QUEEN’S BIOGRAPHER TO GET RECORD PAY WRITER SELLS SERIAL REGHTS IN UNITED STATES. It inglish Working Girl Wins Fortune by Writing Life of Her Maiesty. lb Ttct, p:upsrostion of n column con- sum in an slant! ot In the (NEW! type of customers ad the mm» cl um arguments that tn but wind to convince out b01010 outwit OI! on a mo. More: tho-thou“. tt you picaâ€, and finding out My in: what 9.09%. " in tom to vim tad sizing up anew I.“ will beet Ink web of an 7 a _ _-----.--.- \uu‘lqud'n "Home interest in the tltt'r' umvvmenl and Sudan-m which 'Ilght her (In charm: to tire with l.~ royal household of England for al ..>l a year, When she left the seventh nr‘fm') job she had had in two years hc mm a child of fourteen on strike. lor enthusiasm and her intelligence mm- such that the was called upon n speak at the union rallies. There lurv MacArthur heard her and draft- A her Into the organlllu work. She an went back to the motor}... Mrtry MacArthur later met Queen Jury and became deeply interested tn H That made Minq Woodward curl- 'tly and In a roundabout way the otr. “Jib-1| permblloll to do the unheard I thing she bad tsu-tV-V of mm we, In which the empire III In- .-r.-m-d but woefully Ignorant. an. l,r,,S done that by wrlttn; About Omen us win " You an m Education From Autumnal. n “hadwani it» done this with formal education. it Wu I love mum and associating with per- 'sho knew more than all. did that lwr the flu-Ho use of Bullish she b went to work when she was ' wars old-tbe youn‘eet child ulully of he. with I father un- fr an: anythinc. in those days, vtmuxht ot royalty at nil. the co her Wu the lymhol "of all of convenient." NOW the is 1y because ehe discovered the m box "the greatest woman in mi" and wrote ehout her. cle Highest Ever Paid in U... is reported to have received the t 1mm pypr paid for the serial of any story or article published " u.-untry. in addition to that , my woe-Hes another large sum m xvi-Lil rights in England. and id in-r mmsihilities front the book Ml Her awry will appear In " “mummy 0110! nan-0's um movement and F; '1) Mean A. tt u tn mine. t,t b moon and the passing rain T continuously loin: the bright nmlm- over? n thy heart, too. Enxlinh worth. girl who dartHd red tradition of the British Mm. "l mm trom Queen Mary In In- H tty study ttottrt life and then mm: H. sailed "" to England y {rum New York, says the New tr.raltr'rritmtte. There was the of cheques In her pocket-pooh .-r-- was the determinauon to r years in her ayes. Her daring mm m the queen won her a tor. an seeking your on will. my Cor You are .oohtng some good than the law you no bound to Hm bow will you ihrd good? It is mini. ot act“: it I. a river my" from the foot. of the Invis- hrone. and ttows " the path of two. t say again. an: on not . ms duties. You any 01:00.0 to 'f your duties and choose not to Lst' sorrow they brtrg. But you I) forth; and what v12] you and. utrhter? Sorrow without. duty~ hubs, and no bread with mom. 1- "Romain." by m m. has always been soeiatltsticaMr a "quite annuity," all. up. rem-rs to her early liter. Today "mullahs are frankly tor labor she no longer takes an active ' union work. -n she wu given permission to " nIII wrtte, Quota Mary made me.» tor but to In my one In .,1 M! an pun-pou- ot the book. ,whaught moon? tltttt her poul- tho wild rose Jumps I her [on --Oh, I. tt in thy heart. oo h " author In KMhleen Wood- atyeight years old. She itt man. bully bored, but Bliqd and conversational ICIIOII n a subject In which she in Her full upper lip even her eyes registers the, feel. ;a, and when she [as it Into lr? can mistake whet. she right and left that goes way alone? Obedience. senting clouds that cum Parting. In Salummhlp. --atnn Lhnebee r M The friend about . To get a promotion his tur your present Job. --To split a town is t troversy on religion. A To wreck in home is Itiut Dad “Look here, I like the war than? hugging you.'" Dot "Don't you twarcely more than They'll won improve.' gamer Ironing ' ' via the Santa Fe to the "enie regions of the Far West. California - Coma“ New Mexico-Am mock)“, Grand Can- yon National Park, Yosemite and the " Trees and other Na- tional Parke. i Would like him-ado: r f-tts. W" E Air-ttFri" have] 10160:: A Canadian General Electric Bugging n " WRF* "iVt;ruCsturtt. - 1. or See Local Aunt T----""""""", CitadSmn - 2'd'lhi't'Uiciiiauiaiaiia The labor of lifting you iron about a hundred and fifty than in the count of an ordinary ironing is the equivalent of mu. ing nearly half a ton. The Hot- point Iron never need: to be liked at att, but simply tips back on its specially-constructed heel nu. This in one of the Four Features that make Hotpoint honing “the easier way". Ask your dealer. Standard Hmpoim Iron $5.504 Special Hotpoint Iron " extra. To fr G. o. Robertson. T. P. A, P. t Hondry. G. A., In“ to " '" Trngaporggtlgp Pullma- Sentence Sermons. Quickest Way To end-user a hip is to borrow money from ruin a boy is to give him too oney he does not earn. start a reform or a degenera- o make " fashionable. 7 kill business is to start talk and times. in is nd. Would Soon Improve. "hunk here. Dorothy, I e way there youngsmm magnum-mu IRON P.. know they're boys. daddy? to become as , start a con to grow too "-37-- don't are n u a sign of the wonderful fortune ot The Vicar ot Wtrkefte'.d that the propereet occasions for speaking ot it continue to present themselves. Every- thing has been said about. it. and said again and again. but the book has long since diluted an indulgence that ex- tends even to comment-torn. In the 'degree of its fortune. indeed, it seems almost single of its kind. Stretch the indulgence as we may, Goldsmith’a story Mill fails. somehow. on its face. to account for its great position and its remarkable career. Read as one ot the masterpieces try a person. not acquainted with our literature. it "night easily give an impression that this literature is not immense. n has "seen reproduced, at all events, in a lthousund editions. and the end is not ‘yet. All the arts of book-making and ‘0! editing, all the graces of typography land ot illustration. have been lavished lurron its text. Painters. playwrights. ’and musicians have again and again ‘drawn uron It. and there is not a [happy turn in it, not a tacetious figure L nor a vivid image, that has not become I',',','.'),":',': and famous. We point our phrases with its good things. and the (tact that everybody knows them seems {only to make them Better. The Tone in Exquinie. i it is the spoiled chill of our liters. ‘ture. We cling to it as to our most ‘prm'lous example that we, too, in [prose have achieved the last amia. lbility. Thus it is that the book con- [verts everything it contains into a happy case of exemption and fascina- 1'ii'.i'i-'e, case of imperturbable and in- i“rumble (-lassli-lsm. it in a question 'wr tone. The tone is exquisite. and that's the end of it. It takes us through all the little gaps and slips, tthrough all the unless looseness of â€he Viear's disasters and rescues, ithrough his confused and unconvinc- ing captivity and his wonderful acci- dents and rtecugnitions. it makes ' these things amusing. makes them most human own when for there is I How he evnr manages to get his soft. '; mass out of a hard shell without losing l, most of his slender legs no one knows, iprobubly the crab himself does not Ewen wonder how " all happens. I Wtten " gol’i too fat for his old coat he simply feeds up a little more than lusual and crawls very (lose to shore l, and hurirs hlan'f just under the sand l or mud. l, Then. by a Vpry slow process. he irquirms out of the shell and stays lthere in the sand until his thin skin :has turned into a real shall. I His reason for hiding in the sand is :iu vsi‘ap? from the tishes, whieh oven lthvn hunt him out at high tide and, homing along suddenly. take a nip at his vlaws or legs, and very anon get lanny with it. l It is probably for this reason that in the course of ages the crab has made himaeii able to grow a new claw or leg ll! ho happens to lose one that he ineeds. Not only that, hut the crab is a wonder in another way. The procvss by which a hardshell crab turns into a softshell crab is one of the must intvrestlng things known to ftshermen, The strange point Is that the crab does not cast his hard shell in piece-s. but takes the whole thing " at one time and not at tlxed periods, but any time when the meaty portion has be- come too large and fat for the old coat. lt his claw. tor inctance. gets mash- ed ur severely injured. the crab has the power to cast the maimed claw eu- tirely tawny from his body and grow a new claw. Thin new claw will repro- duve only from the second Joint from the body. If an aecident takes his arm " at that point. well and good. he soon grows a new one. But it the accident severs his arm further away from the body. he will. within two minutes, give a little twist to his body and oft will come the claw all the Way to that won- derful second Joint. Four own emancipation proclamation Freedom from bad habits beat: my other kind of freedom.-- Rowe's Monthly. Sometimes a crab will do this cast-3 lug In a few seconds. sometimes In the f course of a couple of minutes, but he‘ always does it sooner or later. I Many tishermen occasionally become brutal enough to hack a erab's claw with a knife and by a sudden stroke cut the claw in twain. They do this merely to watch the chub cast oft the whole thing all the way up to the Joint near the shoulder. Now wintry winds are banished from the sky. Gay Tauxhs the blushing tare ot tlow. ery spring; Now lays the land her duskier ralmeut by . And dons her grass-green vest. for aim! why Young plants may choose themselves 'rpparettitttg. --Meloager, in "The Greek Anthology.†How Crabs Change Shells. Harris Abattoir Co., Limited Strachan Ave., Toronto FLEEGE WOOL If you are a slave, you may write New Appara. (iouBliiml'8 GREAT ST’JRY no other way of putting lt~ithey are most absurd. " will not say it makes them live, for I think it scarce does that at all, but leaves them to linger on as spiced . . . rmleaves in a bowl. inanimate, fragrant, intensely present. There Is not a small dron- ery at the eni that does not work fry. to the very texture that takes us: the punishment of the wicked seducer by being cut down to a single tootman . . . the perpetual food that makes its appearance as the climax ot every- thing; the supp-er of two w1sii-dressed dishes that dissnpates the gloom of the prison: the delightful forty pounds distributed among the captlv'h, and the still more delightful "coarser Iwo- visions" scattered among the pom- lace. i Because a man in Australia remem- ‘bers the home of his boyhood, a cur- :iow bell in Blandford. Dorsetshlre. England. which has runs every even. Iing for 800 years. will not now be silenced, according to cable dispatches. Another tangible result of the "in. tangllrle" Hes which bind together the members of the British Commonwealth of Nations! Soul of Goldsmith. It the tone in the great thing. this comes, doubtless. to saying that the Vicar himself Is., and that the book has flourished through having so much of him. It is he who is the success of his story; he in always kept true, is what we call to-day "sustained," without be. coming pompous or hollow. The es- pecial beauty of this is surely that it contains something of the very soul of Goldsmith. it is the most natural imagination or the unopened that any production perhaps, offers. and the ex- hibition of the men tairmselt--by which l Mean .or the autttor-oaMtfttett with his instinctive taste to make the clas- sicism for which we praise him. These two things, thtrtrtutknetm of his sveet- ness and the beautiful ease ot his speech. melt together- with no other aid. as l have hinted. worth mention. ing --to form his style. I am afraid I cannot go further than this in the way of speculation as to how a classic is grown. In the open air is perhaps the most we can say. Goidsmith's style Is the tiower of what I have called his ttmenity, and his amenity the making ot that independence of almost every- thing by which The Vicar has triumphed. Henry James, in an Intro- duction to "The Vicar of Wakefield." h MEDICINE THAT GIVES STRENGTH Dr. Williams' Pink Pills are a strengthening medicine. Surely and etteetively they build up the blood, itt. vigorate the appetite, tone up the di. gestion. give brightness to the eye. valor to the cheeks and lips, and quick- ness to the step. These pills have direct action on the blood. making " a health-hearing stream: thus no part or the body can escape their beneficial action. Weak men and women. boys and girls tind new health and strength through the use of this world-renown- ed blood builder, Mr. N. H. Langviile. t',N'.R. agent at New Germany. NS. saysr "In November, 1924, I had a severe illness which left me in a very run-down condition. I got a supply of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills and derived great Itenetit from them. My appetite improved. and a gain in weight which is now normal i owe to the use or these pills. I can therefore recommend Dr. Williams' Pink Pills as a tint' tonic." New Health Comes to Those Who Build Up Their Blood by the Use of Dr. Williams' Pink Pills. Try Dr. Wllliams' Pink Pills tor anaemia. rheumatism. neuralgia. ner- vousness. Take them as a tonic it you are not in the best physical con- dition and cultivate a resistance that will keep you well and strong. Get a box from the nearest drug More or by mall at Go cent}: a box from The Dr. Williams' Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. A bag made of brightly-colored ere tonne. lined with waterproof material, in which to carry unv's toilet neces- suries when going to and trom the bath on board ship or on a train. can be made easily and cheaply from a yard of cretouue. out in two circles. with a strip let in at both sides to give spam. The interior should be made of mackintosh, with band: ot the same material attached. The whole is fas- tened to two thin pieces ot pine board covered with either cretonne or gold braid. The handles are two rings- similarly covered. Defeat new-for-r the chosen am- ong men: it sorts out the people: it winnows oat those who are purest and strongest, and makes them purer and stronger. But it hastens the down- fall of the rest, or cuts short their flight. In that way it separawa the M of the people, who slumber or fall by the way, from the chosen few who so rrurrehing on.--Romain Roland. Minard': Llnlment King of Pam. When you get that tired. ,itTe',"fef.ri'v1ra,e,dif,ie, feeling take 15 to 30 drops 9! mel's Syn? in I tr, of water. Does we trick and safely. 'ou 'll eel like new. A Waterproof Bag. Ties That Bind Oh, London has tha bold shops. the' silver and the gold show. Rich with all the trauma in the wide world found. on. there rouT'. ttnd the hires; shops. the cheapest. and the rarest shops, All ablaze with color on the pearl- Krcy ground! They deck themselves at daytime with the colors of the Martime: They deck themselves at twilight with a glad and lyric glee: But oh-the lusty. frowsy shops, those old marine, Limehousy shops-- Oh, they're the shops that most I love-the only shops for me'. - Thomas Burke. in "London Lamps." The forget-menots at the foot ot the! garden, under the low wall, are -iustl coming into bloom. . They are one of; Sprints loveliest gitta, whose comingl we eagerly anticipate. All the miracle, ‘of Spring is in those slender green" Items and those minute turquoise-col: ‘bred flowers. On one of our walls': hangs a copy of Leighton‘s "Return of? Persephone,“ the lovely maid, support- f ed by Mercury. ascending out of the, dark underworld, being met by herl mother. Peres. But those few forget-i Inc-nuts under the low wall are greater than Leighton'a picture. They are notl a representation. they are the authen-l tie. happening itself. Every one of muse blooms is a Persephone. beauty' born out of the barren earth. THOUSANDS OF THANKF Ill, MOTHERS Strongly Recommend Baby's Own Tablets to Their Friends. Once a mother has used Baby's Own Tablets tor her little on"; she would use nothing else. The Tablet: glve such results that the mother has noth- ing but words of praise tor them. Among the thousands of mothers throughout Cattada who praise the Tablets ls Mrs. David A. Anderson. sew Glasgow. NM., who qrrttti--"l have used Baby's Own Tablets tor my children, and from my experience I would not be wltlmut them. I would urge every other mother of young children to keep a box of the Tablet: In the house," Baby's Own Tablets are a mild but thorough laxative which regulate the bowels and sweeten the stomach; drive out constipation and indigestion; break up voids and simple fevers and make teething easy. They are sold by medicine dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box from The Dr. Williams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. There is no stamped work in their minute exquisiteness. What “under of adaptation. what Ingenuity. what activity, there is behind one forget. me-not bloom! Wordsworth Halls how he gathered 2 " """'pi,a"c"i'rirl'i'/ni1iiTi's." ._. ', 'Jf,'u,1t/2,n'11/1,,u/',',,2t,,r.yt" is: :32; _ "Good-by, foud, foolish. clatitorinC q _._. 1 m.rGoodhyfortmtuya wore frlvnds he hall that along many a ' 1:3? mm " n ' i igiluhgt 'Cad:.,, Jrtt,al"c,1"ie1i,,.C,e,, (ziAnd nestle in those sheltering atoml i .v . . . . ' _ t beside St. Mary's Hay. l y,'.?e1"J/."'onlo'i1'is as well as of Bow. From "Amblins Through Audio" by , ery. . day oit had been taken to ex-i Charles Hanson TOM". ! pluse a. wlld. unspolled lllt of rlver «a _ --_-----_ 1 valley in the neighborhood 4116 home UM Mlnard'u Llniment In the “.qu l of the dipper and the Kingfisher, Walk- ___A ’6 - - ( in: up stream a desolation was found Ivory Bracelets. I that had evidently once been a garden, _ Ivory hracolets. extremely lhlrk and l Someone had had a home there and a _ tTy or three inches wide. 'tre . new _ garden down try the Nver'e, brlnn. The Fancy among ttttmiottttf to women ln home had disappeared, the walls “are London , all broken down and the cordon on, o--------------- F which much- care had once been spent Grease stains on." strove should be: had returned to n natural wildness. wiped off immediate/y wich newapnper.“ Thus were goosetrettv bushes and rasp- Before cleaning the stove: rub the: berry canes all untrained and wild box stain with a cloth dipped m tut-pen»! new also, with. of course, netlela and tine. . . _ . =====a==--%============ ‘ grass and dock everywhere and ivy, covering the old walls ie-tere""""'"""' f It was In that wild tgarden that the forget-mo-not" were gathered. They recalled a vision ot other forget-mo nuts. treasured possessions ot mem- ory. Passing through the garden of an old Scams-h hall. We mum to the gardeners rubbish heap, which was tipped over otip of the steeply buttres- sed sides of the garden. Nature her. self had become gardener to some ot these runaways Nothing in the whole garden exceeded the careless beauty of these clustered forget-me-nuts. For their own sake and for memory'a sake some roots were transplanted. They Bow now at the foot of the garden, un- der the low wall, bringing a blt of heaven‘s own blue into our llttle gay. The Saxon name for March was the "lenet monath"--the "length month," signifying the lengthening of the days. The Heaven's Own Blue. We Offer Toronto's Best PHCCS. ' LINES. UNITED St. Lawrence Market Toronto 2 TORONTO OFFERS BEST MARKET FOR Poultry, Butter, Eggs DIERFLAG Tuaboveutters Wu-sr-edt-tune-ue.',",'.' Ever,or-distqitttue_itrlutirm will t-rdediutifulkxot" atteriooimcrRisdeuaregsll encumbrance-.locnedlnoneofouruub dividen- bctm Nev/York am1Atlanrtc0ts. “kw: July 15.19â€. iiii"iiGaiiiaiiGrrtriJi/si, am viei1tryiitr, RIO - RECHWES TORONTO "ii' _an ya ii Barvu This , Despite its "saintlike name. St. Mary's Bay can out up elven. " is n saucy. choppy. naughty little stretch of blue water; but as we puffed across we liked it better and better. The town behind us looked enchanting in the morning sunlight. ' . . Over the lovely light green hills we could see a church spire. graceful and immaculately white; and, below it. great blocks of granite came defiantly down to the very water's edge. with trees overhanging them. White sen- gulls soared above uur heads and on our left a curving stretch of sandy beach invited us to bathe. Approach- ing nearer, I shall never forget my first vision of that village. snug and quiet. as if it had purposely folded itself away in those hills, aloof from the clumr of the world. The little town of Sandy t'uve tucks Sandy Cove. We wanted to so down the river, Brat thing, in a little power-bout. and cross St. Mnry's Bay to see what was on that stretch ot coast beyond no. Village: were ruddled on the other side, we knew by glancing at the map; and some one had said in Yarmouth that it was a pretty region over more. Yet when we got closer, Ind expmo ed our desire to a native down on the bridge, he smiled tolerantly and want. ed to know why we Were so anxious to nee a town like Sandy Cove. "A dull little place" was the way he put lt. “Nothin' doin' at all." it would have been folly to explain to him that that was the very reason we wanted to set there. Itself away Between the warm Canadian bill: be yond M. Mary's Bay: And there it dreams through lazy hour. we whole long summer day. The little town at Sandy Cove in beautiful and white. No railroad (Intruders at Its heart; no windows Mate too bright; No movies tiash their garish slgns. "A thrilling show to-night'." But quietly the little town sleeps and nods and smiles. It lets the noisy world go by wlth all its ways and “in. ' Commit to watch from Its high hills the dirutnt Happy Isles. Would I nxlght dwell In Sandy Core in peace and calm and any. "Sunni-by. fond. foolish, clamoring lawn! Good-by for may I day!" And nestle in those sheltering signs beside M. Mary‘s Bay, From "Amblln; Through Acadia." by Charles Hanson Towne. Ivory theleu. Ivory brace-lens. extremely thick and twg? or three inches wide. are I new fancy among (“humane women In Landau. SPRAINS. ttii MON 05 l SAWS "is Joiid tea" Apply Mlnard'l at once. It drawn out ittthutumttion, soothes the muscles and ligaments. BECAUSE guaranteed to cut 10% more timber In came time, with less labor than any other saw. IJWIDS CANADA ttaw co. LTD. . MTNIRCAL yum-an. u. run. 04.... Tacoma . W'whowantdiz (at 1tfiiftithtst8detlirtllff/e'd CARRIED V4531: "eiiiiarau B--tauneh Munch!" In do“ our WI! u-- nmylthrh love that never know- db my. C-our- for the trid- on every side, Own-deuce wan; u out my guide. Earns! allot-l to: our "on an. B--treetgth to "canyon" is all we ttttk. tr--att5eMy" means more mu: “mum-â€a mull. Ask your druggist for Nujol terday-- Ind remember, look for the name "Nuiot" in red on both bank laid and pause. Such people need tiujot, bemuse Nujol softens the Waste matter and permits thorough and regular bowel elimination without annexing the intestinal muscles. It helps Nature belpyou. _ _ _ -- -- - The average man or woman does not enjoy consistent good health. Loss at nppetite, headaches, biliouoncu and a lack of enthusiasm for either work or play _are pongatant complajntt. A 7 Due to modern living habits, the natural secretion which promotes legu- lar elimination by softening the bowel contents, is often deficient-especially among middle-awed people. The poison from waste matter remaining In the systems of people thus affected istite ineidiqua enemy of sTo4frealth, - Scientists have Mined that such I condition is usually caused by self- poi_s_oning resulting [ram r?nttipatityt. Suffered So She Could Not Walk. Restored to Health by LydieE._Pinkham'_s Minning. Ontario. T 'e “I um I m- tical nurse and I recommend Kym. E. Pinkhnmuvegetable Compound to suffering women. ForIiree months l WIS nlmoat helpless and could not sit at the table long onoutth to drink n on: of ten. Many I time my hus- ban curried me to bed, [would be sowuk. Then hereudintbe spar of a womm suffering u I 2l' who got better After taking the Vegetable Compound, so he went and got it for me. When! had token three bottlrl I was just like a new women and have had splendid health ever tsince. When I feel any bearing-down puins t Ilways take it; sometimes a half bottle or whatever I need. It is my only medicine and l have told many a one about it. Any one wanting to know more about Lydia E. 'lt/tgi', Ve‘euble Com mnd, I wil (holy write tn her. 'lfll I" I an to rue- ommend it for I feel Iowa mr life and strength to it." Mrs. NEAL Bowman. .R. l, Minesing, Ontario. Do you feel broken-down, nervous, and well: sometimes? Do PP hue this horrid feeling of fear which m .m.’ time! come: to women when thew are not well? Lydia E. Pinkhm's Veg- etable Compound in excellent to take at such a time. It aways new, and if taken regululy md persistently will relieve this condition. c Modern Living Habits Pro 119:: Self, Poispping' Self . Poisoning Increasingly Common Cuticura Talcul ls Cooling Gl Comforting Daily In: of this pure. fragrant, antiseptic T-luun Powdu helps to overcome heavy perspiration and is soothing And [chewing to the skin. 'tMt (tedt." slrrt ItutA'rtSt's'2'l, It. Mun u "I In tum- I: 6' Cad-n “sun “at Me. Thousands are victiGs WIFE Til Kill ISSUE No " ..."i . isa,,:,:,)?).,'.",.,) Maude L. Morrison. "