f reougint an ache to hor throat, f § ~» wes stil beyond her, $ I Cleap _ come to her '; ’ ‘yokh F 1 | £ Taint, M“ a» he *d2 t Mibhaiinint nds tz mndt ie 2. > 5A yupre . "~_~ ~~CCo BP Me aiyâ€"â€"/ . Hay eyes pleaded. A sudden half. "this love!" |\ wild panic was upon her. She was Simmmmimurgge afraid of ti;'e lights â€"fthe.dquesg';nin]; » c [ glances. She was afraid, sudden 7 (“â€"\ Pâ€â€˜Rh(;\x:" & it of Waldronâ€"of hthe wlï¬teh.passi’o.n of It was Wal tron w shook himse his faceâ€"the unger t glaring froe first from the rapture that held | stream of light revealed to her in and intoxicated him. He glanced at his eyes. | the ‘ittle leather covered clock; then, | _ Hap heart had begun to throb, heavâ€" sii!! holding Marcia fast, he lifted the ily, painfully. The elusive, alluring spoaking tube. M . _ mystery of the dream which had enâ€"‘ As he ast back she stirred, gasping folded her was s i0g away from‘ a little, and instantly his arm xripped,hnr: The sudden plunge back into her closer. ,admy'%ly_o sound â€" of: “u’. fll M"lt." he said. #K sn ‘ bernoilutiam Aeusees it was Waliron who shook himself fro> first from the rapture that beld and intoxicated him. He glanced at the Nittle leather covered clock; then, siill holding Marcia fast, he lifted the sroaking tube. Wodiiantos:â€"xugh < dB i1 t 1 â€"the first awa kenineâ€"t i fluitering know lodge of her Back _ through the â€" glow gl:mnr«baro! in hand wit u. & , CC °CC P022000, (FiSâ€" turbod. He d scemed to deliberate. ly connoct Kemp‘s absence with his provious aFusion to Marcia‘s relationâ€" ship to the Ross‘aors. She stirred roatlescly, Watching the pa‘ing sky, she told hergelf that ahe was utterly fosliohâ€"be:oming fanciful. Yet, as the bird‘s song died, endi the garden became indistinguishâ€" able, she shivercd. | ‘Then Ret fincors esmmuke iL. .1 .. Rad beo 9 Tudtnitt wl issc a 5. WB 4 haulcd a few sketches with some of them um‘je mad > me attempt to lig Sbe sat curled up on the watchirz the shadows 2 Ing to the last, s‘cepy bs!‘g congâ€"think ngâ€"d Sometimos =*> smiled. m>>\ part her oyes ware : "L love him!" she said. "That is all that I know! The is a‘ll that seems t» me to matter." She opened her eyes thon and ha‘f turned to him. Her fase was trarcfigured, â€" wonderful. Trask turned its own eyos away. "I will always love him," ske said simpâ€" 1 ly. "Alwayst" +n1 sweetne: start‘kd Track T °"~@ UHOCKk dgainst ‘hers, That bird‘s song brought back mem-# "Sweetheart," he w priesâ€"swch memcries! She closed ber | again, acancely steadily ryes for a moment. Still with them!_sweaem!" osed she anowered, with a new depthj And the girl was still ind sweetnes in her voice that‘ .. T (_"â€" No attemp.: to light the lamp. h> sat curbed up on the window seat, atchirz the shadows gather, listenâ€" g to the last, s‘cepy note of the ni‘y & ongâ€"thinkingâ€"dr caming. Sometimeos: s*> snmiled. But for the *«l part her cyes were wistful. There d been something in the way Track 4 szoken, rather than in what he. if said, whath loft her puzzled, disâ€"| rbod. He d scemed to detiberate. I connoc:t Kemp‘s absence with his ; rvious alusion to Marcia‘s relationâ€" | p to the Reoss‘aors. g Sbe stirred TOMOXAC. Watohin_» ®scovers that she â€" Trask, becom‘ng un Araby about Rosslae: 3 _ ) C~eson of her new friends and the love of Waldron. He pays a large sum for Marcia‘s portrait, painted by Trask. Lady Rosslaer claims relaâ€" tionship with Mrs. Halstead and inâ€" sists upon a visit from Marcia which angers Kemption. The young@ helre«s enswers the call of a solicitor to find that she is heir to a large fortune on condition that she marries before she is twontyâ€"one. Returning to Mrs. Alden‘s she finds Kempton Rosslaer (who i. secretly married to Araby Trask) replacing the goems which his stepâ€"brother had stolen. Believing hing to be the thief, Marâ€"ia promises silâ€" ence if he will marry her within two! days. To shield his father‘s name | and in consideration of release within | six months, Kempton consents. At a} restaurant Marcia faints and is assistâ€"| ed by three strangers, Araby THSR,' her father, who is an artist, and a wealtny young man, Jasper Wald'ron.’ After the secret marricge ceremony | Rosslaer and Marcia go their sevc-mll ways; her improved mode of living |. bencfits Marcia‘s health; she sttracts tiw ‘;ulmiration of her new friends and . [3 _ 1OoOmAEOCrORn d 6 But for fong ihe Beginning of the Story. locked down Marcia Halstead, secretary to Mrs.| unsteady, wor Alden, is entrusted with some jewels| him by the while her em loyer goes out to lun-f trembling. cheon with ï¬em ton Rosslaer, his| ;. p» stepmother Lady lfoulaer and her son Oh you! Gordon Ruthven. Marcia puts the| huskily; and Jewels in the safe but fails to find the was a caugh duplicate key. She consults a noted golden with a physician who tells her she cannot ness live longer than six months; th.n| _ enswers the call of a solicitor to flnd, She was st that she is heir to a large fortune on | A dream so icuertntmnt that sht;t marries beforeMshil iridescent as s twentyâ€"one. eturning to $ / wi j ‘Au,l;.-n'g she finds Kemptfn Rosslaler i:}:t\-hsi:allozai’: who i. ; y : ' Trask)» renï¬,r-;efi-y o:'.'.at_ljfl !?\.:ï¬.rax!| In uols duc. CHAPTER xxx ie t ADILQ sicnars Complete Radio Receiving Sets ready for shipment Marconi Model C â€" Amrad â€" De Forest Satisfaction Guaranteed or Money Refunded AUTOMATIC TELEPMONES AND TIME RECORDERS, LTD. 140 Victoria St., Toronto Representatives Wanted ‘ong aftor Trask bad overâ€" few sketches and departed se Sss . l 2 IN 3T0CK for immediate shipment â€" Qm Strombergâ€"Carlson 2A Head Sets, No. 147 Jacks and No. 60 Plugs. We are distributors. ,_‘fe gl.ow â€" and the in hand with Love. _ hor st!l there when wo in the merning. Her bed up over her heart, a tired chd, and her curved in a smile. ? zo of her own heart, "ed, explosively, in rred in his armsâ€" n. The young heiress she loves Waldron. wa uncasy, questions ¢ wet, and there tponm her cheeks, ight, shaded by [E E29 i The Gates of Hope vuruoer his arm she * at the other it and stooped over Cwn at â€"(Comns*d. > RADIO sns Mate@ik lc i dii o ut wooge4 .‘ _ .â€" _ hore open, giving onto a short, | =â€"= t wonder wide belcony ; the light streamed fully . wit first wild down upon himâ€"and Marcia gasped his wn heart. again. BY ANTHONY CarLYyLE voice that L "Meios P Maca 6400E NO V d co ‘door and franed in, Mis hands cought onghitend «C and shrank becko ol3 | ait a grieranon _ °CC |and found )nn.ukh His hfl:’g‘:mlm,l::t,mrwhdlmlnt terror of what she had| "I Wish, sir," he said, "you would exâ€" |His eyes burned into :m 6 Mihu'do'M. “'i':y“l'“â€""'rï¬ld ;ni: upon ©roise your influence to restrain my wbm. littls whils before. Mar. before Thor. mRemémbmn ’.'m men from referring to me as ‘legs.‘" s leapedâ€"then 16 nobtly nce I certainly will," responded the She clogsd her g.,,“'mq BlZmy she thrust Wai a colonel, "If you‘lluse yours to stop es OIe® ~mught. Waldrors looked from her. idron away| my whole regiment calling ° mg : nV3 a e hndtrne.’ "Noâ€"no!" sahe cried, breathlessly Baldy.‘" then her hands | oddiy, brokenliy. "Ohâ€"no! Noâ€"moii| _: _ â€"â€"â€"#â€"â€"â€" vae mouth. His (To be continued.) Some men spend hailf a day 1 The a Yittle. omm Gpowrr m may 1i the y looking wine waee upon ie to keep her| Minard‘s Liniment $az. z... .. shortest way hn dn a niaan .» We l n Mss vorr . AdntcvOre, ~Counte â€"â€" suga l.nenm anything at ail! | prep | And so it was with Marcia. Her| top, soul had been half sStarved, as her’f Er mind and often her body had ‘been. table |Her heart had been empty even as of f; , her days had been empty. And now | Cook â€"4iwW a greater whalth was hers| mouls than any fortune could bring. / Fm _ At the sudden stopping of the car| water 7 OMewnt 7 Pomn C icntut 222 And svo'it soul had he fhere was no thought of wrong in her heart. Al the world was blotted out just thenâ€"a miracle had happenâ€" ed. Just that; the greatest mirr.'.le‘ of all. It is like that when Love first ’ lays mis kands over otr eyes. No ane. but the loved ons matters, counts â€"â€"‘ means anything at ail! I lc 0C s oR n WiBt and stiff.! "Aunt Em!‘" Phylis‘s voice | ~â€"sweutheant!" : Put into a large serving bowl or indi. tragic. "Have you no mercy ? | _ And the girl was still again. Again vidual dishes as desired. Keep in a| you know that it is spiritual m the sense of drifting was upon her;‘ cold place until served. 'to destroy a fellow being‘s dreams ho‘d herâ€"che was content| _ Sauce for puddingâ€"3 egg yolks, 1 esteem? I always knew that I j ; 3 e * * o | anow with the present, blind alike to| tablespoon sugar, 1 cup milk, % tea. could be ornamental, but I comf that which lay behind and that wmch,’ spoon lemon extract. Beat three egg| myself with the thought that if was beyord. | yolks until light, add one â€"tablespoon| have one gift it was common se Rea‘ity at that moment was singtâ€" of sugar and one eup of milk. Cook| "I am inclined to think," Aun larly unneal! It was the dream thai} slowly, stirring constantly until it| Said thoughtfully, "that I was rig wes real; the dream that countedâ€", coats the spoon. Flavor with oneâ€"haif| the first place, for to have a gift rothing eise. She yie‘ded herse‘f to| teaspoon of lemon extract. Chill be-, to refuse to use it is shirking." ;:._,‘,.o the man who had woven it for| fore using. | CBRUNGaâ€" acamber." bnane s lc og . er. W 1 10 TUC S was still again. Again the sense of drifting was upon her; dreams hild herâ€"cohe was content anow with the present, blind alike to that which lay behind and that which " was beyord. | _ She was conscious of an almost overwheming desire to give it some sort of expressionâ€"to voice the tuâ€" | mult in her soul. Involuntarily she made a litt‘s movement. For the sec-i "ond time _ Waldron‘s grasp of her bightened. He bent his face and laid ) hwis cheek against hens, F "Sweetheart," ho whispered, and | again, scancely steadilyâ€""swectheart / msun LA o0 0 ues d! She was still as one in a dream. n| A dream so wonderful that it was 'I iridescent as a bubbleâ€"yet warmed + : with a joy so keen that it was like ;’ physical pain. She did not want | to wake from it. She was content: | to lie there, the strength of Wal-’ -}dron's arm about her, the beating of | his heart near to her cheekâ€"-d,ri:fting, ’,â€"driftingâ€"y-lek}ing herself â€"to the |glory that had suddenly filled her | world. ‘ ’ Under hor fishes her eyes were| shining like stars. A little pulse' !thwbha:i rhythmically at the base of| | her throat. k ’ | _ It had come so suddenly, so fiercely, yet, withal, so tenderlyâ€"this love, of ‘ which she had been ignorant for so| . long. It beat up within her suffocatâ€" !1 ingly, as with the wings of an imâ€" 1 prisoned bind. 3P ks hn ts. B ficca c â€" Lo 1 dA was a caught laugh-â€"hes:itat.ingâ€"â€"buti golden with a thrill of magical sweelâ€"! "Oh you!" he said against her hair, huskily; and w:h.'cx}!y she laughed. It fooked down at herâ€"smiled a new, unsteady, wonderful smile that caught him by the throat and set him trembling. | k her, whimsically, a is awfully late, They where on earth we Assionâ€"to voice the tuâ€" soul. Involuntarily she movement. For the secâ€" ‘aldron‘s grasp of her e bent his face and laidJ ng herself toth;' suddenly filled her| | hes her eyes were| s. _ A little pu:l“i cally at the base of 00 o oonmn oeen ."WU" one in a drea.m.? rful that it was! bleâ€"yet warmed, that it was like] e did not want| She was content! rength of Waj-l Minard‘s Liniment for Dandruft. ETWOOC last / LC me take it with meâ€"for-g-oodn‘fghtâ€" that ){ou’ love meâ€"that you‘re mine!" uM mal "Marcia!" he whispered, so low she scarcely caught the words. . "Marcia ‘â€"sweetheart! I want to hear you say itâ€"that you love me!" There was something . at once humble and oddly boyish about him as he said it. His eyes were eager, his hands hot upon her bare shoulâ€" ders. The restrained quiet of the man was ione. He w‘:th stammering, eager as the veriest youth, “Sal\: it‘" he begged again. “Let! me take it with me__fom amaailcot 1. 000 _ C080 CC20000, BC D. |,_ Any good cake recipe will do for| Yoiks and one egg white s inted your birthday cake, which should be{ the milk and cook in a d made in layers, with > coir, ring and until thickened. Pour in â€"mâ€"â€", | thimble, wrapped in waxed paper, dish and set away to chill â€"__..\ | Placed between the layers. The cake, three egg whites and the ~***~1)} is covered with frosting, then decoratâ€"; light and stiff. Fold int | ed with one candle for each year, the | half cup of crushed‘ fruit . candles to be lighted just before the ; on _top of the chilled custs ,guesta enter the diningâ€"room. Or the! _ Raspberryadeâ€"1 cup ras) ; cake can be kept out of sight until it 2 teaspoons lemon juice, 1 is to be served, when the candles beâ€"| 4 teaspoons sugar, 3 br | ing lighted, it can be carried in and leaves. Stir until the sug ‘placed before the person whose birth.| solved and place on ice to ( * m:é day is being celebrated. When the| Raspberry and curranta f‘u‘f time comes to serve the cake, this perâ€"| Taspberry juice, % cup cur * *""*"/ son should blow out theâ€"candles, reâ€"|1 cup sugar, 1 teaspoon lei $ ’move them and place them on a plate 2 Cups cold water. Stir until T hair,‘ provided for the purpose, thon cut the !s dissolved and chill. Pieâ€"; hed. It cake into slices ready for serving. The MAY be substituted for cur gâ€"‘but,’ person getting the coin is supposed to|, Currant sherbetâ€"2 cup: SWt‘et-i attain wealth; the ring means an early Juice, 3 cups sugar, 2 cups marriage, and the thimble , means °EZ white. Make a heavy ineam.! spinsterhood. The:e trinkets ‘can be, the sugar and water, the cur 1 was omitted if desired. ‘The small candles And enough water to make armed| and rosebudâ€"shaped holders are very| Put it in a freczer, add an s like, inexpensive and can be bourht at most] °&# white and freeze, Pieâ€"p want department, houseâ€"furnishing and no.| Mmay be used. If it is used, ontent| tion stores. . Lk Anieincrni "4 Ds ie Panst 124 . F0 6 CZVUgU mim. He smiled at her again. ! "All right," he said gently. "I‘ll let you go." | He turned to give an order to the chauffeur. Then he came back to the door again, thrusting his head and | shoulders inside. | “Ma‘rcia!" h‘e whispered, so low sha | avayp p32 5 "" ; _ ~OO! Slightly and pour|! At dinner that night Phyllis was | over raspberries or blackberries which | unusually quiet. . _ Immediately after | have been placed in a serving bow!, She had done eating she went to her | Set away to chill. Serve with or with-'l ma'i"‘“:"h:“’: r]:::n:dug; El::; 5:::: j | out cream. * â€" » â€" 6 + s & 5 s t » s sut ! fl"rmt floatâ€"1 pint milk, 4 egg,::';f"’; ::';t ;:,;n,m :?’g:; 2{"â€'; P eeey " bhe white; 4 ta-blelpoom{; "Dear, dear, dearest mother," A'untj hy gp * Em read. "I‘ve wanted to write so‘ S o ooo aeet o ty flaunt i w â€" Cld | that I thought I‘d burst, but I just] It died at sight of her closed eyes. | Can‘t say things on paper. Yeve alli He realized suddenly that she was ]We“' only terribly lonesome without | spentâ€"exhausted. He felt very much you. Aunt Em told Greta to make | the same himself, except that a wild| blueberry pudding for dinner, which | . elation was surging through him. [ahe hates ‘to do, and we could hear H.:â€smllid ati‘her :'ng‘ai'n. Iher talkink En This\ aÂ¥re anmttedie s o o. n e t l a 6A Jj vioht " ha ant L acuUN L e se e 1E with him stillâ€"to flaunt the wonder of his happiness before all the work!. It died at sight of her closed eyes. He realized suddenly that she was spentâ€"exhausted. He felt very much‘ the same himself. aovaen, 11 _ "_ NuCn D ORAENR P in cinintitic o d ca =1 & A 7 | _ Fruit blane mangeâ€"Dissolve two tablespoons corn starch in two cups of fruit juice. Add sugar to taste. Cook until thickened and pour into moulds. Chill and serve with cream. ‘ Fruit sagoâ€"# cup 'iago, 3 cups water, 3 cups milk, 14 cup sugar, %‘ teaspoon salt. Soak the sago for a| short time in thg water, add the mflkf cook until sago is clear and add the| sugar and salt. Cool slightly and pour’l over raspberries or blackberries whiohi have been Dlncad in . .. _ ; _ o" Mo |__Strawberry iceâ€"Cook rice in plenty of water (twelve times amount of rice) until done. Drain and cool. Fold into whipped â€" cream (1 cup of whipped cream to two cups of cooked rice). Place fresh strawberries in the botâ€" tom of serving dishes, sprinkle wit,h' sugar and add two tablespoons of the prepared rice. Put more berries on! top, sprinkle with sugar and serve. ! Fruit blane mangeâ€"Dissolve two, tablespoons corn starch in two cupsf of" Trinik iss &A 33 L ols . o oeioe n s ene viewrs . COd !I' lemon juice, and oneâ€"half the sugar.}! [ When the sugar is dissolved, strain J and set on ice until thick as honey.! | Then beat with beater until white and ; light. Fold into this the egg whites / | and remaining sugar, which have been | beaten together until light and stiff.| ; Put into a large serving bow!l or indiâ€". _vidual dishes as desired. Keep in a| cold place until served. I ’; //†1 ~~ lf[}; omens @ : ‘%’H' :;.;smnï¬"]†Sphere se Any Cool Dishes f. o; ive an order to the he came back to the sting his head and The Birthday Cake. blow cut the. candles, reâ€" and place them on a plate ‘Ahe purpose, then cut the ces ready for serving. The ng the coin is supposed to h; the ring means an early ind the ihimble . means . _ These trinkets can be esired. The small candles â€"shaped holders are very| and can be beought at most‘ houseâ€"furnishing and noâ€"| piocaâ€"3 cups brown The Clue. water, 1 cup tapioca, 1/ “I_\_IO_. Aunt Em, T don‘t , 50 IW she Hot Days, Some men spend half a day looking for the shortest way to do a piece of vorkthteofldbodoulnqnm\ rTZ C °C 8 Dattaiion commanded by & bald elthough not elderly colonel. After a feow days he approached his commander and asked premission to | her talking to the atmosphere out in , the kitchen. But she is doing beautiâ€" | fully really; the youngsters were wild , over the pudding. There was omelet before it, and Billy got a yellow smear | on the southwest corner of his mouth, ‘and he added purple ones from the ,’pudding. His face looked like the“ | map of" Ontario ~â€"when he was through. Kathie is wearing her blue ’chambray and a tissueâ€"paper hair rib.| bonâ€"that the latest fad. She wears @bout ten different colors through the day. It makes you feel crossâ€"eyed.} She »» ' Aunt Em handed back the page. "Bless your heart, child," was all ahe) said. But Phyllis was content. . very tall, thin Heutenant at one our training camps last year reâ€" d : 4 tters | Soft the Summer winds are sighing |;nothe;;. Oh;ld,;;':ld &f ;'eh:ti:h:hletmï¬ As they sway the blooming grass, lp'i"t’:,'.. idns | Sunshine follows swift the shadows | ie n 4 » Inler p» Of the clouds that o‘er us pass; I'Phy?l?s |fcrge;rasnt thinking of her! IHus-h! hLow 'near a bird &: a.;lng1ng-, | "And," Aunt Em went on, "of the| \spazm“:::;: ,i':ly:dwt:e“:‘elo"zm""e f A s | 2 ’Joy you ‘can give hgr lf. you !'eal;ly set! In the fairy fields of June. your mind upon doing it. And without| *\ â€"‘Heloq 13) Aiderson tnny trowble on your part, either." o _ "How?" Phyllis cried. "Aunt EM,| _ Fear paralyzes curiosity, and vice how?" k versa. "She wants home newsâ€"the tiny, =‘%r== little, everyday things such as what When in Toronto visit the we had for dinner and what dress Royuk Q'n.:n: M:ueum Kathie is wearing to schoolâ€"things| 253 Bloor rpent ieA mss lou. like those. Just suppose you try doing| k::.‘.‘:;;,{:;;’:‘c“_:;',,:;‘, Dillon in Canada it once." mamcllr__" Aunt Em‘s voice became â€" more gentle. _ "I was thinking of your mother, child; and of what the letters from home mean to her in the hosâ€" pital." Phyllis‘s reply gesture. have one gift it was common sense." "I am inclined to think," Aunt Em said thoughtfully, "that I was right in the first place, for to have a gift and to refuse to use it is shirking." miomie . i 1‘ 11°} AZnS Im, i don‘t want to hear ,| Lucile‘s last letter. I am perfectly a aware that 1 am cutting mysolf off e‘ from a very interesting quarter hour,} p, but hearing you read the letter isn't,l ) worth the p:ice. I get too madly 1’envious of Lucile. I‘d give anything! 'to be a good letter writer, but letter| | writing is as much a gift as singing | ‘r is, and I don‘t have it, and that‘s all there is about it!" | "You‘re not usually a shirk, Phylâ€" . lis," Aunt Em replied calmly. | _ _"A shirk!" Phyllis was too much ‘astounded to be angry. "If you knew | how I work over letter writing, Aunt |Em! If I could show you the pen handles I‘ve chewed in my agony! Andl [then you call he a shirk!" | M s en en e e SE‘ "Maybe I was wrong. I should have said, ‘If you‘d only use your common sense.‘ " TORONTO The Respectful Private. _ Currant sherbetâ€"2 cups juice, 3 cups sugar, 2 cups egg white. Make a heavy the sugar and water, the cur and enough water to make Put it in a freczer, add an egg white and freezo, Pieâ€"p may be used. If it is used, 1 is improved by the additio juice of one lemon. WA crim 000. C 0 AnCC »UgeF CGnUl ,i‘light and stiff. Fold into this oneâ€" : half cup of crushed‘ fruit and spread ‘on top of the chilled custard. | _ Raspberryadeâ€"1 cup rasperry juice, "2 teaspoons lemon juice, 1 cup water,; ;4 teaspoons sugar, 3 bruised mint |leaves. Stir until the sugar is dis-} ‘ solved and place on ice to cool. _ Raspberry and currantadeâ€"i cup, raspberry juice, % cup currant juice, 1 cup sugar, 1 teaspoon lemon juice, 2 cups cold water. Stir until the sugar is dissolved and chill. Pieâ€"plant juice| may be substituted for currant juice.] doru 2t 96 & D sugar, 3 egg whites Beat four ow ces . thickened. Pour in a urving, ind set away to chill. Beat the j °egg whites and the sugar until and stiff. Fold into this oneâ€" up of crushed‘ fruit and spread _of the chilled custard. . pberryadeâ€"1 cup rasperry juice, poons lemon juice, 1 cup water, poons sugar, 3 bruised mint Stir until the sugar is disâ€" and place on ice to cool. berry and currantadeâ€"1 cup’ IPY HHCG, 16 ANN nivanomns tur o _>USar, â€" cups water, 1 Make a heavy syrup of ‘ou no mercy ? Don'l: t is spiritual murder fellow being‘s selfâ€"' er, add an unbeaten eze. Pieâ€"plant juice it is used, the RAavor the addition of the , the currant J:uiL:e to make a quart. white slightly, add : in a double boiler Pour in a servine that I never| I comfortedi that if I did! hat if I did| Clover. non sense.‘"/ Ob! the meadow‘s bright with clov ‘ Aunt Em| Blossoms red and blozsoms whit ‘as right in| Bird and bee aâ€"hovering over a gift and Make a scene of life and light; cing." | As we rest amid the flowers despairing | _ Heart with Nature is atune, | For the earth holds sight no fairer me morel Than a clover field in June. cups currant bfl eat four egg . Was juice. Little Sunâ€"Maids The $185 Tractor (Ft(-)-:B- Cuts the Cosft nf (*% SPRYWHEEL Get Some ; â€"energy and iron Had Your Iron T oday? 5* <TV d 7i <TA 1 > C \~AAF i. Te ,‘?J\ \ s .‘l & UA, r\A';A‘\;V\ < Â¥" _ 7 ces 1ry it when you‘re slipping â€" when you yawn at 3 P.M. Stiftens up your backbone and makes thoughts flow again. T‘wo packages and a glass of milk form greatest midâ€"day lunch you‘ve ever tried. Vital men resist the heat. Let litâ€" tle raisins help. 75 per cent pure fruit sugar. 145 calories of energizâ€" ing nutriment in every packageâ€" practically predigested so it gets to work almost immediately. No tax on digestion so it doesn‘t heat the blood. Fatigue resisting foodâ€"iron also!l ‘All natural and good. NEVER mind the weatherâ€"get some new vitalityâ€"speed up any way. Don‘; be a lagger. in Little Red Packages C Cmenas o n NS ons the shadows ! Minard‘s Liniment for Burns, etc. T us pass: nememmmmtfisan ... _ with clover, etweenâ€"Meal Raisins 5¢c Everywhere & * 8 ks egs VJ . Cost of Chultivating uol anidl cce 20 s aie i2 white, Thomasâ€"* long way." Teaoher-â€"â€""'l‘ommy. can ‘Tur‘? Thomasâ€"*Yos, sir‘~ PU Teacherâ€""That‘s right. you tell me what fur is ?" , An old lady attended lphysiology. At the clo dress the lecturer invil from his audience, The old lady rose "I should be very â€" m she said, "if the lecture me whether the part of t be called the ‘cerebellum* head or outside." Just Wintea to ;(nou; oronto) ady attended a lecture on At the close of his adâ€" lecturer invited questions Fur and Far. A oc n the lecturer would . Sir. FUâ€"R.* very much obliged ‘urer would tell of the brain that is inside the you spell Now can hn "say 45 ) Snporks in 1918 }.mounhd to 32.974.282; in 1919 to 83.799,105; in 1920 to ‘3.409,498; and in 1921 to approximately the same amount. The extent to which the berring preâ€" vails in Canadian waters and the wice favor its high food value and palaâ€" tableness have won for it urge a great. B ~AONVGEELC aonmasees s iak * » TTD 22207 COu _, . "o+ _ fltstralin, Brazil, British Guiana, Jamaica an4q Trindad. The dry saited in addition go to Hong Kong, China and Japan; the pickled to Barbados, Dutch Guiana and Porto Rico. Thn mkag "â€" 10‘ CN hi mS6ghpunel o 4 0 C AP surgp quantities are exported making a brisk and steady trade. _ ‘The fish leavas Canada in a variety of forms, fresh, frozen, canned, dry salted, pickled and smoked. In a cannadl cheis sa 0 Large Export Trade, The Canadian berring would appear to be more in favor in other countries than at home and annvally larga quantities are exnaxisq _ . . > | they are mostly pickled and smoked. The latter are known on the market as "Kippered herring," or "Bloaters" it they are unsaited and half dried in the smokeâ€"house. A comparatively small quantity is canned. On the Pacific coast the species of herring is very similar and prevails in great abundance about Vancouver Is). and. Here the catches are so heavy that a boat load not infrequently totabs mhmlndflftytomcnd it is notunuunltahantqrch.gfluul of the net and dump‘ oneâ€"half of the catch in the sea in order to retrieve the remainder, Pacific herring is mostly dry saited and shipped in boxes to the Orient where an extensive mar. ket has been developed for it A small quantity is canned but the pro. Miouol&omektmted in thig way is M every year, Though the Atlantic catch as a rule exceeds that of the Pacific, British Columbia is the heaviest producer its proportion in 1G00n i: _ ‘vect in special equipment to fish offâ€" shore. ,1 The herring is neverthole:s an imâ€" | portant fish in Canada and in the fishâ€" | ories‘ revenue each year accounts for a substantial amount following only !Lhe salimon and cod. The catch in | 1918 amounted to 1,764 223 ewts. valuâ€" ‘ed at $2,295,611; in 1919 it was 1,â€" {' 506,961 worth $1,624,730; and in 1920, | 2,146,986, ewbs. valued at $2,012,638. "ln the twelve months of 1921 841,575 cwts. were taken which scld for $632,â€" VE h m ul F means of bflub-we‘rl, gillnots and torching. T herring fishery on the Mn on ds 6 c uy uk Atlantic and Pacific Fishing Grounds. The Canadian herring fishery is prosecuted off both Atlantic and Pacâ€" fie coasts the methods used being by mainbine ol Cc I% 00 C.C MB 941. | in f" room here for an educative camâ€" | paign to be followed by vigorous busiâ€" | ness action. For the reason that it has not yet attained the popularity | it deserves in this country, adequate ]wu has never been taken of the herâ€" | ring fishery. | _ _ On the American side of the Atantle | where the herring catch has not asâ€" | sumed the importance it has long held ;in: Euu:p‘e, the ï¬__shery is entirely a in as great abundance off the Ameriâ€" ican shores as in the North Sea, but Canadian fishermen have never found conditions sufficiently inducing to inâ€" vest in special eauinment ta Acl a@â€" considers their high food value and palatability, and the fact that they are obtainable in abundance all the year round, it is striking that exceedâ€" ingly small amounts of herring are used fresh on the continent ‘There dititntity +s uied â€" 1 in a variety of forms, fresh, canned, dry salted, pickled and In a canned state they go United Kingdom and United Australia, Brazil . nm.ui," lm of the world‘s yearly herring catch by the Department of Fisheries, | mnnï¬ubflhlï¬ufl" that number of pounds. The finest | npecies are found, and most proMâ€" fically, in North American seas, partiâ€" | cularly the colder waters of the North The herring is one of the world‘s most important food fishes an estiâ€" 1 High Food Value and Palatâ€" ableness Merit Greater Doâ€" . * _ OF THE DOMINION : RANKS NEXT TO SALMON | & ; _ "â€" NA a million ewt Sceotia and Quebes cach fas m uy o in 1920 being :n : * Onininifinatviss â€"< ds c » NG' Bm.wick ac. nast 4.â€"a» w @xports in 1% excess of n* sale 'lily my w whall do my :« {hon what 1 «whall All my Au‘!y «se It was 1i explanat io may be a : ic eate!it« It is sup eloud of m 000 miles t around it | o that th« Adenc “"lhr .‘fl C# bus zim b But ©on : gan Of a to 4 his . ©an: then It is awhost e@ane awhou: #scho is light row: always on «e Ruts and H Anc But In M\y Ar t AVE « CON L. C it &6 It is strain i making it is we th ing #ib Whe low g« is poss f Sm tmmcififittes I the er the road BArst. One and tee if is not look tion circui the comm{ hill casily second spee and knocks, engine boar When g« whould not most stalls 100 W K When Ej NI If Bhift th