4. very low Y wealtny young man, Jasper Waldron. After the secret marriage ceremony t'k«laer and Marcia go their several ays; her improved mode of living benefits Marcia‘s health; she attracts the admiration of her new friends and the love of Waldron. He pays a large gium for Marcia‘s portrait, painted by Trask. Lady Rosslaer claims relaâ€" tionuhit wikls Whce ME cLebas a. .4 ons and in consideration of release within six months, Kempton consents. At a restaurant Marcia faints and is assistâ€" ed by three strangers, Araby Trask, her father, who is an artist, and a \zain, as h little gust of lc clenched hi wiftly into his "You‘re not 3 itd, _ suddenly artod. Her ten died. Sh, stepâ€"bro to be th ence if | davs. Alden, is entr while hor emp chcon with P stepmother La. Gordon Ruthy Jewels in the s duplicate key. rnv.h'i:m w ho ive longer â€"th answers the ca that she is hein condition that 13 twentyvâ€"ome. Alden‘s she fir twho i secre Trask) replacit stopâ€"brother ha to be the Hhied CHAPIEBNK AXAVIH.â€"(Cont‘d.)} \wain, as he looked down at her, tte gust of rage shook Kempton. clenched his hands, sliding them ftly into his pockets. You‘re not playing the game!" he ._ suddenly, intensely. _ Marcia tod. Her color flashed higher, + died. She met his angry eyes ressedly, making a swift little â€"ment of her hands. t was not my fault!" she told him, low, almost appealingly. "I did want to comeâ€"but it was imposâ€" The Beginning of the Story. Marcia Haistead, secretary to Mrs. den, is entrusted with some jewels iile her employer goes out to lunâ€" oon with Kempton Rosslaer, his pmother Lady Rosslacr and her son rdon Ruthven. â€" Marcia puts the vels in the safe but fails to find th" plicate key. She consults a noted vsician who tells her she cannot ¢ longer than six months; thon swers the call of a solicitor to find t she is heir to a large fortune on | ‘it+on that she marries before she| Mp Mar entyâ€"one. Returning to Mrs. 3 she finds Kempton Rosslaer L secretly married to Araby replacing the gems which his rother had stolen Relieving himw the thief, Marcia rromises silâ€" ‘ he will marry her within two To shicld his father‘s name APTER XXVII of Waldron. He pays a large Marcia‘s portrait, painted by Lady Rosslaer claims relaâ€" with Mrs. Halstead and inâ€" ‘cia for the following Sunday. Little Sunâ€"Maids ar h se _ 9 Wl 7 to 321 Mowlana Ave. Toronto Canaqa euemenmaees 22222220 Never Mind Reâ€"vitalize The Gates of Hope Wonderful because this sugar doesn‘t need, and, therefore, doesn‘t tax digestion and thus heat the blood. Yet energizes almost immediately. â€" Contain fatigueâ€"resisting foodâ€"iron also. T‘ry a box today. Y()U BET it‘s warmâ€"the more need then for keeping the vitality up to par. Vital men: resist heat easily. Lanâ€" guid ones are floored. Reâ€"vitalize yourself and you won‘t mind the weather. Get new energy in little raising. 1560 calories of energizing nutriâ€" ment per pound in Little Sunâ€"Maids. 75 per cent pure fruit sugar. in Little Red Packages BY ANTHONY CaARLYLE Betweenâ€"Meal Raisins S¢ Everywhere gagement for to iihimal eB t is c o d c trait of yours now it‘s hung Esement for toâ€"night," he told her. "I came to ask if you‘d come round to my rooms and have a look at that porâ€" SEIIIK f Atrctims" vcsude Kn n i © Marcia found Waldron talking |tc her mother when she reached home He turned eagerly at her entrance. "I did not know you had an en. snutting her away into the shadows and the silence. f He drew a quick, hard breath and | went forward. _ Marcia had turned | from Lady Rosslaer and was bidding ‘ her husband good night. She looked; at Kempton quickly. Without speakâ€" in[s_he held out his hand. | happened is just between ourselves, '-’Weâ€"â€" can forget it. Mr. Rosslaer‘â€" +lagain her tone took a note of pleadâ€" ‘jingâ€""it would make things so much easierâ€"so less strainedâ€"if we did not ‘J]‘.uvo to avoid each other." 4 Kempton made an almost violent + movement, but she persisted. | ‘ "Can‘t we behave just as if noâ€" |thing had happened? You know"â€" her voice dropped suddenlyâ€""it is for: such a litcle while! For such a very | little whileâ€"â€"* | She broke off. In his deep armâ€", chair Lord Rosslaer had stirred. Gorâ€"! 'don stopped playing and Lady Rossâ€"| |laer came slowly from the pJano. | ; Marcia went to meet her. Kempton ‘ looked after her with a sudden softâ€"| ening of his hard face. "For such a‘ little while." ‘ The words stayed with him, haunt-, ed him. In such a short time release 'would be hisâ€"release from dread, deâ€"| ’ception. The path that lay before her â€" was so short. Then the dark gates would open to herâ€"and close againâ€" shutting her away into the shadows ‘ and the silence. | He drew a auick hard hraath a«4! ment. When she did her rather stifled. | "I meant to. And thenâ€"e | was so different here, at | changed; there are so many see and do that I couldn‘t . And soâ€"I stayed. Iâ€"didn that it would make things cult." need be no different! What happened is fjust between She paused for a moment, then, sudâ€" denly, almost eagerly, turned to him. "Butâ€"need it?" she asked quickly, "I meanâ€"what does it matter if we do chance to meetâ€"sometimes? _ It â€"surely it is no different than if I had still been with Mrs. Alden? It w d la 0 ol 1+ an suouel. "I did not know you were coming." His voice was harsh, abrupt. In his pockets his hands stirred nervously. "I thought," he added, and now he could not quite keep the resentment out of his tone, "you were going abrcadâ€"at once. You said so!" Marcia clid not answer for a moâ€" ment, When she did her voice was Lo‘ 1e F to be kind. You sw placed ?" Kempton did not went on: "It is asâ€"as try is for you. Iâ€"hope be here." sivle to refuseâ€"I could not get out of it. You knowâ€"I told youâ€"Lady Rossâ€" laer and my mother are cousing. I don‘t know"â€"a little wearilyâ€""how Lady Rosslaer discovered it. Not that it matters. Butâ€"she seems in want| sible to refuseâ€"I psslaer discovered it. Not that rs. Butâ€"â€"she seems to want nd. You surely see how I was i m as trying for me as it â€"hopedâ€"you would not And thenâ€"_â€"eyerything ildn‘t do before. â€"didn‘t realize answer, and she ‘, at homeâ€"so many things to â€"what has an enâ€" Araby so diffi voue 2o m hn m y es eCE T00E {lips, and with a hoarse exclamation | of selfâ€"reproach he loosed his hold ‘ upon her, putting her a little away . from him. ] â€" "Marcia!" ‘ His voice was low, the merest ; whisper, and shook uncontrollably, There was passion in it stillâ€"passion "that sent a flame up over her throat and cheeks; and a deep, throbbing tenâ€" derness that made her eyelids burn \again as with hot, unshed tears. She did not answer him. She had| no breath, no voice. She lay back" against the thick padded seat, her eyes| _closed still, her lips apart, her hand.s! caught up over her wildly beating| heart. 1 Walidron looked at her, leaned nearâ€" erâ€"then _ suddenly caught up the speaking tube. "Go back!" he ordered curtly, in a voice that still shook. "Get out of these streetsâ€"onto the Embankment â€"anywhere that‘s quiet, Drive up and down till I tell you." | AUTOMATIC TELEPHONE anNp Ek Km S eusl ic REPRESENTATIVE WANTED We will appoint a dealer in your town handling complete Radio Seis and Parts. Write at once ap1 _ q3 _ _6 wmich had come to her, all suddenly, all unlooked for. _ She knew, too, a sweetness so poignant that it made her closed lids smartâ€" a fierce exultation _ that shook her whole slim body. Then, again, the passion whic leaped up so unexpectedly withi as his arm had gone round her unleashed again. His mouth bi hers, she was panting, breathless a moment it seemed to her tha senses reeled, that she was seg fully conscious. Something of terror was in soulâ€"terror at this unknown, derful’thing which had come to Lh .003 & 7 $ ache There was something at once childâ€" like and passionate in that surrender. It touched _ Waldron inexplicably, brought a surge of tenderness to his throat, a great gentleness to his hot eyes. He held her less fiercely, yet none the less strongly, and there was that in his long, slow meeting of her .Vitl"ldi"z lips that made her own throat I on Sent m ie 12 ue n n NWey _ _For an instant she struggled to free herself; then, as suddenly, was (£M. _ He bent nearer, letting his hu;ll‘i fall, but holding her against him still, "Kiss me," he whispered again. Again she struggled; and again was still. Then, very slowly, as if against her will, but with a flickering, wonderful light in her wide open eyes she turned her head and tilted her face( up to his. | flash, Whi;l‘r‘c;rin&}:;‘ï¬e;'f;éck. A moâ€" ment he held her, panting, against hir'nâ€"th_gp_t_heirj eyes met. ‘"Youâ€"you are not angryâ€"annoyed â€"because I bought the picture?" he asked anxiously. "I supposeâ€"â€"" Marcia glanced at the little diamond watch on her wrist. The look of fatigue had left her, the fiush was back in her cheeks. After her ordeal the thought of a little relaxation was pleasant. Yet she hesitated. Waldron spoke swiftly, so low that Mrs. Halâ€" stead could not hear. and Trask are thereâ€"they‘ve been having supper with me." RADIO ‘As M back as the car slid up a . He did not speak again were in comparative quiet from the glare of lights, _turned and laid his lean, ds above Marcia‘s. Under CHAPTER XXVIII C for in, the passion which had,: ) unexpectedly within him | ha}i gone round her, was| F o ieeea ie ie lips apart, her hands _ her wildly beating 1 at her, leaned nearâ€" your opportunity this unknown, wonâ€" Miicdiihes His mouth bruised _ to her that her she was scarcely in her The extra labor in Ppreparing the curface than justified in the d paint coat and the &r appearsance of the fini Palll ccat and the Emoot appearsnce of the finishad > nmumitine ced Wce ces Congs ‘4 Liinard‘s Linime it for Dus LIUMC= "C /"~ §9000 COnduition as it is that | we select a good grade of paintâ€"forl no matter how good the paint, the reâ€"| | sult will be far from satisfactory if attention is not given to this detail.‘ | _ _In the first place, the surface to be‘ | painted must be clean, dry and free: from dust. grease dirt, (On rew \work, a Hflf toal oflieï¬a‘% should be, applied to all knots and sappy placos.’ On work that has been previously’ painted, use a wire brush to remove all looge particles, and spots that arc! entirely bare where the paint has" chipped off should be given a priming ccat of paint reduced With tnrnaniin. | For TORONTO D It seems but;one shorrtmdilz;y-' $ Since in their rompers worn and blue | _ The car slid to the end of the Emâ€" Japa bankment, turned and glided back again. The soft night air whispered A in through the window and liffed a n strand of Marcia‘s hair. It blew aâ€" APP®¥ | cross Waldron‘s eyes and he gave al ly all | smothered, choked exclamation. He) the el« | drew his head back and looked down! moved | at her." His glance was like a flameâ€"| tanden her own answered it, waveringly at| ing ca ï¬r.:t. t.!wn with answering flame. I beccas t De_ar little lads, I lov‘d them true "I Love You,vMama, Dear." For the second t‘i"m‘(;,“ï¬ermly, upon a breathless, throbbing silence, their lips met. 1 HtaPP o m Addnasiciec > BB c i uioi c Slowly, very slowly, she Hifted her hands and laid them upon his shoulâ€" ders. Tremblingly, hesitatingly, she clasped about his throat. | _ There was no past. There was noâ€" ‘thin.g*â€"save only just themselves, he |and she jalone in the darkness. And [ nothing else matteredâ€"nothingâ€"noâ€" | thing! She could only lie against him, drinking in the rapture of the moâ€" ment. . Nothing matteredâ€"nothing but the clasp of those strong arms about her, the sweetness of knowing that he cared. He held her closer, straining her against him. She tried to speak, but words were denied herâ€"her own pasâ€" sion, his, made her dumb. atter how good the pai;xt, the reâ€" will be far from satisfactory if tion is not given to this detail, S L Vn o2 s k uo o oah oo S on o e memae appeal, a fierce heart hunger in the word. It craved a boom greater than her throbbing silence, the radiant proâ€" mise of her eyes, the wonderful, unâ€" spoken confession of those quivering NECL lip s Swiftly he straightened himself and caught her into his arms again, holding her fast, pressing his check against the fragrance of her hair, ‘"Marcia!" _ He whispered her name yet again, in that same stammering, eager fashion. There was a strange EDRERSSTE ET ED ETY ‘I‘.'CP’ UE his soul, with a ,veax"ning that was alâ€" most pain, a desire that would not be denied. Before them, before that which they revealed, he bent his head, resting his forehead against her hands. He was at once uplifted and infinitely humble. No woman he had ever known had been like this oneâ€"so young, so unâ€" touched, so sweet. No emotion that he had ever known had shaken him as 1}.1'0 was shâ€"al‘(en now, to the deeps of They said so much more than her lips could have done, those eyes, It was as if her whole soul and the throbbing, glad, frightened heart of her was in themâ€"the soul that had so suddenly awakened, the heart he had captured. W it > Bnmilifacisidh â€" Lc stt _4 s t css d did not lower her eyes again, and the radiance that was in her whole face crept slowly into them, making them starry, suddenly glorious. What she saw there made her catch her breath, brought the rose sweet warmth to her checks again, set her t‘n_njgers s‘tirring in his grasp. But she His voice was urgent, insistent. His own hard, strong hands were shaking. She looked down at them half wonâ€" deringly; then, with a shy reluctance, up into his face. "Look at me!" he said look at me!" _ He spoke stammeringly, like a schoolboy, striving with mere words to express the wonder that was in his soulâ€"wender of his own emotionâ€" wonder of her, and her yielding, and the radiance of her uplifted face, white ;:zyv against the dark shadows of her ir. & Her hands were in his now, thin,{ nervous, white hands that reminded him, somehow, of a caught bird. He lifted them until they lay against his mouth. them he could feel the heavy beating cof her heart; beneath her lowered lids there was a shining line of light. _ _ "My dear!" Waldron whispered. "Love of mine, love of mine!" (To be continued.) nows and sappy placos.! has been previously’ wire brush to remove it for Curns, ete. durability of the smooth, uniform 1ished surface. the paint has| given a priming with turpenLine.! _ thus properly; @ will be more‘ Marciaâ€" ~| Japanese Hydroglider is Built Like C An Airplane. f An amusement device has made its | appearance in Japan which gives nearâ€" |ly all the thrills of flying but with | the element of danger practically reâ€" | moved. _ It consists essentially of a | tandem biplane motor,. It has a seatâ€" | ing capacity of about 20 persons, and !1nstead of rising from the wator, it | glides over the surface at a fair speod. [Mtée‘ WRIGLEYS NIPSim Pnsl Acititcacck B zio 3 much cultivating as wi Before the growing sease Sprywheel will have mor itself by the labor expense Agencles apben in som: SPRYWRHEELT SPRYWHEET. sw 103. iractor 1 Pays for Itself ir > ~s pry w heel enables one he $185 Tractor (F jrojé.â€"Tâ€"oronto). ays for Itself in Labor Saved Cooata N<qP@C 2e\ growing season is pense saved. â€" in some loeslities more then peid f man to do five times with a wheel hhoe. The remains of what is probably the first Chbristian church in Britain were disclosed by excavation in North Hampshire, The blue color of the sky is caused| by the scattering of beams of white light on myriads of particles of dust.! Minard‘s Liniment for Oandruft. 2 CoLsoRrne st, D'p'. ucu TORONTO far along, or k The hot vapors from the ns ammame tnmmemmes ,thmugh waterâ€"cooled tubss > sky is cluled/ the coalâ€"tar, naphthalene eams of white| are condensed. Subsequen: rticles of dust.] 4te 1090 complex for brief ; Dandruft. Suffice it to say that th is probably the| Fields dyes, medicines ;. n gï¬w:?,euhckkâ€"the last an indispens ;supplyinz her pm; t.hé | substituting a chemical J Endowed with a marvelious c 'matimt. this bird anly collect ja mass of vegetable matter â€" | may safely commit the hateh ‘ the egis to the fermentation th« duce. 1t is, in fact, on the h }ongendered that the bird rsl due to ar <‘dâ€"time habit ol’ drinrking mugs to repreasent , fac‘. - The use of the wo slang word for the f; her own cares When the laying is co Megapodius abandons its and its offspring, Nature vealed to it that it is no ful to them. There is a bird found in known as the Megapodins, t only a chemist, but aiso a nests that, in proportion t when compared with man, efforts of the latter seem p: This bird, about the size j ridge, and weighing about i~ | builds a nest 14 feet high, + ,cumfu'ence of 150 feet. ! A man weighs on an av pounds, and in _order to buil ture corresponding to the n bird ho would have to acc ,mounhin of earth which wo Imo‘t double the heigh an ‘ on:_of thq great pyramids of The mighty task comp! workman confides is oggs t female usually lays cight, « disposes in a circle in the the nest among the horbs a which lie heaped up at this s eggs are placed at exactly « tances from each other, : vertical position. One of the most important ducts derived from the coal is oil called "benzol," which yie‘d dyes, and photographic chemi. is, as everybody knows, a v motor fue!, entering into the c tion of most of the mixtures u driving auvutomobiles. From a coal two ant fonrâ€"fifths gall benzol suitable for moto: fue extracted. on S mt Emmen for explosives. Coalâ€"tar 18 lent fuel, and is i ly use hearth â€" furnaces ‘ stee] Naphthalene is a source of i dyes, and is familiar to ove! wife in the form of mothâ€"hb>a!! Ammonia is separated fror pors in the form of ammo: phate, which is a valuable : From the sulphate commer monia, which has so many va; !s obtained. Part of the gas ; by the plant is employed for the ovens. of distilling ovens, into which is poured from above. â€" A t machine is used to push out ovens the exhausted coke, whi very hot, drops into "quenchin wherein it is cooled with wa is then delivered to dumps, there are facilities for feed‘ng belt conveyor that carries it to by which it is automatically into sizes. A plant of this kind is huge seale, employing a @r When that time arrives, i coal, we shall/burn coke and ready, indeed, we are doing thing to a large and rapidly | extent. We are using the fuel, as well as for lightin; great convenionce and c~ housewives; and, as for tho . popular prejudice against it appear when furnaces and g properly constructed for its : tion. In the meantime "»; coke ovens," designed and for the recovery of the va) gredients from coal, are m in number," Some of them, of their business, supply who with illuminating gas. The employed consists primarily in tillation of the coa! at high + ture in the absence of air, the choments béing carriel of :s« through pipes, for subsequent cal treatment. that these, if taken out by su chemical means, are worth far than the coal itset?" when «: merely as fuel. HMence the proi that before very long the use . in a "raw" stateâ€"ie., before i: products have been extracted â€" forbidden by law. m of â€"oil l.-lâ€. revolution{ lighting. _ The coke left over a the extraction of the gas was a v able fuo!, and municipal gas comp» toâ€"day derive a considerable fra~ of their income from its sale. | within very recent years it has to be known that coal contains 0 valuable byâ€"products besides gas From that epochâ€"making discsovery sprang the utilization of what we ~= ; i_hnlutjn;un_‘. which, taking t The utilization of coal byâ€"prodacts had its inception 180 years ago, whon a SBcotch engineer named Wil}im» Murdoch discovered that by distilliny h fossil fuel he could obtain a 14M that was an admirable illuminan A Bird Chomist. ® pmiace, the moth a chemical proce Why it May Become lilegal to Burn Coal iAce, is proba of amm{ valuable e comme« ) many v f the gas ispen s tar is uy n pie mas hav a h 8N n m it 10 [ 4; Sm »th #1 KING