t M e in > 3 TÂ¥ P M 2 0O pECCs TOV AeCee Rero Cnorcow #t nopn." e<._ Suddenly Umanski lost his stoicâ€"| Hennig had stirred at the mention ism and unfolding his long, strong| of Gilchrist‘s rame, arms, crossed with rapid strides to| "Not Glichrist," he protested churlâ€" the vounger Goodkind‘s side, ishly, * "That little boxâ€"" he shoted, "No, jfust we aix," assented GooF "What you poy for him?" Hoe pointed kind, "â€"and maybe one or two.more to the cigaret case, J anticipatâ€"| of our dirsctors," o l ing. turned his back o:'l burninel ‘HWEKW alahef L_6% Hs ai o t <o . t s of the mar, not de‘gning to ansâ€" Cayâ€"â€"m.Im ROne.. ’ "I think we‘d better let this go for ‘Dead?" Goodkind‘s face took onitonight," the president sail, shaking avity. [hia head at Steatman. "My wife say: ‘Good. Not such Unanski was on Lis feet ‘n an instant. any to feed‘." ‘No," he raid halfâ€"apaloweticallv. Hennic, casily swavyed, had caught "Neâ€"I‘m all rfért. ï¬xcuse.â€' motkhi~sz of Umanski‘s note of proâ€" ‘‘You‘re a little upset," sail Goodâ€" + k‘rd soothinc‘ly, "and I havo guests. "It ain‘t fair," ho whined. Resides, Gilchrist will bo here in half lerry, _ apparenily _ tninterested,| an hour and I want to talk to him w out his cigaret case, a lavishly |before I say anything definite. Supâ€" raved affair, and took out a dm-lpon we meet here tomorrow at noon." Onikdonto Tlestacth i6 EH cutes ae LA EuC ISSUE. No. 52â€"‘28 Wh ‘W» pC 44 H nna chance to learn," replied < figure, ‘"and a chance to Sve. : chance to seeâ€"sun." _ son?" asked Goodkind, misâ€" he word. Ip " sneered Jerry. I fight in the war." d senior had> turned to an American" he said with in," replied Umanski "I| "ye im. Go to minesâ€"him not iy. "P n minesâ€"him not gee. Go| Um: gone. Got baby five years looked see him. Go to minesâ€"|still a Come backâ€"him sleop. Golkind t traightened quickly at this i gone." 6 ioodkind‘s face took cally earnest. isked you to take the job," u‘\'()body asked you to ere. You‘re not an Amâ€" «â€"> t BS Aovem é \}; s 99 xk A â€"3 ‘\ <Gf wz 7C° ‘} > e HiLVSTRaTED to By R.w SaAMIRTMILLD h uU ON W ou want?" he asked. inâ€" ld you have," broke in n untrained manâ€"" been surveying the proâ€" ifully. He broke his silâ€" eringly. even know English," he "‘Z ME It Tellows are never satisâ€" d broke in warmly. itting plenty for what you d followed up. "What are ning about? You‘ve left follow a lot of idle, disâ€" ritators. We‘ve got to t on principle. The work pay what I can get men a cent more. Take it ol“ th ~as non hang together to rted Joe. Tk bud ~C, ho was, with massive was a frame that would > .e weight, but it "a‘cver might have been tin «larved of. He was « brawn. His face was ‘arnostâ€"something about _ a grim kind of pootry n born of suffering. you be on sidewalk," he to Stedtman. Max smilâ€" ULM «vanced to the three. e qucried amiably but held the humidor beâ€" vho helped bisvelf with iclon. Stedtman reachâ€" ind took a cicar. Goodâ€" \ to Umanski with the‘ he held it ou the Pole m and made no move. d at him strangely and x to the table. ing a little more imâ€" big cigar in his mouth, nd of discussion. 1 know all about our blustered with an air We arn b you had anyâ€"‘" Joe | the employers‘ apâ€" oursâ€"every dayâ€" nothing," he said ~â€"@NO â€" Whay navefcration of t d had centred on‘ memories. Umazski who ansâ€"| â€" "Now look ding quietly with going toâ€"" ice was as unemoâ€"|saw tha+ ch. m Englishâ€"work Umanski‘s query wave and what have‘« cod owed at the intro cking up a flashy liil THE SToRY : of this uncertainty e stood with arms p within the room. ed a hand jerkily. t in myself," he 0 "This is Mr. ent. And a couple now we can get ' "Ask the ladies to stay in the drawâ€" edling room," the elder Goodkind said. ve.“‘We’H jJoin them in a few minutes." Dilly did not fathom it all, but she ia-’hnd a feeling that scmehow she was |to blame. "I| ‘"Yea,â€"certainly," she said nervous, otfiy. "I‘m so sorry." And she was gone. 30| Umanski heard the closing door ard rs looked after her. Stedtman, his arm â€"â€"'stil] around whe man, signalied Good ;olkind to go on. ’0! our dirsectors," "All right," said Stedtm: it was his business to agree Umanski had rssumed ptoical position again, CHAPTER X. A SUBSTITUTE, A heavy pall descended upon the room. Somehow, all felt the grim 'trazody that phantom figures had reâ€" enacted in this man‘s soul. Stedtman ;'uwayed a moment between two loyalâ€" ties and then walked to the chair in‘ which Umanski huddled, bowed and quaking, and put an arm around the‘ man. Gookind took a step nearer and | looked down at the broken figure symâ€" pathetically. Jerry alone seemed not to mind. ‘"You‘ll have to wait, Dilly," he said to the girl with still a trace of his petulance in his tone. _ Now look here, Jerry, you‘re not going toâ€"" Dilly began. Then she saw that she had interrupted. ~"I‘m sorry." she said haltingly. Umanski stood looking at her. She was 20! She had gold hair! She had bluo eyes! She had a pink dress! Unmanski stretched two trembling arms toward her, then brought them back to cover his face. Haunted and‘ helpless he sank into a chair. There came a sudden blare of music and ripples of laughter as the door to the music room opened and Dilly Gillilam burst in upon the tense perâ€" * 1 tell you we got right to quit," he said feverishly. "We got right to hang together. We got right to fight â€"to liveâ€"and, by God, we gonna fight â€"we gonna liveâ€"we gonnaâ€"by God." He straightened now to his fnllf' heicht. 1 a yard with clothes hung up to dry, and beyond that into the dank darkâ€" ness of a mine. "She wanna go church. She ask me: ‘Pop, buy me pretty new dress for church. Buy me pretty pink dress. Where I get him? We hire doctor onco and he say: ‘Airâ€"sunshineâ€"| milkâ€"eggs? (iot no job. My little girl, she cougchâ€"and coughâ€"and one ’ nicht she die." His eves went far a;way-;io;);i;g back perhaps to two cellar rooms and "If I don‘t like, other mang will," continued Umanski, unmindf{al. "Other mans take my job. I got little girl twenty years old. Awful nice little girl. Got gold hair. Got blue eyes. Her take sick. She sorry she‘s sick." I tell said Btedtman, seeing creature hounded byj his & Royal Military Academy (Woolwich) ground jno England, A Bandburst plavey mm uce i'legal. I wanted to maké Minard‘s Liniment for Chapped Hands. â€"Aristide Briand. A lady writer asks: "Does a w prefer a husband who gives w her, or the other sort?" What sort? Mn Exnstc did 4 222010119 hopes to pass it into law before thel general election, which is to take | place next year.â€"Editorial in Chris-l tian Science Monitor. t *000° of poverty so that the spending authorities (Guardians of the Poor) shall no longer be divorced from the county and borough councils responsâ€" ible for raising the necessary funde ’ Something of a sensation was caused four years ago when a then | comparatively unknown man, Neville ‘Chamberlain, declined the Chancellorâ€" [ship of the Exchequer, second highest : post in the British Cabinet, in favor of }what is regarded as the far less imâ€" 'portant offlice of Health Mlnlster.‘ which carries with it responsibility for municipal affairs. Mr. Chamberâ€" lain gave as his reason that, as the entire system of legal government in Britain was in need of reform, he thought he could do best service to the state by turning his attention to the urgent questons pressing in this latter connection. Beneï¬tting the Poor in Britain ""You beteha." Hennig answered with a flare of pride. "Prettiest girl in West Virginia. Been married a year. Got her in the five and ten." (To be continued.) |â€" _ UwWs nave got the wrong idea. VWe‘re not tyrants or monsters. We‘re ,Chflstinns and we want to. act like | Christians. Onlyâ€"we‘ve got to live, too. We‘ve got to have the things we‘re used to, just as you have. But I think I can promise if the strike‘s |called off, you men will be kept, and ‘put back just where you were. Ring the bell, Jerry." us Jerry pressed a button beneath the table. Benfield excused himself and rejoired the other guests. Umanski stood there with his eyes still on Good. kind. The president shifted a bit, then turned to Hennig, attempting to free himself of the Pole‘s gaze. ""You live in Black River?" he uked! by way of making conversation. i ‘"Yes," said Joe, flattered at the atâ€" tention. "Married ?" "You> DEECRE *‘ â€" Hanniw ‘anouns 4 I "I wanna know what we gonna do| !â€"tcnight," he said emphatically. | ‘"Weo‘re going to get together," said : j Coodkind with a confident smile. "You l ,! allows have got the wrong idea. C becoming law. The accomplish â€" several reduce unemployment a great burden of "Does a woman ves way to What other soLlpiers MEET IN aANNUAL EVENT Iwich) met the IRoyal Military College (Sandnuret) on Player is seen getting away with the boÂ¥, "What are you going to do to the fellow who stole your wife." "Going to try to make him keep her," M 00 C A2mReamved > qGE0 _ rolled forming revers, with straight " ecllar attached, with separate inset ° vestee. Belt of selfâ€"fabric or suede, 1 Skirt has cluster plaits at each sile toor centreâ€"front, with straight slim 6 back, which makes it equally suitable ~ for women of larger figure. It is deâ€" . signed in sizes 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 38, ‘ 40 and 42 inches bust. _ Patterned : wool jersey, plain black wool jersey, _ homespun in new rust shade, navy blue wool crepe, navy blue wool repps, _ black crepe satin, bottle green velveâ€" {teen, printed sheer velvet, silk crepe in tweed pattrn, and cocoa brown dull ;silk crepe with vestee of beige silk |crepe are smart suggestions. Pattern |price 20¢ in stamps or coin (eoin is |preferred). Wrap coin carefully. | EOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. [ Write your name and address plainâ€" lly, giving number and size of such fpattaerns as you want. Enclose 20¢ in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap| it carefully) for each number and|! address your order to Wilson Pattern| Servics, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. |« Patterns sent by an carly mail. & Until now nbieliatin oi d Acia ib c L w ness, serviceability and warmth with. out weight for allâ€"day wear. The frots of bodice are underfaced and rolled forming vrevers, with straicht collar attached, with separate inset Cak ds en 4 i0 & es Too much cannot be said abor importance and simple charm of woolen, as expressed in chie sl Style No. 336;â€" ‘It combines vay Military Rugby Match ONTARIO ARCHIVEsS TORONTO FIT PUNiSHKMENT war has been licit and SIMPLE CHATr Nes y > in <altel ed in chic slende combines youthfnl It & crime aid about the M sheor Ottawa Journal (Cons.): No proâ€" gran. will help our farmers if their ideal continues to to be free trade or low tariff, which would check indusâ€" trial development in Canada and limit the number of their customers. in their own coutury. N 0o program will help this country much which merely puts more "people upon farms, and as a conâ€" ’hequense reduces the selling price of farm products. The program which can help this country is the old Naâ€" tional Policy to promote â€" industry, which means a bigger working world, a bigger population attracted by that, and more customers thereby for our farmers., , vancouver Province (Ind. Cons.) : Either it is Mr. Coolidge‘s misfortune to turn a sour face to the world, or ’else it is his fault that he wilfully hides his more generous self. He is going out of office after five years as President, and if he came to that ofâ€" fice by accident, and if he has filled it without any great distinction, or apâ€" peal to the imagination of the world, he has at least henw Iennur an a Bubeule ' "Artichokes are another vegew.ble' {that can be made into a meal if he {hearts are served with a puree of ; ‘mushrooms. Ordinary French beans| can be frished of with a mue, |cream." , ‘‘‘In the same way cabbage is cook ed in salt and water, whereas by brais [ing it with a Hitte bacon, it can be made into a meal." | __M. Mavrice of the Trocadero restâ€" ,’aumnt, went further. "Peas," he said, | "can be made into a deHcious meal by ‘ cooking them with onions, a little butâ€" ter and sugar, and some chopped letâ€" tuce. If possible a casserole should be used. Only crough water to cover the bottom of the dish is required. The salad will provice enough liguid to salad will p cook the per: ole should be ’ "In England," said M. Latry, chef at the Savoy, "we eat more meat than l’they do on the continent. In France, for example, families live on vegeâ€" tables the whole week, only having meat on Sunday. Naturally they disâ€" cover a variety of ways of cooking the humblest vegetable. Over bere.‘ you cook peas in water, and they canâ€" | not possibly be eaten alone. But try cooking them in butter and you wlll’ find they are 2 substantial meal by themselves, | Vancouve The Worshipful Company of Gardenâ€" ers, one of London‘s anclent trade guilds, in making its annual presentaâ€" tion of vegetables to the Lord Mayor of London this year, called attention to Great Britain‘s need of knowledge as to to the cooking of these valuable articles of food. | â€" Fine tea is always the MMâ€"T";:""; | falling off in price of cheaper teas cannot entice l _ the teaâ€"lover from his discriminating eleairna Delicious Meal of Vegetables Alone t any great distinction, or apâ€" the imagination of the world, at least been known as a friend Old Na'tional Policy the Ri Uncanny Cal. icnmond Athletle The }id o pt herimil fluMdAnlho‘rm so« ally seal Jim: Do you still do your doop breathing exercises, old boy? Naslum: I bhaven‘t recently, I‘m rooming next to a tannery at presâ€" ent, Minard‘s Liniment for Asthma. 1 CCC AmRoamien TEHkt there is very little to attract visitors to England beyond the beauty of the courtryside and the oldâ€"world atmosâ€" phere. It is also eiaphasized that the hotel accommodation service in Briâ€" tain must be improved if the camâ€" paizn is to bear fruit, A Londonâ€"Britain has long regarded I!with considerable envy the huge inâ€" jceme France derives from tourists, and efforts are now being made to atâ€" tract visitors to England and Seotâ€" land. The scheme being formulated aims at the creation of a national asâ€" 'sociation, financed by those national | industries most likely to benefit from‘ lt.he tourist traffic and supported by : \the Government to ensure Britain‘s | attractiveness becoming known | ‘thmughout the world and atso to see‘ lthat the visitor has a good time while‘ here, I _ U~ ime visitor has a good time while here, Douglas Hacking, secretary of the Dept. of Overseas Trade states that last year 1,800,000 people visited France from abroad and must have. A Association Formed to Ensure Attractiveness Becomâ€" ing Known Britain Pléns to | E"é‘f Attract Tourists uC Britain Not Likely to Act ;J(m London.â€"British officia) circles say anq that the sizuation in Kabul is "seriâ€" lege ous," but that they are not aware otJ the exact nature of it. There is no likeâ€"| lihood of Great Britain taking any acâ€". tion in Afghanistan. | While disurbances in the remoter [sectlons of Afghanistan have been re. ported recently, the present advices were the first indication that the disaf. fection bad spread to Kabul, the capâ€" ital, a city of about 100,000 population. The trouble at Kabu} was attributed to the King‘s drastic westernization reforms and to Queen Souriya‘s desire to abolish purdab, or the seclusion of women, F EESeTe TV ME |n]1llill. Communications have ceased excent for the wireless, and the imessages over it stated that the legations were safe, Afghan King â€" _ { afldeTake * Refuge in Fort Army Reported to Have Turnâ€"| ed Ag_aipst Themâ€"Western seneme being formulated creation of a national asâ€" nanced by those national ost likely to benefit from traffic and supported hy Reforms n the capital, ceased excent the imessages _ Washington Post: War is no trolable duel between two . ants. It is a fire that would 0 a continent if not stamped out. Intrigue is on foot, seeking t« about war between Bolivia an« quay for ulterior ends, it is spracy against all Latin Amer! against the world, which, it » ated, could not fail to bring d on its participants a suce calamities now unforeseon a yond credence. Let\the hrol: scattered remmant of receni e in Europe give testimony to th bution that follows deliberae v oi Mauons an Society to pror The support of great asset in Coast" Member place on April be known as Day." Ottawa,â€"T newspapers of porters of the at the regular "We have mains," decl; town is full our young p« ant than a lo no matter to belong." Membershi: Coichester w about two th archmolorists ruins, which able as any Council wan tennis courts Betwe disputed mains oi in the m soundit On the ancient m the nation On one backed P Colchester, town is in th between age and sproutin ruins and E pionship, It is hoped ceed with t} residences fo Queen‘s Park 100 men in r« Bolivia and Paraguay of the Univer is regarded Colege fed. f Toro: btained vhole T ‘ourses, ‘lass Hc econd C In ath ! _ The late Mr. Cec |lishing this schola i‘l the choice of , should be had to duty, courage, syp leadership. (b) Ability and ments, (c) Physical vi; participation in g ways, Mi on‘s Park. Th men in residen 70 at St Hila» gne award of one of t EScholarships for Ontario fo, 1929 to Mr. George Steven wright, a student in the Fo In Arts in Trinity College in versity of Toronto, has nounced. This js the thirg tive year in which one of Rhodes Scholarships open t dents of al) Universities in has been awarded to a st, Trinity Colloge. In Decem} Mr. Escott Meredith Reld w ourts to 10 at St. Hild residence for Sg) Force of character, dey Supplies T e it Coum““*m-\ Sets Highe%f:ct)rd n Rhodes Sc} During Pa Sport of Nations The â€" woekiy courage, sympathy, cay Dt the niv t] Can 0 "v (x Ir 1 s the best s ited with the in 1903, Fj highest stan #3 al} _ vigour, in games Â¥Tre hree chola ast * al Exan Toront« in lle schol en ars scholars byt Stevenson the Po'll'!h ET nt ree th nit of th to th in G n the fy * of ong C in the or in Rhodeg m Veny year Cart. Year Ung. anâ€" seoy. »Ax nt, ird. in ib at rd wo 4*Â¥