HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1931-10-15, Page 2Over a million pack-
ages sold each week
ALAB
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'Treat from the gardens'
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What New York
Is Wearing
BY ANNEBELLE WORTHINGTON
Illustrated DressinakinP Lesson Fur-
nished With Every. Pattern
patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in
stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap
it carefully) for each •number, and
address your order to Wilson Pattern
Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto.
A Flower Sermon
In the soft dusk before the night
The lilies gleam like flowers of light,
Reminding us that there may be
Some b_•ightness in obscurity;
And all the sweetness of the rose
'The tender power of love forshows,
Unselfish love that is .content
Withspending, yet is never spent,
Nor can its firmly -planted seed
Uprooted be by word or deed.
Dark pansies in a shady grat
Bid us have patience with our lot,
While marigolds tell us to bless
Our own small worlds with cheerful-
ness
Daisy and pink and pale sweet -pea
Alike enjoin humility;
Bright sunflowers in corners stand
Like golden angels, hand in hand,
Calling on grateful heart; to raise
With them to heaven a psalm of
praise.
So if their message we discern,
Grace from each flower we may learn.
—Kathleen Lee, in "The Times,"
London.
Ilere's a cut model with all the ear
marks of French chic, yet is as simple
and smart and is practical as any tiny
girl would wish for,
A French blue linen with plain
white linen made the original.
Isn't the inset yoke cunning? The
pleated ruffling finishes the round
neckline and deep flared back cuffs.
The pleating may be replaced by bias
contrasting binding, if desired.
The circular skirt gives smart em-
phasis to the brief bodice
as:
Style No. 3302 may be had in sites
2, 4, 6 and 8 years. ` Size 4 requires 1% yards 35 -inch,
with % yard 35 -inch contrasting.
A plaided gingham in yellow and
brown with plain brown is fetching.
Then again in a navy blue wool
challis with white pin dots and vivid
red contrasting, it's adorable.
HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS
Write your name and address plain-
ly, giving number and size of such
— —41r
s zNaPsls sn should not be suspected: Obvi-
tlenry Holt and 1,1r, ward ; lvithere had to comas limp when
Aleinwaring, are staying at a leaf
farm. Holts friend. Moineau, lige. silly -ass stunt would be spotted.
Kestrel House, is desirous thatr?'the Kestrel House gang, and the,
marry 1lioineau's nephew, Iaydet
cer, whom she dislikes. avers 1e safe alternative was to be a bro-
terious disappearances have beep r crook. If I had taken you into
ing the neighborhood. confidenceyou
pAnother
noth r a artier at
iia iy would never have
+cted so convincingly as when you
unravel the mystery of Nestle ,,
Itayden Mercer threaten Mur }ally did suspect me. But, by gad,
she refuses to marry him 4was not all beer and skittles having
Barnard rescues her when she irk
.lviuilo iu on my trai
ed on the moor by Dartcyl. I had so many things
watch' at once.
4'J,1'Iercer, for instance, was desper.-
ly anxious to marry Miss Main -
ring. This intrigued me, as there
reed no object. Affection with such
scold blooded criminal being out of
e question, of course. I set enquir-
aeon foot through certain channels
my own organization, and I learned
t Illainwaring had left his daugh-
considerable land in Africa. He
d made Holt his executor and trus-
, for the girl. At one time they
d had business relations of a very
5e order, and apparently he enter-
ed perfect confidence in Holt. At
rt Holt was not a bad fellow, but
ow Mercer had him absolutely
is thumb. I suspect that it
atter of I.D.B. Anyway, a
m of gold has recently been
d on .'his land, andit may
be worth a huge fortune to
wrier. That is what Mercer was
,,' .and Miss Mainwaring would
lived exactly long enough to sigh
el deeds to him."
Infuriated, seeks,; out Mei cer
strugglerea that,*„;
Barnard end ,,114 : tCxQ
House and are ti i
his undergreapd 'iaberateries
effectsa rescue
.HAPTER XXIII. (Con,
Barnard star hard at,.
ordinate.
"So you're not deai;f`
he said.. Trotter grinned, an
ing his shabby bowler, reve
splits in the crown.
Barnard realized the secre
ancient headpiece—it was "st
and to this the sergeant owed
The man., who bore such a'
able resemblance to Pyeereft
at his watch.
"What about getting bat
gested. "We can explali ,- a
along. Feel like it, Barnard.?'
Barnard nodded, but lid` was
a supporting hand as•they
through the plantation down
bridge, where a car was waitin
noticed that the driver was.
Flack, but made no "coinrnent.
exhausted his capacity'for. sur
"Noe,” said Pyecreete "1 gue
want to know the story, eh?"`
"I suppose you are aware
tinued Pyecroft, "that.toth H• a
Kohn, alias Mercer, are dead. ",Afted .'I had fled from justice,'
it out in the valley apparentltia, :ted. by the noble Flack, plucky
Barnard shook his head: .ii, we parked the car in a cave, well
"I did not know it," lie replieV on the ,poor, and hid there our -
I guessed what would be Holliies. We never lost sight of either
when Miss Mainwaring told **ter or Mullen when they left Kes-
he had gone gunning after ;'e1;House, day or night one of us was
So he actually did get his and guard. Several times we actually
he?" ntered the house itself and learned
"Sure, he got him. But st of its secrets, the traps and see -
begin at the beginning. Slxe ,,51oors, I mean. Freddy Flack is a
uels toid you that Mercer a, Wonder, Barnard."
were printing forged note.
was not aware of the, The
business. Those two sere
World's Oldest Wheel
The oldest wheel yet found, dal ng
from about 3,000 B.ii., has been dis-
covered in an ancient site in South-
ern Baluchistan, it is announced in
the annual report of the Archaeologi-
cal Survey of India. It formed part
of a two -wheeled cart and is believed
to be about 1,000 years earlier than
the earliest wheels used in Egypt
The find is of especial significance
since the wheel is one of the funda-
mental inventions of mankind. The
discovery of .its principle greatly
altered the course of history.
On the same site, the report states,
were found the ruins of houses of
burned brick an 1 a large waLlig ex-
cavation with a drain which evidently
was used as a bath by the ancient
they were a narrow -headed group,
perhaps distantly related to the Medi-
terranean peoples of Europe. Ap-
proximately 1,000 seals with unde-
cipherable pictographs were found.
Evidence was found of a religion bas-
ed upon worship of the great Mother
God, with cults recalling those of
Babylon and Crete.
A creative economy is the fuel of
magnificence.—Ralph Waldo Emerson.
Try this salad dressing .. .
itkeeps , for weeks!
KRAFT Salad Dressing is so thoroughly
blended, it will keep for weeks. it stays
good right down to the last tangy tea-
spoonful.
Best of all, it :osts just one -halt the price
you're used to paying. A generous 12 ounce
jar sells for only 25 xnts. Get some today.
KRAFT
Saldd Jjress!ng
Made to Canad: oy the Makers of Kraft
Cheese and Velvccta
so that eras it!" exclaimed
rd. "I wondered what the real
ede'Oft nodded, and continued:
,;4,"Too wonderful," snapped the chief
if spector, "he's a public menace."
". "Yor'll' laugh if I tell you he's go
flooding certain Europe firth ing stpaig;•t:in futu..a, so I won't say
dud money and the coneetr;e it.,' Well, now we return to the oust- .
efts, K - l , tank t lie.. `ltt%gctually brought lee here.
The job was given to ire .ter-eirfected by . Moineau, who at•• olie
origin of those notes. , I err a was a pretty well-known chemist
specimens and concluded that ance and Italy until he became
was the .only man *lab: suffieie .t,,ted with an Italian secret so -
to carry out such clever wor•?i$., :lty, a appears to have been one
a number of false starts I of the ading lights, and when the
to Dartmoor and *trice I I gang was broken up he was forced to
I was running across'youe flee for'+hiest1ifee Naturally he came
that something otherthan to Englapd; they all doe Mercer was,
was taking place in Kestre I believe, a nephew of sorts, and prob-
"Holt puzzled me at first, i. ably assisted him in his electricai re-
ed his room and discoverer search. What that actually was
trunk had a false bottom. doubtless you will, be able to tell me
nothing in it at the time, b later."
culler smell of new note :. "I shall!" replied Barnard, between
apparent. He was actin ` lois ;teeth.
dispatching agent but I d "It was that research work which
was really in their confide$ brought him down. Apparently it was
cer had some hold over. I; •;ilecestary for his experiments to be
must have been pretty.''strLione on human bodies{—we found evi-
"After the episode ;of �'dencei that he had burned human
ping and attempted xnut bones; in the furnace—and, of course,
for Flack. ' By the -tiny, - he difficulty of procuring human
number of crooks ona';rr+y t' bodies alive for experimental work
They all fancy that ,3'm #,,entre kidnapping necessary. This was
super -crook, but they il6n1'calried, out by Mullen and Mercer,
I am,—any more than :Yo., v;l7o.used a car, which, incidentally,
added with a smile t c
Barnard smiled rn i*
"I've seen you be
sir," he said, "but Ire
even Bow." r r ti ed. Anyway, the fact remains that
"No? Well, never MiTlghe did. come here for some reason of
on with the story. Flack }is own and made a mess of it. When
little fellow and has paid pal, saw, that things were coming '.o a
ily for his lapses from taeaaeaa, I wired for Sir Harry and niet
virtue. I took him over gliim at Totnes, where he got Flack
House and we discovered eeut of prison. Apert from the feet
entrance, a tunnel leaden, that 111.3 ought not to have been there,
he was necessary to us. There's no
odyquite so good as Freddy when it
mes to locks slid bolts. He worked
IeeFhtll, destroyed. Moineau would have
en very much safer to have stayed
feendon, where the disappearanee.s
ceh.
.; surd not have been so quickly no -
the gorge, the track of e;
underground river, X the
we were there we had' a fie
ghastly creature whichc19,.ej ig'hty hard to reach you tonight, and
bled Ford's Hell Houiicl ap "• guess .we arrived not a second too
fairly put the breeze up us soon, eh?"
Barnard nodded grimly 1� "you did not, sir," replied Barnard.
[rhatically.' "Another minute and
t lunatic would have finished n1e"
n, well," smiled Pyeeroft, "its
the day's work. Now let's nave
side of the yarn."
"One moment, sir," said Barnard
quickly. ,"May I ask who you are?"
air Barry Chamberlain leaned . for
Ward.
"Let me introduce you to Captain
ohn Fortescue, of the Foreign Office
itelligence Department. His identity
xnd his many adventures in the ser-
vice of the: Crown are known only toa very selected few. But, as he is
lortly to resign and embark upon
',he more perilous adventure of Holy
i acrimony, there'., ne harm an yocr
knowing."
"Be gad, sir'," exclaimed Barnard,
.; he grasped the firm hand extended
1.o him, "and I thought you were a
i riminel! I've ;lot to thank you ":,r
lily life."
ISSUE No. 41—'31
'I'll tell you about that.
later, sir."
"Good, I should like .to
truth about it ... one
experiments, eh? I thoi
to continue, Mercer was
puzzled ine. T did, not at
to the fact that he had.
to a rich golden and had
grow long and wavy,
finger prints by means o
tle trick . with a cigaret
when they wore identifie
safer ground. I knew Ile
fan I had to deal with
expect from him. iA11.
was acting the eirun)+`eix
orally making nlysel1er i k
wondered if it was dee
did it?"
"At first, yes," ad mi
"but not later."
Pyecroft smiler!,
".Sorry I had to lead
garden as I dill,, but it
most importance that
' Packed full of tender, plump,
uncrushed Sultanas, retaining the
fuze flavor of the fresh fruit. Just
as wholesome as they are delicious.
hrigie's
sultanas
"Nonsense, old fellow," smiled For-
tesque. "If you've got to thank any-
one, thank Freddy Flack, he . dug you
out."
.* * * *
Barnard and the Assistant Commis••
sioner were walking up the hill :.o
Barrows Farm with the object of
arranging certain matters with the
Secret. Service Officer. As they came
over the crest Sir Harry seized Far
nerd's arm and halted him. On the
edge of the moor against the moonlit
sky two figures moved, a moment later
they were merged into one in a clone
embrace.
"Brrrrr! humph!" exclaimed Sir
Harry, turning about: "Some other
time, I think, Barnard.... Captain
Fortescue appears to be engaged on
pressing business."
(The End.)
Brevities
Socrates said: "I know' this, that I
know nothing."
Every man knows just what he re-
members.—Latin Maxim.
Life without cross-examination is
no life at alis—Socrates.
Poverty is in want of much, but
avarice of everything.—Publius Syrius.
He that does good to another .man,
does also good to himself.—Seneca.
`'Tis rarely that men have respect
ti]cemerence enough for themselves.
Powers
Live while you live, Life calls for all
your powers;
This instant day your utmost
strength demands.
He wastes himself who stops to
watch the sands,
And, miser -like, hoards up the golden
hours.
—William Henry Hudson.
A Summer Victim
He was sure that everything he knew.
Poor fellow, his way was grim.
I•Ie tried to paddle his own canoe
Before he had learned to swim.
Australian Industry
Sydney Bulletin: If confidence can
be re-established and if the season and
overseas markets help us, expenditure
on unemployment relief should dimin-
ish and the revenue from taxation ex-
ceed the estimate. What is needed
especially now is a saner view about
work and wages. Hitherto practically
nothing has been sought but high
wages; the reduction of the burdens
on industry, which have reduced the
value of the wages, has had hardly any
attention. The greatest of these bur-
dens at the moment is the enormous
army of our unemployed; and the Pre-
mier's Plan ought, therefore, to be
supplemented by an organized drive to
absorb them into production. Thus
far we have been inclined to stress
too much the national demand for fur-
ther sacrifices. The case calls for
more than that. It calls for initiative
and enterprise and energy. It calls for
hard work and faithful service.
Serid" for r:.This
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UNSWEETENED / EVAPORATED
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115 George St., Toronto
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Addxri .. «...
EURALGIA
THE agonizing aches from
neuralgia can be quieted in
the same way you would end
a headache. Take some
Aspirin tablets. Take enough
to bring complete relief.
Aspirin can't hurt anybody.
Men and women bent
with rheumatism will find
the same wonderful comfort
in these tablets. They aren't
just for headaches or colds!
Read the proven directions
covering a dozen other uses;
neuritis, sciatica, lumbago;
muscular pains.
Cold, damp days which
penetrate to the very bones
have lost their terror for
those who carry Aspirin
tablets with them! All drug
stores, in the familiar little
box:
eseeoes
Octob{
The
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that
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in B•
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mark
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peac
was
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sent
his
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but
proke
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Fo
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"nob
nobl
men.
With
ined
ferr
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say
tang
to d
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thed,
Fath
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trutl
holy
cern:
op.in
trutl
mind
III.
To
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seeere
ML