Loading...
HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1927-07-07, Page 2It WiliDelight ORANGE PEKOE BLEND 99 T33' Perfectly bcod—superb in flavour. 0 1i Read tSabatilti thing more than forty, who once must have been very lovely, whosver r was y lovely still with the refinipg quality that age brings to some women, Her dress and carriage alike ad'vertisecl great rank., "I take my leave here, since you have a visitor," said Andre -Louis.. "But it' is an old acquaintance of your own, Andre. You remember Mme. la Conitesse de Plougastel?" He looked at the approaching lady and because she was named to him he recognized her, He must, he thought, have recognized, her without prompting anywhere at any time, and this although it was some sixteen years since last he had seen her. Tne sight of her brought it all back to him.—a treasured memory that had never permitted itself to be entirely overlaid by subsequent.events, When he was a boy of ten, on the eve of being sent to school at Itennes,. she had coin on a visit to his god- father, who was her cousin. The great. ledy, in all the glory then of her youthful beauty, with her gentle, cul- tured voice—and her majestic air of the great world, had scared him a lit- tie at first. Very gently had she al- layed those fears his, and by some mysterious enchantment she had 'coni- pletely enslaved his regard. BEGIN HERE TO-DAY.will come round presently. And then' For three days while she had been To escape ba;,ging on the charge I we shall want to know where to 'find at Gavrillac, he had gone daily to the of sedition, Andre -Louis Moreau flees . you." 1nunor, and so had spent hours in her from his native town of Gavrillac "At number 13, Rue du Hasarti" company. .A. childless woman with and hides his ident:ty as a member of i "Tell toe, Andre." She paused;' as the maternal instinct strong within a band of "strolling players in which if in some difficulty, and then went her, she had taken this precociously he makes a great success in the char-, on, her eyes upon the ground: "Tell intelligent, wide-eyed lad to her heart. at His fligher of t busocaused him to delayuche. �nte—the truth of that event at the "Give him to me, Cousin Quintin;' revenge on the gnat and powerful Feydau.' he remembeed her saying on the last Marquis de Le Tour D'Azyr, who. The request fetched a frown to his of those days to his godfather. "Let tricked Andr.'s -dearest friend, Phil brow. He suspected at once the me take him back with me to Ver - !lope de Vilmorin, a divinity student, thought that prompted, it. Quite sallies as nay adopted child." into a duel and then killed himbe cause he feared the idealist's "danger -1 simply and briefly he gave her his.But + the Seigneur had gravely ift of eloquence." Over elm dead version of the affair. shalten his head insilent refusal, and out g body of his friend, Andre -Louis swore, "That is much what I was told," there had been no further question to carry on _his work of reforming she said. "But it was added that M. of such a thing. And then, when she the lot of -.e peasants.de La Tour "d'Azyr had gone to the said goodbye to him—the thing Searamouche, as Andre -Louis Is theatre expressly for the purpose of flooding'back to him now—there had now called, falis in love with Climene, !breaking p y p po daughter of the owner of the trouppe breaking finally with La Binet, Do been tears in her eyes, and tries to forget the beautiful IYou know if that was •so. Think of measometimes,. Andre. . Aline de Kercadiou, .whom, he thinks, "1 don't; nor of any reason why it Louis," had been her last words. But all was vividly remembered now upon beholding her again, after six- teen years,profoundly changed and "Uncle," Aline leaving Andre "Oh, there was a reason," she in- matured, the girl sunk in this worldly and crossing line said, leaving "you eerrupted him. "I was the reason. I woman with the air of calm dignity de spoke to Mme. de Sautron. I told her and complete self-possession. Yet, he make me ashamed of you! To allow that I 'would not continue to receive insisted, he must have known her a feeling of peevishness to overwhelm one who came to me contaminated in anywhere again. all your affection for Andre!" "I have no affection for him. I had once. He chose to extinguish .it. He can go to the devil; and please ob- serve that I don't permit you to inter- fere." Andre -Louis shrugged his shoul- ders and hung hos head. He had come there so joyously, in such yearning, merely to receive a final dismissal. Ile looked at Aline. Her 'face was pale and troubled; but her wit failed to show her how she could came to his assistance. His excessive honesty had burnt all his boats. She answered his look by a glance at her furious uncle, a faint shrug, and a lift of the eyebrows, dejection the while in her countenance. It was as if she said: "You see his mood. There is nothing to be done." He bowed with the singular grace the fencing -room had given him and went out by the door, "Oh, it is cruel!" cried Aline, in a stifled voice. her hands clenched, and she' sprang to the window. "Aline!" her uncle's voice arrested ,, he, "W ileo you going?'} He called afte hei', imperiously oommanding her return. But Aline "SO PLEASED, MADAME, THAT --dutiful child—closed her ears lest DOOR," SAID ANDRn;-LOUTS, she must disobey him, and sped light- footed across the lawn to the avenue, that fashion." She spoke of it With Aline embraced her affectionately, there to intercept the departing obvious difficulty, her color rising as and then answering the questioning Andre -Louis. he watched her half -averted face. glance with faintly raised eyebrows As he came forth wrapped in "M, de Sauntron conveyed my de- that madame was directing toward gloom, she stepped from the border- cision to him, and afterwards repre- Aline's companion. ing trees into his path. i sented him to me as a man in despair, "This is Andre -Louis," she said. " Aline!" he cried, joyously almost,' repentant, ready to give proofs—any "You remember Andre -Louis, ma - "I did not want you to go like this," proofs—of his sincerity and devotion dame?" she explained herself. "I know that to me. Ho told me that M. de La Madame checked, Andre -Louis saw Ids great soft heart will presently Tour d'Azyr had sworn to him that the, surprise ripple over her face, tak- melt, He will send for you, and he he would cut short that affair, that ing with it some of her color, leaving will not know where to send.",he would see La Binet no more. And her for a moment breathless. "You think that?" then, on the vrey next day I heard of And then the voice -the well - "Oh, I know it! Yt.0 arrive in a his having all but lost his life in that remembered rich, musical voice- bad moment. He is peevish and erose -'riot at the theatre," richer and deeper now than of yore, grained, poor man, since he came here. I "Oh, if M. de La Tour d'Azyr has ,repeated his name: loved Gavrillac. Brittany, you know, ing on a bitter note of sarcasm. He wearies himself away from his be- sworn . . " Andre -Louis was laugh -1 "Andre -Louis!" Her manner of uttering it suggest - was becoming too unsafe. The chateau Either she did not hear or did not ed that it awakened memories, mem- of La Tour d'Azyr was burnt to the heed him. l ories perhaps of the departed youth ground some months ago. And for i "You do not of your own knowledge with whieh it was associated. this and his present discomfort he know that it was not as M. de Lai ''But of course 1 remember him;' blames you and your Mende. But he Tour d'Azyr asserts—that he went to she said at ,last, and carte toward the Feydau that night?" bitn, putting out her hand. He kissed "I don't," he admitted. "It is, of it dutifully, submissively, instinctive - course, possible. But does it matter?" ley, "And this is what you have grown "It might matter. Tell me; what intoes She appraised him, and he became of La Binet after all?" 1 flushed with, pride at the satisfaction "You don't know?" She turned to in her tone.. He seemed to have gone back sixteen ,years, nd to be again consider him. And You can say it the little Breton lad et Gavrillac. She with that indifference! I thought .. turned to Aline. "How mistaken I thought you loved her, Andre:" I Quintin was in his assumptions. He "So did I, for a little while. I was was pleased to see him again, was he ntletaken. It required a La Tour net?" d'Azyr to dleelose the truth to me.I "So pleased, madame, that he has They have their uses, these gentle- shown me the door," said Andre - men. They help stupid fellows like Louis myself to perceive impoitant truths." I "Ah!" She frowned, conning him They had reached the wrought -iron still with those dark, wistful eyes of gates at the end of the avenue. hers, "We must change that, Aline, Through these they beheld the wait' I will plead for you, Andre -Louis, i ing yellow chaise which had brought t,,in a good ndvocilte. Andric-Louis. From near at hand came the creak of other wheels, the (To be es,-ntinued.) beat of other hoofs, and now another i She had her face lifted but it fell vehicle came' in sight, and drew to a when she got the, bill for repairs. stareistill. The lady who occupied the carriage, perceiving Aline, waved to her and issued a command. Callottses Quick, safe, sure relief from painful callouses on the feet. At alt dreg end shoe garcs • ' �72�. Fut one on_ ',loinotripag�9ay. Ya'" la goon will marry the Marquis. Climene I should be so. La Binet provided him treats 'tire with coldness. the sort of amusement that he and GO ON WITH THE STORY, his kind are forever craving .. . HE HAS .SHOWN ME THE DOUBLE MINT—easy to remember .and hard to for. get, once you've tried It. Keeps teeth white, breath sweet, aids appetite and digestion ... ISSUE No. 28—'27. "I don't know." • CHAPTER IV. The footman opened the, dor, let- ting down the steps and proffering his arm to his mistress to assist her to alight. She was a woman of some- Minard's Liniment for scaly scalp, BICYCLE BARGAINS New and Slightly used, $10 upwards, Prams portatlon 'Pre - nal d. write for Price List, P137; nLiasS 131c:vcLn Wo 11KS U./ i)andaa Sp5eet West, Toronto Wilson Publishing Company 1586 A SMART ONE-PIECE FROCK.. This chic one-piece frock will be found suitable for all day -time wear. There is an invited plaitin each side seam, long sleeves extending into the neck and gathered to bands 'at the wrist. The smart vestee has a shaped collar and the trim belt fastens with a buckle in front. No. 1586 is for Mises and Small Women, and is in sizes 16,18 and 20 years. Size 18 (86 bust) requires 81/2 yards 39 -inch ma- terial, or 22 yards 54 -inch, and GIs yard 99 -inch contrasting. Price 20c the pattern. The secret of distinctive dress lies in good taste rather than a lavish ex- penditure of mono:'. Every woman should want to make her own clothes, and the home dressmaker will find the designs illustrated in our new Fashion Book to be practical and simple, yet maintaining the spirit of the mode of the. moment. Price of the book 10c the copy. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and adurees plain. ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for tach number and address your order to Patten, Dept;, Wilson Publishing Co., 78 West Ade- laide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by return mail. Everyone Works in Canada Ottawa, Canada.—More persons are employed in agriculture in Canada than in any other industry, according tck a report on "Occupations" recently isstned by the Canadian Government Bureau of Statistics. i The report, which is based on the 1921 Census, discloses that the greatest manlier of Canadian. workers were engaged in agriculture, which gave employment to 1,041,61 poisons. Manufacturing came next with 546,657. There were 3,173,169 persons over 10 years of age gainfully employed in Canada in 1921. Of this number 2,- 683,019 were men and 490,150 women These figures show that 47,.5 per cent. of the total population was en- gaged in some gainful occupation. Of the male population over le years of age 77:.5 per cent. were 010.• ployed in some trade or occupation. Making allowance for boys still at school and students in the colleges, practically every able-bodied male in Canada was either at work or avail- able for employment. Employment in Canada .-tn 1921 was divided into -three groups roughly equal in size. The primary ledus- tries, agriculture, logging, flehing anti trapping, and mining and quarrying —employmentt to 1 161 7788 er- gav� , p sons. The 'secondary industries manufacturing, transportation and in- struction—employed 999,951. persons. The third group—trade, finance, pro- fessional, clerical and domestic ser vies,—gave' employment to 1,011,430 persons. The report makes it clear that in Canada no one cares to be idle. Prac- tically every individual is mailing some direct contribution to the na- tion's productive and constructive ef- fort. Minard's Liniment tor arache. Effort Alone Brings Results Character is the individual's pe- culiar way of. dealing with Life. Character is to living whet efficiency is to working. Indolence plays a per- sistent hand in human nature. Effort is the solereality from which any de- finite result can be expected. 15 failure comes, in spite of added knowledge, nothing remains but further effort. We have only to renew effort in the light of still better knowledge. I. An expen't is one who knows more and more about lase and less. --The Outlook. World l?elegates Will Tour. Canada' Ottawa, Canada.—Delegates from some'' forty nations attending, the World's Poultry Congress in Ottawa July, 27th to August 4th Will: make a tour of, Canada from coast to coast immediately: following the Congress. Preliminary announcements of the tour have been made from the World's Poultry Congress offices hero. The tour will be made by special train leaying Ottawa on August 4th and covering 'first, Quebec and the. Maritime Provinces as far east as Halifax, Nova Scotia. Stops will be made at the principal places of in- terest, particularly from au a:Weul- tural point'of view. The special train will then' tout; Western Canada, mak. ing stops et Winnipeg, ,Brandon; Ite- gina, Moose Jaw, Saskatoon, Edmon- ton, Calgary, at a number of famous beauty spots in the Reeky Mountains, at Vancouver and Victoria and other points en route. Upon their return East. the delegates will visit Niagara Falls and the party will disband„at the Canadian National Exhibition at Toronto, on August 31. Thee tour of approximately eight thousand miles, which has been ar-' ranged through the co-operation of Canadian Government Departments and the Canadian railwhys, will afford prominent visitors from many lands an opportunity to gain an impression of Canada's extent and resources which would not have been possible had their visit been confined to the Wo-rld's Poultry Congres' in Ottawa. About three thousand delegates from the 'United States are expected to at- tend the Congress, a number of whom will be included in the party making the tour of Canada. Getting There. Returned Tourist (to his friend)— "Well, I like Paris and home, but the best part of the whole thing was the trip over. Don't miss that, whatever you do, if you go to 'Elurope.” Chris. tian Register. Celebrity: "Weil, my dear, anything else you want besides my autograph?" Girl: "Er -yes, my fountain pen back" For all washing e n(1 cleaning ®SeVes Soap Saves Work Everywomen's Meld•of-ell•work a aaesitle KEEP CHECKED UP Cancer Can Be Cured If Taken In Its Early Stan'es, Says Doctor Rapid City, S.D, Cancer can bet eliminated if every susceptible pmee'on over e5 years of age well go to a doctor once annually for examination, Major' James F. Cowpal, personal physician to resident Coolidge, told the Black Tfiele Medical Association here. I"We examine our checking accounts yucca a month." Cougal' said. "Our health accounts we rarely think of un- til we have 'overdrawn on them and us tune sends us to a doctor. • 1 "Wall credited authorities : claim that from 30 to 60 per cent. and higher of cancer is curable if diagnosis of this oondiltion is made early. A. periodic/ .ei¢amhsatione. of eitua,tiene where We know cancer to be common. be the on'1'y"thing which can eliminate this sum= peril. "•-•e I "This means that when we came of cancer age, from 35 on'ward', we must go . at least onoe a year for careful examenatio'n of etas dangerous gosai- bilItyM." Dr. ayo Hopes That People Can Be Immunized on Cancer Loudon—"T am in hopes that neons of immunizing people against ganger wiL1 be discovered," sabil°'Dr, William J. Mayo, American surgeon, in an in. terview here. He is now visiting this gauntry to exchange views with lead- ing surgand Physfelons. Elle cited the extraerdivary 'results of the exp'erim'ents caviled out by Dr, Maud Skye, Chicago woman -doctor,. who is able, he Bald, by seleotive breeding, to breed mice wbieh will in no circumstanoes develop cancer de- spite -alt efforts, to iubroduoe it into them. On the other hand she is able,. he declared, tp breed mice which will bnevbtebly be born with cancer. "These experiments," said Dr, Mayo,. "with the others conducted by Dr. Cryo and Professor Blair Bell lead. logicaltly to the idea of canner pveven- tion_as .well, as the discovery of the•. cause. Medical science has massive evidence tee prove that the relief of '851 sources or chronic irritation . doer Much to prevent cancer and that early operations effect cures:' No False Hopes An important exhibit at the annual eonversaz'fone of the Royal Society at Burlington House, was in the hands of 'Dr. Thomas Lunmden who' was granted 51,000 a year in 1925 by the British Empire Canner Campaign to. carry on his oancer research work for six years, By means of slides under micro- scopes he showed that anti -human - cancer serum applied to cultures of mouse -canoes' kills the cancer cella within a few minutes, while leaving the normal tissues undamaged, When asked whether -the serum had yet been tried on human beings suf- fering from cancer, he replied that It had not yet been considered desirable to.do. this. "One must be very careful," he said, "not to raise false hopes. More expemi- ments must be made with andmals..bee fore the treatment can be applied to human beings. Many people are wee.- Mg 1e4ing to be treated, and I reoeive mazy painful letters, but it le essential to go slowly, .step by step, It is hoped, of course, that the treatment may eventually he appiled." One of the most slgnifloant feoturee of the treatment is that enely the can- cer cells are destroyed. The difficulty' haus always been to dlecover a serum whic'ln would not damage the other cells, as well. Quebec and Canada Quebec Soliel (Lib.): At the mo- ment when every province is prepar- ing to celebrate Confederation and to recapitulate the progress achieved during the last sixty years, it is in or- der to point out that the present de- velopment of Canada was above an and before all made possible by the French-Canadian element established on the shores of the St. Lawrence one hundred and fifty years before every- body else. They were a hundred and fifty years of rough toil and sacrifice, of .war, ambush, fatigue and . some- times abandonment, Then was form- ed the real neucleus of what we call today the Canadian nation. - Indianispolis Star: That "Ask Me Another" fad w.as not se popular dur- in the final .examination week. . The Harley-Davidson Single Cylinder Motorcycle is the greatest little ma- chine that has been made. Safe to ride, easy to control, and most econ- omical. Stands without a rival. 100 Miles to Gallon of Gasoline. Price $300. Down Payment $100, Balance $22 per month. Walter Andrews, Limited, 346 Yonge St., Toronto, Ont 11vok ti3 MONTREAL Golfing privileges on some of the eportlest links on the island of Montreal are among the wide variety of lru•gest hotel in rthe Britisalnment h Empirfforded eaceta of the Vernon G. Cardy, Managing Director. '0' A few friends drop inon Pa Buzz LIT spray clears your home of mosquitoes and fligs. It also kills bed bugs, roaches, ants, and their eggs. Fatal to insects but harmless to mankind. Will not stain. Get Flit today: Detributed in Canada by FredJ.;, Whitlow &'Co., Limited, Toronto DESTROYS Flies Mosquitoes Moths Ants Bed Bugs Roaches "The yellow ca" with the black band" , Veeeele .;l Vitt rbY�4i,'LaC 1 lwr�aYiaAce Just Ashfor' al ..Sa�IxFe'.":ii ti . rc l ou... t 11ssu' A most satisfactory roll for the bathroom. A soft, absorbent tissue made, like all Eddy Toilet Rolls, under the most exacting sani- tary conditions. Big value for the housewife seeking a good tissue at a moderate price. THE E CO. LIM/TEO HU LL,CANADA W2 Chair of Canadian Literature One of the first lectureships,- in. Canadian literature, perhaps the very first, has been announced by the'Un1- Versify of British Columbia, Vancou- ver. Dr. Charles G. D. Roberts,'' poet and prose writer, the author of many books, has been appointed to the posi- tion. This is an encouraging forward' movement, and Dr. Roberts has ex- pressed his satisfaction, at the recog- nition thus accorded to Canadian writers. The work will mean Dr. Roberts' re- sidence in Vancouver for parteof each year, but will leave him free forthe remainder to, devote himself to his writing. On his mother's side, Dr. Roberts is a distant cousin of Ralph Waldo Emerson, He was born in New Brunswick, just six months be - fere Ernest Thompson Seton was l born in Durham, Eng• Both men have become.: noted for their annual stories. One of Roberts' 'teachers was Dr. George Parkin, headmaster of the Fredericton Grammar School, : who afterward became Sir George Parkin; administrator of the Cecil Rhodes. Scholarships. . Among the early works of or. Roberts are poems on classic,.sub- jects after the manner' of Keats. In a long list of works, "Songs of the Common Day," and "The Book of the Native" stand out in his poetic,writ- ings. Among his best-known prose works are "The Forge in the Forest," "The Heart of the Ancient Wood," and "More Kindred of the Wild." He has also written a History 6f Canada. The University of British Columbia, situated in Vancouver,' has an `enroll- inset of nearly 2000 students. 'It pos- sesses splendid 'grounds and is grad- ually rearing fine buildings, being liberally endowed. Dr. C. L. Klinck is president. Dr. Roberts spent tea winter in the West, where he g lectures on Canadian literature an' readings from his own work. He Is a cousin of Bliss Carman.