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Zurich Herald, 1923-01-25, Page 2eareeree " et To Fruit.Cake OV Now you can buy a fruit cake of the kind that you would make at home—and save home baking. —a rich, fruit, luscious cake that doesn't crumble and dry out. —a tender, almost juicy cake with that rare flavor of the raisins and the spice that makes you dike fruit cake. —a .cake that you'll be glad to serve to friends —a prize fruit cake, in fact Ira the most delicious you have ever known. * * * * • These plump, tender, juicy, thin-skinned raisins are ideal for cake. Taste the cake you get and see. You'll enjoy fruit cake more often when you can secure such good cake ready-made. Mail corpee-for free book of tested recipes suggesting scores n. other luscious raisin foods. Just ask your bake shop or confectioner for it—the cake that's made with inns Sun-MaideRaisin Growers t 4 Co-operative Organization Comprising 14,000 Grower Members Dept. N-533-30, Fresno, California. Blue Package CUT THIS OUT AND SEND IT • Sun -Maid Raisin Growers, Dept. N-533-30, Fresno, California. 1 Please send me copy of your free book, I"Recipes with Raisins." ! STREET. -- PROVINCE ea,C11 row Alld you have emit gathere that will not slip out 44 plat* When putting on a atraight •faaing or balding, let • ane edge he aelvago. This saves much time anti basting. The leas perticular •thinga May. he pinned instead of basted. .If you are oareeen, ao put the pins in atilt angles to the liae of 'atitelaing the machine it will peaa over there with no trouble. A. little fancy stitcbieg adds nalcb , BY KATHARINE SUSANNAH PRICHARD Capyright by Hodder ancl Stoughton. to the appearanee of some ottlerwiSe shuttle tenaion eaeuel to eneiv, the morMng, he realized that his sleep aways, the thrashing -in of stragglers, plain looking things. w. /1,14 fich,,s: on CI-IAPTER XXXII. neob 'going, like ene man. There hied tiess to pee 1 had been too heavy for him to know I the crowding of beasts up steefp, eaan y, , arid t the bobble of When 'McNab awakened in the been headlong gallops. atter, break - your maohine, l000en tho lengthen the stitch. Ordinary thread . w lad happened during the night, Pery with mimes and yelping Ind that mach inieht have occurrea dogs, the watchfulness that driving a is used for the teedle. Stamp the inn while he was snorlieg. ° 1mob of wild eattle shorthanded terial and work on the wrong side, Farrel found him snapping and bit- meant; nerves and muscles were This stitching' he,s the ,eppearance of ing like a trapped dingo. His vo, ee , stretched to the job in hand. couching—Mrs. H. R. W," a I ' •raspedfhis inquisitive, suspicious eyes When a halt was made the first from a small arnaunt of 'goods hd master had none of the ale k f a vie- wood fires. The wildest of the scrub - But the Saloon night, the mob was ringed with brush- - When cuttiag children's garneente. were everywhere. piecing is neceseary, piece where tr m.. ai1., otiOUS gamester, and Deixdre's ami- I bred warrigals, broken by the long ming woid look most effective. Cover ability was of a pattern with what he day's steady trotting, hustled up the seam with a bit of braid or ah hadimagdined it the night before. Ile quietly against Maitland's, well-fat- aculea).Davey and Conal ride out at tweed store bea:ts. Conal and the simple design in embroidery work or dawnwith a •craelcing of .whips and black boy took the first watch, Davey a few fancy stitches, as the long aad yelping of dogs to wake the saints. and Conal the second, and Davey and short stitch, or feather stitch, * On, That seeined to negative the sugges_ lthe black the third. beads can be used in charm' ing.effectsa They were going to muster a• cople .Ordinarily the fires flaring against garments for grown-upsl ' e woo yarn ott rtion that they had been out all night. I , of hundred of Maitland's cattle in the darkness were enough to keep the To do punch work by a shortecuti some paddocks near Red Creek, he cattle in a bunch during the night. method, eseea design such Sometimes when a fire died down and rose er butterfly, baste a piece: of said. AS a wild remembered the Schoolmaster had there was a longer gap in the links ibetween the fires, a restless heifer or . use About the tio• Two Kinds of Honesty. I 'With her brother it was different. A certain brother and sister, just, He was an active, companionable and promoted from one school to another,1 sensitive boy who disliked work as found. that among their new school -I much as he loved play, eared im- mates cheating was prevalent. It was, mensely for what the other fellows apparently a point of pride with the, thought of him, delighted in doing a papils -to deceive the teachers as often, good turn for anybody, and desired always to be like the persons he was with, and to do as they did.. He thought it mean to cheat, but he could not think meanly of all the pupils who cheated. Some of them were very "good sorts" in mast things. Then, too, even if he himself dad not cheat; how was he to keep from help- ing others to, when his best friends would ask him the answers to ques- tions and think him a prig if he didn't tell? He tried one day to acquaint his sister with his difficulties. She was horrified, "Why, Tom." she exclaimed. "Do you mean to tell me you'd like to cheat?" Now, that was exactly what Tom did 'mean. He would have liked- to cheat. He felt the temptation. and longed for the comfortable result. Yet he had not cheated. But he stammer- ed and hesitated and felt so ashamed before the bristling virtue with which his sister received. has confession that he never finished it. He dropped the subject as soon as he could, and so forfeited the strong and bracing help that he needed. If only the nature that was so nobly honest had been patient andgentletoo that sisterly opportunity would not have •been thrown away. The two* are still at acih.oal. The aggressively honest gill. still main - takes her honorable oddity, and still wins no one to leer side. The boy still as possible and to invent new ways to do it. Neither of the newcomers yielded to the fashion, but they resist- ed it in very different ways. • The girl, who was of a strong and independent nature, detested the habit, felt a sweeping scorn for all who indulged in it and was outspoken in expressing her disdain. With the few who shared her honesty, she held herself aloof from her mates; she toiled with indignant fidelity at her tasks, never complaining, never tell- ing tales, and accepting with a feeling of exaltation rather than of discour- agement a rank lower than that which her mental inferiors attained by cheating. She was regarded as a person apart, who had strict notions, did not mind work, said sharp things and shot contemptuous glances. Her af- fairs were of no consequence 'to the rest of the schwa. She did not care for their opinion nor they for hers. • no world's greatest industry. Millions of automobiles needing constant Service: millionS of batteries 'and thee to repair; W11110123 of parte to rebuild. 'Ste- inendous opportunities await the trained auto- mobile man, That's Why lt pays to learn the antomobile business,—and learn In Detroit, the mite center ot the world,—the Heart of the Auto Industry where 79% of the autos are made, ltflake$2,000to$10,000Yearly —Have a Business of Your Own Thousands of our graduates are making big money in the auto business. Hunts (Sash. rotating more money than he es - Pe ; Petttgrent (Quebee) appointed In- structor at Teoh. Sohool; 'Collette (Alberta) in business and has all h6 can do; Stedde (Penn.) wag getting $18 weekly, new mak- ing 5100 per Week; Mayes (Has.) saves 5100 monthly- aboVe penses; Johnson (Ohio) jump- ed from "pencil pusher" at , WeelslY to Sato me-. thank) fit $42.51) per week. 1'4\ Hundreds more like them Cotinniete Course -- Endorsed by Big Auto factories Avery branch of the mute business le taughtCoristruotlen, operation, lip-lteen and rePairS of traCRS, traders, farm lighting plants and gas engines, AU teaching by actual practice, sal gutas W ork. Students learn bit stetual factory Thetheds, Big auto fridtbriCS helped outline tint ()Minna and elve our etudonta fullest to-operatien, srlro heartily enderSo our school. Snocief Coarses in Battery' liar*, Tiro /(00.1r. Brazing, Weldius end mnfihinu Shop Pfnutioui Good PogIflonsAWidt OU ad*--Peotorke,. or savor ilitineht, 6 no tufo 6 f nintholf. Thilalgh kiljg 41145eY 4)1 tile e'Se the the ecestamne that mesh aesocia. Xi16-r5t.c.yr 11111 ornyir wow strong paper imderneath, then a piecel Yet by the cold light of early morn- , steer made a dash for it, and the all. When finished cut out linen be tion of having been tricked. What' ing bough, brandish and whack it of eoarse curtain net. Work through ing, he had an unaceountalale sensa- I watcher had to be quick with' a burn- .,.,,, he had not been as wide awake as he grog about the head of the runaway before ' I wit' the girl's smiles and Steve's out paper, leaving net, whic.h-greatY had intended to be, he knew. Ferrer,. I the beast with a meaning bellow and ing very . to cut net. T arl , . careful not e resembles punch work.. This can be roar turned back to the mob again. worked to great advantage in mend -1 sition irritated him. It had been a ing thin breaks in lunch cloths and pretext; his only anxiety was not, to and .Teddy. watching, that. the black, 'when Conal was sleeping and Davey also to cover stains. Work the de -I discuss it any more. He was all fret' stupid with sleep, let his fires _go sign over the stain or hole and cut' and fume to get back to the Wirree. down, and a red bull and half a dozen away. Mrs. R. R. . . •- . Teething would stay him. cows broke through the ring. It looked 1 have a family of seven to sew for, When he was up in his high -seated like a stampede. Davey dashed after sc. I have to use all the shot-cuts1 r the bull. Conal's dog, Sally, alert at speing-cart, there was none of the can. I do very little basting and find complaisant geniality of the night be- the first nal of the cattle's move - Lean make the work look just aaneat;fore about aim. He gathered up his ment, leapt after them. Her long „ he ,V4fRnto Heeeitak, for Paler* steles, in affiliation with 4.14,:tovue sal Allied Hospitals, New CIO. offers three years' Course 'of aanee ins to ming women, having the roe quired education, and desirous of be - corning nurses. This Hospital has adopted the oight,hour system. The pupils receive uniforms of the Sersbel, a monthir anewange and trnveiling expenses o and from New Twat. area' turther nferrns,tion apply •'to the Superintendent. ' reins with a sour smile at the little yellow shape flashed like a streak of as when I baste 1 . • !group assembled on Steve's veranda lightning in the wan light over the I do my patching of eve -day end drove out of sight at a jolting plains. She raced level with the lead - Joe,-"The boys got the mob?" Steve in his hide, wheeled him, snapping at ro . , asked anxiously, his nose and dragging him by it, until The Schoolmaster took off his hat the turned in toward the moil) again. with a sigh. i Davey lashed the cows after the lead - "Had the time of their lives!" he ! er. Sally flew round them, a yellow exclaimed. "It was a big mob—rolling fury, yelping and snappieg. Cored, half-aeleep flung on to his horse, and D ' d 's eyes were still on the laid about him with his whip, cursing. track down which MoNab had gone to He and the black boy had all their the Wirree. work cut alit to keep the mob steady. "I won't say good-bye, Deirdre," he It was a near thing, and Conal used had said, as his eyes rested on her his tongue pretty freely when he talk - for a moment. "I'll be seein' you again ed of it. He had had very little to say soon." _ to Davey, oedinarily. The memory of There had been something in the that evening in the kitchen at Steve's nature of a promise—or a threat—in rankled. It bred a sense of resent - his eyes. ment and secret antagonism which he "There was no time to fix brands," took less pain E to hide, from that the Schoolmaster was telling Steve. might. He -used his lungs to curse "Conal's running these with a couple Teddy and the red steer, but did not When hemstitching- wears out; I Drafted out about fifty calves, clear to say about the cattle or the road. of score of Maitland's store beasts. talk to Davey unless he had something • . '' skins and a couple of dozen cows, put From daven till sunset they rode sil- stitch serPentble, braid* ael'aaa' Pe thein into the Narrow Valley run--- eutly, within a dozen yards of each 1"ril &age' Mis-Taak64'.a7 IleAtIfii4sr.h wants—to do aoxne branding When he other. and lasts a Tong time. ' a ''' ease back. • I thought he ouglinto let When they canie within; easy dis . When I get new iinderwaerarr ,, herria', go ., with the ilajf..doz... en seaub. - tanee a Lon and the Jake settle - two or three times around the. button.= 'hers turned back to the bush, he ments they kept the mob moving all holes on the sewing rnaahiae: ' This touldn't have it; says he .ean take night.- The Snowy was swollen with ee's sleek shoulder 'and laid her teeth clothes on the sewing -machine. I put a patch on the knee of a pair ofover- alis by ripping up the inside leg seam, sewing the patch in place andathen reaming the seam. In making buttonholes in every -day garments, I sew back and forth three eat or for: times, leaving a small space in centre where buttonhole is needed. This is then cut, being careful not to cut the stitching. n In making plain garments I cut out several garments at a time. Then stitch all seams so as to have them ready for pick-up work at odd times. To prevent ripping in tablecloths, sheets, or towels at the ends,, I sew back and forth two or three times in the seine place instead- of tying the threads. _ Canada's IViesOasel- My Forests march from sea to .ea Eternal in their pageantry; rrhe.white-leaVd poplars sup for rain* The birch a maidereghtest remains,' The maple ilarne,s in a lone hour, Ever the pine's a secret tower, Bird and beast do so abound, My lonely lands seem holy ground: Edens at evening waere God stood , And saw His aeries : all were gooda —E. B. °shorn. Mlnerd's Liniment or Burns & Scala. Ivory on Islands. The most valuable desolate lelaada in tb'e world are the Liakova, en the Arctic Ocean, off the mouth of •the'l Lena, in Siberia, They are frost - bound and utterly barren, save for Arctic mow; but they contain such enormous quantities of fossil ivory, that they are exceedingly valuable—la fact, although -uninhabited save for the ivory diggers, and of themselves incapable of supporting life, they pro-' duce a revenue of ES1,000,000 a year. prevents them from stretching or los_ them aleng, branded, with Maitland's recentrains when they came to it; but "It's a bit risky leavin' them there." Saeve's glance wandered in the E- rection of the valley lying to the west- ward between the last line af hills ing their shape.--1V1rs. L. W. R. I have five children to 'sew for, the oldest being five years of age. .1 Flo my summer sewing . in 'the winter when the men are not worleing very hard and don't require the hearty meals that take so much time to pre- pare. I use lots of pins and do very little basting. I do the stitching with No. 40 thread, and instead of French seams lay the edges together and fold over about one-quarter inch and stitch. I find this will hold as long as the cloth will wear. • I make everything' I can with the kimono. sleeves. When it conies to darning men's cotton work sacks, I _crochet arohnd'the hole with knitting cotton, using single crochet and skip- ping every other stitch until hole is filled I use tape to tie childeen's nightgowns instead of maleing button- hales.—Mrs. A. H. S. I think my greatest short-cut in sewing is the plain slipover dress with sleeves and body all cut together. I use an old dress for a pattern.' Cat out, finish around the neck and open- ing first. Sew up the two sides, and arm seams, hem, finish the sleeves with bias binding, put on the fastea- ing, the dress is ready to wear: I put straps on the aide seams an4 make a sash or a belt. The neck can be open- ed down the .front, back or on both shoulders. I fincidethat a supply of cotton tape and bias binding of different. widths Li a great help. I always have a package of safety razor blades that are sharp on only one side, at hand When I want to do ripping.—Mrs. T. C. Dye Old Wrap,Skirt, refrains with difficulty from doing as Sweater, Curtains the other pupils do; sometimes he hi Diamond' Dyes helps his friends when it would be bet- ter for them if he refused. Burt Ms Each package of "Dia.neonel Wes" own Work is still honest, raid Smile of contains direditIlle so simple any his mates are coming to do as he doe, woman can dye or tint her old WW1, hall from love of honesty and half faded things new. Elven if she haS front love of him, Perhaps, as his never dyed before, she Call PIA a rich, mord nature grows with his physical fadeless coley into shabby slcirts, and mental growth, he will be as dreesea; waists, eoate, stoeldage, sturdily and naturally' hone,st as his sweaters, coverings, deaperies, hang- eister and mon sympathetic than she Inge, everything! Buy Diamoed byes with the, wealeneeles of others. ---no other kind—then perfeet being It is e fine thing to have a nature dythig is guaranteed. ,Tast yo Sapealor to common teniptations; bust druggist whether the mittetial you When viable assets itself so vigorously wish tt> dye ie wool er.glia or Whether that it &tithes or alienates the feel., it is linea, cotton or mixed goods. Inge of thoee who ere,lesa hardy trier- Diamond Dyes never streak, spot, ally it links itself with a fault. Com- fade, or run. ' mot honesty eta common lemcilanete " -6 bunch." Conal had set his mind on crossing without delay. He rushed the mob down the incline to the river, and drove it into the swirling stream. Whip thongs swung that shut the shanty in from the long together, ripped and 'reeked in the clear air. • The strug,gling, terrified roll of inland plains. ' "It's a bit risky," he repeated. "But beasts were crowded, with no more than their heads above water, against Conal knows his business. It'll be-all e e the strong currents of the stream right, I suppose. There's nobody eoes until, with rattling and clashing Narrow Valley way but Cameron's horns, they clambered up the bank on men, and they're not likely to be go- the further side. ing this time of the year—seeing the The last days on the road were rains are due. Conaft had a look at taken more easily. The mob went the fences when he was up a coup,e slowly eastward, grazing as it moved, of days ago, didn't he? Though fences and was in prime condition when aren't much good. Seen a wild cow fly Conal handed it over to Maitland in like a bird when she wants to. Good Cooburra, on the New South Wales thing Conal got away before the rains, ' side. Maitland was a big man in the Dan. If the rivers were down he'd 'district, head of the well-known firm never've got through." I,of stack dealers; no difficulties were "Yes," said the Schoolmaster. "It made about the turn -oven When was a case of now or never." Coed had had some talk with him, "And, after all," he added gravely, 1 and Davey and he had loafed about putting his arm out and drawing her hthe town for a day or two, they went to him, "it' was Deirdre saved the' out again with half a hundred poor situation. But I wouldn't have you do beasts from a drought -stricken West - "101 ireutnhe road behind the mob, despite their secret resentment, Long Conal and Davey Cameron had come to the dumb understanding of rcad mates. It did nothing to break the silence be- tween them. Davey yielded Conal an unconscious homage. He did it with grudging humility; but there was no Costal and Dstvey were back in the serve. Notwithstanding his blithe recklessness, his daring and bragging Wirree again. They rode into the township one enthrtaiasm, there was a stern quality, evening when the sun was sinking be. an unplumbed depth in Conal. He en - hind the purple range of the hills and dieted Davey's company, but thera was making a rosy mist of the dust a that in his mind against him which mob of northern cattle raised. one man does not easily forgive an - Dust -grimed and silent, their whips other. As they drew nearer Wirree- curled on their arms, their dogs lean ford, and the thoughts of each took and limping at heel, they passed Mc. the same track, the latent animosity Nab's. They might have been any of vibrated between, them again. a dozen cattlemen who were about the Conal lost no time in getting out of sale -yards that day; but MeNab the township and taking the road to recognized them. the Davey, conscious that it -It Vas those cattle of Maitland's was Conal, and not he, who would that stood between him and his sus- , stand well in the eyes of Deirdre and piciona of the game Gonad and the Ithe Schoolmaster: when the story of Schoolmaster were on. He thought he , the road was told, lingered at Heg- knew the part they played in it, but , arty's. itched for a geese of proofeHe I A brooding bitterness possessed ried to the doorway and stood in it, ;hira. He knew that Conal had wanted chewing his underlie), as he watched him until this deal was fixed up, not the road -weary, vteedy beasts and ' only because he was short of a man their drovers trail out of the town. when Pat and Tim Kearney cleared Coital saw him, out, but because he was afraid how 'Pain' 'ern up and coinini back for , he, Davey, niight use the knowledge a atink in a minute, 1V1cNa.b," he he had told the Schoolmaster he pos. yelled I sensed about some other of Conal's He lost no themes of letting Thad ,cattle dealings. As for himself, Davey think there was nothieg to hide In hiaknew that not only had his independ- nievernente. He returned to the'Black Bull a few moments later, and Davey Went on to Ilegarty's. Teddy, Steee's black boy, and the doge, Watched the Cattle on the edge ef the road. Ootial and Davey apeat few words etoolt other. They went their siep- Provides "the bit of sweet" In beneficial. form. Helps to eleanise • the teeth and keep them healthy. what you did again, dear, not for all the cattle in the world, nor all the money in it." She clung to him "And I wouldn't do it," she sobbed breathlessly. • CHAPTER XXXIII. It was nearly two months before breaking the barrier of Conal's re - aliould go hand in. hand, a, fiah hi the laket of the attune Pre. vents chapped ha n cracked lips, c hi 1 bla ins. Makes your skinsoft,white, clear and smooth. DRUGGISTS SELL zr 06.1tIoun loth atoriiinsai 666611ont 650fitflin tlei moth Caere Xentoelti are lEOPeon l, w yt by Mutual consent avoid- nont• 01 eAt.trni01 —40 Ont 11 000 ,Ier Anita „tog erst re% NA u6 ion of Linn SpeeitS hag tealeatil fitiVe till or cero;iliewlrillonot,,l'Arelt-.L)Trto.reett eaeard ,neeeee,e.eiv... to no. it7" digt yotIC SOMO Short Cats In Sewing, 'When gatheting, ietvicateh the ma - 6 boo. StMt MI6 T.ifhly NU)? tsafig. Ratil thdi eitt Oti " *ttt fdlichlriattStale Automobile School"tit6h c't 611e*Illittvra • • • (Inr1114,it e g tt,82 St/2Auto Detroit Mt*. Stasonatig , abOan tasaiii-emosses ‘' When the 'Cattle Were ltesh, 't,liear had Is indispensable In all cases of platemper, In- fluenza, Coughs, Colds, Heaves and Worms among horsed med. mules, Ueed and endorsed by leading stock farms and veteran drivers of V. B. and Canada for thirty years. Sold in two Sizes at an drug etores. MOTHER! MOVE CIIILD'S BOWELS "California Fig Syrup" is Child's Best Laxative 1 Bilious, Constipated Tongue Shows if Hurry =ether! Even a crose, sick child loees the "fruity" taste of tallith, Fig Syrup".and it never fails, to mice demanded a Joh, but something open the bowels. A tea,spoonftil today of the 'Spirit of adventute, reealeaae may prevent a sick dwd. to -morrow'. 14 nest of consequenc.es, had appealed to constipated, .billou,s, feverish, fretful, Itini in the inooraightmg of a couple of hundred Serllb tattle. He wondered what he would do when the Seheoltnaster and Canal Ana Deirdre left the hills. Ile,knee/ that it abate a the money the cattle had beought 'Would be Ma. He thought in SOTTle 110Ntr line 'of life tor himself. inaY 814 has oom,' Colic, or if stomach is sour, fatigue coated, breath bad, rexinernber good cleensleig or the little bowel is often all that is necestary, Ask your aregiost for genuine "Cala, fortis, Pig Syrup" which has directions that he Would go away froth fOr habieS awl &Admen. of all dgeis South 'Mien got it, and strike oui oat rintoa ob. bottle. Mother! Yell toult asatea.i.eso ° inch Oatt, rattaat trp ate 441*katr1 Mittaird'h Linlineat for Ibtlebt tit COW*. Isvrong their eetiock-evhips,, keeping the , (To be ceathiuttl.) 0 , .