COdE s Py Py TPTET Take Carters Little Liver Pills. Pureâ€" ly vegetable. No harsh calomel (merâ€" eury). Safe. Sure. Ask for them by name. Refuse substitutes. 25¢ at all druggiats. What you need is a liver stimulant. Bomething that goes farther than salts, mineral water, ofl, laxative candy â€" or chewing gum or roughage which only move the bowelsâ€"ignoring the real cause of trouble, your liver. Wt nniptiys l 4e u4 c cacc You are "feeling punk" simply _ beâ€" use your liver isn‘t pouring its daily $wo pounds of liquid bile into your bewels. Digestion and elimination â€" are both hampered, and your entire system is being poisoned. Is Lirgely Liver Wake up your Liver Bile That' D_epresged_ Feeling tect and sooth gums. No colored, gumâ€" He must get his mind settled so as to give that valve a thorough test toâ€" morrow afternoon, It was clearly goâ€" ing to be too late to do anything toâ€" night, The valve meant a career, he was convinced, and since his meeting with Priscilla Novval, a career had asâ€" ral. Positively no slipping or clickingâ€" buu‘l‘ eo::’m assured all day long: Forms a special comfort cushion to proâ€" Funny that he had never realized that there was something queer about the man, After the revelation of his frightened face on that rotten old staircase he would have believed any. thing of him, That was exactly how anyone would look who had been surâ€" prised in the commission of a crime. Now Priscilla, even when she was startled out of her wits, looked apâ€" pealingly innocent. FALSE TEETH Perkin‘s story about making an inâ€" vestigation of the Grail Street propâ€" erty, after dark and apparently by the aid of matchlight, was unbeliew. able, Nevertheless his mind even now refused to admit the idea of this lean, dry lawyer havng been inâ€" volved in an attempt at highway robâ€" bery. 1 WITH A GRINDING SHRIEK. Life in Mr. Perkin‘s office had been #o uncomfortable for Adam that it was a delight to him to envision as he strode along the lampâ€"lit streets of Mensbridge, the possibility of an escape from that unpleasing place, He was persuading himselft that de was indeed a young man with a sctâ€" entific future, able to make money. He‘d leave the office in a few months leave it gladly, relying on the proâ€" «eeds of his invention. It would be & greater relief to him than ever now that he had begun to suspect someâ€" thing exceedingly fis‘‘y about the mwctivities of Mr,. Perkin. The man turns out to be Adam‘s employerâ€"Corville Perkin. Adam, in his private hours experiâ€" ments with shortâ€"wave wireless. He attempts to track the thieves and reaches an old warehouse. _ Adams enters the building while the girl watches the door. Suddenly he hears footsteps. t Tt c sig e y y ie ns ns h ate se dip ts Nee n y ie is ie ty y sYNOPSIS Adam _ Meriston, a â€" farmer‘s son, articled to a solicitor, makes a brave but unsuccessful attempt _ to _ thwart three thieves in a bagâ€"snatching raid The bag was torn from the hands of a girl who afterwards explains to Adam that it contains the day‘s takings of her father‘s shop. ‘ CAN‘T SLIP OR SLIDE g**4044 d l lt n l l lg l i ige e i e e ie i t t ts uie i e i e i ty t y i t l t t e ie t e y ie ie is ie ts ts + l "o % $ al | P :: j t o 4 4+ «4 e > < + A> 4 > (. H A l S & 6 ka + soon as you swallow it. And F;ï¬;;r‘; is sg/{.A‘For Aspirin does not harm Remember the pictures below when you want fast reliet from J)ain. Aspirin eases even a bad hea ache or neuralgra often in a few minutes! hn.A'l'n, As,in'n tablet begins "taking When in Pain Remember These Pictures Aspirin is the Trade Mark of the Bayer Company, Limi a An Aspirin tablet starts to disinte t grate and go to work. a â€"â€"Without Calomel to DISCOVERY alsOo Eases BAD HEADACHES mUSCULAR PAIN OFTEN in FEW MINUTES your pain practically as Faster Way Now Relieve Neuralgia Why Aspirin Works So Fast office had been Adam that it to envision as By FAREMAN WELLS t ol ol ie ie hn 3e Ne hy en s e ie ie ie ie ste s3 He went to s Prl'in., .nd pau c 2 en ace Cels He told his people nothing of his adventures, The story of Mr. Perkin would only cause them worry and of the girl he was for the moment too shy to speak. He would have to say something during the weekâ€"end to prepare for his absence on Bunday af. Anemamees~~ es onl t se The sight of the lights in the farm windows inevitably recalled his mind to the dark yard and the stable out of which he dad rushed so incom. prehensively last night. That was the most puzzling thing of all. However, ne was satisfied now that his nerves were sound, He‘d been through enough to frighten most people and he could honestly Say that he had not felt the slightest fear. _ It must be something other than his nerves. YWs sc1% . His job in life. he decided, was to secure Priscilla Norval for himself. To do this he must put all his enerâ€" gies into the perfecting of his valve. His legal career was to be abandonâ€" ed at the earliest possible moment, and, for the meantime, he was going to be much on his guard with Mr, Corville Perkin. For the rest of the way â€" Adam walked _ steadily, and with the rhythmic exercise he succeeded in getting his thoughts into some sort sequence. The next moment he had sprung instinctively aside into one of those angular recessess that the builders of old had been solicitous to provide to preserve the pedestrians of their day from being â€" crushed by, preâ€" sumably, oxâ€"wagons. It was well he was quick in movement, for the car seemed to get out of control, sweryvâ€" ing so that its near wheels mounted the pavement. With a grinding shriek its fore axleâ€"cap struck fire from the parapet. _ Immediately it swung dangerously â€" toward the opposite side, and then, straightening out, zoomed away into the night. Adam thought it more than queer that the driver had not stopped to ascertain what damage he might have done to his axle. He could hardâ€" ly have failed to feel the glancing impact and still less, with those headlights, could he have missed seeâ€" ing how narrow was the escape of Adam himself. Just another unsober driver, he concluded. Probably the fellow had been sleeping it off in the train, which would account for him not getting out promptly. A sharp sentence was what he needed. s1de, and then, straighténing out zoomed away into the night. Adam thought it more than queer that the driver had not stopped â€" to Aascertain what damare ha . wish. ed as if the car he had noticed out. side the station had been going to Pennymoore after all,. Within a few yards the lights loomed up behind him, and he caught the sound of a menacing speed, It was going far too fast for a car that had to negoâ€" tiate Mense Bridge, Motorists usualâ€" ly slowed for that, Some reckless devil was taking a chance that the‘ way would be clear. Commencing to cross, he noticed on the gable ends of the houses on the hillside opposite a flush of light, He stepped on to the twoâ€"foot pave. ment, idly telling himself that it lookâ€" _ Thinking on these lines he strode briskly forward, his head well back and his long arms swinging, until he reached the ancient â€" narrow bridge that was the chief glory of Mensâ€" bridge, alpeit an eyesore to the town‘s modernists since its width will only allow of a single line of tratfic, and‘ that at the peril of the foot-passen.l ger, sumed a more than selfish importance to him. ib Rptraitat 28 s fciumuas Th .24 . Meantime hg was dogâ€"tired. UEWT ETTVTY 2OR PRCNLS, Aspirin Speed and Aspirin S;l{dy. And, see that you get ASPI IN, the method dociors prescribe. It is made in Canada, and all druggists have it. Look for the name Bayer in the form of a cross on every Aspirin tablet. Get tin of 12 tablets or ecoâ€" nomical bottle of 24 or 100 tablets. Remember these two sleep amidst thoughts of d slept without a dream. e hn aBe ole iBe Ge ze iB ole i%e ihe ole ite points re+ BEST TIME FOR SLEEP From 8 p.m. to midnight are the "natural" sleeping hours for human Modern methods and machinery introduced into Japan‘s textile facâ€" tories have greatly increased outâ€" put,. _ A weaver working eleven hours a day in 1922 produced 1,800 yards; now working only eight and a half hours, he will produce 5,000. f Apply At Heston Air Port, Middlesex, which it is claimed is the busiest priâ€" vately operated gerodrome in the world, aeroplanes land or take oï¬ at an average rate of more than 100 a day. By producing 385 youngsters in the eleven years of her life, a sow beâ€" longing to a Worcestershire farmer holds a world‘s record. She producâ€" ed sixty five pigs in three litters in one year. it rine.... Coarse Roughened Skin Unnecessary Films depicting the latest developâ€" ments in tank, infantry and cavairy warfare are to be used to instruct the British Army if the two experiâ€" mental films already taken prove satisfactory. Grandmother‘s Remedy Still Good Today The new library at Cambridge is the third largest in the world and contains 1,500,000 volumes in addiâ€" tion to vast numbers of maps, pampâ€" hlets and manuscripts. In the use of allâ€"steel railway carâ€" riages England lags behind Gerâ€" many, the United States, Italy, and the French State Railways. Only fifteen per cent of British rolling stock is steel. Marriage figures are up and birth figures down in Scotland. Last year the marriage rate was the highest for ten years, while the birth date was the lowest on record. The cheapest railway is surely to be found in Finland where one can travel 1,000 miles for 23s third class and 34s second class on the State railways. 7 A crystal wireless set, so small that it will stand on a three pennyâ€" piece, yet which works perfectly was recently made by an eightesnâ€"yearâ€" old London lad. So quickly has the movement grown that there are now more than 3,000 youth hostels in Europe, 213 of which are in England and Wales. British motor car manufacturers will turn out and sell cars and chaâ€" sis to the value of 50,000,000 pounds next year. Among London taxiâ€"drivers there are scores over seventy years of age while a few are over eighty. "I think I‘ll take Adam with me toâ€" day," he told Mr. Brewster. "It‘s time he had some experience of Court work." The morning dragged on until preâ€" sently Mr, Perkin himself emerged from the inner office, overcoated hatâ€" ted and gloved immaculately, _ his umbre!la a model of neat rolling, Perhaps after all Mr. Perkin had told him the truth, He knew Mr. Montada to be one of the firm‘s most important clients, although he had never seen the man. He must find out quietly if he did own the Grail Street property, He‘d get that out of Mr. Brewster, the managing clesk, Issue No. 48â€"‘34 ring just like that in the offices of shady solicitors. There ought to be an air of subterfuge in a place whose chief was accustomed to prow!l by night in obscure quarters like Grail Stseet. _ Fit and brisk he arrived at the ofâ€" fice mext morning ready to tackle any amount of work, Its dingy but resâ€" pectable atmosphere was calculated to destroy the remnants of his unâ€" easiness, The very ringing of the telephone bell, and the businessâ€"like responses it evoked, seemed reassurâ€" ing. Surely telephone bells did not ring just like that in the offices of shady solicitors. There ought to be an air of subterfuge in a nlace whose ONTARIO A FINE LAND TO LIVE IN sOME FAMILY! (To Be Continued.) Flashes! he remnants of e very ringing 1, and the busi evoked, seemed telephone bells e that in the © rs. There oug! TORONTO 40 weeills a fiveâ€"passenger sedan skid and overturn in ,ed to render skillcq. First Aid, hurry to the scene. Two of three badly cut about the head and arms. . One of the telephone men attaches an emergency ator in the nearest town to send a doctor. The other two lin vive the unconscious victims, working to such good purpose ; arrives he finds that all possible has been done and complim knowledge and prompt help. An oftâ€"told tale of the modern damage. " Famous London Fog * Is Just An Ilusion British â€" banks formerly absorbed nearly 4,000 boys a year; now, owing to the introduction â€"of calculating and other machines, this number is greatly reduced. _ As officials retire on reaching the age limit the number of employees is still further reduc-l ed. British novelisis also are much to blame. I could ‘give many instances, but cite as a conspicuous example of the willingness to make the worst night. _ That this attitude may be regardâ€" ed as unnecessarily arrogant _ does not matter so very much; the trouâ€" ble is that it is silly, For the less sympaihetic and understanding stranâ€" ger blandly accepts our description of English weather without ‘in the least comprehending our queer inâ€" verted pride in it, beings, according to one scientist. who adds that those who suffer from sleeplésnes would be better to retire early in the evening and get as much sleep as possible before midâ€" [ We are rather proud of the repuâ€" tation we have built up of being able to live in a "difficult" climate; it exhibits us as a hardy _ race (which we are) and one able to adapt itself to conditions that would sevâ€" erely test the stamina of lesser‘ breeds, *# We have for too long allowed the world to suppose that England â€" in winterâ€"and especially London in Noâ€" vemberâ€"is intolerable; indeed!, we have gloried in the assertion. â€" For generations we have been abusing our weather, without making it plain that this is a form of indulgence pecuâ€" liar to ourselves. I am assured that there are Amâ€" ericans who believe that Great Britâ€" ain has but two kinds of weatherâ€" Scotch mist and London fog, They are, I need hardly protest, Americans who have yet to make their first visit to this country. They have not even heard of the supierbly sunny summer which we enjoyed this year, or of the summer that preceded it, in which, from May to August, 926 hours of sunshine were recorded at. Kew, \ But there is some excuse misapprehension. "November fogs ........" Are we not the victims of our own incorrigible habit of phrasemaking? (Coming Fvents in Great Britain and ~ Ireland) Seeing a fiveâ€" Outstanding Quality "SALADA In the Wake of the for their roadsâ€"every available telephone The dawn of a day like that deâ€" scribed in "Bleak House" would now provoke as much excitement in Lonâ€" don as a snowstorm in Jerusalem. of a bad thing the opening chapier of "Bleak House" What a superb glorification of soot, mud, drizzle and T E A Within reason, and an ¢méergency telephone to the wires and asks the : other two linemen staunch the flow of blond a 0d purpose and so skillfuliy thaf "when and compliments the telephone men on t €rturn in the ditch, Two of the party modern highway. Storm Bell Telephone linemen are unconscious and the lineman busy Which suggests that it would be not merely false pride on our part, but a blatant disregard of facts, to brag any more of our mononoly in Mere is the average of fog obser vations at seven o‘clock in the mor ning during the Novembers of a number of years, made at four typiâ€" cal observation stations: London, Croydonâ€"5 days, ' London, Kewâ€"7 days. Paris, Le Bourgetâ€"7 days, Frankfurtâ€"5 days, !at. when . the doctorl' men on their First Aig Fresh from the Gardens Qf bloogd and' reâ€" repairing storm uinemen, trainâ€" and the other operâ€" 109 â€"_ . ; _~~" *pected no more than 100 entries. Five doctors and 20 nurses worked for hours to decide the winâ€" ners, but they could only get through three ~classes, and quelled an incipâ€" ient infantile riot by announcing that the remainder would be judged next day, One thousand mothers with 1,000 babies and apparently about 890 of the latter all erying at once, stormâ€" ed Farnborough Hampshire, Eng., town hall one day recently, Chaos reigned for an hour as the mothers tried to fight their way in to compete in a show organized by the local c‘l:;?.r of Commerce who had epected l Isn‘t it the truth that it‘s the man who s usually Euving nowhere in particular or who has time to burn on his hands who has the greatest craving for speed? Take some moâ€" torists, ‘They will drive like fury through the country, passing everyâ€" thing in sight, and at the end of the journey kill hour after hour of time doing nothing. ‘The man who has a real honestâ€"toâ€"goodness mission . to fulfil1 generally takes a reasonable amount of time to make the journey; his chief aim js to get there safely, This craving for speed has become & sort of disease with some people, It isn‘t fair, however. to find fault with the railroads for creating fasâ€" ter trains, They have to cater io people who want speed, and if those people do not receive such service from the railroads they will patronâ€" ize the airlines or whatever else gets them through space in record time. â€"St, ThOIIIll Timesâ€"IJonrna) 1,000 Arrive at Citing speed â€" records made . by traing recently, ‘The Ottawa Journal asks "Why the burry." In these days, The Journal says, a person may pick up a telephone and speak to anybody almost anywhere, or send a wire, so it can‘t be terribly importâ€" ant that be may get to a destination & day or a few hours sooner than ordinarily, shooting along at 118 miles an hour on a train weighing thousâ€" ands of tons to do £0, _ No one who witnessed King Ed ward‘s funeral procession will ever forget the pathetic figure of Caesar, the wireâ€"haired terrier, who refused to be banished from the room when the King was dying. And everyone is familiar with the pictures of King George‘s Labradors, the Prince of Wales‘ Cairn terriers and Alsatians, and seldom are portrait groups . of other members of the Royal Family without at least one doggy â€" member of the circle. | From the earliest years of her reign, Queen Victoria did her utmos to encourage pedigree breeding. 1i is recorded that her first love was a ; spanicl, and throughout her life, colâ€" lies, dashhounds and others, to many of whom tablets are erected in th: grounds at Windsor, followed in succession until at the time of her death she owned more than seventy _ dogs. I think that Pepys, in recording the King‘s insistence on the presence of his spaniels within the Council Chamber, mentioned â€" that they did not always appeal in quite the same way to his subjects, who were inâ€" clined to echo the sentiments of a courtier who, being severcly nipped on one occasion, prayed God "to ble«s Your Majesty and damn your dogs." never before have they been . so markedly in favor as today, when nearly every member of the Royal Family is a dog owner. Since the days when Richard 11, deserted by all save his faithful greyhound, Mathe, surrendered the throne to Bolingbroke, nearly all the Kings and Queens of England have been distinguished by their love of dogs. Henry VIII we are told, a} lowed neither "greyhounds nor masâ€" tifs nor any other breeds at Court & but his own dogs in "crimson leather collars studded with pearls" accomâ€" panied him on all occasions, and the Court rules were so far amended as to permit Anne Boleyn, while still a ladyâ€"inâ€"waiting, to keep a spaniel and a wolfhound, for whose depredaâ€" tions among sheep His Majesty was sometimes called upon to pay out of the Privy Purse. The Craze for From have ow 100 OAE CTRV m THORC not receive such service railroads they will patronâ€" lines or whatever else gets ugh space in record time. Royalty ard Dors om earliest owed not a of Royalty, before ha Timesâ€"Journal may get to a destination few hours sooner than ooting along at 118 miles a train weighing thousâ€" wooumess mission . to y takes a reasonable , to make the journey; is to get there safely, oUR with some people, ver, to find fault for creating fasâ€" have to cater to peed, and if those est times Br t a little to t Ity, although have they favor as tod EMPIRE â€"Brit to the tish dogs e patronâ€" probably been _ so