EE a Nining ace deposit; mill a property. r eposits to 200 feet gd mond drilling. BOUGHT - Hector M. Chisholm & Co., Young Davidson Mines Ltd. he construction of the first 600 ton unit of the oung Davidson is an attractive speculation J}! in the peny class, 'narket now about 30 cents, SOL ! approximately 400 x 500 feet tested Ah . QUOTED Bay Street, Toronto D 350 fronts Jean with this as the reason for . He sighed noisily. STRANGE SENCE | SYNOPSIS, Jean Graham and her brother Euan stay on the Riviera with Geoffrey \Win- ton and his wife Doreen, who leads Euan on to gamble at the Casino. Jean coaxes him to go to Paris, On the road to Paris Jean finds a string of pearls in Euan's pocket. He snatches the case from her and the car crashes. The accident is digcovered by Jerry Grant who takes her back to his hostess, Helen Gorst. M, Rivaux, French ingeetor, Investigates, {Geoffrey Winton tells Helen that his wife's pearls are missing. Rivaux con- fuan's disappearance, Jean visits Euan's friend, de Laurier, whom' she dislikes, and learns that Euan is in debt to him. Meanwhile Jerry Grant meets M. Perl hon, famous detective, who promises to fielp them. Having tea with de Laurler, Jean learns that he knows Euan had the pearls with him. Rivabx produces' a petrol lighter which Jean acknowledges ks her brother's, . : CHAPTER XV.--Con'd. "Ah!" Rivaux grinned delightedly. "We advance!" Carlessly lighting an- other cigarette, Doreen Winton listen- ed to all that vias said. When Jean identified the article, M. Rivaux flung her a glance of triumph. "Next it will be your pearls, Madame," "It's about time," she said with a ghrug. ' "But where did you find it?" asked Jean breathlessly. : "Ah, that is the strange thing," gaid the Frenchman mysteriously. "That little lighter was found on the hillside between the road and the sea, right over there--" He nodded in the direction of St. Raphael. "In a lonely place between La Croix and Hyeres." "But--" Jean broke off. "I don't understand." Suddenly Doreen Winton burst out laughing, "Don't Toulon." "Why Toulon?" asked Jean, missing the point. ko The other's eyes narrowed as she said: © "Toulon is a port. there." B "Come, Doreen, that's hardly nec- essary," said Helen, sharply. "You haven't lost twenty thousand pounds, ér you'd be suspicious your- rep!" With which, gathering up her cigarette case and bag, Doreen turn- «ld and strolled off by the way she had come, I M. Rivavx shrugged, looking after the retreating woman: "One jis sorry for that pour lady, n'est-ce pas? It"is terrible to lose so much. Ay-ya-ee." yop see? He was n.aking for Ships sail from Jean, sat down. It seemed to her that she was living in a maze 'and was becoming more bewildered every day. What did this new discovery "by ALLYN SLOAN] they stirred him, He said: "Mademoi- selle, who knows? But possibly, possi- bly, Me, I think we shall find him. So au revoir, Mademoiselle," : As Jean stood watching him walk off into the house &he felt dead, stupid, staring at the little lighter which she still hed in her hand, She had given | it to Euan on his birthday two years ago. It had been tacitly agreed that at dinner that night no mention should be made of the tragedy which over- shadowed Jean Graham. They were therefore a merry party, although Grant felt rather disgusted that after one dance Jean refused to go on, Even Helen's insistence that it was natural that the girl did not feel much like dancing failed to reassure him, Whilst Jerry danced with their host- ess, Jean sat out with their host and looked on. She was completely taken unawares, however, when suddenly Max de Laurier appeaved before her and asked for a dance, whispered. . "Of Euan? Oh!" She rose almost automatically, "What, Tell me!" "Not here; we shall be overheard. Outside," he replied, moving away." Everything forgotten but the desire to hear this news, Jean followed the Baron on to the terrace and down into the garden. "This is far enough, surely," she objected, stopping by a seat, ? "Look, there is a -bench with a view." He pointed beyond'it, where the lights of Monte Carlo bordered the moonswept sea. "You are cold?" Helping her draw up her shawl, his hands lingered upon her: shoulders. "Jeanne, cherie, you are so lovely to- night. Look at your lovely arms; they are like marble kissed by the sun." Lifting her arm, he pressed his lips against it. Pas : Shrinking away, Jean tried to free herself, but opposition only intensified the Frenchman's ardor, Flinging cau- tion and restraint to the winde, he drew her into his arms. "How dare you! Let go of mel Oh, how dare you!" Jean gasped struggling unavailingly to break away. "Love dares all, ma cherie "Don't speak of love to me. have no:right--none!" "No right?" His eyebrows raised in genuine surprise. "But you forget, surely?" . Though softly spoken, the words bore in them the hint of a threat. "You forget that I hold the You "Mademoiselle, there is news," he! Jean stared, her face as white as marble in the moonlight, So that was it! This was the kind of man into whose power Euan had fallen, What|_ was she to do? d But his voice went on; suave, silky most, yet with always that subtle int. "Jedn, it is true that 1 love you. You are so sweet, so--different, Look at me, mignonne." her, seeking her lips, © "Oh, stop, please. My wrist--I'm sorry, but I don't care for you in that way, Baron," her, saying with a cold finality: "Very well, Rivaux of the Surete will be glad to hear what I have to tell him." "You beast!" gasped Jean, almost incredulously, She was horror-bound, unable to move, and stood there a pale slight figure, her face in the moon- light frozen into lines of fearful dis- tress. '"W-what do you want?' she asked at length, "Money?" De Laurier laughed. "Money you owe me, my dear, two thousand pounds, For my silence, ] want some- thing better." « "But I--I----" she swallowed. Laurier smiled. "Let us not quarrel, Mademoiselle, 1 have perhaps been over-hasty, But we wil. be friends--don't we? Just friends. You agree? Is it a bargain?" A bargain--her friendship for his silence -- otherwise Euan's -- perhaps her own--honor, Scarcely audibly, she whispered: "Very well." Turning, she made Yor the house.' "Parfait!" De Laurier followed her, Her voice failed and Suddeply then de : "Pomorrow you will lunch with me and we will seal the bargain," . Returning alone to the ballroom, Jean went. straight to Mrs, Gorst and said that she would like to go home, Her pallor and the purple smudges beneath her eyes told their own story and Helen rose at once, Grant, however, although he saw that something had upset Jean, steeled "his heart against her look of misery. If 'she preferred the Frenchman-- well, let her, he thought jealously, bowing frigidly and giving her a for- mal good night, IE 'CHAPTER XVI. It was soon after ten the nexl morn- ing hen Jerry Grant arrived at the Villa Marguerite, He was carefully dressed and in rather a haughty mood, for he had come intending to proposé again to Jean Graham and this time to extract some definite an- swer from her. The starch was taken out of him at the outset, however, for Helen informed him that Jean was staying in bed until lunch time. All the grand sentiments which he had prepared to voice suddenly seemed rather silly, and he looked at Helen appealingly: "D'you think she'd lunch with me?" She shook her head: "I'm afraid she's lunching out." : "Oh?" He glanced at her sharply, hesitated, then as if unable to help himself, blurted out: "Not' with that fellow 2" Helen nodded. He leaned towards | * Abruptly the Frenchman released "Hell!" Grant's smooth brown fore- |' imply? That Euan really was alive? "A great, joy stirred in her heart, but almost immediately was replaced by renewed fear. Those. pearls. Getting 'up, she went over to the police officer. - "Monsieur, -what does this mean? Is It a good sign?' The Frenchman stared -into the pleading eyes, and in spite of himself Perhaps too! knows?" Jean was appalled, frozen. knew not what to say. your honor, you, and have no reward? is not reasonable." honor of your brother in my hands! Who She "Am I to lie for you?. To put my- self' on the wrong side of the law for Come, it head gathered into puckers as he stared moodily at her. "Look here, Mrs. Gorst, what does she see in that fellow? I mean--Oh, I suppose I've no real right to---to say anything, but I can't'understand it." ata Helen nodded." She too was sorely puzzled and not a little worried. There was one thing of which lately she had become conscious, and that was that ACH cake wrapped in air-tight waxed : fier 72 paper~Royal Yeast Cakes always 7 ; reach you in perfect condition, They keep ; fresh for months--you can be sure of suc- cessful results because their full leavening : power will not deteriorate, That's why / - Roya! Yeast Cakes have been the standard of qunlity for over 50 years--why, today, ft : they Are preferred in 7 out of every 8 7% hd Canadipn honies where dry yeast is 4 ; : used in home baking, ed) ' ; 0 vi : 2 FREE~The Royal Yeast Bake Book to use when you bale at home. 23 tested rec 5 12af bfeads, rolls, buns, coffee cakes! Address | nt ep I Rey { ; or lea! [A Png Rand b Rektes Heart. idk Ser i / # 3 3 bof : > ids : Jean knew something which she had not divulged. She had no absolutely definite reason fot, this belief, except- sometimes amounted to apprehension, and a curious sudden reticence which | sometimes descended upon her when they were discussing the affair, She sighed, however, and said: "I don't understand it either, Jerry. It's odd, I agree, but I shouldn't worry ahout it too much." wo «1 don't like the man. Can't you do anything? Couldn't you--well, sug- gest to her that----"~ "Helen laughed: "That we don't like her Baron? I have, tentatively, but it doesn't seem much use." "I see," he nodded gloomily, stand- ing with his- hands: thrust into his pockets and staring out of the window; "What d'you think of M. Rivaux's clues?" : : : "Not much. In fact, I don't believe that any of these people know any- thing. They're just a lot of mutts." The entrance of the butler put an end to this tirade, "M. Grant, you are wanted on the telephor.e by M. Washburn," "Oh, I say, I'm sorry." "That's all right. The telephone is in the hall" | > Whilst Grant went out, Helen--con- tinued to arrange the flowers, a duty which she always performed herself, % (To be continued.) en A et Prince Fond of Gardening London.--It is nc: generally known that among th2 Prince of Wales's hob~ bies is that of gardening. The grounds of Fort Belvedere, his country lome on the borders of Windsor Great Park, give him plenty of scope and been lookirg very picturesque. schemes and is now supervising the laying out of new sunken gardens and rose walks, The miniature nine-hole golf course, which was constructed at the Prince and his friends many en Jjoyable hours during the summer, ing the girl's own nervousness, which even at this time of year they have) The Prince is always planning new | the beginning of last year, has given| Orange Pekoe Blend i g 111 Fresh from the Gardens | Some Favorable Factors Seen Europe Has Made Definite if Limited Progress Towards Recovery London.--In Europe some Progress towards recovery -has certainly. been made during 1933, What the world has been working for during the past year is the attainment of a beter but economically justified price level. The prosperity, both of Great Britain and of the rest of Europe, is bound up with revival of international trade, and the four main objects for which this coun- try 1s working to btain it are (1) a rise in wholesale prices, to secure which the'British Government consid- ers that control of production is the most certain and rapid remedy; (2) removal or lowering of oppressive trade barriers, which the government thinks will follow a restoration of the stalility .of currencies; (3) establish- ment of an international monetary standard commanding general confi dence; such as can only be given by gold, and (4) resumption of interna- tional Jending. : At present the conditions do not exist which would enable Great Bri tain to return to the gold standard, and th. resumption of international lending is impossible so long as the present fears for the safuty of capital exist. But there are, itevertheless, signs that all countries aie beginning to think a little more internationally. There i3 some hope that before long a reconsideration of tariffs will be pos- sible and, that being the case, restora- tion of currency stability looms in the distance, because the one is regarded as a necessary preliminary to the 'other. --,-- Important : In Spring Millinery New York.--Away off the face are the new spring hats--sometimes as far back as two inches from the halr- line. ; And in styles they're as refreshing as the fivst glimpse of green in Central Park. In one collection here about five main types were seen recently-- all lively and different. First, there's the bonnet, important this spring for the first time singe pre- Katharine Hepburn aided Bonnets war days. in bringing it back. But as this de-| signer creates it, it's an 1940 bonnet, like Madame Bovary"s. Madame Bovary is alinost tire great. est single millinery influence right NOW. i : "But other Important hats from this designer's collection are the.Breton sailor, 'the bowler, a new beret, and a dashing "desperado'" hat. The Breton sailor, which turns up all around, she makes in straw or stitched straw cloth. - Sometimes she faces the brim with bright imported silk, Then it is worn with a matching scarf, which ties saucily in front, The bowler is a little hat of the Eng- lish type, very shallow and sometimes tilted over one eyo. "It ex- poses one entire-side of the hair. This designer makes it In dark straw to wear with suits, and also in white pique, for wear with pique-trimmed evening dresses. . Each scason the heret comes back with a new trick. This spring it's a "windblown" straw, : P| ee --p ttn : Gold in Central Banks -- During 1933 as a whole, gold in the U.S. Federal Reserve increased $396, 430,000; in the Bank of England, $346, o 223,000; The Bank of France -lost $242,000,000, the German Reichsbank $97,218,000. \ | a ---- The true law of the race is pro: gress and .development. Whenever civilization pauses In the march of conquest, it is overthrown by the barbarian,--Simms, bs pai Be TE y "No nation can respect its govern: ment it it does not foresee the dan. ger of attack and prepare for self: defense.' --Joseph Stalin, ANDREWS LIVER SALT mamtam nature s rhvinm aa in hah or» o Ss a small, |. M------ Fish Cook 'Book Prepared For Canadian Housewives The fisheries of Canada constitute a very important industry to which a. surprising number of other 'indus- tries are contributory. If Canadians could be persuaded to eat more fish felt. - With this object im view the Government periodically proclaims a "Fish Week," calling attention to the value of fish as a food, Canadians desiring to obtain an authoritative booklet on flsh cookery may now re- celvg one, without charge, by writ ing to the Department of Fisherles, Ottawa, and asking for a copy of "Fish and How to' Cook It." As the booklet is availablg both in English and French editions applications should state which language is.desir- ed. Letters of application address- ed to the department do not require postage. "Fish ana How to Cook It," which has. heen prepared under the direction of the department's specialist in fish cookery, is designed, primarily, to meet the requirements of the average Canadian household, First Editions Bring High Price in France Paris.--First editions of nineteenth century and modern French authors from the collection of the Duchess Sforza, auctioned recently at the Hotel Drouot here, brought high prices, and francs (about $52,000). Among the works sold were "The Diary of the Goncourt Brothers," 4,500 francs; "Aphrodite," by Pierre Louys, with a dedication fo Francois Coppee, 9,600; "The Life of the Bee," by Maur- ice Maetedlinck, Japan paper, 4,900 france; "Poems by Stephane -Matlarme;" 4,300; "The Va- tard Sisters," by J. KX. Huysmans, 6,100, and "One Life," by Guy de Mau- "I passant, 2,000 francs. FSP es A} men "How long have_you been mar pled?" . ; : © "Long enough to know that whenever anything goes wrong at aur house It's my fault" rn ---- pee "Criminality 13 mainly 'a pheno- menon of adolescence, though often of unduly prolonged adolescence.'-- Havelock Ellis, -, a , ,-DEHHN " "All of us- seen learn fin" life that obstacles present themselves "to be surmounted, adverse conditions to be overcome,"--Mary Pickford, *° the effect on trade would be widely the whole collection realized 850,000, original edition on New Test Combats Carbon Monoxide Simplifies Dectection of Dan- gerous Fumes in City ; Streets ne Few poison gases are more danger ous than carbon monoxide, Where phosgene and wartime gases have a characteristic color, taste and action which warns everyone of thelr pre- sence, carbon monoxide "is colorless and tasteless, ites go What makes matters worse is tha carbon monoxide Is given off in the fumes of motor cars and certain chim- neys when there is incomplete com: bustion, Tests in cities where motor trafic Is heavy indicate that carbon. monoxide poisoning ca.. and does oc- cur among traffic police persons who must work on city streets. Science is well aware of the problem and ever seeking more facts about the poisoning, either to build up preventa- tive measures or devise better' diag- nostic tests. A new, simple test has just been announced by Dr. A. A. Christman, of the department of physiological chemistry at the Univer- sity of Michigan, which has all the ac- curacy of older, more complicated methods, and yet can be made with ap- paratus In the city streets instead of in the laboratory. Dr. Christman's method was announced in "The Jour- nal of Biological Chemistry." Y Previous methods took much more time to work cat and involve. equip- ment and skill seldom found outside the larget hospitals and college labor- atories. Carbon monoxide causes asphyxia- tion, not because oxygen cannot be drawn into the-lungs with air, but be- cause the gas displaces normal oxygen in the "carrier" cells of the blood and prevents oxygen from being trans- ported about the body. The cells take oxygen going from the lungs and bring back carbon dioxide on the return trip. Oxygen can displace C02, but cannot drive out carbon monoxide, The re- sult is that one may die of the lack of oxygen just as surely as though the throat were: closed, . : In Dr. Christman': test-the dissolved gases carried bythe blood are passed through a solution of pallidium chlo- ride. The resulting compound, when treated with potossium iodide, gives a red-colored solution which, by shading of the color as compa. ed with a stand- ard color chart, shows the proportion in the original blood sample, i Write for free copy of SWAYZE GOLD REVIEW and Full Information to : Swayze Huycke Gold Mines LIMITED 910 Sterling Tower, Toronto, Ont. fe mame a J] HERE'S THAT QUICK WAY TO STOP A COLD Hf throat is sore, crush and fo Take 2 Aspirin, Tablets, ours. . The simple method pictured above is the way doctors throughout the J world now treat colds. It is recognized as the QUICK- LEST, safest, surest way to treat a cold. For it will check an ordi- nary cold almost as fast as you caught it. : Ask your doctor about this, And when you buy, see_that you get Aspirin Tablets, Aspirin is the. trademark of The Bayer Com- pany, Limited, and the name Bayer in the form of a cross, is on ~ each tablet. They dissolve almost Drink full glass of water, a Deat treatment in 2 DOES NOT HARM THE HEART dissolve 3 Aspirin Tablets in a half glass of water and gle according to directions in box, . Almost Instant Relief in This Way instantly. And thus work almost instantly 'when you take them. And for a gargle, Aspirin Tablets dissolve so completely they leave no irritating particles. Get a box of 12 tablets or a bottle of 24 or 100 at any drug store, : { en and cther railways décided to "gamble' again, 'j geons, Cheap Fares Pald--8c London, Eng.~--"The biggest gam: ble fn railway history," was thw larm applied to the penny-a-mile rate on the British railways when first intro: duced this past summer, and this pay the railways would have to carry had been carrying. : 2 'However, the penny-a-mile railway fares for return journeys proved such a success that they are to be con- tinued all this year, = a ; The cheap fares apply to journeys more than four shillings and sixpence first and two shillings and sixpence third class, and wera introduced last May under the name of "summer tickets" fn an effort to bring back passengers to the rallways from the roads. Ho'ders may return on any day within a month. The fares re. present a reduction of one-third on the ordinary return ticket. During the summer the change was so successful that the railways de- cided to continue it to the end of the year, but during recent weeks there has ben a slight decrease, and it was debated whether it was worth while to adopt cheap fares for the whole of 1934 or to cancel them un- til the summer. . It was argued on one side that the takings last summer were largely due to the phenomenally fine. weather, to the increase in employment and to the Southern Railway electrification. Others felt that it would be & false step to cancel the tickets tor so short : a period just when people were: be- coming "railway-minded" again, In the end the managers of the but . the experiment may be aban- doned should the cheap fares not justify thmselves in 1934, shipbuilding Barrow-in-Furness, -Eng.--Between 3,000 and 3,500 work-people bere will be employed over a period of 18 months in the construction of a new liner for the Peninsular and Orient Company, + : Fight Polson With Polson London,--The case Of a young wa- man who was found unconsclous after taking 225 grains of veronal (tour-and-a-half-times the average fatal dose) and was saved by injec tions of strychnine totalling 6 grains (12 times the average fatal dose), is- described in the current issue of the "British Medical Journal." i It 1s given as an example of the new use of strychnine in massive dosage as an antidote for poisoning from hypnotic drugs of the veronal group. - = : In the case of the woman mention- ed in the British Medical Journal, the injections of strychnine were term was applied because to make it .- millfons more passengers than they. . given for an hour or so, and the amazing -dose of six grains given would certainly have-caused violent convulsions in a normal individual, a state of coma for 60 hours, it Is stated complete recovery was made, The discovery of the natural an- tagonism that exists between these powerful poisons, which: permits strychnine to be used in this way, represents, it is believed, a definite advance in the curative treatment of an alarming form "of modern poigon- ing. Nu . Uusuai Court Order Hu!l, Engi--Judge Beazley held 8 mosquito bite may incapacitate a. man and ordered payment of wages to a timber worker who was off the job several days following.an attack by a swarm of-the insects, Mail Bag Recovered _ Nuneaton, Eng.--A "mail hag with registered letters including one with $5,000 in it, which dropped out of a truck and wag reported lost or stolen, was found later, intact, with children using it for a roadside seat, Sire Savings Bank Increase London--Money in the British Post Office Savings Bank exceeds by £26, 000,000 the total at this tims last year--a steady rise of half a million a week. ELT There is now £320,000,000 in the bank and the total increases -yehrly. This year has show: an exceptional growth, Bequests Left to Authors London. -- Hard-working authors may find new hope if the example of A, B. Solomon, of West Runton, Nor- folk, is copied. Solomon hag dled, but in his will he left bequests of £10 to George Lanshury, Bernard Shaw, Bertraud Russell, "Yafile," H, N, Brailgford, H. M. Tomlinson and Millie ¥. Prout, "as a token of gratitude for the plea. sure 'I-haverhad from their works." Given Coveted Position London,--A young Canadian pro- fessor of anatomy shortly will take" up his duffes as conservator of the Museum of the Royal College of Sur-. He has Leen selected for this post from a fleld of six candidates after a world-wide search for. a man to fill the position, 3 Proessor John Bedftie {s only 34, He has been professor of anatomy at McGill University in Monlreal With: out any fuss or formality or formal induction into office he will quietly take over the officd which wig lately held by Sir Arthur Keith, Toil to some is happiness, and rest to others, This man can only breathe Although the woman remained in : | in crowds, and that man on'¥ in olf tudes,~Bulwer Lytton.