- .. .. tuI " “I! "105; ;-mp1:te and own.†work at its kind. root tno years to edit and cost many ihounndg of dollars. Contain: 143 teat. ,a manly ':"syvos--trread, pastry, cakes. more. minds. ee?'ta-eviiriiiiirii Vere, step-by-step method mute. luc- :ess In cooking no bums. Clan an pun-proof cover. mn- Mt " l"d trt, Well worth â€.00. Son: 'Nr,,', or we. Adana: Water!) Gun our SIP Ca. Llama Dept, Mr. Tcrontn . hole " could not have done that." 1 my pride and remain, inexorable Eventually memory yields. No one can assert that the cur amnesia is scientific in the sense , the physician always knows ex: what he is doing and why. Many tims of amnesia either recover t memories of past events spontane ly or have that memory reccnotrut for them through a p-ocegs " P. eiation. The spontaneous cures s to have been eeeeted by almost es eoneeis able theory and device. I rotten events may be recalled dreams. This has led the Fre psychologist Janet tt com-Inn. I fulfilment. Mysticism and demon- 'iotry thus appe: in a new guise. If a man forgets who he is or part cf hm life becomes n blank, Freudians any it is that the wish not to remem- ber blocks the wish to recall. Nietzsche pietures fhis contract almost in psycho- analytic terms in "Beyond Good and Evil." .lctim of anterograde amnesia for- gets experiences almost as fast aq they occur. Ptrrnrnnesiaes try to till the gaps in the memory by illusions. STIMULATlNG THE MEMORY. Dr. Coriot in his "Abnormal Psy- "tology" records the case of a woman who found it impossible to recall the signature, date, place and bank on which a cheque given two years pre- viounly had been drawn. When she was placed in a "state of abstraction" by listening to a monotonous sound stimulus. all the facts were recalled in a few minutes. By means of crystal gazing it was also possible tso produce a vivid hallucination of the cheque. l Of course the psychonanalysts have their own ideas about amnesia. To explain why we forget names, events and even who we are, Freud invokes automatic censorship, conflict, repres- ‘ion, unconscious activities and wish If man may forget how to walk. for ex- :mple. but not how to crawl or hop; his memory of-writing may have gone, but in will still be able to t.lk. Then there are retrograde amnesias, in which it is impossible to remember uhat oeeurred" immediatelyugcfae "ple mental or physical shock. The are localized amluesiu, whiéh ‘ch; only :(rtain warps of memories. A Although thes know little enough about the mind and its vagaries, psy- vhiatrists classify amnesiu. There Men and women who forget who they e and who wander about path- eticallyntotally new personalities so far as the world is eoncerned-are commoner than many of us suppose. a, The truth is that we all suffer L little from amnesia or loss of mem- wry. Who has not had the experience of trying to recall the name of a per-‘ son or place. apparently in vain, only u have it fUsh up vividly in the mind hour; later and for no apparent rea- son? “Normal amnesia†the physi- (-ians call the phenomenon. Luckily we have the power of reconstructing and synthesizing mental records of past events. " is only when the blankness covers long periods of time tut amnesia becomes alarming, that he lose all recollection of our real selves and that we actually develop new personalities. M Commoner - Beam Latest Findings ofiscience: -.-r--- Some Cases of Lost Memory the ich " ISSUE No. 5 I--.'" h did TALK! M ORANGE PEKOE BLEND “’2 "SAMMY ---) ttve It" " at an always knows exaet'O Joins and why. Many vie- nesia eithcr recover their t past events spontaneous- that memory recon. traded Ilit me Wonk t a beam A COMPLETE COURSE ar att say in Cookery for only SOe postpaid LIGHT RA ora ly?ir ig 9'10 mos: 'han Generally Supposed - Talking Over A of Light-Karine- Dry Combats Colds " Ta m y me mory on OT be of at the cure or the sense that tl den "Fresh from the Gardens" the last to ogiginal in- communica- rs ago Alex. emor strand icaticn with In. has been , two years. t light some uct r it evice. For. recalled in the French rnclude that e power of that is lost TEA a 'very For. ee m V. -.__ -........5... _S.vd!vy Horlvr. however, the popular _niveiift, has been disclosing, for the bimstit, or literary aspirants, his in- come from his pen during 1900. The total was 24,835, made up as follows: Contmtmtal serial sales, S105; Contin.. ental book sale: , t'44; United States of American serial sales, 2369; United States of America new book advances, 2501; United States of America roy- alties on previous books, 26r, British serial sales, £1,758; British book sales, £1,110, and British royalties on previ- ous books, 2821, These particulars are given by Mr. Bor1er in his latest book, which is not a novel but a man. as] of advice on "Writing for Money†(Nicholson). Bis recipe is to write L,000 words a day and sell them " top price. 1 A Novelist’s Earnings Writes the London correspondent. of '.he New York Times: It is seldom that an author takes the public into his eorfdenee as to his earnings. Sydney Horler, however, the popular mgs water physi: quiet. at water in his she drying process- nary quantities Raomprert in N The Metropolitan Life Insurance Company also has its views on the common cold. "keeping dry is an ele- mentary precaution," it says. "A child who goes out in a storm without pro- per protection collects a certain am- ount of water in his shoes and cloth- ing. If he has just had a good meal and is well nourished, during the time he is physically active, he generat:s enough heat from his food or stored- up energy to compensatu for the extra demands which the evaporation of this water makes. At the and of his journey to school his shoes and stock-z Colds are so common that they are taken as something inevitable. If they have not been sueeessfully eombatted as yet it is because they are probably due to a filtrable virus-in other words, to a germ so small that it can- not be seen in the most powerful mic- roscope and that it can pass even through a tine porcelain filter, Be- cause it renders those whom it attacks susceptible to pneumonia and inhu- enza, the common cold, in Dr. Wars ing's opinion, is more of a menace Ahan most of us suppose. Why colds should be more prevalent‘ in cold weather than in summer no one has yet satisfactorily explained. Changes in diet and clothing may have something to do with winter aus- ceptibility. Children who eat fresh vegetables and fruits seem less liable to catch cold than the egg'and meat eaters. This does not explain why it is that the Eskimos, who live almost wholly on meat and live in drafty igloos, know nothing of eoldsr-tmless they come in contact with white men God given might to the neck. KNOWLEDGE OF THE COMMON CCLD. Dr. A. J. Waring has been idling tic- Southern Medical Association that the common cold must Jte. ‘ought by th-. same methods that proved success- ful in tuberculosis, diphtheria and contagious diseases in general. Substitute a modern responsive thotoelectrie cell for Bell's more slag.. ttish one of selenium end I neon light for Bell's are and we have in principle the apparatus that Taylor demon- strated last Spring in an experiment with the navy dirigible Los Angeles and now from the top of I mountain at Lake Desolation, N.Y. It is clear that sue" a wireless teleph me has its limitations. Intercept the beam of light and conversation ceases Per- haps for this reason the prireipie Is euntined to communication between ships at sea or between stations on: mountain tops. l KNOWLEDGE OF THE mnmm , with his "photophone" that it is pos- sible to talk over a beam of light. With the modern sensitive photo- (lectrlc cell the trick is easier. Bell used a selenium cell in the focus of a parabolic veflector and incorporated the cell in a; telephone circuit Five hundred yards away a beam of light played upon the reheetor and the cell. The intensity of the beam \uried with the density of the air whm I sound was uttered. As the beam f1uetusted, so did the strength of the current passing through the selenium cell and the telephone receiver. The Buetua. tions were trnnslated by the ttlephone into spoken words. the m g may carry a large quantity of [ From a condition ot marked al activity he becomes relatively His heat output decreases just 5 time that evaporation of the in his shoes and Mockings-the r process-calls for extraordi. been disclosing, for the heat.--Wa.'demar Times. "lou‘re going to wear it, in public, where people can see?" He said it ty.; if he were asking whether she meant to go out naked. "Later, perhaps--. but not now, surely." "Now, if necessary. Whenever I must." She felt as if she must burst into uncontrollable laughter. "Dirk," she said, "this is the most ridiculous thing I ever heard of. It's such a little thing to cause such a. big rum- pus. And what's wrong with the J w. piter money? Don't you want me to have it.'" ( He was almost insane with Jealous) anger she saw when he turned his dis/ torted face toward her. “I dare-q itV sun of me," he said Waxy,‘ "but I don’t! Howdo I know what untold fool thinhhe’e huh“: 1ttttmehi-ir%tGri'G"ii; you? 1rowattumrtouiit%iiii' "You're going to wear where people can see?" if he were askine whoth "It was bad taste, but I need it. I have to have it. When The Fly's been caught with it, it can go to the bottom of the sea for all I car'e. Why you make so much of it, though, is beyond me. . . ." "My idea “as," he went on, “for you to give out a statement-just a few lines, no more-denying it in a dignified way. It's too late to stop a lot of fools from gaping war it, but it's the best you can do-now the harm's dcmo. You'd have to say, of course. what it was you did choose-. a ring or a pin or whatever it was, just for the sake of sentiment. It would help to quash this, gold-digging action about you that everybody seems to have--" Mary said: "I epyldn't do that, Dirk. I did choose the necklaee." Dirk said: "Oh, Mary.†It was al.. most a groan. "Oh, nothing that's true-at least, if it is I don't believe you realize it. I think -you’rc perfectly innocent about it. That the Jupiter money has turned your hetsd--tut you’re being nice to the old " an just for what you can get out of him. If they knew about that will what a jabber there'd be! And of course that .‘ewspaper story about you last week was just about the last straw-coming right out with the intimation that you'd had rotten bad taste to choose thar, horrible necklace. . . ." Mary was silent, stunned. "There's nothing I can say," she faltered. as Dirk seemed to be wait, ing for some comment. Mary (vas appalled. "What do th sat'll' she whispered. "r believe in sou," Dirk said, prai- ently. Mary's searching eyes saw his face contorted with the effov. to speak fairly and plainly. "That is, when I'm with you, I get-wild ideas. Other people say things, and it-hurts. I shouldn't listen, I know. But I do. Because it's you." His hand gripped hers until an benumbed fint,rors tsehed with the pain. "You mean so much to me teat the least breath-the least suspicion---" He stopped and held his lcwer lip with his teeth like a man in physical pain. "Evcrything's ready. Pte gut to go. Besides, I've just learned some things that may be of great value. ' here's too much at stake, now, Dirk." She turned toward him suddenly, an agony of pleading in her Nee. "Dirk, don't you believe in what I'm trying to do at all?" It was very still in the room, which was lighted only by dim wall brack- ets and the flicker of a smell wood fire. Dirk stroked her hair gently. "You really want me?" Her eyes answered him. "Better still," he suggested, "don't go. Stay here." Why, indeed, Mary thought happily after several blissful, speechless min- utes. This was what she had been longing for, for days. How had she ever lived through them alone? She sighed deeply. Well, that was all over now-- Then she remembered. To- morrow she was going away! Her heart cried out against separation from Dirk again. She clutched him tightly. "Come along with us," she begged. "I can't be"r to go unless you do!" "Probably. I said he wasn't out to marry money." Dirk roared himself suddenly, crushed out ht. cigaret and put his arms around her. "But why are We talking about them, sweet- heart?" he said gently, "Why are we talking at all.'" , Mary Hat-knees undertakes to trap The Fly. who she believes "framed" her brother, Eddie. with the murder of Mrs. Jupiter, and killed him to keep him from telling. A: bait she plans to use the fam- ous Jupiter necklace which the murderer failed to gen She is aided hy Bowen. tk reporter of The star. Mary's name. Dirk Ruyther, and his .amily. olden-t to the notoriety. Bruce Jupiter. absent many years. rrturns From Europe. "is father orders him nut and makrs Mary his heir. Drum: swears in "out Mary. Mary and Dirk uurrrl â€wausc Dirk Is Jealous, of Bowett and 'retirees t belies in the axiwienw of The Fly. Dirk goes about again “in: his iormer sweetheart, I'ornelia Tahoe. Mary prom-rm to sail with Mr. Ju- piter to Miami on his yacht the"Gyrstsy." behaving The Fly will be . t Hialeah to we» his horse. the favorlte, win. CHAPTER XXVrt.--(Cont'd0 "Did De Lama know that†asked Mary. "About the millions, I mean?" -'_----------_--------, SYNOPS.S. one glued to tietd-srG--turnisd not upon an M. have. but upon the This visit to the Hialeah race track from which she had hoped so much had turned up exactly nothing. "The Fly will be there if hey alive," George Bowen had said. Well, they had spent the afternoon looking for him and obtained not so much as n glimpse. It was almost an impossible task 110 find anyone in the huge crowd and it was made more exaaperating by the constant feel of Bruce's mocking eyes upon her. In self-defence, Mary had kept her As the rented roadster spur. along the white Florida road toward Miami late in the afternoon of October 16, Mary was uneasily conscious of Bruee's presence beside her. He still wore his cynical air, but now with some reason, as she realized with vexation. He choked and stopped. Whatever it was he would know Mary was not to learn, for with a twitching fac, he turned and bolted from the room. "If you gs-" ho said in a fright- ening voice, "if you go, I'll know that you-PII know--" "And I've hurt you," Mary mur- mured sadly. "And there's more to come." "You think you'll go, then?" "I have to go," she told him dogged- ly. "I can't quite believe-he got to find out the truth for myself!†Dirk stood up with an air of final, ity. He looked very white and stern. "I don't know what Dad believes. He wouldn't desert Jupiter if he mut- dered a township, though. Jupiter Motor Car stock is about all we've got that survived the crash, you know. We owe him gratitude for that. Be- sides, Dad's his lawyer, remember. He wouldn't turn against him any more than a doctor runs away when his client falls ill." "Besides," he went on miserably, "what men do isn't important-to men. It's what women-do, that- hurts." friend?" "I've got to think," she said. "i'll tell you later what I decide to do," Dirk shrugged. "Does your father believe all this you've been telling me. If he thinks Mr. Jupiter murdered his wife, why There it was again. Mary stirred restlessly in his arms. Pulling away from him, she sank to the couch, put her forehead in her hands. T" "But what about Bowen? He couldnt be in the plot, even if the rest were true. And it isn't . , . it's too preposterous!" "Bowen's just a cheap sensation. monger, as I've always tried to tell you," Dirk remarked, irritably. He was breathing hoarse/y, a/Alt (rying. "Come away with me," he begged, "out of this house. Damn it, it hurts me every time I come here to see you. It's ugly, for all the money that went into it. Maybe because of the money that went into it. And its ugliness has come off on you. You’re going to be suneared with it rnd I can't get you away. . . I ean't make you see." Dirk glowered mutinously. He RA- thcred her roughly into his arms, hold her amped and breathless am if he would never let her go." sort of girl you are, that a false move would repel you." Mary smiled, but there Va. no hu- mor in that smile. "Then you don't believe I'm as bad as Bruce and other people say I am?" his wife been dude. Two maths. Well, he knows better than to make a pass at you so soon. He knows the "Oh, Dirk," Mary wrung her hands, "how can you,say such things of a sweet old man like that? You don't know him.' Why, he's never said or done a single thing--" "I don't know ha," Dirk Hunted, "and neither do you. How long has "That wild kid brother of yoirs and his threats when Jupiter refused him money makc a handy peg to hang the murder on. Maybe he really did it. Maybe he only knew who did it. Eddie was killed purposely, perhaps, by someone who warned to shut him up. You want me to :hink some mys- terious gunman was responsible for it, for the first murder and Eddie's, too. And you wondu- why I don't fall in with your fantastic tale! A Lorimor car killed Eddie; a Lorimor car c..riied the murderer to and away from the house, after Mrs. Jupiter was killed. Whose Lorimor ear? Why not Jupitet"st" "Jupiter's.'" Mary asked stupidly. 'His, yes! You didn't know he owneu a Lorimor car, did you? Well,‘ he does." right when he tells Masterson, the critic. that he's too busy to have an exhibit myw-he's got to rout his fa- th.. It mistress: How do I know the old reprobate didn't shoot his own wife to get rid of hes? He stopped the police investigation, didn't he? And why did he do that.' Because it threatened you, or himself? I don't know. I wish I did! he remain his lawyer? His CHAPTER XXVIII. Scandinavian, Returning Home in Large Numbers New York-That Seancinavlaus are returning home in large numbers to pass the holidays with relatives and friends is reflected in the heavy bookings being received by the Tati. ous booking omces it is estimated that when the motorlincr Gripsholm sails trom New York tor Gothenburg she will carry out 1,200 passengers. This is believed to be a record tor tt ship ot her size at this time of year. If bilence prevailed in the front seat, however, there was compensat- ing animation behind. The countess and Bates, who was a private detec- tive when not posing as an inventor of a new form of aircraft, anxious to win Jupiter backing, had evidently found the enforced proximity of the rumble seat conducive to quick ac- quaintance. They laughed and chat- ted like two children. boxes. Satisfied that her quarry was not there, she had systematicrlly rak, ed the stands, tier by tier. But The Fly, if he was present, had eluded her. What her next move should be, she did not know. _-r-o-------------.. LAKE OF THE WOODS MILLING COMPANY, LIMITED. DEPT. 22-A, P.O. BOX 1419, MONTREAL, QUE. “Brown must be a sinner.†.. ' /hy t" “I heard " wife "r. he we. no saint." . 4 h . .OOHW Hi-___-it-H-t DO. q I..' H ERE'S Au INEXPENsIVE One of the nicest ways you can express your Christmas greetings is to give several copies of the new Five Roses Cook Book "A Guide to Good Cooking". Your friends will prize it for many years to come. It is practical. inexpensive, and beautifully bound in a dark blue leatherette cover that is waterproof and greaseproof. It lies open without breaking the bind- ing, and its 160 pages of easily readable type contain over 800 prize recipes and a host of useful cooking sug- gestions. Kindly send me. postpaid. l , copies of the new Five Roses Cook Book, "A Guide to Good Cooking", for which I enclose Me each (money order). Me outside of Canada and Newfoundland NAME FIVE ROSES F LOU R Christmas Gift The Year Around (To be continued.) TORONTO ADDRESS . Useful s..........."""..'..'..... who. when there II n induSE'B': success. looks into " work toe s reply . . . Work in vietorr.'t--- The poet may say or sing, not as things were, but as they ought to have been; but the historian must pen them, not " they ought to hue "Photographs demonstrate how much more rapidly a cucumber will grow in an electrical hotbed than in an ordinary frame. It is pointed out that Norwegian and Swedish market gardeners and farmers produce lettuce and other market plants at out-of.. season periods by this method. It is also useful in growing cantaloup mel- ons and other expensive fruits at times when they are wry dear. It is suggested that the electrical heating of the soil my prove useful for the growing of mushrooms, and would be e pletsanter method than the one ordi- narily used. Experiments with this end in View could easily be carried on in a cupboard or a cellar." values. "The soil is heated by means ot a 'thermnl' cable buried in the soil and carrying " certain times of the day electric current. _British and eonti. mental firms are now manufacturing this kind of cable, and an elcctrical contractor will install it. Then the Ina-met gardener rushes them to an early tttantet and realizes t. fancy price. We are told in "Nature" (London) hoy__it is dpne in England: They hurry their growth and mt- ture far ahead of time. Warm Soil Speeds Plants can be fooled into thinking it is spring it the Bail is heated. ...................... ('1 look upon Order your copies today, to be sure of delivery before Christmas. Just fill out the coupon below and en- close 40 cents (money order) for each copy required. The new Five Roses Cook Book, to which 15,000 Can- adian women gave their prize recipes and suggestions, makes an enviable gift for your friends at Christmas. At only 40 cents a copy. sent prepaid to you in any quanti- ty, it is the economical solu. tion to your Christmas bud- get problem. but as they rGirGriri.UE2 Growth of Plants By WILLIAM GREEN, President, American Federation of. . Labor Are we going to resign ourselves to " economic eituatlon where eleven to titteen millions ere to be continu- ally idle? How long are we going to be patient". Will our social order sustain such a condition? [low long will it be tolereted? These are question unswere to which will not he denied. . . . The time has come when we must tell the world that we will no longer tolerate thin situation and that we will demand that action to taken to remedy lt in the near future. For tour yen-e we heve been appealing to reuon end to public opinion. We here inede some progreee, but that to not enough. There ere more people on the dude, week than ever before. but that to still only e drop In the bucket. We here not to bring ebont e condition where in. dual-l element will be con- pelted to "ply the ehorter north, end workweek neivenelly end einnluneouli In In alum. . . . . Wo say that " no going to otriko tor thlo great ooonomlc reform. Jun " the woman led tho tight tor tho eight-hm any. Io the woo hoo como tor â€no mint“: union to lead The world is better tor n deed or kindness. though it any Full “he the unsuspected seed And lie tor many I an Beneath unsympathetic earth Until upon the light, When hope seems dead. it blossom- forth And ttttg the world with light. -A. B. c., ftt Tit-Bits. The world in better tor a word . Ot comfort end ot hope. _ For hum; sluggish pulse. stirred By joy'l bright hora-cope: For though there'e much in human lite To sudden end depress. No Instinuon to new strife Can make that wanes: lese. The world ll better tot I null. Upon I cheerful face. For ought that will dull care beam. And brighten up the place. For. as the sun dispel: the cloud And makes the Ind-capo bright. So in . [tulle with power endowed To lighten sorrow'l night. me Word. 1nd phrases in the sys- terloua and "ttltr-ttttown Basque ton. gtte, No toreiener, I believe. has ever learned to men It well, and one mull be born 5 Basque to mn- om m ttotttplexitim.-George Allan England, in "Isle! of Romance.†(New York: Century.) l returned along the road with n gleam ot bright eunlicht falling over my shoulder Ate (an. i observed In old men with huge irouaers of meal marking. engaged in satin; wood with a buu‘ksew which be hrld between his knees. tntlrttfttr. the stick up and down on the week The 2' man's red sash told me that he was a Basque. He invited me to inspect hie pigs. hens and cows. but they did not interest me " much u the Basque himsell. Hie wrinkled face. bright eyes. and sweeping mustache: would have termed e painter‘e been. He was a very voluble old fellow. and tor half in hull be told l entered the house of benormand, s cozlly hospitable French mens‘e, white-plastered. with tall chimney- stacks, hinged windows. gersnaums in the usual window-boxes bravely displayed to the occasional sun. and a little shop below-stairs. Hers the doorbell jsngled as merrily as in Old Brittany; the laces made by the charming Mademoiselle Lenormsnd were on sale. and one might well have thought one] self three thous- and miles overseas. . . In Tiréo'Mltlon ot moist disreputar mm u to both person and elects. not!†The cues Jidu': look inviting. and charged rote. not indium] their opinion of an Americaâ€. " miliion. tires; theretolo. l scouted up amen and rocky street: tor some who“ deal of knocking at cautiou- doors. roof to sucker me. After a good I found a lot-39mm“ widow with roof to shelter me. AIUr I found a Int-393011194] wid in children. who Idm'md the family clrclou, ' The Shorter Working Day rubbe1 A Mt of old We. very door. in tho No I lumen! of Brittany tow American nulls. t day's naming from t they can tind an actual rope. Mr sojourn u 8'. all through the mandala ed as truly French In I ABitofOldFrance The World is Better OI nun-.-~., __-He'" _ ml renittte that onli on In; from Cape Breton d an scum part ot on. Maura In St. Pierre and .he Mlquclon group seen- F‘rench u If " era-d We. He. " or to North Atlantic; mun, luelf. _Ven a "