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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1945-08-02, Page 7It's C (1, til LOthS ARTHUR CUIIN11NGHAM Cat A'PTER X11 "Who lead—" Roger started to mane, but the smile died a-born- ing, His lips were parted. He stared hard at his aunt and saw go gleam of mirth in her eyes. A sbadow there ,a hideous lurking curtain of doubt. "A moment," he said softly. 4'3-ust a moment! This — this was no play, none of their make -be - here?" "This was serious. We question- ed them. Meridel and Rudi scold- ed them. It was no good. 'He is the one who killed Bonhomme Fri- eet. And he laughed afterward. 1 hate him, hate him, hate him!' My God, Roger I have been hearing that child's voice ever slime, In the dark hours of the night when I waken and realize how old I an and remember you and remember him — him." "They could be mistaken. Youngsters like them—" "They are old, these children of the war — old and wise. Roger, I'm afraid, I've been afraid since that day. I can't think of it — can't bear to. You know how he felt abont those people. He lived among them three years. He was formed by them—" "Not to betray his country! Not to wear their—" "Even the scar on his chin" said the old lady bitterly. "His souve- nir of Heidelberg he called it — a saber cut — they remembered tbat" * "Don't! Don't talk about it!" Roger got up and walked to the window just as the telephone rang softly, handy to Roger's el-. bow. He looked inquiringly at ma- dame and lifted it when she nod. ded. He did very little talking, a - great deal of listening. "Good! We shall see you soon, my friend!" And he put the tele- phone down slowly and looked earnestly, appraisingly at his aunt, "Order that coffee and cognac, madame. You are going to need R." "What —" she spoke through the house phone to Gesner, turn- ed then to her nephew. "Tell me. *he was that?" "Chid Delorme, your confidential agent's clerk. That black devil ]Toilet has skipped. There's a letter in his office there for you — and from what I could gather — not much else." "You mean," Madame sicked up her stick and fingered the knot, "you mean to say that Gabriel Pellet has swindled ale!" for BEATER SLEEP... D16ES71O BETTER AMT / HOTEL METBOFNLE All Beautifully Furnished With Running Water. Rates: $1.50 up NIAGARA, FALLS OPPOSITE C.N.R, STATION What iiek wottits. aid t /Q 10ddknow flyer a 10o��ireeke s et Vete ti't FLY PADS wilt 1t;u rate* * Hien Atmore 5.00 *farts af other ea kllfor? a: do thew stew; Yew 60 XaSSU ai-1141 "I shall go back to the city at once and see what's to be done. I'll get some good lawyer for you. 1 know that you wouldn't be in- terestedenough to come with me." "Why not? It is a long time since I have been away from here. We shall go right after lun- cheon. Perhaps now that we are poor, Meridel and Rudi and the children will forget their pride and come back." The tiny back parlor of the Coq d'or held a gay company that night. The tavern was closed early and the little ones, as a very spe- cial concession ,were allowed to stay up a full two hours after their bed -time. Roger, was their hero. "You must come to stay with us," said Madame, "not just to visit. If I am able to remain there, Meridel, you and the child- ren must return to me. Now, you see, the shoe is on the other foot; it is I who am poor who am in need of good friends and cheery faces around me. You would not leave a poor, helpless old woman alone!" * .* * She sat in the place of honor by Jules Gouion's fireside and be- nignly let Rudolph wait upon her, which he did with obvious plea- sure. "Ah, it is like the good old times, Rudolph," she said. "I fear it was not until you were gone that I realized what a treasure I had in you." "Just as 1, until 1 became a bar- on, madame," murmured Rudolph, "did not know how pleasant is the lot of a butler." The children surrounded Roger and Meridel, questioning Roger, asking him the meaning of the bright ribbons- on his tunic, , beg- ging him to tell them of his ad- ventures in the sky. He waited, as did Meridel, and madame also, for queries, some talk of Bon- homme Fricot, "that good man whom the laughing soldier killed," They knew Rosine and Pol Mar- tin were thinking of that, but something, some childish intuition kept their little tongues away from the subject. "You could not take captives from your airplane, could you?" asked Pol Martin. "Who takes those prisoners? I know: it's the soldiers on the ground. They take them and send them over here and put them in big wire cages. eesner told us that there was a big one full of them deep in the woods beck of Philibert. Roger sat at the fire with Mere del after madame had. retired, 'while Rudolph and Jules Went over their accounts in the little en- closure in the taproom. Roger's dark eyes studied her face shyly. "This is the hour I waited for," he said. "And I pictured it just like this. '.there would be a fire and you and I would sit beside it and 1 wont' know such happiness as never before. To be near you Is all I'd ask, to know that, by reaching out, 1 could touch you, that by bending 1 could kiss your fill:; .' t+he looked nt him, ilu'n a way. "liul but you do not," "No, 1 do not." Int', too, was in - tont 00 the blaze. "The niystir fig- ure that was between nay love and mo"—his voice held now n little of that same wryness that had boon in It whcn he learned of her previous heeling with tho red one ---"it has crys allizcd .into the very solid form of my brother, Michel." "Madame told you about the' picture? "All about it." "And you think?" "1 think with you and with my runt.: it is a thing too awful, too monstrously appalling, to be be- lieved," "nut could ite-could it be? Your brother ---how could he live among them, serve with them—?" "You mean could he get away With it? Yes, he could readily. He was educated in Germany, spoke the language we11, had many friends there. He knew the politi- eel setup and admired some ok the things about it, There! I swore 1 wouldn't talk about this btteinese, laid here 1 iVpoil our fleet ttiomiente together by dwelling On it. floret attrition It again—evefi though i know you •keep hie photograph afrd. —!pray to It." ('r1 tse Continuaed) MYSTERY STORY Ages -old symbols of mystery met when the comely member of the British Army's Auxiliary. Territorial Service, pictured above, went sun-bathing in the desert with the Sphinx as a backdrop. She was on leave from her post in Cairo. HAT SCIENCE 1S DOING Silver Luster Spoons and forks, plated accord- ing to a new British process, re- tain a lustre equal to silver without any treatment beyond washing in soap and water. This' process, called speculum -coating, has been developed by scientists. It- can be ewe o; Al;oaatp pue .cldtuls parldde metal, giving exactly the appear- ance of silver. Tests have shown, however, that spulurn coated metal, which has the same reflectivity. as silver articles when new, tegie- iers 400 percent higher reflectivity in one month's exposure under Identical conditions, Acids such as lemon juice, and beer, have ab- solutely no effect on its silver lus- tre.. Other advantages of the coat- ing oating are that it does not scratch or flake, even when articles are sev- erely bent or twisted. It is ••so tough that an average coating -of one -two -thousandth of an inch is. adequate to give excellent pro- tection. Speculum plating is already be- ing used in. the United Kingdom on a wide range of products includ- ing all types of household goods and fittings. How Cay ,: 1? my Anne Ashley Q. What can I do for an oily skin? A. Wash the face in fresh water to which the juice of half a lemon had been added. Apply this treat- ment once a day. Q. How can I remove chewing gum from children's cothing? A. It can often be removed with- out injuring the material by ap- plying a piece of ice. This will har- den the gum and cause it to crum- ble. Q. How can I make a remedy for poison ivy? A. A little potassium perman- ganate and a little water in. an tit.- cellent remedy for poion ivy. Have solution prepared by druggist. Q. What is a good tooth wash. A, Old-fashioned cider is still considered to be one of the very best tooth washes ever discovered, Q. How can I make the white of an egg beat to the required stiff- ness? A. When it does not ,beat to the required stiffness, add a pinch of baking soda while beating. This also will make it more fluffy and prevents falling if it must stand awhile aftei beating. .. .... .... A Tall Tale of Tall Trees Out in California the natives are nighty proud of their state's giant redwood trees, and occasionally their stories about thein art se tali as the trees thcroselvee Here's one: "Big trees? Why, out our way they felled a hollow tree over a ravine that was too deep and wide to build a bridge across. One day while I was driving through this tree with a trailer I met a big moving van corning through from the other encs, I couldn't back up or go ahead, so I just edged the trailer into a hollow branch and let the other fellow go past," Valuable Wire Tungsten filament wire' for three -watt lamps is drawn through diamond dies to a diameter et 2/10,000 inch at the Westinghouse Lamp Division. A pound of this Wirt, one-tenth the diameter of a human hair, stretches 282 stiles mad costs thousands of dollars to Manufacture. Modern Etiquette By Rooert: Lee 1. When answering a wedding invitation what form should one Use? 2. Should the bread and butter plates remain on the table through- out the entire meal? 8. Is it 'permissible to termin- ate a conversation that has grown too tedious? 4. What is the proper way to point the prongs of a fork when cutting food and when eating it? 5. Is it necessary for one to give a wedding gift to a woman who is being married for the second time? 8. Is mourning stationery with black border still popular? ANSWERS 1. The same form should be used as when replying to any formal invitation, and should be written on the first page of good, white note paper. 2. No; they should remain until the dessert is served. 8. Yes; quiet dignity and tact will succeed invariably. 4. The prongs of the fork should point downwards when cutting .. the food, upwards when conveying it to the mouth. L Not unless the bride is a very close friend.. 6. No, though it is still used by some people. What We Need Today Canada needs reassur- ance that the arena of industrial development will still be open to free enterprise, states the Montreal Star. We stand on the threshold of a new era. We are destined to become a far more numerous na- tion than we are today, and unless free enterprise can have fair play we shall not be able to keep our place in the march of the nations along the road of progress and prosperity. The people of Canada as a people have a keen appreciation of what free enterprise has done to help this Dominion forward. They realize that without it we could never have become the leading Dominion of the British Empire, and certainly never have come to our present recognized international status. The average human thigh bone .can support a weight of 1% tons without breaking. CHRONICLES of GINGER FARM w w By ndoline P. Clarke * s s What a lot of difference it makes on a farm when there is sufficient —and efficient—help. With Bob and young John both working like Trojans we were really able to get somewhere with the haying last week. Given a few more dry days and all our first cutting of hay will be safely stowed away in the barn, Partner has been helping too, coiling most of the time. Son and 1 have both been urging him to take it easy. He pay some attention to us for awhile and then first thing we know he is back in the field again. * * * Just imagine, with all this haying I haven't had to drive the horses on the hayfork once. And believe ere, that has been a great relief to this woman. You might think after all the years I've been at it that I would be used to it by now, yet the fact remains it bothers me more instead of less with every passing year. Just old age creeping on, 1 suppose. * * * Next week it looks as if the wheat will be ready to cut—and next week we also hope to have our first picking of peas from the garden, Yes, they're a little late, but better late than never. You remember we had some rain in the spring that prevented folks getting their gardens in early. However we mustn't count our peas before they are picked because there is just a chance some visit- ing pigs may clean up on them first in — which case I shall feel like cleaning up on the pigs. * * * One morning last week Son and I made a hurried trip to the city —we were back home again in time for dinner. We both had shopping to do but for all we were able to get we might just as well have stayed at home. For the life of me I can't see why there 778 auta�cc(cs The romantic story of "boy- meets-girl," told in a new and amusing way. Stitches are simplest embroidery, gay in bright kitchen colors. You'll have a kitchen full of guests admiring your laugh -making towels, Pattern 77S has 6 motifs. 6% x 7 inches; stitches. Send twenty cents in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern to Wilson Needlecraft Dept., Room 421, 78 Adelaide St. West, Toronto. Print plainly pat- tern number, your name and ad- dress. shouldn't be less of the non-es- sential garments made and a few more of those that go next to the skin. And I also fail to see why a certain amount of synthetic rub- ber shouldn't be reserved for mens'Q women's and children's undergar- ments. I wonder if it would be possible to make an appeal to the powers that be—and :f so, whether it would have any effect. * * * But we were on a trip to the city . . , we traveled along the highway and as I didn't have to- drive odrive I had plenty of time for observation. And my observations were anything but encouraging. We passed acre•: of orchard land .and never in nil my life have I seen less fruit on the trees. It just wasn't There Oni•• in one orchard did l see an cherr:et--and very few at that. Apt les. pears, p:ums and peaches were practically non- existent. Here's hoping this fruit famine is not quite ,, bad in the Niagara Peninsula—at least we have been told that a fifty per- cent peach crop is expected. * * * As for wild raspberries — show me a patch where there are some and I'll be there with a milk pail in either hand. The most we can hope for around here is a few blackcaps. And of, course there won't even be a good crop of honey to fall back on. And then our son comes home from Europe and in response to a few inquiries as to what he would like to eat he replies—"Well, 3! can tell you Mom, you needn't be' afraid of giving me too many- fruits anyfruits and vegetables!" He also asked if he could have some bacon for breakfast. But he has learnt a thing or two since that second day home, especially since he went shopping for himself. • * * Isn't it a strange thing that there should be a shortage of so many things whtn an abundance is so greatly needed? One wonders is it part of the Master Plan. Fruit famine, drought and flood con- ditions are beyond man's control yet they exist to a greater degree this year than most of us have ever known. Even the sugar crop is a partial failure. Surely the picture as a whole is one to which we should give considerable thought — and by thought I don't mean a series of complaints. We suffered little material inconvenience during the European war and if our turn is coming now to suffer a little hard-. ship it is surely up to us to make the best of it and prove that we,. too, can take it cn the chin. British Building New Electric Car A new electric car with record speed range and low operating costs has been specially designed by a firm of English engineers for export purposes. It is used mainly as a commerical delivery- van eliveryvan in cases where frequent stop- ping and starting make the petrol - driven car un -economic, You Will Enjoy Staying At The ST. 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