"I wonderâ€"havre you any . idea*" he said, and his tone was so altered, o softly imperative that she was startled, Abruptly be pushed forward :b' chair from the fireside, pushâ€" forward to within a few feet of her, and sat down in it, Startled by baving him so near, at facing him at Me met her eyes steadily where he stood with his back to the hearth, as though be meant to withstand her 411 opinion, His glance took in the eimplicity of her navy blue frock with white linen collar and cuffs, and be remarked drily: "You‘ve changed, But the expres. wlon of aversion when you look at me is just the same!" With n sigh and a laugh he added thoughtfuily: "I wonderâ€"will that ever changet"* "SBurely we know fairly well how we rewan: one another," said Joan, â€".eaningly, "At the risk of their lives?" said Joan quietly, ko c 2oo Pn d t mmne sgank the ship a second time, coming through the Bay. All the crew, as a matter of fact, wanted to put in at Gibraltar, because the weather re. ports of the Atlantic were so alarmâ€" ing. But 1 didn‘t want to hang about, M'Ilm.-‘u".m“ ward was foremost among the mut. bnn.hllmmn.-,“‘u we came." "Do we?" he said. "You know then how 1 regard you?" Piers said this to make her Sertable and change colour. Joan Denby of humble m.ua in tm Secveima in 3.00ei0, eaust / than es =u_lonln."ih... _ meets Plers Mannen, -ul:'ulnl.":u forcem .: Bittimg at the tea table, Joan dis. €ained to reply, wy Lydia F. Pinkham‘s Vegeis® _z':_.ug.‘:.u.....-:---? Gives you more pepâ€"more â€" Perhaps you hy m-olndllm. day‘s work is done you are too tired w enter into the m‘ times that vwther women enjoy. For extra enerfy, and smiliog I Aperh "cf" Fouith and vitality. Clear skin artracts. The hesltsyserivegic is both happy and TO BE SURE YOU CGET Fast Relief An Aspirin tablet starts disinteâ€" m‘n‘-m-um% t means that Aspirin mw-...-«-.u almost A:'dmhui:dc- m‘m-mrcuwu not harin the hoart. Be sure to look for the name Bayer in the form of a cross on every Aspirin tablet. Aspirin is made in Canada and all druggists bave it. HEALTH MEANS CHARM AND HAPPINESS "Poor Edward! He 7 ~"W THE REMARKABLE ROMANCE OFP a; DICTATOR vaiqesane mesisrimid ie GAMaRA A S P I R i N Demand and Get el‘vet and Steel 4 SAAA# way home we nearly (A PEARL BELLAIRS bad a frightful . wondering it attentions By for him to go. But now his eyes mocked her again; his face demanded compliance to bis #1l1, "I suppose you still loathe me?" "Not exactly," said Joan, * at once when be looked We ie« her aversion for him gripped her The blue eyes looked at her Steadâ€" lly, but che knew that he was hard put to it to retain that lightâ€"hearted amile. For a moment she was breath. less; so she saw him stripped of his assurance for an instent; and all this was really trueâ€"he fancled that be was in love with ber! 1 swed it to you! I *hought I‘d get away from myself by going down to Malita, but it wasn‘t any good, 1 merely grew worse! I wouldn‘t have believed it myself a month ago, 1 shut my eyes, and what do 1 see â€"> Joan‘s face, 1 go to sleep and of whom do 1 dream* Joan Denby. 1 ride the Corsair into the teeth of a gale trying to get rid of this fright. ful, enchanting obsession; “"."'1 whips into my face and of what do 1 think? Of amiable Joan and her fan!" He laughed. "Do you know that 1 can‘t even cat? And that I‘ve had about twelye hours sleep in the last week, getting here?" "In Cannes it was just a joke. 1 was bored and it amused me to tease you a little. New, by Meaven, it‘s very different! How do you curs & man, Joan, of this painful allment of the heart ?" "I‘m afraid 1 can‘t do anything!" said Joan faintly, "Homestly, 1 don‘t think it‘s my fault!" "No," he agreed, drily and brutaiâ€" ly, "You can‘t do more than tell a man you don‘t like his face and then hit him across it. The remark goes home!" i Joan with her beart racing, hard. Iy knew what to say, One could not disbelieve him, his manner made that impossible, She had never seen him like this before, qulet, and bumâ€" orous and rueful, "Ever since you slipped away at Cannes I‘ve thought about nobody else. Why did you give me the slip like that? And you tore up the card 1 sent with that daphne, and anyhow, face and saw it faintly ashamed, But Heavens, what blue eyes be had in that bronzed, powerfu! mask! She looked away, and he went on quictly, with a vein of humour runuing through his voice as though he were laurhing at himselfâ€"but only just. much close quarters, Joan shrank back a little on the ccuch on which she was sitting, "You don‘t know, do you," he said. "That I‘m in love with you?* "Reallyâ€"!* Joan protested, gptonâ€" Ished and incredulous, "It‘s a factâ€"a perfectly ridicuious ":'.’."""m-. "I don‘t know what you‘vre done to me; something that no one else has done!* "Well!" said Joan, This is all nonâ€" sense! She raised her eyes to his LIVE Yeart Gives Buoyan!. Health orighum NONUT+ v.-uy-um-‘:'mï¬-""' ve, netive. b Ithy ? Then take gllb'" ournaorers, enere ncreake ies Seast will do this for you MR NC ration a way BM FEUDV* 7M Lizzavs en nmm- h.nn.mmw ’::.c-. h‘ln .a"l-nn‘t.l‘l vaf {: ::l found to uuï¬-ffl,. Im highest activity, the rich eonient of 1 'un-uo*m and Nuclein of yeast, LIVE Yeart : (1) Helpe digestion ; ends in aud discome fort after eating. (2) &lm that your body extracts to# full benefit from the 4 CaCs sasttes the white tort UteT 22rs (+e fall benefit from the booy ertects se full benefit from the yuu eat. (8) Aud enables the white forpuscies in your bloed to throw of polsons which induce muscular thin imperfections and genecal f ‘z‘ptm.. now, You 'lg Th ngrueret progint Ju)"Uk, as use supply, $1.0¢ "Marry me!" he said, making & "About tir «e monlht »M., . commenced t » take Phiilipt FAVE Youst w- with excellent sesults. 1 bave recam» mende, your Yeast to mahy frie» a, and those who have tak» 0-1‘",',".!_‘.'..".'... t Leen sest ," she said, and longed N INDUSTRIAL ) Mowever, she also sent me some â€"f the writing of the man in ques tion, also that of the man‘s wife And from my inspection of all three writings J cannot but come to the conclusion that this girl is making a very grave mistake. Apart altogether from the moral angles to this question, the wiiting® tell me that this is the case. Both the man and his wifs are of the selfâ€" Her own handwriting shows that she is very affectionate and of a markediy sympathetic nature, She responds very readily to emotional influences, and I have no doubt that it was, in the first place at least, this eager readiness to sympathise with others that led her into her present attachment. be lor‘asome. In our houses there must always be tiny escapes of gas, which luckily our modern noses do not detect. Nor are they offended by ts smell of the woo! or cotton of which clothes are made, or the lenther of our footwear and the thousand and one other odours which would become intolerable. _3 . . abCCe Bif Rigby Swift, one ot the judges of the King‘s Bench. The judge was giving evidence before the Royal Commisston on the despatch of business at common law , "Nothing has created greater . in. dignation in some parts of the coun. try than the eloaing of jails," deciar. ed the judge. "No one would think |llllloy'tlu¢|hll in their midet, htllmunnltnn'lhm highly indignant that their prisons should tl:.uhn nw.hhhcu':lh. people into town as visitore, se0 it, and the same thing applies to the holding of assizes ," On the question of retirement of Migh Court judges, Mr. Justice Swift whs le just 60 years of age, saic: "No retiring age should be fixed, i Speak without nratnatas a2lllct 1 smiling challenge of the suggestion, though his eyes were intense, "I coulda‘t possiblyt* "Hate meâ€"want to bit me ia the face again?" he quaried. 1 have another letter this week from a young ladyâ€"she is 21 years of ageâ€"who says she has fallen in love with a married man, and, to use her own phase, "simply cannot give him #p". Well, of course, the decision as > her future course of action must .me i.sm herself, but as she has written to me about her problem, I deduce hat she is worrying over it, buscs c CCC8C C2W We Whed I am entitled to retire. and I am conâ€" whicn in menl to be naeds 1e jeage es already vested in the Lord Chancellor ncb 0o "npedtt phe br aee or Incompetency should be relieved of his judictal respoosibilitics." Picture the consequences if the powers of smell which once belongâ€" ed t the human race were restored. Mulhnelvfllnuum s-cllll.'l'o:':r‘.“:.m'..-‘ coal and ot producing which we do nc> notice, m our nosw were perfect they would writing. _ Mave YOUT The revelaâ€" and 1 am therefore going to give her my candid opinion. _ _ "Oh, don‘t be absurb!" said Joan, getting up and walking to the writing tuble. He followed her and stood facâ€" ing her meross It, ing her meross it, "I‘m not used to being thwarted!" he said warningly, and bis face was stee! hard, renews his invitation to readers folâ€" lowing this week‘s article.) Saved by the Modern Nose (Editor‘s Notet _ Many of «# WHAT DOES You HANDWRITING W REVEAL ? To be Continued All Righ r i uwfml St, Clair | fidential siroed," «otiag y M e " r»die :hn’d.‘ =‘ Geotfrer St. C Geotizer t Cttin, Reem 45, 10, AdelaiJe Street West Torvo Coy Letters will be ant® will 1 conâ€" as possible, and letters relle about 'â€!': Sendapec‘â€" | mens of the writines you h "l'] alysed, . stathag birthdate s can _ End] 10e coin foreach specimen, and include is stainged â€" addressed | envelor, . to;| nooite.. S Clsir, Reom 42 73, addre conth ing her Give ls ness in wore |» #igns mark his wife are wellâ€"suited. But ! cannot say the same thing about the girl who writes tome and the msn. 1 do not think that the man is s Me may t 1 suggest his gettin they can what At last week‘s meeting of the Naâ€" tionul Geophyric«l Urnion in Wash Ington Professor A. E. Parr of Yale ghve an account of the Mabe: Tayâ€" lor‘s findings. The schoone spent all of her time in the C«ribbean the Caribbean Sea through the Yucaâ€" :Ml.n‘hlhmfl'-J -uamnwu..m: Straits. â€" Thus was the projlem of inflow and outflow studiedâ€"the ‘masses and kind of water that enter the Gulf of Mexico from the Yucaâ€" tan, Channel and that leave it througu the Florida Straits. his getting a divorce “*‘3 :: they can be married, u..{-m I say is merely th truth. He is interested in her for the moment, hut has mo sincere desire to ruin his present conditons of life and marrlage. _ _ . . tWWE Stream, _ _ © _ STUDYING THE CURREXT It turns out that Nielsen is right. The Gulf of Mexico is saitier at the surface than the Caribbean current m the opposite of what was The Caribbean current aweeps straizht from the Yucatan Channel to Florida. Below the surâ€" face there is some Caribbean water which Joses itself in the Gall, but the soâ€"called Gull S:ream is about as independent of the Gulf of Mexâ€" ico as the Mississippi River. Malifax, â€" Big Game husters in Nova Scotis this year will hive only 11 days §# the woods. Third reading was m bill in the Legisiaâ€" ture y limiting the hunting season {:r moose, deer and caribou to the reriod between Octber 20 and Ocober 31. (Yous Onentafihae 1. 240 ; Aidl besert of Mexico in 1932. Instrudions to the scientists on board: ptermine the saltiness of the Guif S¢eam at 'llh:‘p;im. and n."xltmfbn as a . Give the a dimensional picture of the GuIH Stream, _ !lluminate the chemistry intercsted type. They look after their own interests firstly aid lastâ€" ly. 1 would say that the nan and _ _ As the years have passes» those who make the carth their .flhl‘ StUdy have been more and more b-‘ pressed by the ||::r.y&g?hm KeOgrapher, Nio Gult Stream flows like a real riher, and this is without cither diffusi& much into the Guif of Mexico or c¢iving much water from the Gulf, To test this view Yale University sent the ..h_h Mabe! Taylor to the Gulf So 1 say say to the girl who wrote all ‘sincerity, that sheis far i to take the chance f ruinâ€" life for the sake of the man. up. You will find happiâ€" other directions and in a like this lady criously in love wth her. »e Infatuated withher, but that, if the girl inists on a lotter from a ldy rao self AK., and th gostâ€" the letter was Ednton. nanent manner, illy, which Reduced To 11 Days 16.A +A B( +99 I s + ~< eet Wew To®* Ost/_ Dirpy p1PS wore d 'fl"‘u’ 1 may writeto her to wite me se * her full The gladiolus is deservedly one of the most popular flowers in Canada. Also it heeds ver : little care except at planting and di, ging time. About the middle of May ‘s a good time for planting but, asâ€" pointed out by the Horticuitural Division, Dominion Experimenia! Farms, the exact date varies according to locality because the frost must be out of the ground and the soil dried. Sandy loam, well fertilized the previous year, is the ideal soil, but gladioli will do well on heavier soni. In a light, poor soil they would probably fail in a hot dry season. After planting the soil must be cultivated. frequently to keep down the weeds and render the surface loose. . During very d'Z weather a thorough soaking w water once a week is very beneficial, and it is well to remember that when the time comes for cutting the blooms at least two sets of leaves should be left on the plants, so that the corm will come to full growth and so be in good condition for growing next year. There are hunâ€" dred of varieties to choose from, But the Primulinus hybrids which are quite distinct in appearance from the largeâ€"growing varieties are . becomâ€" ing more popular every year. . The corms, as obtained from the seadsâ€" man, should be planted from four to six inches deep and about three inchâ€" «s apart in a sunny position in the garden. "An angel is a person who has conquered self and risen to high levels of character. No person can be endowed with virtue or holiness." â€"EAwin Markham. â€"'Tâ€"T.yâ€"da_u'. You‘l feel like anot‘er persont 'l‘-t- cushr the â€" famizur liguid "PHILLIPS‘", or the conâ€" venient new PMIII'T' Milk of Mag» nesic Tablets, Made in Canada. Also in Tablet Forms Phillips‘ Milk of Magnesia Ta‘s lots are -::ll.‘:':.ul ‘.u': l:'»-"-c'&’-‘,unm ‘A’E:_ _ When you ha acid When you h\:.‘" e}c o:l 2-.# meals and before going to bed. _ to do is simply to nculrullss the exce to oo oeiol fo imbull the xc rat many cases, is merely an acid aooii 4f the nomuct. Puo thing _ Fouch Of Acid Stemuch _ At about db amtslers Recnyi sets. Dirzit«s. Nausea. % Why at 40 You Think You‘re "GROWING OLD Not "Old Age." And According Sclentists, be Someti Fo Hare 4!::'1‘5.- !!!zfl It‘s Frequently Just an "Idea. BROWN LABEL â€" 33 % Ib. ORANGE PEKOE â€" 40¢ % ib. Well, scientists say the cause, in a decision of the judges, which will be final. Whether you win a pair of silk stockings or mot, we will mail to all entrants free of charge, our famous bookletâ€""The A.B.C. dlqu Making", Canada certainly does not starve its people if we may judge by its recorded consumption. In 1933 we ate, per 136.99 pounds of meat, 10.68 of poultry, 30.4 pounds of butter, 3.30 pounds of cheese and 257 eg~>1. The meat bill was follows pork, 74,58 lbs.; hd.hnnï¬;u‘-umnu‘ lamb, 6.32 pounds, Hiop io foha B fhams Co. Ti is 2. Send as ,::zfl E wish; contest closes When {Iu feel like a log and your muséles tire easily, it‘s more than likely that eastts thas stouldn t be your sending out polcrus into mmo‘- At timen !lh.‘;hu:l As&:nuwhlnellul!lluu troube clears up, Then ‘ake 8 Wein aofvowil steg Perfocily At, weskâ€" lec Get A:nv't m"’-l.ll tin, 3b¢; Large tin, 60¢; Extra large bott‘s, _ Fast corors witHout somimg! . mfl‘fl“flvfll RIT is the tint or dyeâ€"casier and surerâ€"far rh-:vlh-y“-hndyum"“m henl-_aJ dn deper, set faster and last 1. Write a short statement (under 50 oi) Ot why you prefer RIT Dyes and send it longer, Sald everywhe NO PEP ? en CE â€"-Iâ€"o;tâ€"v'-hâ€"f" T m Fmfl:. l:."‘ guaranteed $1.00 valueâ€"will be given as prizes to 1,000 eatraots, 'l'hnm‘Ld reasons why you will prefer RIT. RIT comes in 33 basic brilliant colors, from which can be produced over $0of the newest Paris shades, m' s of Monarch Debutante fullâ€" pure silk chife suaranteed £1.00 valueâ€" he alven as department store and in tir ow i e ine o eioed lhh.-l':::l’uhammld†pairs d!q-n,rc’rmlnu full« Canadians Well Fed Botinn *;v:“; fal marg milh mt OYHH P $ | ; and your | | more than . | ouldn : be ut poleras ' inn of tea is now hecome so eOMâ€" ‘mon that the meanest families, even ‘uw labowing people, particularly in burghs, make their morning meal of it _ The seme drug supplies the laboring wonien with their afterâ€" | poon‘s entertainment, to the excluâ€" sion ef the twopeany." Tea was first sold publicly in England in 1657. It fetched from fifteen to fifty shillings a pound in the leaf, It was also sold in liquid form, made, so the vendor said, acâ€" cording to the directions of the most knowing merchants and traâ€" vellers in the East. hoAï¬ hss + ar ‘There were, however, organized efforts aginst the growing custom of tea drinking. The most poiiticat« ly adroit of all the objections of that rrhd was that raised by Dun« can Forbes, Jord President of the Scottish Court of Sessions, He arâ€" wued that tea drinking reduced beer drinking and so diminished the yield from malt duty. _ The deierrent measures he demanded were finally defeated after a lengthly debate, One item from the Forbes scheme yeads as fotiowat "The excussiv® Tea was known 3,000 years B.C., and though by the thirteenth cenâ€" tury it was a universal drink in China it was not until nearly 400 yeas later that Europe began +*o hear of tea through the Portuguese and the Dutch. The first English whan to mention tea was a Mr Wickâ€" man in 1615. Me wrote from Japan to a friend asking for three silver porvingers in which to drink tea. _ In 1711 the "Spectator" récomâ€" mended all wellâ€"regulated families who set apart every morning an hour for tea, to order the nows» paper to be punctually served up and to be looked upon as part of the tea equipa®s. o But 1839 was a e«te never to 53 forgotten in 4/‘ °. A€ British Empire To?") W t e in which Empireâ€"grown tea was first m‘l in Snglard, Now the British Empire not only produces ton which at its best is ibe dingst in the world, but in less wan 100 years has become the tea garden of the worllâ€"J. H. in Ottawa Journal _ Mard as a stone and aimost inâ€" destructible, they travel all over Asiq on a came!l; when you want a glass of tea, you chip off a bit with a knife, as the oldâ€"time traveller in China, cuts= bts from his silver "shoe" to weigh against purchases Drinking tea is a fine art im China. The late Lord 14 Chingfong when minister in London 25 years ago, objected to the custom of put ting the suucer under the cup, whereas the Chinese put it on top. In China tea leaves and beverage are served together in a little bowl, into the top of which the snucer fiis, Gripping the bowl with thumb and «outer fingers, with the middle and first finger you adjust the saucer to hold back the leaves us the liquid flows out. Brickâ€"tea is made mostly for Rusâ€" slan anc Mongolian consumption, The leaves are damped and comâ€" pressed into blocks about ten inches square to one inch thick, ; Before the year 1934 China supâ€" plied the world with tea, and it was in China that tea had its origin. Now there are teas and teas. We have Ceylon tem, Indian tea, Java tea and China tea. ‘The more scienâ€" tific methods adopted in Ceylon and India in preparing tea for marketâ€" Ing graduaily reduced the China tea trade. Today, however, more pains are being taken in China and the response is a better demand for her tea. Certainly, if China had given the world nothing else, we snould owe her gratitude for her tea. . There is a ritual of teaâ€"drinking in China, as there has been for thousands of years about every deâ€" tail in the taking ef nourishment, though the foreigner never learns more of it than not to touch the cup till the business of the interview is ended. ’ It is well known what the nationâ€" al drink of Scotland is, or at all events what it was before there was imposed on it a tax of 72 shillings aixpence ($17.50) per gallion. The national drink of England is well reâ€" cognized, too, despite the "savage" â€"m.flh( to general complaintâ€" tax upon it. But the great drink of the UI“::‘I:H:O::.II. without question, t daily houseâ€" hold beverage. M handt wuiy vatiel APbsbcniiicintrimertite Pitces: it &Nmanafulum in country, providing‘ employment for ."l'l’o. million workers, u.“ among producing countries the world ranks highest. We here in Great Britain consumeJ more than the rest of the world put together and teaâ€"drinkingâ€"at once a solace and an inspirationâ€"has become part of our national life to an extent not always realized." "A hundred years ago the Indian tea industry was founded; today it _ Writing in the Manchester Guardâ€" lan Commercial‘s special issue in nbbufl:;:dh'ohfln'rn&:-‘ tenary, "loare, Secretary State for India, says: TEAâ€"DRINKERS OF