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The Seaforth News, 1924-11-27, Page 6i The Delicious Flavor Q! drawn front the leaves f GREEN TEA H469 has won it tattilliorts of users. Sold b7 all grocers. > 4*Ay peecliage to +ear. FREE SAMPLE of GREEN TEA UPON REQUEST. "SALA9IA," TORONTO °^l '' ut]r the House Dove Gives Itsel THE STORY OF A BLOOD FEUD BY ANNID S. SWAN. "Love gives itself and is not bought,"Longfellow. ett ee'1 • j CHAPTER II: (Conti).) suffered yet, were about to'dawn fol Alan did not answer, It seemed as Stair. if Carlotta bounded the whole horizon Alan Rantciuo- refilled his pipe, of his thoughts. poked up the fire, and took the chair "She rifted about you, Judy. .Ap- prenelydint testes {u& tlLe plroblemis parently the liking is mutual. She which had met hint on the threshold said you were the only person who of his home. had showed her any kindness in Ayr." He forgot, for the moment, even the 'They were perfectly abominable to serene face in the upper room, set in her over these theatricals --Jean Wed- the majesty of death. derburn and Ailsa Horne, and even Something else had intervened— Lucy! I•was sorry for her. Of course, that olti, old intervention which 'has it was jealousy. She couki have been made havoc in men's hearts and lives a great actress—in fact, she is one, ,Since the world began. A woman's Alan; and, of course, she made every- face! The wonderful, vivid, arrestfn body else's attempts seem appalling.,' face of Carlotta Caxlyon! And the • "So they were horrid to her, were deep eyes which had looked into his DIANA BUYS A HAT, "Sou haven't said anything about my new hat;" Eve declared. "I was a goose to wear it!" "You were not a goose!" Diana re- torted. "I'd have seen it sooner or latera But you know that think that your eyebrows are too lovely to hidoe' Eve glanced in the glass; there was a shadow of discontent on her pretty face. "You loot: like such a freak if you don't wear things the way every- body else does. And besides, you can't get anything else!" "It isn't the hat I.object to," said Diana; "it's the angle. As for getting anything else, I had just decided be- fore you came in that I would go on a real adventure to -morrow: It will be a search for an honest woman. You see I know that it is horribly unbe- coming to wear my hats on the bridge of my nose. I'm going to see if I can .find one {woman who will have the courage to tell me so. Do come along!" At ten o'clock the next day Eve, with the look of one fascinated against" her will, stepped into Diana's coupe. Diana shot a teasing glance at her as she pressed the starter. "Sure you don't want to back out?" "Certainly not!" Eve replied. They went to Camille's first. A won- derful young woman swept forward to meet them. Certainly she had the exact thing for mademoiselle—so wimple •yet so chic: She pressed the marvel slowly down over Diana's lovely hair, forehead, one eye -- "Help!" Diana gasped. "I have to leave my nose out—to breathe evith, you know." The young woman was shocked. "But, mademoiselle, the style—" "Why should I suffer because other people are willing to?" inquired Diana, "Haven't you anything that stops a trifle above the eyebrows?" The young woman stiffened. "But certainly not," she replied. Diana rose cheerfully. "Sorry," she said. "I'll come back when the fashion ellen gee." Eve was triumphant, "What did i tell you!" she cried. But Diana only laughed. Two hours later in ?Jarrow's she glanced round and chose her sales- woman, a girl with steady pleasant eyes. At first the procedure was the name, but at the third trial Diana looked up, "I want to ask you to do something, Will you please show me where, with You need not deny yourself the pleasure of hearing famous singers, noted lectur- ers, wonderful con- certs in distant cities just because you can- not travel. If you own a MARCONIPEONF Radio Receiver the turn of a dial .will make you one of the audience in the city where the artist of pour choice is per- forming. The happy world. invites you to share In its fun l Write for descriptive bookietr PD THE stAncori t WIRELESS TELEGRAPee CO. OF CANADA - LIMITED, NiONTR16AL -48.24 due consideration for my eyes an I they?" and answered to the fire he could not nose and mouth, I ought to wear my Abominable! In fact, I had two or three cod tussles with Jean about hides hat? Po you dare?" g "Peter's wife? No, by God, she'll girl's eyes brightened. She it. The trouble was, I could not al - The never be that!' he muttered to him- y g ways be there at rehearsals, and what self.• placed a hat quickly above Diana's not. Set she behaved awfully, well But he slid not add that he meant clear ,straight brows, "For you—.Carlotta, I mean. Heaps of women to have her for his own. there," she replied firmly. But you would have hacked out or given up the __ aro the first customer who over asked whole thing, but she simply went ;through splendidly. And, of course,' CHAPTER III• • me." Diana turned to Eve. ``There's your all the suceess of the piece was owing nue SANDS of AYH. honest woman," she said. ;to her. She is a very straight, honest sort of person, Peter saw her at the Carlotta, wandering on the sea - /performance on the first evening, and shore, on one of the kovelfest of spring the next night he bought five pounds' mornings, was conscious of melody in ;worth of tickets; and six weeks after, her heart. they were engaged." But whence it came or whither it So that's the story? And do you tended, she was not conscious, nor diel think she cares for Peter?" she make pause to inquire. The skies "I don't know. I haven't been able were blue overhead, and somewhere; in to call since we knew. Of course I invisible space, the larks were trill - wrote to her when Peter told ;no. But ing; in the lower air there was the 1 will go, one day soon now. Per- sound of church bells drifting out haps the marriage may be postponed from the town, summoning ell lag- for a month or two; but don't you Gds and wanderers to the House of think we should tell Peter there isn't d. any need to wait because of what has Carlotta had forgotten that it was happened here?" Sunday—if she had ever known it. I don't think we need say anything Servants who had been employed at at all to Peter," was the enigmatical the Clock House sometimes carried answer. "Then, you think the county strange stories of the Bohemian ways {won't receive firs. Peter Garvocic of o'f that alien household; of how its The Lees?" mistress lay abed, and had her meals "A section of it most certainly there, or roamed about in strange won't—but Peter {won't care." inose raiment, considered ha> dry de, "Why should he?" asked Alan cent; of how the Professor forgot all harshly. "lie gets her—" lS8UE No. 42--'24. A POPULAR STYLE FOR SLENDER MURES. ;about his meals, and would leave the Judy gently laughed. ;house without a collar, if he were not "Certainly if I were a man I would watched; of how completely Sunday think her worth fighting for. She will was disregarded, having no place in a be very good for Peter, Alan. She's calendar where all days were alike. so big-hearted. She'll teach him how But one thillgthey did not do—and to use his money." that was to speak against Miss Car- eyou said Aunt Isabel had behaved who had her fingers tightly on pretty well over it?" lottathat, odd menage. Of her kindness; She had to, for Peter is very mas- her sweetness, her capability they did terful." speak, though sometimes unwillingly, "And Lucy?" for she had to be obeyed, even when Judy shook her head. /she spoke most kindly, and obedience "I am afraid Lucy has behaved in dges not came readily to all. to dlin way I1at was surprised toolled mid -1 hear the werealreadydotting the streets and g P way .she talked about bliss Carlyon.'roads, and Carlotta founts herself 4934. The Tunic is this Season's, She is usually very gentle and inoften F alone on the tivfnd-s{wept shore, A little most attractive feature. In this stylemore i`w ll'rel relish ]eavlbut n„ Thof e Lees any morof e Popular promenade!latee in the hamongere aAyr folks, It is shown m blouse effect, wale yokewill I shall relish being turned out of; but not in church hours, Just one. or and vest portions. Black satin and Stair when your wife comes home" itwo stragglers, and these, unkempt, embroidery are here combined. Crepe She smiled archly on him, but he she Passed, quite near the town; but would also be pleasing with the satin. kept his eyes moodily fixed on the fire.!by the time she reached the mouth of Or the blouse could be of figured or No word of matrimony for Lucy ;the river, she found herself a unit in striped silk, with vest and skirt of yet?" I a solitary world. She has plenty of admirers, ad-, She paused there, entranced, for satin, mitred Judy, and continued to regard !Door {vas a roaring, flood. A rainstorm The Pattern is cut in a Sizes: le, her brother rather perplexedly. She' the night—violent, and effective, as 1$ and 20 years, An 13 year size re -{vas perfectly well aware how Lucy the spring storms so often are—lead quires 5 yards of 40 -inch plain ma- regarded him; that she was inclined loosened all the burns, and now the terial and ee yard of contrasting ma- to attach more seriousness than had fiver, swollen by their coltxibutions. tenial if made as illustrated. If the even been intended, to an old boy -and- swept between the arches, brown and concealed part of the skirt is made of girl flirtation that used to go on be- I' e foam-flecked,carrying on its bosom all lining, 3g' yards of 40 -inch materia] tween Stair and The Lees. sorts of spoil. Here, a slim, unbent will be required, with 1% yards of 36- "Well, let her pick and choose, then sapling it had torn from its roots, with the buds; still pink and Lander, inch lining, and ye yard of contrasting it won't matter to her who remes to The Lees," answered Alar • ' ^n he on its shivering arms; Ther , a tread material. The width of the skirt at abruptly changed the ::�' and fowl or even a piteous little lamb, the foot is 1 v yards. which, mayhap, had ventured too far Pattern mailed to an address on once more plunged into s :'tion from its mother's sheltering care— Y and plans for the future of the home such was the toll of Doon to flood. receipt of 20c in silver, by the Wilson they both loved. Carlotta watched it fascinated even Publishing Co., 73 West Adelaide St., When Judy rose at last to say good more than by the sea, which lay placid Toronto. night—rather early, for she had had as a child, under the sun's kiss. She Send 15c in silver for our up -to- a long, trying day she smiled a little stood a long time there, on the muddy date Fall and Winter 1924-1925 Book wavering smile. of Fashions. DOORS. Recently,I visited in a home where the pantry door lacked a knob and, fit- ting in closely as it did, much time was required to get it open. Yet dur- "But, Judy, promise that you won't ing my stay the housewife opened that go back on me, even if I prove a stubborn door several times, requiring broken reed?" 1 at least two minutes each time in A broken reed, The smile went tedious pushing and moving about waveringly about her kind mamoreuth. "I've had a pretty good ex - open. either way in order to persuade a to perience of them—I'm only one my- self; don't let us have any more at I gave the lady my recipe for such Stair." They kissed one another with real affection, and Judy laid her tired head down on the pillow with a feeling of five minutes would be required for; absolute security. She had the sense cutting and nailing in place. Or a'of a burden shared, and did not dream spool sawed in half and one part of it, that darker days, even than had been fastened on with a screw of proper, length would make a handy knob. Another door in the same house had shrunk away from the frame until it failed to latch; this door, too, was closed a number of times,and each time a bit of cloth was folded, held in place with one hand and the door clos- ed with the other. I also gave my own remedy, one1 which I have used many times, for; just the same trouble. Cut one, two, or three pieces of leather one inch'. wide, and about three filches long;; tack these firmly, one to the door' frame and one on the edge of the door" at a corresponding height. This gives• a noiseless closing and the leather holds the door in place, If shrinkage has been too great, two or more thick- neeees of leather must be used. --L. Y. This Baboon a Houdini. Among an African wild animals con- signment landed at London is a ba• boon able to untie any knot or escape wind in her hai, and You can't think what it feels like thehglint of swith un and sea on her face, to have you at home, Alan. I do be- wondering whether Boon In flood had lieve I shall have the first really sound sleep to -night I've had for years. It takes a man to get a grip of affairs. Everything's going to be right now you've come home." 1• "Doubtful," said Rankine gloomily. cases --just a small leather loop, cut from the top of an old shoe and held firmly in place with tacks. Less than "DIAMOND DYES" COLOR THINGS NEW Beautiful home dye- ing and tinting is guaranteed with Diamond Dyes. Just dip in coldwater to tint soft, delicate shades, or boll to dye rich, permanent colors. Each iii -cent _ package contains di• rections to simple any woman can dye or tint lingerie, silks, ribbons, shirts. waists, dresses, . coats, stockings, sweaters, draperies, coverings, hang- ings, everything new. ' Buy "Diamond Dyes"—no other kind—and tell your druggist whether from any cage.. the material you with to color is wool _ or silk, or whether it is linen, cotton, Miiard's Liniment Heats Guts. yr mixed goods. r s•' say 1LEAR, sparkling coffee—the color of rich, transparent amber—shay be made in any Hotpoint Per- colator!' Percolation from cold water co mm ell c e s within thirty, seconds. IIetpo nt Percolators are equipped with ex- clusive safety switches which protects the appliances shquld they accidentally ` "boil For nate by clearers eilerywhre, • H 16D not some kinship with certain steriny souls, naught fast in the toils of the thing men called life. She was out of love with it at the moment, and rnoetelly afraid of the day that was coming—even of the day that had, al- ready dawned—for a few beers more woeld brier, her lover to her side. And she knew„ in her hetet of hearts, that she had no use for hint: She to be wife to Peter Garvocic in six weeks' time! It was unthinkable! Doon told her,quite definitely, and in a voice, which roared but did not croon, that such a -monstrous thing would Bever happen. She turned presently, for the roar and thunder of the flood were be - welling to surge too insistently in her sou', and she must seek more peace- ful influence, so that her being might coma into line and tune with the set order of her life. Vain endeavor, futile hope! (To be continued.) Carthage in England. The ]mined temple at Virginia Water, Surrey, England, is always something of a mystery to visitors to that .beauty shot, which •free at one. time a dreary swamp. Standing in a romantic glen, its colunins look. 'as though they hall been undisturbed for two thousand years. The tact is that .the temple has been in its present Petition about a century. Its, original Site was ancient Cartilage. On several of the stones are inscrip- tions. 'One in Greek,.on an altar stone; tells bow the structure was dedicated to Jupiter and to the other :gods wor- shipping in the temple, Others are written in Latin. One of these reads: "Marcus Julius erected this to his most beloved wife Demitia Rogata, who lived twenty-three years." At one time a line group of ancient Greek statuary stood near these col- umns from Carthage. When William TV, opened the lovely grounds to the Public, however, these statues were so shamefully mutilated by 'visitors that they were completely ruined, and . the public were again excluded until the reign of Queen Victoria. Expence No Object. "Madam," said the doctor, "I shall have to paint your husband's throat with nitrate of silver." "Please use nitrate of gold, doctor," exclaimed Mrs. Moneybags. "The ex- pense is quite immaterial." For Sore Feet—Mlnard'e Liniment - Baby or Husband. Mrs. Wilkins—"My husband :s very particular whom I engage ea a nurse. Haveyou a kind disposition, and are you gentle? Will you—" Applicant• -"Excuse me, madam, but do you want me to take care of the baby or your husband?" i ,After e'v'er' ,meat ,a A pleasant and agreeable sweet acnel rht 11-a--g-l-as-ii 1` eneilat as well. • Gooey torr teeth, Di eella and d,igestiotra, Makes the next cigar Castle bellies.. Teaching 40 ,,r 5'0 Pupils the Piano at Zine ` Not so many years ago; a person who ventured. the suggestion that a whole class of 40 or 60 pupils could be taught the piano successfully at once would have been branded as an idiot. But not so to -clay, tor; that this can be `lone; and is being done, thereis no doubC. in the United States to -clay class teaching of the piano, violin affil other musical instruments isnot uncommon. A-uumber etfine pianists, violinists, etc.. have become efficient player's, in- deed, through this method .of mase teaching. In Cenada the method of instructing groups of school pupils in the violin has been tried in such centres as Ottawa, but the writer has not heard of a case where whole class- es have been given instruction in the piano at one time here in this'coun- try i One will here probably say, "Wen, teaching a number of pupils. to play the violin simultaneously is a much easier matter than teaching a group i the pi eno." This will not be denied, but nevertheless school music super- visors in the United States—where music has become a Ponce to be res-. leaned with --have approved of a plan. for teaching the piano en masse. The first necessity, 4f course. they saw. was to secure an inexpensive in- strument resembling n-strumenth•esenbling a piano keyboard, that could be carried about at any time and anywhors, and so sim.plo fn construction that it "never gats Out of ^ order:' Accordingly, after continual experimentation, a oneq)lecekeyboard with "V" shaped corrugations instead of flat white keys, was born, and this instrument in the Bands of each pupil has become :the medium for class piano instruction. One of the best authorities in the country remarked, upon examining this keyboard- invention, "It loops as though you had solved the problem of class Instruction;' That the under- lying Ideas. were .correct, was abud- antly proved by the results achieved with the experimental class of twenty pupils at the 'Lowell School, Boston; none of these pupils played the piano, and but five had pianos in their homes. At the end of ten weeles . all played from memory a number of pieces rang- ing from sixteen to forty measures each, played all of the triad inversions and their roots, played four finger scales with alternate hands beginning with any degree of the scale, played four octave arpeggios with .alternate hands, ueing the various ohord posi- tions, read instantly any intervals within an octave, named any pitches of the major settle, transposed their simpler pieces tothree keys, and got good tone and good legatos when they went to the piano, (During the les- sons one pupil always played the piece or exercise an the piano, while the rest of the class did the same thing on their keyboards). In spite of the fact that this plass work was done late in the afternoon after a full day's worst in school, all were enthusiastic, as proved by the fact that they always asked the privi- lege of playing on the piano at the close of the lesson, and invarishly left the room singing some of the tunes they had learned. In conclusion, It goes without say- ing that a large portion of this class will continue their lessons with pri• rate teachers, and that some of the parents of the fifteen who dill not have pianos will buy pianos. Music flays a Great Part in Life of Frenchz-Canadian. Here is a synopsis of the musical Proclivities of the great French Cana- dian race, as told by one who spent several years studying the customs down in Quebec and the Maritime Pro - winces: "In French-Canadian homes," this authority states, "children are roosted with a.s•ong from their birth; when they are olds enough to attend school, they receive singing or instrumental, music from either their school teaclr- ers or private teachers. " At Home, music has its place of honor: and dur- ing the day Piano, violin, mandolin' or accordion is not left idle; but above all singing is the favorite pastime of. the French-Canadian; and above ail songs the ones he prefers are the old'' time melodies which last; old French -songs from the XIV., XV, -and SLI, ich he inherited from bi conturies. {{ h m s fol'e-fathers, are also his favorites, And oft you will hear the fanner, while plowing in his field, or the shepherd boy" guarding his Roel., sing one of those old songs which they love, Dux- ing the evenings, after their meal, and while taking a rest in the garden,; on the verandah or within tbeir homes, the French-Canadian family, , where children are many : and happiness abides, sing together some of those old songs of undying sentimentality and teutlernees with obsolute sincerity. If you are a. passer-by you will shop and listen; You will remember home and mother,and you will thanit Jdeav en for giving musicto the world," The Biggest Job. I A . school -Leacher ..who is sightly' proud of his profession has this en• cnuraging word to eay of education: II "Teachers. never taught so well, build- ings were. never 9c 'well adn.pteel, to their purpose, and the public was never so appreciative, as now. In no period of the past. has there been suck a realization that, education is the big. gest job la all the werlo:' Highest Paid Actress. Tho highest salary ever paid to ant French actress, recorded in Paris, was received, by Sarah Bernhardt, before the {oar, when she was paid $10.000, then $2,000 for each of three perform- ances. The Siowet Animal. Of all the beasts of burden in the world the water buffalo le known as the slowest animal. lienal. eatabished-00 years, Please write for our pride ii8S on Poultry, Rutter, and Eggs P'o quanaA"rEE them tar' a .week ahead, P. POULI'N & CO., LIMITED 80.89 6onsocours .Markel. Telephone Main 710 piONTREAL. , • einem CUBES Concentrated StEe�' igth and Goodness se BEEF \\\\ \ �\\�\\\\\ , \ \\% One of the greatest of ail • Energy -Producing Foods! \` Delicious for the table and for cooking \ \ 77Q'CANADA Branum COMPANY, MID= uonxaw 1 C.4.6/hw, C..-crw', W.tria G.rdmlted i rypte, y�J'��,�ic•.7.., �i i] 3ieS 1 r" a: ,I.3 ` r ` lc 1tr` _ r3 eRa•- �l��t\ Iheftopelar liTs t. - ,a� 2, $iterranean6 -` ....6 � s 1 In :r, r�,. 16 INTER CRUISES 1925- SS.Providence' Ss. Petrie 5S.Provtdence 53. Petrie From: :New York To: Ponta P-etgada E2 hts Madeira 10 hrs, Algiers 'i4 hrS. Palermo 12 firs. Naples. , ,, 12 ire. Pira ius-Alhons 24 hrs. Coustapt;nopie t hrs:. Bcyrouth, . , . 14 hrs, Jaffa-lei'usalem 39 hrs. Egypt ,3days Messina., , 8hrs. Monaco 1.5 hrs. Marseilles, .. Length of the Cruise Jan. 10 an, 17 JJan. 19 Jan. 23 Jan;•25 Jan. 26 ran. 20 Jar.. 31 Feb, 3 Feb. 8r5 Feb, /8 Feb. II Feb, 13 ' Feb. 14 - 35 days -.. Feb. 17 Feb. 24 Feb. 26 Mar. 2 Mar. 4 Mar. -5 Mar. : 8 Mar. . 10 Mae. 13 Mar. 14/15 Mar. 16/18'- Mar, 21 ' Mar. 23 " Mar. 24 ,35 Jaya - Mar. 21 - Mar. 28 Mar. 30 AP. 3 .Apr. 5 -Apr.. 6 ,Apr. 9 :. .Apr, 11 Apr. 14 Apr. 15/16 Apr. 17/19- ' Apr, 22 Apr. 24 Apr. 25 35 daya�•, -4Vr. 29 May 5 Mny 7 May 11 May 13 May 14 ^May 17 >May 19 May 22 May 23/24 May 25/27 — " May 31. ..,33 day., . Ming -num Fare §450.00 inciudipg'sho e' excursions and Hotel at. Egypt. Clean, .Comfortable and Comodiouo vessels eapecialiy. built for .the Mediterranean Trade... Shore Excursions it Porta—of—call. `•:too -overs permitted Concerto lectures, dances, card parties, games of all sorts to addition to the social pleasure: of ocean travel. Un- surpassed French cuisine and first class service throughout, Orchestra: Mbvtng Pte- ' tllreatwieclea5 News A8i17. Forfurtherinformation and descriptive literature apply: -- Any authorized Stealiiship Agent, or JAMES W. ELWELL e. CO., INC., Gen. Agents 17 State Street, New York. City.