Joronto, March 30--A . gold" diles long and 40 miles wide, Albany Riyer, has beer ro : i 75 per. © = | this could be' Attributed to he No A f not be ! true of the state "of the © industry, he said, for at the present time "one of the most interesting and Your vacation starts the moment your Anchor» Donaldson Master-at- Arms salutes you at the gangplank. This is the front door of Scotland you can already feel that very gracious atmosphere which you will find again in the fine old homes of Scotland. And dignified, quiet, yet friendly service. Sail Anchor - Donaldson ! Book tigeugh The Robert Reford or Bothy The . Finingion 1. 5 Elgin 3471), or any steamship ad DONALDSON wn LINE WN SVA-218 ©abin, Tourist Third Oabin and Third Class. . } province v3 iting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. the tinding 4 proceeding in the north ern of provinge, ED Ee apres god | tries are flow 75. pes he declared, Quoting years, Mr. McCrea predi was only commen closé its mineral resources. policy on sound and broad lines so all parts of the world and would feel that its millions were safely invested, He pointed out the area which com- menced in Pucbee, extended through Ontario and on into western Canada. was the largest compact formation in the world. "Five per cent of this area "Yet in this is located the iron of Minnesota and the copper of Michi n. On it the United States has uilt its great steel industry. The mining A ives] of the northern part of Ontario has the biggest weekly pay list of any industry in Ontario and furnishes 35 per cent of the railway traffic." ALMONDS MEETINGS Church Services and Young People's Meetings Will Mark the Occasion Almonds, Mar. 28.--Rev. A, L. Richards is holding an Easter com- munion Service and also a reception service Scnday. Easter music will be given by the choir. A Mr. and Mrs. Gordon of Meadow Brook Farm, entertained a num- ber of their friends on Friday even ing last. Mrs. Steve Flintoff and child- ren, Miss Ruby Reeson and Mrs. J. Gregory of Oshawa visited at the home of W. H. Balsdon on Monday, Mr." Arthur Wilson's sale on Wednesday was largely attended and prices were good. Mrs. Darby of Kedron is vis- W. Hall. . A special Easter meeting will be held by the Young People's Society on Tuesday of next week. Mr, and + Mrs. F. T. Rowe of Whitby spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs, T, McCombe. Miss Mable Mackey of Toromw was a week-end vistor with her pmother here. NICE WORDS WON'T SH J) € WF y) Neither pretty agree they no streaking or color, And wat: wear and washing. They are better dyes because they contain plenty of real anilines--from three to five times more than no more for them than for ordinary dyes The white e of Diamond Dyes is the original a" qu doe for any and every kind o i It will dye or tint silk, wool, cotton, lin: any mixture of materials, The blue package is a special dye, for silk or wool only. With it Jou can dye your waluable articles of silk or wool with r the Be is ouch works Réaetmber Lis wien you . 'The blue package dyes silk or wool only. 1 white package will dye kind of goods, including sillc'and 'wool, > Your dealer hao both A amon Pe ALL DRUG STORES i fag ® use. pictures ful 7)/ dye a dress or coat. It takes dyes to dyes made from true anilines, "Next ti hav ing to do, try Diamond Dyes. See 5 bind yung them. Then compare the / results, Your dealer will refund your money if * don't agri are better ; You get none of that re-dyed look from Diamond Dyes; ress or coat... . nor 0 will J the work; tting. Just fresh, crisp, bright new the way they keep their brilliance other dyes. But you pay, f material. rayon or ts equal to packages D 3 Dyes ES <i it 3 © the pain that 4 m promp Physicians prescribe Aspirin; ss and Toren: 1. : "statistics covering the| *| quantity of nickel, copper, silver d § Id mined in Canada durin; the aa |. c e dis- that capital might be attracted from |' is to the south of us," he continued. |: OBSERVE EASTER AT i} ho ents 'in Ne Se : tie Gov'| * ernment, he said, was' shaping its : S---- He was looking - at her concen- tratedly; de dd jot Lon her. 1 J Ww dear "The pook, Hugh!" she exelaim- pd reprovinglys Hugh smiled sly. "You "are. Wo! H y L Jnow that. Bee, I r it.avy; the world ever had & place like this to come back to, and a woman like you to Sate Him aa the. burts Mer, A eyes widened nto femarriage, Hugo?" laughed at the picking and sneez- ing that followed. "Bee--" Hugh began; and pais. ed. ' "Milord?" ¢ 3 "Bee, if you should ever stop raring for me, dear--no don't laugh, I'm serious," Hugh said, catching her hand again, "If you should find--well, that you loved someone else more, or--or in a dif- ferent way," he went on quickly, almost incoherently, "you'd tell me, wouldn't you?" Without releasing her hand, she slig to her knees beside the couch and gathered both his hands against her breast. "Why, what nonsense is thls, Hugh?" _she asked. .jn her mater al" half-laughing, half-chiding voice. He studied her face gravely. an- tlously, for a few seconds. Then d. be Jaushed, see" he exclaimed ef, Re » she sald In a brisk, sensible tone, withdrawing, and pccupying herself with the tray ynce more. The kitten rockated (way to a distant lair under the pookcase, but either Bouieice nor eyes for . iy 8 oy possession of the pig drawing desk and had littered i once more with T-squares, sheets yt squared paper and pencils. Big- mice had clipped from an aregl jectural magazine half a dozen lit- ile photographs of arches. atess, grills, dogrways; ghe display them eagerly. ily, absorbedly, fon boots: While they hand touch- r her bright hair prushed for t against His lace. And srahe bad got her, ud. "a June they moved to the sping, led' ¢abin on 'Spy Lake: that ha peen the Challoners' summer camp 'for twenty years. It 'was an airy, piny. place, only three from the fashionable Fentinel Beach, near the mew golf slab, near the.yacht club, and with its gwai lovely tennis gourt and old- rashioned garden. ah PY tol 's mother e adjoln- _ oh a square, white, colonial with green shutters, and 's sisters, Mes. White and 'g, Carey, own unpreteut- piace tribes 'the lake. All it the summer homes of old * friends und long-tested meighbors . were scattered; the fish man and the milkman and thé man who re- tired the boats and the man who ght the mall knew the Chal- loners and welcomed into thelr "% ranks'the new member of the fam- By. There was a mneedle-carpeted : steep descent of ground through ~\'the 'woods, below the cabin, reach. _ 'Ing to the ripples of the lake. 'A " poathouse and a few tethered row- _ boats were' there, and hammocks "Ror warm afternoons. The hotel was out of sight, beyond a I wooded point of land, 'but the I motel yachts and launches eame into view, as well as the pat- fent steamer that crossed the blue stretch of water twice a day. The alr at the lake was sweet and aro- matic and sleepy, and at sunset the bills turned a clear deep blue and fish plopped in the mirror of the water, and flies buzzed in the sun- shiny spaces in the woods. 4 'Beatrice loved it all; she w ecstatically happy in the freer, simpler life and in Hugh's ; ce, for he almost always spent a week-end, from Friday at- ternoon until Monday noon, there, y 'mile sin from town on 'a week 4 night as well. . She went swimming with the young Whites and in the dreamy blue mornings, when drag- on Silos litter and pines; squirrels flashed and chat- tered in the near-by woods, where the winter's fallen timber had been heaped into stacks incredibly pic turesque, up and down the forest aisles. : Often old Mrs. Challoner was . |wheeled down to the pler, and sat there basking under her great sun umbrella, with the dripping child- ren and the murmuring elders at her feet. Harriet Challoner Carey had a daughter of Beatrice's age, and Minnie Challoner White was only three years younger, and the three girls chattered and laughed together, in and out of the satiny blue water, in and out of the opm by. them! details togéther, Bee!" litle ed resentful "Lucky his mother", boomingl»' ways gave 'her happic-t and most youthful laugh, in sheer content. , When Bert was at Spy Lake. he always stayed with his grand. mother, S0.4 t Beatrice felt no re- sponsibility 'for him. ' He spent his Monday-to-Friday intervals in 'the ¢ity, but' usudlly put in an avpear-|® d lance at the lake on Saturday af- ternopns, expectant of tennis ol stim Hugh would play, d they would find two other men for a hard session of doubles. More often 'Beatrice played with her husband, with Bert and one of his young cousins for onvonants. Young Tom Carey, Harriet junior, or Mary or Pauline White all viay- ed well, and the other members of the family would gather as aund- fence in the shaded chairs on the sonth side of the court. Beatrice, who had made early be- ginning with tennis in the long- ago days of Miss Roberts' school when Mummy had feught music and Marcia the upper ~rades, was enormously In demand as a part- ner. But it was not so much be- cause she was a good plaver--thev were all good players--as because pecs ama ANE pangs of the elements she brought to the game; fire and excitement and en- thusiasm that gave it new life. Her face grew red as she nlayed, her hair wild; she fought desper- atelv for every point, lost hard, and fairly danced with trinmph when he won. "Oh, Hugh, Hugh--take it!" she would shriek in a "tene that brought tears of laughter even to dignified old Mrs. Challoners' eyes. "She's a nice child, Beatrice," the ola woman told her son one morning. "That's exact! child Mother." i "Well, all the better," his moth- er sald. "Eh?" ghe added. a little sharply, twisting her head to see his face, as if something in his ex- pression surprised her, "After all, she's only twenty, Hugh." "Twenty-one. Yes, But many si ho RSI ole emt as young e." he offered, - certains a little un 'She's auite remarkable wit French, Harriet says," her 2 hor er-in-law defended her, "and she's a good manager and very sensible with the girls--as far as that goes, she seems eight years instead of eight. months . older than little Harner And she's certainly been elp our ri Hugh» y prize plans, "Ob, yes, all that, all that!" he conceded almost impatiently. But it's not natural to have her settle down here among all of us, who are so much older" "All the children except Peter and Tom are younger than she," persisted the old lady as he paused ue oo ebutented note. . but she's not one of them; she's 'Mrs. Challoner," he sald '"There's a great difference. The tradespeople--the employees down at the office----make much of her. It makes no Impression--she"s just & child. I've put money to her account, of course, hut she doesn't spend it as most girls do--now and then she sends her mother or sister & present; that's all. A child about money too. She isn't always after furs or hats or jewelry. I took her to Cate's the otherday; tried to find a ring or a chain she want. ed. She liked them all--and dida't want any." a ---- CHAPTER XIV "Mother, it's the strangest thing," he went on seriously he old woman watched him with bright, serious ayts and did not peak--'It's the strangest thing. I know men whose wivés aren't any- thing like as lovely as Beatrice, or loved"---he laughed--"loved one mothered offered with a common- sense alr. "She can't!" Ys when "Nonsense, dear! Pailiae x was 1.3 Hele girl, Sout Jou rem r mendous she t30k to you." el whe was about eight, Mother." "Certainly she was! Oh!" said his mother in a slightly altered vol 8, s00--"" 5, "Oh, I of it's' going to happen, it's' go~ ing to happen," Hugh eaid present. ly, In a volce he tried to make philosophical. "And if I have to bloom Phere out as she has. very generous to hold her, Hugh, ve to be very gentle and|- afterward," she added, "they mus{ be 'most done." loud shrieks from the direction . of the tennis court, coming faintly contirmed her birds. "Oh, what a game!" Bert sald briefly, burying his tousled head in his hands, his broad shoulders heaving under the thin, perspira« tion-sosked whi fre. but you'll hold her, even when| ----she pa n't ace Jhjeres : : 'AS; watch. tng her datently as she benttated she--grows. up. And. meanwh used, "am hil alle again, WE, i WE : "Well, that draw her amy trom | discrep. you, that aceen in And ps too?" *Well--" 'said his mother, with tuafe the " t {a sizniticant shrug. "Now do you know, Mother," sald, after u silence, "T Gitte with you there." *I know. 'What I advised seem- ed 'like managing her--spestricting her. But it would be only for her ows bapsiness in the ols. Hugh." 4 nk 'her own p Hugh suggested, "is Hind o ight 'upset her most terrib- 8 Juan. y She's. ttle girl enough wan protected. to 'be iti ot te." . es, but' it would have to be. Mother." | > " "You mean--men admiring her?" his. mother asked, looking thoughtfully at his face and then 8 ing her gaze again. "Not that, perbaps. That's bond to happen: that's laopening an the time. But if she--" He stopped, his fone reluctant as if it pained him to go om. "If: she fell in love," she sald "You mean if ghe fell in love? That 1s, in the young sense--Iin the emotional sense--as girls do--"" "I suppose 80." "Hugh," his mother asked, after a silence, "what makes you think that she doesn't love you, dear?" "Oh, she does. She does. But there seems to be a d'fferent kind of love for every year of a woman's life." he sald wretchedly. Old Mrs. Challoner watched him for a space without speaking. "You mever were jealous of Alice," shp reminded him, mildly remonstrative, after a while. "And Alice--Alice liked to play with jfire now and then too," the old wo- man presently added smiling. "Yes, I know she did. But! never was jealous of Alice. I was young when I married Alice; I took life for granted. But mow now," he said, throwing away his cigarette, crossing his arms, and trying to smile, "now I take noth ing for granted. There isn't an evening, when I go home to her, that the miraclo of her--the sheer sweetness--doesn't strike me. 'When she comes down to the of. fice and opens the door, of my room and steps inside and closes it behind her, ang stands there look- ing at me from under het hat - why, I might never have seen her before! Just to have her on the seat of my car, beside me, make me feel as if it were a party. It's"-- he laughed, but there were tears in his eyes--*it's that way with me!" he said simply. "She isn't at all the type that pays any attention to other aen," sald his mother, after thought. "If ever she does," Hugh assur- ed her, "she shall have her head. I'll put nothing in her way: she'll go as far as she likes; she shall have anything--anything!--that means happiness for her." "I hope there'll be a child!" >d Mrs. Challoner said abruptly, after a silence in which she had looked irresolutely at her son and away again more than once. "I hope so too." "Does she?" "Hard to say. ' Her one feeling" Hugh sald slowly, "about losing her baby, seemed to be that she must save me, spare me. I think she felt my disappointment as much as-----perhaps more than her own." i "Extraordinarily .sweet nature ~" hig mother mused. And for a long space there was silence on the porch, * 3 The plue. surface of the lake, seen between sturdy pine trunke down the slope, lay like a sheet of pale satin; close to the shore the shadows were deeply, softly green. A heron skimmed the water; a canoe, with a man and a girl in it; shot out across the peaceful ex- panse, and the girl waved, "It's young Harriet, with the of them all, waving a stout, majes- tic old arm in answer, "Where's eanwhile I would.) sea urse were Harriet and down there and ttle . "(To be continued.) : (Copyright, 1928. by leon Norris.). ; Debater is Surprised at Lack of Knowledge of Canada in U.S. Oltaws, Mar. 30.--Surprisingly erroneous impressions exist among the residents of United States con- cerning Canada, according to E. G. V. Evans, of the University of Mani- toba, member of the Canadian college debating team, which recently toured the Central States, interviewed while visiting in this city. "The tour was well worth while," Mr. Evans said, "because we were able to correct many erroneous im- pressions 'which have become widely spread in the States concerning our Dominion. One man came up and congratulated me upon my Eng- lish, remarking he thought Canada was all French. Another man asked about the constitution of the Empire and how much of a tax we pay to the Crown of England. And, of course, there were kinds of funny ideas about our climate and customs. "We were very cordially received," Mr. Evans remarked, "wherever we went and, on the whole, the trip proved a most profitable one." VIENNA DANCE LEADERS ASK FOR MORE WALTZES Vienna, Mar, 80.--Dancing teacn- ers of this home of the waltz have asked that as many numbers of the old dance be included in the programs of balls as of the Ameri- can fox trot and similar dances. They asserted that social dancing has become degraded. Says that All Other Remedies Failed Ontario Man Speaks Highly of Dodd's Kidney Pills Bladder Trouble; out : DODD'S KIDNEY i \ { i i £8 Bit K'S BIRD That Terrible BACKACHE! Need Not Be Endured Gin Pills Will Stop It DB crac is so often a cry for help from inflamed or - clogged kidneys. They need to be soothed and restored to nor- mal action again, other warn- Never neglect .this--or , such as swollen joints, dizzy ois, painful, scan ty or too frequent wrination, ah Take Gin Pills----at once. Heal and strengthen your kidneys. Prevent Ssrious ailmetsis~Rheumatism Scia- ca, 0, or, perhaps Bright's Disease. "Pills are safe ang re- liable~~50c a box at all druggists. National D. Chemport Ca¥ Canada, Limited. Tait boy," said the oldest me) 1 Beatrice?" t "Playing tennis." "Why aren't you Hugh mm } playing, "] was. We had men's doubles and she scored. But It appears that she and Bert had some bet left over from yesterday, and they plunged right into 8 game when we half as much as I love hen," he|finished. went on, steadily, "and they--well, they fail them in all sorts of ways. Nagging and. extravagance and stupidity and utter unsympathy with "them--Why, the homes of some men are hell!" Hugh finish. ed. "Aud; mine--when she's there--"" . ¢ "Is heaven," his mother suppli- ed, in a silence. % } "Not much less!" he assented. with a little laugh. Mrs. Challoner looked at him sharply, but he was staring off in.' to space, a vague.emile in his eyes, and did not met her glance. . . else is down there, Hugh?" ¥ "Oh, everyone, Minn = and Herenndeens and. Peter (he's gone for ® shower; he n' ved " A jag © | the 88 in uy set. "Seems awfully hot Tor ternie the old woman sal th att. Ais Olympic Series t's rresistible Ontario Motor Sales, Ltd. OSHAWA, ONTARIO it does NOT affect the heart Asple tra 'So_Canada) fndicating Bayer Manufacture 1 is pila aie Hide math ¢ means 3. Canada) nates Shy Ra ne ad ATL 3 asl tons, the Tablets will be stamped with their "Bayer Cross' tra oN - and sometimes made the thirty-| "She loves you, Hugh," hisiconteated tone, "If you swam ; PRODUCT OF GENERAL MOTORS OF CANADA, LIMITED