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The Seaforth News, 1947-05-29, Page 7The Quality Tea LA ORANGE PEKOE SYNOPSIS CHAPTER XVIi; 'Rocky ,reports that Vim slain. RigaloW had entered Vallaincourt's seartment the Preceding night. hunting for the letters, and that he had Seised her mearch. They found nothing. how- ever. McCall) then calls up Ann, and Mlle her to run over to Shari Lynn's apartment, to see what she can find out. CHAPTER XVIII4 The library was dim and still and only the sound of a piano being played in the drawing room up- stairs came through the oppress- ing quiet as Adelaide Bigelow finished her recital of events, and looked at McCale sadly. "What are we going to dor she asked. "I think," he answered,""that 1 • may be able to sec a little further, get a little more than the pollee were able to do. That is, if 1 can gain their confidence. If you will ask thein. to come in" -=he rose as she got up, smiled and added— "one by one, if you please. it might be easier that way." "To trap them, I srippose," she murmured, surprisingly. "Why, of course." He bowed, the smile leaving his lips. * He felt the subtle antagoniern heap, between them. Then she came over to him, impulsively put- ting a- thin patrician hand on his sleeve. ."Forgive me," she whispered, °'It's only that I'm so upset. I know how things must be from now on. I see a whole way of life disappearing before my eyes, an empire slipping say. I know—" "That below the surface, things have not been what they seemed for a long, long time," he inter- jected, keeping the pity carefully front his tone of voice, for he knew that this she would not have. "Yes—yes. You won't need me again?" She spoke as if that would be abhorrent to her. "No. It is better that I do My --clicty work alone." He smiled once more, as he watched her leave the room. * * He stood by the fireplace, star- ing .moodily into the ashes of last night's fire, until he heard the door open and close behind him. When he turned,' he saw Stephen Bigelow standing irresolute and nervous in the gray morning light. It was clear, as he sat down in the chair opposite McCale, that he was completely shaken. Although it was no doubt partly hangover, McCale intuitively sensed that not a little of it was due to the fact that he was on his own. A com- plex tad, this. one, he thought, riddled by complexes. He had seen enough of Stephen to know that • in spite of his high -nosed arro- gance, he was lost, without the supportof his wife and silly mother. He pondered as to which •one of than had been clever • enough to send him in first, so that either or both could expertly deny any brealc he might make. In a business like way, McCale said, "I am willing to take the , police report of your actions yes- terday afternoon verbatim. How-, ever, I'm more interested ietsome- thing that Mai, not seem relevant to the Minder. If you Will only have confidence in me, I can assure you it will probably go no further. 1 ask it entirely in the hope of helping your foster sister, Verb- nica, out of a ticklish situation. I know, of course, that you are eager • to be of any assistance possible to her." ."01, quite." The answer came ,readily enough. MeCale studiously ignored the contemptuous curve of the lips that accompanied the remark. "Very well, then, Id like to know if You had knewn Curt Vallaincourt before he became en- .. gaged to Veronica. What you know of him. What you thought of him, to be exact. How, for instance, did it happen that he came so suddenly to this city to be taken up immediately by yohr family.? I'd welcome anything you, can tell me." mes.u. FEATURES He saw the relief come over Stephen's face, relief that the question' was loot the one he had feared. Stephen smiled—a thin- lipped, uneasy smile. "1 met him in Chicago," he said calmly, "about six years ago. Vic- toria was running around with him, . I had gone there for a couple of months, just to renew a few old . acquaintances." * "Anyone in particular?" "No," His hands shook a little as he .fumbled for a cigarette and lighted it. "Just a couple of fellow's I had known in the navy. At one time, you see, things were not very —well, plea:sant at home. 1 .ran away and joined up. I made a few friends while I was in the service. I corresponded with them from time to time after I got out We are not a particularly happy group, McCale, en famille, so to speak. So—er—a little squawky,I decided to hop out to Chicago and visit a chap who had since married and done quite well for himself." "Sort of run away again, is that it?" McCale's grin was sardonic. He thought—as you've .run 'out on everything unpleasant since you were a kid, I can bet. "Well, I suppose you could call it tliat " "You took Victoria with you?" * * "No, she came to fetch ane back, as it were. All is forgiven, you know. That sort .of thing. Vic- toria had met Curt in some of her wanderings. I had met Karen by then and didn't want to leave until there was some sort of under- standing between us. We stayed almost a year, 'until I married her, Vicky corresponded with Vallain- court for a while after she came home. It was she who .finally got him here. Ran int6 him by acci- dent in New York or something, and she brought him along for a visit. He just stayed that's all." He settled back in the chair, a little less jangled, as if a job bad b,ecn done and rather well done. bleCaie settled back in his chair and looked at Stephen Bigelow with unconcealed •disgust Then he decided to try a shot in the dark and see what it would bit. • "0 course you know that Curt Vallaincourt was married at some time in his lively career' "Oh, yes. Be was," Stephen admitted, completely off guard. "To Shari Lynn?" "You knew her, too?" ' * * * -"Sarah Linsky to you," Bigelow blurted, then bit his lip, realizing the trap. "You knew her roo?" "Pd met her. We all met once or twice, •Bue he divorced her, you, know." McCale changed the direction of his next questions strategically and said with the suddenness of a cata- rnilt, You Were spying on your wife and Curt Vallaincourt at The White Abbey sight before last, weren't you?" "No, indeed. I just happened to be there: I saw them, talking. What • of it? Karen comes and goes as he pleases," " you didn't, then, suspect her, say, of having an affair or some ' secret . connection., with him — say ...something she wished to keep from YOU?' "Not at all, Mr, McCale. What- ever gave you that absurd, idea?" Mr. McCale thought—he has been lying to me now for the last three minutes. 1 -le shrugged. "You haven't •a thing to tell me that might help the growing case against Veronica, then?" he asked. "'Nothing at all." Stephen rose, well aware that he had acquitted 'himself, in his own sound anyway, ,with some success— that the interview was ewer, He paused at the door. "Who is next for the inquisit- ion?" he asked meekingly. (To Be •Continued) • IN POVERTY-STRICKEN GREECE Their home. a shack h. the slums, Georgia Haloulou and her family manage to keep alive The children sell flowers in order to purchase food. The current campaign to raise 21,500,000 in the Canadian Relief to Greece Appeal is an attempt on the part of Canadians to help provide medical care and hospital equipment for the sick and the diseased in Greece. Many of' these are children. • There are more than a million people absolutely homeless in Greece today. There are two mil - !ion souls suffering frorn tuberculo- and chronic malaria. There are 376,000 orphan.children. These are the results of the stand taken by the Greek people against the Axis •driye through Southern Europe. Facts like these are being pointed out by officials of the Canadian - Relief to Greece Appeal committee which is now organized and cam- 'paigning for $1,500,006 to be spedt in Canada on medical and hospital supplies for shipment to disease - stricken Greece. The former U.N.R,R,A. chief whose organization withdrew from Greece the end of March, urged further- assistance and pressed fo' the succes.s of a fund-raising appeal. By voluntary contribution, Can- adians have already sent approxi- mately $4,500,000 worth of medical supplies and concentrated food con- signments. But this help must be continued, officials emphasize, if the children of Greece are to have a chance to grow into healthy, self- supporting men and women. Major General L. R. La Fleche, Canadian Ambassador to Greece says in a letter to the Greek com- mittee: "I trust that the excellent work of the Canadian Relief to Greece Appeal will be continued be- cause after U.N.R.R.A. leaves Greece, some organization will simply have to continue to do some- thing for the people here who have not yet recovered front the terrible losses of the war and the occupa- tion. Would you try- to contrive to' keep things going?" Canadians whci want to send in a contribution no matter how small, are asked to get in touch with the local committee or mail their dona- tion direct to the Canadian R5lief to Greece Appeal, Committee Rooms, 30 Adelaide St. E., Toronto. An' official receipt will be mailed acknowledging the contribution ' Sunday School Lesson Fall of Northern Kingdom 2 Kings 17:5-12, 22-23; Isaiah 28:1-4 Golden Text. — For the Lord knoweth the way of the righteous: but the way of the ungodly shall perish.—Psalm 1:0, "The Lord knoweth the way of the righteous, but the way of the . ungodly shall perish.' Be the first to get this new slant on your good little figure! Pattern 4629 makes striking use of stripes on a side -buttoner ancl is equally marvelous in a plain fabric. This 'pattern, easy to use, simple to sew, is tested for fit, Includes complete illustrated instructions. Pattern 4689 comes in Jr. Alias sizes 33, 15, 17. Size 13 takes 314 yds. 35 -in.; 14 yd. contrast. 'Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS •(25c) in coins (stamps •cannot be accepted) for this pattern to Room 421, 73 Adelaide St. West, Toronto. - Print plainly SIZE, NAME, AD- DRESS, STYLE NUMBER. That is as true concerning peoples and nations as it is of individuals. And it is as true today as it MS III160,11t Ten of the 12 tribes of Israel, it will he recalled, had revolted under Jeroboam, the rebel against Solo- inon. Jeroboam returned from Egypt to lead the successful revo- lution against Rehoboam, Solomon's son, when the latter refused to lighten the burdens that Solomon had imposed upon the people. Two tribes, Judah and Benjamin, re- mained loyal to Solomon's suc- cessor in the Southern Kingdom. * The Northern Kingdom, with its 10 tribes, Should have been the stronger. But it had in it from the beginning elements of dissolution and defeat. Jeroboam, who came to power, was nbt long revealing his baseness. The weakness had the familiar aspects of all social failure and deterioration—dishonesty and cor- ruption in public and in private life, licentiousness and debauchery among the well-to-do, disregard of the poor, exploitation of the people. * This is a temperance lesson, and the prophesies of the time in their revelation . of the social abuses stress how large a part strong drink had in breaking down morale, O bringing woe,and destruction up -au the nation„ Temperance less"ons and lectures are not popular today. The preva- lent psychology is favorable to drinking and iadulgence, where a generation agd it was favorable to total abstinence, It is fair to make a distinction between drinking and drunkeness, between use and abuse of intoxicants., But it important to remember that intoxicating liquor has in it inherent clangers. The Northern Kingdom went down in ruin, and any nation that does not overcome evil with good is doomed to disaster. ells FAITERMIG firs101009... This fine medicine in very effective to relieve pain, nervous distress and weak, "dragged out" rootless feelings, of "certain daye—when due to functional monthly disturbances. Worth tr,yingt ARM E PINATAIMS NW= , • , . ' r , . ea...A.a.stizetitemeszeseelacesseas.,.....,. .0_6gOtlateataillitiagnalagis L AN NE1 H *Lt.& ?---ainapi Wafithei-ot Hatred Must Not •_Embitter Grief DEAR ANNE H I RS T: Four * months ago my brother was killed * in an automobile accident. A neighbor's boy asked him to go riding, said it was a friend's car. There was an accident and the other boy, though hurt, ran off and left my brother alone I It seems he had stolen the car, and was afraid he'd be found out He lied about his own injury — and I only learned the truth when I saw my brother in the hospital a little while before he died, I want you to ten me what to do when I see this boy. I feel like killing him I can't tell you how 1 bate him, Will you help me? 1 don't want to do the wrong thing—Mrs, A. IL M. * * • OUT OF YOUR HANDS A few years ago, the little son of a friend of mine was killed by an- other boy who was playing with a shotgun. The first act of the dead lad's mother was to go to see the other boy's family and tell them hotel sorry she felt for them She knew the tragedy was accidental, and she realioed that this young boy • would carry the grief of it through all his life. She was and is a great lady. Your hatred of this boy, who was the cause of your brother's death, is the first natural reaction to shock. It will, I believe and hope, Pass. You will remember that his punish- ment is out of your hands. Life will never let hint forget, and through- out all his years he will live in the shadow of the thing he has done. Leave'hint to Fate. For your own sake, you cannot afford to nourish this bitterness against him. It will poison aol your thinking, it will destroy your sym- pathies; it will change you from a gentle, Christian woman into a spiteful person whose soul will slow- ly shrivel. Your life is before you. Will you make it an evil life! You will never get over the grief of your brother's death. But you - can Det this hatred yott feel now and even, some day, came to ,teel the compassion we all must try to cherish toward those who suffer P.m the consequences of their own weakness. o HUSBAND NEEDS SHOCK DEAR ANNE HIRST: 1 have been * married 15 years, nd I dm in a * daze. My husband won't stay *home and,act like a married man, * If it were, not for the other worn- * an, 1 feel we could he happy again, * for I love him dearly. I have even * offered to divorce him. I have * tried everything! 'We own our * business, which I have been run- * ning—he'd rather be foot -loose, We don't get to go anywher6 to- * gether. I'm afraid this will get the * best of me. The children love * their Daddy and need him, but * they are beginning to understand. * Is there any way to shock him * into a sense of his responsibil- * ities? It is up to Inc to make some * move! Yon have helped so many— * tan yon help, me? - —Pu.szled Wife Thelma, * * It is time, indeed, that you put your foot down. Yell this skittish lursband of yours that you cannot run his business and take care of the .children and the home any long- er. Ile must take veer his respon- sibilities or you are through. You have been too easy with him —yet 1 can linderstand why. N OW be firm, and let • him see Mal .you mean what you say. He must be Made to see that lie cannot own ez business and neglect it, any more than he •can have et wife and children he neg- lects them Either you will lake the children and leave, or he must. / think this will give him the shock you and 1 agree he needs. Don't play the part of Fate. Anne Hirst will help. Write her Box "A," 73 Adelaide'St. West, Toronto, 41ULLT1 Space -Saver Plans Win $100 Prize There's one thing about the Cana- - dian National Exhibition—you don't actually have to go to it ia order to participate. People from the far -away cities, the towns, the villages and the farms right across the country have the opportunity of entering many of the C.N.E. competitions. Prizes don't go to those who attend the Ex—they go to the best entry, no matter where it comes from. There's $100 for the person send- ing in the best space -saving and storage ideas. These days, with houses hard to come by and fami- lies doubling up into smaller quarters, every inch of space can be used, Clever homemakers are always worlcing out 'space -saving ideas -- cupboards, bedroom closets, stor- age cabinets and a hundred differ - en original ideas for preventing clutter. In some homes, there are the most ingenious ways of hiding the card table, the youngster's toys, Dad's overalls and boots. By drawing these ideas out on paper, by describing them briefly, it's anybody's chance to win $100. Entry forms may be obtained by writing to Women's Section, Cana- dian National Exhibition, Exhibi- tion Park, Toronto. " Know Just How You Feel" "I know because I have been that way myself. I have been so chron- ically tired that 1 thought I would never feel well again. However, I found that Dr. Chase's Nerve Food soon gave me new pep and energy and put me on my feet." Tired feelings!, indigestion and loss of sleep are quickly relieved by Dr. Chase's Nerve Food. Ask for the new econ- omy size bottle of Dr., al se's Nerve Food 00 pills---60ets. 180 mile -1130 ISSUE 21-1947 caw% Sure it's delicious, when you make it with Canada Corn Starch and it will be a favourite with the whole family. The quality of Canada Corn Starch is the reason for its popularity with housewives from Coast to Coast. 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