CERIN BTR ARE TRAPPERS letSIMPSONS / / higher Tur prices gel you MAIL COUPON BELOW got fop of Her En kd new ". pleturespl Valuable pain ERE ail coupon This servic i limited fo Ontario only) ---------- -------- y THE ROBERT T SIMPSON kn Please mall me, without cost or obligation REE sang latest edition of "THE Do TON FRAPPER. which contains te Information regi ng your Raw Yur arketing Service. Young Men Find Economic Barriers "Chicago--Marriage is in the United States; but the money angle is giving it a new trend," Dr. William F. Ogburn, noted University of Chicago sociologist, says. - "There are more married young women, than married young men," he said in a paper prepared for a scientific journal," and "there are more marrjed older men than mar- ried older women." The answer, he explained, was in the fact: "Young men find economic " barriers to marriage which young women do not meet, since the man is the breadwinner." "Widowers," he continued '"pro- bably supply many of. the older men for marriage with younger women." "That widowers remarry in great- er numbers than widows is shown by the fact that the number of widowers at any one time is about one-half as great as the number of widows, awfact that can not be due to sex differences in death rates." Cigars for women, made from Ha- vana leaf of choicest and mildest varlety, in several sizes and shapes, some little bigger than ga cigarette, have been introduced here by Im. porters, ® BATTERY CPERATED SETS Amazing tone, Unusual cabinet beauty. New airplane type dials, Operate with air cell, Sorgs or hig Mantel and nsole models, As low as ,.,.. $58.50 ® HYDRO OPERATED SETS The only sets with the pre- t-smashing CentrOmatic Unit, Controlled Selectivity and Metal 1 Tubes. Sei sk stra ro opetated we rom $1 19: 130 See your NLE. dealer for demon A To Early Marriage increasing 1 10sing your head over a thing |T wanted that rag I god] take y from you now." .| had been declared. 'GREEN by Stuart Martin - GHOST |. OO a & roo SYNOPSIS Maud Barron awakes with a monition of disaster, She hears footsteps. Rush into her study she finds him dead. Dr. Sidney Foster, a friend by Detective "One Eye" Uttoe mulatto, who has never lost a man. England. Dr, Foster gives Maud telegram informing him "The has reappeared, taken, Hughes raised the down hard on the dog's muzzle, "By God! Attack me, would you; I'll settle you! I'll kill you, you brute!" He lashed wildly and the dog, fore his fury, And then Hughes top- ped his flailing arm. He bent down and faced the dog. "Lie down! You hear, Lie down!" Back went the animal's: ears, the tail fell, a shiver passed through the magnificent creature. The right arm of Hughes was up, leash ready to descend. The dog flopped, his tail beating the ground. His anger had gone. He recognised his master. Hughes stroked the dog's head a few times, then straightened him- self. "Treacherous he these Alsati- ans," he said, "Best to take the firm hand with them-- 2 "That cloth, RHE ih "Aw, Foster, don't be a fool--" "Give me that cloth!" It was a command. "And if I don't choose to give it Wolf! you?" "Then PIl take it." And Foster stenned forward, 3 "You'll take it?" "IT will" "Come. don't los2 your wool, doc- tor. All because of a bit of a rag." Foster threw off his coat." Hughes laughed and pulled out his pipe. "What a temper it has?" He ex- claimed; and held out the piece of cloth: but there was an evil grin on his face. "You can't take 'a joke, doctor. I was only pulling your leg. Fancy like that!" Foster took the cloth and drew on his coat. "You're very quick to show fight, doctor. It is a bad sign, especially in one in youg, position. You can't take g bit of fun." Foster did not answer and Hughes continued. "You know, if I had really wanted to keep that I would have done so. The devil himself wouldn't have got while. And certainly not your threats influenced me." = "I did not threaten, Hughes, I warned. As for pulling my leg. I hope you. realise now just how far it can _be pulled." "Oh, your sense of: humour is deficient, that's what's the matter with you. And that damned dog." He cast a threatening look at the Al- satian. "I tell you what, docter, if it "Try it!" said Porter amir. "Oh, T don't want it. I don't pick up dirty rags and make a row about them. All "the same, if I thought it worth while--" "We needn't fence any more, Hughes. You understand me now, I hope." "Aw, be a dain fool if you like. {When it comes to the point I'll fix you good and hard." He turned on his heel and called to the Alsatian, , which followed him humby, tail hanging." Foster watched them -go with strange feelings. He knew the dog would not come back to him even.if he called, He. waited for some time before he, too, turned to the house, War There was no CHAPPED SKIN? NOI HINDS RELIEVES ND KNEES CHAPPED. by NOW a WIND Toney EAlniornd CREAM gadis is joined Xk, Maud Barron and Hughes return Hd address in case of need. He receives a Ghost" He staggered back, borne off his balance by the weight of the dog that was gathering himself for an- other leap, But that leap was never heavy leash above his head, and brought it snarling and growling, retreated be- tabulation of some 10,000 ch it. from me if I'd thought it worth|_ 1 lowy, therefore, + >> e good disguising it longer. He and he muttered, "but it makes my position a | here more difficult than ever." Hughes were antagonists. "Perhaps it's just as ' well," * * @ ELSIE MONTEITH He had reached the Maud Barron and Elsie Monteith, looking down on him. They waved their hands to him. "Been for a stroll?" called cheerily. "Yes, for a short stroll." He smiled and nodded and entered the house. On going into the drawing room, he heard feet coming down the stair- case. It was Miss Monteith, She came forward joyfully, : "Doctor, Maud says that you and I can have the car out this morning if you would like a run, I was going in any case, I've been with her for the last few hours and Mrs. Gibbs is ready to take her turn, Is it very forward of me to ask you to join me?" He stammered something about being delighted; and added that he must have a look at his patient first. He went upstairs and looked in to see Maud, She was considerably better, but there was a flutter about her eyes he did not like, Her pulse 3 was beating too- fast. "Anything been exciting you?" he asked. "Nothing -- fothing much, T Just '| want to rest.'I haven't much energy, I fear," "Why not come out in the car? Miss Monteith has. asked me. It would do you good." She shook her.head. "Not this morning, doctor, if you don't mind. I must stay here." Why?" : (To Be Continued) > Measure Your Hip For Average Weight --. It yowre worried .about your weight, as compared with the average for your height, forget it -- consider your width, That's the - advice Brepton Pryor, medical examiner at Stanford, who has worked out "width-weight" tables based on flve years" college students. Instead of one "normal" weight as given on height tables, her scales give seven "averages" width as well as height. Width--technically, the bi-fliac di- ameter -- is the,measurement at the crest of the hip bones with sliding calipers, on the same principle as measuring a marble with a monkey- wrench. Thus, for instance, a girl of 18 who is 5 feet, 4 inches tall, might nor- mally weigh as little as 107 pounds, if her bi-iliac diameter. fs 9.6 inches lawn and heard his name called, He looked up. At the open window of her room sat Maud Six Years. - ~ -------- chewan has been oiled with confi- are asking the price of farms. winter months, work. best business in seven years and has engaged 16 extra clerks. W. W. Smith, member of the Sas- katchewan Legislature, has received numerous inquiries about farm lands and Manitoba, = Small houses in the city are.at a premium, he said, and apartment blocks filled. "You hear business is picking up?" Mr. Smith queried in response to a question, "Say, have you ever been here on a Saturday night? You have to elbow your way into the stores." Many farmers who left the district in swirling dust storms a few years ago are starting to return. A caval. cade of confidence has brought about the boom. Buying power has thrown the period of economic distress for a loss. Movie Marvels (Kamloops Sentinel) At the Fall convention of the Society of Motion Picture. Engineers held at Washington the other day there was less taik of television and based on! or as much' as 133 pounds if she meakures as much as 12.2 inches. "Tests that havé been made so far indicate injustice has been done 'to about 30 per cent. of those measured and labeled too thin or too fat under the old one-.dimension table," Dr, Pryor said. . The stocky girl who nines to be wil. should not starve herself into nervous {irritability but strive to keep to her "width.weight." On_the other hand, Dr. Pryor said. some- Stanford 'girls who had been told they were "underweight" prom- ptly shed ideas they were "delicate" when they learned they were normaal weight on her oharts, He F orgot Observes the Calgary Herald - -- He brushed his teeth twice a day with a nationally advertised toothbrush. The doctor examined him twice a year, He wore rubbers when it rained. He slept with the windows open. He stuck to a diet with plenty of fresh vegetables. He relinquished his tonsils 'and he traded in several wornout glands. He golfed, but never more than 18 holes. He never smoked, drank or lost his temper. He did his daily dozen daily. He got at least eight hours' sleep each night. ~The funeral will be held next Wed nesday, He is survived by 18 special- ists, four health Institutes, six gym- nasiums and numerous ers of health foods and antiseptics. manufactur- He had forgotten about trains at | grade crossings, ° y Smiling is less wearing than frown. ing it takes fifty muscles to make a frown, while a smile calls upon only uisteon., more of - what might be. expected in the. next few years to improve th® talkies themselves, Two or three years ago they were telling us that each would have a small television set in his home, but the highlight of this recent meeting is the an- of Dr. Helen nouncement that by 1940 third-dim- assistant women's engion films will be a fact, Characters and backgrounds will stand out bold relief just as they used to do in study and | (minus the thrill) when we looked at lldren and tha photographs through the old- time stereoscope that laid upon the i parlor table. Also we are told, five years from now the pictures will. be = colored so naturally as to be "almost in- conspicuous" and at the same time ' the. sound apparatus will be so per- fected that noises will seem to be coming from the appropriate - loca- tion on the screen. Research, scientific data and the laboratory are all contributing to the future of the industry, and: a further forecast of 1940 is that sound will be" reproduced over a i frequeney range of from 30 to 10,- ; 000 cycles with smoothness and reality, and that these disquieting and disillusioning background noises will be suppressed: to the point where the volume range of expres- sion will be comparable to the or- iginal sound sources. "Color," said 'the president, "will heve achieved its majority and will 'clothe the picture 'in the raiment of a gentleman, neither' shabbily nor blatantly but in-such excellent taste and perfection of detail as to be al- most entirely inconspicuous." Thus a science that everybody is interested in progresses and more 'and more weaves itself' into the lives of a public that must be en- tertained. > Note To Housewives We know a lady in Forest Hills | who has two maids Her husband made her get them, for he wants things shipshape when guests come in. But the maids, rather high-toned, won't do the laundry. So the lady of the house handles the washing down to the last piece of linen and hangs |. it all out to dry, too. -- Brookiyn Eagle. 2 3 "Canada Sings" "Biggest little follo in 'the music trade, contains words and muslo fo 188 songs Including all your favorites and many others never % appear in book form Poet fnelul Ang & Marching Al Along gether, A An- chors Avels Singh oe the Ral When the Moon Comes Over the Mountain, Pagan Love Song. 2 © Edited by Hugo Frey } "he best of all follos and song L hooks, only aso, DOMINION MUSIC SUPPLY Hermant Building, Toronto In Saskatchewan -- Cash Registers Ring Again Alter Swift Current, -- The depression doesn't live here any more. This hub of the southwest portion of Baskat.| dence and the wheel of better busi. ness is slowly starting to turn again. Cash registers are ringing and people After six years of watching grass.| hoppers eat what drought failed tol dry up or dust storms blow away, the| district had a crop this fall. It was not a large crop but it has brought back confidence, business men assert. Farmers have a little money after years of self-denial and they are com. ing to town. In rattling old family chariots long distances to purchase necessities and supplies for the long And because their rural cousins are spending money, city folk are back at One department store head declared his company is doing the in the district from points in Alberta | fhe Ln futare Wil _haye -| logical room sequences an | ment, windows loeed Io2 for "tron Christmas presents marked against this 'name and that is --a book. The following offer a nice variety and make gifts that your friends will remember long after the season of giving is over. SALAMINA by Rockwell Kent (Geo. J. McLeod Ltd, Toronto) is a book to treasure, The illustrations by the author, of which there are over eighty, are alone sufficlent to recom. mend this book. It {8 an adventurous autobiography, a true chronicle of many 'curious and romantic happen. ings in Greenland life, the land which has so captivated this author, : MAN, THE UNKNOWN, by Alexis Carrel (Musson's, Toronto) is an ideal book, as a gift to the more thought. ful of your frinds and relatives. What is man? What is his future? Alexis Carrel, surgeon, scientist, an. swers these important questions in straight-forward, simple- language, easy to grasp and pleasant 'to read. MARY QUEEN OF SCOTLAND millans, Toronto) offers this author at his best. The subject of Mary has always intrigued biographers and in the past they have been prone to be Stefan Zweig has weighed all the evi. dence and at the end of the -book ture of this tragic queen, Queen Eliz. abeth, Darnley, Bothwell all come forth as living breathing characters. scene of the execution of Mary is al- most gruesomely too real. A book to read and remember. THE SECRET OF KEEPING FIT by Artie McGovern, (Musson's,. To- ronto) is a book many people will ap- preciate. Do you want to reduce? Do you want to gain weight? Do you suffer from insomina? etc. If you or any of your friends answer yes to these questions then by all "means read this guide to better living, bas. ed on common sense. Tan YOUTH UNCHARTED by Stephen Lawford: (Macmillan's, Toronto) to begin with- is well-written in a charming style. - Stephen Lawford writes to his young son, Ivan, of his many adventures. With the author we go to India in the - British Army, then 'to South Russia where many fantastic adventures occur, Here the author meets, falls in love with and marries a Russian girl, From there he goes to Geneva in connection with the League of Nations. Next we travel to Bolivia, South America, to investigate a group of refugees from the continent, The author 'is now connected - permanently with the League of Nations at Geneva. <r ASLYUM by William Seabrook, offers the reader a detailed record of the bewildering life in an asylum. Here we meet the patients, doctors, minutely described, -- \ by Arthur' Kober : ronto) is -a unique handbook, dealing THUNDER OVER THE BRONX '(Musson's," To- . E - A YEAST THAT COSTS YOU LESS Have you heard about Shia new yeast: which le: who pimply, i ple ho have lon Bway Da It is different' to the ordinary . for. more one reason: 0 LX is pleasant Thi yous and ai this y * koopa indefinitely witho 8 : aur pa! 8av6 money. vitaming Bland 6 whieh RA oh rg" X Fi, 4 i Ei i iE foils The Book ; Have you made out your list of et? Undoubtedly Shelf with the Gross amily, inhabitants of that section of New York life known as the Bronx. The book is brilliantly illustrated by -that well known artist, Mr, Hoff. Halifax You | ster Saved Her Pennies F or War Veterans i Halifax.--The discovery: that in- valid veterans in Camp Hill Hospital here "never got out to play", turn- ed eight-year-old ' Patricia Godfrey from dolls to social work. Aided by her seven-year-old sis- ter, Joan, Patricia distributed cigar- ettes and candy to the bhed-ridden 'World War veterans on Remem- brance Day. Ever since she visited the hospital some ' time: ago, Patricia had saved her pennies for the occasion aud at 'the same time made her sister do likewise. And The Isles: by Stefan Zweig (Mac- |. gi overcome by her fascinating qualities. | we have an exceptionally clear plc-|: ~The | [ : ful of ina PRACos Milks of - Magnesia. nurses and visitors, all vividly. and : SK YOUR DOCTOR FIRST, MOTHER Before You Give Your Child an Unknown Remedy. to Take Every day. Sim he mothers ; take the advice of unqualified persons -- instead of their 'doctors' ~on remedies for. their chiidren, - If the 4 knew what the scientists know, ey would never, take this chance, : Doctors Say PHILLIPS For Your d- When it comes to the frequently- milk of magnesia," dactors, for.over years, ave said "PHILLIPS' ME of M nesia ~-- the safe remedy for : Your child." member this -- And Abways Say prin 5' 'When You Buy. Your child. deserves it; for your own peace of mi see that YolL i dordl it-- uine BATA 'Milk of Also in Tablet Form: : Philli Milk of Magnesia T: Jats ar ik e now on sale at all a everywhere. ch tiny tab- J or gist thee pid dds lent ! PHILLIPS' Mik of Me Made In Canada 3 st 4 If you want to feel § WONDERFULLY BETTER {wood ii 'larger than it is. 'toy | closet. The bathroom | up of prefabricated units, _| panel are the sink, mirror, medicine --Isink.= much store by is' the than the exception these days, what with, special signed. to shed-dirt without all the back-breaking 'scrubbing that grand mother had to do. Designed For Living With Minimum Of Effort And Maximum of Health re -- The. moderately-priced house of effectiveness ra design, with Atteon per tan = more wall space as a result, year-round air conditioning, scientific 1i ighting and a co-ordinated unit plan o ishing that will insure comfort, economy and good taste, : Sounds like the millenium, doesn't it? But we are assured it is really true that architects are 'Planning and building such houses. 3 In one that is on view 'ab: Rocke- feller Centre, New York, the living room by careful planning from the inside 'out, is made to appear much Air conditioning makes it possible to put all the win- dows on one side in a group. This leaves more free wall space, Doors are concentrated at one end of the. room to the same end, The living room mantel is about half as high as the ordinary mantel and the pie- ture hung over it is thus brought more intimately to the gaze of the beholder. Dining Alcove A glass brick half-partition is used instead of the usual wall to separate the dining alcove from. the living room. The glass hides: the kitchen entrance from the eyes of those in the living room, and yet, being glass, does not shut off light. ; Flexible - chair-sofa units are ,ar- ranged architecturally on two walls, giving the space-saving advantage of built-in farniture. : Only two of the four walls match. These 'two are pained in putty color. Another wall is tinted yellow. The fourth is" done with glass. bricks. The floor is cork, easy on the feet and. easy to keep clean, : Closets Meet Needs _ . * The master stroke in the bed-room is one 'closet for the mistress'and an- other for the master. The master's is done with a fine arrangement of tie rack, shoe case, trousers bar and sturdy hangers finished to match the walls, The mistress' is a feminine affair: with fittings of every conceiyable sort--they can all be bought at bud- get prices, incidentally -- in glazed. chintz. Two bedroom walls are paint- ed, one is papered, and the fourth is of wocd. 2 Types of Lights Living room; bedroom and dining alcove have sunken lighting fixtures in the ceiling placed sbove the piece of furniture which most needs direct and reflected light. The living room floor lamp can be adjusted for three intensities. A chromium tobe on a metal base, used as a desk light and very similar to the lights over the beds in the bedroom, directs the light to one.spot when adjusted. Even the nursery has the varie- gated wall treatment. Three sides are done with a blue polka . dot paper. The. fourth is papered in ° plain blue. The chest of drawers has. rari-colored knobs - which - are 1 ma hed by the insides of the draw- idea is that the child will learn cdlors. and neatness at one fell swoop. The practical crib-can be modified: and used for a bed when the boy "(or girl) grows older. There is even a .child-height window in the is made In one chest and clothes hanger under:- the "In anoth¥r are the tub and shower. The Kitchen The kitchen has all-electric' Sin ment, red accessories, shell-pink wall, a floor of black rubber and a lighting system backed with a white metal reflector and hung from the ~ | ceiling. to avoid glare and shadows. ~ 'As a matter. of fact, utility is com- | bined with beauty in kitchens more "than anywhere else in modern de- corations. The kitchen floor you could eat off of that our grandmothers set so rule rather floors especially de- They are using washable papers on the walls, too, and have added so many handy built-in. gadgets that the modern home food- factory looks {like a laboratory. All we need now is an automatic cook! * Snugness -- With the first winds of November 1 it is wise to make the best of winter, Jf and pretend that we like it: There fs, at any rate, one pleasant attribute to | winter, and that is its potentialities {for snugness. One cannot be really | snug except in winter. The word im- | plies warmth, but it must be an in-, | door warmth, It is impossible to be | snug in summer with doors and win- | dows wide open, since it is an ob | vious implication of the word that we are keeping inclement ih weather ouf ; of the great. meri 8 is that. Cid 'has nothis bh nd Yuuey I \ of a e box stove w ~ . on