Zurich Herald, 1946-04-25, Page 6Bey
ry Imlay Taylor
S'1'11CorSas
MATTE V: Teresa likes the
$eweomer a'hd learns that he, too,
hates Stenhart. Hazlett tries to
Make Teresa say why she hates
Stenhart hut the old woman re.
XUses to tell him.
CHAPTER VI
Hazlett stood a moment lon-
ger, listening to Ah Ling's. chatter
;with old Mac. IIe could smell the
strong tobacco in the old man's
pipe. Stenhart's dark head was
bent over his newspaper. His
profile was handsome, clean-cut
as cameo; his hands looked thin
and white. Far off by the corrals
some men were building a new
gate, and the distant sound of
their hammers came on the wind.
The stranger left the shelter of
the low adobe and walked swiftly
over to the trees, On the turf his
footsteps made no sound. The pa-
per rustled in the invalid's long
fingers, and he stirred uneasily, as
if he felt a presence, and looked
up. The paper dropped to the
ground and he cowered in his
chair.
* *
"My God, Sherwin, you! How
did you come here?"
The young man, standing in the
sunlight, looked back at him, quite
unmoved.
' So you know me? I carne a
long way, Stenhart. "Look well
at me— I carte to kill you!"
In the terrible silence the ham-
mers seemed to grow clamorous.
Stenhart tried to rise.
"I'll call help—I'm still a sick
man, John Sherwin!" he babbled
wildly.
Sherwin thrust him back in his
Chair. ' You coward!" he said bit-
terly. "You'll have your chance; I
don't deal blows in secret—as you
do!"
Stenhart groaned. "Y o u' r e
crazy—I always said you were!
How did you get here?"
"That's no affair of yours! I
came to kill you."
Stenhart gripped the arms of his
chair with shaking hands; he was
not a well man but he tried to
summon his old courage. "I'll
raise the alarm—why, I can setle
you in five minutes, Sherwin!"
Sherwin's eyes glinted like steel.
"Can you? Try it!"
* * *
Stenhart tried again to rise, then
something in the other man's look
held him, he shrank. "My God,
what do you mean to do? You—
you can't kill me out here—in cold
blood!"
"I can," replied his tormentor,
"but I mean to let you think
about it, imagine it, wonder how I
mean to do it. It would be too
pleasant if I finished you nowt"
Hope kindled in the other's eyes:
he knew a way to end this brag-
gart.
"I'mn obliged to you for a res-
pite," he said mockingly; "thank
you!"
But it was Sherwin who laugh-
ed, and the sound of his mirth
sent a horrible chill through Sten -
hart,
"I know your plan, Friend
Max," he said coolly, "but it can't
save you. I shall kill you just the
same—only a little more quickly."
Stenhart's courage began to rise,
his face reddened. "You'll not
stay here; I'll make Las Palomas
too hot for you! You'll see. I can
make any place too hot for you."
Sherwin looked at him steadily
for an instant, then be spoke as
steadily.
"It wouldn't save you, Stenhart
--n.h'aing will save you—but the
sooner you drop that stuff the
longer—you'll live. Get me?"
Stenhart writhed in his chair.
"You can't do it! You don't
mean to do it! You're threaten-
ing me to—to hush Inc npl"
* * *
Sherwin bent down and, grasp
ung the arms of his chair, he look-
ed deep into his eyes, "You know
what I've endured, you know what
you did—do you think that 1
wouldn't kill you?"
Stenhart, staring back into those
stel gray eyes, wavered a n 9
blanched. He will still weak from
illness: his limbs shook.
"You—you fiend!" he gasped,
"Yon call me a fiend - •what do
you call yourself, you liar?" Sher -
win's voice was low but it was
terrible. He let go the amps of the
chair and straightened himself.
'You're half sick still. I'll let you
get your strength first, brut --1 shall
+kill you presently."
Stenhart said nothing; he was
shaking now from head to foot.
Something deeper than his fear of
lcherwin shook him. He set his
teeth, but they chattered.
Sherwin, watching him, laughed.
Then he looked toward the house
and saw Fanny Sewell emerge, ear.
ISSUE 17--1946
rying a tray.
"Your nurse is coning," he said
to the invalid. "Get your strength
quickly; I don't care to kill a sick
man, Stenhart."
Stenhart leaned back in his chair
and shut his eyes. He was feigning
more weakness than he felt;' he
was trying to plan some way to rid
himself of this peril, for he knew
that Sherwin meant every word he
said. IIe would kill him! Though
his eyese were closed, he listened
keenly and he heard Sherwin's foot-
steps retreating across the grass;
then came the rustle of a woman's
skirt and he looked up and saw
Fanny Sewell coming with her little
tray. The sun was shining on her
hair and her serene face, and he
tried to think he had just awakened
from a nightmare.
* * *
Sherwin, passing the young nurse,
ent to the house. The door stood
open and he entered, going at once
to Jim's desk. He had promised
Jane to straighten the accounts;
mechanically he sat down to his
task, but his mind was full of the
scene under the treys, of Stenhart's
aghast face. He had no pity
for Stenhart's apparent weak-
ness; he had evidently been near
death and he was glad that he had
not died. If he bad died he would
have escaped. Sherwin knew that he
did not want to escape in that way;
it would be too easy, too gentle an
end. A sudden fury swept him;
some primal passion, some instinct
of vengeance inherited from a
primitive ancestor, a caveman or a
pirate, possessed him. It was all he
could do to keep his seat there, not
to rush out again and confront the
man, The effort shook him; he saw
the perspiration start out in beads
on his hands. Then he controlled
himself sternly. There was plenty
of time, nothing could interfere now
—he had found him, found the
coward—
v: *
There was a little rustle of paper;
a breeze from the window had got
among the papers that his violence
had shaken out of the pigeonholes.
It lifted a thin tissue covering a flat
cardboard and rustled it. As Sher-
win looked down it blew the thin
paper completely away and he saw
what it had covered. A photograph,
the photograph of a very young
girl, her hair in braids on her slim
shoulders, her chin lifted. her eyes
looking up at him, a smile on her
full young lips—Jane! Unconscious-
ly a great change came over him;
the blood rushed to his face, his
eyes softened.
Garden Notes
By GORDUN L. SMITH
Flowers For Show
A really wonderful showing can
be trade with a few annual flowers
and with very little effort. Cosmos,
giant marigolds, zinnias, petunias,
portulaca, nicotine, alyssum, are
easily grown almost anywhere in
Canada. Some of the larger flowers
like cosmos and marigolds and
nicotine can actually be used in
the place of shrubs. Seeds should
be started early and in finely pre-
pared soil. Plants are transplanted
to permanent quarters when they
are well established with several
sets of leaves. Some time can be
saved by buying ready -started bed-
ding plants. For husky growth tall
cosmos, gladiolus, dahlias, giant
marigolds and zinnias should have
about two feet each way, Petunias,
nasturtiums, medium rnarigolds,
need about a foot apart for best
results— smaller things like alys-
sum require six inches each way
Give Them Room
After the first garden is planted
the next major job is thinning and
spacing. This is most important
and applies to either flowers or
vegetables. Crowded flowers will
grow thin and spindly, will not
bloom freely and the biggest
plants will topple over in the first
storm. :they should have half as
much room between as they grow
tail. This means about 4 or 5 in-
ches for things like nasturtiums,
less for alyssum, much more for
tall marigolds, cosmos or spider
plants.
With vegetables-- leaf lettuce,
carrots, beets— a couple of inches
between plants is sufficient. Beans
and peas should have 4 to 6 inches
between plants, and as all the seed
usually germinates it should he
planted to about this far apart.
Rows should be from 15 inches to
2 feet apart. Corn is usually plant-
ed ',3 to 6 seeds to a hill, about 18,
inches apart each way or rows k
to 3 feet apart.
JUST A MOTHER
When Joseph Lux, Chicago, brought hone a stray alley kitten,
Princess, his eight-year-old spitz -terrier felt her mother -love re-
kindled, and adopted the youngster. Here she gives the kitten
a true cat -like cleaning.
C 1CLES
of GEIGER F
133,
Gwer.doline P Clarke
• • • •
This is one of those times when
I hardly know where to begin —
so much has been crowded into
one short week. Take Thursday
for instance. When I was trying to
light the kitchen rare first thing
in the morning part of the grate
dropped out. Then three hundred
chickens arrived on the 8 o'clock
train. You who are in the chicken
business will know the time it
takes getting a few hundred chick-
ens comfortably settled in their
new quarters—setting the stove so
that it is neither too hot nor too
cold. Yes, setting it just right --
so you think—then back to the
house, maybe to get a few dishes
done ... off to the chickens again
—to find the stove is too hot. You
set it again and leave it while yon
get potatoes peeled for dinner.
Then another trip to the brooder
house—and this • time the fire is
toe cool! In the middle of this
Partner comes to the house for hot
water. Mary has just produced a
calf, In between cows and calves,
chickens and stoves, I manage to
get some kind of dinner on the ta-
ble. After dinner I think how
grand it would be to have just
about thirty-nine winks. But it
can't be done.
* * *
It is the day of our local Institute
annual. And an annual meeting is
the one meeting of the year one
feels morally bound to attend. So
away I went to the meeting—a lit-
tle late in getting there and the
first to cone away. And from that
time until late at night the chick-
ens kept me occupied—more so
than usual because, you see, I was
experimenting with an electric
brooder stove, the running of
which I knew absolutely nothing.
But I had heard plenty—that they
are great time-savers, easy to op-
erate, athough not too satisfactory
in cold weather unless there is
other heat in the pen. But at any
rate I thought it was worth a try.
Keeping a coal stove going is a
chicken -raiser's main worry .There
is always a danger of the place
getting over -heated in cold wea-
ther, and you need the magic of a
magi to keep it alight in warm
weather. So, says 1, what's the
good of the hydro if you don't
make it work for you.
* *
To cut a long story short the
electric brooder has been in oper-
ation now for nearly five days and
I am really delighted with the re
sult. It is so clean, and, when one
understands its mechanism, very
easy to operate. Last night the
wind got quite strong and it was
a real treat to lie in bed and lis•
ten to it without having to worry
about either chickens or fires.
Naturally there is one draw-
back to electric brooders—and it
is a serious one—if the power goes
off you're sunk. . As a matter of
PEOPLE ' ARE SAYING
that Maxwell House Cof-
fee is extra delicious. It's
true ... because Maxwell
House is "Radiant-Roast-
ecl" to capture the ffald
goodness of its supremely,
fine blend !
Alt YOU PALE
W(AKJI RED
'You gra and women who suffer so from
simple anemia that you're pate, weak.
"dragged out"— this may be due to lack o
iron in olood. So try Lydia E. Pinkham';
Compound t.9LETs with added iron—one o
the acs=: home ways co help build up red blood
—in such cases. Pinkham'sTablets are one o.
the most effective iron conics you can buy.
fact it went off for about five
minutes this morning. I almost
developed a case of nervous pros-
tration. The only way I can think
of to meet such an emergency is to
put several sealers filled with hot
water and wrapped in old socks
.under the hoover. And no doubt by
the time one had heated the water
and filled the last sealer, the power
would be on again. Life's like that
—haven't you noticed it?
* * +:
Now to get back to the first thing
that happened Thursday morning—
the broken grate—which unwitting-
ly provided a striking illustration
of the difference between two gen-
erations.
To put in a new grate there was
a front plate that had to be re-
moved. The screws were seized up
and from past experience we knew
the only way to remove them was
to drill them out. so Partner got
the brace and bit and started the
job. But he found it pretty hard
work so he told me to get Bob to
put his young strength on the job
when he came up from the barn.
Bob took a few turns at it and ex-
claimed—"Heck—there's no sense
in sweating your heart out at that
job! An electric drill will do it in
just about five minutes. And I can
easily borrow a drill."
You see what I mean, don't you,
about the difference in two gener-
ations?
* * *
'V-hile I have been typing the
weather has cleared. It was rain-
ing this morning but now the sun
is out and it really looks like
spring. Daffodils are swaying in the
wind; sweet • scented violets shyly
peek through grass and leaves; a
saucy robin is perkily singing from
a fence post; and my ]nen are away
to the field, one with the tractor,
the other with the drill, sowing our
first esed of the season.
Sunday School
Lesson
Decisive Moments in Peter's
Liffe
John 1:42; Mk, 8: 27.29; Lu,
22: 54-57; 61, 62; John 21: 15-17;
Acts. 5: 29.
Golden Text — We ought to
obey God rather than men. —
Acts. 5:29.
Simon, Named Peter
Our Lord bestowed on Simon
a new name, Peter, which signifies
a piece of rock. The pante is sym-
bolic of the rugged strength of
character which its bearer was
to display as an Apostle.
The first question — "whom do
men say that I am ?"—was to pre-
pare them for the next question
and to draw out the difference be-
tween what the people said of
Jesus and what His chosen dis-
ciples believed about I-Iim.
Peter acts as leader and spokes-
man for the rest, In his full.con-
fession — "Thou art the Christ.
the Son of the living God" —
Peter declares our Lord's office
as well as His nature.
Peter's Denial of Christ
The Lord Jesus was seized ann
Lrought before the high priest.
Where was Peter who promised to
be faithful even= unto death? He
"followed afar off." Peter, though
seeking to hide his discipleship,,
boldly joined the men who hap
arrested his Lord and warmers
himself at their fire.
Accused by a maid -servant of
being with Christ, Peter denied
all knowledge of the Lord to
whom he had promised steadfast
loyalty. Later he denied his Lord
again with oaths and curses.
Peter Fully Repents
The cock crew and at this
moment our Lord turned and
caught the eye of Peter who re-
membered his protestations again-
st the very thought that he would
deny his Lord. The look of Christ
had pierced the guilty heart of
Peter; it brought instant sorrow
and repentance.
Humbled by his fall Peter dare
not say he loved Christ more than
his brethren. He simply appeals to
his Lord's knowledge of heart and
leaves it to Him to judge the
strength of his love; "Yea, Lord;
Thou knowest that I love Thee."
In these solemn words, "Feed my
lambs,'' probably meaning the
little ones of Christ's flock, our
Lord graciously confirms to Peter
his Apostolic office as one of the
chief shepherds of His flock.
Housekeeper Wanted
GIRL OR WOMAN f'QR RE-
fined home. Pleasant working
conditions, Good Wages. Fare
Paid. Write stating full par-
ticulars to—
MRS. SAIR
44 Ridge Hill. Drive, Toronto
10, Ontario.
Thousands Helped
By New, Simple
Home Hearing Test
HousANDs of Canada's hard-of-
1
hearing who once suffered in si- .
lence because of high hearing aid
costs, have discovered they need pay
no more than $40 for a quality hear-
ing aid. It's the New Zenith Radionic.
More people are buying it than all
other makes combined!
Sold Direct -by -Mail Only
Comes complete, ready-to-wear with
Neutral -Color Earphone and Cord,
Crystal Microphone, Radionic Tubes,
Batteries and Battery Case. No extra
charge for shipping, taxes or duties.
Zenith's revolutionary direct sales
method eliminates salesmen's high
commissions and other extras . .
makes this fine quality instrument
available to all at about one-fourth
the cost of comparable hearing aidsl
A Child Can Adjust Its
No need for embarrassing fittings by
high-pressure salesmen in special
demonstration rooms. The flick of
your finger adjusts the Tone Control
to your own hearing needs instantly.
It's easy as focusing binoculars. New
Neutral - Color Earphone and Cord
blends with the complexion, too—is aa
little noticeable as eyeglasses!
Hear Better or Pay Nothing!
Send for your Zenith today. Put It
on yourself in the privacy of your
home. Wear it amongst family and
friends—to church, work; club. Let
your own ears decide. If you are not
completely satisfied return it within
10 days and your money will be re-
funded promptly andwithout question.
Thousands who have made this test
now hear better with a Zenith! Send
$40 check or money order to: Zenith
Radio Corporation of Canada, Ltd.,
Guaranty Trust Bldg., WL -1210-46,
Box 30, Windsor, Ontario.
Zenith Radio Corp. of Canada, Ltd.
It Makes You Fee
So Much Better
The Vitamin 61 Tonic
Extensively used for headache;
loss of sleep, nervous indigestion,
irritability, anaemia chronic
fatigue, and exhaustion of the
nervous system.
60 cts. lfconotny size; $1.50
-'"Dr. Chase's
3 ERVE FOOD
it's `�
ncChase's `
NERVE FOOD
r. Chase's Nerve Food
46511
i{.44'v`:v:?'?+iii •..,� .�:•'�;:;::
/T CERTA/NLY
TAKES THE WORK
ANO WORRY OUT
OP BREAD SA/C/N6f
Made in Canada
""° ""NEW Faster Acting ROYAL
Ends Overnight BotherRisk!
N)CW Fast Rising Royal is here! The
..modern baking discovery that
lets you do all your baking in a few
hours , by daylight! No "setting.
bread" the night before—no baking
disappointments because dough spoiled
during the night when the kitchen tem-
perature changed. New Fast Rising
Royal is ready for action 10 minutes
after it's dissolved tit water!
And the rich, home -baked flavor of
bread baked with New Fast Rising
Royal will make your family brag about
your baking more than ever. You get 4
packets in each carton of New Fast
Rising Royal -4 large loaves to a packet.
Stays full-strength, ready for immedi-
ate use, for weeks on your pantry shelf.
At your grocer's—novel