8 12 04 ) ts PB cieanineet"â€" wonre en wit, thought Miss is Fontaine, «he would scon come to see things in A more sensible light. It was only mat« wralâ€"and if she really did dintike Plers Mannen a* mucn as she assert« «d her action in taking him to Hooley Strect, though utterly mad, was perâ€" baps underatandar‘>, "You are not going quite away from me, Joan," she said to her quietâ€" ly. "You bave a right to this jobâ€" and | shall ring the Saion Colesie to tell Madame Celle that you are goâ€" hcnulmnlnuoln.lyn- commendation will help you. But 1 want you to come here often to aee meâ€"you‘ll still make a friend of me, won‘t you* I claim this as a vightâ€" After a strained and silent morning, however, Miss !s Foutaine telented. sho realised that Joan had too easy u time; If she had to fend for l_f‘- Joan said nothing, it was no good good arguing the point, and she was wery near to tears. Miss la Fontaine gozed at her impatiently, and said: "Just exactly like your fatherâ€"in every reapect!" A+ Georgina had often abused Mr. Donby as being a bad husband and a waster, Joan cou‘d bardly take it as a compliment to be Hkened to bim. It was quite I-.oulbk to stay and . dispute . Miss !a inc‘s wishes all the time, so it was best to go. And yet she was so fond of «ieorgiet * 1 Plers Hanuen! &‘ nameâ€"but for bim this mever bhave happened. _ But peor Miss in Fontaine was disâ€" mayed by visions of Plers Mannen eating his dinner in that terrible Httle house in Mooley Street; She would wot be consoled, and finally Joan watd, quietly; o "Honestly, Georg‘e, 1 think you had beiter let me go. Don‘t for Heaven‘s sake. think me ungrateful! | am pratefu)â€"and 1 can never be grateful enough, But you know 1 have a «hance of getting a job as a manne. «uin at the Salon Celeste in Brook Stree!. 1 think I bad better try for "Do as you like!" Stay with meâ€" I‘m only too glad to have you. But you evidently think that you can do much bettes for yourself!" "It‘s a superannuated notion, this hiea of getting a hold of a man with #n income, and marrying bim for it!" whe said. "If you don‘t like the man â€"â€"if you find him actually repulsive, IW‘s hardly mora‘! You can‘t pretend that it is, Guorgle! I‘m not here to be picked out of the bunch, as it were, by any Plers HMannep who bhap~ per; to come aloug." _ > ‘ â€" Misi la Pontaine was still more ¢i caayed, but she said shortly: "Cou‘dn‘t stand it! My dear Joan *â€"don‘t you understand that you have xo hope in this world uniess you can get some decent man to look after youâ€"some man in the society to which 1 have fited you. Yere is Piers Mannen, eligible, young, tremendous. ly wealthyâ€"and honourat.o, | know! Je showed an interest in you â€">4 em sure he was beginning to be .A« tercated _ And you deliberaely take bim to Hooley Street, ayparent‘y for a joke!" Joan roefrained from making mat. tors worse by revealing the fact that P‘er: Hannen bad ruked her to mar. ry him bofore she performed . this terrible action which so much upset ber friend; but she was growing ang. 1y herself, Going on a Holiday? Lingerlong Lodge, Ardbeg, °O «Just north of Party BowA) Jean Penby of pumbie origin, is tnâ€" troduced as ‘a nortal equal "of "Mtine Wicergina L4 Fontaine, rather than _ as her secretary. She meets Plers Hannen, millionalre, who force« his attentions en her. Lord. iwards proposes to "I didn‘t like him," said Joan, and rdded, with growing desperation, "You know 1 didn‘t like him. But you wouldn‘t help me, Georgic! You took his part, 1 couldn‘t stand that. 1 had to do scmething to end it!" Velvet d Steel We can give you the best whether you want to THE REMARKABLE ROMANCE OF AN INDUSTRIAL DICTATOR f D. J. McRae 1 Plers Hanuen! di*k mark against PEARL BELLAIRS By year would De 2/ more than last year. "My dear Georgle!" excilaimed Joan and she could not restrain the tears, Sho was horrorâ€"struck by her own ingratitude towards her friend. Miss la Fontaine, after weeping a }ittle too, sa.d that they were both perfect. On one occasion when she bad gone there with Georgle to buy an evening frock, Madame Colie, the manageress, had romarked that Joan had exactly the figrre to make a succes ful mannegu.n. Joan would have thought that Madame Colle was moerely ‘trying to fatter, for Miss in Pontaine was an excellent customer, had not Madame Celie remarked to her when Miss la Fontaine was out of hearing: Winnipeg â€" Winnipeg was (accd last wee with mognsing relief costs. At the sresem rate of expenditcre, said City Treasurer Harry C. Thompâ€" son, Winnipeg‘s share of relief this "It wil"be an excellent thing for yourself, and 1 have been wrong not to let you do it. I‘ll get another seeâ€" retaryâ€"one With a plain face and spectacles, who won‘t attract all the ellgible men and then infuriate me by turning them down?" Joan finished her morning‘s. work, and then after luncheon set off with a fast beating heart for Brook Street and the Salon Celeste, .e of Lon. don‘s most exclusive and fashtonable dreas.making estab!ishments, ment, and also as a hope. it was not that she cared much for the idea of being a mannequin â€"â€" it was a little too much like her .present acâ€" eupation in life. But she had a sense of style in clothes, a little bit of fair for it a» she diffidently assured herâ€" self. If she could squeeze into the world of fashlon somehow or other, there might be a future for her in it. _A pretty sound process is recalled in conmection with farm operations in Canada in earller days. A famâ€" ily shunned borrowing as it might a viper. If a new ‘barn were desired, there was no Punning to the bank for a loan for the purpose. . The family would put away so much . a year out of farm revenues and carâ€" mark it for that barn. The new barn in prospect became a family fetish, but with it a resolve not to borrow to build it. Jt might take six years for the special "barn fund" to reach adequate proporâ€" tions. But when it did reach: such mbuthhnmhul.-m not a cent owing on if. Eternal borrowing is a bad policy. Borrowing is what places indiviâ€" duals and communitles under the burden of interest _ ‘The best way to get rid of interest charges is to stop borrewing. ‘ The Scandinavian countries are unylhobot‘rlhwll to day, and a report rom there states that their debts are small. They paid the future. In Canada we chose 10 do otherwise, and now de not like the situation we created with our Relief Costs in because * have, as you say, done a lot for you! Though, my dear, it bas only been because 1 have wanted to!" ty eyes wide open but not seeing far jeto the future. _ "It‘s quite trve, what 1 say, llu-.‘ moise‘le! If you were a young lady who had to make her own way in the world you could be quile sure of a positon with any modiste, your }!nnu-oule.unnml you will pardon my saying so!" . Borrowing, however, is not a way to salvation. _ There bas been too much borrowis;,, too much mort gaging of the future, on the part of practically all classes across Canâ€" Easy Borrowing TO BE CONTINUED went instead of morigaging â€"Regina Leaderâ€"Post such urban centres alone Show that the marriage rate this year Wil be even higher than in 1934, For the it emint Mn eomen to stepped up to the altar as M-nl\ with 20,798 in 1933. During the first ..? -uth:‘ 1:: year the .mvb:" the Dominion with approxim: 4,667 weddings. _ The province Qubn-ouudmm‘ Prairie Provinces third with : British Columbia fourth with Quebec came second with 2.234, _ th* Prairie Provinces third with 2984, British Columbia fourth with 889 and the Maritime Provinces . 148t with 635. By cities, Toronto led With 1090 weddings as compared . With Montreal‘s 1,688, although the !2tâ€" ter city showed a more marked . !nâ€" create over last year than did . th* former. Winnipeg came third _ with 775 weddings and Vancouver fourth with 607. The purchases of household _ furâ€" niture and equipment, by the ne*wly married couples and the number . f wedding presents showered on them dwml'l:.lflnfln trapacs Yegistared In ths " Samhtaine creases Bureau of Statistics‘ report on _ the changes in the value of retail sales during the popular wedding monnths, particularly in the furniture store reports. words, 146,045 gersons were . confiâ€" dent of their econo®i¢ future. The number of marriages solemnized in 1984 was the largest in the past five years and represents 89 increase of 9,158 or 14.3 per cent. over 1933 figures. Of this total, 23261 or less than half took place in <itles and other large urban centres Of 19909 ried and s e un hi indicates, ‘Poostbly‘ vetter un Pig caretuly confidence and Lpn'lu economic conditions in Canada. Government statistics show that 73,023 marriages were performed in 1984 or, in “!I' population or over. Oitawa â€"â€" The fact that more young couples are now E*Wing marâ€" bother me," an executive tobld us last summer. "I simply refusse to think about it. After all, we allways have hot days in July and Auugust and 1 decided long ago that 1 nmindâ€" ed them less if 1 stopped commmentâ€" His iden isâ€"a good rule for all of us to follow. 1t itands to reeason that the less you think about seomeâ€" thing unpleasant, the less it ananoys Since nothing you do or say will make the breezes cooler, you nmight as well accept the wenther philonsoâ€" phically and forget about it. ‘ Wear the covlest clothing you can buy, of course. ‘This means umderâ€" wear of sheer cottons (new and fashâ€" bublolhhnu:::u silke tht“ absorb moisture let the air get ing Dark Sheers Best Town | Frocks For Hot Weaather to your skin.. For town, yowu‘ll probâ€" ably discover that dark chiffon jackâ€" et dresses and coolâ€"looking, mhortâ€" sleeved prints are the most commfortâ€" able. White hats and other necesâ€" sories make you look cool, even to yourself. Remember to put on fresh h erie and stockings each .l'm‘ Incidentally, it‘s better not t0 wear thnn-lrdlhlll'odunh\ succession. Take two baths a dayâ€" a lukewarm one before y0U go to bed and a cool shower when yOu get up in the morning. Government Figures Re‘¢al Gardens at Jamn: 73,023 Weddings Perfomâ€" ns of mds is ed in 1934 â€" Largest M be fated to trave! Five Years. |""" Purk. _ _ | Lo id _ The chain of « Lady man, speaking on« Church mkuyr:tlu- q:: conference of the Press and Pubjes;. lens Boar? of the Church A*strbly , said she was sorry there WAS Agep. erel ,unm of the gimple tagy. ing ~f the Bible, which was lye)y lm If you are home at lunch, ABOther shower will help you to get through the afternoon in a more POBeqful manner. _ If not, at least wash your M_mh.-m\ndlubul’;:g on a whin tonie before y9U spply fresh makeup. * Regrets Bible Not More Widely Read The Prosw provided a pr®at tBp,| of teaching Mx * **made use of more y© kasAmew that in the minds of many thars 33 an objection to pubMeity und to.| paganda, but, speaking with all ..‘ ference, she said that Jesaa Christ understood the value of and pric tined wkuy and propaganda ;,, ruch and in sending out pig isciples as messengers. :‘ Getting Married; (India to London Zoo Confidence Rouml Lendon i: Weekly mm _| _ Singh was born :s the Zoological "No, covering Lion Culy; Travels His Highness 8 Sahib, to bring his from India. One : the palace the : ingly mentioned. | and there presente o the «mall boy, whose mother chaed herself with the transport of o« gifi. Singh was thes barely a fort night oldâ€"an odi little bundle of| rough fur, the si~ of a large kitâ€" ten. Plainly, he ~ust be gradually weaned. Agcordin:ly, he was separâ€" ated from his mot><r for some hours every day untif )« became accusâ€" ‘h:d to h& t.-iulh A ::r. enough . tra ng cage o.l-tli-un was â€" constructed and fitted on the cutside with opaâ€" que blinds which ould be pulled in order to give him the darkness which "Conside |r for the rights and sensibilit‘«« of others is merely a genero‘ definition of courtesy."â€" Em!y Post. In his splendid there his mmhl:cl..n:h-lu not disdain to take totice of the chilâ€" dren whom he *as come to regard as playmates, ‘When the time came for his final hld to Foubgto ap. and. was fed to § to lap, was at twoâ€"hourly fntervals by having milk poured dows his throat. . He an event of the day. He proved an affectionate and playful as a kitâ€" ten, early learning to recognize friends and to keep his already forâ€" miduble claws carcfully sheathed a playing with them. down, becoming, if possible, even more goodâ€"tempered and more tractâ€" able than he hatl been before. But, alas‘ he has g so much in bealth and nmml.rn whils bis manâ€" ners are perfect, the respm «‘hilsy of keeping him has &« «® great for any but the skilled a ons« ants of the zoological Society‘s Gardens, As soon as he was s:rong enough to walk & small collar ::d rl\d: were provided for him; the sight o Singh at his daily exercise on the boat deck of the liner soon became _ The visit of ‘am inspector of the Ministry to the country house which was to be Singh‘s temporary abidâ€" ing place resulted in the desiaration that, within a few m.r cautions, a largé conservatory a walled rose carden would be suitâ€" able quaranting, It was found that he flourished best on a widelyâ€"advertised infant food to which raw ezys were added. :o,'- brushed and groomed .:‘:rk,- as carefully as a prize ingese; his cont became sleeck and glossy and he remained entirely free from many trace of "z00 smell." Travelling fu the suite of Hiis Highâ€" To these quarters Singh was transported from Dover in his own car; in them he quickly settled EEWM, HNWC INVC PeSHy MECEPIeMEG 57 the I of London of t c FAp “-hm H..,onhd:: a country hous@ sympathy and helf of the officials in the Ministry of Agriculture. the lon of the party. The Italiss and the French Govâ€" ernments gave him special facilities for crossing their frontier, but in England as a lion he would fail within the four corners of stringent antiâ€"rables regulations; and for a while his owners were in despair, But interest in the journey of an Indian lion cb so young to Engâ€" land, and the ready acceptance by Singh quickly exme in cvery sense No bwsâ€"a9 stainbess â€"â€" Try D. D. D. the most is lulncw,ï¬q Nabd to prove | is muade L the own se foothing 2 dn »,I:Kiire STOP THAT ITCH l:sue No. 31 â€"‘35 D. D. D. Preseription Speeds Relief Was to convey him to the nts was started a small boy in he asked his & as a guest of Mahaajah Jam a lion or a tiger sht at dinner in uest was laugh» met with an im« Singh, the only a the Zoological ar m‘h‘ there was noth» : he would seon is far as to Reâ€" to write from the same copybook in school?" The answer to this objec. tion proves how strougly bandwriting DOES show character, Bocau:e, if __"We have over 70 breeding stock. The largest fiock in Canada. In fact, more inan all the rest of Canada put together, and have been the means of starting th:.‘ other un:. to perâ€" ragute them, supplied tha. breed "mg stock fer most of them. Whes inised under the ord‘nary hen they become as tame a> domestic torkeys, “I:L""“ they â€" are otherwise very wi Recently, several . correspondents have aked questions about the staâ€" tus of Grapho‘ogy, posing certain ob. jections against it, and in this ar. ticle 1 will deal briefly with some of these angles; you will study the writing of a single class of students who have learned writing from the same copybook, & few years afterwards, you will NOT FIND TWO WHO WRITE ALIKE Each one writes differentlyâ€"a dit. ferent slant, a different pressure, and Aiffering . conformation . of I‘n his is «o, despite the training 1 ve had in a standardized writing ha.d, and proves that, as one grows, one‘s character changes.or strength. ens, and o.¢‘s bandwriting changes, "How can handwrit.ng stow one‘s cheracter, when we are taught how Recently, a colleague of mine pick. ed out a dozen specimens of writing from my fles, and, hiding the names of the writers, asked me to state which were writtee by men and which were the work of women. This On the Prairies the sandhill crane hkunhutbo“vl.:'“l:vhy‘:' of Canada, but though ed! it a very different bird indeed from the genuine wild turkey of the Southern States which is the progenitor of the domestic turkey, In this connection it is interesting to note that the Wild Animal Park Society at Moosejaw has been ¢xâ€" perimenting with the wild turkey of the South and from young birds imâ€" ported now boasts the possession of a fock of 150, the largest in captivity in Canada, "In 1920 there wasn‘t a wild turâ€" key in Canada, and our society im« ported three birds at a cost of $100 in order that we might show the public the difference between sandâ€" hill cranes (so often called wild turkeys) and wild turkeys. The only ul-lnrluluhnh the noise they make while in the air. The birds themselves are about as difâ€" ferent as birds could be. We have since imported several more turkeys and have raised and sold turkeys to various parts of Canada. and last Fall had a flock of over 150 birds. ‘Does handwriting show the sex of the writer?" This question bas been asked me quite frequently of late, and my answer is that while it is possible for the trained graphâ€" ologist to make certain guesses of the sex of the writer at times, there is really no definite scientific founâ€" dation for this. We all know men who write in a fominine hand, and vice veria, wo. men who write a markedly masculine handâ€"the reason is simply that these people typify these same traits in their characters. Some men . are almest feminine in their Wabits, and Wild Turkey Makes there are women who act in an al. most masculine way. ‘These charac. teristics are shown in their bandwrit. Ing. Your Handwriting Reveals Your HOW TO MAKE ICED TEA Infors six heasing tesspoons of Selede Black Tes in a pint of fresh boiling (Medicine Hat News) All Rights _ Geoffrey St. Clair that information is being obtained continually concerning this very im. yâ€">tant angle of the science, and it is true that, even now, certain dis. eases can be indicated by handwrit. Now and again it is possible to help a writer to know a litte more about his or her bealth a; a result of a scrutiny of handwriting, but as yet there is no gecurate and perm. anent means of determining ailments or discase, th all cases. Amile. Hewerd, i is probable tnat angle. , It is probable that before very long, as a result of the various researcho; that are being car. ried on in handwriting, some definâ€" ite scientific evaluation will be posâ€" sible to determine the writer‘s sex. "Can disease be revealed by one‘s handwriting?" â€" This is an angle of "eut and dried" scale to determine these sclentifically is to go beyond the facts. test revealed that 1 chose nine out of the twelve correctly. 1 might add that my friend had purposely choâ€" sen specimens that be thought would prove puzzling. it all goes to «bow that it is sometimes difficult to speâ€" cify the sex of the writer, and as there is very little to be pained by YOUR like it, but as it really is? And have anxious to know something of their characters? Send specimens of the handwriting you want analyzed, stat. iIng birthdate in cach case. Enclose 10c coin for each specimen and en. close with 3¢ stamped addrecsed en. Londonâ€"Only one passenger in 96,000,000 carried on British railâ€" ways last year was killed, according to Ministry of Transport figures pub lished recently. The proportion of inâ€" jured was one in 3,000,000. e 421, 73 Adcipide Street West, Tor. onto, Ont. All letters will be treat. ed in strict confidence. In accidents other than train acâ€" cidents 68 persons were killed, mainâ€" ly through misadventure or carciessâ€" ness by the victime themselves. hi B Bb e trichbe Oiiortecti noid critical time muh.u“‘_'_' healtby wife and mother she ~ Kill 1 in 96,000,00% YOU like to know The Island Highway ends at Menzies Bay, north of _ Campbell River, and there is ‘a 150â€"mile stretch of country beyond, practically unknown, with the little coast rettle= ments, of Port Alice and Port Hardy cut off from communication except by sea and air. The occasional explorerâ€" timber cruiser, government surveyor or airmanâ€"brings us back word of this country from time to time, a« grecing that it is a beautiful wilderâ€" ness, but nobody else ever gets into it. It is an hour by air from thiv eity, and it is beautiful country unâ€" known. But when it comes to talking about _ the _ inaccessible _ natural beauties of British Columbia, where shall we begin and end? That very country of the Delia Falls, which is to all intents and purposes still a terra incognita. is less than halfway up the Island. Nearly all the north end of the Island, too, is that sort of country. * Ningara), is indeed a wonderfol sight. _ We do not doubbt that the Publicity Bureau is right in thinking that it would be a great tourist â€" atâ€" minders from time to time. We know that such reminders are little likely to eventuate, for a long . time‘ to come, in the project of opening up our unknown British Columbia. We suppose it is not much use to expatiate upon all these highways of ours that end in the wildernessâ€"we have got to get them made passable before we can extend themâ€"but we ought to remind ourselves about them every little while. Do you _ realize that the straight road between Vanâ€" couver and Calgary is cut off by an eightyâ€"mile. gap between Revelstoke and Golden, and that you must make It is inaccessible by road, and to reach it you must go by boat to the head of Great Central Lake, and then by a forest trail for thirteen miles, until you come to Delia Lake and glacier. We speak of all this just by way of reminder. It is useful, it seems A genuine waterfall, 1480 feet high, even if the volume of it is Tot® m "order io. compiete that journey by road, _ reachihg up towards Jasper. ends in the wilderness, A~200â€"mile trail continues the eastâ€"west road ‘ from, the Cariboo through the Chilcotin to Bella Cooln on the coast, ‘ Most of our great inland empira waterfall, neverthcless, and a beau» tiful sight, the noisy music of it to be heard for miles away through the Island forest. * Trince Rupert. . The road the North; Thompson ‘out of â€"â€" Kamloops, (Vancouver Province) As the story comss ‘to us, the Publicity Bureau is V‘storia believes that Vancouver Island pomssesses the highest waterfall in the w ** It | is the Della Falls, thirteen miles north« west of Great Central Lake, reputed 10 be 1.580 feet high. The gazeteers do not support the elaim that this is the highest waterâ€" fall, but certainly it should rank among the first hali dozen known falls in the world. If the other information about the Delia Falls, as given out by the bureau, is true, then we agree that they should be better known. _ We are told th§t it is not very large in of British Columbiaâ€"do you realize it?â€"after seventy years of discovâ€" ery and settliementâ€"is still wilderâ€" volume of water, but a ness, still almost the country of the unknown. Appointment Honor To Farming People Says Mrs. Fallis 'mwâ€"vmum by her appointment, Canada‘s seeâ€" ond lady Senator, Mrs. Howard T. Fallis, carries on her housâ€"hold hold dutics as usual. "I consider the appointment as an “""""::'flllnn?holm hofll"lhmhu going Mrs. Fallis states politics are in :mz..-mnm.'u‘. to stay away from echool to attend political mectings, My father was considered the bost MANY B.C. ROADS END IN WILDERNESS impromptu speaker in L MR erad c o To C C uy “‘mlllhulll‘-.vl-y ability from him." II:. 'O-A:'ll.lor has ~.ad...= wl murvey political N..," in addition to studying Hansard ivhnï¬o“mhhl:u,hh. ':.?‘ l ::{-l':u haw nfl TATY TCAAY Reys she wep ‘m“ wil come when women would have a fair numerical represenstion both in the House of Commuas ans the Senate. present a different viewpoint in vial today," ars. Fath® Wayy in a place for thim. The w the â€" ditrict, which