"taking hold" . . . eases even a bad eastioeee mumn'km" raparte Canada and all druggists have it, Demand and Gét *A S PIRI N Joan said nothing; so he tossed it wway into the darkness. She had not thought that he would really do it. it brought home to her her bhelplessâ€" mess, That he should have done it. It was only a sprig of daphne but had emelled so sweetly, and she bad wanâ€" ted itâ€"now he simply took it from her and threw it away! ‘ Mer helpless rage and exasperation blazed in her eyes. <#XNo," he said, "It wasn‘t doubt, before! You don‘t doubt me now, do you? You know exactly how to take me, And you‘re furious!" ‘The things this man did! Joan felt like erying. Extra Fast Relief Joan Denby of numble origin, is Inâ€" Velvet ma Steel THE REMARKABLE ROMANCE OFP AN INDUSTRIA DICTATOR who forces his attentions By Rarrow road in a fashion which brought her heart into her mouth; they tore away on the descent and soon, it seemed to ber in no time, Sise, o5 the eaprle tncaw, Tsd on way boluh-h.o-h-wu have enjoyed the speed, the wonder ’H-u.llflt.lhuud the mm-»mm‘ acceleration, __Me sat back caszally, driving, and seemed in a good humor, "That was & pleasant drive," he remarked. "You see, if I only get what 1 want I‘m a little different, are you not?" "Different? 1 don‘t know," said Joan, and she asked: "If you had liked me leas, would you have be haved worset" about her and sank into it as deep ly as possible, hiding hersclf, cars and ail in it, and hating him, Me turned the car round on the them up now. 1 said that you had the most delicious little egrs â€" all right, I‘ll tell you the rest tomorrow," Me laughed as he switched on the head lamps of the car, Gind that the light on the dash board was out, for this sort of thing from bim made her feel more uncomâ€" mmmmm Joan wrapped the coat more closely _ "There is nothing unusual in me, I nssure you!" said Joan hastily, If he was going to start saying that be admired her, she was only too anx lous to cool his interest. "Nothing at all. 1 love clothes, 1 wallow in admiration! Oh, please, please, Mr. Mannenâ€"take me back to Cannes!" "Oh, but there was some more of itâ€"1 said that you had the most deâ€" Ilfbuâ€"!tuf You‘re _ covering "I told her that you aroused a hope which Aad jong been extinct in meâ€" that there is something in women besides a passion for clothes and adâ€" miration." \ Ing. 1 said to herâ€"sball 1 tell you what 1 said to her?" "No, please don‘t!" said Joan, more disconcerted than ever by his sudden change of tone. "I really don‘t wan‘t to ly seen me once, so 1 thought 1 would live up to it!" "You bave," she said. Je laughed, "I was bored to death in Cannes this morning. But I‘m not in the least bored now. My boredom vanâ€" l‘duafl.mmm‘ ment you. We‘ll cry quits. You had the effrontery to give me & most un when you had onâ€" ereased expenditures made the step scribers that prices of their editions will be raised from two to three went on his eyes began to shine, She looked at him scornfuily to begin with, but then nhe had to look away, He was so powerful and so enigmaâ€" tie, standing there, that even . with the hote! windows but a few feet away the was frightened of him, "You don‘t appeal to me, I‘m afâ€" raig, Td rather not meet you again! her wilst: "Noâ€"not yet! Don‘t go!" (To be Continued.) tiee. You may think it a joke, but 1 don‘t. You Gave wealth and a postâ€" tion in the world which enables you to do as you like, And you do â€"â€" regurdless of everybody else! You‘re a boor and a bully who takes what he wantsâ€"a sort of social holdup _ "Come In," said Joan, "Take me up to the hotel", 8 Me looked at her quizsicaliy, "Come in! You‘ll have to see Georâ€" gle in any case, won‘t you? We‘ll ar range thereâ€"I‘ll toll you on the terâ€" race," she said promisingly, ‘ He followed her, At a leisurely pace she led him across the garden and out to the terrace; and there, in the light from theâ€"windows, she turnâ€" ed and faced him, 1 don‘t like you. 1 don‘t like your face, 1 don‘t like anything about you! You took me up into the mountains against my willâ€"I told you that 1 did not want to go, but you took no noâ€" "Now we‘re here," Joan said. "Tll tell you. There will be no tomorrow! WHAT DOES YOUR He smiled at frst. ‘Then his face "Well, what about omorrow?" he Raise Price Of Papers night!," sbe said, and she turnâ€" , be caught ï¬" of it as a preudoscience| As residual legatce, Governâ€" paheg~ -u-’u#p'u’ wmelit sMill Feceige momme. $250,000," 18 not to be taken seriopsly, |‘nis 28 years on the supreme bench deaths out of a population of 120,â€" 000. ‘This is something to be ;« membered at a time when vaccinaâ€" In 1732â€"1%38, there were 1,800 deaths from : in the City of Quebec. In 1755, more than 600 ."dwh'. that! in the City rapidity where‘ite use has been at all general. Between the years 1871â€"1885 obâ€" jection to vaccination became wideâ€" _In 1702â€"1"03" smalipoxs struck Quebee city ;m 3,000 French inhabitants dâ€"4 Im the year. _ _ ..‘vuu:‘ulï¬"-mb conquer «ease. Smallpox wis brought to Canada in 1635 by sow@ Of the carlier getâ€" tlers. _ It spxad with devastating activity amons the Indians. Whole M""'E: During the two centuries ! the introduc» tion of smallpt, the toll among Inâ€" dians numbercl in the hundreds of thousands. N« was the disease checkâ€" ed until afte the introduction of vaccination b; Jemner in 1798. one case was rgistered, and in the Maritime there @@re no cases of the disease, In t« Bime provinces of Canada, accor/ng to the statistic» tans of one of the large life insurâ€" ance companics 100 cases only were reported with x deaths, In order to 4¢c@ed in practically stamping out »Allpox, it was necesâ€" sary to convinc the people that vacâ€" cination was t!» Only means of com» bating the dise#@, If we go bak to the origin of smallpox in ts Country, weâ€" will In :'P"‘vi of Ontarie, 18 cases 1 n 10 on Mpiimce of Gueber Lo. 15â€"35 Fmmate N CANADA $490,000 from tie Government. | ! Rdward J. Holmes of Boston was 'n.d'flllllll legatee, receiving $100,000; all of the jurist‘s editions 'd&onflnd&mm ers, his more famous father, and of ‘himself, Small legacies to more disâ€" | tant relatives:â€"and to those who servâ€" / e4 him through a long Hifetime were wuriew ait s of America." Half His Estate Left to U.S. tributed specific bequests of $253,500 and then incorporated this unusual "All the rest, residue and remainâ€" der of my property of whatsoever mature, _ wheresoever situate, . of| which I may die seized and possessâ€" ed, or in which I may have an interâ€" States Goverrment which he‘ served so long, Oliver Wendeli Holmecs re turzed in death more than Laif the money with which it had compensatâ€" Ylome mds wn ‘olmes uea hn in funy. BROWN LABEL â€" 33 4 1b. ORANGE PEKOE â€" 40¢ % Ib. DRN SYRUP . wh “‘ mmr bWaa m Piven: troprihe), it sindinn ue eye with is rich red color. Childâ€" m e Mn rowim i nnens Hinine Je nodihn dattvet h. m wos vitamin C as lemon juice, | When the HMungarian chemist Szent Gyorgi dissovered that the abundantly in his native land is a rich source of vitamin Câ€"the one o Eegomer Poos oi t ns .# druggist ty P io. ies eonrrgrig come refrigeration and care. _ _ e s ue | O inpoue esn tm | t tecfan | If you are among the ak Four druggist for Phill oc c Jam From Paprika em : that he considered essential. ‘ FINDING THE RIGHT GLASS ‘The original quartz lamp bothered the President at his work. The 15 |light and the fonizing effect were l-nl."‘ al, wher it is said a anâ€"ber of T soins have beca cirâ€" culated.â€"Halifax Chronicle. bevadiburs,cdpinith cce o Wmmsd Ne this tor! ccald t easlly â€" applied, heve tie sar alone was not deliâ€" eate enough to detect the diference. _ Whe plece ahown us came from was reaiily detectable when comâ€" pored with the sound made by the real fifty sent piece â€"â€" the sound The . unaccustomed _ car . could hardly detect the difference when It was allowed to fail upon the We wore shown a counterfeit Canâ€" adian fifty cent. plece. It was such a good copy of the original that it would deceive anyone not on guard. In size, appesrance, color, there was than what it seemed. conduct affairs of State with a clear place in its effect on a man‘s soul or on the joy of life." Still, it is something to it in the Presidential palace in Warsaw s1d ubout the artificiality of his invenâ€" tion. . "It is ithpossible to reproâ€" duce in a city the beauty of Alpine was too much ozone, . He made inâ€" quiries. _ He found a glass which will let the ultraâ€"violet rays pass and which will prevent the generaâ€" tion of ozone. His problem was chromium. _ Why chromium? _ Beâ€" cause it does not absorb uitraâ€"viclet rays, as, for example, sliver does. And the ribs? _ They break up the eams of ultraâ€"violet rays that come from the lamp â€" spread them all over the room. _ Moscicki thus Ticg aat only hit the takp hk indoor sun â€" but gave him the exâ€" erature on ultraâ€"violet radiation; he consulted his former assistant, Dr. President of Poland for his own use, Jt is original in many ways, but any correctly designed airâ€"conditioning equipment will do. What deserves special attention is the physicist» President‘s method of giving himâ€" self the benefit of an artificial sun‘s ultraâ€"violet rays. His first indoor son was a quarts mereury lamp. _ To sit under its glare was to invite sunburn and all its discomforts. _ ‘The President wanted something like the water particles in the air that scatter the convinced him that it was definite» ly harmful in large quantities, Nor did it seem of much hygienic im« portance that the air is thin on a mountain. Mis problem reduced it self, then, to cleaning and moving air, keeping it at the proper temâ€" perature and humidity and ionizing it with ultraâ€"violet rays. ‘This is net the place to describe in technical detail the airâ€"conditionâ€" Before he decided that he wanted mountain air indoors the Polish President studied it. That it was clean was selfâ€"evident. _ That the ultraâ€"violet rays had an electrical rbh.‘muh(l-hfln) e knew as a physicist. That ozone, about which much nonsense is ut Ing papers in the open on a Swiss mountain. . When 5 o‘clock comes and most business men in Warsaw insists vhat he is as fresh as a dewâ€" weighing matters of State and signâ€" huuum«.umunu.g' ’h‘uf“u be made~ order, Most of us are content if the manufactured air is clean and if 1t h.d.h‘t--l--‘: m..:l:-t'dylhdh'd and engineer to boot. His sir must be good for the healthâ€"preferably MOUNTAIN AR Poland‘s President Makes His Own Conditioning 2 Apparatus Bogus Fifty Cent Piec# Cherishing ideas about air, he deâ€" trom the rea} plese was nob He read the litâ€" AT OM it was other