Zurich Herald, 1929-09-05, Page 6SAIL DA quality never changes
While cheap brads constantly
vary with market prices
r
TEA
"Fresh from the gardens'
Hot Weather
Window Hl
ire esso
! 'roll irtr` it C., it • C'N e
KC:TRIDUTI. o ri
Y
•
•
13
EbisOt*i MARVAI,,4
ski
e.vesATTEFilletre
BEGIN HERE TO -DAY ties of lloonisdorf's detaliation, "She
didn't dream that ''yet• �vnuld do
Ned Cornet, his fiancee,. Lenore, th �,1 off hurling
and Bess, a seems ress «• Doomsdorf s but it
;LI.u,,TRA r BY
t are sur truck him not
vivors of e shipwreck. They take briar againts the wa + un
69s Il was
refuge on an island inhabited by a with the idea of inflicting p
ish-
mail named Doomsdorf . and his In- anent. erns=
dian wife. The master of the island Ned could not speak but Do
sus b Nedh and es. girls that they dorf looked at him with the fire of a
must be his slaves.
Lenore is too weak to do any work
so the burden falls entirely on the easy he said withd
shoulders of• Bess and' Ned.
The prisoners build a cabin and I inferred a
Doomsdorf gives •„thea i an old stove.
As soon as the cabin is completed
Spotless windows and Well- ns play Ned and 'Bess are informed that they
an important part e.the well -kept ap Tare to learn to be trappers. Lenore
pearance . of a home. In the summer, i is allowed to remain with the squaw
sprung. Outwitting the wild cree
tures was seemingly 'not the easy
thing he had antioipnted,
For a • moment he couldn't locate
the beaver trap, Then he saw that
the wire, fastened securely to the
bank had become mysteriously taut.
Not Glaring to hope he began to tug
it in.
At the end of the wire he found
leis trap, and in the .trap was a large
beaver, drowned and in prime condi-
tion.
(Continued in Our Next Issue)
Sun Life Head
Helps Old Horne
Canadian Endows Experi
mental Farm for Crofters
in "Farthest Hebrides”
Stornoway. , co•
Save the Price of Your
Fare to Toronto
Permanent Waving $5.54
By Experts
When you, visit Toronto don't
fail to have one of our`fa,ynous 'Pen
manent Waves at the Reduced Rate
01 $5.50.
With or without appointment.
Specialists In the Shur Wave method
ladies
of Permanent Waving. (.
zealot m has ayes. who care.)
"I dcn't want anything that's that ROBERTSON'S
�+ infinite contempt. S t A large crowd as . TORONTO
"Sometimes. the grope is her er. semblecl here recently to give a re- 288 YONGE STREE"+
take back something eembleon to re re Macaulay. of Ago t for Booklet W. on the care
moment ago -that all women would (heal. ----
f them the
Mont- Write
however, a good breeze through the
house is essential to physical comfort.
This means open windows, and open'
windows are hard on curtains, tor
dust collects on the screens and the'
wind whips the delicate fabric against
them. Fortunately, there are simple'
means of minimizing these difficulties,
and they contribute to the usefulness
of both curtains and shades.
Lowering the windows from the' top
and so letting out the hot air that col-
lects in the upper part of the rooms
e e
and help her with the housework.
Bess and Ned are given separate rout-
es. The squaw starts Bess on her
way and Doomsdorf instructs Ned.
NOW GOON WITH -THE STORY.
I
e
of a Shur Wave Permanent Wave.
sed his schemes
do the same. The best o, Mr. Macaulay discussed
of the L mreiean
Wiest of them, 1 it tthrough r k gd for improving SOUth
had arranged tot
hose spirit is forth while to break. ai
stir will go the conditions
hell for an idea; and that's a in
crofters, and said tie
w.
Do you know any one who right now,
likely enough, is trudging along
through this rellish snow with forty
pounds of traps over her back?".
Ned shuddered, hurling off his
doubt, believing yet in the findelity of
his star. "I don't know, and I don't
care," he answered
"That's what Bess Gilbert is doing,
and you know it. There young man,
is a woman worthy of my steel!"
He turned and strode out the door
Ned was left to his thoughts and the
still, small voices of the waste places,
alone with the wilder •r•ss night whose
word was the plaster word of life, and
with the wird that sobbed unhappy se-
crets as it swept his cabin roof.
CHAPTER XX.—(Cont'd.)
.The dam itself didn't appear to be
a natural formation of rock. It
looked more like driftwood, but it was.
inconceivable that more drift could
be piled in this ordered way
"It must be a beaver dam," he said.
is one of th best means of cooling "You're right for once;" Doomsdorf
and ventilating the house. It is not ( agreed.
as hard on the curtains, either, as g„ A big beaver weighs about 50
opening the window at the bottom, pounds --arid he's about the handiest
because not so much of the material boy to trap there is. You 11 wonder
can be forced out to the screen. It is what the purpose of these dams is.
more wearing ons the shades, though As far as I can make out, simply. to
—and sometimes annoying, too—un keep the water at one level. 'You
less some provision' is made to keep know these little streams rise and
these from Sopping back and forth• fall like the tides. They've learned,
when the draft is strong• in a few hundred thousand years of
Anchoring the Shade their development, that it doesn't pay
One excellent way to accomplish to build a nice'house and then have
this 'when there are full-length screens the creek come up and wash it away
on the windows is to put two extra and drown them out."
pairs of brackets for holding the roll- Doomsdorf explained that a trap
er on the , inside casements of win set on the house itself so alarmed
dews that are to be lowered from the the animals that the entire colony
top. One .pair should be about eight was likely to desert the dam. Instead`
inches lower on the casement than the trap was set just below the sur -
those at the top, and a second pair face of the water at a landing—a
about six inches below these• By such place where the beaver went in and
• out of the water in the course of
their daily work.
Doomsdorf still marched in his
easy, swinging gait and ever it 'was'
a harder fight to keep pace. Yet Ned
dered • not lag behind. His master's
temper was over uncertain in these
long, tired hours of afternoon.
Tired out, weakened. aching in
every muscle and not far frena . the
absolute limit of exhaustion , Ned
staggered to the cabin door at last.
He Lad put out all the traps he had
brought from the luin,e cabin; thence
his course lay along a blazed trail
that skirted the edge of the'narrow
timber belt, over the ridge to the
Forts cagin. Dcomsderf entered,
then Ir. the half-light stood regard-
ing the younger man who had fo'.-
lowed him in.
Ned tried to stand crest. He must
not yield to the almost irresistible
impulse to throw himself down cm
the floor and rest, Re dared .,not
risk Doomsdorf's anger; how did he
know what instruments of torture
the latter's satanic ingenuity might
contrive in this lonely cabin) Nor
was his mood to be trusted tonight.
His, gray eyes shone with suppressed
excitement; and likely enough he
would be glad of an excuse for some
diversion to pass the hours pleasant-
ly. It was very lonely and strange
out here, in the open in the full sweep
of the wind over the barren lands.
But Ned wasn't aware of Doonis-
dorf's plans. The great blond man
stretched his arms, yawning, buttoned
his coat tighter about him, and turn-
ed to go. "I'll sse you in about five
days," he remarked laconically.
Ned wakened abruptly from his re-
very. 'You mean --you aren't going
to show me anything more?"
"I've shown you how to set your
traps, for every kind of an animal,"
Doomsdorf said. "You ought to be
able to do the rest. By the time you
conte around, we'll likely have'freez-
ing weather—that means you'll have
to thaw out your animals before you
skin them.
"Here and here and here"—he
paused, to put in Ned's hands a
clasp hunting knife, razor sharp, a
small pocket hone to whet his tools,.
Land a,light axe that had been hang -
'e back of the stove—"are some
TYPICALLY SPORTS
!3 new featherweight -tweed in
fart food -violet tones with neckline
endow the experimental farm near.
Stornoway to the extent'ct £500year-
ly.
ly. His primary interest, he said, was
agricultural development in the is-
land. The experimental farm near
Stornoway was working. out remark
ably well, and the results were in
every way encouraging.
Already they had made an epoch-
making discovery with regard to the
eclamat• of peat—namely, the tre-
r
mendous importance of phosphate, try for the :purpose of meeting Lanae
which, in the form of basic slag, was
a comparatively than manufacturers and showing
inexpensive'fertilizer.,
them the opportunities that lie ready
y
The piece of land chosen for the farm to hand and the profits that initiative
was, he continued, not one of the best,
and determination will 'bring to the
but one of the worst, and if they couldaDominion by nursing and expanding.
make a success there they could any -
our business with Latin America.
where. All kinds of problems regard
-
on Major McO011 lays special emphasis
o cultivation; fertilization, and costs on the' openings in the field of con -
would have to be worked out on the structfon. He points out that the Ar -
farm, and givenhis endowment of £5000 a gentine has been won over to the plan
Ar -
year `w be nti on condition that a -it of handling grain through interior and
would r continued as a can n co- terminal elevators and that it pro -
tion farm. It would be run in co- poses to spend x,100,000,000 on the
operation with the Macaulay Soil Re- poses ol of $grain100, elevators the
search Institute in Aberdeenshire' to cmediately. With her unique expert -
which he had given an endowment of once in this form of construction, Can -
the
£10,000, knowledge puttingleto practical use ada should be in a splendid position to
ledge gained and the tender ,successfully for share of this
gaineda
aditionhl knowledge that would be work. A large and costly program of
through the experimental farm, road building, of the construction ot
Referring to the question of how to branch lines of railways, of improve -
improve the conditions of the crofters, ment of port facilities, and of erection
Mr. Macaulay said he believed they bridges is also in prospect, and
were suffering from an excess of the of Major McColl offers the practical sue-
communal
ue-
ts drawbacks.
al system, hut thought it had gestion that in order to obtain a sub -
its drawWhen he first came stantial slice of this work construe•
to the island he had an idea of inclosed• I tion firms. of Canada should pool their
resources, both financial and techni-
cal.
Finally, Major McColl believes in
the advantages of firsthand know-
ledge. He thinks that groups of manu-
facturers and the directors of our
large institutions should visit Latin
America and study conditions thele at
first-hand. Canadian investment in
Brazil has opened our eyes to Some
of the possibilities of this trade, and
apparently there are virgin fields for
development that only await invest-
ment. Such a trade development,can-
not be secured by reacting about these
opportunities and writing letters of
enquiry. •It will only be obtained by
an aggressive campaign and by per-
sonal contact with the business men
ot`these countries.—Montreal Star.
I ♦
Minard's Linimentfor Summer Cold;
Trade
One of the most completeand clear-
ly written pamphlets issued from Ot-
tawa for some time past is the report
of Major E. L. McColl, Trade Com-
missioner at Buenos Aires, on the op
portunities of developing Canadian
trade in South America. Major Mc-
Coll is to follow up the publication of
his brochure with a tour of the coun-
XXI
Thus began a week of trial for Ned.
For the first time in his life he was
thrown wholly ..pen his own resources
standing or falling by his own worth.
Should he fall insensible in the snow
there were none to seek him and bring
hien into shelter. If he shoulu go a-
stray and miss the cabins there was
no one to set him on the right path
again He was meeting the wilder-
ness alone, and face to face.
He crossed the divide to the Forks
cabin, followed the springs to Thirty -
Mile cabin, descended to the sea, and
along the shore to the home cabin,
just as he had been told to do. He
put nut his traps as he went in what
seemed to him the most likely places,
using every wile Doomsdorf had communal pastures for each township,
him
taught to increase his chances but the more he had seen of it the
for a catch: In spiteof the fact thatmore he was
g l convinced that there was
'
he went alone, the second day was a Wetter way, and that was that each
ever' so much easier than the first; crofter should have a certain area of
and he came into the home cabin only pasture Ind in the vicinity of his vil-
Painfully tired, but not absolutely lge for his . own exclusive use, while
exhausted on the fifth the moo rand hill Brazings .would con-
- All through the five days he had tinue to be held in common as at pre
strengthened himself with the sent.
thought that Lenore awaited him a, In order to show what could be
the journey's sad"; and she hada done in this way he was willing, in
never seemed so lovely to him as the case of two typical villages, one
when, returning in the gray twilight, on the east and one on'the west side
he 'saw her standing framed in the of the island, to supply all the fencing
lighted doorway of the horn cabin. material required to enclose 30 to 50
Doubtless it was his own eagerness acres for each crofter. He would also
that made her seem so slow in coin- give the use of a suitable plow to turn
ing into his arms; and his own great t$e inclosed land, and would supply
fire that caused her to seem -to lack each man with fertilizers sufficient for
warmth. He 'Zai. been boyishly an- five acres. What might be done in
ticipatory, foolishly exultant, Yet it the future would depend entirely on
was all sweet enough. The girl flut- costs and the success of the evperi-
tered a 'single instant in his arms, • ment. His underlying idea was that
and he felt repaid for everything. individual reward for individual effort
"Let ane go," •she whispered tense- was going to have more effect than
ly, when his arms tried to hold her. anything else. — Christian Science
"Don't let Doomsdorf see. He might nioni.tor.
kill you—„-_-_e_e.
But it carie about that she didn't
611
softened by faille silk crepe rever col- means the shade may be a lux
lar with flattering jabot frill and vest- quickly and easily according to the
ee. The skirt shov s the fashionable open space desiredabove, leaving a
all-around box -plaits and is stitched to free opening fo rthe ,exit of hot air
hipyoke which is joined to bodice un- from the room.
der the narow belt. Style No. 482 can Lacking such brackets,` the next
I
d ' sizes 16, 18 20 years, 36, 38, ibest device is a small cup hook
i:e na
40 and 42 inches bust. It Will make up
very attractively too in plain silk
jersey in a-
'
crepe in vivid red, wool jal-
mond green with matching faille silk
crepe, grey silk crepe with matching
shade in linen, printed rajah silk and
printed pique in red and white tones
with plain matching red inen. Pat-
tern price 20 cent in stamps or coin
(coin is preferred). Wrap coin care-
fully..
HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS.
screwed into the casement in such a
position as to meet an eye in one end 1
of the stick at the bottom of the
shade, and hold it fast when desired.
This eliminates much of the noise, but
unless the hook is quite high on the
casement, the shade prevents free
passage of the air and so retards the
cooling of the room.
Dainty Curtains Ail'Summer
One of the greatest conveniences
for keep"g the curtains clean when
Write your name and address plain windows must be opened at the bolt-
number and size of such 'tom, is the spring .clothespin.. Enamel,
pa giving
Enamel -
patterns as you \van. Enclos : 20c in ed to match the woodwork in color
stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap and fastened to one edgeno the
of the
number, and meat by an upholstering for each
it carefully) same color, it may be made as orna-
mental as it is useful. By clamping
this on the curtain at the proper place
the materials will be held away from
the opening, allowing free passage of
address your order to Wilson Pattern
Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto.
Patterns sent by an early mail.
The Homing Call
From far-off hills across the sea,
Beyond the ocean's mounting foam,
I smell the scent of heathered lea
—
I feel the call of girlhood's home.
I must go back , I cannot stay;.
Old ties, old scenes have strong allure;
I want to tread the well-worn way
That leads to home across the moor.
cool air into the room without in any
way impairing the freshness or wear-
ing qualities ot the curtain. This lit-
tle device is especially needed in
sleeping rooms where fresh air as well
as dainty appointments are the rule.
'Unless the window screens die kept
clean, the first driving ram will force
the dirt and dust onto the outside win-
dow panes. So one of the secrets. of
having attractive windows always is
of old, keeping the screeus clean. This is
Once more to greet the friends not difficult it three or four times dm' -
Once more to view old Scotia's scenes, ing the season, according to
Whose .charms have been so oft un- t,amount of dust raised in the locality,
the windows are
closed and plenty of
water fro nithe hose is thrown onthe
rolled
As one the songs of poets gleans.
- o,
I screens previous to washinb the
Old memories stir at fancy's call, dewe on the outside. As this is hard
I know fond welcome waits me there on the thin layer of paint on the
From friends of youth, but, best of all, screens, a good wiping with an oiled
From her of swiftly -greying hair. cloth after the netting is .dry helps to
-Jean C. Watt, in the Calgary Herald, preserve it:
Chew and
Grow Thin
You know that certain foods
furnish bods► energy without
adding' uncomfortable fat.
Sugar is one of these foods.
supplying needed energy in
concentrated form.
WRIGLEY'S gives You sugar
and flavor.' These ingredients.
dissolve in your mouth.
What bleasanter way of
taking sugar)'
._
rnmeiromisseemeemeelseelaareiesoui
e���l; leo,
It is as the paint wears off that the
wires rust, so an ounce of prevention
in the form of painting at east once a
year is important it screens are not
to be removed often.
So, they are not only an economy
but they also add to'the well -kept ap
finish the watnii.g. Presently she Sea
felt his arms turn to steel She felt
herself thrust back until her eyes
looked straight into his.
She had never seen Ned in this
mood before. Indeed, she couldn't
ever remember experiencing the
sensation that swept her now: se-
cretly appalled at h;ta, burnt with
his fire, wavering beneath his will.
She didn't know he had arms like
that. His face when she tried to sleet
it, hardly seemed his own. The flesh
was like gray iron, the eyes cold as
stones.
"What. has Doomsdorf to do with
:t?" he deinandecl. "Has he any
claim on you?"
"Of course
"He's treated she
e as well
to
reply. as
could be expected. But you know—
he makes claims on us all."
The fact could not be denied. Ned
turned from, her, nestling to the fire
for warmth.
Ths happines he had expected in
this long-awaited night had failed to
materialize. He ate his great meal,
sat awhile in sporadic conversation
with the girl in the snug cabin; then
Invent wea`ily to his blankets
Often, in the little hour after sup-
per about the stove, he wakened from
thinking about Bess. She had come
hiS revery to find that he had been
in from her line the previous day
and had gone out again; and he had
not dreamed that her absence could
leave such a gap in their little circle
He had hardly regarded her at all,
yet he found himself missing her.
She was always so high-spirited,en-
couraging him with her own high
heart.
But his blankets gave him slum
her, and he rose in the early hours,
breakfasted, and started out on his
lonely trap line. Ho was not a little
excited as to
the res
uy
t of this smorn-
ing's
'tramp. Bver;i. skin he took was
his, to protect his own body from
the bitter, impending cold,
The :first few traps had rot been
pearance of the whole house and are i things ,you'll need. • The time will
mulch easier on the curtains that will I come when you'll need snowshoes,
robably blow against thein many too. There's a pair on the rafters.
p
times before fall conies again.
Canadian Trade
London Times Tre de Supplement
(Ind„): There would seem to be litr
ch the Do-
minion
prospect Ct w
him
res
n
le t
o di
t
minion offers to the capitalist, the
it
and
Route to Stop
Lady: "I want a bottle of iod'ine."
Clerk: "Sorry, Madam, but this is a
drug store. Can': I interest you is
an alarm clock, some nice leather
goods, J. few radio parts, or a toasted
cheese sandwich?
To love all mankind a .cheerful state
of being is required; but to see luta
In Irish Free Si.ate mankind, into life, and still more into
Iourselves, suffering is requisite.—Jean
Plans May Help Young Paul Richter.
Dominion
Dublin.—With a view to establish-
ing the shortest possible sea route be-
tween Europe and America, the princi-
pal transatlantic shipping concerns
have decided to institute a terminal
port in the Irish Free State.
As a consequence the harbors of
Cork and Galway are being visited by
United States and Continental engin-
eering experts and financiers, who are
investigating the potentialities and re-
lative merits of both ports, with the
object of launching development
schemes on a scale to induce even the
largest ocean-going liners which at'
present do not touch Irish shores tot
call at a Free State Port and land pas-
sengers en route for the Continent:
It is proposed to provide an air ser-
vice to convey passengers across Ire-
land to England and the continental
centers.
Opinion seems to be that interests
could be best served' by establishing
Galway as a terminal port and Cork
as a tl'ade dfstributiiig center for
Eurbpe on the lines of a "tree, port."
"It's no good mincing matters,
said the' doctor, "you are very bad.
like
to
is there anybody you would
see? "'Yes," replied the patient,
faintly. "Who is it?" cjueired the
doctor. "Another doctor, please,"
whispered the patient. •
Now Pin going to tramp back to the
cabin to spend the night—in more
agreeable company.
For a moment the two men stood
regarding each other in absolute
Then Doomsdorf s keen
silence. Th
ears, eager for such sounds, caught
the whisper of Ned's troubled breath -
is
iexporter and the settler, • n Presently a leering smile flash-
sl ni ing , -
too
mach 6
possible to attach
i atioii caused by the ,ed through the blond beard. will
Seance to proposals
p b t e higher "You mean—you and Lenore
Amerscan p Cansals to'impos I .rig_:" Ned asked.
dirties on Canadian produce. The be aro
Market for foodstuffs is world-wide, "You saw the squaw start out with
a d ifobstacles are placed in the way. Bess?" was tthe riumyou pea t ins was
n
of the sale of her commodities in the"But whys y
'United States the Dominion will find' Lenortake e's own wish to and co fort anytay. She'd
t time, ,sooner
other earl I,tl endure the Cold with
you. ets. Ian u. Of
e.
rY
• n boll,
ale
women made'
1 y
tuff . ,
"The women look cooler that the; stiCh stuff, y
a� rr in summer." "Must be cooler,"j Ned's face, li elecr and whiten s a
•
noise h inert tone was no
flefsh rile mem Wltlth t
WRicbi:Y�S and stay thin,
�,fl3
' ;Minard's Llnitnent for aching joints` "That's a folil,llel" lie shouted q,elf�"
• 35� 2
"Hell?" a ..q
Sonic. of them even have to
rar•. desperate fury had brought
wear furs � hiin,to the verge of mads
WHEN IN TORONTO
EAT AND SLEEP AT
SCHOI.ES HOTEL
i it
4.00t.ulrrt+ ar tit�hpar n ,,tire n y
V"ONGE ST., Opposite Eaton's
Hotel Retest' $1 Per Day and Up
MOST people rely on Aspiritt
to make short work of their
headaches, but did you know it's
just as effective in the worse pains....:
from neuralgia or neuritis? Rhett,
niatic pains, too.Don't stiffer when
Aspirin can bring such complete
comfort 'without delay, and without
harm; it does not affect the heart.
Iii every package of Aspirin you
will find proven directions with
which everyone should be familiar§
for they can spare much needless
suffering.
,SPIRIT!
..�
dtrplile tr ii eel/Issues ltcstat;e^ib' ro tirilAcli