Grimsby Independent, 15 Nov 1933, p. 6

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) i f 3 «en FREE COOK BOOKâ€"When you hock TE n yon im o e give you for aclicious baked foods. Write to Standard Brands Ltd., Fraser Ave. yad Liberty St., Toronto, Ontario, , fer Magic. In fact, Magic outsells tlnh.::lh”:flmw For luscious cakes, light, “H:‘m Dfi ron‘s advice. Few People Born â€" Minus Tonal Sense M * * * B Ren Fadhng: £24 tinige o. 1+ mor ced l with . College Teacher Says Nine Out of Ten Pupils Who Imagine They are Monoâ€" tones Can Really Carry a Tune taste better. Its uniform leavening qnityum- dependable baking _ And Miss Dutton‘s praise of Devil‘s Food Layer Cake b--nhn-:-.-c-‘-:h. Canadian housewiver, 200, preâ€" Miss Gertrude Dutton tells why she makes her ISSUD No. 46â€"‘33 Cream butter thoroughly suger milk; edd venille and meited choc» wlate. Fold in stifly beaten cag ‘whites. Put into 2 greased layer cake tine end beke in moderste oven at 380" F. wbout 30 minutes. When cool, put togrther end cover thickty Nee ‘ees.., =“~:l-v Il-'.:‘-.â€"n- BSour (or 2 cupe _ nille extract omacines Lt ic is seconded by the majority Devii‘s Food Layer Cake Magic Baking Powder people who think «" can realy sing, sor Prances Ellen Loppes, bult his education, as he told mldlw:‘ .“‘"l“l ntk “““'"" trust«! N-d‘i. "Just missed it." He read Â¥ to ‘uu'“m “l lflhmflfllhbfitflrm a wear hot awtually some 'fln:n re "S hope of being something he could chance than men" if becomiry venienâ€"\and servant. He called her Miss Jill. arlans. Women, n an uverage, live/ She called #im Hanson, as her father fou: years inger than men, had done. Then theré was the differ se mmmenfipmmmmmmes ance in education. Mark was no clodâ€" _ Believe it or not, thare‘s t uunland .:‘v.:“.n_.a ..-"-E'.‘.'.‘" next winter‘s hats! Me was giving a demonstration of how fit a man can be at 63, Here are mavg um antermstreioing have bare ve the hyglenic sins zie the middlo _Mosders civilisation has filled our\ uscles tables with :-ll o::::.:' deliencies, / moths These should be st avoided uy | stifled the manâ€"or, al least, inâ€" | bility. mvv“ eoomstmnn nÂ¥ 22240 mm l leicester. !n the middle of a leeâ€" ture he was giving here, Dr. C. K. llllfi.!lo-dk:lhoflnrdm‘ put hands on floor, und steed on his head! _ *‘ "*****~ 'Jluhd-uhmq.::‘._\ monotont, she suggests the girl drop the course and pase that Ume in _ some other department. r""" girls wint to do this. ts "are ._i’_"!,"_""!‘-hn- the course, "b‘lfll. slng. Standing on Head Many of Professor Dulting‘s stuâ€" Cnh-rlbq-nutnllnuu slng at all in elementary schools . WMMm.‘m,‘ of the class tome quality," said Proâ€" fessor Dutting, "and a ‘pitch prob lem‘ should not indeed sing with the rest of the class, He should he mhlmd'-.l.'- ever, and asked to help the teacher lsten to the others. This should he followed up with individual | help. The delinquent idea should not be suggested. wnn.n.:us....“, is not fair to them. A Goes not rationalize and may remain & Hetenâ€" er all his life." _ "That girl was an example of the results to be gained by persistent individual work." said Professor Dutâ€" ting. "I would prefer having that girl teach music to a child of mine to having that child sindy under a carcless musician." w Unti! recent vears WMiHa simacs 2s placed on music education and many l.cbmnlovn-uuw eould not sing well, Professor Dutâ€" manter, "" Chldron ‘sing â€" maturaily ner, naturally and in a thin Autelike tone." | That Is, they canno« reproduce exac‘ ly a tone, or group of tones given on a pithâ€"plpe or sang for them." Professor Dutting advises adults who want to perfect their singing ul provide themse‘ves with a pitehâ€"pipe. They should match one ton» at a time, then groups of toues. After a time It will be possible to aing stmâ€" ple musica! phrases, Profesor Dutâ€" tInk eited the case of a girl who entered ber c‘ass last term and was unable to reproduce a single tona correctly. _ Working with a pitchâ€" Pip* overy day and having her friends and family Naten to her, she was able to sing a song perfectiv at the end of the term. "We try here to do with our stuâ€" dents what they will do with chilâ€" dren in their own classes, . They are taught how to introduce and teach I-ucu-eln..umnu- are the basls of music education and are lemwm<4 by imitation, the first essential is for the teacher herself tinetion." "If a student sayy she cannot «ing, I a«k her try some popular song with me. _ Nine out of ten of them car do it; because they have been hearâ€" Ing these songs practically a‘l their lives. _ The trouble with these girls is that they cannot match toner eannot ge‘ll one tohe from anot" or match tones, are very rare, A monotone |s a defective just as -l&‘ As a person who is deaf orll;" When 1 tell that ta my stadent« t are less avxious to claim that 4* Dutting, who bas been a member of the education departmont of a College for almosi twenty fye years. _ Most of the girls who be‘leve they #B nover #sing, go out at the .u.c'u year of music education mot °® able to sing but able to teactf"a “'::; Professor Dutting | explained WB real monotones, that j« persons *B@ are born without a tonal sonse 484 recent years little stress Proves His Point . just watching . their WUTrra! The position between Jill and himâ€" ... tolf were frankly those of mistress P SEHIEL"\ and servant. He called her Miss Jill. *0l#e | _ The farm of Stone Town was one of #ing.| the largest in the agricultural area with| where it stood. It dominated, on one car| side, the gorse patched Rough Valley, w-,l great yellow basin when the gorse their| was in full bloom, but in this Novemâ€"« girls| ber it was a dreary depression. The oner | valley was surmounted on the opposite xac‘â€"| side by Magple Spinney. CHAPTER 1. The sharp bark of a fox in Magple Spiuney came clearly across the starâ€" lit space of Rough Valley, echoed pepes against the long, low b .ildings of the farm called Stone Tower and quivered *T O!| into silence. eK® | _ Again it came, and once again. Most ; Mark Manson, leaning over one of ‘, 88| the farm gates gave a slightly s«arâ€" only | donic smile as he thought of the local song, ! belief that three foxâ€"barks meant three llnl"o.d men. You might hear a fox who, bark once or twice or you -I.Mhnr‘ , and| him bark four to fifty times, but never . her ; thrice. "A| So they said. mycD] "If it‘s true," broeded HManson, |.~i "then the man who called at Ston» ey| Town tonight is likely to be one of â€" dis; them," Experienced farmers looked nt each other aghast, as though they had seen a vision of acres of dead cows and misâ€" .uw m-n uhm"l'll-uyul’chM‘ young woman!" And he did see her {ater, but if he had expected to make any impression on the intentions of Jill Merridew he had, ‘as Jill told him, barked up the wrong tree. "‘The farm is mine, and 1 can do what 1 like with it," she said, "and I‘ve got Mark Hunson, the head man, left to help me." "But Hanson wasn‘t responsible for the perfection of the farm," said the solicitor, "He is only a workmanâ€"a good one, 1 admitâ€"but it was your {father, Miss Jill, who was the guiding hand." "Just as 1 am going to be," replied | s Soiee | oo heug an hests repiled life of Mark Hanson. Further than tLat he could not go, He knew the uselessness of it; he had heard of moths and of star», and of desires stified frcun the first by stark impossiâ€" Mark Hanson had stood loyally by h.hwd.?m-n-'-d at a man who orders from pettiâ€" conts. He was a tall, somew‘at serâ€" fous looking man, a few years older than Jill. He worked bâ€"rd for her, often doing work unkzon to her. He eould, in fact, have wi.ned more hours to the day so th=1 Le might serve her ‘To see her, to strive for her, to deâ€" fend her and her methodsâ€"â€"these were the things which alone counted in the ‘:-h;l'ovs. uhtl! z year ago, had property of old Jasper Merâ€" ridew, upon whose denth it descended to his daughter, Jill, who, after the funeral, astonished the assembled mourners, and the family solicitor in particular, by announcing that she proposed to run the farm herself, practical, reigned in her father‘s She could often be seen about the countryside, visitinge fields where men were at work. At first her hatlcss figure, wearing strong breeches and leggings, caused a sensation at esitle markets, but farmers and auctioneers alike had by this time come to know that, whenever her auburn head gave sought, a bargain Stone Town farw generally gained. The farm, to some, might . have seemed strangely named, but, in the days when it was built, a farm and a few farm workers‘ cottages were freâ€" quently called a town. We get a glimpse of this fact in the very old as for Mark Hanson, there‘s nothing you can tell me about him. After all, Mr. Sinker, I haven‘t lived all this time in Stone Town not to understand it. And don‘t forget that I had a large hand in looking after it when Dad was so often in London." infoons s s ks priphrey is mnty n m ©. mort» gages and overdrafts. And now Jill, far too pretty to look If you looked the other way from Stone Town you saw, less than a mile distant, the roofs and church tower 6# Morley village. Time was when the squire of Stone Town ruled Morâ€" ley, for the farm was the Maner Hoyse as well. But not today, _ | § A ROMANCE i \ By Kennaway James & & . PIBDBDLDI EDLEA TE T 0 # FHC i9 'III.'IIIIIIIIIIII~"’I<! 5 z. ' i \ Jill of the Fields { "John, John, John, the grey goose And the fox has gone from the i "I should think 1t very Hkely," conâ€" ceded Mark, "Strapping girl. Knows her wa~ about, I should think." _ "Borry, Ntl.fi.rhdblhl\ cider," said Mark, "If you‘ll exense e" "Quite understand," said the stranâ€" Fos on Te Lone Aftee Merridow mos you go, does thid :?“":""' pen to an l“ asper \ Yridew, n-\:r of an old family hereâ€" absuts ?" 4 bk /5 and the farm is seven hundred acres 7"?;.. his a..."" Mark, stung at last by the mtlfl- ness regarding Jill, "and he‘s dead, _ "In .::": the girl who rides M‘r.l!dc â€"saw this rn hair, Think that would be Emz‘ ;il;-'l;-;-;t}'nnpr was not to be put "It belongs *o Mist Merridew," Mark was forcedto ansawer, He wou‘d have replied even more tersely, but he had a feeling that Jill at her window could hear the comversabon. _ . '::l‘;“,;'t hni img a look h'“'.‘ "'I.=ll stracger. "I h " "Not at ail," "=-,=' Mfl. "Interceting job, making ‘ what? _ Make« my mouth water. Whose is this farm, by ‘_h !.-’ft_“ _"It‘s called Steme Town," said Mark evasively. He did not care for this stranger. s oi Those at work ginneed at him occaâ€" slonally, but he seemed oblivious, ’A.M.um.uuuuumd ark Hanson, and, a alight back» wards jollufllnmm'fi over to him. 1t w-"‘ movement * ook Hunh‘ The work was in (.) progress and from the press came fowing the paleâ€" golde: julee of the apples. Each mun had his job. One to bring apples and clean them, an«jher to transfer the julce to the barrels, Others worked Sitting on a beneh, and perpetually stamping his feet for warmth was old George Bowker, who, so far as could be ascertained, was the oldest man in those parts. George had rural cunâ€" ning brought to a pitch of profitable perfection. Whenever a farm was making cider, there would be found old George "helping" He had helped on those farms vany a long day, und when old F proved too much for him, he #e/ to admit it. \mmhvuu. k up at the press. In charge of all was Mark He leaned on an empty milkâ€"can to watch the work, and in so doing placâ€" ed himself under a window of the house, from which Jill was doing the same thing. EW .i8 1 ’ It wos the night after the cider press had arrived that Mark Hanson bh-lillol-h!ithliw. The cider press, since the days when most farms in the cider country bad their own unclent stone presss, is travelled from farm to farm in the same way as, after harvest, . + thresher tours the homesteads, It was during the a .ernoon that an incident happened which led to Mark Hanson‘s outhurst as he gazed .cross Rough Valley on that «%=>lit night. _ the farms and : a helper, though all he did was fo sit and watch the proceeding». this he generâ€" ally had a fair libatién of last year‘s clder and a shilling or two. Not a farmer was there round about who dared put the matter to old George in its true light. s 2 The afternoon was well spent when there walked into the farm yard a strange. He came in casually, not as one with an intention, but more as one whose curiosity had driven him thither, s He was tall and handsomeâ€"looking in a slight, indefinable foreign way. Clothes seemed s matter of importâ€" ance to him, and he wore an Immacuâ€" late goin.g suit which Jooked as though it could never become what a golfing suit should be. â€" _ _ Jasper Mertidew had died in Novâ€" ember, and November nad come again, bringing with it the workâ€"or, one might almost say, the {estivalâ€"of eiderâ€"making. Out in the farm yards were groat piles of small ciderâ€"apples, their bouquet filling the air. Muscular, resource(ul, levelâ€"headed Mark had secome the irm foundation on which the farm was built. Jill had no know!s~!ze of his feelings {:‘m-‘m'u too clever ;:“ll::t. When she unex y caught him looking at her, a puzzled fush erossed her m.:-l. As for herâ€" welf, she liked this serious, goodâ€"look« Ing man who was always a present help in time of troub!«, and she frankâ€" l.y‘:mu hers«!( that, MI::" year‘s farming might have beaten her. \ It needed little to :«!| one that someâ€" where in Mark‘s {amily there had been breeding. Ev<:thing about him quietly proclaimed i. !n this he was not unique in the }anJ, for frequently one may discern the patrician :ine in the rustie face, "I asked whose It was, n he snid : of his feelings clever for that. e unexpectediy her, a puzled astride Cortain other names, outstanding ones of the moment and undisputed big box office, were given other credite, but not glamor, Two of my own parâ€" ticular favorites, maybe yours, too, were dismlased as suggesting too much ability to create glamor. Others were condemned as too coldly classical, too selfâ€"sufficient, too just beautiful, and nothing else. Anyway, they missed fire somehow on the powerful allure before which strong men bow and weaken. (Others, it was contended. ffected men in too nice a way to proâ€" nh.hmmhlnâ€"c-lmhl‘.p favorite blood relation appeal. your own luncheon or dinner table, Theda Bara, Barbara La Marr, Nita Naldi in the Blood and Sand days, Mae Murray, and, of course, Garbo. Choice of Theda Bara was questionâ€" «d; Mae Murray‘s name, too, but other men present volunteered them a disâ€" tinguished place in their respective heydays. They were colorful, and, acâ€" cording to their day, glamorous. Clarence Sinclair â€" Bull, portrait photographer, the only man whom Garbo has allowed to photograph her during the last five years, was among those present. Mr. Bull was asked to name the most glamorous women of his entire screen career. He named, ll‘!hhb_lg_u-m,.,m_.g Then it was contended that certain enly women have only screen glamor. On the stage or in private life they wight be washouts. The suggestion followed that perhaps this was resâ€" ponsible in no small measure for the frequent change in marriage partners out here. The screen personality is fallen in love with. Later, talking to Alice Brady about glamorous women of the stage, she named Katherine Cornell, Lynn Fonâ€" tanne, and Ina Claire. Miss Cornell for the dark, brooding, mysterious Mollywood.â€"At a _ luncheon the other day were some of the Old Guard, men who had been in the movie game for 18, 20 and more years. The talk got on to Garkp and what makes the woman so glamorous, then on to glaâ€" "Rude {ellow," retorta the other uhnuuldulhhul.. ‘Jasi rustic ignorance, 1 expect." Mad he tried to anger Mark h2 could not have done it better than by using the word "ignorance." 1t was a word :u‘.“ ro here 1 "i-:' :3\ sure w gnorance m where it ended. 1 "Blast him," »»i¢ Mark baif aload as he strode back to th« cider press. (To be continued.) h o o n t P o ied and most of them good, and the cattle are mostly Alderneys and Herefords, and the cat had kittens last aight." two seconds after touching moistioc. # =-u to M}'fi hoid* of '.-'1'?3\5 Catration of the glossy hare, is the story. An Asp able‘. m‘:‘:: ? An Aspitic Table® y you a . And t« ready "9-'& buy, “1:’% be on maard snainrt subitnnten To newite For Quick Reliet Say ASPIRIN When You Buy ONLY 20° A BIG PLUVG PLUVG TOBACcco SAVES MONEY FOR SMOKERS pixie P Almost Instant Relief From Neuralgia _ Toronto.â€"There was a young man on the verandah o. a Moore Park home when the lady of the house ansâ€" wered the bell, _ His arm was out stretched for dramatic effect, when he began his speech: "Lady, you will se surprised to learn that I‘m not working my way through college, nor have I any starving ehildren. | But this soap is honestly worth 15 cents a cake, ang I‘m selling it at a dime. Any luck t" | quality that makes you think of cathâ€" edrals and things like that; Miss Fonâ€" tanne for a brittle careless quality, a mental appeal rather than a physical one; and Miss Claire for the "band lbu"mfanhna(d-thnmlm ng. | & 2O MINUTES LATER â€"â€" Does Not Harm the Heart He made a sa‘e. It‘s All in the Method :h Benlen h.'u-s mowmes. ~»lian Radio Commission will "rmke over our com,letely control" three Mighâ€"powered rauio stations in aridition & the four highâ€"pewered and three lowâ€"puwrred stations which are at present under the segis of th» com :h“l:u. Thos, Maher, vho-c*.‘lr-: commission, announced in t initlal broadcast of the commission‘s new Montreal station CRCM. Radio Body to Azquire Montreal.â€"There will be jobs for thirty or forty thousand men on the pulp limits of Eastern Canada this winterâ€"more jobs than there hava been in any of the past three seasons, und very many more than there were last year. So far as bush operattons are concerned, the pulp and paper inâ€" dustry seems to have got off deadâ€" centre. It has reached a stage where uulu to cut pulpwosd ‘to feed it« mills. Every since spring the demand for Canadian newsprint, the industry‘s wmain product, has been rising. The mills of this country as a group wits operating at 40 per cent. of capacity in March. _ Last month they were working sround &, per cent. of eapaâ€" city, an increase of 42 per cent. Wh.â€" ther this expansion of activity wi‘. be maintained depends, of **=/â€"e, on market conditionsâ€"chiefly perhaps on the onntinued progress of business in the United States, But whether or not nowspriut saies continue to expand, a new factor has arisen which promises renewed employment in the woods, without warm food. Pulpwood Wanted %Mw farm, was largely instrumental in the building of a new village school, and is the main mover in the village coâ€" operative and "reading room." He himself has finished only the fourth grade of sehool. Seores of thousands of pupils in the who regularly bring them supplics from home. A surprisingly large num» ber of them go for weeks at a time beys lived mostly on cold food, vary» ing thei diet now and then with a savory bean stew, well Aavored with gariic and peppers. In the summer they helped their father in the fields, and so well did the family coâ€"operaâ€" tive do its work that the sons were all able to finish at high school and many of them superior schools withâ€" out requiring their father to sell any Besides making this trip of eighteen miles each week, Uncle Milovan deâ€" veloped Kis place into an ideal little \Once Pauper * l, Now Weslthy EmE n ankare Now his boys incluse officers in the army, a pricst, a Inwyer, a forest exâ€" pert, and civil servants, and all but one of thé live in cities as "intellectuâ€" _ Uncle Milovan enabied them to get through school by establishing them in a cheap room in town and carrying fruit und beans to last a week. The Belgrade, Yugosiavia.â€"Uncle Miloâ€" van Milikitch, a peasezi from the lt tle Serbian village of Slavina, says that in giving his nine sons an educaâ€" u-hulhdhnfllb."h around the world. it to k him 27 years to complete his ta®k. _ "Walks Round World" Seven years ago Start, his wife and their three sons came bere (rom the Ponnsylvania coal felds where Star: had worked as a coal miner. He di¢ :‘I..):hblueuhlu winter to hm&flmhmmha J sons, Howerd, 24; Raymond, 24; "l.en. 14, helped their fatber build the house out of rougb, um Anished, unpainted boards, There it one bedroom, and a combination kit chen and dining room + _ =p gou‘t know what to think about all this," she said. "I have been satls #ea 1o be with my own family, J never knew there was so much money before." Experienced miving men estimate that there is $100,000 worth of ore in sight at the mine. the town storekeeper told them they eoulq 20 longer obtain food on credit. Mry, Staorr does all her own wash For many months the Starr (amily has been in fear of want. They bad their 0wn gardenp patch incapable of providing them with sufficient food for the winter. Several weeks agt since Charlie Starr, oulm; ob oune of the richest gold miues in ado mining fndustr: coa.dn‘t get groceries on credit. Prospects for get ting food for the Starr (amily for the wintor were slim. But now Starr is one of th e richest men in the San Juan bastu, wité idgygands of dollars worth of gold ore ‘m'._.ll‘mflflsmn. m“‘-.,ueun«u.'oln the Red Arrow mine Â¥Bigh he hoids Joint ly with G. W. Giimore. Finde Mancos, Colo.â€"It haen‘t been long \éal.â€"Before the end of 1183 , Gold Mine â€"â€" One of Best in History ot

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