Re Thufty . . have ùus fin your coal bins NOW!1 with Our high-grade,clean and steady burning TESTED COAL. C.pIteyW 1IL M E T T E cok e COAL A, MATERIAL YARD> sitkea 1301 Lake Ave. WiImette ]4200 ILSON& CO. Make1ieSA"Lf *UCCS'I certain mietals, ofwhich thie body rnay require. less thaýn 1/200 of an ounce, daily, but which are absolutely in"- dispensable. The' discoveries -of the role and func- tions of the vitamins and -the endocrines are :the two great achievements o f medical science of, the, present century and their story is one :of. the great; romances of science., This fascinating tale is told in his >new. book,, The L ittie, rhinigs in, Lit e: The'>Vitains, Hor- Moxes and éther Minutte Esseptiais for, Heidth (Appleton-Century), by Dr. BarSiut Sure, one1 of the independent dliscoveries of vitamin, E. Not only does. Dr. Sure tell the his- tory of these vital discoveries but he points out their extremely important applications, tQ, êyeryday life in eri»s of individual health conditions, shows also the significance of the enzymes, which are indispensable to digestion, and discusses allergy, the cause of- hay fever and some types of f ood poisoning -ail of whicb subjects medical science is beginning to suspect may be related. Remors. Racks Invenlor in Novel by Norweqian, the thousands of bodies that it, had wrecked- Bojer bas obviously drawn for the background of many parts of: the, book' on mateiial, Which lie knows, and it is- this which gives his. novel thé ring« ofunmnistakable genuin eness ittnd truth to Me. Atoms and Moen Atomns, Me», and. Stars, a survey of the latest deveIopmientà of Physical science- and their relation> to life, by Professor De Rusk of Mount Holyoke college, was .published by Knopf on April 19. -.Professor 'Rusk bas de- scribed for laymen, 'in the *Simplest language possible, thé most recent dis- coveries in. physics and the present status of research iniisuch fields as the quantum theory, Einstein's rela- tivity theory, heavy water, radio- activity, cosmic rays, et cetera. He lias attempted to evaluate their place in our ideas about the world in whicb we live. The Sfory of Goldwyn Alva Johnson's. The Great soon 'to be published by some respects, paralIel ý that of Bojer himself. Bojer was born into the straightest poverty, was brouglit up in a tiy Nor- M. turesque and spectacular sicilli at twisting, the English language until it shrieks, could have been told by nô other as well as this ace re- porter. A pointed and delightful satire on the blatant cinema realm. m .u.~ieiPsib eDovtute psa~i 1~Si c o#*lÀe&gr~ wm 70-tdwd