HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1920-02-19, Page 6urea
P.P7r aA.:..wrsa�a'rc. TIN
co:ria
121,0
Preserved C". sold only in
y M � air; ,dtight packz ^t >
to .preserve ve its c.'t±ntily
goodness.
got the homestead I should build {laldnes +.
here," „13aldnttti ihr+ :teethed term for it it
`'But it is my land, resisted James.
"Certainlyf th would not have alopecia lequee no definition With
aec~ h
willed k
ll I sway this little field from the •very few t•aceul k.0 (-lege serail lyhr:
home property! That would be ab- lives long enough gains practical
surd, And 1 have children to inherit knowledge of it through his own ex.
from me, and father did not know )lerienre, wee this- simnel he so, wiry
that you were cyan thinking of mar- ' W0111011 so ,0h101 1 suffer frons httitinei's
tying. And we all know what the as Cotrrpare*d with 11100. 1411 (1, wl.ly n luau
butons are, Thomas; wast aloes not. ret bales. on hie far:1, are
James checked his hasty spc.c:l,
The two were so accustomed to think- :Mysteries. indeed, it is often noticc-
ing one thought that it was difficult able that the st.rouger and more
to conceal an opinion,
"I beg your pardon, Thomas;" said
James, ``Martha herself is a fine girl,
and she cannot help her family. But
the copper beech is mine,
&see Thus, indeed,it proved to be, The "•
little field waJames's, and ,hi -to his from the scalp, starves the hail' and
yard he took it. It would have been causes it to fall. But. most men wear
possible to increase the size of the their hats only for a fraction of the
yard greatly and still leave the tree day, and the pressure of the brine of
outside it, so that Thomas could have the hat is never enough to phut off the
built his house in its shadow, and blood supply altogether; $o probably
luxuriant a mans heard is, the earlier
tied the more nearly completely does
he get bald, it is geiherally believed
that the pressure of the man's hat, by
hutting off part of the blood supply
Used In Millions cT Tea-pots Daily
r
tHEI ifete IBMs VA 'elk Me W. ME Me lith Veee XIX WS NES Neil
EEO! so
James could still have gladdened his that is only one of the factor's that.
brother's face. But presently such e tri
words were spoken re or dandruff, and for that reason, as
and even concessions were impossible.t unsightliness
Thomas married his Martha and we sat anneal
eyes with a sight of it and of his cause baldness.
seborrhea,
• , is
a d]
r ub to
1 do Y
e
cans
I 1
Ir
Ou
forgiveness 'riven
that 1 g
11 a because of. the
r built h' house under a great oak to of the white shower on the co
ur his
ons
the valley at theoppoeite end of the noaonnneChelloeither at all present for
lfuture-
land that was his,and the two broth -
1 ,III . BY ELSIE SING 1I ASTER ars spoke no more, show: d neglect to trent dandruff. It
Of the two James only made ap- is comparatively easy to cure dated-
'f•mss ` 'fig,;;; ; proaches toward a reconciliation. ruff but lvheu the hair follicles have
When Martha lay for months all with
PART I, i ing flashes of lightning deafened and . fever, he rime to his brother's house ,been clestroyrdh the baldness that re
The pleasant hospital room opened' dazzled hint. He dared move no to ask whether he could be of service. !sults is irremet•iable. Tnrteed, the ill -
The
m
directly an the city square where birds' further. He was refused admittance. When tility of treating established baldness
sang in thea Budarning way as Then occurred an Thomas,
standing
dinghe- Thomas, who had always been the i is proved by the number of derma -
they sang a hundred miles away at azed and bewildered im his own yard more visionary and the less steady of tologists of middle age, who are them-
Aml,Iesitle. At the enol of a sleepless the two, who would stop his plough- selves bald. In eases cf. premature
them -
night, t, or .waking before dawn, e- with one a Sruttee a oafternoon emed so quiet t and tIng while he followed with his eye ! baldnees, except diose caused 1 dand-
e10e red gnarl them and law with soM1� eaceful, the great oakgand the the flight of a bird, fell into difficul- ruff, the victim is almost always in
C losetl kyes ani a th g heart, lis little beech seemed to spring as lif he; ties at the bank, James'S efforts to
tri it fixFmany morningsnhe had to `them. 'He had an set things right without his brother's 1 poor health. A chronic invalid seldom
of almost childish amazement knowledge were promptly discovered pas
good
attack of home acute ills -
of
mornings
to his t:, end on the sweetness' were an enemy
bethe sound ale=el pe without counted . instant ' and brought to naught.
(To be continued.) • ease• such as typhoid fever, the hair
mrrni the -appy peace of unwanted that anything that he had r dearly • ea y
t heard the laved and cherished could treat him
thus.Another instant a d theof the
Mk Me Va. tfita the
mo1•i.in^'s svheii he had, rear
very commonly gets thin on - the top
roar- head,but it usually returns as
sarin notes windowr the great oak tree ing the storm and the splitting
outsideseery
his n at home. But he 6i ccnvalesc•euce is established, and its
was a cry tvea�ri, and his will was less sound of the twisted trees were noth- ,i A Song of Days. •
'return can be hastened and assured
strong than his memory. The old ing to limn• I Sir:g of the bee, taking her busy flight, , by the use of a tonic taken internally
oak and the little beech beside it were Thomas Griswold and his Brother; Sing of the sun, driving off the night, ! and daily massage of the scalp. A
gone; the great storm pial made of James were twins, without brothers
them a weapon against him; the or sisters. They had been born in Sintg of Dame nature's days• fresh and I good shanlpao is made of tincture of
bright. 1 green .i0alli coin:Unita; ten grains of
crash of their falling had been for', the big stone house on the hillside, t g
months in his brain. 1 toward which Thomas .had cast un- iIsrp,l,c the springtime, strolling thymol to the ounce: but the scalp
All the circumstances of his life consciously what might have been his thraugh tsp grass. 1 should not be shampooed' oftener
scalp
Pone Thomasregarded with a' last gonna fectionhbetwe between them had,' in and the happy spring hours that brighten as !than twice a month, and after sham -
even
Philosophic spirit; heea thoughtcalmly; they' mass, , poring it is a good plant to rub into
even of his own death which had' seemed indestructible. Until they i
seemed for so many weeks _ear at' were thirty years old, they were leappy our youth, it comes but once, 1 the• n alp a few
tlnops of olive oilor
hand. Martha was provided for; she i never separated. They explored the alas! I t.
had a sister with whom she could! woods, they waded and damned the ragedy•
live,and t- separation would not: streams, they had their pet animals Sou .y the days that go to snake July, A ountairi
be f t 1'f beneath his flaming sky,
rr birth
e
long. He had wronged no one; he and
When
Fatigued
AcupofOXO
is both re-
freshing and
invigorating.
Ready in a min-
ute—the minute
you want it.
'tins . lOc„ 25c„ $1.15, $2.2.5.
6
a start in the way of adverti ing their
products,
Advertising is the same sort of in-
vestment that poultry feed is. Feed
is bought to grow the chicks to let
and advertising space is bought to let
the people know you have them for
sale. Very few poultrymen can sell
their birds, no matter how good they
are, without first advertising, them.
The neighborhood in which he lives
may not need his surplus stock, but
in the adjoining county or in the next
province people may be looking for
that very stock.
Recently a. neighbor had a promis-
ing young horse he did not need. He
passed the word among' his neighbors,
but no buyer appeared. After some
time he placed a 20 -word advertise-
ment in his county paper, coating him
but one cent a word, and before long
a buyer appeared.
I have found that when replying to
the letter of a 'prospective customer.
it will help greatly if one has a small
photo of the stock or poultry adver-
tised. The investment of a few dol-
lars in a camera will soon be returned
in many ways.
wase the beech` tree planted` by ' �unn< the summer as our life goes by. Occasionally there are tragedies in
v eu no ane -thine- -e had gone ; allthe o 1
f the
their father on ay
regularly to -arch and had helped
the poor andd the afflicted. But in a corner of the little field in front . Fruit fills our orchards in the autumn
Thomas had been wronged, and even! of the old house. They loved its; days,
after thirty years that injury still' smooth gray trunk, its golden buds Fruit of the vineyard shimmers
rankled and hurt. He said to himself, and coppe"y leaves, its outline of per- through the haze,
, icfclent in which a pair of cubs whose
lying in his bed, _that if he had had feat symmetry. Fruitage of life work flits our harvest mother had been shot by a hinter
his just dues his house wot'lcs not 1 In time the trunk of the tree dived- trays. were the heroes. The little bears
have stood in the path of the great; ed; and, though the symmetry was ' were discovered peeping from beneath
storm; he would not have been so not marred, there grew side by side �yllite is the winter, snowflakes cover a Targe rock a short distance from
cruelly smitten. : within the great leafy cone two main all,
Thomas was now almost well. All branches, each tendingion. a little away Yellow the fireplace in the cheerful where the slain animal lay, and after
from its companion. hall, for a moment they came
healed;he cdt e hip, which andtbruisesoor had; The division between the two• hesitatinget and stood looking intently toward
othe hip, the doctor had r the men and their dead mother.
thought would never knit,could now � brothers came at their father's and', Golden our visions as the evening
bear his weight; the' eyeswhich they mother's death. James had been mar- shadows fall. the men note d mother.
they `oak
had feared were forever darkened, ried for several years; it was natural • a few stepsm did them. Hesitating
saw as well as ever. Thomas would that his father should leave to him, again, they stopped, rose up and look -
that
be as sound as he had been whose children. had been born in the A StYitrtge I�layralate. ed around, and then hastily retreated
that August day, when, stepping out old stone house, the homestead with to the rocks. Evidently their mother
on his porch in the middle of the hot the surrounding orchards and gar -A boy will be a boy whether his
Sunday afternoon, he had beheld,. dens, and to Thomas a slightly larger . father is a millionaire in Canada or the h
bears ig with terrific violence down on share of the rest of the property. ,The ;meanest fakir between Basra and Bag
f black -
is
had brew long since explained 1 1 and in the matter of healthful,his
the lives of bears just as in the lives
of simian beings, Mr: Enos A. Mills
writes in his new book, The Grizzly;
and he goes .on to tell of an appealing
a E FAT' OFTEE
W �S GREAT MEN
ONLY ONE IN POWER AT
PRESENT TIME.
Orlando, Wilson and Clemen-
ceau Have Suffered Loss
of Prestige.
At the heels of the lion in the ani-
mal kingdom snarl the jackals, wait:
ing for the King oi'. Beasts to show
sign of deadly wound that they inlay
sprung upon hint: and tear from bliu'
the spoils of his prowese. Certain'
types of human beings bear startling
resemblance to the jackals. They ar,�
those who envy the glory of 1>.ero
and who lurk ever in cowardly wai R'
the moment when the object o
ing for
their jealousy may falter for a m ` '
went, so that they, too, may sprin
forward and seize the spoils rightl .
won by him they hate.
Defeat of Clemenceau.' •
With the. startling, sensational de-
feat of Georges Clemenceau for the
office of President of France ther•
disappears from active. governmental
affairs the greatest and most romanti,
figure of the world war, With his tall
from power there remains but one of
the chief personages of the conflict
still in real control ---Daviel Lloyd.
Georgo, the British Premier—and al-
ready his enemies- are eagerly at.work
to cast slim from his high place.
GOTA CHILD'S COAT
BY DYEING GARMENT
"Diamond Dyes" Help Make
New Outfits for Youngsters.
Don't wordy about perfect results.
Use "Diamond Dyes," guaranteed to
give a uew, rich, fadeless color to any
fabric, whether it be wool, silk, linen,
cotton or mixed goods -- dresses,
blouses, stockings, skirts, children's
coats, feathers, draperies, coverings,
_everythiug!
The Direction Book with each pack-
age tells how to c(1amend dye over any
color,
To match any material, have dealer
show you "Diamond Dye" Color Card.
Others who, at times between` 11114
and 1919, were high in popular acclaim
amid who have been cast down by the
maelhinatious of the envious are V;it-,
torlo Orlando, Italy's "Premier of V'I&-
tory;" Lord French, who was hailer;!
as the. greatest of British comma-
ors, and, in a somewhat different vrai7
but none the less effectually, Preef-
dent Wilson.
' The effort( to drive Winston Spen•
car Churchill from the British Cabinet
and to deprive Marshal Joffre of boll;
ors due to him failed, but the influence
of both has been sadly reduced frog
the tremendous power they once
wielded, Only after a storm of indig-
nant protest from the world at large
was Joffre given a place of honor in •
the Victory Parade at Paris.
Made Him Feel Small.
A foppish young man who could
only find a seat next to a fishwife in a
North of Scotland smoking carriage
expressed his disgust by many dis-
had trained them to stay wherever dainful glances.
she left them until she returned, but . At length the woman remarked:
they had waited a long time. "I'11 bet ye. my manny, you an' me's
thing."
cloud stand roaring msound. oMartha to thein; but the division had not been I y ength giving play it is U3' no means For a while they stood and whim- Ualth thinking the same
was away; he had remembered that tothemind of Thomas a clear one. I certain that the. Arab boy of il3esopo- pared very much like hungry, torsaken "What is that, woman?" demanded
save himself. Across the yard was
fact at once with a throb of relief. I am going to build a house beside ,children. They could scent °their the youth haughtily.
He knew immediately what to do to the copper beech." he said to his tamia has any the worse of it. Ail, mother, and see her, too, and they •'You are wishing you was sitting
brother. "Then ,., the fall Martha for example, says a tourist, was typical
' of ten thousand boys in hundreds of were hungry and lonesome, Again next a gentleman?"
:a dere cellar in which milk and butter an a win oe marries. 1they started slowly toward the Wren,
were kept; there no harm could toms ExceptJamthat Thomas's eyes looked round at �i were blue ; tiny plain ofrsages Irak, or in the hinterlands ntaif walking closely side by side. ,• When
to But in his confusion he stood for a and James's brown, the brothers were! the
Tigris. Fiipllrates. Itiala or i hat" very near, they paused, rose an their
second too long upon .his doorstep, alike in face and figure. The two el-Adl1ein, hied legs, and looked in wonder and
He looked stupidly up into the were standing side by side in the lit-; He rose at my ,widen appearance longing at their lifeless mother. Then
branches of the trees he loved—the tle field, with their arms folded ng}roused the corner of the cemetery wail, they went to her. One little cub
oil a century aid, the much smaller the fence, They had been talking
h d 1 1 'n out where 1 scorned to watch the l wall,
1, sniffed in a bewildered, puzzled way
about their father an no ct g
beech, which he had planted thesyear over their beautiful inheritance. They! adhr. or hone game. he was playing, over her cold, still body. He gently
of his marriage, thirty years ago. stroked her fur with Inc paw and then The art 02 emitting fruit, vegetables
to look toward the land
Then, still more stupidly, n turned had forhfarmine,land toalso getherir thee"'
the lop of his head just toldmh10 sat down and lregtu to whimper and and other food was druit,vred by a
ing on the giftg y my belt; but his panne, lie me in r I'reuchinan, Francois Appert, who was
ills where had great plans for setting out or-
`answer to my question, was Mabomed
•'1 am, indeed," replied the young
man,
"So am I," the fishwife replied calm-
ly. ;
came 11'N Lis:Ansel:1,t &ellevoa wscaralaies.
Clemenceau was refused the su-
preme honor of election to the Press-
denoy of France, so the Paris des-
patches assert, because he was "too s
strong a man." France feared the ele-
vation of so dynamic a personality and
so energetic an intellect to the high-
est office. There was danger, ea the.
French politicians thought, that. "The
Tiger" would refuse to be bound by
the tradition that the occupant of the
Elysee Palace was to be a mere figure-
head, to receive foreign visitors, of
distinction and to make pretty speech,,
es when he conferred the Legion o
Honor upon those recommended for
that token of merit.x
Orlando's Sudden Fall
Vittorio Orlando's loss of power :sad
popular acclaim was sudden. His
.ower remained without serious clues
tion as long as the Italian armies
were fighting. Like Clemenceau, -ltts
was one whose patriotism and will to
defeatethe enemy could not be ques-
tioned. He had driven from office `nen
whose loyalty might have been open,
to attack. He went to the Peace Cone
ference at Versailles with the chee1Ys'
of the Italian people still ringing i
his ears. At Versailles he presented ,
Italy's irreducible demands, In 'cvttiOh
was included a declaration of the rig,`
to annex Fiume, Under the leaderslit, of President Wilson the other deist•
gates to the conference denied It'itttfae
to Italy,
Frenchman First Canner.
gentle slope of the Yoatn ,
stood a. mile away a large gray house chards, irrigating a dry corner of the! Hussein Ali bin Malldi. I called him
almost hidden by thick trees. Then, farm and making other experiments. {Ali, far short. 1 had noticed the big
and l he started toward his Now James spoke in his impulsive Ali, for
zamboor, et gigantic
way 1 •asp buzzing close to
The other cub stood looking with employed by Napoleon to help provide
awe into his mother's motionless face, food during the blockade of France by
but at last he shook off his fright and Great Britain.
id then only, He always said what came to
refuge, 1lesopotanuiai R,1 smelled her bloody head; then, all
But Thomas had delayed too long, his mind-
tt Th mast I am 001118 to leis face. When Ali rose, the great in -
'forlorn, he turned to look iota the face
The roaring sound had changed to a Oh, no, o r
sharp hiss, and to his astonished eyes extend my yard to take' in this field, l sect rose he #with
ted him, aand
t nikey pt�iits Place
the branches of the trees seemed to and it this isall want
my land!"studThom !
is -
Leap up with strange cries to meet the �� r covered that, it was tethered by a bit
cloud. Sharp peals of thunder, blind- as. I always planned that when you of thread, the insect end of which was
..--- .-.� .-----•-w-w- i made fast to a frayed strand of All's
9 • j aba, As we went past the stables of
tmaga s Siler Fax arms 1 the bus line running betrr•eeu old and
}incur" Hut, bast the 'i•urkiill bath Ali's
1 father owus, and round the corner in -
Silver foxes on a ranch at Hungry 1 Canadian Pacific Railway and of sever- : to the bazaar,- or sug, to give 11 the
I al others near Winnipeg has demon- } proper Arab uante,---the 'wasp flew
Hollow, near Regina, are epicureans
and live on the fat of the laud. This i strated that the prairie provinces are I ahead, tugging at its thread nice a
as well adapted to breeding silver' gatuly captive balloon.
need not be wondered at, for silver {
foxes literally are worth their weight loxes as prince Edward Island, which ' Tens of thousands of the great !n -
en gold. 1 is the world's centre of the industry. I sects fly through the crooked streets creasing o£ apace used in
little aristocrats are fed as ex- Some of the fax ranches in Prince Ed- ; aud narrow; tortuous aalleyssof'.Jut. ereasi g amounto dailies, and e the farm
litell
pensively as guests in the best hotels,
i ward teland are tions capitalized at several corpora- i
, taernkh =tan, banyai and loobiyah, press.
istits
or
q
business
man
e t�
average
The them i.. p t•
;T
1 a
The meat served{ Manyrise 111 blat4t•and-yellow to ur.,
fi igeret regulated and l spotless re- I madethouforting sf themfOitheir t
•,tear. It consists of t.l�a1 choicest , hover in the air. incl settle again} �� ltlbecause he }las trthat oditpublicity idre«
en's1when the
steak, and 1lorlr � owrler�. Others have lost heavily. r+nstomer hes Tlert�raedan4l,o`g ritlerlily, But the aysrafye farmer is}
tuna of tenderloinr . ded ''Breeding foxes seems to depend as 1 the ehapkeePer is squatting attl
t•itops, with a little poria meat a, i e eh on ' "know how" as any other 1 legged once more and srnoltin a not convinced that public,itty will pays
of. the hunter, who had been watching
the little, cub all this while with tears
on his cheeks. After a moment he
took a step toward him., rose up and,
puttlug his forepaws upon the roan's
knee, looked confidently into -his face.
The hien carried the little orphans to
camp, and the hunter raised them,
Their mother was the last animal that
he ever shot.
ate
Selling Farm Products.
Does advertising pay? It :certainly
does or we would not see the ever -in -
Invest Your Money
in
See% DEBENTURES
interest payable half yearly.
The Great 'West Permanent
Loan Company.
"Toronto Office 20 king St. West
al.,ttrsaeae
lr P �T Bate i em
eh
tared. a� ease/fully ' business. In the poeeibtlht'l.es or anal• ; jigaara, So glow aud They is I toll
a' it led wheat 1 1 It , end 1 in0us profits the industry aeeurs as !light }tt that. ilia littlest toddler thinks
tt,� ft light tv for sr.nue wee 1 y al1111 1 ; ii,e gold mining. Olio breeder 1 eething of eatc:liing one as n s's.ils lay
fond s.
d141 l(1d. Other h e';ittast
,atl3i Pr started tv,o iM acs 0 g with two hairs, ;and ph? .1,,ins out ii siing. i5"1th a
iincrs. t:ereait rinri tc.t,e.t:=111• , t 3' i , sliver t1f wood dangling by the t
') little be;at:t�• Iii; now liana [int �i1t. atuitiralt+. Ile has � , r piece
thr1 appetites of the illi sold $1tr,001' worth of pelts. 1 silver { of thread, light enough to let hien fly
The ranch is tightly fenced it w rasfly. 1,00 heavy tc, allow hint to es -
I.,
�1'" i•1 the ' foe stein brings from $200 to `s'8,m°. ; '"
i rn=.,1r ,,,.lees'
},t•' . '"` i °1 "!' ( t pep. in . r ; public 1h1411011 at e )curl,
;ia tit r• t S , ,rt:,, tt r )i t 1 1', ee i. >, ereteentt 1
1T11 elite, 1 )lr:t
of ti,., fo ocf, .4, tine • • llttiutrrd's xi7iintreilt 107 awio every Ls
by wsy of variety. it ai
`tire h dt, teat 111521. l!= , e. , - rare 01°heeler. 1, was)) 11101tr'S a 1•,t,eer
.,, avtre'a1 ;ee . gee fo,; ttov.ee`, ` fie twWlfs his t-r•:r:l,eat-r+ld t,l,intaltl at
113111 h,. , . , +jrltl 1t1 ''..;;:',(100, 1+r. „r,ltl , ;xlil 11100111:�:a r.al,•;1 0 til' fel:'11 1,11 lin 114 1 1t' :+it 1:4111 (4
hhhm.
I•well remember the first tinge I1
used space rn. My country papers, I t
thoeght the moray was thrown await^ 1
but in due time I began to get ,
quiries, and sold the products 1 had!
advertised, at a good profit. And 1
after the iee- has once been broken. ,it
is the natural thing to go right ahead
and adeerhse every time one Inas any-
+'hin= of valise to sell. But with matey c
f sirme•r.. the difficult thing is to make
A,3L gaadea• '1i14te for pr!•t
VrelaMeTo SALT WORKS
�}yl„b•i�lltl.
Appear At Your
Best-•-1nstautly
1f you receive' a sudden
caller or an unexpected in-
vitation you can feel con-
fident of always appearing
et your beat, to but a few
moments it renders to your
akin a wonderfully ptu'e, •
soft complexion that is
beyond comparison.
Orlando -went back to Rome for a
mandate from his people. He was 1..6 -
calved with "enthusiasm, He w >t
once more to Versailles, -but he it al
no headway. Then, as cittiokly as # t
Rena
thought could be formed, the Itai af
people turnedagainst him,
IOrlando, a patriot to the last a
putting his country's interescts abe . ,
!fit„_
his ortn, bent before the etorm
gave up office. He lost neither di
pity nor honor in doing so, but he d
lose power and high place. He no
•trniget' sits in the seats of the mighty,
Lloyd George Alone Rerneins.
Pour then made the League of Na-
t10115- President Wilson, Clemenceau,
LloydGeorge and Orlando, There, 'w
widespread belief .that Mx, Wilsti,
would be its first president. /Yet the
league is now being organized at Paas
without. American. representttlai)' at;
Out
Ciemelteeaut anti' Orlando are, 7ut
office:
1Vii'• •'Lloyd George do far retaioe
Prower, yet the storm clouds have been
gathering around him • for months.
,t'higland is beginning to li:son to the
talk of the politicians !eat ee utigbt be
well to dissolve the c°elition (If patties
which has leapt pin in t,1tc c iso is ,a
etirawd ni,ln of polities einhsati nod it
•,;x.11 be interesting to watch the ale•
olopmonts of event :=, „ i I.'1, ,remelts
1ae:r !thee to v"rest; tits