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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1925-09-24, Page 6ave You Tasted • G EE,'N TEA Those who have used Japan, 'Young •Itlyson er Gunpowder Tea will &pyre. ciate the sirperiority of this delicious blend, always so pure and rich, Try it. ••••••••.•n.....• Love Gives Itself THE STORY OF A BLOOD FEUD BY ANNIE 8. SWAN. °Love gives itself ad i3 not bought.r—Longfellost, CHAPTER XXIX. "When—when did. you come?" he stammered. "I only heard to -day 011ANGES. that the house was empty, and I was Peter Garvock, on a Sunday after- on my way to see whether it was noon, put his hand on the wicket gate true." on the far side a The Lees shrub- "You can come back with me then. bery, and passed on to the lower slopes My sister-in-law only arrived last of Barassie Hill. night at eight o'clock. • But she iseetery It was a dayof :April's most ex- tired, and I have not allowed her to quisite mood. A sunny sea lay, blue get up till tea -time' has written now and again, but no.. and ambient, under the dappled sky, "Your sister-in-law!" repeated that/she is getting into a family, she the air was full of the soft, indescrib-I Peter in the same stupid, stammering seems to have •less and less time." ,able beneficence of spring, birds sang ',fashion. .`Then where is Alan?" But Peter refused to be beguiled. and twittered on every bough, and i "Alan? Only God knows!" answered "I can't get over it,", he said in 'a the far cry of the lambs seemed to Judy, without a thought of irrever- voice of anguish such as Judy had voice at once the need of childhood! ence. "Let us sit down here and talk and the answering call of motherhood:things over, Peter, for I see you are throughout the world, I interested, and, after all, I won't go These two years had aged Peter eto The Lees, because now I see you 1 Garvock so that his face looked harsh- know it was only you I did want to er than ever, and the grey was about See. But I hope Aunt Isabel and Lucy his temples. IIIMIORS112•VIII00••••Iadearla.l. turned seewards, were eot good to "Doa't Tub it in Judy! Good God arid to think,I with at the bottom of it all!, That, but for Imo,' Alkm would have heen et Stair yet, tiesmping his own hill with e dog at hie heele, of a Sunday afterriece, 'es be Used to do!" "Don't, Peter!" said Judy pitifully, "It isn't any good. If it is true what Carlotta says, that these hitngs are written in the book of Fate, what dies gnarclednY* "And if .A.lan s wife it all matter?" • thinks he is conting home—well, I "There is no beak of roe in which think the red of-• us had better sus - it is written that a man shell be a peed our judgment." hound, and a cur, or a murderer, "She Asn't well, Bobbie; and she's Judy; And that's what I've been. If such a dear i The very best and dear - 1 bad killed Alan here, on this very spot, tare yeara ago, I couldn't heve been more guilty than I am," Judy was in no way amazed at the change in Peter Garvocit, because no very different dtheetssieg them face to face." •• NoW 'Debbie Sanderson, at the back of his mind, had rio' doubt whatever het that Alae.R,ankine had joined the great majority, He could not oeper- wise explain his Complete silence and distippearanee. Put he could not look into Judy's face and tell her so. "'I'liere's more in psychology then we are inclined tb admit,'! he said est in the' world! And elle deServes happiriess for what she has done! She, has slaved.and toiled these tvo years back, end she's going 0 start slay - in and toiling again, as soon as she happening on earth seemed now to has had a month or -two's rest; all have the power to move her much. e for the saving of Stair! And I'm to "There len% any use speaking or stop here, now, for ever and • ever, it looking like that, -Peter," she repeated. I like! 'Isn't it splendid? go you see "It won't do good to 'anybody, and it what a high and mighty trust is going hurts you. Won't you come over now to be place'd in you to build up and' and see Carlotta? She will certainly keep well the woman on Whom 'so s; much • d."(eTnods'bie' continued,) - "But Peter come down for tea." Gervock shook hi hen d, was not reedy yet te meet the eyes • --1, • that had once been his undoing, and . • he had not yet recovered from, the * • An Arctic Patrol Alan Rankine's wife all these dreary Canada exercises jurisdiction -in her • shock of hearing that she had been • manths, and was now, perhaps, 'his Arctic archipelafor and. ii endeavoring widow'. to ' ameliorate the conditibns under - hielt her Eskimo eel 1)..r "I think I'll leave you now, Judy. w ' --zena e living. These things want thinldng over,".he Patrols sent out by the Dominion C;ov- said, standing almost humil and eminent are administering fuatice and bareheaded, before her. "We i meet investigating conditions in that vast again now that you have come back area. Every precaution is being taken "Oh, don't go yet!" said Judy cheer-' to conserve the wild life ef Arctic Can- to Stair." fully. ,"Let's talk about other things. acla and the o7perations of the white I'm dying for Ayr news! Tell me aU trapper and trader are being so limited about Aunt Isabel and Lucy, and Meg aos to avoid undue depletion of the fur - Sillars, and the Sandersons. Edie nearere and gadie animals. In pursuance of this policy Major L. T.''Burrw'ash, explOratory engineer of the North West Territories, and Yukon Branch, Department of the Interior, has already bevn hie patrol through never before heard froni her cousin' the southern islands of, our Arctic liocs. Mackenzie river to Midson bay. He archipelago _front the mouth of the "You can't get over what?" "The fact that you don't bear any wil ' I travel through this country for the malice apparently; that you can speak 'to me rn the oler friendly way! I didn't deserve it, Judy. I've be- haved like a cur—but don't think I've got off scot-free!" , "Nobody does," said Judy gravely. "Nobody in the wide world! The price has always to be paid. It is only when it has to be paid over and over that one incline § to grumble. Oh, I am so sorrysfor Carlotta, Peter, and I'd lay down my life cheerfully, at this very moment, if by doing it I could bring Alan back, and see them happy in Stair together!" Judy had no intention of reproach- ing her align, but the words went ily. home. She picked herself up a trifietheav- "After all, I don't think I'll go over to The Lees to -day. You can give Aunt Isabel and. Lucy my love, and tell them I'll come and see them soon, or they can come to Stair if they like. . ' are quite well?" There is no process by which a man She spoke these commonplaces. to . ' ages quicker than by mental travail, give him time to 'recover himself, at of which Peter had had his fill. the . same time searching about. for a No man or woman (since he shut comfortable place to sit down on. his inmost heart from. those in the Three weeks of drying March -wind house with him) knew what these two had made the fields ready for the years had held for him. In the silent sowing, and there was not a marshy night watches, when he did not sleep, spot left on Barassie Hill. he Was haunted by the vision of a naked and devastated Stair, from Judy dropped down on a clump of which his kindred had been swept heather on which 'the new shoots clean, like the chaff before the wind. were showing greenly against the grey Little - or no news of the Rankines of a sheltering boulder, and invited had filtered through to Ayr, and noee her cousin to do likewise. But. for a at all to Peter Garvock, though he was space he did not, but stood still, star - aware that Alan vashbelieved to have mg down at her with the strangest died in Canade, nothing having been heard of hirn since „lie left Scotland. Just that morning he had heard from one of his own stable hands that the tenants had left Stair, and that expression on his face. "I can't compliment you, Peter, for —honest Indian—you are looking about sixty years old to -day. What- ever have you been doing to your- lf1" et was now unoccupied. But nobody • seemed to know what was, going to • "Chewing the cud of remorse, Judy. 1 happen next. ' . • And it has never been more bitter Such au unrest and longing had than now! What do you mean by been upon him all the morning that, saying that your sister-in-law is at though he had tried to fight against Stair? -I never heard that they were it, it had conquered him; and he was married! When did it happen? And ' now on his way to Stair to see with his own eyes and hear with his own ears concerning the further fortunes of the desolated house. • As he vaulted the march dyke, re- membering, with the poignancy of anguish, what had transpired there on another Sunday afternoon not so where?" "It happened it London, on the morning or the day on which he sail- ed, and nobody has ever known of it till now. It might be a very long story,. Peter, but what's the good? Alan is lost somewhere, on that {heed- ful Continent which stretches from very far away but that he could re.. sea to sea, and after that, to illirnit- call its minutest detail, a figure sud- able regions of ice and snow. And denly came round the spur of the. hill,1Carlotta and I have come back to with skirts blowing in the playful April wind corning in from the sea, and Peter, to his unspeakable amaze- ment, beheld the face of his cousin Judy. For the moment the man was at a Alan's wife she has the right to Stair loss, and would have fled, but Judy —at least until it is proved that he came forward, smiling in a quite is really dead. Claud and I think he friendly manner, holding out her is dead, of course; but Carlotta says, band. . and I am sure believes, that he is alive "I'm not going to eat you, peter yet, and that he coming back. She is" ' Garvock; and I was on my way to is rather weird at times about things The Lees to see whether Ramsay's' like that, Peter, but in all the world mandate held good yet, and whether there never has been a more noble he would show me the door!" I woman than Carlotta, nor a love like Peter Garvock essayed to speak, :theirs ---or like hers, I should say !— but his tongue seemed to cleave to for what can we know of Alan's love the roof of his mouth. I or hate at the Back of Beyond!" . Judy had changed, too,. The round -1 "I have known, of course, that she ness had gone from her brave face, so has been on the stage all the -time, that its profile was sharpened; she and that she has been a tremendous was much thinner, but her eyes smil-,1success. And she went to America ed just as friendly upon him as in the :—didn't she?—last year, and did well been on their best terms. days when Stair and The Lees had there too." "Oh, yes. I was with her. Alan , was the object of that trip, Peter, and ___ Stair." "For good." Judy nodded. "She says so. She has made a great deal of mo.ney, and, of couise, as esesseeeseassessseseesesesessr • we arrived just twenty-four hours too late! It was the boat's fault, and we 7 erree dNevlaasyeasdlyfogand ga'..es. And 1 horrible blizzard -which ur own froze the decks and made the sea inferno!like an It seems that Alan had IC ease ; in Alberta that very day. • By a [arranged to go out West te a ranch P „.... strange coincidence, he was in the theatre on Carlotta's first night with 'The Searchlight,' and he left imme- diately both the theatre and the city. 'We were able te find the lady he had akeyi. Home-made mustard pickles. How • delicious—arid how easy to put up. Here's the recipe:-- ERISTARD PICKLES 1 ot. small onions 1 large cauliflower 1 ut. cucumbers 2 heads celery 2 red peppers Teel onions, cut vegetables 111. enS, covet with -weak brine and let stand overnight. In the morning bring to a boil and dram off, 'rake 2 cups brown sugar, 1 cup flour, 6 tablespoonfuls ICcen's Mustard, 1 tablespoonful turmeric and 2 quarts -vinegar. Boil this eni:tture for twenty minutes, stirring conti. :wally. Pour over vegetables hot. Let stand ten days, stirring every day, Then bottle: This it one of the many recipes given in our new Cook Book. May we tend you a copy? It's FEE. Write — 001.rdAN.ItEEN (CANADA) LIMITED 102 Amherst Street • MONTREAL •siS They never had any quarrel, either, c•1 resources'of th• e land- and sea along with Alan or vsith Caf.otta," • the Aretid`,coast, will take a census She paused, but when Peter had cominent to make, went on again. of the Eskimos in the -district tra- "I suppose you heard about Claud's wedding? It took place in Northamp- tonshire last week. That was. what made us a week later than we intend- ed in getting here." "I saw the announcement of the marriage, of course, and wondered what he was marrying on." ' "He has twelve hundred a year from the Dublin appointment," said Judy proudly. "That is just the beginning next two years, living with the natives and investigating conditions on the g -round. "t ed at the lower edge of the bodice be- fore being joined to the skirt at the Major Burwash left Ottawa en 2nd July en route for Fort Smith, North- buttons simulate pockets: The dia- westfront Tabs held in place by small Territories, and from there pro gram pictures -the simple design, and seeded by steamer to the mouth of the the miss or smaa woman may achieve Mackenzie river. From Aklavik he a very smart frock -With pattern No. will travel eastward along the eoast, 1172, which is in sizes 16t 18 and 20 visiting the different seUlements and years, or 34, 86 and 88 inches bust. Size 18 years (r 36 bust) requires 8% yards of 36 -inch, or 8% yards of 40 -inch, er 31/t yards of 54 -inch ma- terial. Price 20 cents. The designs illustrated in our new .THE MISSES' MODE IN FROCKS. • Faller skirts and fuller sleeves are typical Of the new mode, and are gracefully associated in this model made of fine twill, called rnirroleen. The long sleeve is slightly puffed and flniehed with a narrpw tailored band, while inverted plaits at the side give a different sort of flare. The collar is convertible, and a deep tdck ie. fold - making surveys, observations, and other investigations. Major 'Burwash hopes to winter in King William island where there it a considerable band of Eskimo, and next year will continue Fashion Book are advance styles for his journey, and expects 'to come out the home dreesmaker, and the woman either at Repulse bay at the north end or girl who desires to wear garments of Hudson bay or else to cross country dependable for taste, simplicity and will find her tastes fulfilled to Wager bay and Chesterfield inlet. economy 'During his -trip Major Buiwash, in in aur patterns.... Price of the book 1,0 cents the copy. Each copy includes addition to conducting 'scientific and coupon good for five cents in the _ one I ti purchase of any pattern. economic investigations including survey of the wild life and other natur- versed. Observations for magnetic de- clination will be made by Major Bur - wash for the Topographical Survey, and, much other valuable Wormed= is expocted to result from the trip.. Major Burwash will travel alone and will secure what assistance he requires by engaging natives from each of the different. tribes he visits. It is be- lieired that it will be much easier for of things for Claud. He's most awfully one man to pass. through the country clever Peter—the pick of the bunch, than if the investigation were made as far as brains are concerned; and he has a way with Cabinet Ministers which used to amuse and astonish me. I got quite a nice little peep into political life while I was keeping house for him at Queen Anne's Gate. Why, didn't you even know that? What a state of heathen darkness you seem to be all in! I suppose you know that the girl Claud married. used to live here? Her father was a minister in Ayr." "Yes, I knew that much,", answered Peter. And Judy went on to tell him more about Claud, his present, and his probable future. 1. But pretty soon she saw that his thoughts were wand- ering, and, stopping short, she said she would be going home. s She felt rather -sorry for Peter Gar- vock on the whole. He had such a for- lorn look, and did not seem to have much in life worth living for, In Judy's nature there was no guile, and very little malice, and the experience of the last two years had given her a new kind of philosophy. But it was a relief, when she get back to the precincts of Stair, to see the squat figure and kind, familiar face of Bobbie Sanderson getting off a bicycle at the'terface steps She ran forward, sniffing, and when Bobbie got his gloves off, re- turned his warm hand -clasp with one equally -warm and kind. "I'm most awfully glad to see you, been with at the theatre—a dear, kind Bobbie! Foe yourself alone, first of E Scotswoman, who was his only friend all, then for dies sake, ad finally n in New York. So we had information • beesnee I want you to see • Carlotta. She isn't well, Bolibie; and we must about him up to the moment of his imend her here, at Stair, before Alan leaving the city. But he never went to the Alberta ranch, and nothing bas oornes 'home." been' heard of him since." • I "You hare news of him then?" said Peter Garvock listened with the . Bobbie, a trifle brusquely, for he felt • d' h tense interest a the man to whom octclly movea everyeword is precious and poignant. I kine, 'gathering frorn various signs Joan—"Oh, yes, auntie. A man offer - "What was he 'doing, do you know?" and`sYmPtoms that the past two years 'ed ase a big pl-ate full of money,, and lie asked, spasmodically. "Had he any .» had tried her mettle more sharpy safd thank you.' by a party of considerable size. . And He's* Keyed Up vi.V1Vy does a cat screech and wail en.a. back fence?" ,of flddle-strings, you -know," Minard's Liniment used by Physicians. • "Sentiment in Mud." A Plymouth grammar ochool maga- zine reproduces these "howlers" by some of its. pupils: -e - Sentiment is the mud brought down by aeriver. Posters are sheets of paper posted on blackboards. Olym- pus was a Greek circus. . When the Armadaowas sighted Drake "was playing bowls with Destiny. One result of the Black Death was the r1. - Ing of the pheasants. Quintain comes froth the 'hook "Quentin Durerard." A •cipher Is a kind or spray. Goitre is a kind of banjo, • • Very Geod. • Auntie—"And were you a very good little girl at church this inorthegi jean dear?" • success in New York? I'vo heard' than any of them knew.• • whet a diffictilt place it is." , I "No • news at.aii. 'But ,she things "None," atswered °Judy. "I got it he is coining back, and she has corse bit by bit, out of jean Dempsteve bete to wait for him. I suppose, that was the wonian who had been 8.0 When a woman is married to a man—" kind to him. They nest in alboardiags 1 Bobbie gave it great start. "Yes. house but he was riot able to stop Theyeevere married on the day lie long there, becatthe his fueds ran out. ' sailed, aiid they never told a living I believe he was right down to staeva- soul—not even mel I've only known tion point; and when he left New it about six Weeks, Bobbie! Whet I York he had been working es a corn- started out to say was, that when a mon hand in an East Side factory. woman is a man's wife 1 suppose she These are the fads, Peter, and there has intuitions about huts. Anyway„ in% any use blinking -them. We never , Carlotta says Alan isn't dead, and have; because it is only through them • that he is coMing back to Stair/ 'we can gt least • partially explain What do you thirik?" he added with Alan'sdisappearelice." a Tittle pitiful droop in her lips. "I COMM - Peter Garvocles face grew ashen in wrote you the full particulare after, The world's best • hair tint, Will re. store gray hair to its natural color 15.. minutes. smeil sire, $3.S0 by mall eouble -sire, $5.50 by mall The W. T. ?ember StorPs • Limited 120 Vonoe-et, Totatto 'the clear April fight, end his eyes we came home from America, but it is• ,4•044.0.,•11..4•-•- • • • H.OW ,.TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your naive and address plain. IY, giving .number and size of such patterns as you want. • Enclose 200 in stenres'Ze coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each amber,' aed address your Order to Pattern Dept., Wilson Publishing Co., 75 'West Ads- laide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by return mail. • mEAL, RIGLE askes your food. do you more good, Note how it .elieves that stuffy feeling • after hearty,eating. • Sweetens the breath, removes C food parades from the teeth, gives new 'vigor • to tired nerves. Comes to you fullfiavored. fresh, clean and \ica4)444C11-,'17,0,1,\-p,-***k14:;61'AIS.1.5"-El?lD \ testleiVA---- .?, RTK:E6GpIIHTTT RIrt Quest: So many roads we tramped together, dear, So many sunny roads in many a placee Now, though I trail the streets of all, the world I shall not see your face. And yet I never pass through any, throng, , Or reach a place -where sunny cross- roads part, Or turn the quiet corner of a street, But hope is in my heart. " ' And, so I shall go hoping without 'rest,' Seeking_exid hoping down the roade of, Space, • Until I turn the corner of some star And meet you, aide to face. • -Margaret Belle Houston. Cruelties in Olden Days. Public entertainment in London a hundred or more.years ago were more of a sporting than of a dramatic or musical type. In the Observer of a date of 1825 ap- peared' a fell report of a dog fight,' at the Westminster pit, at which "fifty personages of rank" Were among the spectators, and whereat also his grace; -the, king's rat "Catcher entered the arena with a cage containing ninety rats and a dog named Billy killed seriatim In .seven minutes and thirty' seconds. Another article recorded that Mr. Wombwell, the proprieter of a lion named Nero, had built a den, ten feet high and fifty-seven feet in circumfer- ence, in which a contest between his pet and six dogs was to take place in Juno. Still another -chronicled 'the melan- choly fact that "John Smith, who was matched to eat a pair of men's shoes in fifteen minutes at the Half -Moon tap, Leadenhall market, had broke down in training, having been seized -with indigestion. It is easier to solder to brass than it is to solder to aluminum. , .1 Keep Minard's Liniment In the house. Worth It. The railroad conductor suspended. his work of -taking up the tickets tem- porarily as the train plunged into the blackness of a long tunnel. When it' finally emerged, he found himself op- posite a young eouple both seemingly much flustered, and the young woman nervecaly readjusting her hair. Thinkin.g to put-thent at their ease, the conductor remarked pleasantly: "Did you knew that tunnel we just came through. cost $12,000,000?" "Did it?" enquieedi the young woman. Then she added, after a pause, "Well, it wan worth it."• ONTARIO COLLEGE OE ART' GvaricK Park • Temortto IntellielG•PAitelNe,MODELL1Ne•DESION DtPLOMX'COUrZsE • 0.1/41012. courksr., TEACHERS COUISE. COMMERCIAL MIT G•A• ItEID OA' Priritt-pal. - Session 1925-26 opens sectoeer 5th teir Prospectus' apply to Registrar .70 • Stays sharp longer. ; SIMONDEt CANADA SAW 604 LTD* inso SUNDaS sr. 1,, 1.05014T0 • M ANY11 CAL , VANOOUVgn Gt. 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