"I‘m afraid we‘re done!" he a‘4. "I\‘s noi too rough, is it? 1 don‘t mind about it being rough," Joan eaid, hastily, though she rather dreaded facing the stormy ses out there in the Corsair‘s launch, "It is rough," he said. "But that‘s mnot tis pointâ€"*=en i* we cout do it it would be no gooi. The Cormesr hus put on to sea!" "Do you mean thatâ€"she‘s gone? "Yâ€"*. Ancett signailed the harâ€" lour, with a flash signal, thet the yacht was drageing her moorings «and he was going to taxze her out to sea to prevent her being run ashore. Apparently she began to drag . as soon as the wind got up, for the hand who brought the Inunch bwik had a message from Ancett to a8y that we‘d better go out at onee as he dida‘t think she would be able "I suzppose there‘s no post‘bility of it being to> rough for us to go out ?" "It‘s rather worse than I thought &(hvunfluhb{'hm- "But don‘t worry. We won‘t go out if it looks too bad. . , ." "But we must go out!" Joan said. He smiled at that, and observed thet one must put life before conâ€" venllon; with this disconcerting reâ€" mark he 1sf" %er, and she sat alone In the nu.st lounge, where the curâ€" tains were billowing and > . Ing About in the windows. Mer heart beat rather hard as she wondered what was going to happen. Had he kncwn. she wondered, that this storm vas going to be s3 bad? Had the whole thing been a trick?| She had not brought any money | with her; se was alone, stranded,| and at Hannen‘s merey in a strange foreign town. The Moorish waiter who brought her coffee and took it |‘ z-y agmin, softly and silently, with whites of his eyes gleaiming in his dark feee, made her feel still more uncasy. She wont cut to the|j terrate amd lou>ed s: the harbour,| , bat it was to *~.. ow to see anyâ€" 4 thing; one coula lights bobbing | ; uwmmmwevhnflu¢ pick out the lights of the Corsair, and the wind was howling in a faâ€"|, whlon which suzgested that there € was lm sea down there ir. the | , black k T At last Hanuen came. after beâ€" Ing away for over an hour. His face "Wil it be terribly rouga going out in the launch?" Soan asked, when he took her i=side and orderâ€" ed coffee for her. "I‘m going down to the harbour now, to see how it looks," Hannen yoad back to Tangiers; thick clouds ebseured the moon. the wind blusterâ€" @d, and the chauffeur got out and put up the hood of the car. By the fime they had arrived at the the wind was a shricking gale But the moment passed unknown to him, for he was thinking about the rapidly rising wind. "We‘re in for a storm." he said. "Don‘t be silly," said Joan. But sho did at that moment feel a reâ€" luctant yearning towards him, a mad impulse to make amends; as someâ€" :'-kllnudulhth-hllol ingara, fancying a plunge into the depths, she imagined for an instant yielding to the personal force of i..... Which frightened her so . , . | "I‘m very sorry in that case," said Joan, sincerely. HMe looked at her searchingly in the gloom, and queried lightly: "Is this pityâ€"so akin to love? But I don‘t want that sort of love," he added, snd then asked: "Do you ‘hllhnl‘-nvupd.l-,hy my fearful upbringing, ‘dreadful,‘ you call itâ€"that no one will ever "Being leathered with a dog whip? Why, on several occasions you would h:_o_lh‘l- have done it yourself!" kn t _ "Weuld you treat a child like that ?" "How dreadful!" said Joan. She felt so angered against his uncle. and so filled with pity for Hannen, in spite of herself, that she could hardly speak. J "Yon can if you‘re old Uncle Charles Hannen, with five millions in the bank, He wanted to harden meâ€"he‘d have said that he did it on MAundHhMu-o.l‘-‘ hard, aren‘t 1?" fl:_m.-H’w beâ€" gome manneauin a Mmmmammm& Yor a crule aboard his yacht. Yoses fo 5 eaie Soaitle Mult, "It is dreadful! 1 hate to think Joan leaves Mizs La Pontaine to beâ€" Velvet d Steel THE REMARKABLE ROMANCE or DICTATOR e gaie _ ~| "Fhis 1» the ng rouzh going|Lindstrom «* â€"oan asked,| who, now mo e and orderâ€"|up her work others which the harbour|into bitter wir ks," Hannen| of iey roads. ;‘.Fl::d “h the memory of those wi Â¥ m -w“ from fl: n::d. Net more blessed The have SE9T thenaiven unipotind wl Yo w t In the world."â€"Mrs, Jameson. ‘ SA vight shen," came back the! Pro® SÂ¥dney they hope to catch chairman, "bil say waitzes, lcl-ln(" u‘:'m m"n way ~to and tango, Yes, and the rhumba. |M.\Mnn‘nllonl~m \ o esc of Africa and then go through Euâ€" "Blessed is the memory of those rope and England, returning by New who have kept themseives unspotted York and Montrea!‘. from the world. Yet more blessed The sisters suld they bad no speâ€" -ï¬:r.::thmyof&:; elal -umhrmmuh ad« w Ya themseives unspot! venture. except for re to in the world."â€"Mrs, Jameson, | "see the world." I Trustee Joseph Jeffery, who had asked that the teachers be commendâ€" dfwwmmufldw. sald he woulin‘t use the word "ballâ€" expect to maistain discipline in the ’duun-, in a:‘.,u.. ‘:.':. Carrothers, ret chairman board. It was his speech which lfl;: a motion commending teachers thelr dancing Instruction. 1 Chairman Carrothers said he was unalterably opposed to tenchers givâ€" ing lessons in ballroom dancing. "It sertainly car‘t help discipline," he sa id teaching boys in their es how "to ogute tomte rearodly mxml Ont.â€"London l;..d..: Education decided recently young n-noebo-l!.ch-nlhull'h not be commenied for teaching older boy students the art of bailroom inkaWlien PhatconbdP es ouindPac sc 1 ind 22 u'ouhrnn.hnnhdcnqfl to stop her when he felt that her asâ€" sistance was needed. [ _ No student of medical books and generally ohliged to work in some met Tehted sls ty x 2o Cn o a a "Grandma" Lindstrom has never last alone in some lonely shack has ever bmnlnmdbyï¬-ouu,'ï¬.u known and loved by all the residents O'_!b“dflhc_-_n.y-.._ alone in This is the recont of "Grandma" Mme:mamm who, now more than 80 has given up her work of love and care for M'Nflhuhhlhr.lnlnul into bitter winter weather over miles of ley roads. _ No call from a franâ€" tie husband, whose wife was lying Tenchers who spend much ialist in obstetrics, yet she has :c‘mdk »f having brought more 100 babiss into the world successâ€" *="; since she passed her 60th birth Aged Swedish Nurse Assisted At More Than 100 Births is so e Ese though obviously he was pleased. "To see you smile like that! But I said, you know, that I‘m perfectly harmlessâ€"toâ€"nlght !" NO letters after her name ecialist in obstetrics, vet i "No!" This time her smile was raâ€" diant, as she realised that her fears mbout his lack of scruple had been By are usually brief . Until then, I‘m afraid we‘l have to stay where we are. Terribly awkward, I know, but what must be, must be. You had Hurhnnn.-hnâ€"l‘llpud find a berth for myself somewhere else. You won‘t be afraid of staying here alone ?" _ _Joan smiled, forced to believe him; and after a pause she asked,; as casually as possible: "What are you going to do?" "Oh. Ancett will bring her in again in the morningâ€"these storms aky! d'qddly. "I might one day arrange someâ€" thing of the sort if things go on any longer as they are!" he said cvolly. "But 1 give you my word of honour, I did not arrange this, 1 d-nâ€"'unmu.u-....{ jure storms and winis out of the AN INDUSTRIAL of their They are C.ara M. Wilson, a school teacher, wn« Katharine. a stenograâ€" pher. They started out on the first lap «i wheir journey aboard the Briâ€" tish freighter Harmatris, on which they signed as members of the crew, early last month, The Harmatris will take them to Sydney, N.S.W. | An pt to work their way -um‘ulla;u’hm-. made by two yeung Vancouver sisâ€" Boxer operations of 1900, and there was a destroyer Hon.r.'h the 1»‘ War. Research, borne by three eariiv« :Nfldlh)hvy'-ln:.u“,h.‘ tting designation for new C netle survey vessel -.‘( Work Their Way Around The World ! _ Observes the London Times â€" Among the names assigned to ships of the 1985 new construction proâ€" gram are Liverpoo!, _ Manchester, Oh.sntn.Cuhbt.m,m Sheldrake, Kittiwake, Gleaner, Plovâ€" jer and Research. The three cruisers 'lhhnulnlhllu-oll“ elunvm-uhlpabhld*u ‘in this new class. An innovwation " ts in this new class. An innovation is '::'tihn:hmlhtlu- chester may have a representative ship in the Fleet. ‘Culduwllln?::uaurh: marine monsters Grampus a Narwhal, submarine mineâ€"layers. The name of Sterlet will be the twelfth, '""l'-l-c-mh‘l'-u-nu..l es of fishes, which have been chosen tion of Chancellor Engelbert Dollfus. ., Miss Wambaugh said she saw v . number of posters in Italy a fow [lvnh ago which might be construed |As tbreatening to England‘s African terriiories, one of which proclaimed: "To Whem is East Africa? To Us!* "I belteve that the Italian program it the wroatest threat to British power that has ever occurred in my ifetime," _ Miss _ Wambaugh . sald. "And 1 do not regard it as merely threatening Lake Tsana or her Afriâ€" can lands but as threatening her whole prestige in the Mediterrancan." _ Miss Waimbaugh said that Germany appeared to be eager to maintain frield‘y relation with England at this juneture, and that the German pub. e has manifested cansiderable fee‘. ing against Mussolini ever since his interference with the Austrian.Ger. ma affairs at the time of the ashlom. Nn.anN-vW-fln ’ ‘The fact is that England is ab. solutely committed to the principle that any action must be League acâ€" }ihl."-ho-ld.unm.. added, the present situation must deâ€" velop either a war, a satisfactory agreement between Italy, Ethiopia and the League, or a complete yleld. Ing by Mussolini a surveying shi ‘ ‘These countries all see their only hope lies in coflective security againat aggression. They know that any one of them might be some other nation‘s Ethlopia." "No one pretends that England controls . Russia," Miss Wambaugh said. "But Russia is frmly supporting the League today. 30 are the Scan dingvian countries, but it is self.inâ€" terest for all of them rather than any leadership of England‘s that they are following. on various European questions, Miss Wambaugh said Eng‘and‘s selfâ€"inter. est colncided closely with the present trend of League activities, but she scoffed at what she said is a frequent allegation that England controls ml League for her own purposes, Against Aggression SmM_By Nations Woman Who Attended l.-n-'n‘ Recent Sessions Tells of Collective Security Canary f Each Convia; wal Nfl":nit,Sï¬hu.am "The public can ‘:“" *'.'I:I th opportunity + G. Wells. * greater number, 086 olt. _( " / A== **ll be grateful that more and more of our people understand and seek the n:n.--a EC Clubs t fatten thelf exchequers by “"""l j0, on their m a city spelling :..â€,;:.3.. ecl Ee "yut 6‘ . Sontietion might| on that sc public leh:l pupils be barred 'I ‘Mtâ€"»nct, to stage a match between ‘ity *»uncil and the Board “ «i.ication or a picked, team from the Board of Trade. The Service "° would be a drawing card, for Instwnee qo "1, i, Tewing card, for FIRPIRL : ~corndihe mc of a wordâ€"he dictates it to a :.enoâ€" Mlllklmlhhh“ the rest. And the stenographer, if whe is wiseâ€"and most of them areâ€" keeps a dictionary in her desk for uho y cases of emergency. Spelling is rapidly becoming a lost art. People nowadays are looking for "'""‘""*Hudl-uu:c‘; “‘"a-lrruudnluw dancing becomes monotenous; amaâ€" Pn B hys agmand ; musical affairs, unless fairly class, do lot‘n“un;‘: Why 4...“':-'.‘ t oldâ€"fashioned apelling r‘"“uhldll-h". hold t "We can well be Phe Rotary Club of the town of ';;:-. ll':h"l --:u:u ‘::: ,T.. county when a picked lot of champion speliers from all paris of the ‘county participated in a spelling match to determine the county . champlonship, senior ani junior. _ Something new in a way; htl*llflln‘l-(unq fashioned form entertainment. Back in the â€" aldem ~dave . anallias Cmm CYeY #00. bee us us wrvite at ance, dinte Make css mu, Proferred. servers, “ the philosophical works and 4 with longâ€"term and life prison libraries, have voic that, during the presont philosophy and the fine _ _ _ "" NOUbEfuI policy, Some obâ€" worvers, _ noting the popularity of }M'.duu belles Jettres with longâ€"term and life patruns of """"hhwnmu.»,. that, ‘-‘-: presont dark ages, philosophy the fine arts would somehow be preserved in stateâ€"main ;‘"Mm Mm-uh. like scl.mnr. musical critlcâ€" lam nder this new canary AAA? , DaCmLCCmaTe VTO MEVE SeCH selling the birds for $2 each is likely "oi‘onutt. - s course, Stateville‘s appreciatâ€" on of music is likely to suffer, too. For the restriction edict is said to have been eaused by a violent quarâ€" ’“mt'.nnun!-nmr the respective singing abilitirs of """F‘l-,'lbmn.".n,| will have no primadonna stuff in his ~.u,~â€"u-'~n~thmr.' los of the feathered songsters. . | Write John C the canary raisers 64. , _pr "eli@8 . are too many for Stateville. He has limited canaries to a quots of one per prisoner. Obâ€" dnf} Ihacki® "oe birds better {‘".':*7 Arm.m::: '.u in m cage find a more conâ€" :“ m&umm â€" The Wardeh, Rowever, thinks that canarics for male. What more fittâ€" Ing eccuation " Who should know jow to raise cage birds better than f A a hary ie tm Msm in baad Regan has :.ul a reduction _ in 2.."."!'&,'!% It seems that :;. aubtle an idea for lhâ€"c:l:-: \ 1O P nitle minds of criminals and 1-.! HTe - ' e Femaiin ‘h’. «and never heen l.'l'll:: Snde o9 Bdant life through the deâ€" Tak NoT Of wealth would seem to be ant . life From the Chicago Daily News .llugi‘;.._h' walls the abund» (Owen Sound Sunâ€"Times) Gent‘al Ave @reatep stand m fot better an it has received â€" appreciate."â€"H. Franklin D. Reâ€" 2%“ E* #ag .,._"~_ 5| That t; for one “lkhc i to have pall has a '“.'Mâ€"-'m spelling. â€" The | ture, has not time with ; nevart anallice! s 2l | _A CANADIAN hEADMA&TER by | Watson Kirkconnell {Clauks Irwin, Toronto) is a orief blogâ€"aphy of the late Thomas Allison ®_rkeonse!! hy his son. Dr, Kirkeonnell taught in the schools of ‘Onteric® for "filty years, chiefly at Pori Hope and Lindsaz These are but bare facts concernâ€" form, that he has béen ::ulld upon to have it published. good fortung an excellent screen version of Les Miserables was produced reâ€" cently in France, and the publish aamnna s ness Comp» ~< hlnlo‘tfudnumbmm‘ This is the history of this little M:Ayrulhhhrhm peg some forty years ago decided, ‘after two careful readings of Victor Mugo‘s Les Miscrables, to tell the iml-lbm'uï¬hphnd a scheduled lecture, It was received with such enthusisam that before he ‘hdommmdltum.h had repeated it more than 800 timâ€" brennliiged to raject mod iavitstinn one in every four which crowded upon him. From so many of these who have heard Dr. Cleaver have come requests for his story in permanent been JEAN VAL JEAN as told by Solâ€" mflum. (‘g-m Irwin, ‘1;'..... “ over Caants, who heatd Dr. Cleaver c.n‘ this famous story. that vast union of states, by a visâ€" ,Rhlldthblnhr. Mr. Macdonell has a deep sense of humor combined with a keen insight of human naâ€" lhn.o-hlhrbu chapter â€" deals with an afterncon‘s attendance at a dootball game. He covers a vast amâ€" nivan ie m t n more, , huchnulhet.gum. tuto, "ietratiing te l Tame 2 hnd in e popanee co to a episode. A perfect gift to any Anâ€" ;;m.nd«lolloefluu‘&odf , 80 rare we could not rake kindling kmmuumumm ‘lonhll.'omuuuul.hr .ur.lullnnumu.‘-l.'l\only ,|reason 1 went on up nad broke the .\ women‘s record was because 1 could. humlutrnuonnnnud tumme-but.l-l'nln. lmkhm'lnflbc.l'lcl'o'l hnowpnm-‘mmm vh'.l“nlltblul-'.n! To »m.m-umo--..:m-m | the photographer asked me to smile lorn.lellnlhndlh-n.lm so mad. Mmiv. Dyhrenfurth «xplains, how. _ ever, that if there is one thing great. |or in her life than her dislike .or mountain climbing, it is her love for hrh-inl.nclnur.hnh&- u-mmnw elimbing career at the age of tan. Wncs t T BW Macdonel! (Macmilian‘s, Toronts) is delightful readingâ€"one of the I<think, of Impressions gethored of entertaina "A VISIT TO AMERICA" by a.G puud cCon ceae n 2o C her record.breaking climb and which mumo«-nmm to death, Mfluï¬nnmw_'u‘ avalanches roaring down the .“‘ tain, the snow so thick we couldn‘t her _ Bhe says she thinks records are allly. Sports should be for the fun of it and, in her opinion, there is no fun in mountain climbing. She gives a graphic deseription of n.uu-,nl that caught the party at 24,000 feet on mâ€"mm; mh‘hdflom‘.m tain elimbing record hates mountains and climbs them only to please her husband and children, This is not nlll!.ll-lluohn-m-tu ‘..’- Hettle Dybrenfurth . who, in llu.nutolllomqm Mary peak in the Himalayas, a glant of 24500 fret and outdid the mark of 22900 feet sot by the late Mrs. Bullock.Workmann in 1906, She says sho thinks samscrs _ To Please Husband Tea at its Best TEA . He looks as nice as nice But ! wish he‘d grow a "uhhmhhlhhou: Our rover seems just right to me ‘There‘s 1 Tut he dotan‘t then s Peaigens *** The next door has one 1 know, ""n-""'-ih.bll-ou‘ l'uurl-ur"ht.-m, He has t and A'--'.-'n':"u...a"-.:‘.'.'.’..":."’ And a little tail he‘ll wag for you. Dad he‘s finizhed Hy. looks, as. nice ms mier ton BG The Book Shelf ’“’",:‘“.-lmm»run-u ner yerson Press, +Toronto) brilliantly illustrated by Elsie Deane. Contains some verse for children that is quaint and delightfyl, Plorâ€" ence Steiner in this volume of verse shows a deep understanding of chilâ€" dnu'nvih-u‘-l*fllln‘ work is based on actual happenings in the bewildering life hnuuflchmdnnn. derstanding, All pupils and teachers Kml&mmm‘ iÂ¥ oty+ * â€"â€"leR to ; » 'lnhlnlhlh(nbnmon.- fl-ludhh-n.l:l-d-dlrh almost comparable value to Whenever His Majesty ‘ gets away h-mlo-fuk.n:mulub-“\ ingham Palace and retires to mmuw. of the first things he does, his health permitting, is to ride out to the fields in search of grouse and pheasants. Aldnhh-nfut-uunlud the King‘s gun. BY MAIR M. MoRGAN Wing George still retains the and the hand that : ie m sns h t certainly the best shot among APPLY HINDS See how quickly it soothes King of England t 4 Still Crack Shot of love for another person rather than lsue No. 52 â€"â€"â€" ‘3§5 _ to the world‘s knowledge, and there must be a real satisfaction in such work whether one cares for the sub. Mumlmmm, eauses one to wonder how the meâ€" moirs of the majority cf men and women who have done things would from record breaking, Mme, Dybren. Unqucstionably, back of herâ€" pro. testations, there is more than the obedience of a dutiful wife. _ Apart from record breaking, Mme. Dybren. est sport in the world les on the peaks that have never beenâ€"seated. "Nl"hnnnil-hnn-h‘ jJust because she knows it makes bite for the game Itself? â€"â€" Despite 1is 70 years, Sandringham, one #hter of an g* he does, his|"led to the is to ride out to|aD4 mother h of grouse and|(Celtic) ‘¢a teenth.com ; ast man to reload|ProbAbly th _ Eeveralugists Ing things that e» calling them by i Imows."â€"G. K. C% Su Drooches, There is authentic recand, moreove», of one awallowins lish dogs, it was brought out. hove a®#allowed C3iH4, ctoncs, rubber hat‘s 'l'tm‘-lhmdlhlmu-h u-n-ur-_ummmm Frate among his cows increased sharp. Iy when he DEKAR 16 ombine iL maids. The milkmaids dropped hair. pins, and the cowa, innocently en. Bo the dog, a legding RBoglish vot. arinarian pointed ow? in a recent lec. lmhnflqxh-‘ynl-dnu neaulres .ilness th Lowi forelgh bodieg. " . """O"€8 *watowing Heirpins Don‘t Sound At All Palatable ago but they did not seem cver to have been admitted to Parliamentary LL0r 0WV In Scotland, indeed, were admitted as local equally with men man fused to vote,, and that the long strugg‘o for the fomale franchise which began in the middle of the last century and culminated in the Suf. fragette movement in the ycars be. fore the Great War shou!d have been possible in a country which had had rmli'!flfllmnm;-n ‘Mh-mnbhlbou.adum abbezses, as period zï¬m ~"__ APTER a LONG DELAy Considering all this, it is all the l-'lfl'l.lhl..fl.m centuries, women should not only be wick, Anna Despenser, Alienor Counâ€" tess of Ormond, Philipa Countess of Marcd, Johanna Fitzwater, Agnota Countess of Pembroke, Matilda Coun. !tcnd‘.m.nry‘o..h-l.-d _ In those days the ladies were chos. en to appearâ€"in Parliament, and there was no ‘escape for them from their dutles. If by any chance they could not take their places they were bound to find proxies to appear and vote for in that assombly. _ So were at the same time Mary Countess of War. tish woman M.P, under our moders ltulunnlhrln-my.m But the difference between thea and now is that Catharine Countess of Atholl did not seek to be elected to Parliament, but was forced to sit (Celtic) ‘gari of Atholl. That four. teenthâ€"cem«ssy lady of Atho‘l was probably the first Scottish woman M.P. of all time, as the present lady ghter of an En;lish nobleman, merâ€" rled to the e‘#.enth Earl of At>oil, l:flflhv of the twelfth â€"and last One oi the iidy legislators of the reign of Edword I!I. was Certharine c-.n-‘ Of Atvo". who was the dau. men did act as leadera at Wes:. minster; and there is en unvsually Intereating colncidence between the reign of Edward IIL and our own time in that connection. As evaryone knows, the Duchess of Atholl was the first woman to be returned to Parils» ment for a Scottish eonsthuency, moDT C Ws e C T â€"â€"oven eariier than the perioc just mt&hh“umm 694, indeed, ladies of the nobility and aristocracy sat in Council with the Saxon Wites; and in Wightfricd‘s o«uc-mnmmm Mlmlllluï¬uhuuuntou with the king, bissops, and nobles, and five of them signed the decrees drawn up at that assomb‘y, Reverting to women in Parlisment 600 years ago, it is a fact that wo. _ Actually women sat in Pariiament ~â€"or the equivalent of that Assembly Where is an instance of this away back 600 years ago. Incidentaily, it surprise some readers that there mmuhfll-ouuh. ::tlhl.ï¬nlt'-..‘-:luhlfll t Mr. Lioyd George Conll. tha(knn-u-‘okp‘l.(q m-l:mllhrlumu‘n. tiona stand as candidates for Parliament. needed a good deal of persuasion to moke them Iegisiators, _WH bhe. moks Mary Gibson in the Glasgow Herald. That question his now beer ==*!ed, Some prople are surprised that more women have not beew seizing the oppo:tunity to be. come candidates . for Parlismentary ’hâ€"-. It is possible that b«~ there been no female franchise today we would have bad the suggestion that women were being deliberately kept out of Parliament, Actualiy, however. Wou‘d there % more women M.P.‘s or fewer of th«m in the new British Parament than there were in tha w::ymflack in The Fourteenth tury Coâ€"atess »Af Atholl Sat In Council, BRITISH WOMEN IN PARLIAMENT M dolle ons restognimiedibe imcars d dsc +s w 4 seoms that women have always FAMOUS ASSEMDLES t« eertais _ names that nabody Chesterton stonca, rubber bai‘s are still «d‘ssover rerybady knows and to employ milk. miy the first Seot.