used allow one teaspoonful of cream,
of tartar in place of half a teaspoon-
ful. Turn out the dough, knead a lit-
tle, and roll into a round, thinner than
for oven scones. Cut neatly into large
scones or small ones as desired and
bake on a heated girdle, turning once.
Steam in. a fresh towel when ready.
the equal moral standard. In panic
lar, the practice of branding women
with a bad name and depriving them
of the protection afforded by, the law
of the land to every other section of
the community must be abandoned,
and the law changed which placed the
honour and reputation and liberty of
a woman at the hazard of the uncor-
roborated evidence of a single police
officer.
"Our hope is in the young," she con-
cluded, "in those who have never
known the crushing obsession of the
idea of inferiority, or the limiting re-
strictiontheir upon their
personal freedom. They are coming
into their inheritance. They are mal.
ing a better world. We commend to
then our motto: 'Dare to be Free.'"
The human brain s a wonderful
organ. It starts working the minute
we get up in the morning and does
not stop until we get to the office.
thou whether the
thing thou repbrtest is true? Is itI
only because a creditable person
spake it? But how slid that person
know it to be true?Might he not takes
it upon trust as well as thou? And
might he not take a person to be
credible that is not?—Richard
Baxter.
SST-
Their eyes met over the table.
household cares and social duties, and
it was easier to give you what you
wanted than to refuse you things for
your own good. It was easier to let
slowly lighted a long, sleek cigar, an you go soft than to provide hardship
for able. ?patient rested with elbows onfor
r�nyotu. hold vou pl andnwe loved you
the table. put you through what
'°Well, Ned, I suppose I might as too much top
well get this off my chest," he began 1 ri l have put youthrough.
at last. "Nov is as auspicious a time
as hny. You say you got a good scare
No jumpy py f e ing
NOW v.Ien 1 drive p
th,'ou h
traffic
eve sioic
"This thing we've talked ova be-
fore. I've never been firm. I've let
you grow to man's years -29., I be-
lieve—and still be a child in exper-
ience. The work you do around my
business could be done by a 11 -year-
old boy. Ned, I want .to make a ran
of you."
He paused again, and their eyes
met over the table. All too plainly
the elder Cornet saw that his appeal
had failed to go hone. His son was
smiling grimly, his eyes sardonic; un-
rnistakable contempt- ,in the curl of
his lips.
Neil'sbitter senile had seemingly
passed to his own lips. "1 hupsa a.
there's no use : of going on,"
"By all means goo n, s since
you
are
so warmed up to your
wouldn't like tEl
d
answered coldly; l
Nothing relieves tension So
effectively as Wrigley's. The act of
chewing, ee motorists Have discov
ere& has a gentle soothing effect.
The healthful. cleansing action of
't rigtey's refreshes the mouth and.
steadies the nerves.
RIGLE
Lloyd George's Record
J. L. Garvin in the London Observer
(Incl.) t • To overdo the disparagement
of Mr. Lloyd George does not look
well. It 'will not gain a single vote
and may lose votes, ' After all,
though his genius is full of the faults
of his qualities, he come but as a his`
torio man of action in the sternest.
crisis the world ever saw; and he has
carried in his time very great legisla-
tion. He will be remembered alwaYS
not only for inspiration and organiza-
tion in the War, but as the, founder
of Social Insurance in this country.
Ile lost himself lamentably after the
Armistice; he has found his form
again because he has eecovered his
concentration, We say this, although
we do not' acoept either his tirrie-
table or his financial estimates; and
13 3UENo. 21 "2.9
u of the pleasure.' You lac ! bound :. insist that his program
something your mind what le it. t rotih utterly under
deprive you �„ are rottnc
annex ing ori e:caggera es as to • , •s 1
"It's simply this,,' his father went estimates as to railways, g and ignores
on. "Today. I stet Leo Scliaf tier at+tine Empire.
lunch and in our talk' he gave me
What I consider a real business ins
spiiation. IIe. tells me, in his various
jobbiii houses, he has' several thou-
sand silk and velvet gowns and coats
and Wraps left on his hands in the
financial depression that imiitediately
hawed alio war. Ile was cussing leis
Io rate
luck because he didn't know what to { ati°n of the matter with a..g '
da with them. Of course they were 1 spirit.
part of the stirpltts that helped glut1 iF
the markets when hard timee made
people stop buying•---pto°k that wa• "wide Mhiard'a for the rub i••own.
ti way. , i
is
Faults
When the most insignificant person 1
tells us we are wrong, we ought to'j
listen. Let us believe it possible we I
may be wrong when any supposes
we. are, and enter renewed examsn-
Extraordinary afflictions are not
always the punishment of extraordin-
ary sins, but sometimes the trial of
extraordinary graces. Sanctified af-
flicitions are spiritual promotions,
Matthew Henry.
WHEN IN TORONTO
EAT AND SLEEP AT
SCHOLES HOTEL
40c Lunch or Supper a Specialty
YONGE ST., Opposite Eaton's
Hotel Rates: $1 Per Day and Up
Joy and happiness .ars-considered
a great sin among the righteous. They
will have that in heaven, they say,'
but personally I have always hated
to wait that long; what if there isn't
any? --Clarence Darrow.
---------- -
BOOKS WANTED
Old Canadian books, documents, eta.
Highest prices offeed. Advise what
you 'have. `
S. M. SUTHERLAND 4
839 DUPONT ST., TORONTO, ONT.
POST OFFiC1=EOX 510
BEAUCE JUNCTION,OUE.
When crude oil is so plentifully
available here in North Amtrorica,
why does Imperial Oil Lhuited ;o
4000 miles to Peru for the crude,
from which Marvelube is made?
It is because Peruvian crude has
lubrication properties which nralre
it particularly desirable abs a base
for a superior motor oil.
That is why Marvelube isgiving
aircraft operators longer periods
between engine overhauls and a
greater margin of safety.
Marvelube meets the need of the
modern high-speed motor, in the
air or on the road, because its
carbou'free and beat -resisting su-
periiorities are created by Nature
herself.
Let Marvelubo give you the benefits
of betterlubrication. ;There is a
grade of Marvelube refined to meet
exactly the specifications of your •
ear,truck or tractor. See the Mar-
velube Ch=art at Imperial Oil deal-
ers and service stations.
Prom far Peru co fes a better cm'isde
I make a bele d►l'oae•
p tkoli 1P0
1 V wig. `ler' i111. S N -I E U nil C114 ,w. nisi Al ...:.. _. ...