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Zurich Herald, 1929-11-21, Page 2"o other tea has this saute delicate ,110/our S (GREEN) 41,7 RA 7E& esh from the g rdente 660 ►1](AII111111111Illlltlllillllllll ht.111/1iI111[11111(tlllffl11J1111f111N11llilll(1111111;11 lr iIIitlII11TI1TIT1(I)1I(IRUDt]1ri11ir A.RTHUP, . R,EEVE CHAPTER I.-(Cont'd.) "So . • . here you are. Been leek- ing all over Suffolk County for you, Guy." It was Dick Defoe. "Suppose you've beard this new tale of Dame' Rumor—about the Radio Dance last night?" Garrick nodded but did not commit himself. This was an ideal chance. He wanted to see how much Dick knew and whether he could add any- thing. Perhaps some fresh angle would offer a new attack on the case. ' Dick knew less than Mrs. Walden, but felt as. much. • "Guy," he pleaded, "you 'must . . you must help me save Ruth .`om her- self ..: and her friends." Curiously, here was Defoe appeal- ing to hint to do what he had already agreed to do. Garrick NINA used to such coincidences. "Well, then, tell nae something about those friends. What about the. radio kid, Glenn Buckley? " , Garrick watched with concerted amusement the reaction on Dick's face. "Oh, he's like a great many people today. It isn't the se.ienlific interest in radio that, Glenn feels. It's the entertainment value in it -in any- 'thing—that appeals to him. As a scientific study, I suppbse, motion pic- tures were interesting -to people, who were following what Edison and others were doing. But when they became a source of entertainment, pictures be- came the fifth industry That's the way it is with radio today With Glenn. Besides, just now radio is fashionable. It's smart. Like the automobile was twenty sears •ago, I imagine. Glenn wants to be smart. So ho has .asked_ the advice and assistance of Professor Vario over at Rock Ledge. The rest of the crowd, I guess you know—that Jack Curtis. You've seen hien around the Club. To pie, th,ugh, Ruth is tale centre of everything. But then, there's Vita Gerard . . and that Larue girl. Of course, Glenn has taken quite a fancy to this wireless craze of his to Professor Vario at the Radio Central." "What about him?" reiterated Gar- rick. "Oh .... nothing. ... guess I'm thinking too much about Glenn! Any- how, it just shows how foolishness ra- diates and hits everybody like•Hertz- ian waves." The Radio Central at Rock Ledge some ten miles east along the Sound shore covered an area of ten square miles with twelve rows of 410 -foot towers radiating for a mile and a half frons the central station, without a doubt the largest radio plant of the kind in the world. "But you haven't told me yet whe- ther eau were at this Radio Dance last night," recalled Garrick. "Of course not. You don't think they'd invite me, do you? 111y tastes are just a trifle too quiet for that speedy set." Per Year wing Sixteen interesting 198^},•.� showing IOU new tin,I ettree ive I n,hroitiery designs for 'Tot -Iron transfer pat- terns and stomped. goods. The most valuable paper of its kind for all thetaitestMeal, oh Embroid- ery and other kiwis of Flinty Work, I;m broit'cryicioons.Cooki ng recipes and other tns'crtyctive Information most interesting to the practical ot,scwifo: There ore many valuable things for the girt seasoo. 15,000 women 11/13 over Canada aro rreaiving their -copies regularly, trlty not you? 'Remember It cot only 12e per plat, to got your copy aitch month. Cut your coupon and send in your 120 to-tl'ayC y<.c;i.c;v r'.MITlI1OIDF1'Y JavrtNM 572-11 St. Catt ovine St., E.., Montreel 1 erzeIone 12 reale for one vv'ar'* subar..riplion. AAJ<lrrvn ... .............r ... Prnvinra . "lout you do go out with Ruth a great deal, don't you?" "Not as much as I'd like. But, as for than dance ... they .'dn't want ne there any snore than they'd invite] me to .."-Dick cut short. "Wiser ,?". ep. Dick shrugged and was silent. "Come, now. 'If you want he to help you, "play 'fair, Dick You can't holdback little things—and expect me to be of any help." Garrick was au electroscope for disco 'ering stray cur- rents of facts. "Well, then," - unwillingly, "on the 'Sea Vamp'." "The `Sea Vamp'? 'What's that?" "A houseboat—down Duck Harbor way—anchored off one of the hest bathing beaches to the west, between us and the city. .A lot of 'the young folks chartei.e it and chose that spot because it was not.far f'r`om the Club and yet not too far out from the city. It's a bit out of the way, but that makes them practically own. the beach and=that end' of the harbor fortheir swimming races and water sports. Some of the sportier older folks go with them—once in a while." "Well - ... what of it?" "Just this. There's more deviltry cooked upon the upper deck or in the saloon of the 'Sea .Vamp' than ... . than will ever get into Town Topics." .Garrick turned toward the steps. "Jump into my racer, Dick. You're going to take me to look over this 'Sea Vamp' „ • • CHAPTER Ti. TZ•IE SEA VAMP. With a siren blast and a swish of dusty air a yellow lacer shot past Garrick and Dick before they were a mule down the turnpike, leaving only a kaleidoscopic impa•ession of a girl at the wheel' and a fellow Iolling back tensely in the other hucket seat. "Ruth!" exclaimed Dick as Garrick mechae:. ill threw in more power. "Who. Ives with her?" `'ialenn Buckley.' Garrick's motor leaped ahead as t.e stepped on it. Straight-away down the turnpike they inced. • Garrick was just about holding his own. But Ruth had the jump and there was not a chance to pass her. Shewas too wise a driver. Having shot ahead of a.car she did not slacken a fraction and she knew that that always makes it nearly impossible to catch one. - A bend in the turnpike toward the the motions quickly enough. , south and a dirt road forked off. Ruth Although the old bulls never left slowed up just a bit, turned her head their harems, the females and bathe- with a pearly smile. "I've a -launch," dors went out daily to fish. Bachelors she called back teasingly, "you can't are those seals that have not yet follow me, Dickl" reached mans estate and the dignity. With a wave •of her hand euddenly of a hetem.. They are the one or two - Ruth shot away on, the side road to 'year-old males, and theoretically are the right, to the north, in a pillar of the only ones to kill for fur. The skin dust cloud, of an old bull is valueless. • It is too Garrick had no desire for a wild thick and heavy and too seared 'by goose quest. Be stuck to the cencrets fighting. ed turnpike. "What's the. matter, old man? Why so silent?" queried Dick a mile further on. "Suppose you're wondering like me, how Rath could have got meshed in the wheels of this gang, i': that's what it is, eh?" 'Dick gazed hopelessly off at the hill and forest north of then/ with their maze of side roads. "I wish, by gad, a girl was like a cat or a boat —something you could steer—rightl'''- "Time .enough . to wof'ry when we knots /more than we think we know;" returned Guy, riegoti.ttittg a left turn that •.equired sone skill to make the succeeding hill on high. "After all, Ruth's ,just a stunning little flapper —facing" a very cold and calculati•,.g world -with a thoroughly modern ill biilaneed equipment—that doesn't hug the road like this old ear of mine, ,- • PSP ~ WEM?iNG1 Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished with Ever)) Pattern By Annel elle; Worthington No. C-2931. Size .\ cute raglan sleeve bloomer out- fit for %vee tots of 1, 3, 5, 0 and 8 years that combines plain and printed. batiste. - As a hatter of fact, this little out- fit was made from pieces of mate- rial that was left over from mother's new 'summer outfits. It is shirred at either side of ,front and back at neckline which is gath- ered into /narrow band, allowing,all the fulness to fall from the should- ers aiid . neckline, which is such a comfortable smart fashion for small folk who spend most of their time in romp and play. The sleeves are gathered into nar- row cuff bands. Pockets at either side of front useful and decorative. The' bloomers peeping beneath are gathered into knee bands to show the contrasting colour's. .Style No. C-' 31 'is made in an hour or two. The thrifty /bother will choose now, It is equally at tractive, made: of contrasting fabrics as linen with pritned dimity or ba- tiste. ,Two tone*S of linen, as one :in blue and - one iii white, or one in green and one in dotted. green and Shite are .smart. • Checked and plain gingham, cot- ton broadcloth in plain and print chambray in one colour, plain and printed dimity, striped percale with plain and tub silks are adorable. After a gay summer of cottons fab- rics .in 'the adult, mode, there must he any number of left-overs-tomake this cute outfit that is practical at same time. Name -t e Street Address City - Pattern price 15 cents, I3e sure to fill in size of pattern. Address Pat - fern Department. The New Pall and • 'Winter Petition Magazine ,is 15 cents, but only 10 .cents when er- State dered with a pattern. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. tt Write your name and address•piaini l ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Encloso20c in Pleasure Resort Loses Argument }Deauville Must Consult Trots- vile • Over Harbor Ex- tension Paris. -w Deauville and 'Trouville, those near -twin towns of the Nor- mandy coast, have ended their long battle. And ;Trouville has wen. Yet peace has not conte hurriedly or without recrimination and embit- terment. Each, from its own side of. the Toupee river, has had saute bard words to say, Dea.iville, "thle "Cate Coquette," ,lorilieel iu its prosperity, in. its swift rise from the obscure to a ' great "place" where society loved to tarry awhile and hotel proprietors throve mightily. Trouville, a little jeal- ous perhaps, would retort that it had a history when Deauville was only a sand -bar. it would recall that Rollo, the .sea -king, ancestor of the great •canquelor, theefirst of all .Normans, encamped in Trouville, that it was from Trouville he threatened to bold his mass, of the lances. And history has its awkward re - stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number, and address your order to, Wilson Pattern Service, '73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by an early nail. • Seals Taught 'to Swim by Mothers, Explorer Reports , ,T17e • Future; of Cotton .:• •` . The' lrortnightly Review: valuable, - as ars .the various forms oZ relief Afraid of Water-;` R.oy which h industry ha r recently cearse outer hair is pulled, leav- ing only the soft under -fur. This is brown and the skins Must be dyed. Young .the s ec y ceived, and those which it 'is 'hoped may possibly accue as the result of the impending eomniisison, they will not be. able to restore much of Lan- cashire's lost trade. They should rather be regarded as helping -us to re- tain -the trade. Moreover, when we are successful .in underselling the 'home industries of Japan, India and -China in coarse goods, we should probably have High tariffs raised against us. .`These countries are keen to protect :their own industries, even at the ex i pense of the consumers. Its short, one can li'ardly believe that the Old- fashioned cloths which - are lost, `of- fer much prospect for the future, and probably too /much attention is being devoted to the diseovery.of paeans for reviving, this trade. Leaving aside, however, the question of coarse goods, the gradual reducing tf costs will be very valuable. Even if we don't re- cover any of that which has been lost, our cotton .trade remains a very large one. To say that the whole trade is doomed ,is ridiculous. To talk in generalities at all 'about the cotton trade is ridiculous. It is , far too varied. There are plenty of units who have succeeded .in doing well all through the bad years. Chapman Andrews Suers-; Bulls Fight Frequently Roy Chapman Andrews, writing in "The Saturday Evening Post," says: "I neves. knew seals had to'be taught to swim. I thought they knew ,how to paddle instinctively, like a duck. Not at all. ' I used to watch the mothers (on the Pribylofc Islands in, Bering Sea), giving swimming les.ons in the tide pools. The babies were afraid of the water. Slaps and vigorous cuffing were required before they ,vonld even get their flipper wet. Sometimes .the another had to throw thein bodily into the pools. But once in, they learned Unfortunately, the female produces fur as line as that of the bachelor. That is what has caused muelvof the international trouble. Pelagic sealing —that is, killing the animal- out In the open sea—meant inevitable ruin to the seal herd: Russian, Sapauese, British and American vessels - hung about the islands beyond the • three- mile limit and shot the animals when they were feeding. As many females as bachelors would be killed that way, and each dead mother meant a.starv- ing pup on land. • It took.years of diplomatic negotia- tions to end pelagic sealing, Then a closed season was put on the islands for live years. No seals at -all wees killed. When the herd had begun to increase the government' killed and sold a certain number of bachelors . Hopeful A problem/ boy was boarded with'• a woman in the country who under- took to train him out of several bad Taints. Writiug about his progress in this foster home he says: "I ain't much better 'about. lying but I Have got •over tine stealing, and perhaps, some clay'1'll be all right," • Jane Cowl takes the gloomy view that the theatre is "an its last legs," but Jane probably doesli't •realize ,the resourcefulness of, Flo Ziegfeld and Earl Carroll. r IN-103TEL, 1T ROYAL. The Popularity, of this hostelry is SVidented in the fact that guests in- variably return to the Mount Royal. A courteous Welcome and Cheery hospitality awaits y,tt, VERNON G. CARY Managing -Director The Largest Rotel in the British Empire. actions. Deauville anxious o expand and by expanding reap more of its, golden harvest, found its path blacked by the ancient rights of Trouville fish- ermen. The limas was reached when the councillors of Trouville read lthat --- Deauville, "pearl of the flowery coast, . intended to enlarge its port andin':so• doing infringe' on the rights Of Trou- ville. - - Indignantly, the councillors of Trou- ville declared the whole project null and void. Had Deauville forgotten in- deed that, the real aiame, of the ;,prat. was not Deauville at, all but TrouSille-- Deauville,,that all bridges were com- /non property, and ,that riot a nail - could be driven nor 'a plank removed - without the consent of Tro evi:le? 4nd were not the ,rights of the fishermen of Trouville. of greater consequeiice than 'the convenitence of people who only used the sands for basking'in the sun? So it went on till an inspector carne' - down from Paris to hear the argu- nients and the complaints. Arid in the • end Deauville the Worldly, Deauville. the Gay, had to pay l.ecd to the haidy fisherfolk of Trouville: , • Ntinard's Liniment' relieves stiffness. Veedless PainY Sone fors take pain for granted. They let a cold "run its course.". - They wait for their headaches to "wear off.", If suffering from neuralgia or from neuritisy they rely on feeling better in the morning, • . Meantime, they suffer unnecessary'•pain. Unnecessary, because there is an antidote. Aspirintablets always offer .immediate relief from various aches and pains we once had to as endure. toits If causepain. persists, consult your doctor Save yourself a lot of pain and discomfort throuAspirin is safe.. the Always ti a same. uees ofAllAspirin. with complete directions. Except," he paused, then added, "that annually, ; she has the inherited intelligence, the Since every bull has a harem of. intuition, the instinct of woman »i ell front five to sixty females, and about. equal numbers of each .sex are born each' year, killing of a certain propor- tion of the surplus 'Hales was ;ii posi- tive benefit to the herd. It stopped undue fighting,' in which both females and young are •• frequently doneto death. The old bulls do tot intention- ally kill their lady friends aid o1l- spring, but in the'heat of comibnt they emit :watch carefully where they step. Senietimi sthey sit on the babies lin avoidably. • I'Jvel thing .on the islands nolo is under' govennm nt sopery sloe. The tee Jntimber of unattachedbachelors is no- one great diffen•enee between art cutntely, l ntiwn 'arid the proportion, exhibitions and dances is that the tliht slioald• be killed is carefully esti paintings at tart exhibitions don't //fated. When the tmia' Comites these dance, are =Aided up; do even .slowly ;to the the. ages ... The real question is What will she do with it?" • They swung off at lash on another eoncreted'i'oad and finally nosed down the middle of the sand neck that hook- ed about Duck Harbor. As they drew. up, off the lfoad, in a clump of stunted Long Island beach plums, they were astounded to see, a couple of yards ahead on the sort of corduroy road of boards to the beach, Ruth's lacer. She had taken a shortcut and beaten then/ by many minutes. ('To be continued.) A bargain sale --whore the buy and 'buy Mlnerd's l iniment for Coughs, killing grounds and there morel [idly et knocked on the head. tach skin is Itagged and sold at government .aro- tide DVAr.,17 Alliin must be p?urklorl. . ho SPIRIN • TRADEMARK REO. WATER ICE WAFERS 112 the S� VERQDY f With 1 cup of tea —as a dessert -or just by themselves, re pr on the 'phone, aiwflys ask fpr uits