-tnlwmmm know. 1 couldn‘t really detest anyâ€" body once I got to know them!" "Well, that‘s an advance at any vate!" Hannen said. At Southampton the "boys were so sorry to leave the yacht that they ulmost cried. Bennv. when he got inâ€" to the roads‘~., actually did. Hannen went to *<.don withâ€" them and there en w ond were all in the back seat, while Joan dhmmhrl was a tight three, Joan wedged in between the â€" chauffeur, who was driving, and Hannen on her other side, was amply protectâ€" ed from the wind. The fact that she was crushed against the chaufâ€" feur hardly entered her consciousâ€" mess, so deeply aware was she of Mannen‘s proximity. To allow her reom he was compelled to sit with his arm behind her shoulders resting on the back of the seat, and at first _ deen teaves to beâ€" Joan began to feel that she might eome to regard Hannen as a friend, though her fear of him in any more o s d she â€"felt â€"would mever leave her, His nature had its kind and gencrous side, and it was mot for nothing that her two young brothers worshipped him. "Mr. Hannen‘s a corker, ain‘t he, Joanny!" Ben said to her. _ "Is he, Benny boy? Perhaps he is, in some ways!" â€" _ â€" _ _ _ So theâ€"trip home drew to its close and they were cruising up the Chanâ€" mi-id-iy'-’-’fo'&;}'t;i; her on one of the rare o¢â€" easions when they were alone togethâ€" or. "Persuaded!" she laughed at the word. "Your ideas of persuasion!" "You haven‘t been unhappy," he stated quietly. rï¬w-lm-v;l-h "I‘ve been happy," she said. "beâ€" To uy you treoght me haree * me C ie looked a trifle dashed, but not Limited. Look for the name in the form of a cross un every Demand and Get about its safety were cormact. _ rated among lb%; methods a a.-:.:mb::du:‘-fl _=Ib average 'â€"'l:h fl: "Asplirin® m‘:z made in uu--::;-mm. "ASPIRIN tbe heart. And the discovery of nsptrn" tigely changed medical se rerentemante ot porte suvare al "Asnirin."‘ most sn aprianies Fee f og opob ns tegornged rhag +d for the relief of headaches; or the md"ï¬!-lq::é? Don‘t Entrust Your Own or Your Family‘s Well â€" Being to Unknown ®Perhapsâ€"detestation is. I‘m not "I think it‘s cured, isn‘t it ?" We ssy kis because, before the From Your Doctor You Take Is Safe. Velvet ad Steel THE REMARKABLE ROMANCE OF AN INDUSTRIAL DICTaATOR Find Out ask your dector what he By Mmu;' whose m""'hï¬"ï¬'i ts liking for some animmls and its dislike of others the mmmmmmmmhmmfl: To and tears? |have stood on a dam and see a lodg» Better to keep in wind the happy in some far spot of Canada or New» stenes. .M-l.numhhnhï¬l Days that were bright, undimmed by |for, withont seeing, the bubbles or cloud oz rain. |thn.-|bllnâ€"tlb~ wompnyssntinatena ht ‘:l_;um.huflumnl-fl.: One.Pupii School: Three pupils atâ€" creature, But even so little as that tended a school near Twordsmuir, is not netesary. To have read of Peobleshire. Two left when their beavers is to Jove them. They have fa‘b.rs moved from the district. Now the quality of dearness, shared with there is uae. The cuncation authoriâ€" the squirsel (the beaver is by famâ€" unl-n‘nl‘dthlmho-.fl-‘n,umm), e est school shall remain open,. More‘guin, and the kinksjou, â€"â€" London farm workers are expectod, ; Times. | merthant thips registered amiee the British flag declined 2,609,49% ons between 1930 and 1984, the Board uf Trade Journal revealed today. On ‘lzl-icll. Mlhn':!“lr' registered. a uu:-mm tons; 4,168 moâ€" torskips of 2,826,160 tons, and 443. wmmmu;.‘ mecording to the Jdarnal‘s statis‘.cs, P | ‘ #4® | M':'w ‘ What shall we keep izom out the misty past? $ ‘ What keep in mind through all the passing years? | Pictures of joys whose memories e‘er shall last? ‘ Or scrrow‘s days with all their sighs 'uimum' Ameriea," . _ _ "I suppose he looks as he looked on hert" she told hereelf, after in naink me boys‘ clothes away upstairs in the dingy little attic. ‘ _ "Well, Joany, did you like it?" "Yes, mother, T did. mother, :fl:..?-fll%dlhn "No. no, my girl. IT‘d have hated being on the water. What was all that about you ard Ar. Hannen beâ€" lnrlmflu"lqn-unel-‘ on l.-:hlli-'. behaved ever so decently, mother, He isn‘t so bad, I don‘t think." "Do you begin to like him betâ€" ter?" "I don‘t dislike him any more." there was something suffocating to her in his nearness. But scon she beâ€" came used to it, and only when she was thrown heavily sgains: him as the car cornered, he looked down at her and smiled with a sudden, unexâ€" nndhll-â€";hrhlnnul.{ but her emotion was too powerful for her to understand whether it whs unpleasant or not. Suddenly she began to think of the scar in his ribs, and the dancer in Buenos Aires who had inflicted the wound; and a violent anger shot through her, changing abruptly to a feeling of dreadful grief. She did not know why"this awful sadness should suddenly overwheim her, but she could hardy speak for it all the vest of the way to town. "I‘m coming for you, * anyhow. We‘ll go and see Goorgina if you‘d rather not be alone with me." This was so encouraging that she mnisthoa esd rackiss is yet was charming it was impossible to be unkind. He drove off, and she went into the house to hear Maude telling their mother all about the wonderful. wonderful time they had hl.‘l‘hmul&uuldluflyhn still for the excitement of telling about it. Seeing them kere in the mean, ‘drab little kitchen she saw how changed they were, how sunâ€" bursed and well! Hannen had been very kind, he could not have been more so. She lost her depression and felt her radiant self. Maude scon went off to report at her sweetshop, the boys ran out to .':y.-uur'.'ï¬ #h-y.d hl'nhlqdm.dhnl and something, some . strange drawning‘ of happiness struggled through the confusion of her fee!â€" ings. Whes she hesitated he clinchâ€" od the matter with a return to his old smiling dominance: Street Mrs. Denby met them at the door with a welcoming smile. "Are you too tired," said Hannen to Joan as the others went into the night ?" Things To Remesber (To Be Continued.) planted asâ€" shelter belts on 55,000 7~* #P‘"ster of IMngWns. She writcs 2‘_ -l;uau. hrlnll""‘"" | atie | planting. Ir-lhn more .: .::‘..-‘= :'.,:..‘::.".:?{ | will be planted in 1986. | day, 1 have always been backward Norman M. Ross, chief of the trea and slow to make friends and, con. | planting division of the federal forâ€"‘requently, I have Â¥ery fow friends. |est nursery station here. and h‘s asâ€"| None that 1 call MBtmate friends. wmflkmuaodmfl.ï¬lhnhuflmkuim | facts and figures and the bn.*nlk:d,.lu&du advertise» |of trees brought by farmers from ment in the â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" inscrted by a |older settled areas provides the levâ€"|"gentleman" who woUld like to most |aler for western agriculture. nu-ul-:n-lolm-nm pulled stakes accompany to partics and break }m.‘ o..:;. -‘wmmdhhmm.mum westward at the turn of the century)I besliated, then Iplttured a young |or_came from the Old Country|®an in a mimilar position to mysei, | brought their love of home beauty #9 1 repled. It has turned out very with them. And in that was born| much differently from what 1 expectâ€" |the tree planting program which is €4. This man was @ridently looking {proving its value in dollars‘ and|for something other than companionâ€" |cents today to modern farmers. fll’n‘lhnml‘l';r-mtm To the credit of the tree planiing| dlficult» esiting e }<> | program was placed better: farn: D2TOBC® "as greatly ppsct me and 1 ly attitude is one of offer more variety of type, uaver: sheuld to" ‘The proctice of knaves be. The practice of duplicating the figures, so as to be equally intelligible from alther slde, is eomparatively modern: it would be interesting to know whether the carlier pictures gave fuller details of in Mas proper (oses, and the‘ Queen ue , ‘ -..a-.:""-:uu of York, wife of Henry VIl, But the lndies, as a whole, are an insipid lot. ‘The 4) Which King shows haif lh(hni xd (2) Mow many jewels are there in the royal caâ€"wn? (8) What do theQueens carry in M)hnt? (3) Which King has two hands? (4) Which King carries the orb? (6) Which Knave. is threatened with an axe? (Y)M$l-lm that does not t (8) Which King wears ermine? _(9) Which Knave has a W on his size the fact of the invisibility of .-dd‘uln_v:cllbt-m Indian Head. Sask.â€"WesternCanâ€" yaising a matter ABOUt which 1 have ada is the forest to its farâ€" atways ‘Intended to Write. it enab‘les -"'-m'.'m- |-Tu-l--‘iluu warning. Providing shade in summer, shield ‘This letter gives me &h opportunity in winter and aiding agrarians in to do so now. their war on drought und soil drift| s miise to Peam Arvenase o22225 Queens are "eycs left" in the proâ€" m?wlo one. â€1 War on Drought â€" Five Million More Will Be ‘ Started Next Year and added home comfort, retention| ‘There it Is. A very old game and d-u-uun.-ullhm'.-u.|~~dauy.uu. fruit successfully, protection ~for|dreds of innocent women and girls stock and poultry, attraction for have been caught in tho mesh of and provision of smm fuel, ter experionce that it > not aiways Fifty thousand trees were planted safeâ€"to answer such asertisoments. in 19001,the first year the federa‘; My correspondent i# fortunate indeed government disvcted the work. ince if she has been able to freoe herself then, Manitoba has panted 18,700,â€"|before becoming wholly ensnared. To 230 broadâ€"leaf and $44,6008 mlnylhllu&l--lnnflayu greens on 32,705 farms and Alberts answer such advertisements., ; records showed 37.879,855 broadieaf | and 661,370 evergreens on 11,123| MY correspondent sooms to have a It has been left for a corresponâ€" d-ucl'n.‘l'lâ€"h.:unnhl] one in w! lzl together u-hl..!':u';l%-lv'- alty). All the others have no more y figures who always get their ui set of syopr the Rings have anly seven among them, and the Knaves six. The Knaves, on the dï¬'hfl»‘ have a monepoly of symmetry, for 3-'-"6-’6'. 'li&'hiiihi"uâ€-i M “ are only figures who always get t! windstarms â€"â€" imnraved --n-!.‘. C The style of all the cards is emâ€" fed 2s 00 acdhay vil In nothing is human nature so unâ€" 7. Bim with the police. If he "persiste, communicate flufl* If he does not turn up a may count ?y--nlt-!:-dyl‘;..bu- that you have profited from your exâ€" perience. Don‘t lct it worry you. Put the whole thing complotely out of your mind. Join some church society or the Y.W.C.A. and find companion. ship that will enable you to faorget about this nasty jar which you have The best thing to doâ€"is never anâ€" n«:mdmw that eaught my correspondent napping. I have known cases where it hasâ€"led to the ruin of a aplenidid type of girl. To my correspondent 1 churches have youth organizations in usually be found, through which one can make friends. Lotély girls can always fAnd companâ€" lonsbip through the medium of one or other of the girls‘.¢lubs that are in vogue today, or through the Y.W. ‘ul-ulhlvhuu-.lu-{ ance from such org@nizations, a let. ter to the secretary will, I am sure, always hbe ympathetfcally treated. mup.cgâ€"mm| | ‘The letter is fro®m & young woman â€"â€"a spinster of thirty.fve. Sho writes I have a letter before me now, ty. pical of a good 1“““ that 1 have received from to time, and raising a matter AbOut which 1 have My correspondent sooms to have a grudge at the paper in which she saw the advertisement, but that is foo‘ish. In all fairness it â€"ought to be said that the greatestâ€"care is gencrally taken to see that advertisements acâ€" cepted for the papers are bona fde, But even with the greatest of care ad. vertisements will sometimes appear that not what they appear to be on NOTE: The writer of this eotumn EVERY DAY LIVING Issue No. 2 â€"‘36 â€" | A WEEKLY Tormc by Or, M. M. Lappin of him turn» i} | Miss Freistater applicd for the license inâ€" March, 1931. The board of examiners denied the application beâ€" cause she wieghed 182 pounds, . Miss Freistater, being fve feet two inches tall, should, in the opinion of the ‘the board, weigh 120 pounds if she formation of women hatera‘ clubs in every university in Canada. He orâ€" ganized the women haters‘ organizaâ€" tion here a few years ago and it has a membership of five. . leease, however, if Miss . Freistater could reduce her weight to 150 pounds within the next siz months. In her application to Commissioner Gruves for a review of the case Miss Wreistater said that she had : * been ab!> to get down to 150 pounus in siz that her mother had not *:en well during the sixâ€"month period and she had to devote so much time to her that she had been unabic w dlet whole.heartedly and had got down only to 160 pounds. She had asked the board, she said, for an extension of another month to get rid of the ten ' In Alberta College f movm:;mm er of the University of Alberta Woâ€" Teard: i didpretion t Rew York bas of New York Slcd an answer with Dr. Frany P. Board of Education of New York has cation to an appeal made by Miss Rose Freistater, of 1995 Davidson avenue, the Bronx, for review of the board‘s refusal of a teacher‘s lcense on the ground that she was over. welght, ‘This requert had been rofused, said Miss Freistater, an action on the part of the board of examiners which she characterized as "arbitrary and So if other var*‘y clubs do spring ac;:hwa‘lhnhm:.‘ merabership goes over ger than a; the University of Alâ€" was to be lHcensed to teach in New Women Haters Teacher‘s License is Refused Because She Weighs 182 Pounds TeA WfHim (Appepmase moprmay ouy :~ 4 banana crates made baby cradies. Bits of lincleum made soles of bed. reom slippers, of which the uppers were made from last year‘s discarded mm'“uh“mum weol from The nedges, wore ‘ased ns miilies for dainty quilts. One ‘of the exhibits, contributed by a Cambridge shire woman, Mrs. Berâ€" nard Jackson, was a beguliful rug made entirely of old sill: stockings on a foundation of coarse sacking. . England and Wales sent work. The exhibits were shown by the National Pederation of Women‘s Istitutes, and they combined beauty with economy. Te Duchess of York, ofered her "The day has gone by when any physicist thinks that he undesstands the foundations of the physica‘ uniâ€" verse as we thought we undertc@d them in the nineteenth century."â€" Robert A. Millikan. The triumph of creative handicraft in an age of machinory was Hlustraâ€" ted by an exhibition in London to Thrift ‘Workshop Has Numiber of _ ' ! â€" !l E I.l.l ‘ «ihkpe o We es d Nes eshee Also in Tablet Form: Before You Give Your Child an Unknown Remedy to Take _ For Your Child When it comes to the frequen Doctors Say PHILLIPS® MADE 1N CANADA a gift, u. l.'l‘-" ! mt @'&‘ fAive parts; slipping, twisting or falling of ladders. Ladders, therefore, should be constructed of substantial maters lal and periodically inspected and maintained in a safe condition. They should be provided with nonâ€"slip feet and where practicable, with safety hooks at the top, Falls from seaffolds, stagings, runways, platforms, ete., may be eaused by defective materiais, slip«‘ pery surfaces, lack of protective rail ing, ete. They, therefore, should hmumm :um. The majority of falls of workers on level surfaces are due to slippery substances, defective flooring, proâ€" truding nails, materials in alsles and ete. If the floors are in good shape, materia‘s propâ€" md-:l*: » p ~ 8« :-ht*unl unobs>.â€"cted well lighted, much will be done 14, Substitutes for ladders, such as boxes, barrels, chairs, ete. 15. Stepping into or out of elevators which have been stopped a little aâ€" ::.nl:rm 17. Winter‘s snow, ice and sleet. It is obvious that stairs and. steps “hbflhnâ€"m substances, loose objects and provided with ‘ubstantial and propâ€" whhhdwuo-l _ The principal causes of falls from It is nbvious that special provisâ€" lon should be made to protect em» mmnm presents its peculiar hazâ€" ards. The chance of slipping is inâ€" tensified by snow, sleet and ice. Suitable precautions should, thereâ€" fore, be taken to guard against such hazards this coming winter. Employees should be encouraged to report and correct unsafe couditâ€" lons and practices. In short, good housekeeping on the part of all concerned will greatâ€" Ty astist in eliminating the many scaffolds and platforms. 9. Shoes with runâ€"over heeks or loose soles. 10. Walking in places too dark to 13, Improper.use of ladders, or unâ€"â€" I “'-l l. uo oo ce se . Stairs with irregular tread. 8. Loose or obstructed floors un 11. Unguarded "Wor openings. 12. Loose covers ..@er floor openings neediess accidents, and their costs due to fallsâ€"N. B. Accident Pre vention Association. *rcidenits Due To Falls Take i Heavy Toll iAmmolueH.tmm venls the fact that necidents due t» ‘ï¬lï¬Â«lfll‘hlh’,mufl pensstion funds. Some of the chief auses of the fails are listed below for your consideration, with the }hplhtth-m'l:.h- insted insofar as possible individual sperations: yest ‘l. Tripp? » over ob atts on floors and stairs. #, Gresse, cll and water on floors ':'m material that will on shift under foot. _ï¬lbunh-nlncrhne- Colors from pottery made Wb n 'b“m)-n-'fl"fl-n the hat of fashionable Miss 1936, For few months, R. F. m“&tm Color Cousâ€" cil, has been working at the mu eums in South Kensington, adopti=g m dn nseanedt : Now he has produced a new co‘>r card with 24 colors, most of thom Chinese, for millinery in 1936, . Colors For 1936 Inspired By Old Chinese Pottery Mere are some of the colors, ta! «n from the pottery of ancient Chi~a. Coolie, an unusual type of §=1e blue which the coolie of China dves his elothes with to this day. Corn stalk, a golden yellow vith which the Chiness loved to deco: sie their beautiful vases, Yorkshire for export to China. . Ruby, the red of the precious s taken from Chniese vases, 5. Worn or broken steps or stairs. 6. Inadequate cr no handrails on WV-‘-“ a% _ Tropic ved and suil red, two iron o rue Chieels wate ‘mbder: of m’"-bii'fh&'-_hï¬h ind an Ol.ï¬-o,m ug‘?'&: Fall Hazards im