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Zurich Herald, 1942-01-08, Page 3rf YEAR-ROUND RESORT HOTEL ST1E, ADELE EN HAUJT P.Q. QANADA WINTER HOLIDAY Located high in the Imurentinns, this luxe:• Wes hotel with new ad- ditions offers you the nrasinttun In hoilday pleasures. Ski school ski -tows . , . flood -lit bilis . • apnciolla sun - decks and dancing in the Terrace Room. Re- stricted. Write for biers., rates and reservations. nam SEROAL STORY IST WaSIVIWIJAVAPIMODUCIAZINICIPINLIMCSINISINUARAIMOIAWIMIS PS I FOG BY EUNORE COWAN STONE SYNOPSIS When Deborah enters her first class, she finds the strange young r,an there, He Is Stephan von Thalmann. She finds herself want ing to defend him when others resent his German birth. Even in war, it is unfair to condemn him. Angela calls him Storm Trooper, says she has discovered he is an officer in the German army, has's( title, estates. Deborah is uneasy as She keeps her first date with Ste. phan TIME FOR ROMANCE CHAPTER. 1I1 In spite of Angela's dire hints, that first evening with Stephan ;proved entirely uneventful. Except that he seemed to know all the best places to eat and dance and to have unlimited money to spend, it might have been an. evening with any American college boy. Before long, few evenings passed that Deborah and Stephan died not , dine or dance or swim or go over their class notes together—or per. haps just walk for hclurs, some• times hardly talking at all. • Without touching her—except in dancing or helping her with her wrap or into a car—without a sign of love -making beyond his ingen- uous pleasure in being with her, he somehow managed to make their casual companionship more .exciting than any other man had ever made a violent courtship. Deborah hardly understood why, unless it was that each time you were with him, you were sure something was going to happen; and when it didn't, you were equally sure it would next time. Angela kept up a running fire of gossip and warning.. "You're certainly causing a sere •cation," she said one evening as Deborah was dressing to go out. "How so?" Deborah asked light- ly, wondering if she ought to wear the white and silver frock again SO SOOn "They say that halt the females on the campus have been trying to get your fair-haired boy, but he can't see. any one but you. I sup- pose"—Angela's eyes narrowed with friendly malice"that ire picked. you because you're the pure Nordic's dream of the ideal haus- frau, with your yellow hair and that incredible skin of yours. "Of course, I can't help wonder- ing how long you'd keep your gold- en, cern-fed look on a bullets -in- stead -of -butter diet. But no doubt, marrying into the ruling class, there'd be no trouble about bread- lines and that sort of bother. . Take niy advice and wear the white ,and silver, Debby. It makes you look like 'Isolde' in the moonlight scene." "Nonsense'." Deborah laughed, furious with herself for flushing. "Anyhow, I don't believe he's a Nazi. You know perfectly well they aren't all, over there. Lots of them hate that sort of thing as much as we do." "You don't imagine his taking a course in poetry is any argument that he's above dealing out a little frightfulness now and then, do you?" Angie teased. "Those Nazis can be as sentimental as moonlight and roses about mothers of ten.. and ?airily life, and kick tar out of a few hundred miserable non -Aryans in the same breath." "You're getting to sound more like Sani Lindstrom every day, .Angela : , . Anyhow, neither class- ification fits my ease. I'm neither non -Aryan nor the mother "of ten." "Don't boast. Angela grinned her mocking, gamin grin. "Of course you may never even have been kissed yet for all .1 cah prove..But I have a hunch you're going to be before this evening's over -unci that it's going to be a right work- manlike job. I was watching the lad while' you gave your report to- day. As a scholastie effort, it wasn't so hot, if you ask me. But Mlle being on .your lips as if yon were Flagstad singing 'the 'Llebestod'," "Ile was probably making nates on ley distinguished Cape Cod die - ACL value i•,'750,U0, and cash awards for original n 1SlCa1 composi. Lions. Canadians of either r sex under 22 years on March 1 1942, the closing date for entries. Junior Division open to com- petitors under 10 who do not qualify for major prizes. For. entry forms and full in- formation apply CANADIAN 1'illib'ORM:1.N(.a RIGHT SOC- II.TY LIMITED, rtoyal Ban]( 1(ulidint„ Toronto, tion," Deborah laughed, catching up her evening bag and hurrying out as a bell rang downstairs. Nevertheless, undressing, hours later, she was a bit piqued at hay- ing to admit to herself treat the fact that she had not been kissed was not in the least due—as it had often been with other men—to her own adroit handling of a difficult situation ... The situation simply had not arisen. No doubt, she thought wryly, he was after all ;lust another earnest young foreigner interested in poI' Jailing up leis English small -talk. . Thrifty people, these Germ- ans. Por after a 'mon'th of almost constant companionship, she knew ittle more about Stephan than she bad guessed in the beginning, She did know that he could laugh and kick up his heels as irrespon- sibly as any American boy of 24 or 25; that he was surprisingly well informed on a variety of sub- jects; that he had an insatiable curiosity about .American institu' tions; and that he was amazed and enraptured by American slang, which he used constantly—often with devastatingly comic effect... When he and Angie chanced to meet, he huug upon her words with the breathless reverence of a dis- ciple in the presence of a great master. Yet under his almost reckless gaiety, his enthusiasm about all sorts of queer things and an un- failing courtesy and consideration beyond his years, Deborah kept stumbling upon unexpected walls of reserve, as if, beneath the light- hearted boy he seemed to be, there were another man—older, harder, perhaps even a little ruthless: At such times, Deborah remem- bored with an uneasiness she never entirely understood, her troubled impression of that first evening in the fog—that of a man eager to crowd all the happiness of a lifetime into one short space of irresponsible gaiety. It was late in the term.when she first began to guess where all this was leading her. That was the day when Stephan was late to class. It was not until she saw Angela's eyes watching her with veiled amusement across the seminar table—and the page in her CAM notebook, inscribed only with meaningless doodling instead of Dr. Brooks' trenchant comrnents on Ring Lear—that she realized how feverishly all her attention had been centred upon the door through which, at any moment now, Ste- phan ought to come When atter an interminable age, the door opened, and he did come in, she found herself caught up in a wave of relief so waren and glad that she could only tilintt confusedly: What has happened to me? . I mustn't let it matter so much. -- just that he is here, sitting beside me. After all I shall probably never see him again after this spring . . I neves intended it to mean so much as this. It was that night, while Deborah, comfortable iu'pa'amas and mules, was putting the finishing touches to a term paper, that Angie earpo in from an evening at the movies. She sat down on Deborah's bed without removing her hat. "How was the picture?" Deborah asked absently. "Ori, just another 'Boy -Meets - Girl'," Angie said. Sbe yawned and :-added with elaborate casualness, "But there was a newsreel that might have interested you," Deborah glanced up, startled. Angela's eyes were fastened upon her face with that wide, innocent attention from which Deborah had learned to expect the worst. Ari- gela, obviously, was bursting with news• --and all of it had. "Yes?" Deborah got up, and going to the caressing -table, picked up a jar of cleansing cream, wondering why her fingers were suddenly cold and trembling. .. "Remember," Angle was going on, "that Bunch meeting that was broken up by a riot last week?? Well, they showed. a • picture of before theolio that just be. re police c And who do you suppose was there right •in line with the camera.'?" Deborah stood very still until she was sure her voice was quite steady "It eollldle't have been handsome Adolf, in person, I suppose?" she was able to ask lightly. "No? Mt right --I'll bite." • (To be Contillneil) Clever Students Win Scholarships $50,000 Worth of Scholar- ships Awarded by University of Toronto This Year Opportunity for gifted young people throughout the Province of Ontario to obtain a university education is provided by a wide- spread system of scholarships. 'awarded annually by the Univer sity of Toronto and its affiliated colleges and faculties, These scholarships, together with bursar- ies and loan funds, make it pos- sible for specially talented stud• ents to continue their education after matriculation, almost regard- less of their home financial condi- tions. Scholarship awards of over fif- ty thousand dollars were made to students who matriculated from the secondary schools of Ontario • last Tune. Among recent graduates of the University was a scholarship stud- ent, who came about four years ago, from a farm. near Stayner, and who would have been in line' for a Rhodes Scholarship if the war had not intervened. Another graduate of high standing came to the University, not many years ago, on an $800 scholarship from ILenora, at the extreme western end of the Province. In the 1941 scholarship list is a student from Parisians May Lose Historic Monuments Parisians fear the Eiffel Tower, the Vendome Column end hand- rods of other historic monuments may' be reduced to scrap for the German war machine, the Daily Mail's Madrid correspondent said. Paris, he said, is ringing with the blows of sledge -hammers which, under German orders, are destroying all bronze monuments to help to make up for the short- age of raw materials caused by the losses of the Russian cam- paign. Household Hints To make linoleum look 'polished without doing the hard work, wash it in very hot water to which has been added soap and a large table- spoon or more of floor -polish. There will be no slipping, but the Hale will be shiny; even old ones respond to this treatment, As you finish each finger of a glove you are knitting turn it in- side out and leave it inside the glove. Having it out of the way, the other fingers are easier to do. Coconut macaroons can be quickly made by stirring into a , tin of condensed milk as much de- siccated coconut as the milk will take up. Bake in a moderate oven till light brown. USEFUL CROCHETED 811 � Lia `- IBS FOR BABY r9) )11' Little time is required to create these crocheted bibs for baby, making ideal gifts for the layette. Pattern No. 811 contains list of materials neeuee, illustration of stitches and complete instructions for making both bibs. To order pattern: Write or send above picture with your name and address with 15 cents in coin or stamps to Carol Aiines, Room 421, 73 Adelaide St. West, Toronto. Red Lake, in the mining district of Northern Ontario. A common difficulty is that students who would be eligible often do not know what scholar- ships are available nor how to make the necessary application. Scholarships are founded by men and women who donate funds to the University for this pur- pose. These men and women of vision have given money to estab- lish scholarships (often as mem- orials) and in so doing have as- sisted talented boys ane, giris to prepare themselves to serve their country as otherwise they could not have done. Norw-egia.ns Fleeing By the Boatload Swedish newspaper dispatches reported that increasing numbers of Norwegians were fleeing their German-occupied homeland, slip- ping away to Britain in some in- stances by the ooatload. Only recently, according to these advices, a 200 -ton ship slip- ped cut of a remote harbor on the Norwegian west coast with 200 persons aboard, including some accused by the Germans of poli- tical "crimes," A week ago another steamship bearing 90 persons was said to have made a similar get -away from south Norway. RHEUMATIC SfF t ' ERS Accept This Generous Offer! Any druggist WILL return y'uiu' money, if one boltie of 1t11 -bra dues not give you relief' from rheumatic aches and pa111s, sore, swollen Atnd v Noracier howlong 1, g painful Joints. . have suffered, you must gut -M and r t n , , 1e " Tryl.t r 'lief (1 "no L V pay," be convinced, iLrt)I. this • e r "us offer now. e �itll cYQ, • nn e Cltk I1Pl'I For goick relief uritis g of carton. pimples, nth - s tt,molly caused ,.kin troubles, use f.,st•nceing, cooling. unit' t pt,i', liquid 11. 1). 1). Prescription. (;,,.,' 1'vr. ',wittiestSro,the•.irritarinn andr[nieklestops i,1 e itching. 35t. Walls.' !lts in (41 t, TM Ilim,11,0"1,, t�k your &wrist t',,h P'rr1).1).1).l'lll Stai11"1'1(1"1. Horses and Sleighs Seized by Germans The Germans falling back in Russia, have taxed their wits to gain all sorts of transport, includ- ing horses and sleighs, according to a statement issued by the So- viet Information Bureau. At one town, the statement said, the Germans announced that salt would be distributed free. Peasants drove their sleighs into town from miles around to get their share. • "•rlien many peasants had ga- thered in the town the Hitlerite scoundrels threw a cordon around it and took away from the peas- ants all their horses and sleighs," the bureau said. "The Germans shot on the spot all the peasants who protested." In all the towns and villages of the Smolensk region, the bur- eau reported, the Germans took from the people all pillows, fea- ther mattresses and warm cloth- ing. The victims are marooned in their own homes because they lack warm clothing. Prince of Wales Will Fight Again Edinburgh has replaced the Prince of Wales. Word came over the ether waves recently from a BBC correspondent in the Scot- tish city to this effect, 'Edin- burgh is having a War Weapons Week, and Edinburgh has, in three days, replaced the Prince of Wales by raising' ten million pounds amongpopulation, of a. pp half a million," be said. 'When warships the sinking of the two v arshi p was announced, the Lord Provost of Edinburgh said: 'All right, we. S in million ,a rrd. 1 raised1 rrl n n have tar 1 r half a week, which will replace the Prince of Wales, now let us re- place the Repulse in the second half of the week. The Prince of "Wales and the Repulse will .fight again." REVEL IN WINTER .&t this t(,, *z ,t.ta ,w$ (alum. o,eynight from 'Toronto and Oatarle, 1a the fam- ous l.aurentians , , . 00 rooms avith ul' without private baths ... comfortable "`- lounges , • . cosy hearths ... 0m:client table ttnd every (Ip -to -Bute convenience. lC ski -tows and "drill 00" on the property well marked trails , . . official ski sehool, • Canadian and b;ttropenn instructors , , ail winter activities, Restricted (;llentele. iOWt. at rates --write: Ste. Marguerite Station, P.et. ituaiS By SADIE B. CHAMBERS A Brush -up on Meat Dishes Some appalling statistics have been given us by those who are following the great campaign on nutrition throughout Canada. We are told that forty per cent, of oin boys have been turned down for the army and are listed . as being with a class of those suf- fering from nutritional disorders. Many from our better homes are listed, so it is not a case of not sufficient to eat, but many times too much to eat, and food of the wrong type. All food columnists are asked to eo-operate by presenting to their readers the simplest and best nourishing food possible, that the campaign may be assist- ed, as much as possible, to raise the standard of nutrition and health of our Canadian people. No meat offers more nourish. latent than liver and it can be most economical too. Calves liver may be more tender, but by no means more nourishing than beef or pork liver, which costs much less to buy. Liver is' a valuable builder, rich in iron and other minerals so im- portant in the upkeep of health, Vitamins, too, it contains in abut), dance and protein which we need for growth and repair. Beef LiverSouthern Style 1 lb. beef liver 2 tablespoons flour 1 teaspoon salt and 1 large onion sliced 3 tablespoons chopped green pepper 1 tablespoon bacon fat 2 cups tomatoes % cup cooked rice ,3'z cup cooked peas IA cup corn Cut liver into slices, then into strips. Dredge with flour, season- ed with salt and pepper. Brown liver with onion and green pep- per (optional) in fat. Add toma- toes and enough water to cover meat. Cover and.. pinnner until liver is tender, about 40 mine utes. Add rice, peas and corn. Continue cooking for 5 to 10 min- utes, then serve. Liver Souffle 2 cups cooked and ground beef liver 2 cups hot medium white sauce 3 eggs separated Dash of salt and pepper 1 tablespoon chopped onion Pour hot white sauce over egg yolks, which have been beaten until lemon colored. Cook slightly. Add pleat and seasoning'. Fold in stiffly beaten egg whites. Pour into a greased casserole. Place in pan of hot water and bake in a moderate oven 350 deg. F. for 40 minutes or until set. pepper (hiss U itiniber. ,.vc.ron,en" personal letters from Interested resellers. She is pleased to :ceche ,ug}; esH out, on Ionics For her eolu,un, and is even ready to listen to your "pet peeves." Iteyuestu Fur rot'(y,es or special menus ore iu order address your letter:. to ";nips Sadie: U. Chum - hers, 73 West Adelaide Street, 'lb - rondo." tient( 51 ,nn pen, st-[i'-addressed envelope it t' II .vINh n reply. Sop steward Fly Me Snowy qJwis Wholesale Numbers of These Birds Have Left Their Nat- ural Arctic Homes Since mid-Uc10ber an unusually large nurnuer of showy cels, whose natural : tome is the Arctic, have been flying southward through the bottled. regions of Eas- tern Canaua. A study of the ex- tent, duration, and density a1 the s•outnwa.rd flight of ttrese birds is being mate and persons who see snowy owls can assist by reporting their observations, giving date and place, to the National Parks Bur- eau 02 the 1)opartrnent of Mines and. Resources lniorm•atiou received so fax indi- cates a largo number of snowy owls have boon seen or shot in Ontario and Quebec anu teat many more have flown on to the Maritime Provinces and the United States. More than two burl;lr'ed of the birds Montholatum quickly s( q y soothe injury and aro• motes healing. Tabes and iare, 30c. 711 ISSUE 2 1) have already been reported in the New England states. The snowy owl is conspicuously white, bas no tufts of feathers pro- jecting from the rounued contour of its head, and is about two feet long. The white of the plumage is generally broken by a number of dark bars. This owl is gener- ally silent and does mach of its hunting by daylight. It prefers open country and may often be. seen perched on a haystack, post, or other elevation. Feed on Rats and Mice The food of the snowy owl con- sists largely of small mammals, such as rats, mice, and lemmings. Such food becomes scarce is the Arctic about once in four years and it is believed that this scar city is the cause of the occasional wholesale southward flights of snowy owls Since Arctic foxes, which are the principal fur animals of the Arctic also depend largely for food on small mammals and are reduced in numbers when sums food is scarce, it is probable that a big southward flight of snowy owls may he considered an indica- tion that in the following year the output of fur in the Arctic will be light. When snowy owls are, as at pre- sent, in southern settled areas, they naturally seek chiefly rats and mice. Because such animals are numerous around open garbage dumps, the snowy owls tend to con gregate there. The effect of their presence; under these circumstan- ces, ircumstances, is beneficial. There is no good reason for killing them unless, un~ der stress o1 want, they are actu- ally ctually attacking poultry, Hitler on Hitler News as extraordinary as a man biting a dog was flashed from Berlin recently, says the New York Times. It was not the de- claration of war against the Un- ited States, an event which might have been expected. It eras the announcement that someone was thanking God for Adolf Hitler. The only 'person in the world who could thank God for Hitler is Hit- ler. But what must God think, at the moment when he has at last plunged the whole world into the inferno of war and sown death in the Pacific as well as the Atlantic, to be praised like this: "If Provi- dence willed that this war should ' not be avoided, I must thank Providence for putting me at the head of the German nation." To Use 1914 Relics To Help Beat Hitler The rumble of German artillery through the streets of Canadian cities, never hear., in the last war, may be heard in this. They won't be the guns of a conquering auny, but rather these that Canadian troops in the last war took from the Jaaiser's legions and brought home after the Aru,i- stice to grace or disfigure public squares whichever way the reader happens to look at it. Ven. Archdeacon F. G. Scott, beloved padre of the C.E.F., be- lieves they "disfigure public parks and public squares," and propos- ed that they be trunuled oi.L to armament plants and melted down for their metal. In a letter Archdeacon Scott suggested that Quebec take the lead in utilizing the guns of the Imperial German armg to defeat its present day counterpart. "Metal, especially gun metal, is sorely needed in our defence in- dustries," Archdeacon Scott said. But he would spare guns of historic significance which "give picturesqueness to our old city fortifications and have value in themselves. These need not be touched," he added, HOW TO RELIEVE PILE TORTURE QUICKLY AND EASILY If you are troubled with itching; piles or rectal soreness, do not de- lay treatment and run the risk of letting this condition become citron. le. Any itching or soreness or painful passage of stool is nature's warning and proper treatment u I should ld be secured .ttone . c For this purpose get a package of from -Reid from any druggist and use as directed This formula which is used internally is a shall, easy to take tablet will qutcklY relieve the itching and soreness and aid iii healing the sore tender spots. Nem -Reid' is pleasant to use, is highly recommended and it seems the height of folly for any One t0 risk a painful and chronic pilo, con- dition when such a fine remedy may be had at such a email cost., if you try Siem-lloid and are not entirely pleased with the results, your druggist will zflatily : Wore your money,