Page:Weird Tales Volume 4 Number 2 (1924-05-07).djvu/188

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186
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OH, I'm sorry I didn't study music in my younger days. Now it's too late to commence—I have so many other things to think of."

How often do people make such remarks! The average adult considers himself too old to commence studying music, for, in the ordinary, old-fashioned way, months and months are consumed, and it is often years before you can render a selection with ease and credit. Monotonous exercises, heart-breaking scales, finger technique—all must be practiced over and over again, day in and day out. No wonder so many become discouraged and drop the study of music long before they have accomplished anything worth while!

Moreover, consider the enormous expense. You pay an instructor, who stays with you perhaps only one hour a week. Then, there are books to be bought—books that illustrate the music to be played, but which help in no other way. That means your progress depends entirely upon your teacher—you progress only as rapidly as he chooses to go.

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Can you read and write? Then you can learn to play any instrument through this wonderful, short-cut, print-and-picture method as easily and quickly as Mr. Wolford did. Just as easily as you learn to combine letters into words, so do you learn to combine notes into beautiful melodies—that's how fascinating it is. And you read REAL music, too. There are no numbers or "tricks." You play from the same kind of notes that are used by our great musicians.

But, perhaps best of all, no private teacher is necessary—you don't need to tie yourself down to special hours or join a class. You can take a lesson as often as you wish, and can progress just as rapidly as you desire.

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Is there any particular instrument you are fond of—that you'd like to play? "Music Lessons in Tour Own Home" tells you all about this successful new method in music. It tells of the wonderful success of thousands of delighted pupils. It tells the stories of old and young—how they mastered their favorite instrument—often in only ninety days. It proves from personal experience the reasons why the new, amazing method cannot fail. With it you also receive an actual illustration of the easy prlnt-and-picture method used in this wonderful course.

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LEARN TO PLAY ANY INSTRUMENT

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Under which zodiac sign you were born? What significance it has in shaping your life?



ARE YOU GROPING IN DARKNESS

Do You Know Are You Lucky? Send Birth Date

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in Love Marriage Friends Inheritance Success

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Please PRINT your name and do not fail to send your birthdate so as to avoid delay. Unclose 12 cents to cover cost of this notice and postage. Address me personally—DHASSI.

TARA STUDIO, 1133 Broadway, Desk 111-B, NEW YORK


(Continued from page 184)

but no sound came save only a faint moan—like that I had heard before!

Then there came to my mind something an old plainsman had once told me; that dying of thirst was not like dying of hunger; that when one passed from starvation there came a point beyond which recall was impossible, but when water lacked one could be brought back from the very edge of the grave, given but a trifle of moisture. Water! Could I but reach it, could I but find some—a few drops—Alice might yet live. Madness seized me at the I thought, and again—for the hundredth time—I cursed Harkness in my soul. Once more I thought of the pump I had seen above us—two inches of wood and steel—a million miles away! Raging, furious, mad with anger and desperation, I staggered to my feet and in one last surge of strength crawled up the stairs. Delirium held me—I would beat I again on the door—I threw myself against it—I beat on it with my fists—heedless of the pain—and even as I beat I knew the mad futility of the act—insane! Had I not tried it before, when stronger than now? Had not Harkness told us we were to die in the cellar? Could I now break down that deadly barrier? I beat once more, and strove to scream—the door held firm. I seized the handle and shook it—I turned the knob—the door swung back on well-oiled hinges—I staggered into a blaze of sunlight!

Have I said that Harkness was a sardonic fiend? Before leaving the house he had carefully, silently, drawn back the bolts and unbarred the door!



IN THE WEIRD LIGHT

(Continued from page 163)

golden glory? Can you hear the exquisite anthems of the innumerable white-robed choristers? If so, you will be ready to renounce the earthly vale of tears at the first call to enter the magnificent Realm of which we have been accorded this glimpse—the first step towards eternal glory.

Finally the reception drew to a close, and the many bright immortals who had thronged the thoroughfares of space in our immediate vicinity betook their way to other parts of the Realm. Our parents, who were the last to depart, besought us, as they took their leave, to call on them for any enlightenment we might desire from time to time. Their presence would be forthcoming at our mental demand.

With their departure the glorious

(Continued on page 188)