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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1924-12-11, Page 6Sti , 5 5 F a.': k e. a amp Pure, Fresh end Satisfying.. . Sold in aluminum packet.. — Try it. About. the House CHARM AND GRACE. 1 hands from the back of your head. To -day I want to tell you about. Doing each of these exercise twenty two neglected attributes—grace and times a night will give you a lithe, charm. I think that by cultivating girlish figure. And when you sit, try to be graceful grace and charm any woman can be attractive no matter what the shape; too. Folding your arms may feel of her nose or the color of her eyes.i restful, but it spoils, the lines of your I do wish, however, I could tell you' figure. The stylish dress models in about bottles and jars out of which big city shops are taught to keep• • THE STORY OF"' BLOOD FEUD BY ANNIE S. SWAN. "Love gives itself and is not bought."—Longfellow. Time, If I- were standing on the. steps of Time And they stretched cleat befogs me, and ,d'+iiwp. ,• • Would I press forward `then, eager to . climb The topmost stair, 'to reach for mem- ory's Crown, Or would I rather rest, life's .humble clown, • Content on my own steps to hear the chime Of friend) bells in lime, ysome not too sub - CHAPTER Ill—((vita,) ' brought that stupendous crowd to -•kissed waves, and kept on walkingthe firm sancl at the edge of thesteadily, as if seeking some ultimate base, but I was tempted end I felldand congenial goal. ' You think you have known peverty, Cod knows how I inight choose, if Iyou do not know the grinding, t had ehoice,Far beyond the usual limits "of the nutconventional morning vialk she meg sordid kind of poverty such as ours Or, having chosen, how the choiceAlan Rankine, and no surprise wee is. the scheming and planning to make I to the Carlotta moved swiftly dowx' Upon 'Alloway ryKi k v last Tuesday," said I S visible on either face, "because each ends meet, cep family But this I know, and knowing it re - had known, by, some strange subcon- out of the dust; Then" -and here she 1 joic.e— , sciousness and telepathy of soul; ,that lilted her head with an odd, proud Though I must, wait for Time, not it would happen, and `that their meet- gesture of defiance -9 wanted to have Time its w ing, here; on the sands of Ayr, was inY revenge on all these horrible pec- Time iii the book of; fate. plc who have snubbed and belittled; Yet he, too, is God's creattu• e, and his • She did not even flush under his;me� since I came to this place."I passing breath but had t loos" And poor Peter was to be the, Awakes no echo in the corridors o steady gaze, u a a xemu scapegoat," murmured Stair, with an. Death. —L. S. (I smile for him as she offered him he' infinite compassion. �+ frank, kind hand. An immense sense ` Right to her eyes sprang two swift Discovered, of well-being which was actually joy, hot tears. . seemed to enfold her; she was su "Forgive mel" she said softly, and A minister who was officiating fol remelt' content, and had no concernt'with an adorable glance which might. 1 a friend in a email town was scandal beyond the moment.. It sufficed, well have banished his self-control.I ized to observe the old verger, whc In the sun -dew of the April morn -,"But you are not angry? One is not had been collecting the offertory ing her heart sang, because she `knew angry with the child who knows no -I quiet extract a three -penny -piece be that all the gifts of youth and life thin . And how, not having met you,' fore presenting the plate at the altar you could take these things, just as their hands low on their hips Theylwere about to be poured at her feet. �u I I can tell you about the creams and • put their thumbs to the back and Rankine laughed, with a touch of p lotions to give you a pretty skin, and their fingers to the front. The first embarrassment. h talking man into the vestry and told him, wit] the hair tonics that give life and three fingers are held tightly together, "I knew we should meet to -day, I Carlotta; but in this case what axe •some emotion, that his theft had bees h to ha' But since grace but the little finger is allowed to never walk here. I don't suppose I've we to do?" „ observed. The verger looked puzzle - been here on a Sunday morning since :Listen, my dear— for a moment and then a sudden ligh I was a boy,. but when I got up this She called him my dear"as if she little to morning I knew that I should come were his mother. dawned on him. produce this evanescence of loveliness here and find you!" "I never should have married Peter "Why, sir, you don't - mean that oh s sen your it ing to try to give you a few hints to' ting, is extremely attractive. and charm cannot be bought I am go- i spread. This position, standing or sit - These are r e things, be sure, by your own will power. There is nothing so attractive as a charming voice. So many lovely wo- men are spoiled by high-pitched, thin, nervous voices. That is because they are always on the go, To have the kind of voice that peo- ple want to listen to, try to talk from your chest and not from the roof of your mouth. Use only throaty tones. At first the new voice may sound a little affected. But if you continue to practice, in a few weeks it will be- come a natural contralto or mezzo- soprano. Another hint for gaining a charm- ing voice is never to talk so that peo- ple not directly in your conversation can hear you. Keep your voice so 1 that 1 the person to whom you are speaking can understand you. If but it is the little things that ruin r enhance the ensemble. A NEW NURSERY TOY. I know? He almost groaned in Spirit. "It is honor we are a ing about, o Carlotta did not laugh. There was.- Garvock. I was learning it more con - nothing to laugh at. It was serious, vincingly every day. Something else as a genuine happiness must be when would have happened, if not you. Not it has to last. three days after I gave him my prom - "We can only get a iittle•farther," ise I felt myself drawing back. It is she said. "See, the tide is coming in. his own fault that he feels so sure." I know all about this shore. It has no "That will not serve for Peter when tricks—only habits, which have to be he knows," said Alan Rankine with learned and carefully watched." the utmost gloom. "You will be the guide, then," he answered, "since you give me permis- sion to walk with you." "Of course," she said, turning her glorious eyes upon his face. "It is what we came out for, is it not?" "You have -felt it too! You under- stand?" he asked, as if stupefied 'by the wonder of his soul. "Yes. Somewhere in eternity this She shivered slightly and put an- other fold of her scarf about her throat. Suddenly her wild eyes grew pit- eous. "I am afraid of Peter Garvock. He is a hard man even in the thing he calls love! And so jealous! He hates even the attention I give to nay own people. Life with him would be ter - day was registered for you and me." Fable. It is peace the human heart Carlotta did not know herself, nor needs, even more than happiness, and y had she any control over her tongue; in how it is ever to be ours, supposing low a on the usual sense. Yet she was not a we should—we should=supposing I you want other people in the room to 4799. Soft toys are ever popularbabbler, nor one who would compii- should come to Stair?" y tate life in any of its relations by fool- "Listen, Carlotta. The thing which know what you are talking about, tell and may be made very durable and ash speech. It but added to her charm, has come to you and me is so wonder - them later. practical. This model could be de- since all men sooner or later weary vre love one another. Is that ful that nothing else matters. We have Another thing that brings charm veloped in oil cloth, terry cloth,or of the babbling brook, murmuring to met, and quickly and easily is a pleasant smile toweling stockinette or flannel also all eternity �� not so. —not one of those hard surface smiles in rubberized cloth. A good filling that seem to start at the teeth, but would be kopsack, excelsior or cotton. one that begins way down deep in 1 If made of oilcloth or rubber cloth the heart. After you have acquired' and stuffed with cork the toy would such a smile, use it and use it. Re- member, it won't wear out, and only grows more beautiful by practice. • Grace is simply the art of moving be waterproof and would float. The Cape and Bonnet is nice in flannel, crepe, gingham or satin. This Pattern is - cut in one Size, bowed "It is eight days since' we met he She her head. said, in a low, eager voice. "Did you When I came into the room that day remember how long it was?" the whole world seemed to change for "Ye -se -and I have been think- ig of Imes'�, d for rne," put in Carlotta you through all these sad days Ct. swiftly. "My heart stood still, then was there when you laid him to Did you know?" all the blood rushed to it, and the He shook his head.°' ' room whirled, and there was only "I did not know, though ,I ort. you." your body in harmony. A girl with The Doll will require % yard of •2?- But that is a day which blots 'other "We belong to one another•. But • a graceful figure is always considered things out of a man's heart and life:' we shall have to }mark warily." y inch material. The Cape and Bonnet"Apart," she said,with the swift stylish, while one who waddles or 24 inches of 27 -inch material. There has been nothing like it see in steranes of a child"a art for ever slumps or jerks cannot look well— pattern mailed to any address on Alloway for generations. My faitlbk petulance ' p riot even in expensive gowns. y some who was not a great lied him ahere were efoolish one more."by heaven, not apart, but to - some of 20c in silver, b the Wilson No, p but to have awakened affection in so gether: But how it is going to be done many hearts was, surely; to have I know not. Who will tell Peter?" lived!" Why, l will tell him, of course. It "The life of the heart!—it is worth -le I, and not you, who have wronged all else," said Carlotta musingly, ter, him. That he persecuted me into a the glow of passion, spent at the mo_ promise does not lessen the sum of my ment of meeting, was followed by a dishonor. My heart was. never colder deepening quiet. "It moved me to him than at the moment when I tears—and yet I was glad, glad for promised to marry him. And when 1 your .sake: How could one be sad�'on told him it must be soon or never he such a day? It was all glory to have might have guessed." rail. • A simple exercise for acquiring a Publishing Co., 73 West Adelaide St., graceful walk is to balance a slipper Toronto. or a book on your head every night for at least twenty minutes, while walking around the room. Another ex- ercise is to clasp your hands at the back of your head and get up and sit down without unclasping them. After you have mastered thi;, try getting up and lying down without moving your Ektk Let Christmas Day usher in months of pleasure with a O1apra01e Radio Receiver. No other gift will give such continu- ous pleasure, so constantly rernind the recipient of your thoughtful goodwill. And it's a gift you can be proud to send. All Marconi deal- ers have various models and will install the set you select. Write to any one of addresses below for. illustrated booklet' pD Send 15c in silver for our up-to- date Fall and Winter 1924-1925 Book of Fashions. Issue. tib. 49—'24. AUNT ADELAIDE'S A LADY. Aunt Adelaide's a lady and She has a lady face; Her house is spick and spandy, too, and so is all the place. After the service he called the oh three -penny -piece of mine? Why, I'v led off with that for the last flftee years." Minard's Liniment Heats Cuts. Clever Doggie! The two small children were mall ing their way home from the kinder garten school. They talked y as child ren will, about all the exciting thing that had been happening in their re spective homes. Then; Gladys—"My daddy sold our do last week and it came home yesterda lived and loved as he did, and then to l. ' "I know my cousin's temper," said 1 pass on! It is what ought to be." ' high Ranki e, glia tloomy ilsand vindictive ore"It tois So, when we go to visit her, we shine! "In Stair there is onlyone to follow. , ' n 'our Sunday boots ' Judy," d Rankine 'He will never forgive me; and it is; And take a clean, whole handkerchief and wear our other suits, And sit up straight at table and keep our elbows off, And always turn our heads away if we should have to cough, And say "No thank you," when we're a.st to take another slice, And for the Lord's sake don't forget to tell her things is nice, And careful we don't interrupt when m, and that is udy, said 'th touch f g1 . "The qualities _lite he willblame to the day of doom.' wi a I will take the blame gladly, Carlotta. which made my father great are not of this generation." :I will tell Peter to -day, though it will "She is very wonderful, I know," be a sorry Sunday's work." said Carlotta.; "and it is because she She shook a decisive head, has been a burden -bearer. She is very. `"I forbid' you. This thing is mine, simple and dear, as all those are who and we must part here until—until— do the big thins of life." or, perhaps, for ever:" Rankine felt himself oddly moved, (To be continued.) as a man may when he hears 'his 4. name, or realizes in his own The Same Wish. soul the secret of the springs of being. The schoolmistress was about to. anybody talks, They walked on in silence, not notic- dismiss the class for the holidays. And go outdoors to run and play and howow said, "I hope arhe theych waweres approachng to tliatlyou children,"wihavesae very pleasant,' don't get off the walks, the frowning Heads of Ayr. time, and, what is more important, that you will all come back with a bit of sense in your heads," Promptly came the chorus of voices, "Same to you, miss." afternoon." Ivy—"How funny! I wonder how found its way back?" Gladys—"Why, you silly, it look on its collar, of course!" And shake her hand r leaving and be sure to say it hearty, "I thank you dear Aunt Adelaide, it's been a pleasant party." Aunt Sadie is another aunt, but we just call her "Aunty." "Carlotta," said Alan Rankine, sud- denly, and with a touch of passion, "you will never go to The Lees as Peter Garvock's wife!" She lifted her eyes to his with a still, wondering look. She did not know how or why, but Peter Garvock She says her yard's a circus and she had just drifted out of her life quiet - calls her house a shanty. She says that trees were made to climb and grass was made to roll on, And says a child's a stomach that you got to graft a soul on, ly, effectually, as the hulk of ah old coble, drifting with the ebb -tide, is lost to view! "No; I will never go to The Lees as Peter Garvock's wife—there is no- thing surer than that." "Say now that you will come to And so she makes us pies and cakes) Stair, one day, as my wife—that there and feeds us in the kitchen,is nothing surer than that?" he said, And if we bust ourselves, she says, land stood still on the firm wet sand,. she's there to take a stitch in. compelling her with his eyes. Then she says she's baked some cook-, She shook her head, and watched, les, and if anybody rubberedwith eyes that saw not, the flight of a Jar is on the They must have seen the ' seagull, its graceful dip to the stili kissed wave. low shelf of the cupboard. I "That I cannot say—at least yet;, She says her house is kid -proof; no for there is a long road to travel one yet has broke or bent it, first." And to bump our heads against it if Suddenly her eyes became dant we think that we can dent it. i( with pain, and she stamped a passion And when we're hugging her .good-by,t ateNoo�t why ees ed.why is life so we say "Oh, . Aunt Sadie, ' ' '' cruel? Why Could you not have come We're comingback to -morrow and Christman instead of at Easter? were glad' you ain't a lady! Why did I tot, meet you instead of .-•Edmund V. Cooke, Peter Garvoek?" "God knows! But I want to hear She Explains.ow�and why peter. won our mains 1 r, y •.». 19aleania11- There, madam, that6, tise. The color flamed in her cheek. fust what you want. This Portman i I am ashamed to tell you, who teau ie solid leather—every inch of it will never understand, for there is no solid leather." -money-sense at Stair. I have had that Sharper-- But, my good man I dinned intorn earssines ever 7 heard d want a hollow one, to mit adage In!" the came.'' ere i s ir'I'h tl e thin s hes de the Por Sore Feet—MVlinard'e Linirintnt, money -sense. It 'would never lut.oe Mixed goods. . Billingsgate, London's great fish market, covers 39,000 feet of floor ,epace, while 182,000 tons of fish were 'handled there last year. 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The separable swivel plug allows perfect freedom in the use of the Iron, eliminating all danger of the cord becoming twisted and breaking at the ter- minals. For sale by dealers everywhere. H 16E NURSES t'.ho Tor9nlo H.*pit l fpr Ii*uraWoas le aMllsnoil OS as4 AVM Neesrtale Near Yark• coy., seise 5: byes-sgi,,ro' Ciro , .< of TtPhil,, to awe carnes. wise as reiulred eloostiea, and Serino' of oaoaatlnp' nurses. Thh Noapitpl hes adopted thr olphl. hour aydem. The pupils reoelvs uniforms of the Scheel, a:Montllly otlowanee and :trsvenins, exponioe to and frost Naw Yprk, F9r further'.. information spots to the 6uperiateodant• SS.Providence In Mexicoa bridge 150 ;; feet long is built entirely of solid mahogany. MOREAN 55,000 FARMERS have :bought their farms In Wastare Canada from the Canadian Pacific. A remarkable. Fact. Think; !-'here is ,a reason. The large area of our hold - Olga affordingehoico of location and of land to suit every fanning need. 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