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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1925-05-21, Page 2"ACTS ABOUT TRA SERIES -No.. b Appearance Tea tilde The only way to test tea i ► to taste it.Many people have the idea, that a finely rolled and tippy tea is superior in favour to a large rough leaf. In reality this is not of necessity the case. The altitude at r-vhicl: the tea plant grows determines the ah.Itount of essential oil and alkaloid thane in the leaf. The essential oil gives tea its favour, the theine contributes the stimulating value, The only way to insure always re- ceiving a uniform quality is to insist upon a skilfully blended and scientifically sealed tea like "SALADA" whose reliability, good- ness and delicious flavour have become a household word. L ve Gives Its THE STORY OF A BLOOD FEUD BY ANNIE S. SWAN. 'Love gives itself and is not bought "- Longfellow. if 'Malt," went oe Affery: preeiaely kis if he httd not beard,. ""which puts au the. Western heals, :It hofs never pole,. down again, so :far as he se concerned.' '1'izaat% why, outside soma oftiees find places in the Weet, you etrilet the le -,1, gond, 'No English need apply."' "I say. Is it so bad es that?" Affery nodded, "That's : why the mining and the lumber camps are so full of. them, Mighty decent chane most of them, but the victims of their own insular prejudice. Heavens! Don't it die' hard! I do believe it's like the worm that distil not, The best most of them can do is to cover it up." "But in its way it's fine` to think one's country the beste in tie world! As you haven't any particular, seen - try, naturally• -you don't grasp int." "It isn't exactly that; Pre i)atria is all eight within limits. It's ramming :. it down other people's throats that's so blamed stupid! And new countries are sensitive. They are on the look- out far slights -don't you see? Fully aware of their own conditions, they've got to bluf-and bluff hard -to' try and convince people they don't exist:" "I see," observed Rankine, as he stretched his long legs across the well - scrubbed deck, "Then inuan's the word on the other side?" "That's so. And you must be pre pared\ for heckling, (toad -humored questioning, in fact -to turd you in- ,,; side out -that is their, first, and gen- erally most successful endeavor." ' "If they turn me inside out, then the climate is going to have an extra ordinaryeffect on me! I'in not Scotch for nothing!" "Oh, you have to give -'eni an ans- wer of some kind. They'll draw it out of you like a corkscrew. You can't squash thein," answered Affery with a augh. "But the Yank is a thundering good chap when you. get him at close quarters. And you'11-findt. it pays to shake 'hands with, him - they're awful duffers for . shaking hands." "If they keep 'em clean I shouldn't mind; though it must get a trifle mon- otonous after awhile," eaid Rankine, with lois easy-going laugh. "I'ni talking of the States just now coat. We answer the call with a. cape -principally New York. As onegets ensemble. It makes a charming out- further out, men and manners change fit for wear during early spring and till you get up against. the big, orig- the cool days of summer. The dress, incl silence. You find that in perfect 3Vo. 1011 maintaining the straight T tion at the Yukon, where I'ni going." ' C=HAPTER XIV.- (Cont d.) air had lost the chill which is never ",what for?" asked Rankine niter- silhouette, is made " in poudre-blue A certain kind of intimacy is forced absent in mid-.Atlanticand lounging estedly.. "`I thought the Yukon was f! iiu�el, The front is closed with A. upon the traveller on board ship; un- about on the deck was, in consequence, played out as a commercial enterprise, line of ha�3f-ball buttons. Either side less he unblushingly proclaims him- singlarly pleasant. or even as an adventure card, long of` the veiiticai pocket -laps has one self a churl, be finds it difficult to "Say, Rankine, if it's a -fair quest since?" escape from his envie onnent.. The tion -and, after all, you needn't ans button. which adds an interesting surest method of obtaining the neces- Wel` it unless you like -what's the words. The expression of his, is narrow and adjusted at low waist- nary peace is to tack on to one cam- have simeiidea iu ves ofw � introductions." se you face completely changed; until he ape r lilies The cane has the required full - face "Nary a one," answered Rankine peered like a man who dreamed' flees to make this costume smart. - It Alan Rankine had little or nothingdreams and saw visions. of the churl in his composition, but h ddr for his spirits, which certainly ""I went over the trail in 'ninety-" •is lined.with a white polka-dot on a there were very few 2ssen ers in the had dropped to zero at the moment of eight," he began slowly, 9-learcl of field of navy. The fellness is gath- p` gleaving England, had heen rising e, second-class saloon to whom he could it, 1 sapose- 1:ered into a narrow band and tacked talk with even a passing sense of steadily. "And to be quite frank, I ",_ d A I told the Fhe trail to the IClon haven t an idea. s o you 1171 � . CAPE ENSEMBLE. The. warn winds and sunshine call the young mass to doff her heavy your AfFery appeared to rnnlinate upon t touch to this simple dress_ The belt e dyke, you" to the dress under the large collar: pleasure Again and again he blessed first night out, I'm going to look out mica-: I �e heard, or read of 1. • of cut -. sizes e 1$ end "0 years S•z the luck which had given him Affery • fora job." coulee The mold rush -wasn't mt far: a room -mate. "`In New York?" queried Affery, Their intimacy, though not of the with a queer look on his face. it?" "`Yes. There were thousands of us IS years requires 3% yards of 36- -no rail then, hardly a trail. only ;inch material for the dress and ;11A boisterous or . talkative order, gee -we "I might leave a try there," Ran about a third of the gold -seekers. ever yaz'cis for the cape. '" ' steadily, and by the end of the third kine again answered lightly, reached the goal. It took me thirteen I3Q' TO ORDER PATTE day out they were inseparable. Yet Affery shrugged his _shoulders. they knew very little of one another. "My advice to you is -don't, New ass!" said Rankine incredulous3 y, giving Rankine, though no great student of York's a bad lace to starve in. "I've •" y S g number and n l s of 20cin human nature, realized, or rather di- done it and 1 know!" "What happened"", i, or you want.Enclose p wined, that some havoc 'wrought in "" - ?" "We had' to camp fol eight month., este oar coin coo preferred; ..wrap g fou. Have. aske+i Rankine with = (coin. Affery's life had made him a wanderer quickened interest. "011,tell Inc an- in file snows, ivaztnif for the ice to it carefully) for each number, and on the face of the' earth. Affery had othere, iul antis fiftee; and n hundred miles long!et that " address your Publishing order" to Pattern Dept., a quid;, warm temperament, as well .. I have. I've been n hobo. sleeping ,, Good Gad! And • ;vhen you, got Wilson' `Publishing CoCo., r3 West Ade- . months. "Thirteen months- • to go over one ,W''ite Your fiat ie and address plain - .14 RNS. as a hasty temper, though that he had well under control. His knowledge of inen, and things was that which is gained by the wanderer; a knowledge which, through course of time, be- comes a kind of second nature. By the end of the third day out Affery had learned a good deal about ; got would last about six weeks." out in Madison Square and U trete was .thele an mod at seem to remember that the boom fin- eturn mail.« delicatessen shop, a thotiter on a rem a �vr sher-u in a i p neon y 1 all? I laide St,, Toronto.' Patterns sent by Park; I've been or and the deepening solemnity of Y ld ' d old °h Don't in out rather gizicl.iv." - l good job I struck N York. y. of gold," said Affery slow - only couldn't t o o chap! e li face laid a strange hold on Ran- try. And the money you say you've kine's imagination. "But it's -not in- Ranldne. He knew, for instance, that Rankine took his ripe from life tended for common men -it'll belong he was the eldest soli of an ancient I i Theto the Titans, asn it has always done. house, from which lack of money had mouth as if it had lost its flavor, poor humans who -essay it will See here, old chap. Now you have merelybe crushed in these awful, driven hint forth. He also -and this asked me the straight question, I'll fangs ' caused him a great deal :i_ private and; ee tivllat I've been thinl.in of since megaphone, and a bar -tender -the ""Fent on y goo s wire in New cyni"al zeflection-- ao ed the fact �' what gitans. and -vhat fangs that l far as milking good in the ever we've met. You've had expert asked Rankine, more - and more - puz- ience of this side. Do you know of zled by the strange imagery of his worldof ameenbe in was concerned, Rankine been any opening likely to be available for companion. a chap like nee: tau ht nothing,and though his de 1 1 - "The ice and the snow, of course. It g, g Affery turned, and, half pausing, will never be ossible teiniination to succeed in the worlds Lilly met his eye. P get• account of was dragged enough, all the methods "No, Rankine, 1 don't know a single climatic conditions, to up the nee. whereby he proposed to achieve that essary plant, or maks work profitable, p one. And my advice to you is, once enough." success ' -were simply like floating shim-' ' ,But the pay ytr I've are rich some tor - eras t.' ""Bttt surely I•'ve heard of for - eras before bis mental vision. ! {.Weil.. but—" began Rankine, a time:. being.znade?" Amery likewise incidentally learned trifle testily. "You know what Pin. u "They that Alan's whole available capital; against. I've got to get a job some ried o t of the Yukon. Gehl! Gold? There'•s Wee one aahueid ed pounds,forthcoming. anthat nowhere, and my only reason for asking millions hidden on that awful river, • 'While we he lyobtta be by su z i is that your experience of - the come-] Rankine, among the canyons! Mil- gg ` ` ytry must be worth something." Ilions you!" ' rathethese than by outstanding cfacta xfr�iai tiois n,1 '•You're right," said- % Affery lightly.1 "Rut what's the good if, as you say,• iheselliou sanding facts remain- "It's worth a good deal. Butd it isn t it can't be got out?„ ed singularly reticent regarding his. of "perhaps particularly fou joyful to parte the mann =hoerotgit-ani dden never oown intentions, xay. On T,thehen niing of oth the with it," said Rankine, with a slightly been retrieved. g Why? Because they side was practically within sight, if. aloof air. as' if his pride suddenly - not hail, he suddenly ranee to close ,caped dip in •.:roes �, aivart�'rs. I:et"s go and sit down and „ani, They e{lira strolling ra�s:id the deck said •Affery. gripping hint by the arm. iiianigniiiingagnannill after dinner. It ,,vat a heavenly, calm night --the sea like a millpond, and the . CHAPTER XV. sky studded with a nuilln stars. The THE 'WANDERERS MEANT. "SO it's luck you're pretty well trusting to, old chap:" observed At- e fery. .f-eeery, as they drew two deck chairs 'into a sheltered lee -way, and turned up the collars of their coats to keep off the sharper night ndr. "Well, luck's about the queerest thing on earth. You haven't had n u. h up to now, I ga- th ,r`:'`' r "Precious littl, e. l'1r •y one _ st_oe- t` k er very a'ea,X A if you exempt good health, s fairly .a?fS:_irt"ldge x� eheerfui temperaniex t. and a few g{roe. pals? cidid,rett fo tarn l"T,rfheir twat "One stroke --eh?" repeated Aferr. ((time them Wrigley'sVilatlitgwP merd d, ars if heeling to" hear It re -moves food particles But Rankine did not enlighten him: from the teeth, Strengthens His faee was turfed towards the the gums. !Combats geld greed and heaving masses of the sea, nitotrth. and there wan more in his eye than Refreslaixt , and beneficial!' Rt ustand aids Dees/ion - Mustard stimulates the flow. of saliva, and of the gastric juices in the stoinath. It neutralizes the richness of tat foods, makes thein easier to digest and assists you in ansimiiatiig your food, Mustard makes ordinary .dishes snore' tasty. Always have it on the table -freshly' mixed with cold water for every meal. the enugxint"s yearning for home, COOK 'BOOK FREE "A queer thing is luck. How it dei. Our new Cook Book con- eerts the best of chaps persistently! tains hinny recipes for deli cious salads, mayonnaise, - pieklcs, etc. Write for a copy- cOLx N-K1EN'tCMMD?il 'Nara t02.A Extra a Street Mom-R.tm. 283 Deserts, mind! No sort of shiny- shallying. but a complete and finished job; It doesn't seem to be any kind' of use fighting against it. I'r'e seen it tunes out of number!" • "Ws a pretty hopeless doctrine, it it?" observed. Rankine rather rtly. ""I suppose you're slinging it me as a �w arising not to expect too ; acini on the other side." "Don't expect anything, for you won't; get.it. It's the cocksureness of Viusta the Englishman-•---" "The Scotsman- in this case,":put mRankinequietly". __. _... "The cocksureness ef the English - No. 20-= 2a.eitiesimmiseggiarearisi died in .their tracks, carrying, their secret with them! I know of one bur- iedetreasure. It belonged to a chap they nicknamed Arizona Red, at Bon- anza. They said he was a murderer from the'States, but if that was true Hien I only wish that there were some non-nnirderers with a soul apiece half as.. white" as his. We pulled together for awhile. He was on the trail a month ahead of me, and he staked a claim and made good, ahead of every- body. Queer be:ggar!- after he had evorked like a yellow slave for a month or so on end;- he would sud- denly set out at - night, for Dawson, paint, the town red,. and then come back and settle down quietly! Yet, with it all,. he was a white man, and I'll never meet his like again." "What became of him?" asked Ran- kine, feeling enthralled as he had never been by the most thrilling tale of adventure he had read in his boy- hood, "He died of double pneumonia. I was with him -at the end. I nursed. him, and in his delirium he talked in- cessantly of the -gold he had hidden, and which was to have taken him back to Arizona to redeem the old homestead. There were womenfolk on it who were dear to him. But I never got to know either their names or the place where they lived. I made a journey to Arizona first time I got clear=eabput. a year .after, he died. But, of course, it was like looking' for a. needle in a haystack. I hadn't the ghost of a clue,°' "So be cited babbling about hidden gold?" mused Rankine, feeling his pulses oddly stirred by the strange re- cital. "But probably it was only the ratings of a. sick man :these mind was obse`ased by one idea." "Not altogether. There was gold, for Arizona Red had talked of it often in his normal moments. He was ' beginning to trust me -well, as one man trusts another he, has proven in these 'beilish"1vastes. Towards the end, When we both knew that there wasn't .a chance, he tried to give a clue -but it was i o use." "But didn't'tiou bate a lo3k for y ourse#f'?» Affery smiled t.ha big, slow smile of superior knowledge_ ""It wasn't tied up in a stocking -foot or hidden under the floor, or on the roof of the shack, .fly son! These things are not done in the Yukon, Arizona trusted the mother -earth from wbieli be tock it. But to human intelligence will ever locate, unit'h lets strike, the lucky spot!" "That seems rather hard. doesn't, It, after your poor pal's superhuman. 1n for' to get it out!" "'Sure thing. But that's the law of the "Yukon," answered Affery. 'There is a kind of eaeralege in man's Pfifeirts tb wrest. her reasurrs from, that. great white world. Dm aiwnys br S*re Feet: -=-i' ttiard's Liniment. n seesetts ic 1- _1� i.:LJ ��rk - -1 Ih i 8f 11 7or all washing andcleaizing you can't heat this soap -.eft says Mrs. Experience, who chooses . soap for its economy and labour- saving value. ' "Sunlight puts de sunshine of cleanliness into the home! For washing clothes, dishes, wood -work, lino- leums,- in fact, for anything that can be cleaned with soap- and water— I call on Sunlight. And Sunlight does its work so well and leaves everything sweet and clean. "Sunlight really is economical, too! You see, every bit of it is pure, cleansing soap, containing no filling or hardening materials, which are only waste as far as we women are concerned. "You get greater cleaning value out of a pure laundry, 'soap and so I say, `Always keep a good supply of Sunlight on hand'. It. really improves with age. And because of its purity, Sunlight is kind to your hands and keeps them smooth and comfortable." Sunlight is made by Lever Brothers Limited, Toronto. 8.50 Sunli ht Soap conscious of it, every time I go hack. But I can't stop anyway. I hate the curse of it! I've known men wrench themselves free with frightful oaths and Vows, and they were back before the snows melted on the trail another spring! I'm going back now," "But what for?" repeated Rankine stupidly: - Affery shrugged his shoulders. "I've been out of it two years. I bought a place in Donegal, near my father's birthplace, and tried to lo- cate; but it's no good. The thing's in my blood, I suppose. I'II go back, and back, and finally lay my bones beside Arizona's among the snows. Well, .a man .might easily have a worse fin- ale!" (To be continued.) w Minard's Liniment Fino for the Hair.- Hoilerday. "Come, come," said a distracted father, who had endured the children's noise till patience ceased to be a vir- tue; "there's no reason why you should scream and holler so." "Why, father," said one of the little fellows, "don't you know ;this is a holier -day?" • The Elephant's Years. -It is said -that an elephant does not reach proper maturity, until it is forty years old, and that it niay live for a century. A great pian is he who does not lose his child's heart. Couldn't Find Her. "How came you to be lost?" asked a sympathetic gentleman of a little boy he found crying in the street for his mother. "I'm not lost!" indignantly exclaim- ed the little three-year-old; "but nZ-m- my mother is, and I ca -ca -can't And her.,, Perfect home dye- ing and tinting is ' guarantcc.l with Dia- mond Dyes. Just dip in cold water la tint soft, delicate shades, or boil to dye rich,' permanent colors, Each 15 -cent package contains directioms so simple any wo- man can dye or tint lingerie, silks, rib bons, skirts, waists, dresses, coats, stockings, sweaters, draperies, cover jugs, hangings, everything new. Buy "Diamond Dyes" -no other kind -and tell your druggist wliether the material you wish to color is wool or silk, or whether it is linen, cotton, or mixed goods. 1 At all 2 tors Aa * 1 sac pegs