HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1923-08-30, Page 6v
II 814
HAS THE LARGEST SALE OF ANY
PACU. T TEA IN NORTH AMERICA.
..�......._..-Asp
The Hidden H
BY J. B. HARRIS-BURLAND
ur
covered it seemed like a ghost In the
sombre and stately apartment, Sir
Alexander whipped off the covering,.
stepped back a couple of paces, anal
was silent. He gazed fixedly et the
white, beautiful lace --at the gloss$
hair, dark as ,a raven's wing—at the
curiously expressive grey eyes,
"Well?" queried Ruth,
"It's a daub," he said. "The felloW
doesn't even know how to get a like-
ness, It's an abominable piece of
Iehie
A:bc�ut` the I7io14se
COOL DRINKS FOR HOT
WEATHER.
Fruit juicesmake excellent• drinks.
work.. I won't take it.» Orange and pineapple juices added to
And when Ruth meekly asked what a'.rich' lemendade improve it for many
was the matter with the portrait her eo le.
husband replied; "It's not vote That's
all. You look like some love-sick girl �' (p trent jelly dissolved in either hot
—or—well, something I won't even -or ,cold water makes a refreshing
name. He's made a bad 'woman of drink. So do many other jellies,
you." • Chilled blackberry or raspberry. juice
"Very likely I am a bad woman," dilpted to taste and served with or
she retorted, "but it's a fine picture." without a slice of lemon touches the
Sir Alexander stared at the portrait spilt.
with fury in his little grey eyes.+'reit punch is made by adding to
"I'd never have married that wo-
man,". he said, and, picking up a sharp ieilsmall pieces of sliced pine-
paper-knife,from the writing -table, he.ionade 'nPple, ,'.orange, muskmelon, cherries,
• slashed the canvas across from. coat ;mall a sprig of mint leaves. Use the
ner to oorner, and slashed it again lemon -squeezer on oranges, just as on
and again, until it hung in ribbons. lemons, and pour the juice on finely
"That's what I think of it," he sad cracked, artificial ice. This is an
ferociously, "It can be sent back to especially healthful drink; but, like
him, and he cantshow it to his other iced should be swallowed
friends and laugh and say, 'That's the slowly drinks,
real Lad Bradney, but I had to paint
Milk drinksthat a calto old and
her.' " • s. ;;young alike can be made in the home. wearer. Crepe, linen or chambrey
A COMFORTABLE PLAY
GARMENT FOR YOUNG
CHILDREN.
`4437. This model has a very prac-
tical closing, and is cut so as to afford•• ns
a her as her fool of a husband seespPfreedom and comfort to the little
Ruth did Just say a word. She turns Use about two tablespoonfuls of fruit would be nice for this style. It may
CHAPTER I. been hearty and jolly, and, as he call -
Sir Alex rider Bradne did not en- ed it, "full of beans." He had whistled ed her back on the picture and walked syrup with three-quarters of a glass -be finished with or without the long
coots a conversation . at breakfast as he had run down the stairs had to the window. Her face was very ful of milk. Sugar may be added to sleeves.
g
Not that he was at all the sort of man
to prop up a newspaper in front of
him. Save for a glance at the Cause
" List he rarely looked at the papers
until the evening. On the way to his
chambers in his car he would some-
times read the Law Reports, but more
often he would keep his mind fixed
on the work of the day.
A successful man, Sir Alexander
Bradney—successful in a profession
opened his letters and commented en1.pale, and it seemed to her as though suit the taste, but it is generally tin -
them, had joked with her about some something very definite had happened 'necessary because .the syrup usually
trifle, had ooked at her with love in' to her—that she had reached some, .yea the sweetness. Add the milk to
his eyes. But those were the days of crisis in her life. And, to .understand s .flavoring rather than the flavoring
their early married' life—days before
this, you must remember that these
thereat Barham Case in which he two had never had a serious quarrel - to the milk. A small stream of charg-
g since theyhad been married, and that ed. water is an addition to these drinks.
had suddenly made his name and laid
of his great fortune, j her husband, grim and solen and re • All mixtures should be well shaken or
the foundation
Up to that time he had merely been strained, had never really lost hie, whipped. ' A fruit -jar makes a good
an energetic junior who was regarded, temper. This was an amazing oi1t.:'device for shaking. A little nutmeg
break on his t an i
b s ar and could
as likely to do something great sorrel P t, or cinnamon sprinkled over the top of
where it is hard for a man to earn his
The Pattern is cut in -4 Sizes: 2, 3,
4 and 5 years. A 3 -year size requires
I% yards of 36 -inch material.
Pattern mailed to any address on
receipt of 15e in'silver or stamps, by
the Wilson Publishing' Co., 73 West
Adelaide St., Toronto. Allow two
weeks for receipt of pattern.
day. He had been earning a steady
no so'inch thick. Chopthe portion of
she thought have possibly been caused
b his dislike of her ortrait ItI any of these drinks makes them even
cucumber removed and add half the
livinguntil hehaslabored f three thousand a year. Now he could y P•m
earn ten times chat amount if he
or many was almost as if he had ben holdingore .appetizing.
years—e profession wherein successhimself in for months and months,Macaroon milk is made by sifting
itself means redoubled toiler life al- worked e eyesrd weretiredButh. thea small i early and that all his pent-up fury had acrushed macaroons over. the top of the
most of slavery. Alexander Bradney grey ylast broken down his self-control.milk. Vanilla root beer, maple,
morning,and his massive face,which
used to say that he worked even mThe door closed with a crash, and "" ocolate strawber inea le
his slee would have been ugly if it had not ch strawberry, pineapple,
,
p
htly
A man often looks his best at the been for the strength of it, was heavy Ruth, hands clenched, lips ti
g
breakfast table. There is a freshness and solemn. pressed together, stared out of the
window.
about him—a clean smartness_ that He liked.to eat his breakfast in
wears off later on in the day. But Sir silence, or what he called silence. This
Alexander was not one of those -men. meant that he was to speak when he
He certainly looked healthy enough, wanted to, and that Ruth,his wife,
and there was no fault to be found was to answer him. But there was to
with his clothes, but there was little be no chattering on her part—about
life in him. trivial matters.
Ruth Bradney, sitting opposite to It was queer that Ruth was not in
him at the table on this December the least afraid of him in those days.
morning, remembered the -days— She was conscious of her own recti -
scarcely four years ago—when he had
A
r
spa;
and stay
"Swat the fly" is a good House,
hold phrase but "Slay it with
Sapho" is better. Use Sapho
Liquid in kitchen, dining room;.
pantry and in ,your closets.
Flies -spread disease --even king
death into the home. Flies may
mean typhoid. Sapho prevents it.
Sapho kills flies, , mosquitoes
moths, bed bugs, roaches ancd
other household pests but is
HARMLESS to HUMANS and
ANIMALS.
S oz. bottles with mouth blower,
40 cents,
Complete outfit containing pint
bottle with hand sprayer. $1.50.
x.11 drug, hardware and depart-
mental stores carry Sapho.
Sapho Powder is equally effec-
tive. Useful in killing parasites
on cattle, thickens, pets and for
• burning to rid the house of
mosquitoes.
KENNEDY
MANUFACTURING COMPANY
586 Henri Julien Avenue
MONTREAL
s?ay it wide0
D-6
'•'MrIG-!
1; ett.'C« •
jontTtS
Sail nuligga eiwril ay
„illi,rettoeleiset
tee
N MOO
"He. will hate me for this she
thought. "He will never forgive me a glassful of milk to abouttwo table-
for having seen him like this -never!';{ spoonfuls of syrup, then break an egg
She went up to the portrait,. gazed • into the glass, shake thoroughly and
at the wreck of it for a few seconds, add charged water, if available. Use
and then covered it up with; the she'et';x whole egg with cherry, root beer,
that had formed part of the pacldng, ;chocolate, strawberry or pineapple
"A winding sheet," she said to her- s
grape, orange, raspberryor cherry
,syrup may be used as flavoring. To
make ' milk juleps, add two-thirds _ of
self with a smile. And at that mo-
yrup•
nient she was curiously aware of John. Milk contains the things that the
tude, of the five years in which she Merrington. It was as if he were
had been a very good wife. She had standing there with his eyes fixed • on
sold herself to him. There was no the portrait that had meant. so much
getting over that. She had married a to him. ` Tremendous labor and ex -
man whom she had not loved. At the quisite skill had gone to the making
time of the marriage there had seemed of that picture.
nothing horrible about that. She had Ruth Bradney locked the door: Her
not been in love with any one else; husband had laid a ridiculous and spe-
she had been very poor, and she had cific charge against the portrait. She
had ambitions. Alexander Bradney, a set to work to put the shreds of the
rising barrister, had fallen violently gummed paper on the back. She
in love with her.. She had liked him
had admired his strength of purpose,
and 'his honest. straightforward char-
acter.- She had, not been in, love with,
hiih, but she had -told herself that in
tiine she.' would be in love with, him
-That•was' how,` as a girl of twenty,
she had looked at the marriage five
years ago. Disillusionment had come
at the end of the second year. She
found that she had married •a hard,
brilliant man who really cared for
nothing but success in his profession.
His fierce passion had died away, and
now it seemed to her that it had only
been an incident in his life. The in-
cident was over, and he was his nor-
mal self again—the Alexander Brad-
ney she had not known at the time she
had married him,
"My ambitions have been satisfied,"
she thought as she poured him out a
I second cup of tea and handed it across
to him with a smile. "I have made
my own bed and I must lie on it. I
have only myself to blame."
She was quite clear on that point.
If she could only have learnt to love
him when he had been so passionately
fond of her no doubt his love would
have lasted. She had married him for
his money, and he had given her more
than she had ever hoped to possess.
Already, at the age of forty, Alex-
ander Bradney was a knight and a
K.C. and a member of Parliament.
There was no knowing to what heights
such a man might climb. And even
now she had almost everything she
chose to ask for. A fine house, and
expensive clothes, and many servants,
and costly jewels, and a place in the
country, and innumerable friends and
acquaintances.
"How long can I stand it?" she
thought as she glanced at him across
the breakfast table. And she shud-
dered when she realized that she
might not be able to stand ' it very
much longer -that oneday there
mightbe a scene—probably atbreak-
body needs in better proportions than
any other food. It is especially essen-
tial for its vitamine content. The child
who will not drink a glass of milk
must be won over by making the pre-
paration more attractive.
The milk drinks may be served
either hot or cold. If served hot,
chocolate flavor may be used. When
served cold the addition of a small
worked ofice Will give an a
1 1 v additional
worked carefully and neat y, and half piecewi gi o
an hour later, when she heal completed attractiveness.
her'task, she, stepped back-afew:paces
,1,
:and gazed. intex>tly at .the face. •,.h��,j UnCULE,NT •ST,7'h'IvIER=%St1LADS.
knife had spared the eyes •and the
quantity of chopped onion, the same
of chopped celery and season. Place
the boat -shaped cucumber on a lettuce
leaf on salad plates and fill with the.
mixture. Baste carefully with French
dressing and dust with grated hard-
boiled yolks of eggs.
Tomatoes en Surprise—Wash and
remove seeds from one green pepper
and chop. Peel. one green cucumber
and let stand in cold water. Scald and
peel six 1prge tomatoes. Remove the
seeds and hard core. Chop the cu
cumber, add` it to the green pepper,
add one chopped onion. Season; and
fill the tomato cups with this mixture.
Finish with a dip of mayonnaise.
Chiffonade Salad—With one cup' of
diced celery mix one cup of diced
beets, and one cep of shredded boiled
cauliflower. Season and "place on a
lettuce leaf and baste with French
salad. dressing or thin mayonnaise.
Green Pea. Salad—With one and a
half cups of green peas inix one-half
cup of'diced carrot. Add two table-
spoons of chopped" onion and one
tablespobnfui of chopped green' pep-
per. Add enough mayonnaise to. hold
the mixture together and press firmly
into' a cup and chill.. Serve On a.. let
"Will its-' please 'the •roan " of the tuce leaf; and if carefully removed'
What was. it that had so infuriated `house?" is always the question in our from the cup will stand in a pyramid.
her husband? He had said that it mind when we make a new salad.
was the face of a bad woman. But And it is sometimes with quaking Minard's Liniment' Heals. -Cuts.
that was not true. And her husband: '.breath and wobbly knees that we - _
was no fool when it came to the read -;bring a' new combination in the form
ing of faces. It was part of his of:a salad to the table for fear the An idiot; who never even learned to
fession.
pro
"He told me a lie," she thought.
And then suddenly she understood,
and the color rushed into her white
face; and all her anger 'dissolved like
a mist scattered by a clean, strong
wind.
"It is the face of a woman who is
thinking of love," she said;to herself,
"of a woman—who.is—in love."
She was face to face with the truth
at last She was in love with John
Merrington,
(To be continued.)
Queer. - 1.
Bird—"That's a cherry all right, bit
what a funny looking tree!"
Quite True,
b
fast—a moment when she would rise At the close of .his talk before'la
to her feet and cry out, "For God's Sunday -school the bishop invited que s'
sake, let ine go, Alec. You don't want tions.
ine, and there is someone in the world A tiny boy held up his hand.
who does want me." i "Please, sir," he said, "why
She could imagine his reply, in that' Adam never a baby?"
cold, quiet voice of his. , "My dear The bishop coughed in doubt as to
Ruth,"c
he would say, your nerves are' what answer- to give, but a little girl
all to pieces. We'll go away for the
week -end -to some quiet, jolly little the eldest of several'brothers and 'sla:
place by the sea." And as she image ters, came to his aid.
Med this answer she laughed out loud, Pleasle, sir, she answered, smart-
and Sir Alexander looked up from his ly, "there was nobody to nurse kiln.
omelette with a. pleasant smile and a.
look of ' interrogation, in his small Mina tees Liniment far- Dandruff.
was
grey eyes.
"I was thinking• of my portrait," she
said hurriedly. "Merrington sent it
up last night. I had it put in the
library, with a sheet over it. Did you
look at it?"
"No, Tiro afraid I didn't, Ruth. I
did not come in until after four
o'clock. The House was sitting very
late."
He went on with his breakfast, and
when he had finished he lit a cigar.
ette.
"I'll have a look at it now," he said,
as though there had been no interval
In the conversation. "I only hope it's
worth the money." WHEN IN tortONre stsrr,ric
He held open the door for her, They
crossed the hall and entered the lib-' Rr�_ ►as. twitnt:ariC I Iul;euzn 1
rary—a long Tobin that ran the whole so sitar 5f, West, Near Avenue hood. i ater4,
depth of 'the lionser The pfettile h tCl Y'rrntnrirnf, rzritifli:r<If to °Cauoda, .Srrttxclfiigr;
p - - P' (i iln i 4.11ieraiogyr 1.41""1616
! i1 w5nl,l se'. 24Qibg,,,. 1'11.1 wl
been placed on a le-back{ed sora t1T>1t c7unv, is e,•itl. to s na.� `sunriai, to pat.
loom
seed the` light. The white sheet that Thtj,, cnd Chutdi cart
Lumber is Doubling.
In the past 10 'years the production
of lumber and forest products in Bri-
tish Columbia has doubled. In air=.
other 10 years it will probab]y have
doubled again, This is a natural conse-
. c,uenoe of the depletion of other
forests, The Lake States are largely
cut out, the south has reached the
height of its productivity. Therefore
the centre of production las shifted to
the Pacifle Coast,
masculine portion of the household
will push it back unfinished.
But the most recent lesson that
science has taught us in relation to the
things we eat is that green vegetable
salads contain vitamines, that much-
needed portion in our food that goes
to build up better digestion and bodily
nutrition. These vitamines are what
occasions the farmer to grab the milk
pail in the morning and step off with
a lively gait toward the barn with
energy enough to plow a ten -acre field
instead of lagging wearily along and
half -dreading' the numerous tasks of.
the new-born day. :
Here : are some new salads -using
just the things your garden supplies
you with right now.
Indian Salad—Allowing • one-half'.
cucumber to each person to be served,
peel them and chill in cold water,
Halve and with a sharp knife remove
centre, leaving a shell in the form of a.
canoe, with a wall about, an eighth of
Corrugated Galvanized
Steel Roofing
Direct from Manufacturers to Consumer
WRITE POR PRICES
W. E. DILLON ':CO., Limited
189 - 191 George St. - Toronto
Kelseyiaa-dug
Hea-tin8
The Kelsey warm air gem,
orator will heat every
room in your house. It is,
easy to operate and costs
less for fuel then any
other heating, method.
Pleats both &mall and large
houses with equal satisfaction•
WRITE FOR PARTICULARS
CANADA F'OUNDR'IES eifORbINQ9
C,Mi1tb •
J.AM11A 1 t P>i,Avr
,, . •. tMoCRV14L'h snit,
IY
1444.1E 14o. 84—'23.
speak, had a brain which . weighed
exactly the same, as Napoleon's.
OUR NEW SERIAL
Thlie story of English society
life has never before been pub-
lished in Canada. The mystery
of "The Hidden Hour" will hold
the reader's interest to the final
paragraph.
W'1GLEYS
Takeit home Jo
thekids
Have a packet in
your pocket for an
ever -ready treat,
A delicious confec-
tion and an aid to
the teeth, appetite,
digestion.
f2'
QUBLEMIS
PLANAMMassimaressumagiago
Cornered.
"Mamma, why has papa no hair ?"
"Because he thdnks so much, my.
dear."
"But why have you so much?"
"Because -Go away and do your leas. 1
sone, you naughty boy!"
•IIIIIIbulIIIHIiJIIII IIIIIg1II111i IIIIII IIIc IHflhI111HR,111a
EDDY'S
MATCHES
The leatllizg hotels, slabs
restaure nts,rail,roads
and steamships use EDDY
Matches, because of their
efffciencyand economy
ALWAYS ASK FOR THEM BY NAME
a E.
IIII011114IIII1IIIIIIIIii111Il1Itilt/I 1 IIN1IIIII 11111fU8u•
kCI LE
CHOCOLATE AND:;
TAPIOCA RPM $..
Two of a dozen
"Quic k" Desserts
:Delicious Nourishing
Prepared in a minute
Add milk to the contents
of a package of INVINC-
IBLE Quick Pudding. Boil
for a minute. Pour in a
mould to cool—and your
dessert 3s ready.
At all Grocers
Insist on
MCLAREN'S INVINCIBLE
Made by McLARENS LIMITED, , ^
Hamilton and Winnipeg. 15
if>iiIn• •r at.eee4d`r} .� :sea
;�;ie. i9::;v:. Ni. -. e..:rr'"i•:c;;•;;�;v; <•irti;
Only a few can make a per
fest drive—but there's satis•
faction equal to • it for all of
us in " anis ice-cold glass or
bottle of this beverage.
ull
11 -118 COCA•CoLA c`'oM'T'AN1r
Toronw Moltecal, %lith 'OiX,OtIle0or
:x . +ares i < ...tae s:�+i „'d9. 7.e •a`'. ,om h a ...'K.`'