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Zurich Herald, 1938-07-07, Page 2M.akeBeIieve by Ruth Harley. i pp ® e 1 Synopsis; Maris Trevor is discouraged be- cause Rod' O'Rorke spends all his money developing an invention which he hopes will provide an in- come so that they can marry. Maris thinks they should enjoy the present rather than deny themselves for the future. She becomes uncertain of her love for Rod. Perhaps there would be more happiness with someone else . . . CHAPTER XI "No, thank you," she said, and kept on walking. "We needa you. Come, we no hurt yen. Alla we ask is you stop and get farmer give us some gas. Yes?" "Sure?" she asked, knowing as she looked at them that if she re- fused they would make her go with them anyway. "Certainly," insisted the man, while the other evil -looking occu- pant of the ear said, "That's all we want, miss. Can't go much farther without gas, and there ain't any stations around. Some- times farmers ain't so generous, even if you offer them money. But they'd do it for you, I guess." "Well, I'm afraid they'll think I'm a tramp, for I certainly did have an accident and my dress is a wreck." A moment later she got in the car and they started coasting down hill. As they neared the end of the hill, they saw a trim farm- house and slowly came to a stop before it. A Double -Crosser "Now, miss, you go and tell them you want some gas, as you met with an accident, and you want to get to town. Then, after yoti get it we drive you five miles more and let you go. Yes? You understand?" But as Maris went up the path she was filled with a strange mis- giving. What sort of men were these, she had been with? Why didn't one of then go and speak to the farmer? They'd been quite decent to her, put her in the back seat and paid Iittle attention to' her. But every now and then they had whispered together. Once she heard one say, "He's a double- crosser, all right." And later the other man had said, "Well, what would you expect when he's work- ed out this schemes to trick his.. o j father re Then they had been 'silent so long that Maris wondered if they would ever speak again. They did twice—once to say emphatically to her, "Now, remember, when they ask you where the accident happened, you tell them, 'On the long road'." Again one whispered in a loud voice, "Guess young Stan's got the fright of his life, trying to put us off like that. The nerve, letting us do all the dirty work and not even wanting to pay for it, but insisting on having all the profits. Well, we won't let him off so eas- ily next time." And the dark - complexioned man had flasher' his companion an evil glance. Bait For a Trap As Maris walked up to the door of the house, she felt the concen- trated gaze of several pairs of eyes on her. But in answer to her knock, the door was opened just a little crack, while Maris could hear the shuffle of heavy shoes on the floor. "Can you let us have some gas so we can get to town?" she asked. "We've had an accident." "You have?" said the farmer, opening the door a bit wider. "Maybe you'd rather come in and get patched up here. I'II send one of the boys out to the car." Before she realized it, she was inside the house, surrounded by several county policemen. She. tried to back away. What had she landed in now, she wondered. "Don't be seared, miss," said one of the men, "but if you value top Your Child Dont ler constipation dull. that happy smile, Give Steed'man's Powders, the .noild, gentle 'native specially made for babies and growing children. For more than lob years Mothers everywhere have trusted Stecdman'sto keep children health+ fully regular from infancy to early teens. FREE ' Samble and Booklet 'MO.; tri Mothers" on request. Write John wtte(Tm+nr 4: co, Dept, 70 0" Y r '$tt•p'l, Montte.ttl Ui�1 • TEEDMAN S 7eethrngtccerrs POWDERS ook/or the doable ER syobo, ea each Package. szue No, 28—'Z I) your life, tell us the truth, Ilow far have you come in that car?" Maris looked helplessly about her. Then, sensing there was something very wrong with the men she'd been riding with, she blurted out the truth. "We've got them," cried one of the men. "Not yet, young fellow," cried another of the officers. "There'll be murder done if we go out. Now, little girl, I hate to ask you to do it, but will you go back to the car and tell them --as inno- cent -like as you cttn—that we're just having breakfast here and wouldn't they like to come in. Here, be biting into one of them hot biscuits and tell them you'd like to stay." Quickly Maris stepped outside, and, running down the path, did as she was told. An angry scowl swept across the driver's face. "We don't want any breakfast. Plenty of time to get it when we get to the city. Go back and tell them that," The other man looked disappointed and started mutter- ing. He was evidently hungry. As they hung around, undecid- ed, the farmer opened the door and called out, "Ain't you boys coming? The biscuits are getting cold." "Better run along," the driver said to Maris. "We'll follow you," Then turning to his companion he said, "Park the gats here. I guess they're a bunch of rubes. They don't know who they're going to entertain." Safe In the Cellar By this time Maris had entered the house, and the farmer quick- ly told her to follow his daughter to the cellar. "It's the safest place. You've been riding with a bunch of thugs. But I reckon it'll be their last ride for a good long while." "Well," said the farmer as the men approached the door, "we' were just sitting down to break- fast and thought maybe you'd like a bite if you been having trouble with your car. So come in and sit down. We can get the gas after- wards." He showed then into the low-ceilinged kitchen where break- fast reakfast was set. But as the driver of the car looked around, he said, "I think I'd like to wash my hands first." "You would, would you?" cried an officer, rushing in. His two coznpanionns seized the other. `e1, ,you'll be able to get that done in jai'." Swearing in Italian and Eng- Iish, the men tried to wriggle from their captors' aims, but the officer and his helpers quickly subdued them. They dragged them from the house, and shoved them into their car which had been nicely hidden beneath a three hundred year old lilac bush. With the hien safely out of the house, the farmer went to the top of the cellar steps. "Well, Mom, you and the girls better come up- stairs now. That was a pretty smart bit of work, all right," he called. Then as they sat down to break- fast, the farmer told how word had been flashed that a big truckful of silk from one of the nearby mills had been held up and driven away by the robbers. But evidently there had been some dis- pute about the sharing of the booty, and two of the leen had disappeared in a small sedan. The Capture The driver, Taft senseless at the roadside, had finally come to, and reaching the farmhouse hacl sent out his S 0 S to the police. But the car with the archplotters had run out of gas, and evidently tak- en a wrong road, so that when it had been sighted a few miles up the road the police had had time to get the word on the road, and Maris had played her part in their capture. "Well, you were a mighty plucky girl to ride with them thugs, but how come you were on the road so early. in -the rnorn- ing?" "There, Father, Maris has told me all about it," his daughter said. "It's all right, and just as soon as she gets a cup of coffee she's going to call up her folks. She's had her own troubles, too, but I guess they're over now," "Well, well, that's fine, and now I reckon Pei better get out to the fields or we'll never get any work done with all this excitement, for even if it's Sunday the beasts must be fed." But as the man left the table, Maris turned to the farmer's wife. "I wonder if you'd let me call up Patsy now?" she asked; "Of course you may. 'The aze'. right there," and she pointed to tie hall. But as Maris rose frown the ta- ble a sudden blackness seemed to envelope her. With .a cry the farmer's wife rose and rushed to her side just in time to save her from striking her head against the table. "The poor little girl! Quick, Tillie, bring some cold water, and then turn down the bed in the spare room. I guess all this ter- rible excitement's been too much for her," When Maris opened her eyes again she found herself in a cool, dormer - windowed room with snowy white curtains at the win: doe's and a big bowl of flowers on the window ledge. She looked slowly around her. Where was she, she wondered. It was a pret- ty room, but how had she ever got there? Then the generous -bosomed wo- man in the quaint flowered- sprigged cotton gown who was sit-: ting by her side said, "Feeling some better now, my dear?" "Oh, yes," she whispered. "fill afraid I've been an awful nuis- ance to you. I must get home." "No, no, not yet, You couldn't rise just yet, but if you can tell me where your friends are, I'll call them up." "Oh, but that would scare Pat- sy. I'd better talk to her myself." She tried to rise, but slumped back an the pillows agein. "There, my dear, you mustn'ee. try just yet. Won't you let me talk to your folks? I'll -be mighty careful what 1 say—tell them just what you want me to." Lost Everything "All right. I guess you'd bet- ter," Maris said, and told her Pat- sy's number. Then she fell as- leep again. It was late afternoon when she woke, and through the open win - clow drifted in the lazy hum of a laggard bee, and the fragrance of fall flowers. She closed her eyes again -as once more she thought of the fate she had escaped. What a fool she had been! She'd lost Rod, for of course he wouldn't. be interested in her any more. She'd lost Stan. That Was dif- ferent. She was only too glad that she had found out in time what a contemptible cad he was. Maybe, after all, Rowene had found out his real character. She night well he congratulating her- self on her escape. Patsy had been right. Men.like Stan didn't have much sense of honor where girls like her were concerned. She clenched her fists, as she thought of her escape. Then she thought of what her crazy infatuation had . cost. Her job would be gone, for of course she could never go to Fayson's again. She'd spent nearly every penny in her savings account so she could be all dressed up. Now the very thought of the clothes she had bought was hateful to her. Once more she drifted off to sleep. Then just as dusk was Nag ing she woke again, and. stelder -k.. she sat up in bed. The door of .her bedroom was softly opened, and Patsy tiptoed lightly to the bedside. "Maris, honey," she whispered as she bent over her. "Oh, Pat, you darling, will you ever forgive me? I've been an awful fool, and now when I'm stranded you're the only one I could call on." Her eyes filled with tears. "There, Maris, there's nothing to forgive. I'm just so glad you were lucky enough to strike folks like the Dawsons. They seem the kindest people. They're insisting that Jimmy and I will stay over- night too so we won't strike all the Sunday traffic." "And you'll take me home with you, Patsy, even if I'm broke and—" A Criminal "Of course we will, and we're not going to say another thing about it. I knew you never really loved Stan Fayson. You were just carried away by the glamor that surrounded hint. But when you know all that we know about him, you'll thank your lucky stars that you„never went through any mar- riage ceremony with him.” Maris was silent. She could not understand why she had fallen for Stan's love -making, why she nev- er realized till their last ride what the expression of scorn on those lips of his signified, nor what it might mean to her to marry a man who couldn't get along with- out his whiskey. She shut her eyes tightly, as she turned to Patsy, "0h, Patsy, if only I could ever forget all this; if only I'd listened to you!" "There, Maris, don't feel so Dentists recotn end Wrigley's Gum as an aid to strong, healthy teeth, cleanses thetas of food par- ticles, massages the gums. Aids di- gestion, rel ievesstuffy feeling. after meals. tfeips keep you healthy? Take some borne for the children too—they will love it! cs•ss Ontario's Tourist Business Worth $100,000,000 Annually Would Certify Drivers' Eyes U. S. Medicos See Need Of Keeping Close Check On Auto Vision Certified eyes for automobile dri- vers and two pairs of glasses for every commercial motor vehicle op- erator requiring artificial aid to vis- ion is the aim of the American Me- dical Association, It went on record last week as fa- voring vision licenses for all dri- vers. Vision Licenses The commercial driver would be required to pass the standard eye test or get glasses that would per- mit him to qualify. When looking straight ahead he would have to show a 90 -degree scope of vision; be able to distinguish red, green and yellow; be free of "double vis- ion" and night blindness. The private driver would have to pass a less rigid test. He would have to show a field vision of CO degrees; vision impairment through 'being cock-eyed oi' cross=eyed would have to show "co-ordination of eye, mind and muscle." In the Centuries-old "bottle- kickin" scramble in I•Ialiaton, England, nearly 100 inen, rein- forced by thousands of spectators, struggled up and down a hill for possession of a wooden cask con- taining nine pints of beer. Traffic Will Increase, Too, With More Highway Construction and Improved Roads In the North---»ual Highway Sten Best Solution. The tourist business brings to Ontario more than one hunched million dollars a year of new money, according to R, M, Smith, Deputy Minister of Highways. In an article entitled "King's Highways of Ontario," printed in the Canadian Geographical .Tours. nal My. Smith adds: "The province is catering to this class of traffic. Highways are being developed through the north, through lake areas such as Muskoka and Hali- burton, the Timagami and Missis- sagi Forest Reservations, across Algonquin Park, through the Lake of the Woods area, and in many other sections, all of which are of extreme interest and barely dis- covered from a tourist point of view, Mostly From U.S. In developing tourist traffic, the province has kept in mind the possibility of a large percentage of the thirty million tourists to the south of us entering Ontario. Roads in keeping with those to which they are accustomed have been built, and will continue to be built. Each year the mileage is extending further into the prov- ince, in this way contacting these vast areas I have mentioned." He points out that each year since the province first conimenc- ed highway construction, traffic has continuedto increase. He •be- lieves that the dual highway- is EMBROIDERED MUSLIN APRON 351 MAYFAIR DESIGN NO. 351 A darling apron that you will love to wear. It has all the charm and freshness of a garden after rain. Cross -bar muslin is used for the apron itself with plain muslin bands for the embroidered sections. When it is worked and seamed together, the edges are all bound with. bright bias tape. The straps cross in the back and the generous sized sash ties in a pretty bow. Perhaps you can find a muslin with a cross- bar or dots that will match the binding and flowers. The pattern con- tains a tissue pattern of apron, transfer for designs, detail of stitches, color chart as well as complete instructions for finishing apron. Send 15 cents for this pattern to Mayfair Needlework Dept., Room 421, Wilsbn Buildings, Toronto. badly. You haven't committed any crime like Stan there, I didn't mean to tell you," she said as Maris opened her eyes wide and jumped up. (CONTINUED NEXT ISSUE) Probes Canada's Radium Sources Daughter of Radium Discoverer Working Near Great Bear Lake OTTAWA. ---Madame Curie-Joliot, daughter of the famed discoverers • of radium, is at work on ores from Canada's Great Bear Lake radium deposits, it wss disclosed by F. B. Friend of Port Hope, radium phy- sicist who arrived in Ottawa to 'speak hefnre the Society of Chem - Industry. Her objective is the development of commercial mmhocis for the re- covery of other minerals of the ra- dium group, particularly radium D, • Rich have not yet been produced ' lit l riend saki. manus*, 2„*...w.,.....�. Rad:e, wris no fetlnd in the loaf • i;: ,1.1:ated from the ores during the process of extract- ing radiant for medical use. Palma - lure, £lnothe1' also discovered lee i'te curios, i • iikorvise present in Canadian bitch, Lig I need on it commercial St:tyC, Read Newspaper By Glow -Worm Cave in New Zealand Is Lighted By Millions of Them One of the wonders of New Zea- land is the Waitomo Cave in the Province of Auckland. It is rich in stalactite and stalagmite formations and is lighted not by naked lights or electricity, but by millions of glow-worms ! Hundreds of tourists visit the cave every year for a glimpse of this amazing sight, for the insects line the roof and clo, not twinkle. Silence is enforced, as the noise of speech has the effect of making than switch off -a natural protec- tive instinct. Glow-worms and fireflies are, of course, plentiful enough in all tro- pic regions, Where it is sometimes possible to read a newspaper by the light they give. In India "shikaris” (hunters) often stick thein on the foresight of a rifle for night shoot- ing, Fine Feathers Dices arc no longer to be foend in Italy because the great themes() of Alpine and Customs troops, who t'rear a kite's feather in their soft grey -green felt hats, nes led to the practical extermination of the bird. the only solution to this, at least in Southern Ontario. Aside en- tirely frena the traffic from out- side, an increase of some 1,300 per cent; motor car registra- tion within 'the :>-province since 1915 has forced pavement •de- velopment. "well beyond the im- agination of the most progressive.. authorities.":• Household ants A good rule for cooking green vegetables such as peas and string beans, or any vegetable • which natures -and ripens above the ground, is :to` put 'them on to cook in boiling water and leave uncovered until done; root veget- ables such as potatoes, carrots, beets, should be put on the fire in cold water and in a covered utensil to be cooked until tender, Now that the season for long, cool drinks is upon us, it's a good idea to consider ways of protect- ing furniture and rugs from drip- ping glasses. Knit jackets to fit the glasses or use coasters, A cleaning stick may be fixed at hone for the purpose of dust- ing Venetian blinds. Take an old ruler and wrap it several times with a soft cloth, securing it with soft string. This will slide in be- tween the slats easily and prevent the dust ' from , accumulating: Change the cloth when soiled, keeping one cloth washed and ready to replace a second one. Lettuce, watercress, or any green food can be kept fresh for a day or two (even if you haven't refrigeration facilities) by putting them in a pail with a close -fitting lid, or in a paper bag, twisting the open ends together and excluding all air. Store them in a cool, dry place, and a short time before you Want to use them soak them in cold water to which a slice or two of lemon has been added. If the water in your locality is hard and causes white rice to dis- color slightly during cooking, add a teaspoonful of lemon juice, Discolorations on the inside of aluminum utensils caused by al- kaline foods may be removed by boiling a solution of one table- spoon of vinegar to one quart of water in the utensil. If fat in your frying or broiling pan catches fire, a handful of salt thrown into the pan is usually sufficient to put it out immediate- ly. If not, throw on more salt. Leather From Canada Canada and Germany are the largest single suppliers among the nations of box and willow calf leather to the British market. From 1,513 cwts. in 1932 pur- chases from Canada increased to 10,145 cwts. in 1036, falling in common with other countries to 5,989 cwts, in 1037. Instant Lighting • Quick Heating Save 1.5 ironing time with this iron that makes and burns its own Sas. Islo cords or connections, Can be used anywhere. See the Coleman Dealer MOM' you 01 write for details! The Cnlanian Lump and StoVo Company LW. Dapt. WL325 Toronto, Ont. (c.,2sY