on 8 THE CONFESSIONS OF ROXANE| By Frances Walter. wire wre vewvwew | WE MOVE. TO FINER QUARTERS (Copyright, 1916, by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate). In an hour we had transferred our belongings from the rather dingy jroom in the second-class hotel to | more pretentious quarters in one of |the best down-town establishments I reminded Arthur of our plan to {make a little home of our own, but 'he pooh-poohed the suggestion: | "This is so much more conveni- jent,"" he objected. "If you have a | place of your own you will always {be in a stew about the maid or the | grocer or the milkman, and half the | time you won't have anyone to help you get dinner. The result will be] | that when I come home I shall find {you all hot and disgusted and not at all like yourself." "But this isn't home," 1 insisted, | gazing about our narrow quarters. "Of course it is. You will have | everything you need here. All you | will have to do will be to press a but-| {ton or lift the telephone receiver and | {al your wants will be attended to." | 'But after all it is a hotel," I re-| | plied. "It is not-home. There is not |the privacy of home. There will In 5,1 and 2 pound cans. not be that feeling of mutual de- | Whole -- ground -- pulverized -- pendency which comes upon cou- | : ples when they establish a nest of also Fine Ground for Perco- their own. Don't you remember how | ators. 172 much closer we were to each other | in the little, place which we used | to have? Don't you realize-how dif- ferent it was from a hotel?" Out today New Victor Records for October Caruso sings '"'Santa Lucia" The most charming of Neapolitan folk songs. It is given an exquisite presentation and reveals the great tenor in 2 mood that delights the listener, Victor Red Seal Record 88560 "Then You'll Remember Me" by McCormack An old favorite which partakes of a new sweetness and charm that will appeal to all lovers of t's delightful operatic ballad. Victor Red Seal Record 64599 Maud Powell plays '"'Humoresque" Mme. Pqwell gives an excellent rendering of this favorite tone poem and seems to-find new beauties in it. Victor Red Seal Record 74494 ook and Feel Clean, Sweet and Fresh Every Day | ive a duet warsong. Emmy Destinn and Maria Duchene It Wis Ties mace cod wow from 'Pique Dame.' Journet sings a Cossa as a nice place and we were/ . " very happy there, Roxane," he re- 4 \ % = i ; Selections by Homer, Martinelli plied. "I admit that, but you do not! §/ [A § SON : i oi 4 3 and 70 others including seem to understand that I am con- "El ' = » i » Es ~+atdering you chiefly in making this| 4 lively band medleys arrangement. It might even be more | 6 charming Srchesteal numbers comfortable for me if we had a home : Hievo acnrdion suectoms of our own, but I am not thinking 2 Saunt a. 3 of that. TI am thinking of you. You 12 rollicking dance records will have nothing to do here except Made in Canada One Price from Coast to Coast amuse yourself. You can go out | levery day and never worry ahout Dealers in Every Town and City | what you are going to have for din- | ner, and if the maid quits you won't Life is not merely to live, but to {have to bother hécause there are so 20 popular song hits 2 delightfully numorous poems 2 selected children's records 8 songs of good fellowship 4 interesting choral numbers Drink a glass of real hot jwater - 3 fascinating violin solos before breakfast tolwash out poisons. P o- Frnt Played Everywhere Write for free copy of 450 page Musical Encyclopedia listing over 6000 Victor Records. live well, eat well, digest well, work | many maids here that one will not be well, sleep well, look well. What a glorious condition to attain, and yet how very easy it is if one will only adopt the morning inside bath. Folks who are accustomed to feel dull and heavy when they arise, dull and heavy when they arise, split- timg headache, stuffy from a cold, foul tongue, nasty breath, acid stomach, can, instead, feel as fresh as a daisy by opening the sluices of the system each morning and flushing out the whole of the internal pdisonous stag- nant matter, g : Everyone, whether ailing, sick or well, should, each morning, befor: breakfast, drink a glass of real hot' water with a teaspoonful of lime- stone phosphate in it to wash from the stomacty Nver, neys and Qow- els, the previous day's indigestible waste, sour bile and poisonous tox- ins; thus cleansing, sweetening and purifying the entire alimentary canal before putting more food into the stomach. The action of hot water and limestone phosphate on a empty stomach is wonderfully invig- orating. It cleans out all the sour fermentations, gases, waste and acid- ity and gives one a splendid appetite for breakfast. While you are en- joying your breakfast the water and phosphate is quietly extracting a large/ volume of water from the blood' and getting ready for a thor- ough flushing of all the inside or- gans, The millions of people who are bothered with constipation, bilious spells, stomach trouble, rheumatism; others who have sallow skins, blood disorders and sickly complexions are urged to get a quarter pound of limestone phosphate from the drug #tore which will cost very little, but is sufficient to make anyone a pro- mounced crank on the subject of in- ternal sanitation. Rr cr Ar AA GERMAN FLEET REPAIRED Kaiser Thanks Shipyards For Come i pleting Work So Soon... Berlin, Sept. 28.--The Emperor has issued a circular letter-of thanks to the German shipyards which have already completed repairs on the ships damaged in the Jutland battle, In his latter the Emperor says: "In a surprisingly short time the | armor has been repaired, new guns have been mounted and apparatus 8nd instruments have been supple- mented so that the fleet was already able weeks ago again to undertake battle." It requires more than a century for a cedar tree to grow 'large en- ough 'to yield a thirty-foot telephone pole, missed." I saw that he was re and sickly, but she is no have his own way about it, so I m no reply. After a few moments of silence, Arthur spoke. ! "Of course, if you do not like it we can try your plan, but let's give the hotel a trial first. 1 am sure that in a few days you will feel sp-much at home that you would not move un- der any ordinary circumstances." "Very well," 1 agreed. Arthur came over and kissed me. "You look tired," he said. "You must have worn yourself out on that foolish searsh for an apartment. Tell me all about it." "Well, in the figst place, it wasa't foolish. because 1 happened to meet' an Old friend whom I might never have met again had I not been house- hunting." "Who was it?" "Mariam." "Who is Mariam?" "Why, how short your memory is, Arthur," 11 said a little impatiently. 'Don't you remember Mariam, who was in the train wreck with me, and whom we knew later in New Or- leans?" "I believe 1 do remember her now," he sald, "A little dried up, sickly thing, wasn't she?" + Minnesota, which has kept a thrifty hand on many of its natural resources, will receive for a quarter just ended $250,000 in royalties from iron ore mines, the money go- ing to the permanent 'school and other state trust funds. The white poplar has been used as a natural lightning rod. Arthur came over and kissed me. That is, she was dried up onger like that. She is the plumpest, health- [ test, happiest, and prettiest little girl you efer could want to meet. She has changed completely. You wouldn't know her now." | Arthur was silent for a moment. | I could see that he was thinking un- pleasant thoughts. "Who was that men. who #as with her in New Orleans? Was it her fa- ther?" "No, hef uncle, Mr. John Gordon." "Oh, thit's the fellow," said Ar- thur sourly. "I recollect now. 1 remember also that I didn't like him.." "Why, Arthur, how impatient you are tonight. Mr. Gordon is a very fine man." "No doubt. There are many fine men who 1 do ndk like. He is one of them. I did not like him the first time I saw him, and I think the feel- ing never left me." "But youd must like him," I urged. "He .is Marjiam's uncle, and Mariam i a "Yes. is about the best firiend 1 have. She Ns a darling." " "Perhaps she is, but many darlings have uncles who are not darlings." "How silly you are! I want you to NAIA ct th PANNA AltA NNN NNN A new French three-handed watch Sent' to Petrograd. tells both twelve-hour and twenty- four-hour time, one hour hand be- ing used for each kind on separate dials, while a single minute hand «does for both. Argentina is constructing a single irrigation system which will cost $60.000,000. "You look tired," ke said. like Mariam, because she and I will no doubt see-a great deal of each other in New York. And I want you to like Mr. Gordon because we may see him, too. Besides he is Mar- iam's uncle. "I have just said that uncles of nice young ladies are not necessarily nice: themselves, and I am inclined to think this is the case with your friends. If I am compelled to meet Mr. Gordon I shall endeavor to be polite to him. The way I feel about him now, the less 1 see of him the better." Arthur jerked the words out and sat in moody silence for a long time. What reason he had % dislike Mr. | Gordon was a mystery to me. In fact, Arthur had seen him only once or twice. Did he know intuitively that Mr. Gordon admired me? Could he have guessed that at one time my feleings toward the handsome rail- road financier was slightly more than even admiration? Did Arthur, look- ing into the future, see something which cast its shadow athwart our lives? These were questions which I could not answer. Only time could answer them. (To be continued). London, Sept. 28--A small plaque with" the Canadian arms on carved oak, and finely wrought with beauti- | ful colors, is being sent by the Can- | adian government offices to Petro-| grad, to be placed in the Anglo-Rus- | sian hospital, Canadian ward. The | plague is the work of a young Canad- | ian artist, | The tusks of an African elephant] sometimes weigh as much as 100] 'A burglar on from a building in Exeter, N. H., fled, leaving an automobile behind him. About 1,100 kinds of insects make their homes in the oak tree. Had Terrible Pains Berliner Gram-o-phone Company, Limited | 1a] Lenoir Street, Montreal 816-432 ictrola C.W. Lindsay, Limited ™ fe 7. :Princess FANT AN SAN a TE "LOW COST OF LIVING" MENU - Menu for Friday BREAKFAST Belled Cereal of Chelce Stewed Pears Coral Eggs Warm Parkerbouse Rolls t Butter Coffee or Cocon LUNCHEON OR SUPPER Squash Fritters . Potate Cakes "a Escalloped App MHK or Tea DINNER in Kidneys and Back. i i 7 j Materials--One cup strained toma- toes, 3 eggs. 2 thin slices bacon. Utensils--¥Frypan, measuring cup, egg-beater, silver fork, 6 pieces of toast. Directions--Puj the bacon in fry- pan and fry until crisp; remove and put the. tomatoes into the dgippings; heat through. Beat the eggs until well mixed; season to taste with sait and pepper; pour into the hot toma- toes. As soon as it begins to set, stir with fork, same as scrambled eggs. Serve on round of wet toast; sprinkle with parsley. ~g " CAPT L. €. LOCKETT nor Mineral. OT NARCOTIC. eof Al Ie SMELT Ponpic Sed GASTORIA For Infants and Children. In Use For Over Thirty Years. STORIA 'her late husband. In widow takes another