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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1929-08-29, Page 2t4 O .�. LTARIBUTioN EUIScxpx relietaaalat x., iLLuSTRATED ey SATTF Rh° l @L D BEGIN HERE; TODAY. Bess Gilbert, Ned Cornet and the . latter's fiancee, Lenore Hardenworth, .are shipwrecked and they take refuge an an island inhabited solely by a man and his Indian wife, l)vomsdurf, mas- ter of the island,.is brutal, He brags to Ned and the girls that he (leans to make them his slaves. The prisoners build a cabin and their master gives then an old stove. Lenore is too weak to work so the entire burden falls to Bess and Ned. They are driven. by Doomsdorf until they fall unconscious. After the cabin is finished Dooms- dorf announces that he means to have his prisoners do al his winter trap- ping. Ned protests that they know nothing of the work but Doomsdorf says they will have to learn. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY. tlozf_ vvatelxiaag him with keenest ir:-eedg' Everyman terestIkiie weariness of life that has no will '"I ,ct3dii't think ;you were aurin ,1'o elimb the steepeniaag hill; enough to doa it," lae commented• I The sickness of the soul for sleep, "'You'll say that's quite a trap, won't, and to be still, or "It's quite a trite,' Ned aAntl then once more the impassioned shortly. "What kind of an .elephant do you take iii it?" "No kind of elephant,' but one of • the grandest mama:leis that ever lived, at ':hat I don't trap them mach, be - T hardly get enough for their that was in has l Skins to pay for handling them—yon hearty the prayer can guess' they're immensely bulky. heart. course she'may stay here, she There's a fair price for their skulls, said. "We'll make s out somehow" too but the skull alone is a fair load fora weak back. Last year I needed CHAPTER XX, a few hides for the cabin, Dad, you rnsdorf's trap lines lay in great ever hear of the Kodiac bear?" Doo He cut a slender whip, about half ordercerste reduceet e various points in in nedto the ,and of willow, and tlthrustiingfboth ends ain}o swings toworkback tohth and the ground in front of the trap, made swinging thicket bes the home cabin in beside the sea. They were an arch. `"When the old boy homes the e along, he'll lift his front foot right Berg' simple to follup,the r ver to explained—he over that arch, to avoid stepping en Bess line running ] enigrreat tributary that anything that looks so unstable, and moue, being then straight clown into the trap,'' flowed the Forks cabin, the campthe left Doonsdorf explained. "If it was known r the upthe heavy wood, he'd rest his foot on it hand forks to its mother springs, miss the trap."' Spring cabin, and then straight flown andtes later they came to the i.idge to the home cabin, four days' what seemed. A few minuo Ned a new hand inter - journey in all. Doonhsdarf drewfor esting geological formation. It seemed her guidance a simple map that would to be a noisy waterfall of three or remove all route was ofsl goinglastray. four feet, behind which the creek was Ned's slightly more cont• damned to the proportions of a small, plicated, yet nothing that the veriest lake. greenhorn could not follow. It took narrow(To be continued.) him first to what Doomadarf called pygmy'' fist. ,Clenched cloudward lull defiant; 'the pride that would prevail, the doomed protagonist Grappling the ghostly tiant,, Victim anti'venturer turn by turn,' anti then Set free to be again Companion in repose with those who once were Men. CHAPTER XIX.-(Cont'd.) "Two of 'em are four-day lines, and one a five-day line—that is, they take four and five days respectively to get around. On each one I've built series of huts, or shacks, all of them with a stove and supplies and food, and you put up in then for the night. They are a day's march apart, giving you time to pick up your :skins, reset, and so on, as you go. "You'll be away from me and this cabin for days at a time, but if you're figuring on any advantage frcm-that, just put it out of your mind, the soon - better Maybe you think you can sneak enough —See Rev his Twelve -Mile cabin at the very head of the little stream on which ea the home cable was built, thence fol- lowing a well -blazed trail along an plum Chutney extensive though narrow strip of tim- ber, a favorable country for marten, ounces to the top of the ridge, around the chopped onions, 3 ounces chopped 4 ouuces Bgar- glacier,ss occupied and down to the hht out, stoned plums, 2 cups vineg rlie; 2 ounces mustard seed, -,5 ounces os oasthed the thirdinight o , g e teaspoon salt, 1/a, teaspoon known as the Forks cabin; thence up sugar, 3! ex the the righthand fork cabins ovexther the ppoon grle teaspoon ound cloveseni/1ateaspoonteof 1 time to make a boat, spring, the Thirty -Mile CHIC NECKLINE. KLIN 17 down to the water, and ridge and clown to the sea, the Sea ground allspice.the Mix isi very ingredients in sports blouse reverse smuggle it , trapping salt -water and cookA stunning you you'll have cabin andand then, PP or in halt -pint jars. No. e in is white me assureY,in bottles menta Style cast off. Letdot treat thannh ae to. sneak. hours' You'd start; get they ey(miek ' otter, to the home cabin, ( Makes two and one-half pints of eliut-1 dot t ae ehine wile vo. 5 red dots, n fecal hall; and they five days' milingy p nil. wodldn't help you at oll een the ce As if smiling upon their venture, iney.' with the unusual yoke that ties in knot at front of reel. crepe ?e chine fields! I aruet there's no need to men-th a cleat dawn in 7 ort ccs Tomato Chutney with whifr dots. tion penalties. You already know h' h t rt forth The squaw • d from the river mouth apples, 4 ounces sugar, 2 cups h d and bow about that Popular Pickles gfried. Sassoon in the . Saturday iew. $so` "x„e ' .;,,.;t a to , by the rice mid cheap teas. 0 y fine teas Fill give, continued ed a jo me nt _s_q_KELN) r 6F .°es ` ' 1 � tha is New Salmi 695 -�� Dividing the Spoils For the midday lunch, the 6 o'clock tea, or the Sanciay night supper, a salad is very often the central dish 'oecomixtig'xnoxe evident• laght frons around which the simple meal ip built, the start there were suspic;ons that. Green Gage Bails the mighty hancl of Sir Herbert Holt. An easily prepared salad is made •.t, ars pulling strings somewhere be,. by nixing two cupfuls of grated i neath the surface and that the Mon- pulling yellow cheese with ;i cup -1 t.i.e.al electric ring was behind the• Toronto 'Telegram (Ind. Con.) : That Beauharnois power is to be jug, gled and trafficked in as a money- maker for the big interests is daily. fur o1 chopped celery and nutmeats and sufficient mayonnaise to allow the -mixture to be formed into balls. After t raining a can of green -gage plums from their juice, . stuff them with the cheese and serve four or five of tl'e balls on crisp lettuce top- ped with mayoenaise• Three of the green balls served as centers on three slice • of ice-cold tomatoes make a colorful dish. Plain salted crack- ers chested with paprika go well with this salad, served with a fruit punch. Almond Surprise Salad nature gave em and green tomatoes, 7 ounces w. ie to start aBess started up vine - together, the former in the role of gar, 4 ounces seeded raisins, 3 ounces cher; Ned and Doomsdori followed chopped onions, 3 ounces chopped gar - up tea -ledsalt,1a ounce cayenne, • k that Tippled 3ounces ,� silvery creek PP he s 'ttle Y the ,r le ce ounce Y ounce mustard seed, 1 t seed. This is another recipe who the scales are most important. Pe and chop the green tomatoes and a pies. Add the sugar and vinegar al. simmer until the tomatoes and appl are soft. Put the raisins, onions a garlic through the meat grinder ax add to the first mixture with the se sonings. Stir well and store in jel glasses, covering with paraffin. Mai - five glasses. An .Old Time Chili 2 dozen ripe tomatoes, 5 green pe pers, 4 large onions, 2 tablespoo ginger, 1 tablespoon cinnamon, 2 to spoons cloves, 1 tablespoon salt, cups sugar, 1 quart vinegar. Cut tl tomatoes in small pieces and cook u til very tender. Strain and add to tb .chopped pepper's and onions. Add th other ingredients and cook for to hours. Turn into bottles and sea Makes four pints. This is a very o recipe which has been banded down one family for several generations. is the traditional accompaniment that household for cold New Yo State baked beans. Thered crepe is re- peated in wide cruse girdle tied cuffs. It can be copied exactly in sizes _ 18 20 years 36, 38, 40 al Y i ting it will hal "Andyouth � maybe are g be easy enough to slack—not trying to catch much, so you won't have many skins to flesh and stretch—maybe hid- ing what you do catch. I'll just say this. I have a pretty good idea how this country runs—just how many skins each line yields with fair trap- ti - ping. I'm going r centC1 and that'sease that to mate by be your minimum. I won't say what that amount is now. But if at the end cf the season you're ;.bort—by one skin—look out! It means that you'll have to be about 20 per cent. smarter and more industrious than the aver- age trapper:” "But man—" Ned protested. "We're not experienced—" "You'll learn quick enough. Aren't you the dominant race? And I warn J you again—you'd better drop bitter tears every time you find where a wolverine has been along and eaten an ermine out of a trap!" They The man was ,tot jesting.. knew him well enough by now; the piercing glitter of his keen grey eyes, the odd fixation about his pupils that was always manifest when he was most in earnest, was plainly in evi- dence now. Thus it was with the most profound amazement that Lenore's' companions suddenly saw her beauti- ful iiiouth curling in a smile. For themslves they were lost in despair. All too plainly Doomsdorf had merely hinted at tills cruel rigors of the trapper's trail. Yet Lenore was smiling• queer little Then Ned saw, with a q tug of his heart, that the smile was not meant for :aim Lenore was soiling at Doomscdorf. She was into his grey rey The squaw and Bess srted up from the river mouth toota • blue past the horse cabin. And for the first time since his landing In Hell sland Ned had a chance really to look about him. "Where there's timber, there's mar- ten," Doomsclorf explained. "Marten, I suppose you know, are the most veraable an d furs we take, fox-andoneoutside of sil- of the easiest taken."' He took ane of the traps from Ned's shoulder and showed him how to slake the set. The bait wasiplaced tl s 1 ook ing stxaxght t above eyes. Her cheeks were bushed a love- as few oxlf eet trunk of tehe tree,aso that ly pink; her eyes were smiling too; , she presented an image of ineffable to reach it the marten would almost certainly spring beauty:y tramped on, and Dooinsdarf "I'm afraid I wouldn't bosmuch egan pointed out where a wolverine had o you, as a terof loyi quietly, her voice of cloying sweetness. come 'down the glade and crossed the "I'm afraid I'd only get in the way creek, " 'ou'l1 curse at the very name and scare the little—ermines, you call of wolverine before the season's Ned them?—out of the country, d f do you know how well aI pauscloneed to�study the msdorf liinipd rint, as"He s cane , " the demon of the snow so far as the can keep house? And the wile was not without re- trapper ' is eaneerned, Nevertheless, sults: The usual scoffing refusal did you'll want to take a skinefor your not come at once to the bearded lips. own use. It's the one fur for the ou can wear it Perhaps the plaster was flatteredsthheet hover your md of a outhinfifty below and it Lenore was'so tamed, p P wished to reward her attitude of doesn't get covered with ice from friendliness so that Bess might take smarterbreath. Bun you'llut have to think you Rxeeto example. cateb him," "You want.to stay here -with Sindy before a great, and he, eh?" he commented at last. C1O1Centhey h pausedmentsiefo seemingly great, "Well, ling might likeesome belt much too large to be a trap, that had I'm willing—but I'll leave it up previous you two friends. They'll have to work been t season.theset from the p ' all the, harder to make up for it—"Lift trapping Doomsdorf advised. Ned you especially Bess. I: was gong' to have bent, finding the iron itself heavy' in, you two girls work together." If i ,vatched Ned's face with keenest hie "I au creature's going to walk away interest. The s, bis man flushed on with that on his leg, is he?" his earnestness, his adoring gaze Lenore. "No?, . That's all you know about "I'monly too glad to melte it it. I��� admit tio v� y faar wouldn't care to w boyish for You," he said, his crooked, hy I didn't take it into .shelter boyish smile dim at his lips. "That's oto wthclose of the season --although the one 'thing that tnatterse, though help of course it's easy enough to haul on you all I can. In this case, --Bess is the ane to say." la sled. You noticed it's attached to Lenore promptly stiffened as Ned's a chain, ande that s a tvhadato a that tag had he." ad • turned to Bess. It didn't flatters h that step lover should eve' take represei ted aegreatblog,which or, d�ag,nto which the trap chain was attached:. It took nearly all of Ned's strength to push down the powerful springs and set the great jaws, The fact that he didn't know' just bow to go about it impeded tiro, ,ito . found Axid when be stood erect again, Dooms - "You Rant a divorce from yot husband? On what grounds?" "T compatibility! I want a divorce a he doesn't!" Greater love hati� no elan than th that he lay down his lite for friends.—Christ to Elis Disciples. German Industry er Bess into his consideration. She had grown accustomed to receiving his every dui.y. $ut it carne aboat that Lenore and her little, jealousies did not even find g. place in Best' ed Ned's ga%e, her axeyes She trous, es' if with tears, and she undersi;ood whole proposition, • . Te be sure, there wa; a spectacular sham fight staged at Ottawa before the King Government filially put the seal of. acquiescence on the lease... But the ink was not dry on the signatures be- fore the struggle for control began in deadly earnest and the flying millions. of list chapter, filled ih•. air. The f I that story has resulted in the ousting of Frank P. Jones. And even ;af hin> it can be said that he was not thrown • out on a cold world to die of poverty. The other chapters have still to be written. There will be others thrown to the wolves with .nothing but a few millions to comfort their declining years. And when the story has alt been told it will be strange indeed if the power interests of St. James street are not found in full possession, leav- ing eav ing to the public the doubtful privilege• of paying all the millions than had to be juggled in the acquirement of com- plete control. When guests are invited to tea, the fallowing fruit salaa never fails to please- The .addition of almoners gives it a note of mystery and the sauce has a special flavor of its own which piques the curiosity: Six oranges; 3 apples with shins left on; 1 large can of sliced pine- apple; 1 bunch, or one can, of grapes; 1/2 cupful or more of blanched and quartered almonds. Remove the seeds from the fruit and cut it into small pieces. Serve on let- tuce with the following sauce: One cupful of sugar; 1 cupful of boiling water or pineapple juice; 6 level teaspoonfuls of flour; juice of 3/ lemon and 1 orange; grated rind of the orange; 1 ,upfui of whipped cream. This salad Is delicious served with cheese, straws and ice cocoa. Molded Cheese Salad One envelope of gelatine dissolved in % cupful of water; bring to a boil the juice from one large can of pine- apple and pour it over the gelatine; dice the pineapple and 1 green pep- per; wbip 1 pint of cream and mix all with 2 packages of cream cheese and 1 cupful cf nutmeats; mold and serve on lettuce with assorted sandwiches, olives. cake and a cool drink. Too Fast St. Louis Globe -Democrat: Chicago.. used to have a ivaxwoxgcP show which exhibited models of the latest murder- ers, but they are coming too fast. now. P & Q Salad An inexpensive, but very attrac- tive and delicious salad for hot days is made with pieapple and cucumbers thus acquiring its alphabetical name. The amount given serves 12. Two packages of lemon jelly; 1 arge can of grated pineapple; .6 me-� tram cucumbers. Drain the juice from the pineapple ml add it to the water .used for the elly, being sure not to use as much water as ie. required for a package (1 qt.) as the salad must be stiff en- ough to cut. When the jelly begins to congeal, acid the pine apple and diced cucumbers; pour into molls which have been rinsed with cold water or into a fiat pan that it may be cut in squares. Serve with meat -or nut sandwiches, potato chips and a cold :!rink. Three or four tips of as- paragus lei dupon the sliced salad mold before topping it with mayon- naise makes a more substantial dish. Every Day Salad two cupfuls of shaved cabbage-; 1/Z cupful of celery, dapped, 1 large or 2 medium tomatoes, diced; hit of tea- spoonful of sugar; ?4 salt; salad oil. This .salad is quickly matte and the ingredients may be kept in the ice box and the salad mixed a few mo- ments before serving, in order that the cabbage remain crisp. If celery is not available; celery seed may, be substituted. No acid is required as the tomato juice is sufficient. Mix the ingredients in a large bowl and toss then lightly together with the oil. Serve with baked leans and iced milk, IEmancipation Day Jamaica Times: (On August 1 was celebrated the ninety-first- tanniver sary of the emancipation of the slaves in the British Empire) 'There are some people who think that the time lies passed when such a celebration ,Should arouse in the mind of the av- erage verage citizen any particula. thoughts on the original meaning of the day. But we believe that such an opinion is not yet entertained by the majority of the people of Jamaica. To them there is a religious significance in the event celebrated in the same way as there is in the keeping of the Feast of the Passover to the average IIIe- brew. On this ' occasion they thank God for leaving moved the heart cf men towards giving th eir forefathers the priceless .gift of freedoni, and for bringing to an end in these West In- dies a condition of things which has eontribted to make the reading t f history. leave upon the mind of the reader the effect of a hideous night - A Clay's pt•oductioxi of IENJCY EA ®AY Better get that new Set of GUM -DIPPED "--70 N.vv1 a small basket factory in Litchenfels, the centre of 'the German basket -weaving industry. LIEN 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 littlepain. just as effective in the more serious suffering from neuralgia, neuritis, rheumatism or lumbago. No ache or pain is ever too deep-seated for .Aspirin tablets te, relieve, and they don't affect the heart. All druggists, with proven directions for various uses which many people have found invaluable in the relief of pains and aches of many kinds. SPIRIN bop= a r"rademark ltegtetk='ed tri gauadn mare, Minard's Liniment for aching joints , ISSUE NO. 34