HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1929-07-18, Page 6•
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SALADA
bas the ,Ilinest l al►ou>e► the �rm�lr �ld audit costs Daly `.
6Fresh trona the gardensy
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•
1 :. days wheel TheCorner
blr?stor oP thw wind, reached thein raAu1 Fto rhos«j ,gray
void,. Economy '
earth was without form, and.
from 111' hold. had been upon the face of
caber ' If.nut.sen tpxnecl in. his D 1 t vas di
but
1.
s
xc es.
t
a n.
Vzcec ronl atthe edge
Even here, seemingly
of the world, the ancieat,nxiraele did
not foil. A grayness, like a mist,
once more. i TWO -EGG CAKE.•
o
n
rs ran for a
the e�ate , Follow these, direct s p
i 1 f ' tare flay, two -egg cape and make it your stand-
by.
tand-by .•
Be sure your oven is lighted before
you Begin,• if Jou 'are using a gas
lar
Cold ,
p1nee• unci gouged down certain orders
to Foregt. In seareely a moment, it
seemed, they were pulling the battens
from the two .little lifeboats on diol
deck
i' 1 r 9, lir" 1 II C. li *r"" e'" T."
0 x atlfi RETRIBUTION
► =sate rl�(Zsf�tnl.t.
-. r•/4
eeueresereo ay
5•�.,,5�_`' 5A77ERF,ELD
BEGIN HERR- TODAY.
Ned Cornet goes on a voyage to
Northern Canada and Alaska to ex
change two thousand silk and velvet
gowns with the Indians for fine furs.
Ned is accompanied by his fiancee,
Lenore Hardenworth, and the latter's
mother. Bess Gilbert goes as seam-
stress. The crew consists of Captain
Knutzen and his assistants, MeNab,
Forest and Julius.
Lenore and her mother suffer from
the increasing cold because they' aremo
unsuitably clothed for a sea s'syage.
The craft runs into a gale and, be-
cause of
theica itamtbbecomes ane too ew safe
.ire .I, and McNab steal into Ned's
cabin and confiscate his throw remaining piiovng
stock' of liquor. This they to replenish
r -
board and when Ned goes sh
his supply for himself and guests
he
suspects Bess.
CHAPTER XI.
i5nutser's brain was entirely clear
and sure as lie gave his orders on the
deck. His hand was steady as iron,.
His fai;ure to. master himself had
brought disaster, but he knew hoW •to
maeter a ship t,t a tine like this. Fron.
the instant the Charon had struck
the reef,' he.vra the power upon that
Storm-swepf.ael, and whatever. hope
MeNab had lay in hint.
Almost at once the fd'ur pashengers
were on deck, waiting' to take their
meager chance in the eliif boats. The
those
stress, the raging
angry seas that ever leaped higher
and nearer, as if coveting their mortal,
lives most of all the terror such as
had never. previously touched them,
affected' no two of them alike. Of the
three women, Bess alone moved for-
ward, out of the shelter of the cabin,.
to be: of what aid elle could. Her
drawn, white face was oddly childlike
in the lantern light. Mrs. Harden -
worth had been stricken and silenced
by .the nearing visage of death; Le-
nore, almost unconscious with terror,
made strangling, sobbing sounds that
the wind carred away. And in this
moment of infinite travail Ned Cornet.
felt his manhood stirring within hint.
Ned came up, and Knutsen's cold
gaze 'eaped over his face. "Help me
here," be commanded, "MeNab, you
help Forest and Julius launch the
larger hoot"
"
There was not much launching 'td
do. Waves were already bursting over.
the deck. . Knutsen turned once more•
"We want four people in each boat,"
he directed sharply: "Cornet, you and
I and Miss Hardenworth in this one.
The other girl will have to get in here,
too. The other boat's slightly larger
—Mrs. Hardenwoxth, get in with Me -
Nab, Forest, and Julius."
"Put Mrs. ardenworth in your
boat, so she and Lenore can be to-
gether," Bess told. Captain l Knutsen.
"I'll get in the other "
The captain did not seem .to hear.
He continued to shout his orders. In
the work of lowering the lifeboat he
had cause to lift his lantern high, and
for a moment its yellow gleam was
bright upon Bess' drawn, haggard
h's mind was wholly occur
the pieseflt i
pied by two stern 'realities ---one of
thembeing that the storm still raged
in unabated fury, an the other that
a drunken captain was driving his
craft at a breakneck speed over prac-
tically uncharted waters.
Once more MeNab lifted his head
through the hatch into the pilot house,
and for long seconds he studied in-
tently -the flushed face over the w'huel.
ff.
"What now?" Ienttsen asked g'
ly "You've forgotten . all ' he seaman-
ship yor ever knew," McNab returned
angrily. "There's no hurry about
reaching Tzar Island And you're
risking everybody's life �� on board,
sailing the way you are.
"Are you captain , of dis boat?"
lenutsen demanded angrily.
spread slowly; and the curtains
derkness slowly receded. The storm
was abating awl-uly now; and s he
dawn broke over an easily roiling
Captain Knutsen, who had at so
long in one position --his gaze fasten-
ed on one point of the horizon—that
he gave the impression of being un-
conscious, suddenly started and point-
ed his hand. His voice, pitched to the
noise of, the storm, roared out into the
quiet dawn.
"Land!" he shouted. "We're com-
ing to land l"
' ('To be continued.)
NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY
s+ tee
CHAPTER X.—(Cont'd.)
c, „
JSen get out of here. 1 are just
ex-
actly what I'm doing.
as But
as—"
But it came about that Captain
Knutsen did not finish the sentence.
MeNab was never to find out, from
lenutsen's lips, just how safe he was.
All at once he cried sharply in warn-
ing.
Before heck knew Knutsen
what lay ahead.
sharp cry
Dulled though his vision was, :,low the
process of his brain, he saw that
curious ridge of white foam, in front
—an inoffensive looking trail of white
across their bows. At the same in-
stant his- keen ears caught a new
sound, one that was only half -revealed
in the roar and beat of the storm.
There was not thepause
use of an in-
stant before his gr
made response. At the same instant
Forest tried to apply the power of
his engines in obedience to the sharp
gong Froin above. And then both
—the is sightg wish ever she nig pa elves for the shock tsen and �theb y knew would
aced thern-
from his forever.
But at his post MeNab bad already + come
forgotten the episode of the liquor ` The craft seemed to
cases. Indeed, he had forgotten other
natters of much greater moment: At
"1 suppose you did it?" he de -
mended.
She nodded. "I did it—to save you.
—from yourself. Not to mention per-
haps saving the hip as well."
His lips drew ep in scorn. Angry
almost to the verge of childish tears,
he could not at first trust himself to
speak. "You've certainly taken
things into your own hands,"he told
Jeer bitterly. His wrath gathered,
breaking from him at last in a flood.
"Youeill-bred prude, I wish I could
never ley eyes an you again?"
It was by far the most bitter mo-
ment in Bess' life. She had done
right, but her payment was a curse
from the man she had hoped to serve.
All her castles had fallen; her dreams
hadbroken. like the bubbles they were.
This was the answer to the calling in
her heart and the longing in her soul
ht ss
u
Miens
/
If you oraot nurse hien
le Brand, the
turn to flag
leading infant food since
857' 'mshy Welfare"-runt,Tl+e
FREEE �,aen Cn., limited, Montreal
G Dept.D 12.;
ti
leapin tae.
water, shuddered like a living thing,
and the swath of the .searchlight de-
scribed a long arc into the sleet and
the storm. It may have been that
Knutsen shouted again—a meaning-
less sound that was lost quickly in the
wind -batt for seconds that seemed to
drag into interminable centuries he
sat absolutely without outward sign of,
motion. His great hands clutched his
wheel, the muscles were set and
bunched, but it wasas if the man had
died and was frozen rigid in an in-
stant of incredible tension. His face,
utterly -without expression, Forest
crouched beside his engines.
There was nothing that either of
them could do. The waves and wind
were a power no man eoultl stay. All
their efforts were as useless as Knut-
Ben's shout; already the little ship was
in the remorseless grasp of a great
billow that .was hurling her toward
the ridge of white foam. in front. For
another instant she seemed to hang
suspended, as if suddenly taken wing,
and -Venn there was a sheer drop, a
sense of falling out of.,the world. A
queer ripping, tearing sound, not loud
at all, not half so terrifying es the
range. have oven fairly hat if using
a coal range. Grease 'pan with lard.
(1 use a square pan), shake well with
flour and then shake ori all surplus
flour.
Now begin. Sift a quantity of flour
on .5, large paper to save dishes:
Measure 2, cups level, taking care not
to shake'the cup. To the -flew add e/$
teaspoon 'salt and 2 rounded teaspoons
baking powder, shaking the can well
before taking out any. Sift these dry
ingredients . together two or three
times. While you are measuring the
dry ingredients have ready a good-
sized piece of butter in a mixing bowl.
During the winter set it near the fire
a while before using (makes less work
of creaming): • Stir the butter well'
until soft and keep adding a cup of
sugar, a little at a time, until sugar
and butter are well blended. Add the
yolks of the 2 eggs. Again mix well.
Now measure ei cup milk. Add a
little of the dry ingredients to the
first mixtures,then a little milk, etc.,
beating well after each addition until.
all the milk met flour mixture are
used. Flavor with a teaspoon vanilla
or lemon. Eq'aal parte of lumen :and
vanilla will give almond flavor. Equal
parts of lemon and almond extract will
give pistachio. Beat,the 2 whites well
until you can turn the bowl upside
down without spilling the contents.
Fold it gently. Don't beat; just turn
over and under with wooden spoon.
Pouf intogreased pan and bake in a
,nrlerate oven for about 40.: minutes.
Keep at it until you are satisfied
with results. The cake should be light
mid fine grained. Learn to know your
oven, too—when it's too hot, not 'hot
enough, etc. Don't look •at the cake
until you begin to smell it cooking,
and then open and close the door care-
fully.
sic
KING
WDER
in of%your
kak n
Thai's iite ray
to assure
success.
M_ adein Cana*
.No .///utri
C.W. GILLETT CO. LT i
TORONTO, CAN.
"I suppose there are nany.•probleme
which Polar explorers Seek to solve.
said the unscientific man. rest!
"Yes" replied the traveller, "a g
many."
"What is the most important one?",
"Getting back."
South Africa's Problem
469 London Daily Mail (Ind.' Con.) :
The handling of the native question
is of the first importance for the world.
It looks as though in South Africa the
very situation which oecured seventy
years ago in the Southern Confederacy
of the United States were recurring.
The dominating party, the Boers, with
their Labour auxiliaries, believe sine
cereler in the bondage of the natives.
South Africa statesmen of larger ex-
perience
xperience and wider outlook, such as.
General Smuts, 'realize that what the
n Boer extremists seek is impossible,
at shoulders. Long sleeves have turn- and that a native population which is
ONE-PIECE WRAP AROUND.
It's one-piecel The smart, printed'
silk crepe wrap around model with
effective shirring and drape at right
(side, so suitable for street and all
-
{occasion occasion wear. Its. extremely slender
line• makes it so suitable for average
I
full figure. The shirring is- repeated
"Your father is quite eisaed, isn't
he?" said a man to the son of a mil-
lionaire. "Yes, replied the youth.. 'I'm.
the only heir he has left." _-
\LUXO\
.
1 down flared cuffs. A narrow belt;
1 crosses back and extends to each side
of front. Style No. 469 can beh a Grid
sizes 16, 18, 2,0 years, 36, 38,
42 inches bust. In. the 36 -inch size,
2°/s yards of 40 -inch material w itb
ee
yard of 40 -inch contrasting,
suffi-
cient. Plain silk crepe, canton -faille
crepe, crepe Roma, wool crepe, printed
cotton foulard and printed rajah silk
are fashionable fabrics suitable. Pat-
tern price 20c in stamps or coin (coin
is preferred). Wrap coin carefully.
HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS.
The yellow bea haggard afsaee right
upon
Bess' drawn, hagg
face. Farther off it revealed Ned,
white-faced but erect .in the beat of
the' storm.
In one instant's insight, a single
glimpse between the storm and the
sea, he understood that she was tak-
ing him at his word.
"Get in with us," he said shortly.
"Don't be silly—as I was." Then, lest
she should mistake his sentiment:
"Mrs. Hardenworth is twice your
weight, and this boat will be over-
loaded as it is."
The girl looked at him quietly, nod-
ding her head.
He helped her into the dory. Julius,
who atthe captain's orders had been
rifling the cabins, threw blankets to
her. Then tenderly lending her his
strength, Ned helped Lenore mer the
wind-swept deck into the bow sent of
the lifeboat, nearest to the seat he
would take himself, "Buck up, my
girl," he told her, a deep throbbing
notein his voice. "I'll look after you,"
Already the deck was deserted. The
dim light showed that the larger'
dory containing MeNab, Forest, Julius
and rMs Hardenworth, had already
been launched. There was no sign of
then now. The darkness and the
storm- had already 'dropped between,
They could not hear a shout of dime -
tions between the three men, not a
scream of fear front the terrified wo-
man who was their charge,
It was as if they had never beet.
Only the Charonvies left, her decks'.
awash and soon to dive and vanish
beneath the waves—and' their little
group in the dim: bleats of the lantern.
Knutsen and Ned took their pinees at
the oarlocks, Ned nearer the bow,
Knutsen just behind. A great wave
Seemed to catch them and hurl them
away,
Both girls saiight refuge in troubled
sleep. Ned sat with his arms about
Lenore, giving herwhat warnmth he
could frons his own body. Bess Was
huddle in her :,cat, Could their lees
rugged constitutions stand many
hours of sueh cold and exposure? It.
was a losing game, already, The.
North was too much .for them, ]Life i
is a fragile thing at best: it few hours
more reiglit easily spell the end, 1lalo rilsui,+yr foxy
Blit that hour saw the Elute of stalb'TON A.
at ancient mystery, cart'ying hack the oe ]snout 0 z':+4.
just as the cobbler waxes his
thread to snake his stitches holdasloing
as the shoe leather lasts, so Firestone
saturates with pure liquid thatru. goes
every fibre of every strandcords resiste
into the tire, to 'make the co
internal heat, friction and strain as
long tas the tire lasts.
This extra patented Fir es t o n e
process gives Firestone Tires the extra
strength arid stamina to give `Most
Miles Per Dollar",
See your local Firestone Dealer.
Write your name and address plain-
ly, giving hunker and size of such
patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in
stamps or coin (coin preferredwrap
it carefully) for each number, and
address your order to Wilson Pattern_
Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto.
Patterns sent by an early nail.
growing much faster than the w
cannot indefinitely be held down or
treated • as superior cattle. This "irre-
pressible conflict" is.what looms lar-
gest on the horizon.
r ,5
Minard's Liniment for Rheumatism.
Magistrate--Andyo were having
words with your wife. our hon-
or,
with 'ef, y
or, frons 'eV.--
"Mummy,"
est--"Iilummy " asked John, "how is it
that little fishes don't get drowned be-
fore their mothers have taught then
how to swim?"
Minard's Liniment for Neuralgia.
/Darling, I've Lust heard the most
terrible bit of scandal."
''I thought you had, dear; you look-
ed so happy when you came in."
"I'm going to manya and settle down,
Said little Mr. Cupp. "You'd best
staysingle," said Tailor Browne"And
try to settle up."
WHEN.. IN TORONTO
EAT AND'SLEEp AT
SCHOLES HOTEL
400 lunch or Supper n f pec'IaiLY
YONGE ST., Opposite Eaton's
Hotel Rates: $1 Per Day and Up
`��t°jahfb'aifa
IitelioneyriyUclW'
You Must Do Your Bit
in the war against the fly, carrier
'of germs and' breeder of disease. P .
It is proven thatAEROXON hone
'of the most convenient and mostt
efficient means of combating
fly evil, 1It is convenient, be' nice
ause
of the pushpin, it i hygienic:
lilies never get away when once
Iceught. Each spiral gives three
weeks' perfect serviac,
eEWARE OF IMITATIONS
Sold of drug, grocery Ind hardware stores
,La Cie C 0. Genese &fins, 'Y,itair&
oesosee s e. QUE
sots accNri
•
677.
FOR HAIR
FOR THE
Ask Your Barber—He knows
Justice is blind, and some court de-
cisions make us believe that she is also
dumb.
NURSES WANTED
,Che Toronto Hospital for Incurables,
in affiliation with Bellevue and Allied
Hospitals, New York City, offers a
three years' Course of Training to
Young women. leaving the re+laired
education and desf>•ous of becoming
nurses. This Hospital has adopted tire
rsrfthliplreceive
uniforms he Scioo,amty
allowance and traveling expenses to
and from Nov York. For further
information write the Superintendent,
TORO
THESes.7
relfar
11EN a cold or exposure
brings aches and pains that
penetrate to your very bones, there
is always quick relief in Aspirin,
It will make short work of that
headache or any little pain. Just
as effective in the more serious
suffering from neuralgia, nettritis,
itheuinatism or lumbago. No ache
or pain is ever too deep-seated for
Aspirin tablets to relieve, and they
cipn't :affect the heart. All druggists,
Witli provendirections for various
fuses which many peoples1tave found
invaluable in the relief of pains and
aches of 1nany kinds. _
Ontario i..
i 111.E •
SCOtlonte
1 IN
phi
ISSUE No, 2+8-^-' ?9
� �ra
a aemark ktetststeroa 11Y gauaita
World's Annual Expo-
sitioll a C e; c c I achieve-
ment where products are ex-
hibited
-
hibited from the four corners
of the earth; here, the greatest
international sports,,progr'am,
featuring the
FOLr.TH WRiGLEY
MARATHON SWIM
in two events (Friday, August
23 for women, and Wednesday, .
August 28 for men and prize
winners of tvo men's race) for
the world championship and
$50,000 purse.
The Goldman and other famed
Bands will be heard; four concerts by
the 2,000 Voice Exhibition Chorus;
the first: showing of 1930 Motor Cars
in the new million -dollar Auto-
motive Building; $125,000 Agricul'
ttural Prize List; Trots and Paces
featuring Standard Bred Society Futurity:
lavish metitary and naval grandstand pageant.
"Britannia's Muster"; National Aircraft
Show and Sky Carnival; International Oa-
board
ticboard Motor Boat Races, and two weeks of
paver • to be +Forgotten enjoyment at the
Bmpite Year celebration of the Canadian
National Exhibition, Aug, 2e to Sept. aj.
Send f or descriptive pictorial
booklets.
THOMAS Bi ADSHAW,
President
H. W. WATERS,
(yenerdl 1%4e.°fteger