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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1924-12-18, Page 6None Will Satisfy [!1 like pure. delicious A d'REEN TEA H473 The >Finestgreen tea produced rodced . in the worlds. — Ask for a trial package. FREE SAMPLE of GREEN TEA UPON REQUEST. "SALMI." TORONTO About the House STOCKING TOYS. As a general thing, most old stock- ings are thrown away when they are too worn-out to darn any more. But we will continue to make toys from ours that will more than delight the babies and small children. t, Love Gives Ilse TI -IE STORY OF A 13i.oim FEUD 8X ANNIE S. SWAN' Pr neverhave you, Carlotta! Never! wh T ete," She shrank back, the soman in her! quailing momentarily before the fury of his face. "And all this high-falutin' nonsense, abode your being ordained: for one an-' other from the beginning of time! I' wonder how many woman he has led on that tack since he began?" he went' on, his evil passion rising \with every "Love gives iteelf and is not bought."—Longfellow. Carlotta ,put •up an .arresting hands "I must leave you, Peter Garvock. All this talk will serve no end. I CHAPTER III.-(Cont'd,) to forget that we ever have, or that very probably I never shall be, but I "I have something to say. tool':" ens- th<<e weeks, had being," will never be yours. I ask your foil= wei•ed Petergaiiy,fox' it was a spxirig The mall who has known you for giveness-for—fol• these three weeks day and all the world seemed young three weeks, and been permitted to of folly and -misery! Some day you and.gay. "If we have to avoid May; look into your eyes, doesn't forget, will come .to me apd thank me for it•'must be not later than the twenty- Carlotta, he said with a melancholy what I have done this dry." ninth of April -our wedding, I' mean touch, a touch of poetry, even, which When she world have turned from for I don't propose to wait till surprised her afresh• him he greaped her arm: June." I It made her dumb in front of here (To be continued.) She sat down suddenly, as' if her colossal task; For Peter Garvock was limbs failed her, and began, with the no weakling to be tossed hither and;ma, The Sheik's Justice. may never be Alan Rankine's wife - hazel stick she carried, to draw thither on the froth of a woman a, strange hieroglyphics among the piste whim. He would probe deeper, The The sheik of as Arab tribe, says Mr. needles at her feet, dreary conviction that nothing but 'peel Harrison in a recent issue of He took a step nearer to her and the truth would' satisfy him, pease Asia, exercises unlimited power;' of q touched her shoulders traced Carlotta's soul: him it may said as it was of Nebiic- R� j "Darling!" he said, impassionedly, t'Somebody has been talking to him it ar, "Whom he wonid he slew say it wi,.l be the twenty-ninth. You you," he 'said, encouraged by her sil- Quid he kept alive." e ni ht and morn , a ones, an Y unwonted sweetness g so long, I m going to take the law into and.. ethos . of her, looks. "Tell the The only check upon his actions is P reducing enlarged joints (bunions) by have kept mem state of uneertamtY d b thet dand whom he w applying turpentine ing; in feet, she declares that the tura my own halide, Do you hear? The who it' is that. I may go :and crush public opinion and the likelihood of its Pontine "almost shrinks the bone," -I Lees needs and wants its mistress; their lies end innuendoes!' expressing itself In the forms of ass": We repeat the remedy for split skin and I am tired of waiting." I .She shook her head. 'expressing if he beoemes too unpopular. (between the toes) : When the skin It seemed a long, long time before No o as been a c n is hereditary and. in the na splits between the toes, apply chalk, she- spoke, and then she rose to her Y g' can't tura) course oY events passes to tiro es the s Iit too the kind used for writing upon black- feet and looked at him quit straightly, undexdstandethatt T haver nevercared eldest son; but occasionally, if tiro Do not use silk on y p but ver stran el - m the face: readily, and the plain lisle are apt to boards. Procure a stick of the chalk, "I am very sorry, Peter, but I can- and that note .I know that I never heir is obviously a man of rib force, stretch, The ribbed ones are best, and serape cif the outer layer and throw not marry you at all." could care, arid that I am saving you, one of the other. children assumes it be sure they have no holes in the lege, las well as myself, from a misery too instead, . "The ablest ruler is the man for that is the. part to use. d d dy" I tweeted For; a funny old "mammy doll" pro - coed as follows: Cut off, the foot and sew the leg straight across the top, so as to form a bag. Then decide how big you want your doll, for the longer b d' h b t ]li None The office this away. Scrape the remaining chalk to a fine powder and dust this, powder between toes. The chalk has a drying effect which ie very healing and gives quick relief. If free of the common ailments of. love given and returned, might have twenty-ninth of April -- be feet, and a moderate amount can taken the words as a jest, to be frown- "No, ma No, neat she ill be. p for shoes, every woman can ed or laughed' over . as • the occasion the leg the bigger w be s ant Just those four syllables—nothing beast of neat and attractive looking seemed to '.demand; but the tone m� Stuff with cotton or old r gs—more feet Size does not matter so much; which Carlotta -uttered them, the set more! ! stockings cut up small will do -till and almost anguished sereex ressicn et You remetnber I said if on were mind" of the Occident out of all pro - the head Ss round Bird large enough. the large woman must have )rigs feet her face, drovthem. home with re -'so desperate as to take the risks, I portion to the a f the hands andee decl.i- Then tie a string tightly around the or she tvi]1 look top heavy. If they tentless force. I would try," she went on, drearily, Flogging, cutting neck to hold it in place and form the seem too big, however, she 'should! Even at the moment when he knew "But I warned you of, the kind of wo capitation are frequent. Batt Dir. Tier- head. Stuff the rest of the body and carefully avoid fancy. styles of foot -,their •finality, Garvock tried to make'man I was. s even"—and her color' risen tells of one act of justice, severe sew u the bottom, wear, and buy nothing but the plain -' .light of ahem )certainly rose- royally—"T even 'warn-' in its way, it !s true,;but such as to '. great to be imagined or enure a and the one eventually se - CHAPTER IV. I "I said I would take the risks, subs cured. No oma cares much to what .THF! MARCH' DYTKlI. Of, being married £ my rt y,". feral)).he-belongs" said doggedly. "An'd I'm taking them, Able some of the sheiks certainly A lover, secure in the knowledge ef'still. We are to be married on the are, and according to their lights and traditions.: just,, although the friighful severity of the punishments inflicted would often seem to the more merciful NURSES The Toronto Hospital 'tor Ineurablea .- le: etniiatIon with Bellevue and AHrd Hospital., Ncte York 'City. effete a three veers',Coune at Tralnine to yound women. haVlne the required edueaaon, and dedroul of heaomin.- our.ea. This Haulm!, has adopted the eight• hour system. The '.aeilt recelim unitor,os el the School, • monthly rllowance and tramIllne expenses to and from Now York. .For further' Information apply to the Superintendent Bass Voice Requires the Most Energy. An eminent physician, presenting before the Academy of 'Medicine in Paris the resulte of an investigation. of the amount of work .performed by orators and singers, said he found from his experiments that a bass Voice, in order to produce the same im- pression upon the ears of an audience in a hall requires the performance of. about eighteen times more work than is required of a baritone or tenor voice, A bass voice is always ate die• advantage with regard to the amount of work demanded of it, he said. It was also found, he added, that men are always more fatigud than women and childrn by all equal effort of the voice, and men with bass voicea suffer the most fatigue; For arms and legs, take a piece of stocking the desired length, roll • up and, wrap tightly with black thread, sewing at the bottom,. Tie a string a little way up to form^the hand:" The legs are made the same way, but turn ,up about an inch at right angles to the leg to form a foot and catch with a few stitches, then sew the arms and legs on the doll. Outline the features with white thread, making large goggle eyes and a big mouth with stitches taken across 3t for teeth. -Dress mammy in any scraps you may have, but be sure to make her an apron and a head hand- kerchief with stick-up ears. A dear little girl doll is made the same way from a white stocking, and dressed in dainty clothes, with the features done in colors—blue eyes, red mouth and perhaps a touch of rouge on her pale cheeks If she has a little est a PATCHING UP THE MIRROR. "You can't marry mel" he repeated. ed, you that, among other things that }vin approval in the 'Western world, no "Oh, come, aCrlotta I It is not a very might happen, was the other man. He less than in th'e Orient, kind jest between you and rife at this has been known to come into married Ibu Jilawi, Governor of Hasa, holds late day!- lives before this, and to destroy suchi•els court in Hofuf, the capital. IIe n We have a mirror from which the "It is not a jest," she answered peace as existed. ivies with a rod of iron, and the rich silver has come off in several places, dully. I would not make that kind That would never have happened . Could you tell me what 7 could do to of jest. It would be unseemly. Be with you, Carlotta!' he answered and powerful. may expect no favors at itv of C H sides I am not a jesting woman" rondly. "If a man trusted you with his hands. He is absolutely incor- 1 Clean the bare portion of the glass "Then why?" he stammered, "why xis honor, it would be safe." ruptible and linpartiaL this change-af front?", ,The tribute touched her ,inexp•ress- One day there appeared before him Ines- • by rubbing it gently with fine cotton, But this time.. she )tad no direct xb1y, nay, more—it drove her rtes-eas complainant a poor and ignorant taking care to remove any trace of answer ready. Her eyes evaded his istibly to the truth. She fixed her villager whose cow some boys on a dust and grease. If this cleaning be. and sought to follow the flight of a oyes on his now set and gloomy face, ).hunting expedition had shot and killed. not done very carefully, defects will bird on the wing.. and spoke quite quietly: appear around, the place repaired. Presently, however, she brought "`Peter, I ani twenty-five years of A careful description of .the party With the point of a nknife, cut upon them back to his face: age, and a good many men have spa-, made it possible to gather the entire the back of another looking glass. Her expression had changed again, ken to me about this love. Every one! number :before the governor; The vil , for swift and bewildering variety was hag left me colt. I had grown if not lager did not know the naive of the the required form, but a around a portion the ailvei • g r. one of the chief charms of that mobile to believe in its existence, at least to : ring -leader, but on being askod if he. b little lang rger. face. think it never would exist for me.! could identify him at once pointed him Upon it place a small drop of mer- « , I think you cant. be cu a drop the size of a in -head very mu s the biggest out, To his horror he the learned rt'; P surprised. We have been engaged force in the world -and the most die- that the lad was.Ibu Jilawes own son. Will be sufficient For a surface equal just three weeks; but have you ever estrous.- "Did you do this?" the father asked to the size of the nail. The mercury had, in that time, any feeling of se "Then,- if, I have taught `you that sterol spreads immediately, penetrates the curity or happiness, much, he cried joyfully,: the rest Y amalgam to where it \vas cut off with "I had your promise, he said will be easy[ I "fas, I aid it, acknowledged the sap, she needs no hair. the knife and the required piece may ,gloomily, "the promise I ani going to. "Oh, but -but it is not youl Don't, boy. The funniest sort of witch's black •1 had a very fine mare; a re - ch But I was wrong. It i be now lifted and removed to the place claim " you see that rf it had been you, t sere Tis boy to to be repaired. This is the most d ffi D the day it was would have been no need for .all this cent gift Yxom his j father's command she was brought in. cult .part of the operation. Then press not a happy day. It is not yet so far .Then Peter Gar -melds expression• 'Would"you;' asked Ibu Jilawi with cat is, made by making the head and body this seine way, then pinching up the two corners of the head for ears, gathering them a little and fastening with a few tight stitches. Do not sew on legs and arms; they can be outlined on the body with white, if liked, or left out altogether. Outline the fea- tures and whiskers in white, with a touch of green or yellow for the eyes. Make quite a long tail, wrapped Iike the doll limbs, and sew on tightly. A rabbit is made from a white stocking by adding long ears to the body made like the cat, with a tail of a wad of cotton sewed on. The ears should be cut out separately and doubled and turned and sewed on. They are less trouble made from white flannel, Outline the features in black. He and the cat may have a ribbon tied around their necks, with perhaps a bell. "Do you rememberfather, and at the l has d teleye,the utmost courtesy, "be willing to re - i given?" she asked swiftly. "It was talk?" lightly the renewed portion with cot- away but that you can recall pre- changed indeed, and became terrible.. Th change 1 f h' 1 d ton; it hardens a est imine is y, cisely what I said." a ac inose o is hair an and the glees presents the same ap- "Y "d did t for me" accentuated the sickly paleness of the Bard this mare as an adequate coin - he said you i ria' care o pearance, he answered, readily enough. "But I face outraged b the dee.pest passions pensation for the loss of your cow?" "And you remember what I said in "Then who—who is it? Someone "She is worth many times the.ealue,of answer to that? 'Love gives itself,, you have seen since we met last?" he my cow, but I hope you will excuse me It i& not bought.' " Idemanded thickly, from taking her. lY I had had the His face flushed dully. Then all at once his ayes were least idea who the offender was, I "I was not seeking to buy your love,' opened, The scales -fell from them should never have entered a cam•. Carlotta. Be just to me. I did not and he knew! I so much as mention material thing's." "It is Stair!" he criedi in an awful Plaint. "Oh, no!" she said, with a swift voice. "That hound and blackguard', "No doubt that le true," replied Ibu glance of compassion for him. "It was that breaker of women's hearts Jilawi with a smile, "but nevertheless I who was mercenary, sordid, base! 'I Alan Rankine!" I yell will not be excused from taking told you I was tempted as a poor wo- He was at once answered and re-; the snare, The boy will apologize to man can be tempted by a rich man. buked by the majesty of Carlotta's you unqualifledly,oy 1f you will ;e to I said horrible things, which after- look. She stepped across the pine, consider the matter settled I shall ebe n wards I hated myself for. But your needles„ and laid her hand, so fight sincerely indebted to you." patience was boundless," and firm yet compelling, on his arm. 1 So, having received the apology, "Because I eared so much, Car-' Listen, Peter Garvock. •You and.! the lotta," said Peter , Garvock with .a I, and Stair, and all the other men and' villager led off the mare: The child's umr i "Besides x no are but players! heart was almoet broken, .but it was " which ca•navae the soul ofpman, "Certainly," replied.- the villager. answered that I could teach you THE FEET AND ANKLES. The appearance of the feet and ankles is of great importance, now that short sldrts and low shoes are so generally worn. While it is impos- sible for every one to have a small foot, certainly every one can have a neat or dainty -looking foot. The last plate to economize is on shoes. It is better to wear one fairly high-priced pair of shoes throughout a season, than two cheap pairs. Of course you will not be able to wear well -fitting shoes comfortably 1f the feet hurt. I do not mean that shoes should be tight, but neither should they be too loose; one produces corns as much as the other. Given the right sort of footgear, it is quite possible to keep the feet healthy with- out ever having to go to s chiropodist. The feet, as well as the body, should' be bathed daily; not just given a care- less washing, but scrubbed with mild soap and a flesh brush.' Then they ehould be dried well and gone over with corn file. Every callus should be rubbed down, the corns softened by soaping and either filed down, or if very bad, the top callus- skin should be ant off with euticle scissors. It is quite possible to do this without touch- ing any of the lining tissue. Very stubborn corns should be bound up with a slice of lemon over them—next day the hard skin will easily come off. Tender feet should be soaked in hot salt water, the proportion being a cupful of sea -salt to a quart of hot water. This rests the feet, and hard- ens ard ens them. `I£ the skin of the foot is very dry, there is nothing better than eweet ad or Vaseline to use as a daily massage. In fact, corns and :calli rub- bed daily- with sweet -oil, vaseline, or cold, cream, will eventually disappear. One womc 4 has been successful in A NEW DOLL OUTFIT• strange h " 1'ty "B "d , I did t women in the world believe the half of them. I understood on the board. We move a little this: n�n you better than you understand your- way or that, but the final moves, the' 5579 note self's .big. stratagems, are not in our hands.: � . /tel For the first time, she studied his .That Alan Rankine and I should meet, _.. etrong, harsh face attentively, think- and love, and belong to one another, 4579. Tills is a very desirable ing of the pity of it, and: how, given has been ordained from the beginning, model and one that will please the lit- love --the necessary, the all -forgetful of time. Iknew it that day when you tie "doll mother," for not only the, love—the right woman might find and brought him to me at the Clock House.. garments but the doll as well may be" c r shtsthe gold of nature that Did rori u eel nothing whicof t eas range made from the pattern here given. t I charged?" istics on the outside:- � The doll may be of drill or unbleached' "If you understand me then, Peter, i "I wish I had choked hie black muslin, and stuffed with floss hair orltry to understand me now," she said, heart out of him before I brought cotton batting. The dress could belie a low, sweet voice. "I am very mis- him!" cried Peter' Garvock, almost of gingham, cretonne, chambrey, silk! erable. I wish we had -never met. Try foaming at the mouth. _ "But he shall or crepe, and the cap, to match, or of - - '"`- lace or embroidery. The Pattern is cut in 3 Sizes for dolls: 12, 10 and 20 .inches in length. To make the doll in a 10 -inch size re- quires fife yard of 36 -inch material. The dress and cap require ea yard, The cap alone requires 24 yard. Pattern mailed to any address on receipt of 20c in silver, by the Wilson Publishing. Co., 78 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Send 15c in silver for our up-to- date Fall and Winter 1924-1926 Book of Fashions. FRENCH ONION SOUP. ISSUE No. 6,1-'24, Winter is the season for thick soups, and this . one which, with a liberal ohm* of bread, makes a whole meal for the Breton peasant, is es- pecially good. Peel four large onions and two °astute. The onions should be chopped flue, and the =mote diced•. Put them into an enameled' ware saucepan with. three #ableepeonfule of butter and saute them until t'be onione are well browned'. Ilse a .quar- te teaspoonful. of .sugar and half .a teaspoonful f salt. "Add a quart of Water and boil for, two hours, adding more water as, it boils away. This soup should be served• with FLSHOOof bread in each plate, For Bole )Toot---Minard'e Liniment. This monument in the Wicking I3orse Pass, British Ce.runbia, marks the place where the last spike Was driven in the building of the Canadian, Pacific Railway. h; not until some time later that Ibu Jilawi bought the mare baric for him, and then at a thousand riyale, or Maria Theresa dollars, a sum sufficient to snake the villager independently wealthy for the rest of his life. May Make "Rudy" Into - Shoe Leather. The up-to-date woman in London now has a regular 'menagerie In her shoe cupboard. To dainty footgear— including those made of crocodile, lizard, alligator, shark and sea leo- pard—she must now add.a pair made of ostrich skin. This Is a new departure, and shoes composed of it look smart and promise to wear well. It is brown, and. the holes out of which feathers have been plucked show a_ deeper tone and make an effective decoshtion. • • ! A shoemaker .who hats Introduced these shoes is else makii g models iu , walrus skin, and is experiinenting' with the skin of the raylish, welch he! thinks will ebe very succeesful for footwear. - +r-- Date Palms In Desert. , Though the date Palm is oonnuouly ; thought of as a desert plant, its roots must be constantly, kept wet, in the mershy soil, of the oasis in which: it grows. r l/1 n' He --"Do you believe love: comee more than once?" She—"If You treat him right, he does" Q Millard'. Liniment Meade Cutts. Percy's Puzzle. The teacher bad been lecturing his class on the wisdom' often .displayed by animals and birds. He compared it with that of human beings, at the .late twee ' disadvantage. Raving finished his discourse, he invited his pupils to ask questions bearing on the subject. Percy held up his hand. "Well, Percy," said the teacher, "What is. it you want to know?" "I want to know, sir," replied Perot', "What mal: et . &Recene know how big our egg-eue aro?" Health N tear Two business men, having to spend a few hours in a emelt town, decided to dine at the village school, One of them turned to the pretty waitress and asked: • "How's, the chicken?" "Oh, i ria all right," she blushed "How are you?" The Bible Up-to-L1,te Novel Translations of the Scriptures' ' Dr. MofEatt's translation of the cid Teetament into modern English is a continuation of his translatioli of the New Testament whichhas been out for some years, and le but one of sev- era, similar and equal'l'y compete0 translations into the language of to- day. This is the way Dr. Moffatt tells the famous story of Salome: -- Herod was anxious M hill John the Baptist, but he was afraid of the peo- ple, because they held John to be a prophet. However, on Herod's birth• day, the daughter of Herodias danced in public to the delight of Herod: whereupon he promised' with an oath to give her whatever she wanted. And she, at teeeiestigation, of hormother, said: "Give me Jahn the Baptist's 'head this moment on a dish." The Icing was, sorry, but for thesakeof his oath and hie guests he ordered it to " be given her; he Bent and diad' John beheaded in the prison, his head was brought on a dish' and given to the girl, and she took it to her mother. We have come to associate old -fate Moned language with the Bible, and to many people it seems like sacrilege to substitute the apeech of George V. for that of James Ii, although -it meet be reinembered that what we know as the authorized' Version •was an attempt to make the language—of Wyclif and Tyndale better underetood, ' A Telegraphic, Triumph. Nevertheless, when a new .tre.nsl'a- .- tion was made by scholars about forty , yeers ago this archaic language was adhered to, although many changes were made in -deference to modern 'scholarship, and eertaia passages, - whioh scholars believed to be inter- polations were actually omitted. This Revised Version was the great est literary event of modern times. , One newspaper actually sent the I wbole of the New Testament by tele- graph from New York to Chicago in older to be the first Missile it there. No part of the Old Testament has been translated se often or so various- ly as the Book of Psalms. If readers will °ampere the Prayer Book version, with the Authortzed Version they will find them very different, because the Prayer Book "Version Is much older. Another famous translation is the metrical version so longeised in Scot- land, cotland, of which the folloevirig is a specie men:— The Lord's my Shepherd; I'll not want „ He make me down to lie In pastures green; He leadeth me Thequiet waters by, This passage of the 23rd Psalm Is rendered in the Authorized Version, "The Lord 1s my shepherd, I shall not want; He maketh me to lie down in green pastures; he leadeth me beside the still waters" A& long ago as 1690. a certain Dean of Peterborough, . named Simon Patrick, thought to im- prove on this, Like Dr. Moffatt, he desired to make things a little plainer,. and this is how he did it:,- For, as a good shepherd leads his • sheep in the violent heat to ehady places, where they lie down and feed ae (not•fn parehed, but)in fresh and green pastures, and is the evening leads them (not to muddy andtrou- bled waters, but) to pure and quiet streams; so hatb he made already a fair and plentiful provlaion for me, One might have thought that such a terrible example would be a warn- • ing to all other trespassers into the field of Biblical translation, but about a hundred years latera certain Dr. Harwood translated the New Testa- ment into his idea of modern English. This is how he renders the well-known opening of the. Magnifleat:— My seed with reverence adores my Creator,, and all my faculties with . transport join in celebrating the good- ' nese of Eiod, who. hath in so signal a manner condescended to regard my poor and hunible station.,- - He refers teethe Prodigal's father as. "a man.ofopulent means" and "a gentleman of eminent . family. Ile says that the daughter of Herodias was "a young lady who danced with inimitable .grace and elegance," that Peter on the Mount of Tranenguration .said: "Sir, what a desirable plaee of residence is this!" He'eefere to the little daughter of Jahns as'this young lady" and he: makes Paul ask Timothy to bring hie eportmanteau" with him when next he comes his way. But, although the many recent at- tempts of sehol'ars to, render the Bible, or parts of it, into modern English have their nee in making -any obscure passages plain, the translation, made in the reign of James I. still stands, as the greatest translation of any book into another language: ' Rouen mtabllehed 00 roses Please write for our price list on Poultry, -Butter, and Eggs we cerenewrne them for a `seek attend P. POULIN & CO„ LIMITED 80.00 eonesoon. Market Telephone Maio 7107 AIONTBEAL. QBEBRO TAYLOR FORBES Tree Pruners (.811ARANTEED J For every purpose in the orchard, cutting limbs up to it inches. Handles- 4, 6, 8,10 and 12 feel, Your Mulleins Dealer kuotd thaagility Out descriptive circular sent to any addreaa on request. lAYLOR-FORBES COMPANY, LIMITED GUELPH, ONT. ns=7s Corn. Unknown to the world. before the discovery of America corm • is, grown in nearly every country in the world and has even replaced wheat and rice as staff of life iu some places., Of .the world's• four -.billion bushels of; corn the United `:Stades produces three. fourths. Southern Europe, .South America, Southern, -Asia, and South Africa, in the order named, contribute moat of the remi,inder. Italy, the Bat• kan` countriee, .Hungary, Spain, -and Portugai comprise the regionof corn culture in Europe. Mushrooms That Can Be Dried. Edible musbmoonee found in the 1a# on stumps, logs, and burled wood, may be dried anti stored for future use without destroying Food value.