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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1921-06-16, Page 6o�. fr To Buy or Not to Buy? There Can ge No Question! VERY time you spend a Us dollar for advertised goods you create employment for somebody. Every time somebody else spendsa dollar for advertised goods theycreate employment for somebody—maybe for you. That may sound far-fetched, but If you reason It out you. will find that It Is so. The world revolves upon Indus- try. That which creates industry is the consumption or wearing out of goods, and the buying of other goods to replace them. Without industry the world would stagnate. Without steady., persistent buy- ing, industry would cease. -those who refuse to buy at the .present time, because of a false impression regarding values, or for some frivolous reason, retard industry, and by so doing impair the prosperity of themselves, the community they live in and the country at large. The Important thing to remem- ber is, to buy from those who advertise In this paper. These merchants and manufacturers have faith and they are back- ing their faith with money to stimulate industry and pros- perity. Life Statistics. If you are a woman you will live longer than the average Iran. It is an old : saying, but very true to -day, in - spite of the stress of the modern woman'slife and the pivyrical condi- tion to which she is subjected. Sta- tistics prove it to be so. Niue hundred and five spinstersout of every thousand who have reached the age of 25 live to be 45; 652 out of every thousand reach 65; 119 reach 85, and eight attain, the age of 95. On the other hand only 789 males out of 1,000 who are 25 -years old reach 45; 559, 65; 64, 85; and but 3, 95. In, regard to mortality among child- ren, Providence hildren,'Providence and the law of aver- age seem to strike a fairly even bal- ance. While 20 per cent. more male children die of tuberculosis than fe- males, 25 per cent. more girls than boys die of cancer. Nearly 40 per cent. more girls die of whooping cough than 'do boys, but asthma is more fa- tal among male children. ate,.,, ' Law of Tooth and MERLIN )r O©R.E r4 Y .OR ' v JT ►�J 1revise eongs f o r putiilica- �.ou. Music set to pieloaliee, Mimic air.sposed .aud orelieetrated, 41,JL�ES Professional Song Arranger, Gormley Ave„ Toronto.. vt untied the mountaineer. "I gats a paper onset in a while and hit air al- ways a knocking the Government. I can't do much more'n read ef I spell out the letters and lots of big words 1 don't pretend to understand at all, but hit tells of how party soon we folks what air poor air goin'' to have change things. All of is (Dopy •isebtedl) ie chanctobto ' � is to be alike and share and share S of preceding Cater glorious handiwork o ature he dub- alike, 'tile paper, set. The rich risen Synopsis I'r ng h P o. glorious - , g i ' - . t 'r man and Louie "Vogel, a notor.ilusbed. a bell •of a lot of hubs and trees. is o n to give tap hex ey n is offered $0byLebrune to kidnap Visions of +being' compelled to remain hall be divided amongst all the peo- Jud - i 0 evil -doers. ' t ere indefinitely u;itfl the hue and ole, Nut bit don't sound reasonable to Judge Graham, ter: or of ev me tliet airyrich roan is a-goin'to As Lebetine leaves "Silver Danny's" cry which already he felt sure was „ saloon, Ralph raised against ban in' the city from g give up' anythin . The pi per sez the; a on, he is observed bywaythis is a- o Chaelton of the Depa.tmen� of Jost- which he had fled, nauseated him. He' gin' to be brung about flee who has dubbed him "•The Gray was sullen and morose, and not even is by overthrowing the Government and Wolf.'' Vogel takes the $1,000 given the .beauty of •Stella, her evident will -1 puttin in �aiiother made up.of sech as him to bind the compacto Stella ingness to believe that he had buried f We-uns ie. I kinder thought that meb- Lathrop, a. country girl he had found his past -behind him and thus would: be you. all, being a Jedge, might ex - starving 'in the city and befriended. make hiineelf worthy of leer, was sufii= plain hit ter me. �,. Stella is now earning honest wages lit cient to arouse the spark of love which judge Gi•ahani did not reply im- a factory and refuses to marry Vogel heretofore- she had kindled in his mediately.. He was thinking that. even unless he gives up his evil ways, She breast. in this•far-away place the Bolshevist serpent had reared his head. He had heard 'of a mysterious- paper, secretly published, which had for its purpose the instillation of the subtle poison of 13oishevism'in the minds of the ignor- ant and the unwary. And in these mountains, out of touch with everyday affairs, ;these simple folk offered a fer- tile field. Vogel, Stella Lathropjoins the Inner home city, the Judge should. not learn a "It's Oust another case with a lot zz g clanged fools monkeyin a ,buzz Council -Charlton visited Stella to that lee, Vogel, was wanted in'connec- saw" he said• finally. Unconsciously find out if she knew of VogeI's where tion with the kidnapping and would he was trying to talk the language abouts, and when leaving the hotel put the affi'eers of the law on his trail. that the other pian would undlerstand. ' saw Lebrune break into her room and Why had he permitted himself to lis- Gone was the dignified polish of the Vogel rush to her rescue. Lebrune gten to Stella and bring the Judge, roan of :law as he' strove to put him - the worst of the right and pursuedalong? Far (better to have lefthlrii.to self on:a plane that would -Make all. Vogel and Stella in a motor run '.o die or live, as might happen, in:the eel - the nut where Judge Graham is Im- lar of the shack.• . He cursed himself prisoned but was frightened into re- fox a "softy," • - - has, however,' fallen a convert to The presence there of Judge Gra=, Bolshevism, Vogel carries out his Pact. ham complicated natters. Vogel felt. Judge Graham lies bound U a -shack sure that the moment the'jurist w`as some nines out of the city. The Gray able to travel the mountain olk would Wolf" demands that the Judge should escort him to the . a'lrbad and permit let certain prisoners off with merely 1 i i o a fine. Threats of death for himself.` Bm to' gO Dome. And in that,nionirnt and torture for his son have no weight g Louie" felt sure that the l a men - with the just Judge. Charlton becomes to himself would become a real suspicious of "The Gray Wolf" and ace. He had no hope that, back in his 'he was about to say .easy of cointaro-! herision to this man, "No, sir, those that promise you things free, things for which you, have' not .done Honest labor, are trying to . pull the wool over your eyes and make' turning 'to the city. frightened insisted So it was in no pleasant frame of upon taking the unconscious_ judge mind that he heard Bill Lathrop sum - with then: in their flight to safety. Hien his sun, and bid hind take the sine; -- invaded the Inner Council sa •e to the railroad station. under guise of a messenger from head- Who's that message to?" he de - quarters, and afterwards Lebrune d3' re- mended-. Stella already had told hiin vealed the secret of the Graham plot, At the shack Le'arune discovered that Juc,ge Graham was conscious and Cbariton's identity. Alfred Graham "apparently none the worse for his ex - came to his assistance. Judge Graham, perience, barring a little weakness. on recovering conscioaisaess, finds him- The grizzled auouaitaineer did not re- self in Stella's mountain hemp. ply He had noliking for this hulk- ing brute of the city, "Let's see it," continued and CHAPTER XII.—(Confd.) es He let her go then. Almost inime- n yed to take it 'from I;athrop's diately a lanky mountaineer, with hand. He `found his wrist clutched, in grizzled hair and beard, clad in hone- a vise -like grip and above him the spun, appeared in the doorway. His steely eyes of the mountain maneglit rusty hat was held in his hand and he .tered' dangerously, fumbled it nervously. Catching the ' Shawn' it to s.said say throng 'bout eyes of the Judge fixed upon him, he you,"Lathrop. "Up essayed to make a respectful bow, here in the mountains we ain't in the habit of forcing ourselves into other theu y gal doe neee ta a meedside as how you, people's business," He handed the wus better Jedae and I cum in to slip of paper to his grinning son .re- pay my resoects,"� he said. "I ain't leased- Vogel and turned his :back -on jest gristly figgered out how she hang him. For a moment the .hand of the gunman stole toward the butt, pened to bring you and that air city 'o£ the feller along with her, but you air wet- revolver under his coat, then it ston- come, Jedge. We all don't,take no truck ped midway and he contented himself with strangers in the mountains es a with brushing off the spot where La= rule; but if Stell says as how you air throng's fingers had closed about his all right they ain't no one lir the Cove, , Lain' to question it. • MyMame"is Bill Judge, Graham eves able to lea`' throp, nd Stell, the red-headed gal bed after he had eaten and`;restedid whut has been a -nursing of ye, is my Piloted by Stella on one side: and -her' daughter," father en the other, lie -hobbled to the "Thank you for your hospitality, porch :and sank gratefully fntoa rock Mr. Lathrop, said Judge Graham, ex- er that hada long done duty for many tending his hand. "I am Judge Gra- generations of Lathrops. The'rare air ham of the Federal Court and I am of the mountains was bracing. He snif- not quite clear in my own mind just fed hungrily at the odor of pine and how I happen to be here, but I am 'balsam. It had been years since he snare that everything is all right. How- )rad been in the woods,.and their effect' How- ever, if some one can be induced to an him was naagieal Somewhere 1n take it to the nearest telegraph office, his blood, almost lost through years of I. should like to send a message to my city life, there ran a strain of the family" mountaineer and, in its natural els- "Saxton, Jedge, sartain. One of therent, it heaped. into being once more: boys'll'be glad to tote it to Jasper and He leaned back in the -chair and closed hey the agent there send it. I'll see his eyes. if I kin rustle up - a bit of paper and When he opened them again they a pencil." rested upon the morose features . of "You will find both in the pocket of. Louie Vogel. The gun,inan :again had my coat, which I see hanging on a nail eat down upon the porch and was Vic- on the wall," pointed out the jurist, ously whittling a piece of wood. Judge The mountaineer found them and Graham had never seen him before,"lie brought them to the bedside. Roughly, knew nothing of his history, but his but evidently trying to be tender, he discerning eye, if not the clothes that Vogel wore, told hint that this was no simple child of Nature. There' -was the earmark of the slums in his every motion and attitude. The Judge knew that he .must be that ."city fellow" off whom Lathrop had spoken as having accompanied him and Stella there. It puzzled Judge Graham.. What could this man have to do with a girl, kindly, gentle, sweet and beautiful, like Stella? , "Isn't it -splendid! out here?" he said aloud: Vogel's grunt - might have been• in- terpreted in.any way. "You do not seem to • care for it," added the Judges • " "NoPe." Then Vogel's temper )lar- ed�aap. "ran sick of it. And these d—d hill -billies make me tired. And the grub! 'Sowbelly and sawn pone,' " He snarled disgustedly. "I • wish to Gawd I was in the city." Why don't you go then ?" asked in a lonely spot in the woods and then the ,Judge. "If I felt that way I' that the girl, leaving the unconscious wouldn't stay for a minute: man to the mercies• of the thwwgg, had "I can't ga because—" Vogel chop crossed the mountains in the night and ped the words off short. In his disgust sent back her father with instructions a had almost, betrayed the- reason to get 'some of the neighbors end b(rin)g' why he couldn't return—"hecal,9•se 1 the Judge to the Lathrop cabin in apromised a certain. party to stay here rudely contrived stretcher of their own' a while," he finished weakly. making. Of the struggle to lug his ( He etose, snapped the blade of his dead weight these long miles he learn- knife, thrust it into his (pocket •and ea only many manths later, ' btalked away. For he reds riot of a On the porch of the cabin "Big: mindto continue the conversation,. He Louie" Vogel sat in disgusted silence, ( had heard of this, Judge who could• He realized that he had been permitted : tell wheii a pian was lying, and whose to find sanctuary here only on suffer -d uncanny ability to read minds .that ince and (because Stella had vouched! did not want to be read, hacl made for hint. nut he could riot ignore the hint the terror of wrongdoers. fact that these mountain folk at whore judge 'Graham shook his head. be secretly was' quite willing to sneer "Soniething wrung with that chap," he as "hicks," kept hint •constantly undar thought, "I've seen men like him be their eye. Even when he chose to' fore, It is with such that our prisons An Axrtirlue Bazaar. stroll beyond the confines of the clear i are filled." r ondent rites of a A come p w novel, ing in which the cabin was situated 13i11 Lathrop emerges) :from the cabin ••practicable and inatructivc entertain- he had an uriconuortable .feeling that and sat down on the edge of the notch. it.,ent that those who originated it— he was being watched. And it irked' His eyes followed( the 'bulky form of „ entertain - him, Mentally he ar sed himself as a i "Si , Louie" disappi'oviu ly, But he .two women merebore ef a church fool for having listened to Stella and said nothing. It Was' the moat- oi'gani atios iiitroctuceii. tti their e . i tohere } rtitle p rm ttrn� her to bring him at, tam. code to speak disparagingly -Of a taNn_peopla ,un.le.. the t -.c of. an a.li> The mountains awed hire. Already' ;guest, and he was fnedtegeed antitluo'bazaah. he was quite hoineshk for the emoky,1 Vogel as. such, unwelcome though he Theewomen visits) everyone ,t11Clni Impure breath of the/city in his nose' might be, He hacl overheard sane of tl-ey knew had old relics in their eros- trill, for the electric lights, the the gunman's remarks anent :"hill" r. +e 1 .- h,. ,,e. „on---houschoid er e„ et had thronged ;streets that -were an the life billies," too,' and they :had not 'been -family ler <'r--• •i , he had known. )Pleasant to him, . )icon in the fd, <i y n e.:w eyes the „ ?r"lrr IaCI 9'lsst tI ty 1,. ., ., His eyes sore none of grandeur You -all air a Sedge,Steil telleme,', . ".i•,; t of these toivcrini peaks, i;Iseir riralr sty he said. The Judigo nodded, " he�e the th,new , Fk S List No. n4—' 1r d -. dons '�. f all a.'�.n,i•�.r1:.:'1. :l•C�. rrepreseed flim not in the leaist; 'The,rs sornethiai' been a-v�orryin rata"' d }r. i Ears are once more fn style and will propped Judge Graham .up while the be much worn this summer. message was written. - The arrows of an enemy prove that Then he took it ;and departed in you are dive. No one shoots at a search of one of his :Hale progeny to dead lion, send to the station, eighteen Hailes over the mountains. For the Cove was an Isolated community unto itself, separated from the nearest town by al- most impenetrable mountains, ravines and tangles of tun'ber and underbrush. High on all sides of it rose great peaks of virgin timber through which here. and there ran an occasional "hog trail." Only the shaggy motmtain horses and inules and the sure-footed men and women of the region traverse them in .safety. To a stranger 'they offer well-nigh insurmountable ob- stacles, Stella Lathrop had not told Judge Graham of this:. She had not men- tioned that she and Louie had brought him in the autonsobile as far as ran the traveled road, had hidden the car P. RICH VITAMIN 5, l\ 1 It eilAQE IN CANADA -• The itnportance of ,a"'1 Vitamines in food is being recognized at .' the present time to `a -greater extent than ver before. ft has been'con-' elusively demonstrated that yeast is rich in this all important, element. Many' people have re- ceived great benefit physically sitp#y by •tek- Ing omen two at' three Royal YeastCakes a*,'cley. r Send name and. r t for free copy "Royal Yeit aloes for $e't€et e:►iiiit,. W GILLEt'' lcoMPMW atefitars ihhihd• TORCHrb, ceueoe n el. sec! Autos rare of eJl t'Peo: ail cars sold su4 pet o deliver up to deo «rU es, or terra you turn the grindstone while they ;ten of same diva rt otl !� you "wL h, iu rul' sharpen an ax. What they really want 4'0iro to uridod purohase�. or pauobsu RING mechanic ot yoi{1r owe spates to Idok therm oypt; '-or ass us W take any oar to city rep esentative for lnspeetion. Very large stoats always eel hand. klrea.l4eyet Used Car Markt Tota gena'e street, - Tara a is a .f:hance to destroy the Government and pet up one that will allow them to run things, to loot the banks, to take away the property of those who have it, to make slaves of women an(1 girls and to kill those who oppose, "Mr, Lathrop, if those Banged trai- tors got hold of' things the country would run red with the blood of their victims. None of our lives would be safe uniees we were worse than they are, Up here in God's blessed moun- tains they are trying to set solme of you at the throats of the others,. They wouldn't be satisfied until you had. - a little riot of your own in this very cove. No, sir, they are liars and trai- tors and if they succeeded in deceiving you into supporting them they would turn upon you and wipe you out the minute you discovered that their promises are only the stuff' of which dreams are---" He stopped abruptly, for the mountaineer had leaped to his feet and was staring with popping eyes, at something in the sky. "Gosh, thet there's the biggest bird I ever seen," he exclaimed. Judge Graham caught sight of it then and his ears heard distinctly the roar of a powerful motor. "That is an airplane," he explained. "Some Arniy -flier on a long flight, I suppose. My boy was one in France," proudly, "Fust one I ever -seen. Thet's. why I thought it wuz a bird," explained the mountaineer, shamefacedly. "Why it's turned and is eoniin' back," (To be contin.ued,) Minard's Liniment used by Physicians Intellectual Honesty. The chief need of to -day is intellec- tual Honesty. It is as essential to women;as to Hien, Some men can judge themselves without juggling the scales, but few women can. It is easy to be truthful and fair to a eeeighbor, but hard to keep from de- ceiving and fibbing to one's seIf. If Canadian girls are to• be .happy andcontented as facture wives and home -makers they must tellthem- selves the truth. I cannot impress too earnestly upon opr,,girls the importance of being hong es!i;toward theinselves in little things astwell ae lb g, enes. If you spoil a eakie° in the, tedoking ,. don't say, e<I didn't mean to do it that way" or "Something went wrong with it." In- stead, say to yourself: "I made afail- ure of this cake. I am going . to make a success of the next one." When a garment you have made for yourself does not fit you or look as nice as you would like it, don't blame the material or the pattern or the sewing machine. Just confess that :you made a poor job of it end try to do better. Weigh yourself on the same scales,. figuratively, that you would have your butcher weigh the meat you' buy and which you seldom take the pains to look at while he is, weighing it. See that you .get your snoney's worth out of yourself. The worst cheated per- son. is the self -cheated one. Woman is destined to become s. far greater factor in our economic life than she ever has been. Rouge won't. cover a defect in character, nor will a wig keep hair from falling out or turning gray. Life is full) of mistakes -and those who make the fewest are those who realize and admit them as they make them. The (person) who won't admit a fault is intellectually dishonest. He or she is handicapped at the start. The kitchen is the first fundamental • of the home. The entire family usually has to suffer for the mistakes made by the cook. That is the reason why • there is an increasing demand for training in scientific housekeeping, cooking especially. - -• Infallible laws of nature punish intellectual dishonesty in the home, and, unfortunately, as a rule, the inno- eennt suffer along with the guilty, 'In these . trying times the house- wife has a most important part. She should keep a budget. , She should know exactly how much she has to cover every branch of her housekeep- ing sod she should so conduct her af- fairs as to make her books !balance. She should ?rake her figures as well as herself tell the truth. She. must be careful, cautious and accurate. The foundation of all happiness is honesty, and the cornerstone of all society is happiness, The woman who refuses to cheat herself is not so, Iikely, to be eheatef by others., The money was, of course, to go to further the particular church plan that was on foot. Those called upon were glad to lend whatever desirable articles they 'had; and since they re- ferred their visitors to other persons who might like to •contribute . to the affair, it was not, long before a con- siderable number of antiques had been collected., The admission fee was twenty-five cents—a sum that no- one felt was exorbitant. In addition to the stim- ulus in helping a worth while' cause, therewas the personal stimulus der- ived from the nature of the exhibition. Those who had lent relics ware proud to have their (heirlooms on, exhibition, and those who had nothing to lend -were eager;te seethe interesting colt- lection of their neighbors' cherished: possessions. The exhibition washeld in the town hall:The antiques were arranged to the best advantage a card on which were clearly printed the age of the article and the name of its owner was tied to every contribution. At each tablesome one who had made himself familiar with the history of the vagi- ous articles answered the many quer• boils that were asked, , The collection contained old lugs', and tapestries, spinning wheels, :sampe! lers, silver, (brass, eopper and pewter ware, pottery, an old leather fire bucket, a yellowed, haii4laude dress in whieh someone's great_„rand_# mother had been eau istened and , a man's high hat that was two hundred and fifty years old. One table carried. military relics of every Canadian struggle from the Indian wars to the Great War. At the end of the evening ;girls' dressed in historical costumes served coffee- and doughnuts. The unpreten. tionis •refreshments tasted the better for being offered by waitresses he the pieturesque dresses of the French re- gime, the flowered muslins and frilly` kerchiefs of early Colonial days, or the quaint, high -waisted frocks of a later time. Keep Minard's' Liniment in the house., The Warm Chinook. oh,the warm Chinook is blowing in the West, ' And the emerald is glowing in they, breast Of the broad and billowed prairie Where the warm Chinook will tarry,' While the birds are malting merry, in the West. - Now the fields are growing golden in. the .West, And a baby bird is holding. to his nest,. But to -morrow he'Il be trying And the next day he'll be flying Where the waren Chinook is sighing,;" in the West.-- Warnnan.• Merchants PHONE .,,YOUR RUSH ORDERS For anything in Fancy Goads, Cut Glass, Toys, stnallwaree, Sporting Goods, Wire Goods, Druggists' Sun- dries, Hardware Specialties, etc„ to MAIN 6700 ore a Reversed charge. Torcarl Fancy Goods Co., Ltd, TORONTO Major Harry Cameron, Man. Dir. COARSE SALT LAND SALT Bulk Carlota TORONTO SALT WORKS Q J. CLIFF - TORONTO • ANNAssamThviremasianxok Sendfor Rea{pe Book.,FREE! Cold in sanitary, air-tight tins, the makers package , —that guarantees purity. . 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