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Zurich Herald, 1922-12-21, Page 2The BY KATHARINE SUSANNAH PRIICHARD CANADA PRESERVES HISTORIC SITES fort in month ` , a r; History and romance surrouad the story of Fort Prince of Wales, at the —=--� mouth of the Churchill River, on Iduc�son s Bay. , It was a stronge the 18th century thajt Quebec, Built with, walls 300' feet long and '300 feet wide; with foundations 30 feet wide; and a roadway 20 feet wide on their summits; the fort was the stro gest of the' Iiudswu's Bay Company in tie North. Three French' warships captured the fort in 1782. The picture Vine, threatening to sweep .the whole! "It's Ls, shows an old gateway Wamree townshiap off its foundations' on. a short breath. "I've quarrelihet1 old I want a job." t.. Copyright by Hodder and Stoughton. CHAPTER XXVII. i "What is it, Davey?" the S:o'haai- A sou' -wester was tearinacross the master asked when he saw h.sn. bh' Mr.Farrel," Davey said, and dash the fragments f the mud with the o man. hwuses against the round. the Black Bull with the noise .after he, had taken Davey to the stable of great guns, and in the pauses of and they had turned Red into it, they its blowing the booming of the sea went indoors, and a light gleamed on the beaches five miles away could from the small square windows until be heard, !the sky ' was waning :on the edge of When Davey burst' open the door he. the plains. Then Davey came to the mens° hills.. It broke' The ootbage was in darkness,. But es. br+ouglbt a grist of wmi into the tap- door sand the Schoolmaster with h m. room that set the lights sputtering: Its not advice—as I told you but and flaring. Two of them went out a job I'm wanting," the boy said. His The gihas'ses on McNab's bench danced h voice carried against the wind, hoarse as he hammered( it with his fists. ;with. anger and disappointment. "For two pins I'd thrash you," he! "But this job, Davey, you know yelled, "You got me into borrowing what it is. money from you. I was a blamed The Schoolmaster's voice was ung fool! But what's your game? troubled. What do you mean playing fair to me "Yes, I know—haven't I told you. and then giving me away to the old As a matter of fact I haven't the man. A neat way of bleeding him, price of food or a bed on me, and I'm that's what it was. Getting me in not going back for it. You said these here drunk and then—" i cattle of Maitlances in the yards The Schoolmaster was playing would have to be taken to the hills. carats with a couple of men on an up- Mait andrs got fattening paddocks u'p turned, box behind the door. He threw beyond Steve's, hasn't he? Tim and down his cards and took Davey's ann. Pat Kearney have cleared off to the The' boy threw it off. i new rush, and you said you'd have to "Leave m'e alone, Mr. Farrel," he get somebody to take them for Conal." cried. "I'd sweep the floor with the "You can have what money---" —the damned swine, if he were worth the Schoolmaster began. 'weeping the floor with. You're all + "It wasn't what I asked for," Davey afraid of hum. Well, I'm not! You said curtly. see here,Mister MeNab," he leant! None knew better than Farrel what across the bar and his eyes burnt ' the difficulties of his getting work of their way into the pale shifty eyes of any sort would be in the Wirree with Thad McNab. "I'll break every bone McNab's mark against him. In the in your body if you ever interfere be- hills no one would employ him for tween me. and mine again. D'you hear fear of offending Donald Cameron. that? . I don't know what you've got ,But it was neither McNab, nor Don - up your sleeve, and 1 don't care! You old Cameron, the Schoolanas•ler was just keep it there, see, or it'll be the thinking. of when he tried topersuade d worse for you." McNab had blenched at the boy's headlong passion. The quivering long arms seemed seareely able to keep themselves off his miserable shoul- ders., His skin was the gingery color of his hair, and though he ,grinned feebly, ,looking everywhere but at Davey there was not a man.why, . did not s... etas. i;', 1;hae. Thad Mee h ew i d lw u ' •ae lTo � e � y. ' LQ�V3 that. There was-.nothin in the world a friend,". he said, "to• eoYne to you. he- feared. more Alan the vengeance Air friend," job with those beasts of hich might wreak itself on his mis- sticking e d Maitland s is the only things g erotic body. As Young Davey stamp- out for me just now." ed out of the bar there was a rustle turned away wearily.. of movement, smothered oaths of sur- Farrel be lad enough tow stand by you prise and amusement, a. swinging ofDavey," he said. "But this eyes after him with something of ad always, y, miration and applause in them; but is• different! : I'd never forgive myself McNasb was recovering himself. Ile if I got you into a mess. However, it. gazed speecblesely after the boy too; t can't do any harm your taking these there was a gihoet of a smile on his beasts to Steve's. Deirdre and Pll be face. His mind was, work'ing;' his lips going up in a dray or two. I'll tell moved, though'no `-weeds carne. The men who had' wanted `to cheer Young Davey shifted their -opinions t tneasily, There would be more to ehcorecto Mc- Nab's. account yet, they imegined. The Schoolmaster did not follow Davey out of the bat as, he. felt in- clined ;he to; but when the boy `lied gone t said,„ McN•ab looked' across at him. going• "That°s what comes of interferin', l CHAPTER TiIivIII. Farrel” he said About 0 Recipes For Holiday Times. " cupful a. shortening, one, egg beaten Puffed rice balls, a wholes'oiue Kw .one=half cupfuls of sour milk one. cupful, of. graham flour,. seven - rolling for children, can' be made be eighths of a;,cupful of white floes, ro1•ling puffed rice in .a taffy that' is Willing. To make the taffy two -Mit -de of a cupful of raisins, one ul .of bibarrbonate of ode, made for p use one cupful of water, two cupfuls t mauls of cinnamon, one - of sugar, a lump of nutter the a,ize of quarter teaspoonful of el'v'es, and a a walnut and a teaspaonfwl of vanilla. inti grated nutmeg: Combine Boil the mixture' untilit spins ' n in the order given, thread, their rice a into o grease Pan dredging the raisins with flour. Pour and 11 it partly to d mold of before shaping well s• a th ht fitting and Airy kisses are named. .'Phe, steam for two and one-half hours. are made with two onpflilo orf nrgwn Serve with foamy sauce or hard sauce. sugar, one tablespoonful iofs vinegar~, Foamy sauce is made with the one teaspoonful of vanilla extrect, one-half cupful of water, white of one white of one egg, one-half cupfuloof egg, one cupful of chopped nut meats sugar or maple syrup, (either pecans ex walmute): Boil cupful of boiling milk, one teaspoon - sugar, water and vinegar together ful of lemon juice. Beat the white of until the mixture forms a thread When the egg until it is foamy,' but not dry. a small quantity is dropped front. a Add the sweetening ,gradually, and spoon. Beat the white of egg until beat the mixture until it is 'creamy. stiff and pour the shot mixture into it, Add the boiling milk and the lemon - beating all the time. When rather juice and serve at once. stiff, add the vanilla and the nuts. A wholesome hard sauce is made Drop from a spoon on waxed! paper. thus: Put into a bowl -one tablespoon - Divinity fudge is also called hew- f suh �a , pi n& pour d the ingredients cool puffed' rice ' a' into ball the mixture into a. grease • mo or co can having g lq lid The only dollar that can buy more this Christmas than it could twenty years ago is the dollar that. buys the Gillette shaving service-- once a $5.00 luxury. With a single dollar, you can, now end someone's ' shaving troubles --save him money—enable him to shave at home with speed, comfort and safety every day of bis life multiply, your Christmas wishes; by. the, days of the year= 365 tunes then some. • Gillette Safety Razor and- 3 genuine Gillette` blades .$ Made and guaranteed glenuine. by Gillette Safety Razor Co..,Qf Canada, :. Limited By -this method of cooking, the cake is ready for use much sooner,,though if etioasd in a cool, dry glace it will keep perfectly for months. The Appeal of Music. Music can appeal to the higher as well as rbc the ;lower in man, it may move to high resolve, it may agitate, it may enlighten. But these effects seem generally to be temporary in their nature. Except in these few eases where intellectual apprehension is secured, the effect of sound is not marintainecl for long, when its action upon the emotions has ceased. Troops will be played right up to the flying a line, the piper will .skirl up to the ere ful of butter, one cupful a g , very moment of the 'charge, for mem- the boy to go home. Not a o rr cry does moved. Davey from his purpese to be 1 bliss," either �e is fitting It and one tablespoonful of sweet cream, not seem able to •pe2petualte "If you a ism ' on enly hiss; ei ter nam requires two cupfuls of white sugar, Stir until well •creamed, adding a grat- the message of the sound. of an ore appear, ear, as far take this ab to morrow e -half curpful of boiling water,; one ing of nutmeg or a few dropsY It would thesef pP' you will clear out then and look for, cupful of corn syrup, F pr reamed' as moral control is contemned, that all nother job on the other side of the ha usp. one cu fu1 eferred flamermg. When e of chapped nut' meats (almonds ill acid the Ns/lapped white of one egg, music can achieve is to create an at - "Yes," stinting it in lightly. When inosphexe. g' Yes, Davey saideagerly. berts or walnuts), 'whites, of one teaspoonful of Poi. ) a a." 'en this is Re Marc bearing of in "Right," a ere,. sparingmutsie must. have a good effect. ,t "the Schoolmaster replied, d 1 a 1 hearing o ..mhoiYhbid music. Right n beat well, p Oontinua g but I y m�iist have h •ed add two more tablespoonfuls ; an :pile on •de bet hard eatreee are ere The Things I Have Not Had, I pray I may be glad For the things I have not had; Glad that somewhere they wait, And that near, or far, or.late, I shall find them, lingering so, In the dawn or even glow, don't want you in this.. ibusi'iiess .ea , rit Co ' a ft .e`c>il"'eff e , ' But t 14y li stable a g x`s hand. t vJ The boar �i'tpp "You said if ever I was' hard -up for Conal about it. Then you can go on over the ranges. There's alwvays work on Middleton's or Yaraan. Come - in now and I'•lhl make jou a cup of tea." Davey glanced at the lightening dome of the sky. "It's a couple of hours to dawn yet," when dropped' in cold wet "You'll know better; anothertune, d Conal himself, on the 1 road, met r-anilla• The mixture should be very 1'saueeipan. When hot, but not brown, won't you, McNab," the Seh�oelmaster Davey behind Maitland's slowly mD t stiff, Drop from a spoon on �a but -f put in the breast of the chicken, flesh drawled, looking up from the cards he ing, scraggy, Nigh -ribbed cattle. r holding. "It's a bad business get "What's the meaning ofthis?" he tered Phan and bake until light lsr°own. sh'vde down -Let the breast cook'quick- tvas „ tasked, striding into Farrel s kitchen: t Graham pudding would be a pleas- �.1 then tike., pieces out, being careful icing between father and son, j "That kid of Cameron's----' ! ing and wholesome substitute for „the I not. to bna li the butter, ' Ien'c ennui, MeNab's smile changed, ,! "Wanted a job," the Schoolmaster plant pudding whidit is frequent., "I was allnidin' to ,our inter£eir11 quarrelled led with leis ter rub :two tablespoonfulst,e said. "He's l served with the dinner. It regoites l acid a pint of water, a Zhev+sl taas�paost- • when I had a bit of business on hand, feather." , one cupful of molasses, one-quarter ful . seated onion and . two bay nd greasy, but this is per - whites •sbif add •.th t'l featly light, poems and wholesome. v<hates of eggs , . mixture, beating all the time. Whexi I Cranberry relish requires three cup - fairly stiff, add nuts and vanilla, eon - fulls of cranberries, three %Ranges, trine treating until very stiff, then threecupfuls of brown sager, three pour into a buttered tin, and: rvheee cupfuls of seeded raisins, tbree-quar- co 1 +t squares , oh ou in of a -cupful of vinegar, one-half Rocks are easily made. 'They re- to ,poontful • of ground claves and quire one and anerhaltf cupfuls of cinnanran, one-quarter teaspoonful of three=quarters of . a teaspoonful of brown sugar, two-thirds of •a cuhpful ground .cinnamon. Cut the eran- of butter, two eggs, one teaspoonful berries in !valves lanai wash in a stn ain- e to: remove asmany 'see'ds as pos- sible, then drain.. Add the orange spoonful of salt, two and one-half ouip puleand Fried, sugar, raisins and vine - of ground cloves, one-quarter tea= fills of flour;' one. level teaspoonful o£ gar. Cook slowly until thick, about bicarbonate of soda, one and oneelalf 'fifteen Minikes. Add the spice cupfuls of chopped• nuts meats and rail- cook five Minutes langee, then pour anins•, Otto teaspoonful,of vanilla. Cream into sterilized gl'a'sses and seal with the butter and ;sugar, add the eggs, paraffin, well beaten, and the remaining dry•K• fricas see of chicken wonld•be ex-. ingredients (except nuts and raisins):'cellent for; the special dinner: Singe, sifted together. Mix well, add the and :cut a :chicken. 'into' pieces, nut meats and chopped raisins and -Pet ewetaiiiespooaiful of butter in.a permanent moral - consegtaenaices - 0a only be produced; by acting upon the .With never a trace of tears Left by the• passing yeara. They know not time nor space, For they have not taken place. mind along lines more purely intel- lectual than emotional. There is nec- essarily an intellectual .elenrent in all music, but the .general appeal is pre- eminently . emoti-onal. Like other forms of art, music loam create canal - tions favorable to -the encouragement of moral truth and of ideal righteous- ness. But a more puilely mental method of appeal is essential if the individual apprehension of the good is to be secured on a permanent basis. Love which I never knew, Beautiful, pure and true, Awaits, and the distant gleams From the hearth fires of my dreams' Mr. Farrel,' • be snarled. I"Does he know the game "Had you ,e, ;bit of business on, The Schoolmaster nodded, staring Thad?" the Schoolmaster asked. i over his pipe into the fire. ling himself something on my account, "Who with? Davey?" And did I Coral threw off his hat. His eyes' saying to himself: `There's something. interfere? Well, now you beat me! were blazing. The bath throbbed o be ' coining i i in to this you!'uOf with course h you." Out with it! Let's • hear all about it. a'gain'st the bare throats Conal lis bud his position and Swore We're all old friends here." his beard climbed. "Do you mean to say, you --,"impatiently. McNab's wrath surged so that he The Schoolmaster's eye on his, halt- "I'ds what it amounts to, Dan!" better keep out of your way -- could not. speak. ed his tongue. that "There now, " Farrel oriel. "He "No. ,. I don't mean to," be said! "No," the . Schoolmaster said, "not won't tell! Never mind,, McNab, you slhohwly, He knoeked the as'li.from his thatl Let McNab think what he likes oame off yell well. Whhen Youim pipe. "By the way, Conal, who fi ced a as fax as I'm concerned. Only he 1 chicken, then dust it thickly with _. , leave bull? v. ,, hasn't any particular nuarre] with cihopped parsley or chopped celery: les of tohasat, and serve with cranberries or currant f a a�a" "I did„ Conal leans axvnat jelly. ` An excellent ftuit cake 1s made by. this 5V,011 -tried. recipe:, Six egg's, -Mines I „ leaves. When this begins boiling, put in the chicken, the reek and back in the b'orbtom, then the dark meat and on top the white meat, flesh side clown.• Cones: the s!aucepaii and simmer gent- ly for an hour. When the chicken is tender, dish, remove the fat from the surface of the sauce, add the yolk of an egg, beaten with four tablespoon- fuls of cream, and strain this over the He Obeyed. A little boy had returned borne after-- having been out to dinner. Said his mother : "I trust that when it came.to the exhtra..be�lpings you. had manners enough to say `No'?” "Yes, ma; I said 'No' several times" "You did?" exclaimed this mother, s1eptdeally. "Yes; Mrs. Stout kept asking me if I hacl had enough! Which will one day come Such a bright reality. Glad for- the pastamI, And for tgday s blue sky But 1 am more. than glad For the things I have not had. —Elizabeth Scollaid4 to be Lavey came in i thought uc (the Ui0flJU % lh qua x - - you out on the road for a certainty, ,know the beast I mean—small, square, you, Conal, and he has with nee—•a,`nrd and hers a pretty bruiser. 'Showed him blazed -face, sold in MAI; Southern last if he tripped you up trying to ger a how to put up his fists ineself a couple' sales•" ate it would be a bad bushiness," n yea „ : • a. It was Dan's way of saying things, Fighting Canal threw himself into "Things are tightening up net*, h• i•ty inimitable ha' Around the dish put twang too?" he said, "I mean to quit, Dan. with a w musico 7 , an a chaise it sreven geniality, tinged with sarcasm, that "Badly alone," the •Sehool'lnasterlMaitland knows I do his busaness 1nd ,Walks rbeaten separatei'y, bi onzmht the house down. murmured, glazing before him. He, and. a little bit extra on nay own ac- ori urs ' of flour; three cupfuls of men in the bar threw , young Dave twigged it.. He's Been count• .That, down t worry hint so sugar :, two cupfuls of sour milk, one Wien the Back their heads and stretched their holding •his Davey igue-fol what teason 1 long as he gets a £circ, price for t;ho an ne;lvalf cupfuls of Uubter, one don't know -but hh told me becaushe' beasts. I want to pull off this. last cupful qf: fruit syrup, :two teas, of e. he wanted thee, job. 1 gave. et to hint, 'lift' and then teen thewgate deem cub. bicarbonate of swo oaths Dna rgot bit lcni'fe into him. altogether. 1 wish you were , Yid cittaranlo- Thad's in ooriful each _ oC goo} "Then why on earth dud you want'Neieh me though you've never been stip. and et Thad on our • any but square jobs before. I've been' eaves and •aldaspice, one Pound each of to take him on g , ,, !s ,ing out the land took a short cttht1 ra sixts,el fes and fig+s, one-ltalfi pound tracks?" orders from Thad yet,'frront Rene and got into the back hillis1 each of currants and citron, one - Cola one do you, Coned 1" Sent; Tim and Pot on with those' ! fcuxtli lxoiurrd..of candied orange peel. y ,that glint in s of Maitlsndh s! Picked up Teddy r ,, a i dates and figs Canal fidgeted airier 1 ri i at There's not much he 'Seery .the laieies, P Dan's -eye. ' 1 • dt n't k s, about the ways of 'scrub into wean pieces and cut the citron +No " he there's ngrowled, "you know I doesn't knowy 1 orange peel into thin slices. dionh't 'but fineries no good I can see cattle, Trust a black! lie tohok me and g h w in rtinninrg against him, What does • drown NarroW •Valley to the plants. this kid want anyhow? Why, there's We laid a couple of hours uncles: •+:over more than a dozen of Caineroti s caws in the aeric. Then the moon roe, ait,d in the seek I'm after now." 1 you should 've seen the mob go FThe log that head been smhoulderingi stringin' cut across the plains - 311 day ori the open hearth broke aed,lookin' no more than a drove of tete l with a 'shattering of embers. !in the dim light, 1t't, a pretty gohod flour. Peart for five minutes, and last- iel ,,, thes Itr�",rli• � 1 'Pell you truth, Conal," the, i,tatteli, rollssn Cat -•,_acrd prices .nft o 1 add the.'srndha dissolved in as little : s. alma ter looked straight out be- h I mean to pick it u:p, Wena d V yr : . Pour into a grease • SCltts :fore him. "�`herre's something in Me-it;noavri anything about it but :for iytiit tYate�r coverrw• With a tightly fitting ilii. 1 Nab's eyes tolls rile he's 'got his stns• ---its eiit of my beat. You rigli to ed p5 i ,. in steamtfair' ld ' icions— well,' if ho. has --•-it's time t•o have u whaack of the profits, Dara" and, ihst+ead of baking, phYtrrs: .'Chen place in a Vick oven fee got out, You've hail luck so fire Bute (To he contrnucey there's something ,about McNab keeps •`"""'— . 11 Mansrct s Liniment for Werts� fifteen or twenty lima z {e brown nsakitng the feel its if he were. prolris- ' It takes a dozers square miles of forest to furnish the paper for one edition of the Sunday newspapers in the United States. MInerd's Liniment for Colds, etc, aackto.the-Land Movement in Japan. Since the• after -war depression heal struck Japan, it is estimated that n+eare' ly six hundred thousand worker& have been discharged from the factories and have gone back to agricultures`' The total number of industrial 'wowk- .eis in Japan is 1,666,000, so thle num I bee• of these going back to faarmdm8'.: constitutes nearly onethird of the. total. - - The working power oi'. -an able- bodied man is about hone -tenth that of a horse. • lungs that night, Thad did not laugh. He stood shivering,' with gimlet flames in. his eyes, his fingers' twitch- rig restlessly-, There were chinks s all round and. the Schoolmaster played another rubber before lie swung out of the shanty and into the wind that rosrecl and beat over the plains. Davey was waiting in the lee of the ,garden fence round Farrel's• cat- taage, his little red mare set with her. haunches against tlhe wind. moimogrorinamilki NURSES The Toronto Hospital for Incur- ebles in aitiiiatlon with Bellevue and! Alltel! 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