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Zurich Herald, 1920-11-25, Page 6Tete a Crockery of Put a teaspoonful of the genuine 'or every TWO caps. Pour or Treshly BOILING 'liirater and let it stand for five minute& THE RESULT will he the most perfect flavoured tea you ever tasted 8726 ------........� eter the Ireat (ioes Ho k,e By MAY HOOVER „it'MAW tersesteassekassaseasaneseeseseessrstasatseureaa !'ART III, i service, it troubled no one. They were Mrs. Blaine insist, t taloa at: ideally I eating angels' food! . arranged sleeping porch and Tori beg- 1 When the radiant vision of girlhood, g tl for a pantry "just like Gi trny alio was his once fretful and bored mer. Under. Game skilful guilt, : and fashionable city girl, served that So it happened that the formal ()Ren- ame the b =tngalow sprung the as it • never -to -be -forgotten dinner,. Peter ing of the bungalow was just a year by magic. They :vcre all determined remembered how proud he had been of later than the day on which Peter it .hou1:I be formally dedicated Ian her Alen she was a..tiny girl and Labor Day. Sara and her Mother ' stood on the stair atep every evening were Granny's aesh tints in cooking , to "say pieces" before being tucked for the carpenters and S:;rr, rapidly in bal.,And now, when she lightly ed to welcome him. learned Granny's culinary secrets. kissed hm on,the back of the neck Granny and Grandfather were on When Tom was not helping, with the! and,io said: `'Isnt that chicken simply the verandah when they drove up to bungalow or the work in the fields, lie de- :cns, Daddy clear. he felt the the bungalow. Radiant and breathless, s (ticct ' ,to Earn! papers and cow same emotions that he had felt then. I Sara rushed up to them and. hastily et: ,,i c s -a Bess De Iie1 Aagie, the The family had planned to go back 4 cow of net:Iona] fame, was Toni s „nye each a peck of a kiss and told to town by the first of October but the , them to come quirk to see the chick - founddelight. Onc day Grandfather young folks coaxed and ,it was finally ens. She and Tom were just getting the lad nfeetionate'.y petting decided to stay out until Thanksgiving them into the brooder house. They the beaulful silken -seated thorough-' and then Peter G. could came out for must see the garden, to& bred and leneed to say to the bay:I another week and take them all home and then the happy family group Lad. the cow is yours," but the tune ; with hint, wandered down to theacture to see was not yet ripe for such a gift. Tom , So once more preparations were the cows and Tom threw his arms; tons, and their estimated value is Ivas khetb't`r.ths to tun all the farm ma -I made for a great dinner. This time about the neck of Bess De Kol Aagte $1,330,033,'50 --at pre-war shipbuilding chines. The tractor was easy fcr he the celebration was to be at the old evhile Peter G. silently thanked heaven) rates. With their cargoes, the ships questioning eyes of young manhood. "I loved hint lad, and I never loved anyone else. And he loved me and no one else." Then Ale lifted the veil that the lad might see and know the sweet story of unspoiled youth. When the story was told, Tom reverently kissed her and started to tlhe village. _Minnie opened the door to him that evening and in a flash she knew that her "little girl" was a child no longer and that this boy -man knew it too. "I do like you, Tom," said Jean frankly to him as they sat eon' by the fire, "better than anyone I know. But can't we go on just as we have been and learn to know each other better?" And Tom was forced to be content with that. So it came on spring and in vain Montreal City called the 'young folk. Sara and Toni were to have the,"entire charge" of Grandmother's chicken business uncler supervision! They weft fearful lest the incubator would not hatch out the chickens for them, and when the fluffy- white balls began to come out of the shells, their ex- citement knew no bounds. When garden time came they could hardly wait to plant the seeds and watched almost every hour of every day for the first tiny green shoots to push through the warm earth. Early in the morning, Granny and are would garden while the Wren milked, and as they worked they grew closer in spirit. Mary would not leave Peter G. until he could leave too—near the first of July, she wrote, and oh joy! he was making all plans to stay for the sum- • History of Angels. Fla Angelico was the first painter :who ventured to•depict angels of the gentler sex. This was deemed a bold and uusrl• entitle innovation by churchmen of hi's time, inastnuch as it had always been understood that there was no such thing as a female angel. As a matter of fact, there is no authority for lady angels except in art. Modern pictured angels, however, are nearly all of the female persua- sion; and it will be uoted that usually they are blondes. But the archangels are invariably represented as of mule sex. • Among all the celestial hosts, only the seven archangels are known as individuals and by name. These, as named in the Bible, are Michael, Cia- briei, Raphael, Uricl, Jophiel, Channel and 7adkiel. Michael is the captain general and leader of the heavenly armies. It was he who conquered Satan and drove him with his rebellious legions, out of Heaven. He is understood to have been in command of the band of angels who, in obedience to divine orders, performed the work of constructing the universe. In painting he is repre- sented with a pair of scales, which ho will use on the day of -judgment to weigh the souls of the dead. Gabriel, the angel of the annucit- ton, has in his charge the celestial treasury. Raphael is chief of the guardian angels, whose business it is to look out for the welfare of man- kind. L'riel is the regent of the sun. Jophiel is caretaker of the tree of knowledge; and it was he who drove had come back. This time he came Adam and Eve out of Eden. Chamuel with his wife, who was his comrade was the angel who wrestled with Jac - and companion, and his children wait- ob, and it was Zadkiel who stayed the hand of Abraham when about to sacri- fice his son Isaac. Salving Sunken Ships. Between 8,000 to 10,000 ships, of which nearly 6,000 are British, it is estimated, are lying on the oceau bed. These sunken ships are reckoned to account for about 15,053,786 gross hurl learned to drive his father's ear I farm home and Granny, serene and for -the lure of the farm. but the binder needed study, and ea :`spry." had never enjoyed prepara- The old moon must have felt'pretty proud boy was he, during oats harvest,' tions for a big dinner more than this. fine that evening when she spied the when one never -to -be -forgotten day,1 Thanksgiving evening' they were ,all group on the• verandah of the • bung- ' drovebinder t d theopen fire There had been d heard their.plans. light= all to nothing! s each is engrossed with thoughts too away a tear land there is small below the sea are worth more than five billion—experts put the figures at $6,021,513,400 roughly. There is need for the ships as well ]:e the binder to cut ten acres t around aloes an ear summer ,p an . of cats. It beat the city anti its white one cf those eonfortable silene•es whenas their precious cargoes to be raised, More than once -the saw Granny wipe � donut that the sal - 4 ~deep friendship sprung up be -1 deep for « wards. Suddenly Toni tween Sara earl Tom and ; Minnie's growled: I am not `going. hack to children, George and Jean Reid, and town—if Grandfather and Granny will many were the picnics and rides and let me stay and work -or them this homey comfortable times they had at I winter! Say! Mayn't I?" one house or the other.- • ( Before anyone could speak Sara To Sara and Jean was given the spoke up. "Well, if Tom stays, I guess privilege of buying the dishes and all I can stay, too, so there!" kitchen acce. eeties for to bungalow. There was laughter and discussion, They devoured several volumes on up-, and the old homestead won. They shut to -date household appliances, read all' up the bungalow. Mary went back to the advertisements and finally called Montreal to make company for Peter in the '.'ounty Home Demonstration G. in the big city •home, and Toni and Agent to help then with the kitchen,' Sara moved over with Grandfather which wa- to be electrically equipped; `and Granny. Minnie happethed to hear of a set Tom slept .in the little room under of blue dishes, a century old, which the eaves where Peter G., not yet dub - was to be srld at public auction some bed Peter the Great, had slept and miles distant. They attended the sale dreamed of future achievements. and captured the coveted prize. 1 Tom's dreams were all of farm man - Granny gave them a famous blue- agement and Sara's all of hon..eniak- andl-whits! linen coverlet that had been' ing. woven by her mother and that was to I Many were --the evenings Jean and cover the couch en the dining porch. George joined them while they popped The kitchen was enough to give joy corn and cracked nuts or swapped to the heart of any housewife. Granny yarns or took turns reading aloud. insisted upon just one thing, a "cam-, Granny was a wonderful hostess and fy" rocker by the sinhniest window,; she er Grandfather were always ready cushioned in delicate blue cretonne, a'. with a story or book that just fitted in.. thing of joy. I Many an evening also did Tont and Labor Day brought the climax of Sara spend in Minnie's home and if the summer's work. The bungalow Granny noticed as the winter wore on wa:s complete, even to the screened -in that Tom's letters to a certain girl in porch. Peter G. was coming out for Montreal were growing fewer in num- the weak and Jean and Sara, with the ber, she said no word. boys to help, were to serve a dinner One moulting Tom came from the • entirely of their own planning and barn and dropped down in Granny's cooking, however much the Horne Demon- stration approved of that up-to-date kitchen, it i:, absolutely certain no kitchen rocker and blurted out: "Gran- ny, how did you know that Grand- father, out of the whole world, was the one man you wanted to marry— Domestic Se!enee teacher eouid have and that you would never get tired of sanctioned the Labor Day mems, from him? Tell me, honest to goodness, the st:an;ipoint of dietetics, but sea - Granny! I've got to know!" ROMA as it wee with love. and loving Fearlessly Granny looked• into the Rem diied stover :gid by Accident It was simply through the mistake of an assistant in filling a bottle with Weal instead of anise oil, that Pro- fessor Fraenkel discovered a prepara- tion which absolutely destroys the in- sect which carries the germ of spotted fever or typhus. This is by no means t1i only case of al rano l.t discovered purely by ac - c -d elft. svisiti�tg an elderly parishioner whom he had nut seen for some time, the rector of a Norfolk, England, p l i :h, was astonished to find that the lard gentleman, who previoualy had possessed a pate as shiny as a billiard bull, new d1splayed a fine crop of hair, rhe. -rector very naturally inqulred l t.w this seining miracle had come thea,., awl wee Informed that it was nee result. • f ❑ certain ointment for ri1 enma.tisul 'Yen t c, ;air,' iici the old fellow, "I have lheunrath-nh in my leg, and after 1 r, hleal the ointment on my leg I w -Lied in3• heads on my bald head. Sera the hair began to grow, and now, aaita'r being 1 1 for thirty years. %use a /Me Cheat again." The remedy, it is said, has already been put upon the market under an- other name. The use of snake poison in certain skin diseases was first proclaimed to the Medical world by a Brazilian scientist, Dr. de Moura. Happening to visit an Indian village, he saw there a man who, by marks on fins body, had evidently„,,suffered from a peculiarly terrible Lorin of skin disease, and one regarded aa incur- able. Yet the man was apparently to good healtr. He made Inquiries, and the sufferer told him that, a year previously, he had been dying from this disease when he was accldentally mitten by a pit viper. This started Ile Moura on meal - mists with snake venom, whieh have same proved to be of great value in many .:kin diseases, and which, it is said, will even arrest the progress o1". leprosy, Professor Rontgen's X-B.ays, ntte of the greatest benefits ever conferred ' on suffering man, afford still another wnataihce of accidental discovery, acv , �engineer will be kept busy for "Our own our very own, Father's'. age helice, and "mine!" the dear old lady was-" thinking: "The best has come, the lasts• Ships of no less than 2,000 tons can of life for which the first was made." 1 usually be raised bodily by means of Mother knew her Browning. pontoons; ships above such a nark There was nothing much more left 1 require often more ingenious handling. to be discussed, Sara was saying,; they pontooning is employed whenever had thoroughly covered everything possible for salving sunken ships; the .that needed the consideration of the, second method is for ships to be family. But at this point Toni cleared ramped and floated, which means that his throat and after a gulp or two: p "Well, there are a few things left. divers roust go down, locate holes, and Jean has promised to be my wife. On mend them with plates, before the one consideration. She loves me but i ship is ptunped free rrom water and am to make the soil make us a living raised again. In a tined method coni: if she marries me. She absohitely will pressed air is used to force the water not marry a man who gets his money out of the ship at the bottom of. the from his father. And she's no eityite. ocean. There you have it—and I want to say right here that I intend to marry her!" An American has invented a sal - Peter G. got hip and r ith his back vage submarine, which can have its to them walked to the edge of the ver- door open below water without letting andah. He felt like "Peter the Great" water into the ship. A European sale for the first time in his successful life. vage company, too, have a patent un - Grandfather laughed aloud: "Bully for der -water ship which carries -several the girl! She has brains up under divers, and is a complete repair shop those curls of hers.' Granny sat still fitted with telephones and search - with closed eyes and a Light on her lghts. face. Quietly his mother reached over and stroked the hair boyishly flung back from Tom's brow. "Well, lad, we could give the money away, I suppose, if it is going to be any hindrance to you," Peter G. said, rejoining the group. "I should surely like to see you get the girl. She is just right!" "'Pell, folks, I have been thinking a lot, though I lave not said anything about it—for really I had no right to say ani -thing before, for Jean. only made me her little speech last night. But here it is: If Grandfather would and you would, Dad, I should like to have Grandfather .have me partner with him, that is, if you would stake me, Dad, for my share. I'll pay back, honest, I will!" It was too much for Granny. She fairly ran over to Peter G. and crump- led up in his arms. "No, no! I ant not going to faint!" she cried, gurgling between tears and laughter. "I never did. such a thing in my life and I do not intend to begin now, My cup of happiness is full. Don't anyone say anthing more to- night. I can't stand it! I wanted all our folks on the farm and --I've got 'earl!" But Sara had oae more word to add: "We could give them this bungalow for a we:ddirg present, couldn't we, Dad, and then we could build another one for ourselves over on the other side of Granny, you know. I am so glad we had that tremendous fireplace put in. I thought there'd be plans and aren't they glorious ones?" (The End.) Doing For Others. "If you want to be happy, Begin where you are; i)on't wait for some rapture_ That's future and far; Begin to make others feel joy ate and glad, Andsoon you'll forget That you ever were sad." titnard'a I.!nirnent Relieves Colds, Eta Cloves Once Used as Money. In the Molucca Islands cloves were once used as money and at a much later date bitter almonds were so used in some parts of India. Minard's Liniment For Burns, Etc. • ICY' DANCE ()R rR TOONTO to be the best In Canada. Any number of musicians desired. Write, v,'ire or phone Al. Manley, 65 Ozark Cres., Toronto, for open. dates, Road Bugs, a Pest. The "fiivverette," or, as it is other- wise called, the "road bug," is the newest thing in automobiles. Already it has achieved popularity in Europe. It is hardly bigger than a boy's toy wagon, yet accsonmmodate% one person, and in a public garage the little ma- chine cern be put into pigeonhole com- partments along the walls, one row of them above another, the higher pigeon -holes being reacted by an in- clined board. A "road bug" can be rue by a child. it is driven by a storage battery, and has a speed of eighteen miles an hour. For mealy purposes it may replace the motorcycle with sidecar. BUY "DIAMOND DYES" DON'T RiSK MATERIAL Each package of "Diamond Dyes" con- tains directions so simple that any woman can dye any material without streaking, fading or ruining, Druggist has colas card—Take no other, dyer CANADA'S OCF&. WTO OCEAN SHA PLANS FOR ROAD FROM COAST TO COAST. Montreal to Vancouver Route Nearest Approach to All. Canadian Road. Despite the tremendous influx to Canada every summer of thouaands of American tourists (many by automo- bile) and that the returns from tourist traffic are estimated by the executive secretary, North 'West Tourist Asso- ciation, to eonstitute the Dominion's fourth principal source of revenue, Canada pos,_eases no trans -continental highway, in contrast to 1Le seven separate coast-to-coast systems exiet- ing in the United Stelae, :although Canadian highways and muter roads are admirable ones and receive con- tinual Government and nhuninipal at- tention, and are especially well mains taiued in such holiday -seeking centres as the National Parks the playground of the Rocky Mountains, ;ins, the Eastern Townships of Quebec, and the sec- tions served by the Toronto -Hamilton „nim eaeoa.: and Montreal -Sherbrooke highways, there has been no single system whereby the traveller yen journey throughout the whole Dominion. The • project wars mooted and riz'enuousiy advocated 'by the various provinces under different statues before the war, was shelved in the stress of hostili- ties, proposed again as a. permanent Canadian national war memorial,. and is now likely to carne into being very shortly. The King's international Highway. The Iatest project which seems like- ly to be adopted is that of the "King's International II1ghway," the shortest and most feasible route between Montreal and W'anc t i, and the near - sat approaeh to tot ail -Canadian high- way. This ban been ntepped out and surveyed to hose through Ottawa, ':1lattawa. North Day, Sudbury, Sault Ste. Marie, Duleth, Winnipeg, across the prairie to Macleod- Crow's Nest Pass, Fernie, Cranbrool, thence to Spokene, Seattle and \"anclauver. 'The value of a national motor high- way across Canada to the Dominion,_ as well as to tourists from •other lends, can lie well appreciated from the, tact that in 1919 the registration of oars in the Dominion neared the 400,000 mark, showing 57,000 new car ops nsrs, and the number is expected tib.,. year to re.^•.cit the half million total. 3,370 Miles in Length, The King's into national Highway, which would be x,170 miles in length from the Canadian metropolis to tilt Pacific coast city, runs an avohage.01 200 miles north of the "Yellowstone Trail," and 600 miles math of the "Lincoln Highway." For 1100 miles the northern route runs close to the Great Lakes, receiving their mitigat- ing influences on the ,summer climate, Tho Canadian route will have this advantage to 'offer transcontinental motorlets over the National routes of the United Staten, that while the routes across the line inevitably, for some portion of their distance, tra- verse a sandy, desert -like country, at once uncomfortable and lacking scenic interest, the Canadian rotate has, in its every mile, something of iutereat and attraction, the country through- out being productive • and naturally 2 adorned. How Plate Glass is Made, The cast plate -glass of which hair rocs, shop windows, and sucll things are made, is prepared from the whitest sand, ba'olien plate -glass, soda, a small proportion of lime, and a much smaller amount of maganese and co- balt oxides. • The glass, when perfectly Welted, is poured upon an Iran table of the sire required, and the thickness le re- gulated by a si,rip et iron pleeed down each of the four idea of the table. Immediately after it I:; peered out, the molten eubstunce hi flattened. clown by an iron roller, whieb lewers the glass to the thickhiees o,; the straps at the sides. It is then cur clod, or tem- pered, for several clays, efter which it is ground perfectly level, ;Ind polished to transparent brilliancy. The first plato-r.:lass was 1:l d.1 In 1688, nt S;t. Picardy, in Fiance, where the process was foiled out by n11 aci'i- dent, as so many other fnl t.:rut methods in manufacture 'have boon discovered, where there acme a e eyes to see the accidents ant minds: ie apply them, or the lessons they teuz,h t, to the xidvanee of art or India:try. '.Phis ear'' V, 114„tt Cru,l tai Ilungary. ancd Belgians are ninety-one per edit. of lest year's t: edpet, lb itch t'f CEDAR SCENTED Absolutely moth -proof and wonder - frilly handsome pieces of furniture. Direct from manufacturer to you. Write for free illustrated literature. Eureka Refrigerator Co., Limited Owen Sound, Oat. COARSE AL L N D SALT Balk ia'loti "'"sORONTO SALT WORKS TORONTO FH C..1. CLIFF There's a Bob Long Glove for Every job la•iaeers Riggers lrril euica Liu ) ireuicn Itleetricinns rtretghtittullela ;;taucMeSon' ltriddgemeu Plumbers 'Riveters liricklayers Linemen Carpenters Smelters Farmers Moulders Rancltars Miners Track Drivers Chauffeurs if your Glove is not listed here, ask your dealer B LONG UNION Mersa GLOVES Made by skilled workmen from strongest leather obtainable — soft and pliable. R. G. LONG & Co., Limited Winnipec TORONTO Moatreel Bob Long Brands Known from Coast to Coast II zt Have Your Meaning Done Ey Experts., Clothing, household draperies, linen and delicate fabric; can be cleaned and made to look as fresh and bright as when first bought. Cleaning; and Dyeing Is Properly Done at Parker's. It makes no different e where you live; parcels can' be sent in by mini or express. The salve care and attention is given the work as though yeti lived in town. We will be pleased to advise you on any question re - girding Chaining or Dyeing. 'WRITE US. , arkers JyarkS Anted 7S1'Yorig e St, Toronto �..;. �r�•�rrr,� �a-,ur:mc's�.+ectwwar+sat�,ars� ” After four years of capes eatiing a Florida man has sutreecled in mek- hig newsprint paper from net' •o enw- g rass. i•