5 a a lt - " ~ ri Bt I lr uh eo be ol hr, vo 18 Cy rd , Tt Sn - fant whi is How , ther along the bricked path. - ---- Sy ge -- » -------- .- = a - ------ PEPPERMINT REFRESHING 0) THE TUDOR AAA CO | [1 HOUSE | By MRS. STANLEY WRENCH (Author of "Sng for the Moon," Strange Lovers," etc). a NE) a NE) Sy VCE) a VS) a tlh wacom it = , attraction, The building was former- "Well, if they sacked men, there must have been a reason," pursued Florrie. "What was wrong?" "They got the wind up properly over that other car coming along, and tried to cut down expenses. However, thank goodness that's over. Multi-Motors is going strong again, and when the Chief comes back sll this trouble will have died down." "But everybody say's he's lost money. Didn't he speculate in the City? Weren't those stories true about his gambling, too?" "Maybe they were true, and per- haps when he's back we shall find a tight hand again." Back To Life A Red Admiral flew from the clump of Michaelmas daisies to the tall sunflowers that heavily bowed, then back again to the mauve and purple blossoms, and Michael Borde pushed his invalid chair a little far- Sun- shine was good, his' thin hands were no longer shaking as a month be- fore, when for the first time he had propelled himself along here, look- ing wistfully down the Vale of the Red Horse. That month had been a busy one for him, too, for as soon as he found brain and body fit enough he had insisted upon seeing solicitors as well as works manager, nd-little-by-little-began--to--lay fin gers again on the pulse of his busi- Jess, It was how extraordinary, too, - contact with working organisation acted as a tonic. Although crippled for some time to come unable to be moved, except on this same level, he found himself growing stronger every day, and if his doctors had allowed, would have occupied him- self for longer time than he could pow give to details dealing with or- ganisation and output. He watched the Red Admiral and sighed, counting up the months be- fore he dare hope to be up and about again. Although both doc- tors were reassuring, they were firm upon that one thing, and for some time he must be content to stay here. Turning now, hearing the sound of footsteps, he smiled faintly. Ac- customed to Lily Eden's surveillance; accustomed, too, to her changed de- meanour, he yet remained puzzled over many things. That he had been rescued by Daphne after his accid- ent, he knew, that she was away in J.ondon he also knew, but exactly what position her step-mother occu- pied in this household he could not discover. To all his questionings Mrs. Eden shook her head and smil- ed. "Ask no more questions, young man, and you'll hear no lies," she This Name" Means Extra Fast Relief From Pain Get tin of 12 tablets or economical bottle of 24 or 100 at any druggist's. DOES NOT HARM THE HEART ¥ an Aspirin tablet starts disinte-~ grating as soon as it touches moisture. 'That means that Aspirin starts "taking hold" . : . eases even a bad headache, neuritis or rheumatic pain almost instantly. And Aspirin is safe. « Doctors prescribe it. For Aspirin does not harm the heart. «3 Be sure to look for the name Bayer in the form «' a cross on every Aspirin tablet, "Aspirin is made in Canada and all druggists have it, "Demand and Get "ASPIRIN TRADEMARK REGISTERED IN CANADA "flushed, a little excited looking. He told him. "I suppcse in her own good time Daphne will be back here." "In her own good time. His heart sank, remembering the look in Daphnes eyes the day of his acci- dent, remembering his own misery, and heartache, the blundering mess' into which he had been propelled; by what he knew mow was lack of judgment. Multi-Motors had been saved, but it would be by the skin of his teeth, as he termed it, that he could manage to get through this; winter; those losses had been more heavy than.he had realised, and. con- sultations with his solicitors had de- termined him at last to do what they had urged from the start of their visits here. ' He must part with Werburge Lucy. The house of his dreams would be his no more. Well, every man must uy for his folly. That afternoon, the final settlement had! been made. ren "Fortunately, Mr. Borde, we cin find a purchaser for it at once," said the senior partier. "That will re- lease a sum which will enable you to tide over this very difficult per- iod." He was remembering this now as Mrs. Eden reached his side, a little wished fretfully she would not put stuff on her cheeks. Who cared! whether she. made up or mot? Still; NOVELTIES IN THE NEWS 1 f By GAEL RENFREW in the Toronto Mail and Empire Not so long since only newspapers recognized the value of novelty, It has taken 'the depression to make the business man enlist it as his main money-maker, Thus, on the basis of something bizarre in enter- tainment a recently opened restaur- ant in New York is meeting with phenomenal success, It is staging its "show" in the ceiling instead of on the floor! Nightly, beginning at nine o'clock, a daring young girl, on a serles of flying trapezes does her stunts fifty- four feet above the heads of the fascinated patrons. And the reader's anxious enquiry is answered even before it Is asked. There is & strong net to catch the flying ifigure should she miss her grasp., Besides, her turns are done principally 'over a cleared space high above the centre of the huge room. The restaurant, by the way, has taken 'its name from this vaudeville ly a millionaire's stable, hence its height, and the bare brick walls are something of a novelty after so much modernistic art elsewhere, Another famous restaurant which has succeeded well enough to form a chain attracts the customers who like to see their dinner cook over enormous open fireplaces, The idea of gatering before a roaring hearth while the chicken is done to a turn i8 not only chummy, but a welcome change from the secrecy of hotel kitchens, And there's the be is sald to be serv customers whil¢" they submit to shampoos 2 permanents. ot course, no rtompulsion is practised on those who don't indulge. Ginger ale is on hand for the teetotalers! New York is treated to the sight of a doll"s house that is famous on two important counts: (1) It belongs to the actress, Colleen Moore, (2) it is valued at $435,000. } Manhattan Island is really being given a preview of this remarkable architectural feature, which is scheduled to tour the world. From the small fee charged to view it, Miss Moore hopes to build up a fund for the support of various crippled children's homes. The doll's house is really a castle which Colleen has spent more than ning years in furnishing, It is 14 feet high, stands 9 feet square on its base-and is-set on a precipice A HS0 Hla ty parlor that cocktails to its " Suggested For Post » The name of Charles Edison, son of the famous inventor, is among those mentioned in Wash- ington as possible U.S. Federal Housing Administrator. Mr. Edi- son was first Housing Adminie- trator for New Jersey. Bribing Child With Cent Proves Costly CHESTER, N.S.,,--They gave Willis Corkum"s four-year old son a cent to bribe him to sleep, but it's going to cost a lot more than that. He swallowed the cent. He was rushed to hospital in Bridgewater, where an X-ray exaniination, locat- ed the coin stuck in his throat. A delicate operation removed it. Doctors said he would lave strangled had it stayed there much longer. ro . Fo But You Know What They Mean Ohio exchange--The accident 18 belleved to be entirely accidental. Cleveland paper--Thieves are be: lieved to he responsible for the theft, Headline in Toledo paper--Blaze BROWN LABEL - 33¢ % Ib. ORANGE PEKOE - 40 12 Ib. BEAUTIFY YOUR HOME ~ AND SURROUNDINGS The season approaches when ev- ery home-owner in Simcoe and the surrounding villages 'of Norfolk County should be giving thought to the. beautification of his premises and thus to the improvement in ap- pearance of his community. While horticultural work has enjoyed a tre- mendous boom in Norfolk in the last few years, there remains plenty of room: for further development. Every unimproved or unplanted home can be made more attractive by the judicious use of trees, shrubs, flowers and well-kept grass. The old saying that a home Is not a home until it js planted very well empha- sizes the necessity and wisdom of planting. Further, the progressiveness and prove your street and thus have a part in beautifying your community, Incidentally you will have helped to make a more beautiful Canada, --The Norfolk Observer, : Go to 12% druggist or department store and buy RIT Dye ¢ Use it. Then tell us in a statement of 50 words or less, why you er RIT--1,000 pairs of Monarch Debutante full she was kind, and he was grateful for her kindness now. A feeling of loneliness ate into him. He would go no further. A minute ago he had meant to push his chair to the end of the brick path, from whence he could look down at the Tudor House. "There's a visitor asking for you," | she said, "I thought I'd run out and prepare you." He was about to reply that he wanted no visitor, but something in her excited eyes gave him a clue, and his heart began to beat a little faster. It must be Daphne. Well, he was in her house, and he would remember gratefully she had taken him in. Perhaps she had stayed away because of him all this time. He must remember to be grateful for that, too. Curious to find his heart beating so fast, "Who is it?" he asked quietly. "I'll leave her to announce her- self," she said coquettishly, and hurrying back, and although he heard other footsteps, Michael Borde did not turn his head. In- stead he pushed his chair a few paces forward, and through the opening in the trees he could catch a glimpse of the twisted chimneys of the Tudor House in the valley. A minute later she stood beside him. "Michael," she said quietly. "I've come to ask you to forgive me." He stared, turned, saw her eyes, and the unexpectedness of her words, coupled with the look in her face, took him unawares. Iorget- ting everything, he held out his hands, for a minute it scemed as though time stood still, as: though all bitterness and heartache had never been, as though he and she had stepped back to a green garden, and life was as it had been when she had laid her hands in his and he had known what a woman's sur- render and a man's longing meant. (To Be- Concluded) QUIVERING NERVES When you are just on edge ¢ = » when you can't stand the children's noise ;:: when everything you do is a burden ::: when you are irri. table and blue : : : try Lydia E, Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound: 98 out of 100 women report benefit; -- It will give you just the extra en- ergy you need. Life will seem worth living again; Don't endure another day without the help this medicine can give! Ges a bottle from your druggist today. Titi & Follows study in costliness and perfection, {it boasts such possessions ag a gold pipe organ, pictures by celebrated artists, the rarest: of woods and bronzes on a miniature scale, and diamond-studded electric light bulbs no bigger than. wheat grains, It is presided over by a fairy princess who dances, sings, and curtsies. "Man's enslavement to the most relentless master-passion, selfish- ness, envy, hatred, and revenge--is conquered only by a mighty struggle. Every hour of delay makes the struggle more severe.'--Mary Baker Eddy. fs Tait to Combustion; Kansas exchange--His ab:ence led to the discovery that he was miss- ing. - Mrs. Roosevelt May be In Canada This Summer WASHINGTON, .-- Recently Mrs. Franklin D. Roosevelt, wife of the United States President, said she hoped to spend some time during the summer at the family cottage at Campobello, N.B. Mrs. Roosevelt did not indicate when she would make the trip, or whether the Presi- dent would accompany her. ©-0-0-0-0- : REVEAL ? ° ° WHAT DOES Your HANDWRITING All Rights Reserved Geoffrey St. Clair Graphologist A very interesting question comes to me in the mail, and because it is of considerable bearing on the pos- sibilities of character reading from handwriting, I am dealing with it mn this article. My correspondent says: "If writing is so characteristic of the Mdividual, why do the schools insist that the pupils imitate a copybook pattern? . . . I myself was an excellent copy- book writer, but as soon as I was not forced 'to write in that way, I stop- ped and wrote in any old way. I must add that most of my friends who were also excellent copybook stylists at school, now write no bet- ter than I do". It will be obvious that education- al authorities cannot take - every angle of things into their consider- ation. Their task, in regard to writ- ing, is to teach the rudiments of it, and for this reason, they have to adopt a standard style. It is mani- festly impracticable to attempt to teach hundreds of pupils to take but a single school, and yet allow them all to use their own systems, It is the same with teaching peo- ple to write as it is in all other branches of learning, We must go from the simple to the complex. The real essence of this question, however, lies in the confession of the correspondent. She admits that in spite of being an excellent copybook writer, once she whs away from the arbitrary influence of that system, she reverted, probably gradually, to |: an individual style of writing. In other words, she gradually began to express her own individuality and character. This confession goes to le Ee lt La a A---- VEGETABLE COMPOUND the very heart of the value of Graphology. > ag Graphologists maintain, and prove the truth of their claims by the ac- curate character delineations they make, that handwriting is the hall- mark of the individual's character; that people write, in a certain way because their characters and natures are of a certain type, and they pos- sess certain definite characteristics. In spite of various systems and styles of writing, we all ultimately express our own individual style and in doing so, present a picture of our characters. It is because of this that a character reading of yourself from your handwriting can be so definite- ly helpful to you. * * Would YOU like to have YOUR character analysed from YOUR handwriting? This well - known Graphologist can help you as he has helped so many others. And he may be able to help yon to know your friends better, Send specimens of the handwriting you. wish to be analysed, stating birthdate in each case, Send 10¢ coin for each .Bpeci- men, and enclose with a 3¢ stamped addressed envelope, to: Geoffrey St. Clair, Roam 421, 73 Adelaide St. W,, Toronto, Ont. All letters are con fidential and will be answered as quickly as possible, [16 thrift of a commodity or a munict- pality are often reflected in its ap- pearance and the best advertising that any community can do is to pre- gent a pleasing,- inviting appearance to the world -- an appearance of prosperity and industry, reflected by well-planted and well-kept public and private gounds. We are influenced to a greater ex- tent than we realize by our sur- roundings. Childen are particularly pensitive in this regard. Surely a home in and around which flowers are grown is a better place to bring up children than a home where no attention whatever is paid to these triends of the plant kingdom, As the twig. 1s bent the tree is Inclined, is an old saying and very applicable in connection with the training of child- ren. If children are taught to love flowers and to become familiar with them, their hearts will be filled with love for these. things which leave less room in their hearts and minds for the things that hurt and destroy. The objection is frequently heard that gardens and flowers cost too much or that they take too much time. The truth is that it is-not €o much a matter of money or time as it fs of desire and disposition, If we are disposed to have gardens and flowers and really desire to have at- tractive home surroundings, we will have them no matter how busy we may be. Information as to suitable varieties for planting may be .0b- tained from your local Horticultural Society or from the Ontario Agricul- tural College. The cost in any event need be only trifing and the amount spent on the nursery stock necessary to improve the average home will be found one of the finest investments that can be made, It will pay great dividends' in satisfaction and will in- crease the value of your home. Your individual efforts in making your home more attractive will im- fashioned--shadow-free-pure-sitk-chif. any color, 15c--2 for 25¢). | | QUEER WORLD A worried 'householder etimbed a Japanese mountain at dawn, deter- mined to. commit suicide, but was so overwhelmed by the beauty of the 'sunrise that he changed his mind, |' der During a 'whirlwind at Shanghai a six-fobt snake fell from the clouds into':one .of: the principal streets of the foreign quarter of the city. Medical science has. reduced the mortality rate about one per cent, a year for the last thirty years, and, as a result, 600,000 more. persons are alive today than would be if pubife- health conditions of 1900 ex- isted." + °° A' flock of crows which' perched on the electric. pawer cables serv- ing the city of Heijo, in Korea, caudedra short-cireuit which put out all .the lights in the town, stopped tramways, closed cinemas, and caus- ed # breakdown in factories, Aroused" from a nap by firemen who told her that her house was on fire, Mrs. Nottie Nelson, of Oak. land, California, advised them * to put it out and dropped off to sleep again, A woman was motoring down & narrow 'country lane in Yorkshire when a white hen fluttered out of the hedge and flew in through the window, alighted on the steering wheel, and: finally, aftér a few sec- onds, settled on the vacant seat next to the driver. Britain's thriftiest countries are Lancashire and Ceshire, Last year their inhabitants saved nearly £21,- 500,000 throught the Nationl : Sav- ings 'Movement, -an. average of £3 13s. 6d. per head. . One hundred and fifty-five of the clergy of the Church of Eng- land are eighty years old or more; 1,400 are over seventy years of age, and 391 over seventy-five. Railways in Britain run nearly twice as many tra'ns (passenger and freight) per mile of route track as the German lines, more than twice | ds many as the French,' and five time as many as on railways in the United * States. Certain types of diamonds gener- ate 'electricity when exposed to red or 'infra-red l'ght. The action -ap- parently 'is similar to' that of the photo-electric cell, but the mechanic- ism-by which the charge is produc- ed is obscure, There are 142 Port of London pilots whose average gross earnings from pilotage in 1933 were £1,000 or more. The best paid were those "hr fon stockings--latest Spring shades-- guaranteed $1.00 value--will be given as prizes to 1,000 entrants, "There, are dozens of reasons why you will prefes RIT. RIT comes in 33 basic brilliant colors, from which can bef over 500f the newest Paris shades, FAST COLORS WITHOUT BOILING! Only RIT offers this advantage! RIT isthe ern tint or dye--easier and surer--far superior to ordinary '"'surface dyes' because it contains a patented ingredient that makes the color soak in des longer. Sold everyw HOW TO W : 1. Write a short statement (under 50 words) on 'why you prefer Dyes and: send it reasonable facsimile) and yous name a dress, to John: A, Huston Co. Ltd., + Caledohia Rd., Toronto. 3 2. Send as mary 8 you wish; contest closes midnight June ,1935. . 3. 1, frites will be awarded on ths decision of the judges, which: will be final. Whether you win a pair: of silk stockings of not, we will mail to all entrants free of charge, our famous booklet--"The A.B.C, of Home Rug Making"s Y) TINTS and DYES Rit lsa convenient scored wafer, eas fer to Mnessarel won't sift out the package, i | Are You Sluggish ? To Throw off Egergy Stealing Impurities, enjoy a glass or two © 7 eachweek of Energizing, Effervescent ,- set faster and 'last | together with an empty RIT package (or | sonal use and for sale, we Cos, | utmost IN hile rooms and cabins . excellent days of 8 al food and plenty of It . . good sun decks ..' happ sort and fun » . {Ine ' CLINARD WHITE ANCHOR-DONALDSO rr Ba CY STA I classified as Cinque Ports pilos. Their gross earnings averaged £1, 027. Pilots of the River Thames earn about £760. = Tobacco is 'said to have been in- troduced into "China from Luzon * (Phillipines) in 1680. ."Thé Chinese becanie so excessively fond cf it | that the last Ming Emperor (1628- ! 1643) forbade its use. Twelve thousand pats per hour are formed, stamped 'with a design and packed in a tin hy the "buticr pat" champion of Cadby Hall, Lon- don. No machine has.yet been foun. to equal, her dexterity, Who Said It First ? Various explanations of the origin of the .phrase "by hook or crook". have been urged; but the simplest, and ,prohably the best, is that for: merly poor people were allowed to collect firewood in the woods of a neighbouring manor, both for per- and they often carried a hook or a crook with which to bring down withered and rotten boughs. gt A much more far-fetched explan- ation is that the phrase implies "foully, like a thief," or "righteous- ly, like a bishop," the hook being the instrument used by foatpads to lay hold of unwary travellers, and the crook being the bishop's crozier: It has even been claimed, since the phrase is found in use by Thom- as Rymer, a writer of the time, that it was the Great Fire of London, in 1666, which' originated the phrase, and that Hook and Crook (or Croke) were a firm of lawyers, famed as assessors and valuers, who did much legal work: arising there- from. - . Thank Your Dentist The hardy cave dweller of old never 'had ,modern delicacies like cake, creamed chicken and fice cream. He gnawed his meat off the bone and ate unhulled grain--and, according 'to some modern theorists, because of that fact 'he had' healthy teeth, - wrt od ~y « However, Dr. E, B. Renaud, -pro- fessor, of. anthorphology. at. Denver University, has been looking at the skulls of anclent clix dwellers in Mesa Verde National Park, and he finds @vidence to the contrary. These 'old-timers, who lived on coarse, . tough 'foods all their lives, had cavities in plenty; suffered from toothache, just as. we do, and also had pyorrhea.. Seal . Anil 6fie must shudder painfully to think of haying toothache jn a land | Where thé' only possible remedy was to gitarhion i ne; iiodk, the decay 'head with a poin ive him of your "and tooth "0 atone!