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HomeMy WebLinkAboutZurich Herald, 1925-10-29, Page 6G.a:. ..EEN TEA Its luscious freshness & rich strength snake it finer than any Gunpowder, japan or Young Hys®n. Sold every., where. Asli for SALADA► to-�'�► ►. Love Gives Itself THE STORY OF A BLOOD FEUD; BY ANNIE 8. SWANS Reeve gloss Itself and is not bought"—Longfelloale CHAPTER XXXIII.--(Cont'd.) • But there was no trace of anything but pure friendliness in her manner and tone when she entered the library that afternoon to bid hien welcome to Stair. "I have to apologize for this in- trusion," he said in his frankest, most winning manner. "I excuse it on two grounds—Miss Rankine has written to tell me you are mistress here, and. though it would have been kinder if you had told me yourself at the be- ginning I believe I am forgiven for my importunity. The second is, I want you to come back. I've got something else. I've brought it with me, and if you will let me stop twenty- four hours at the Ayr Hotel until you've got time to run your eyes over it, I believe you won't send me away empty-handed." Carlotta slightly shook her head. "You are welcome to Stair, Gra- ham, and if your traps are at the hotel, some of them will fetch them up. I shall be pleased to read the new play, but—but—I don't think I am going back." Graham Madox looked a trifle dis- appointed. "I understand how you must care about this beautiful home," he said, glancing round the room with a slight hesitancy; " but it is not possible nor right that you should give the whole of your life to it when the world needs you so much." • "I must at least wait until my hus- band conies back," said Carlotta quiet- ly. "I think he is on his way now. After that we can talk it over. But meanwhile do let me send down for your things, and conte and talk to Judy. Although she was very angry with you in New York and would not say good-bye to you, she has forgiven you long since." Madox smiled. He had always liked Judith Rankine and respected her as a type of very high and noble woman- hood. Sometimes her Scotch out- spokenness had somewhat discomfited his more plausible English nature, 'which shrinks from calling a spade a spade. Judy had not shrunk from that, and in one rather sharp passage between them in the sitting -room at the Holland House in New York she had reminded him that Carlotta was in her care, and that he had to keep his distance (the very words Judy had used) and confine his attentions strict- ly to business themes. Carlotta had not heard of this little, scene until after Judy's boat had sailed, and then, instead of being amused as Madox had fully expected, she had been deep- ly moved. When Madox seemed to hesitate Carlotta went on: "Papa and mamma will be here not later than Tuesday of next week to stay. We shall love to show you Scot- land. properly. All you know of it now is a Glasgow hotel in winter! It is different here." • Madox admitted that it was. "Seeing you in a place like this, my dear," he said with a touch of sadness in his tone, "one might well heel - tate to ask you to come back to the world—but there is the future." He made pause there, for he could _ hardly put into words what he actu- going to recompense you for what ally thought --that in all probability you have done, Peter? You needn't GIRLS' PRACTICAL GYMNASIUM the Laird of Stair would never come shake your head. I know without any, SUIT. back any more to the home of his of your telling or Alan's that it is fathers, and that the snows of the! This comfortable gymnasium cos - you who have done it all. I can see tame is composed of the regulation Yukon had claimed him. from your face that you haven't spar-, g Carlotta with her almost uncannymiddy blouse , with long or short ed yourself. Who is going to lyaY sleeves and all-around halted or intuition, divined his thoughts. you? That's what I want to know." p Garvock took a stepforward until straight gathered bloomers, finishing I know what is at the back of all with a casing at the top and knee for that, Graham, but I know that my' he could look into the kind wells of husband is coming back soon—why, elastic. Many girls will find this an there he is!" She moved, quite quietly but with radiant face and starry eyes, towards one of the long windows which stood open, and passed out. Absorbed by their talk, Madox had not heard the sound of distant wheels on the gravel, and when he stepped after Carlotta all he saw was the tall hate got Strangely: retached-..from---; from, all this, 'and I was able to bring him, sharply back. But he has come back' with all his might, my dear, You may take it from me. And it is a rare thing that if we had been able, to charter one of the new flying ma- chines at Quebec we never should have crossed the Atlantic in the usual ' ' way," "You did that, Peter! You!" "Yes. It is all I lay • claim to do. I talked and talked and better talked until I got Stair into his blood again. The spell of the Yukon is something like the evil spirit of old—it takes exorcising! Now I'm going to lay mother, Judy, and you can find Alan. You've no need for me. at Stair to- day." "No need for you at Stair, indeed!" cried Judy indignantly, "when but for you this day would "never have dawn- ed for Stair!" Judy's face was infinitely pathetic, for at the back of her mind was the deep-rooted conviction that she had rendered her last service to Stair, and that the two, now re -united, would henceforth have but little need ; of', her. Garvock saw these eyes, andwith the new intuition of gentleness and consideration for others which had come to him, he fully understood. But before he could say that which was in his heart Judy went on talk- ing. "What I want to know is, who is Judy's speaking eyes, "What about yourself, Judy?" was Ideal costume for camping, or for all he said, long walks into the country where (The End.) comfort is the mi requirement. Pat- tern No, 1196 i in sizes 6, 8, 10, 12 and 14 years. Size 10 years requires A Poem You Should Know. 23 yards of 32 -inch, or 1% yards of Baby' and. 38 -inch material for the middy blouse, and 13/% The man who wrote "Wynken, Blyn- 20 cents.yards for the bloomers. Price ken, and Nota" and "Little Boy Blue The garments illustrated in our figure of a man, in a grey traveling conferred a lasting possession on new Fashion Book will keep, you "in suit and bare head, take Carlotta in mothers, for these are among the step with fashion" They are advance the swift embrace which said all that sweetest child -poems in the language:' styles for the home dressmaker, and words could never say. they were written byEugene e d, the woman or girl who desires to wear Graham Madox turned decently himself a man who, like Peter Pan, garments dependable for taste, sim- "Never grew up" The following is plicity and economy will find her de - another product of his unique genius: sires; fulfilled in our new patterns. Each pattern envelope gives charts hard?" showing at a glance how to lay the pattern on materialand where the different pieces are joined: Price of the bock 10 cents the copy HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. •Write your name and address plain- li, °'fie ing 'number and size of such, patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for .each number, and address your order to Pattern Dept., Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Ade- laide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by return mail. away with what bitterness in his soul they would never know. Making his way in the hall, he found some means of egress which enabled him to leave the house un - f observed, and when afterwards they remembered him, and sent down to the hotel to inquire, they found that 'remembered had gone—his first andlast visit to Stair having lasted exactly five,and- twenty minutes. e ' Judy, mooning in the sunshine on the terrace steps, amused herself by throwing little pebbles from the path into the round pond, where the gold- fish disported themselves, watching the eddies rise and spread across the clear surface. She did not hear the wheels, for the very good reason that the whole solid block of the masonry of the house intervened. Presently she rose with a little sigh and thought she would go in and see how the interview was progressing, when a figure appeared at the far end of the terrace, having come round the gable of the house. "Oh, Peter!" cried Judy, and ran, her face blanching white in the merci- less sunlight, and her eyes pitiful, al- most anguished in their depths. "It was no good. You heard nothing? Oh, poor Carlotta, her heart will surely break this time!" "My dear," said Peter Garvock, "Alan is here. They are -they are somewhere in front. Don't go near them just. yet. After what he's been through, this hour wants no shorten- ing or interruption." "Alan here, Peter!" whispered Judy in a voiceless whisper. "But where —how --when did you find him?" 1 "It's a very long story and it will keep, Judy. Meanwhile I want to know how you are." I "I? Oh, you can see! I'm a person of no importance. Alan and Carlotta , —somewhere in front! And together! !Is he—is he well, Peter? Has he changed much? Is there anything to' break our hearts about?" "Nothing. He is well; he is fit;' he is handsomer than ever; and he has done what he set out to do, Judy hie has come back a `rich .man to re- deem Stair." "To redeem ,Stair!" repeated Judy in a low voice. "But oh, does that matter after a.•1, Peter? When one 'comes down to the bedrock of things it isn't places that matter—only peo- ple! We have set Stair up too high; and we have bad to pay the price. Oh, I want to go to them -and yet 1 daren't." "Don't go yet.,"pleaded Peter Gar- vock with a strange new gentleness and consideration which began to. astound Judy, and to push other things into the background of her mind. Suddenly she looked at him with an odd steadfastness aad inquiry, almost as one might look at some ob- ject, long familiar, which suddenly presents some new and unfamiliar phase. "Peter, you are great! There is a lot more belied a11 this than meets the eye. Tell me this very minute where you found Alan"• "I found hiin in 'a aback on the I londyke River, sly dear, in the rear of an old gold -mine. It was what they call in these days the psychotogicisl moment, Judi, All 1 claire to is that 1 -arrived in the nick of time. Alan • e, Probably one reason for the popularity of WRIGLEY'S in that it lasts so long and returns such great dividends for so small an outlay. " It keeps teeth clean, breath sweet, appetite keen, digestion good. Fresh and full -flavored always in its wax -wrapped package. 'How many miles to Baby "Anyone can tell! Tip one flight; To the right; Please to ring the bell." • "What can you see in Babyland,?": "Little folks in white— Downy heads; Cradle -beds,' Faces pure and bright" "What do they do in Babyland? "Dream and wake and play; Laugh and crow; Shout and grow; Jolly times have they!" isaiJa lYo. �'sb{ "What do they say in Babyland?" "Why, the oddest things! Might as well Try to tell What a birdie sings!" "Who is the Queen of Babyland?": "Mother, kind and sweet; And her love, Born above, Guides the little feet," Not Too Fast. "If I'm too fast for you just let me know." "Gosh, no! My last boss had me on his lap by this time." +)•- Keep Mtnard's Liniment In the house. Royal Dairies. • One of the domestic institutions at Balmoral in which the King and Queen take particular pride i.9 the model home dairy that Supplies the Royal table with everything in the way of milk, cream; butter, and cheese. Run on the most up-to-date lines, the dairy is a miracle of hygiene, and is in the charge of a woman graduate of Aberdeen University. , The King takes a deep .interest in. all matters connected with agricul- ture, and the flourishing condition of the Royal farm on the Balmoral estate is largely due to his foresight. a. Queen Alexandra also has a mania ture dairy at Sandringham, in which atone time she used to spend some of the happiest hours of her life. Exteriorly designed on the lines of a Swiss cottage, the dairy inside fol- lows exactly, the plan of the "Trlt 01 - awn," the largest dairy in Denmark. You like Kraft Cheese because of its inimitable flavor. To be sure you get it, always look for this trade -mark., FREE RECIPE BOOTS,— ~'Trite Kraft-avlacLareo Cheese Co" Ltd" Montreal. (4,45' A NORWEGIAN'S OPINION OF CANADA Anders Jaarstad, a proment busi- ness man of Stavanger, Norway, the city of sardines:, kippers, and cheese, has returned home, to Norway from an ea4tended.business trip to Canada and the United States, In articles contributed to , the focal press he speaks • enthusiastically' of the great agricultural opportunities, of the Do- minion where he hopes thousands of Norwewgian Emigrants will find their future homes. Stavauger, Mr. Saaa- rtad's house city, has played an impor- tant part in'the history of Norwegian emigration as it was from its harbor the "Bestaurationen" set sail for New York one hundred years ago, in com memoration of which event hundreds of thousands of Norwegians gathered at Minneapolisre,eently to celebrate the centennial of Norwegian emigra- tion. He Forgot Something. The young. plumber;„had proposed to the girl that evening and had been ac- cepted. Several hours later they part- ed and'he went Biome. At three o'clock ha the morning a Feud ringing of the front -door bellof she girl's abode was heard. Her fath- er, roused from slumber, went to a window ands sticking out his head; in- 4uired who was there, "It's John,” said a voice from be- low; "I asked Agree to marry me and she said she wound, but I forgot to kiss. lies'." • Executive of. Canadian Week ly Newspapers' Association. Learned the printing busi- ness in Galt,, go- ing west twenty- seven years ago'. where he built up The Vernon;,; (B.C,) New,si tQ its present high standing. M r Bali is skilled In orrice manage - anent, in cost ae- • eounting, and in L. J. Bali newspaper malt: President (`..W,N,A,, ing, The I W:N. A. is fortunate te obtaining the. ser, ',Flees of Mf Bali, who has been AP - pointed Manager 'and Teeeeereti suc- ceeding kr. E. Roy Sayles. Mr, 134.11 wall elected, Preatd:ent of the C.W.N:A, in June, 1929, after havifug s'brvea on the Board of Dlreotors tor several For several if,illi• years a member of ;.the Staff of T h e -Brantford I, Expositor; was manager of The Brentford Cour- ier for a • short time before pur- i chasing the Pert 1 u?!7 d1gin (Ont.) Times. After a successful pro - B Soy 8ayaes p,rietorsliip o f First icianager and The Times be Treasurer: C.W.N.A,, was chosen by the weekly newspaper owners of Can- ada to establish the Canadian Weekly Newspapers' Association, as its first manager and treasurer. Mr. Sayles has purchased The Renfrew (Ont.) Mercury, one of the outstanding week- lies of Canada. Emigration from Norway has, lar- ing the lest fifty years, averaged about 14,000 annually. Under the new U.S. quota regulations the total emigration to the "United States will, as fair as Norway is concerned, be restricted to some two thousand, beginning July 1, 1927. "This condition of affairs," Mr. Jaarstad says, "has coused intending emigrants to look to other countries: where they may hope to find oppor- tunities equal to those offered in the U.S.A. in previous years." "Such a country is Canada," says Mr. Jaarstad. "Canada is yet on the threghold of its development. -It' is a country of great agricultural possi- bilities and with undeveloped natural resources, whibh.offer rich reward to those who have the will to work, "Unfortunately, Canada is not as well known in Norway as its great neighbor to the South,": says the, writer. ° "During the last few months the prasehas given publicity to de- famatory articles, which our country-. men in Canada brand as deliberate in- sult to them and the country of -their adoption, articles which are mislead- ing and written with the view of frightening intending emigrants." • Advises Countrymen Go to Canada. For the purpose of setting public opinion right with regard to Canada, Ma:. Jaarstad has contributed some ex- cellent articles, containing a wealth of information about the country, its dev'elopment during the past few years and its possibilities, for future emi- grants. During a recent business trip to Canada, Mr. Jaarstad had -occasion to visit the principal Norwwegian communities in Canada, interviewing countrymen who had lived for several years in the country, and the impres- sions which he received and now re- lates were very favorable. Mr. Jaarstad calls attention to the fact tltatein the five year period pre- ceeding the, warthere wes .quite a movement of Scandinavian emigrants to Canada" This direct emigration, was, however, small in comparison with. the emigration of Scandinavians from the' States to the Prairie Pro- vincec of Canada. Thousands of Nor wegian _Americans, pioneers and their sons, changed their domicile from the States to the Prairie Provinces, where :fertile'agricultural lands could be Iliad ,• free or at a very low •price. The great majority, fully ninety per cent. of, these settlers, are farmers; and M have prospeTe!d beyond- their expeetations' in the Canadian West. "Canada is not an industrial coun- try," says the writer. "Those who wish for nothing better than to work in shops and factories, had better ¢'e - main at home. Yet, thousands of arta- eans and common laborers,who came. to Canada a few years ago and found farm employment, are now located on farms of their•, own, where they are never disturbed' by the shrill whistle. of the factory. These peopleado not regret their change` of occupation. They consider the soil of Canada the best in the world." "There is only one country which has been able to produce 40 to 50 bushels • of wheat to the acre and No. 1 Hard at that. 'That country is Can- ada. The average crop is 18-30 bush- els to the acre, a very profitable yield. Of course in a country of such dimen- sions, :both good and• inferior land is to be found, but there is such an abundance of excellent land that no ettler with eyes to see with, need till inferior soil." Gives Much Authenlic Information. Mr, Jaarstad devotes considerable space to geographical and statistical information about Canada, its agri- cultural and commercial progress dur- ing the last twenty years. In concha eon he he says: "Canada stands on the threshold of its development. Only a fraction of its natural resources are: developed. Only the'surface has been scratched., as it were The develop- ment of the country has "been inter; fered with by • the war, and the period of - readjustment which followed. From now on the outlook is. brightening: Canada maintains an open door policy towards the thousands who wish` to emigrate from :Northern Europe. To those who are contemplating leaving their native land I have this to say, that for the agricultural classes ;t'here' is no better country than. Canada. 'Those who wish to engage in agricul- tural pursuits will there find oppor- tunities that, they cannot find else - .I where, and they can start with a corn- - , paratively small capital. By persever- ance and thrift they may, in a few , years, become independent owners of ' a good 400 -acre farm. Canada is a country of opportunities in many ' branches, and people with some capie tal can do no better than to go to can, ada. There is plenty of rrooin, and for I the agricultural classes there is : al- ways room, and always a fair chance of success." • Amusing statistics havebeen issued by two Chicago investigators, who state that after two years old girls Cry more, frequently than boys, while the five yungest children under water to use "'words were all female. Minard's Liniment used by Physicians., o e • • • • e • • • • • e • • • • • Cleans Like China When you use SNIP Enameled Ware Utensils, You ftever need to scrape, scour and scrub the way some wares demand. Hot water, soap, a cloth—that's all you need to clean thein. It washes like china, has the cleanliness'tpd sur- face`of china, but wears like steel Don't be the;dlave df your cooking ware; equip with clean, pure mini=' tary, lasting smonges Ena'lered WARE 181A ..•.�,:N..YC-'• ••<Y:f,.s ,0 ••.o.... •