always btiy salada1 green tea the greater good by bannister mbrwin canadian banks in better position to serve public part ii the good of th greater number kent raised himself higher on the but was the goad of the greater d- number always the greater good couch his bearing had becomestead- number ier but there was still the tortured marjorh fear in his eyes and latham who it came to him in a flash at last knew that the hardest truth was often whatever the result to latham what- more merciful than uncertainty ans- ever the ethics to which 1 had been j wered him bound marjorie should not suffer it is bad he said but many even if he had to give up his profes- great and useful mm have had it sion marjorie should not suffer caesar suffered from it so did na- his portfolio lay on the table poleon so did peter the great within it wore the typewritten sheets kents face was set in startling of his lecture en the medical secret i horror he took the manuscript and tore it in i school yourself continued lath- two am yes its epilepsy i this is most distressing phii kent relaxed as if a stunning blow said mr stone are you sure there an exhibit in one ot the furnished world where rubber is used at the had been struck him his tower lip can be no mistake an ernimt m thue of wriung both these ambluona dropped but with a rebound to sud- i am sure replied latham the little leaves and tips from big mountain tea gardens tnat are used in salada are much finer in flavor than any gunpowder or japan try it robber roses invented by a woman rooms in tho british pavilion at the paris exhibition which attracted a great deal ot attention was a vase full of roses- so natural in appearance that the public refused to believe that they were not real until peoplo were al lowed to pinch their petals and so found them to be mado of rubber these rubber roses aro tho inven tion of an englishwoman mrs d m mcgarvlo munn who told a press re presentative the story of their dis covery i was feeling the petals of a rose one day she said and thinking how unsatisfactory the ordinary artificial flowers are and wondering why they could not bo made to imitate nature more closely i tried to think of some thing that would be nearer to the tex ture of a real flower petal than silk or velvet when the idea why rubber of course came to me worked out the formula alone mrs munn was stopping in a hotel in london at the tlmo so she went to a flower manufacturer with a request that he would make some flowers she n fulfillment for the roses den fury he jumped to his feet and he had an attack last night ffirtftritftu iie6 you lie ho exclaimed you are how terrible poor marjorie have met with an mim frighten me you latham was silent mr stone con- tion from everyone ncludlng the rub- a s he gaw siderei before speaking again ber growers association which vas truth in lathams face ho san limp- you say he came to you profession- responsible for their being exhibited to tn6 couc an covered his face ally he suggested at wembley and paris when they w his hands j yes latham spoke shortly flrst saw them they said fruit is it might he worse said latham weell it put you in an awkward made of rubber why did not one gently consider the situation as place phil but it was important for think before of using it for flowers calmy as you can and listen to me e to know the match seemed suit- both tho canadian and australian gov- you are in splendid physical shape sme but marjorie will get over itj ernmmite tre interested in the idea y hav take kod care of your his face brightened wh e body and you may withstand many phil and mrs munn has had inquiries from nervous inroads who knows perhaps after a time she and the attacks may you all over the world never be frequent look constantly to stop said latham painfully i other flowers are also made realls- your general health avoid undue ex- go back to town at once there is a tic carnations primroses and daintiest citement do not marry train in half an hour i am more than little bunches of violets which will i ha j halfminded to give up practice and go presently be on sale at all the big kent sprang from the couch at abroadfor a year or two london stores the blossoms are scented and are washable and would they are uicrushable they sure to be very much used for table decorations in restaurants and on board shipand in many other ways this 13 not mrs munns first inven tion she has also invented what she calls a rainshade an umbrella trim- mod with rubber this is one that tho action latham realized the forco of what he had said i do not marry are also j he was no tne singleminded you think from my standpoint you mr stone smiled foolish he said this is awk ward phil but it is not so tragic as scientist but the man his position have acted sensibly yes sensibly in received little encouragement how- j i use myself she said holding up a ever for he presently wrote to say j delightfully smart affair in brown silk that ho was very sorry but the ma- with a petal frill of bois de rose rever- torial did not lend itself to flower sible rubber lined with amber and an making j applique rubber design on the covor i had a very slight knowledge of j itself one can imagine the muddiest chemistry only what i had learned j street looking like a flower garden on at college she said but it was just a wet day when these decorative raiu- sufflcient to enable me to experiment for myself on tho gas stove in my room up to that time there was noth ing known that would curl rubber ex cept heat and i tried baking and cook ing it until presently my room was like a workshop and uiad to rent an other room for experimentation the secret which is a chemical one was at length discovered tho rub ber rose was put on the market and last june at a public function princess mary was presented with a lovely bou quet of them the methods of color ing also remains a secret process two ambitions approach fulfillment mrs munn has two ambitions with regard to ier flowers one is to estab lish workshops where former soldiers can make them and the other is to have the flowers produced all over the shades are more generally used date pickles and a duplex hat then i invented a dale pickle she went on which is being made by one i of the leading manufacturers in paris when i took it to him he tasted it and said how delicious it was and bought the reclpo straight away of course i get a royalty on each bottlo the writertasted this datte de la munn as the pickle is called and found it most unusual and delightful another of mrs munns inventions is a hat which is convertible from felt to straw so that it makes two hats for traveling this is also being manu factured in paris but it is as tho first woman to take an interest in rubber and as the in ventor of natural rubber flowers that she is best known was equivalent beyond explanation he flushed i am sorry ho said quietly for the moment i had forgotten the spe cial bearing of my words neverthe less you must not marry kent looked at him contemptuously then swung on his heel and went slowly to the window after the lapse of many seconds ho turned again to latham and his eyes were steady why he asked coldly there is this shadow upon your life well i shall keep it hidden from her and the question of children there neednt be children said kent calmly no dr latham im not going to give up happiness be cause once in a year or two there is danger of being unconscious for a few minutes but man think of her exclaimed latham with growing disgust sho is sure to find it out and that is something you neednt con cern yourself with said kent im quite capable of looking out for her but you dont realize that youre in iove with her your self kent laughed a short laugh time marjorie will feel the same way dont latham pleaded good bye mr stone and marjorie but latham was gone mr stone smiled a quiet worldly smile latham had already made his ex cuses to fanny codwell and the i motor would soon be at the door but a duty remained kent had not yet come downstairs and latham went up to his room and knocked at the dull invitation to enter he opened the door kent still in his gray dressing gown was sitting be fore the empty fireplace his brow was furrowed his eyes were sombre well ho queried not rising i have told mr stone said la tham kent slowly nodded i thought you would he said in the hours i have been sitting here i have come to see that you would it is a violation you were bound to make he stared into the fireplace ive leen growing older these hours he added latham stepced toward him im pulsively kent raised his head and nodded toward the window i ive been trying not to look out there he said one of the most complete and authoritative statements ever ub- mltted regarding the canadian banking system and the present banking situation was intake by c e kesi general manager of the royal bank of canada at the annual meeting mr nelh said in part i through amalgamation the cumber of banks in canada has bee slowly reduced until the present situation is analogous to the condition existing in great britain whero the great bulk of the banking aseets of the country is in the handsbf five large banks fear have been ex pressed that the concentration of banking power in the hands of com paratively few institutions may lead to bad results such as slackening of competition or neglect of local interest the feeling in regard to com petition seem to have had its inception in the fear of what roay happen in the future rather than as a result of developments to dote for no oao can say that the competkfon between banks lose severe than it has bon in the past we believe that the contrary is tho case and that a large proportion ot the savings affected through omalgasiatton3 have beea pafd on to the public in the form of increased service and relatively lower charges the merits of branch bsnuldg as compared with a eyateoi of nnlt banks are a subject of debrto in the united states today and- opponents of branch banking have stressed tho advantage to local interests of hav ing their banking business in the hands of local institutions which ara claimed to be more intimately in touch with conditions at the points con cerned for canada however the arguments la favor of broach banking are in my opinion immeasurably stronger than anything which can be said on the other side in the development ot new districts in this country the necessary funds have been supplied from older districts and at much lower average rates than those current in the united states at the same relative stage of- deveflopmem the banking history of the united states moreover contains a long list of banks which have failed either through lack of proper perspective during boom periods or becauso in districts where everything depends on the success of one crop or one industry the local banks had all their eggs in one basket i have no hesi tation in saying that had western canada been served by unit banks- tho situation in 192122 would have been nothing short of calamitous a great financial institution such as the royal bank of canada covering the whole country must have intimate persistent and active interest in every part of canada we have responsibbltles not only to our shareholders but to a degree which i hope we fully realize to the public of canada in fact there is no conflict of interest because it is only to the extent that we contribute to the sound economic development- of the country that we shall deserve or receive the confidence of the public selfinterest will prompt us to secure a diversity of risk through the en couragement of the industries lndtlgenous to the various parts ot our country and to keep ajways before us the fact that we can achieve tho greatest measure of success only if our actions and policies promote and foster the best interests of every part of canada then latham went down to the waiting motor tho end a morning song o i am up with the morning and i am oft with the breeze off to join the merrydancing of the winds in the trees i 6hall gather on my way many sliver sips ot dew o i am one with the morning come along will you o i shall shiver with the poplars i shall whistle with the pines- sharing every scent of sweetness that the winds breath finds circle softly round great mountains finger lightly giant trees a clear morning song is calling come along do please oh i am up with tho morning hear t shouting from yon hill you can hear when it is singing you can hear when it is still you may hide you with oxcusos it will search them through through ah the morning sweot is calling calling mo and you flora lawrenco myer3 and the end of human wisdom most human beings seem to me to act like big children who to the mart with their scant money store greedily hasten while yet their pockets hold the little fund secure ah then all things are theirs sugar fancies and other sweetmeats rare some pictures gay also a hobby horse likewise a drum and violin heart what is thy choice and tills heart is insatiable it opens up lis eyes extremely wide but when at last for one of all these fancies tho fund is lightly bartered then goodby yo golden wishes all ye proud hopes aiwl desires farewell in but one ginger cooky yo terminated might as- well run homo goethe translated by e m cord- sen no thats been plain enough ever since you came its even plainer mthwhitote latham made an i time latham the words were spo ken wearily not after what has happened made an he smothered his resentment you distrust me he said gravely i have spoken to you as a physician and not asn man now hard wood in motorcars the automobllo industry according to a genoral motors statement usos more hard wood than tho furniture and building trades combined batteryless radio set is a big success satisfactory results in thousands of canadian homes proves it is what public want imagine just plugging into your elec tric light socket and getting not only tho power to operato your radio set but also your aerial thus doing away with tho necessity of all a and b batteries and also tho troublo of put ting up an aerial and that is just exactly what this remarkablo radio invention tho rogors batteryless set will do why would anyone having electric power in their homo bother with the fuss and muss of a battery sot when they can own a set which needs no a or b batteries this canadian achevemont in radio is amazing evoryovo whoscca and listens to it bringing in distant sta tions wiuout any worry of run down batteries or having o rochargo or buy new batteries and vet thx ara those who will still make false statements about tho rogers set becau th want to try and sell ycu something else one hogers owner writes that ho tuned in 51 different stations in ono evening others say they get florida and cuba just as powerful as a nearby station to anyone contemplating buying a radio set it is of course apparent that to buy anything but a batteryless sot would bo like baying an automo bllo that was going to bo out of date in six or seven months there aro solectod dealers in cer tain ccmmuriltlos who will gladly put a rogers set in your homo on trial so that you can hoar for yourself this wonderful radio accomplishment if there is no dealer possessing the rogers fronchlso in your community write tho q r s music co ltd toronto t ontario go to new xork and see b dwell and la f wi m follow his advice if he tells you not dream yo and to her said tomarry you certainly wmot accuse kent wiu be the him of interested motives i to make you forgpt i am going away said latham chokingly kent smiled and every road will lead you back to her goodbye latham the fight has gone out of me i am sorry said latham sorry that dont latham respected the plea his heart was wrenched by unforeseen sympathy as ho was about to go marjories laugh floated in to them through tho window the two men in silence- in silence are the mountains clad in robes of silver silence palely shimmering in mantles softerhued than moonlit night yet like the night adorned with starry patterns of embroidery with far faint constellations of twinkling sounds clear notes of a canon wren a cowbell far away glad calls of chickadee a hounds deepthroated bay and over these float sheerest veils of aspenlooking winds of murmuring streams and whispering waterfalls frances higgins sentence sermons teach your daughter to hold her self in high respect and she willcom- pel others to do so also to depend upon her womanliness for her charm and she will never lack admirers the advantage of economy and she will net need to marry a rich man to respect the rights of others and you will insure her friends in abundance to love the beautiful and true and she will be her own board of censor ship to do something useful and tho world will come offering her rights to pity herself and she will get no pity from any one ctoo thereafter exchanged a last look j minards liniment relieves headache kent was silent will you do it latham persisted no by heaven i wont kent ex ploded you think youve got me in a trap but if all tho quacks in the world told me to give marjorie up i would not do you understand shes mine shell stay mine r no exclaimed latham sharply im not afraid of you sneered kent i have corivj to you profession ally i am protected by the medical secret it is as sacred to you as the confessional is to the priest your mouth will stay shut suppose i went to bidwell and he also told me not to marry do you think he would inter fere if i didnt follow his advice cer tainly not but kent latham cried well stop right here said kent i came to you for professional ad vice youve given it he jerked his head in a curt bow and left the room by all the vowslhat hound him to his profess al ideals latham was pledged to silence however in the moments that followed kents depart ure he lot himself lcokat the case humanly emotionally and his soul cried out in utter revolt should he work out a scheme by which mr stone would of himself dis cover what was wrong with kent should he bring about a disclosure that would appear to be accidental impatiently he dismissed tho thought he would not evade the issue as sacred as the confessional his own words he rcmemwred how strongly he had insisted that in every case tho physician must keep the patients confidence without that assurance how would it be possible to establish the rapport essential iui diagnosis as sncied as the confessional the physician of mens bodies mist be as single purposed as the physician of mens sous but marjorie bound to a man who had no right to marry how coud ho permit it tho gcod of the greater number he muttered wna it sound reason if the patient wcro afraid or nshamed to toll the truth should not the physicians fail ure to treat tho case successfully bo slntttsmho phi new photograph of his h0lngs3 cinn condone a moral wrong and say the above is tho latest photograph taken of his hollncis pius xi this is beyond my province tho head of tho roman catholic church has often been styled the prfconor ho could not answer ah the tradi- f vatican but this imprisonment has been selfimposed by the various tions to which ho had been tutored i struggled against his human impulse j ropes since 1s0 mussolini now suggests that this occloslasica prison be and accused him of warping his views j connected by a fifteenmile tunnel with tha sea that the pcpe may leave tho to fit his emotions and so racked vatican grounds and reach tho cccan ihout passing through tho italian by his problem ho paced the roomi dto nntil the red dawn streaked the sky cl wvt j the overskirt figures afternoon modes a note of chic simplicity is a fea- ture of this satin frock which lias its graceful overskirt curved to form a i deep v in tho front and back long full sleeves of contrastingcolor satin are trimmed with bands of embroid- i ery and gathered into tight little bands at the wrists the diagram j shows just how the dress is put to gether and pattern no 12g8 is in sizes 10 18 and 20 years or 34 36 and 38 inches bust only size 18 years 3c bust requires 5 yards 3ginch or 3 yards 54inch material with 1 yards trimmingbraid for tho sleeves price 20 cents every womans desire is to achiovo that smart different appearance which draws favorable comment from tho observing public the designs illus trated iifour new fashion book aro originated in tho heart of the stylo centres and will help you to ncquiro that much desired air of individuality prico of the book 10 cents the copy how to order pattern3 write your name and addro3s plain ly giving number and size of suh patterns as you want enclose 20c in stamps or coin coin preferred wrap it carefully for each number and address your order to pattern dept wilson publishing co 73 west ade- laido st toronto patterns sent by return mail minards liniment for sore throaff i zinc pails can be cleaned by sciub- i bing with warm soapy water to which a little paraffin has been added wanted one rellablo man in overy town morchant proferred to take orders for best custommado clothes in canada highest commissions rex tailoring co ltd toronto 2 dcdaidc for fanning mills ncrhino wtro zinc screens- for chatham or any other kind ot mu1 repairs for obathimn incu bators froo book on grain cleaning manson campbell chatham ont is8ue no 6 20