HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1925-06-18, Page 6ea
the fu/1. Cha to O
3E1 Allto
Hese .,
its revealed. The flavor is pure;
fresh ab.d fragrant. Try it.
BlacL Mixed or Green Blends.
Love Gives Itself
THE STORY OF A BLOOD FEUD
By ANNIE S. SWAN.
"Love gives .itself and is not bought."Longfelloie
Mind! But I can't help.'wornderingT.
whether she got Mr. Rllnkine's, con-
sent before he went away.' 111y belief
i8 that when a woman goes+ otr the
stage, when she has gifts like Car-
lotta's, she hasn't the sane interest.{
in matrimony. I shouldn't be at all
surprised if that, came to an end too,
You see, with a girl like Carlotta, one
never knows! You can't lay down
hard and fast rules for her, or calcu-
late with any certainty how she 18 go-
ing to behave."
M
Lucy's eyelashes fluttered,* down,;
but Mrs. Carlyon, quite uaconseious
of the undercurrents, babbled on.
"Of course, she may have taken it
up just to LI and distract her mind
just now; but I know far better than
mostpeople what is likely to be the
endo'it. • She'll never give it up
after she has felt the glamor of it,"
"Yougave it up—did you not?"
asked Mrs. Garvockswith a smile,
Mrs. Carlyon shrugged her, ample
shoulders, and her pretty, faded face,
looking a little tired and old with: the
bright May sunshine on it, smiled
ruefully.
"Oh, I was never a great actress!—
only a comedy performer, and not
i much at that. But I liked the, life,
and the'Professor had no idea what I
gave up when I married and went
down to that stuffy old college town to
live! I tell you, I nearly edied the
first year. But, you see, h promised
him to give up, and I kept my. prom-
ise. It is no use pretending I'm sorry
It would surely be more dignified to at m not. Carlotta has
d ne,,dbecause
know
leave them alone now."glad, y
"Oh,very-
The Toronto notpltet tot InoeraeheIn
'effhlatlonwith nellnvee And iAlllod ItsepitalI.
Now York Oily *!lore, n three yeprl' Pouffe
•, M Tralillos to. Young women, Raving tho
yecufrod ,eduoatlee, and dellrouo of heoo+lilnp
t
eyries, Thlt ito'pita' hal odopht
cd the OIp.
p our eyelet». "Os pupil; receive uniforms 01
h 041100, a monthly snowless and tin o lIn2 ..
�,iponset to and from NOW Wk., For (wino,.
+rlutorntatian apply to the Suporintendonl.
was very kind—she asked me up to
The Lees to sleep, Pet --I` mean Mr,
Garvock."
"Please calm me Peter,"- he said
gruffly. "I like it. And I hope you
will come up to The Leese you will
tell me when you will be ready to
leave the'1Clock House, 1'11 send"a car-
riage from the hotel."
"Oh, how very good of you! Well;
I think I will come,". said Mrs. Car-
lyon, pleased with, the little attention,
and not at all concerned as to whether
she ought to decline it in the circum-
stances. "I'nr not fond of hotels. I
got a pretty good dose of them in my
touring days; though these, of course,,
were not very classy :ones. I suppose
you have heard the reason why we
are leaving Ayr?"
Peter 'shook' his head. • -
"Carlotta has gone on the stage!"
said Mrs, Carlyon hastily; and at the
. Same time narrowly observing him, to
see how he would take the news. "She
has gone on as'leading lady, with our
but Mrs. Carlyon wrote a how to bear myself till I get to Lon old friend, Graham
Mr. Ga vock . And if
-:I should
kind letter. You said yourself it was don to see her in her proper place,
you
y that's good-bye to matrimony. The
a kind'' letter." where she ought to have been years ,
"I did, and I answered it, Lucy. No- ago if her father hadn't- been so pre- kind of actress Carlotta is going to be
thing more is needed." judiced." •has not time for that sort of thing in
"But I do so want to go! I must "I suppose' he gave in this time," her life' ,
Peter Garvock's face flushed
go, mother! Please don't refuse, orp' murmured Mrs. Garvock, merely for what painfully, and, though intensely
some -
1 shall get ready and walk. down my- the sake efe something to say. interested, he did not seek to pursue
self:" "Carlotta didn't ask him. She situp- the subject, but turned it off by ask-
"You may ring and order the car-; ly just wrote and, said she was going ing again when he might'order the
nage then; though"it will inconven- to do it. He has gone up, poor, dear carriage from the Station Hotel.
for Alan Rnkine, for what chance ience the people greatly, I am sure, to an, ith some idea of expostulating
So that night the feud between
has he—a nameless adventurer in. Am- have us calling on the very same day with her. He doesn't know that Stair and .The. Lees had another pre-
erica—and she with the whole world the furniture vans are at the door." as fixed up'now, Revocably, for_ ciaus little bit added to it .
practically at her feet?" "You know that won't trouble Mrs. months to come! But Carlotta knows It was told with great gusto how
Lucy made a little nervous gesture Carlyon or the Professor in the least" how to manage -him. I've no doubt
that by tads she's of h]m talked Mrs. Carlyon had spent her last night
Sillars. o
In about twenty minutes' time they one quitelostwithout the pair!
• It
"If it is as you say,"bean IVIrs.�`vere being driven over the smooth
Garvock,"certainlythe risks arm, g was very kind of you to drop in like
roads,in the delightful May sunshine; this to saygood-bye, I did think I
great. A great actress, is she? Nowwould wrie a line to -night, after T
1 wonder whether he knew what she towards the town.
moment he' Arrived at the Sandgate, they found, got down to the hotel to sleep, and
was going to do at the the pantechnicons at the Clock House tell" ou what had happened."
left her? And Judy?—•I am sure shep ,y ply
would disapprove most highly! Now door, precisely as Mrs. Sillars had "I don't like the idea of your going
that she is supposed to be pledged to said. to the hotel," said Mrs. Garvock, with .
Stair, it is hardly the thing—I should The coachman was instructed to a sudden and quite- genuine rush of
have thought!" I stop a little to tine side, and both la-
"Oh,
a- hospitable feeling. "Won't- you. come Potatoes Make Ireland Poor.
a is a matter of- d' alighted d s 'ked up Ato the t Th Lees?"
door which was wide open. When Carlyon the surprise through
CHAPTER
"MISS CARLYON AN ACTRESS i"
"You don't say so! Are you sure?
I heard that she had gone away from
Ayr, but of course we supposed that
her object was to be with him, and to
see him off at Liverpool."
"I am quite sure. I know her well
enought to make no mistake. And
there is no doubt that she is a great
actress. As I sat there looping at and
watching her, I felt nothing but pity
with her hands, not last upon Mrs. Lucy reminded her. over. They are a w nde fuI air! The
in` Scotland under the roof -tree of The
Lees, and, further, had been. driven to.
the station next morning in the
brougham, in company with Peter
Garvock, who showed her as much.
solicitous attention as if nothing had
happened and she was going to be• his
mother-in-law after all! • •
(To be continued.)
-
"Oh that ' tt little im res a g an va. up e e ees .
Mrs. lookedAll tl h modern history Ireland
ort It is dtafraid
of.l of c'0 v she felt.
the thing I should be afraid of. And no one answered their ringat-the has beeremore or less poverty stricken,
if I were Alan's friend, GT in his con- bell, they ventured in, and. c on the "Very kind of you, I'm sure, but 'a condition brought about by the fact
fidence, I should simply advise him the steps from the lower hallt your son wouldn't like it—he couldn't that the chief food of the Irish has al-
to come back and take her out of it first landing, where they encountered be expected to; and I'd like to say ways been potatoes. One acre of po-
a11. Otherwise— I Mee, Carlyon in a strange costume, here"—she added a little- hurriedly, tatoes produces twice as much food as
'She shrugged her shoulders, and her apparently directing operations. s '°that I was awfully sorry when it hap- one acre of'wheat and at less expense
expression was significant. Now while She had a small Chippendale dress- pened. h would have done - a good and less trouble not only in the field,
there was no venom or malice in Mrs, ing-glass in her hand, which she near- deal to prevent it happening, but I
Sillars' tongue or in her heart she ly dropped h '' at si lit of q • p It blit in the cooking.
] t ral result there i ars on , in her surp.i.e g was quite
o,ver�ess, was a case
did some mischief that day which she the ladies from The Lees. But thous r of love at first sight, if ever there ' As (a natural has been
afterwards could very heartily have surprised, it was just as Lucy said, was one!" no reason for the Irish to labor hard
wished undone. In her eagerness to she was not in the least disconcerted, Lucy rose up suddenly, and her and as a natural sequence the popula-
•1 1 men but welcomed them' quite warmly,and mother observed her lips whitening. tion of Ireland has,always increased
be kind to these two one y wo ,
suffering through no fault of their invited them` to come into a small sit -
own she had done less than justice ting -room at the back, which had been
to a�woman she knew nothing about.left untouched.
"I was in the town before I came ee I "I've lust had tea in there. Can
to The Lees," she went on, finding I offer you some?"
that Mrs. Garvock did not seen in- They thanked her, but' assured her
dined to pursue the subject, "and in they had already had it.
the Sandgate I saw -two furniture' I am quite glad to see you, and
vans before the door of the Clock to have a chance of sitting down for
t 18S ax -
"I spoke very straightly to Carlottl, twice as rapidly as that of England.
and told her she couldn't expect to ;This brings about .a surplus of labor
prosper after what she had done. It
was .a shame to treat a c'ecent, honor-
with the result that,.as in Indian and
able gentleman 'as she treated Mr. other countries of a similar nature,
Peter Garvock; but there! What was very few of the people have ever be -
the use of talking to Carlotta?` Why, come possessed of much wealth.
just none at all!'I don't believe there The Irish have had no use for money.
will ever be a marriage between her By 'working a few weeps in the year
House; so, quite avid a ly, M' C a few minutes What a business this and Alan Rankine. If. he was so des- they could sustain life for the whole
l on's people are joining her in Lon- removal is! And this came upc,ii us perste about her, he ought to have car- year, and this continued to be the con -
don. A great cleaance, is it not? We with such suddenness. Of course, the ried her off with him. I know what dition in Ireland up to 1846 when a dis-
Stair,
Professor has gone. He went osier-+
could ill spare the' Rankdnes from ,y- London is. And Carlotta •has looks! dition ease .attacked and destroyed the crops
Stair, Mrs. Garvock, but we shall have day. Oh, yes.; it was muchei<ietter• She may do much better for herself, famine
to call upon the new people and make He is in anguish when this asrt of Mrs. Garvock; smiling somewhat the r the result d fo during
Aiuerica�in large
them welcome. They are very nice, thing happens! I do hope that this painfully, rose then, will said the, s
and will take great care of the house,move will be the last, and that Car- must not detain her any longer. numbers and it became a habit which
, e„ t lotto will not !rustle us any more." "I thank you again for writing that has lasted until the present day:
These conditions were aided by mis-
government' which gave .the Irish a
chance to be born fighters, while the
intervals of peace left them free to
dream of fairies and imps so that to-
day Ireland has -more quaint songs and
superstitions• than , all the rest of the
world combined. r
m suz So much a citizen of theworld was
Mrs. Sillars, now having finishedkind little letter to me., I showed, it
her tea, said she thought she would Mrs. Carlyon that she saw and felt to my son, and though be did not say
go, and bade them good-bye heartily; nothing incongruous in the visit of anything about it, I aro sure it pleased
hoping
y
the y would soon come to Kit- The Lees ladies, and no thought of him."
doon,
and that all the trouble and apologizing for the condition of the A gratified smile came on Mrs. Car-
worry
ar-
worr • would blow over. ! house occurred to her. Still carrying Lyon's face..
She was genuinely sorry for them, they glass, she ushered them into the "Did it? I should like to have seen
the
�* h' h Carlotta had used
for, quite evidently, they felt the po- - i .e
sition keenly, and, through no fault as a sort of housekeeping room, .where
of their own, 'were being talked about she kept accounts, and such stores as
much more than they relished. Indeed, the limited size of the establishment
the extraordinary number of new ver- permitted. It had an old-fashioned
sions of the story rampant in the knee -hole desk across the window, on
county would not bear telling. 1which the tea-tray still stood, a long,
"Mother," said Lucy, when they low couch, an easy chair and a faded
were left alone, "I wish you would rug on the floor.
order the carriage, and let us go down I Both ladies seated themselves on
to the Clock House to say good-bye." , the sofa, while Mrs. Carlyon leaned'
"Why should we do that, my dear? against the corner of the writing
US
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Mustard makes ordinary
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jtable.
Su
" eh an upset! -But, mind, I don't
say I'm sorry to leave Ayr just now!
I.I suppose you haven't heard what has
happened to Carlotta?"
Mrs. Garvock pondered a moment,
and then said outright that Mrs. Sil-
larscalled upon them that very after-
noon
fternoon with the astounding news.
"Sillars—Sillars? I don't know her.
ISSUE No. 24.-' 5,
him --only once, to tell him I had no
hand in it at all. He was always very
kind to me, Mrs. Garvock, and like a
son to the Professor; and I don't care
though Carlotta should marry a duke
-which, indeed, might happen," she
added, with a little conscious smile,
"but he never culd be better nor kind-
er than Mr. Garvock was, in the time
he came about this house."
They parted most amicably, and, as
it happened, were not the last visitors
from The Lees to call at the Clock
House on that eventful day.
Peter himself heard in the town that
the pantechnicons were before the
Clock House door, -and, knowing that
`Carlotta had gone, he walked quite
deliberately. down the Sandgate, and
into the house, just as his mother had
done.
But Mrs. Carlyon shrank back a
How did she know? -:Because, though little at sight of him, both because he
the play was spoken of in the news- seemed very much changed, so thin
papers, Carlotta's namo was riot given and shrunken, and also because it was
—or only her stage name, Miss Mar- a very different thing discussing Car-
garet Tenterden." lotta with Peter's mother and with
"Mrs. Sillars has just come from 'Peter himself.
London, where she saw her in the "Oh, howdo you clo, Peter?" she
play." said, in tones which . her discomfort
Mrs: Canyon's face flushed a little made a little shrill. Then she redden
with pleasurable excitement. ed furiously. "Mr. Garvock, I ought
"What did she say about it? Do to say, but I forgot. Odd, that you
tell me! You can't imagine what I should come! I've had your mother
have felt like shut up here, while all and sister . this afternoon, to say
that was going on in London." • 1 good-bye." "" '
"Mrs. Sillars says she is a great "You have? So they knew you,
actress," •said Mrs. Garvock ktndly;. were 'leaving!"
for now that all chance of relation-' "Not till to -day, I think. hers.
ship with what she called "those queer Somebody, calling at The Lees, told
people" was at an end, she could af- them. I believe Milers was the name.
ford to be very friendly and interest- 'The Professor has gone, and I.follovv'
ed in everything concerning them. ' to -morrow. I'm going out to sleep at
"Of course, I've always known that! the Station Hotel 'to -night, after I
And if it hadn't been for her father et all the stuff. out. Your mother
she would have gone on the stage Tong
since. It was our old, fteend, Graham
Madox, who persuaded her. fie was
e student atPeterhouso in my leas -
heed's time there, trd we knew him
ver ' well. 1t's .a. splendid chance for
her, though, I. don't quite understand
why she should have. taken it up all
of a sudden just Time
She hesitated just there, remember-
ing that the was hovering perilously
near tha'edge of debatable ground,
"No doubt Miss Carlyon had her
own suf:?crent "reasons," suggested
Mrs. Garvock.
"Oh, probably. Thci•e never Was
one like her for knowing her own
g
43,
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162
SZAZED
TIGHTp
P10717
les
'FLAVOR tASY,P
Wisdom Cometh With the
Years.
Now I am young and -credulous,
My •heart is quick to .bleed
At courage in the trernmlous,,
Slow' sprouting of a seed.
Now i am young and sensitive,
Man's lack can stab me through;
1081 I own no stitch I'would not give
To him that asked me to.
PLAITS ADD FLARE ;TO PLAIN ' New I nen young anti a Mmol for love,
•CONTOURS. My blood'goes''mad to see
The plaited treatment is considered A brown .girl pass me likea dove
especially attractive in this. frock of That flies melodiously.
summery voile, inasmuch as the gar-
ment Let retains the straight silhouette;
And ..di'earrr.that false is true;
Though wisdoni cometh with the years
.The barren days come, too.
—Countee P. Cullen.
Minard's Liniment for Backache.
Man is His Own r.
Man is his own star; and the soul
-that' can
Render an honest and a perfect man
all
of the belt. Plain -color faille ribbon Commands fate light', all influence, alt
finishes the round neck and short Nothing to 'him falls early, or too late.
kimono sleeves, after which the side Our'actso our angels are, er good or ill,
seams are joined, leaving only -the Our fatal shadows that walk by us
hem to be turned up to the 'desired still.
length. ,Cut; in • sizes 16, 1S _and 20
years. Size 18 years requires 2/$
HOW TO 'ORDEBf PATTERNS. Yyou've
.
yards of 36 -inch material if made with our courage.
Nothing is lost until
short sleeves. Price 20 cents(
while a flared movement is achieved
whenthe wearer is in motion. The
most attractive feature • of the frock
shown here, No. 1081, is that the pat-
tern is cut all in one piece. The plaits
are laid in place first and stitched
to the lower edge of the side -belt,
which is cut in one -with the dress' The
bodice is made to blouse slightly at
the sides, in the new manner, by be-
ing slashed in and gathered to the top
And It Mayele Good Advice.
1st Lady—"And why are you getting
a divorce, dear?"
2nd Lady—"My doctor advises . a
change of husbands, you know."
Co.
Cocoanut pulp as Milk for Use
in Tropics.
With the discovery that the pulp of
young Cocoanuts contains practically,
all the nourishing qualities to be found
p ntin
in milk, scientists are experimenting
exp
to find out it the substance can be used
as a practical substitute foe the liquid
in the tropics, says Popular Mechanics..
They plan to extract the moisture from.
the cocoanut and inix the dry remain-
der with milk from the water buffalo,
which 18 said- to be more nirtritioes
than. cow's milk.
Write your name and address plain-
ly, giving number and size of such
patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in
stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap
it carefully) for earl. number, and
address your order to Pattern Dept:,.
Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Ade-
laide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by
return mail.
Why Bread and Butter?.
Until recently no one was able to
say just why bread and butter are al
ways associated as articles of our.•diet..
It has now been shown that there is
such a substance as an "anti -vitamin,"
or good property, which nullifies the
influence of the bad property in bread
and other cereals.
The new discovery shows, for ex-
ample, why the people of the cold
north eat blubber and animal oils,
while people of the south use olive and
vegetable oils. Animal oils, it has
been found, have properties that are
possessed by the sun's rays. In the
Arctic regions sunlight is compara-
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place. Vegetable fats, on the other
hand, do not contain this propefty.
"Liberty!' Oats.
The hulless variety of oat named
Liberty, origiinated at the Central Ex-'
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used for four years in experimental
work carried on by tho Ositar•io Agri-
culturel end Efperimenlal iiniou, The
average yield during the past , two
years was 84.1.4 'bushels to the acre,
standing,1n fourth position in the varie•
tie's tested over the province.
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