THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. FRIDAY, APRIL 8S, 1521. 4 In the Realm of Women---Some Interesting Features Delicious in the Cup. | has no equal for quality and flavour. If you have not tried Sal free Sample stating the use Black, G 50,000 Dr, Bell's Veterinary Wonder 50,000 ree reen or ca. SAMPLES one dollar ($1.00) bottles t horseme h ive e Schubert, Brahma, ada, send us a post card for a price you now pay and if you dT Address Salada, Toronto Vienna was the hallowed home of Gluck, Hayden, Mozart, Beethoven, Bruckner, | JOSSELYN'S By Kathleen Norris Author "of "The Heart of Rach- Rel" 'Martie, the Unconquered," "The Story of Julia Page," "MctherX etc. | warmth could hear the shrilling of grasshop- pers. "Oh, it's marvellous, Joe Ler is apt to have days like this, and From the dry fields they ! Decem- | | EeRLRALY. is p-groat-menth-for piewt--vrr nics!" Ellen said, ¢agerly . "What | wanted to say to you," she added. s | little uncertainly, "'was--1I thought I would just tell you--" They were appalled to hear a sud- den thickening in her voice, and to | see that her utmost effort could not ! | keep her eyes from watering. "Named for me? My own niece! Ah, Joe, you make me proud!" She gave the baby back to Lizzie, and ! stood for a moment, resting her hands on the car doof, rnd stil] try- ing to regain her breath after the | | surprise. "Well, now, I'll take you home! I may have something else to do while I'm in town, but it has | Bone completely out of my head, if I tiny | "You know that Gibbs hasn't been well, don't you?" she asked, hastily, "You wrote that he wasn't well, some time Wo" ingly. - "You'll see--a change," Ellen add- ed. | him see that you see it." | "Ellen, he's not ill? we land down here on you--!" Joe Joe began hesitat- | "And of course you mustn't let | | My Lord, and loor Coverings adaptable to Jome and your purse C/ 3 Wonder a fair trial Colic, Inflammation 1¢ ' Bowels Kidneys, Fevers istemper etc. Bend 25c. for Mailing Package et. Agents wanted, f your address plainly DR. BELL, V.5, KINGSTON, Ont. exclaimed. "No--no--no!" she protested. | { "He's up, and all that, and he'll be | { perfectly delighted to see you! But | he looks--he looks--'" She lost con- | { trol of her voice again. "I should think this climate would MADE IN 'ANADA Johann Strauss, Lanner, Mahler and | have!" she said "Get in front with other more recent musicians the baby, Lizzie: then the shield will The "free concert" movement, sus- | screen her, and Joe can lean over and pended during the war, has been re- | talk (o ys both, I.can't wa.t to get vived in New York, where several ed- | home, to show Gibbs what I've ucational bodies, including three | brought with me'" daily newspapers tave Inaugurated Talking of little, several series of free concerts for the "How Beautiful! And it will stand the roughest usage' Write This Linoleum always looks fresh and bright as a May morning -- though I ! inconsequent Birmingiam, N.Y. orchestra of 200 has ehildren's people. SSUES WILL SCALE N providing proper musical education for the young, the use of a really good piano is essential. The grow- ing child will be influenced for life and his or her ear formed, by early impressions. Give your children the best examples and none but the best will please them in after years, The pure, sweet, resonant tone of the Williams has earned the cordial recommendation of many great artists. And this tone quality endures because of the ine strument's perfect construction in every detail, THE WILLIAMS PIANO\CO,, LIMITED * Canada's Oldest and Largest Piano Makers, OSHAWA . ONTARIO IAMS things, as those who love each other, and who meet must do at first, they drove through the dusty street, and past flat fields where great oaks threw | shade on the shining brown grass, | and 80 climbed a curving road into | From the top, where Ellen | | the hills, | stopped the car for a few minutes, they could look down upon the spark- | ing sapphire of the Pacific, and see | the idle creaming waves along the | rocky shore. marshes a dairy farm slept in the | sunshine. When the car stood still, { they could hear the sleepy, incessant { murmur of the ocean. Here and there on the slopes a | | brown bungalow clang, half hidden in trees. the shore. | 'That's the house," she told them. | "It belonged to a Mr. Perry, who | knew Gibbs, you know, and he loan- | ed it to us at first. But we loved it | 80 we couldn't think of moving away, and a year ago Gibbs bought xe "It's the . loveliest placc I ever after years, always | blots of | The soft curves of the | hills, falling away below them, were | clad with scrub pine and cypress 1 {now on flat green meadows by the | Ellen pointed at a sloping i roof, halfway between the ridge and | build him up again," Lizzie ventured, a little timidly. Joe looked a' her | gratefully, and Ellen quickly grasp- ed the thread of comfort. "Oh, Lizzie, it will--they all say it will!" she said eagerly, wiping her | eyes. But immediately they brim- med again, and the dark head and | the crushed white hat went down on ! { the back of the seat; she burst into | tears. "Ob, Joe--Joe--Joe! "Ellen!" Joe said, aghast, lutely régaining her self-control. "I know it! I am sure he does, too. I'm sorry to break down this way, but I don't often have a chance," she added penitently, with a smilé. "I never let him see that-- | it's killing me, too." "But, Ellen, what asked fearfully. is it?" Lizzie He's | not going to get well!" she sobbed. | "Oh, I know it," Ellen said pre- | sently, lifting her head, and reso- | watery | "Well, he was sick, after that ter- | | rible two fhonths, you know," Ellen | | said, reflectively. "He ' looked-- { don't you remember how he looked?" | | "Like a ghost," Joe said. | "Like a ghost, yes. I wanted to 80 back to Paris, but everything is j changed there anyway, and then one only mop it occasionally. paid such a modest price would outwear all my other think when I for it, thatit Little did 1 floor coverings. Saves scrubbing and sweeping--yet visitors are always ad- miring my well chosen floors of LINOLEUM Where beauty, economy and wearing qualities are strong decidedly wise investment. Linoleum is always so clean that it safest playground for She Viddies. t al many prett: of whioh yoiir dealer will be glad to eahibir mopping and it is also true of Linoleum emphasized Linoleum floor covering is a "a toh ust : This is patterns For those who want good looking, washable floor coverings at a lower cost, Floor are ideal. The patterns are quite as those of Linoleum. loth and Feitol pleasing as and insist Linoleum--all made Canadian workfen. IMPORTANT.--When you buy, ask for se n Canada with our by our | day Doctor Cutter said, just casually, 'I'd go somewhere where it's hot and dry, Ellen. He's been under a ter- rible mental and physical strafn and | he's managed to get a heavy cold, and there's a little affection of the lung, | saw!" Lizzie said, in an awed tone. | | | | Joe, how could I ever dream it was | | | i "It's a wonderful life to me," Ellen admitted thoughtfully. And as she made no motion to start the car, but sat twisted about in her seat, look- | Ing down vaguely at the sea, Joe wondered again what that new look {In her eyes meant. "We can't get | enough of it." she added. "It's all | 80 deliciously simple, and so free: | like being children again. It's taken | us back to our summers in Brittany. We all sleep out, and sometimes I | sleep twelve® hours, and get up so wonderfully gay and fresh, just eager for breakfast, and whatever bheppens to be coming along, exactly like Tommy! We wonder about the gar- | den, or take our luneh down to the shore, and I pick up shells or read to Gibbs-- and little things seem so | big," smiled Ellen, "and the big | things don't come our way at all! Gibbs gets his New York paper, six days old, and we have ajl the mag- azines, and all the books we want, 104 how 444 then, pei have | the most out of them. For instance, | NN NN 2 that! We came to Santa Barbara, and the Perrys wrote us about Los Antonios, and Gibbs did seem better, he ate well, and glept pretty well--" (To be Continued.) ~---- | WUSIC IN THE HOME, | Musicians Ignorant of Instruments, "A great fault with musctans." | says Thomas A. Edison, the inventor, | "is that most of them Lave not stud- ied the science of the instrument | they profess to play. They never take | the pains to determine the nf¥chan- | ism of the things which produce | their art, and hence they fail to get | The Old Reliable Kingston Carpet and ~ Oilcloth Warehouse NEWMAN & SHAW THE BIG HOUSE FURNISHINGS STORE Wi ARE DISTRIOT REPRESRNTATIVES THE J. M. GREENE MUSIC CO., Ltd. "THRE HOME OF GOOD MUSIC" nm | { % here in--in July, I think it was, | have heard pianists playing on In Gibbs' friends are always going and | SiTuments ot which ofie key would I rs i re m coming through San Francisco, and | vaiy extraordinarily in timbre fron | tLe adjacent. key and yet be unaware | of it. 1 admit that in piano this ig- | norance of the instrument is not so | apparent or dangerous as in other in- | struments, for the plano is not a true { musical instrument but is in fact a musical compromise. The notes are | | measured out for the player, and he | is able to produce consonances and | pines was drifting through the still cctaves exactly, because the maker of his instrument hag measured them | Sentenced to Death cut for him, > | No Appeal Possible "This, however, is not =o in many | they come down! And we're always) providing for the day we get bored, | by saying that we could £0 up to the city for a week," she finished cheer- fully. "But somehow we don't go!" "Lord, what air!" Joe sald, with a | deep breath. The sweet odour of the 7 NATIONAL PLAYERPIANO WEEK lI I IR Al A i] Your Choice Should Be The Lindsay Player-Piono ~ First--It's a Perfect Lindsay Piano One that will delight the most exact- ing Pianist. Second--It's the Greatest Player-Piano Value on the market at its price. Third--It's Manufactured by Canadian Workmen who know what a Player-Piano has 10 stand from the severe Canadian climate, with its many and sudden changes of temperature. Fourth--It's Guaranteed by Lindsay's. 'Ii Th Soca Chi The firm with 43 years' experience A -- back of its slogan: "IF LINDSAY'S SELL IT, IT'S ALL RIGHT." a Come In To-day and Select Your Player-Piano. The Telgmann School of Music Plano, violin and r Your Floor Covering Needs Promptly Supplied from our complete stock. Whether you require a Linoleum, Floor Oilcloth or Feltol Floor Covering, or a pretty Rug for dining room, living room, bedroom or hallway, our wide range will afford ydu the - right choice. The death warrant is passed out Other instruments. Take the violin; every time a corn is treated with |it 18 utterly impossible to play true | Putnam's Corn Extractor. It means | cOnsonances and octaves on the violin |! o JAMES REID, Kingston the end of the corn. Putnam's lifts | or any stringed. instrument, though / out corns, root and branch, and| most musicians are unaware of this. | ~ WHY HESITATE The fact is very easily explained. In | for Putnam's. 25c. anywhere. People who have been putting off the pur- catch this tuning for it occurs so | continue to write Alem and virtuosi . a The J. M. Greene Music Co., Limited antiquity is the Hieronimus Amati & stringed instrument a movement of one ten-thousandth of an inch along . chase of a Piano from time to time for var- rapidly. In the case ot octaves, he 3 eed atter of may correct and hold the right tone Bric reasons, n not let the m | to play them because they do not ap- precite their ugliness." HOME OF GOOD MUSIC. 166 PRINCESS ST. which oneé belonged to King Henry ; IV of France, and which was made " aa i the string changes the tome, and in order for a player to give an absolute- otheirs! ly exact tone he would have to in- ® | tone it within a tenth of the thick- | ness of tissue paper. When a violin- f [ y ist plays single notes he can general- Write | ly correct a slight falsity of intona- 3 3 1 ni Te tion by an almost instantaneous turn your baby. : - in one note, but he is utterly incap- rice or terms deter the many longer. . able of doing this with two notes, as . - 0 two simultaneous actions are impos- Dordlens [imino tue sve wie THE GREENE PIANO | note remains untrue. Octaves on : . stringed instruments are highly un- is a product of one of the best factories in Canada. Is a handsome model built for * trade, bought in large quantities for our five stores, getting in thfs way a close price, which therefore vefy reasonable to our customers. We sell it on such easy terms that the purchase is not In 1596, bearing the maker's label. It is one of the oldest of known mas- terpleces in violin making, and is also one of the first of recorded vio- ling, being but within fifty years from the time that violin making and vio- of his finger. His auditors do not 5 : LE B pleasant aurally and yet composers Condensed Milk difficult by any means. Come in and let it sing its own praises. lin playing became a world art. our is expressly Royal Violin With a History. One af the most interesting violing extant, at least on account of its on the margin of the original, which gives a rather clear ingight into his attitude toward musical critics, It was discovered among the manu- ript of Queen Caroline Amaila, who Krough says, got it while on her visit to Italy in 1812, The work is of uncommon import anos since it is the overture that ished and embellished with coats of arms, an inscription on it states that it was made especially for the king's ebapet, The Bohzmians (Czecho-Slovak- fans) are ug the most musical Overture Found. This violin is now in , and is in an 1 the popses- | sion of Lyon & Healy, music dealers, ca Rossini's Original Torben Krough, historian of mu- Sic in Denmark, Is said to have excellent state found the original ecore of Rossini"s of preservation. Beautifully varn- overture to the "Barber of Sevilla" ¢ was so violently hissed at the origin- al performance in 1816. Rossini then composed the one now known to the musical public, making liberal notes people In t18 world. There is 1 tab- ie that every made Bohemian baby is born with the mark of & vislin oa his right zr.n.