Beyond the Club. beyond the barracks at the extreme edge where the cantonâ€" ments met the plain, with a dusty road redâ€"andâ€"white bungalow, with grounds which showed no sign of blossoming like a ross in the desert. Pathapore was not a picturesque nor remantically situated station. The cantonments looked like a child‘s brick buildings dumped in the middle of the plain‘s fiatness, with the untidy muddle of the native bazaar some little distance away. In neither was there a single structure of any architectural value; even the Club was an unpretentious y wae Ke'ep outhouses saniâ€" tary with Gillett‘s Lye Destroys contents ... banishes odors ' NCLEAN outhouses are a peril to your family‘s health! Keep your outhouse clean and sanitary by using Gillett‘s Pure Flake Lyve reguâ€" larly. jJust sprinkle half a tin of Gillett‘s over contents once a week. Used full strength, it quickly destroys contents . . banishes odors as it cleans. *Gillett‘s Lyve makes dozens of messy household tasks easy. Frees clogged drains . . . cleans ugly yellow stains from toilet bowls . . . whisks dirt and grease from pots and pans. Will not harm enamel or plumbing. Keep Gillett‘s Lye always handy. Buy a tin fFOM your grocer toâ€" day. gives dozens of ways to make Cho_rea ?lnrd housework easier.. Write to: Standard Brands Ltd., Frase. Ave. Liberty St., CHAPTER VII "NDIAâ€"GRIM STEPMOTHER OF OUR KIND" brings pain ‘and misery Never dissolve lye in hot water. The action of the lye itself heats the wuter, raonto, Ont Anyone proposing to build any structure, including residences as well as business structures, on "The King‘s Highway" or what is commonly called the "Trunk Road" is hereby requested to apply â€"to the Department of Highways for a permit to erect this building. Any person erecting a building within 150 feet of the boundary line of the King‘s Highway must secure a permit before work commences. Matheson, July 11, 19838. ADVICE TO BUILDERS Cysts of Endameba histolyâ€" tica (a cause of amoebic dyâ€" sentery). Just one of the thousands of dangerous orâ€" ganisms that lurk in unclean outhouses, Gillett‘s Lye Booklet MADE IN CANADA an unpretenticus by VYIOLET M. METHLEY "You want to know why I‘m here," ne said in his pleasant Scuthern States veice, with its slight drawl. "Wioll, you see, somehow England felt very lonsly after you all left in October. I‘d got to finish my commissions, but I didn‘t feel inclined to linger on after I‘d got through with thom. And I‘m bound to say that Christmastime bored me." "Here it was .. . rather pathstic," Chrissie was laughing at the rememâ€" brance, hut again came that little catch in her voice. "Snowy, frosty hymnsâ€" and the cook sorved up the Christmas pudding in a soup tureenâ€"like porridge. So then you decided to come t> India?" His trained eyes took in quickly her pallor, the heaviness of her eyes, the drooping, sagging lines of her whol> bodyv. "Oh, IT‘d always had it as a possible end in view, you know! But what setâ€" tled it was a commission from a big thinz in potentates out here, the Maâ€" "Oh, Mr. Hall, how tremendously glad I am to see you!" she cried, her breath catching almost in a sob. "But now‘. :iA . .. why ; :*;:9" Hall tock the two outstretched hands in his own and pressed them warmly. "Why, now, that‘s wonderfully nice of you," he said. "It means a lot, a real welcoms like this." She would have to drag herself up; there was no help for it. She swung her legs over the side of the chair; sat on its edge, then sprang to her feet with a little cry. "Ohn, glad I breath how . She had said that she might go down to the Club, but now that it came to the point she simply couldn‘t muster the energy; perhaps she would feel better if she rested a ‘bit, more fit to facs dinner time. And then, the hoot of a horn, the throb of an engine; a motor car unmisâ€" takgably stopping at the gate. "Oh, dear!" Chrissie pressed fingers to her aching eyes. Warily she pushed back the limp hair from her wet forshead. Althoush she had only just bathed and changed, her clothes were clinging moistly to her again; there was no trace of freshness in the air. Her body felt heavy and listless; she had scarcely energy to lift her feet on to the chair and lie exâ€" tended, and the cushions under her head struck damp. "It looks very nice, Mallee," she said, and sank down into one of the long chairs, with the feeling that she sholuld ery if she did not cling to her percepâ€" tion of the funny side of it. And it was so like Indiaâ€"ons phase of India. running northwards across it like an | harajah Zindiaâ€"Lakhsman Singh." unrolled tape measure, stood a â€" "Yesâ€"of Khotalghar; his place is not bungalow, whose ccmpound showed far from Pathapore," Chrissie spoke more than a feeble attempt at cultivaâ€" , eagerly. tion. There was a bed of pansies.' "Only about six or seven miles, I mignonette and wallflowers, all seemâ€" junderstand. So I thought I‘d come ing rather to deprecate their presence ) here and see you first.". in this strange land, while a jasmine: "And stay with us? That will be tree flung itself recklessly over the verâ€" ! splendid." anda, and shed a galaxy of starry flowâ€" "Mo, my thoughts did not mount to ers upon the ground beneath. those â€" heights, Mrs. Struan. The There were orange and red croton |portrait will take some time, and I lilies in tubs sunk into the ground, and | couldn‘t possibly foist myself on you a gardener squatting before a small| indefinitely." flowerâ€"bed was gravely inserting into "Oh, but we shcluld e delighted. I‘m the dust of its soil the decapitated heads| sure that Ranny will say the same, and of marigolds, forming them into a close|then Leonie . .. she knows you and thick carpet. The memâ€"sahib loved | likes you too . . ." flowers and her tastes should be gratiâ€"| â€" "Ah!" Hall‘s quiet eyes were obserâ€" fied, even though by toâ€"morrow vant. "She‘s still with you?" labours of Tantia would be withered| "Oh, yes. I didn‘t know what we and doad. And for the moment the | should do without her." Chrissie spoke flowerâ€"bed looked far gayer than if the ) with almost feverish haste and there marigclds had been planted, roots and, was a bright spot of colour in each all, after the stereoatyped method. I cheek. ‘"More especially now that I Tantia looked up and grinned as the memâ€"sahib herself came out on to the verandah. Undoubtedly she would be pleased . . . And Chrissie Struan, enâ€" countering that gazse of childish satisâ€" faction, just managed to hide her disâ€" may and smile at the men encouragâ€" ingly. A. T. Hamer Division Engineer Dept. of Highways. ‘"Yes, the piano; I was taught rather well in Paris and London. I compose a | bit, too, or try to, and I‘ve been studyâ€" ing harmony and counterpoint. I was lazy at that as a pupil." "Will you play for me some time?" "Why, of course!" Chrissed smiled at ; Hall. "Ranny likes it too, so long as the stuff isn‘t too classicalâ€"although he can appreciate good things too, espeâ€" clally if they are not labelled Bach or Brahms! He‘s more musical than he knows, really." "And Miss Valence?" "Oh, she declares she doesn‘t know one tune from another.I don‘t think she has much ear, really; she‘s not good at distinguishing voices, Now, that‘s how I know people, how I remember mm on «mm _ Rather a long pause followed before Chrissie answered hastily: iâ€" "Of course not!" | ‘"You know her betterâ€"trust her betâ€" ter?" Hall persisted, rather as a docâ€" tor persists in his catechism of a patient. it‘s like fish in an aquarium; you see them and all they do quite plainly, but ther2‘s always glass between you. You can‘t touch them, or know what they are thinking." "But you say Struan likes her in spite of her . .. fishiness?" sounds a horrid comparison put in that way!" Chrissie laughed. "Though it‘s my fault for having made it first. And it is really marvellous the way Leonie manages the servants. She speaks Hindustani far better than I do, and they like her, too, although I beâ€" lieve they‘re bit afraid of her as well. She‘s an extraordinary capablk person in every way; she leaves me very little to do in the way of housekeeping; eviery thing is taken off my shculders really." "What do you do with yourself then?" "Oh !â€"I sewâ€"and readâ€"only it‘s difâ€" ficult to get anything new. And I‘ve been working at music again, practisâ€" ing quite a lot." ‘No!:â€" â€"I "mean ... No.: I C that I know her any better, 1 don‘t think she wants one to. question quietly, in almost an offâ€"hand manner. "You‘ve grown to like her yourself, then? She doesn‘t frighten you any longer?" "You play, then that." "On, yes .. . yes!" Again the two feverish spots appeared in Chrissie‘s cheeks. ‘"*But then, T should hate to take her away from Ranny. She‘s such a companion to him, too. I mean it, really, Mr. Hall. You sez2, the experiâ€" menlal Flying Grounds are a longish rido away and Ranny‘s job takes him cver constantly. And I‘m not riding much at present . . . Besides, Leonie is so wonderfully wellâ€"informed absut aviation; it‘s marvellous how she‘s picked it up, the technical sids2. And I‘m a perfect idiot about those thingsâ€" T simply can‘t remember the differen} kinds of planes and their records and who built them. But Leonie can discuss it all, man to man; Ranny says she can even make useful suggestions about deâ€" sign and that sort of thing. So, of course, he likes being with her." LEONIE AGAIN Chrissie leant back in her chair with an air of finality. ‘Hall put his next away . . . later." "No, I don‘t think so," Chrissie anâ€" swered quietly. "Ranny would like to arrange it like that, but there‘s the question of sxpense, you see. Ranny can‘t possibly get away, and he wouldn‘t like me to go alone." "Miss Valence? Didn‘t she come out here as your ccmpanion?" Hall raised his eyebrows. . . can‘t go about with Ranny so much. You see . .." She raised her eyes to Hall‘s with a kind of grave simâ€" plicity. "I‘m going to have a baby at the end of the year." "I‘m glad," he answered as simply and sincerely. Hall glanced expressively. "Surelyâ€" perhaps I‘m wrongâ€"but don‘t women genereélly go up to the hills on cecasions? But perhaps you are "Only about six or seven miles, I understand. So I thought I‘d come here and see you first.". "And stay with us? That will be splendid." "NMo, my thoughts did not mount to those â€" heights, Mrs. Struan. The portrait will take some time, and I couldn‘t possibly foist myself on you indefinitely." l1IKes yOu tG0 . . "Ah!" Hall‘s quiet eyes were obserâ€" vant. *"Sh>‘s still with you?" "Oh, yes. I didn‘t know what we should do without her." Chrissie spoke with almost feverish haste and there was a bright spot of colour in each cheek. ‘"‘More especially now that I "Oh, but we shcluld e delighted. I‘m sure that Ranny will say the same, and then Leonie . . . she knows you and likes you too .. ¢." No, I can‘t say didn‘t know Copyrighted It‘s these going THE PORCTUPINE ADVANCE, TIMMINS ONTARIO \offer you a drink or anything el Whatever would Ranny think of m: Chrissie‘s voice held real perturbati as she sat up sideways. "What \ you have? hen did you get a m last?" Paul Leguers, 32, employed at Delâ€" nite Mines, was seriously injured whon knccked down by a car on the back road Monday afternoon at 3.45. Acâ€" cording to information gained by Timâ€" mins who investigated, Leguere walked directly into the path of a machine driven by B. E. Servics, 78 Eim street south, Timmins. The acâ€" cident tocok place near the> foarmecr Crown Reserve property just beyond memory!" Hall laughed |remember places and |k anly by smelilsâ€"or tas "I wonder why I‘m glad to be stayâ€" ing hereâ€"I wonder what‘s the real atâ€" tractionâ€"or who? I‘m hanged if 1 care! A lookerâ€"onâ€"that‘s what I‘ve always been, that‘s what I am still." (To be Continued) In the bare, matted room, with the green sunâ€"blinds and mosquitoâ€"curtainâ€" ed bed, whore the light admitted by one sideâ€"window shone purple thrclugh a falling veil of bougainvillia, Hall surâ€" veyed the situation mentally. Has Leg Fractured in Holiday Mishap Paul Leguere, Delnite Miner, Suffers Severe + Injuries Walking on Back Road. "Then that‘s settled said heartily. "I‘ll spe Chrissie." "I‘ve no doubt I can arrange to run over to Khotalzhar for His Highness‘s sitting, perhaps spend a few days with him later." "Of course, you‘re staying with us, Hall," Struan‘s voice broke in on his thoughts. "I won‘t hear of anything else. Chrissie says you‘re painting our local potentate, but yolu won‘t want to spend all your tinmn>» at Khotalghar. Georgeous, of courseâ€"something beâ€" tween Windsor Castle and Aladdin‘s Palace, but not exactly what you‘d call homely! I couldn‘t stick it myself for more than a feow days, although India is pretty thoroughly Westernizedâ€"Harâ€" row and Christchurch, and all that." More of a woman, even in that boyâ€" ish kitâ€"was that it? Certainly the tropics must suit her. There was colâ€" our in her pale face, a soft brightness in her eyes which was surely new; the beautiful lines of mouth and jaw seemâ€" ed less seculptural. "I‘m not needing anything, really, and please don‘t got up, Mrs. Struan. I shall have to be off." "Inderd you won‘kl! Ah, hers comes Ranny! I can hear their horses, so I shall have reinforcements to persuads you to stay." The clatter of hooves and the sound of. voices came from the side of the bungalow, and in a few momeonts two figures appsared on the verandah. Struan strogde forward, hand outâ€" stretched, an attractive figure in his ridingâ€"kit, from smoothly head to wellâ€"poalished boots. "Hall! ~What a pleasant surprise! I wondered whos> car it was. And what brings you to Indiaâ€"and to Pathapore?" "Business and pleasure combined, as I‘ve been explaining to Mrs. Struan. Well, Miss Valence, wi> meet again, and I only hope you‘re half as glad as I am." "I‘m glad, of course." There was just a flicker of a smile about her lips, but her eyes were grave and intent, as they stood handâ€"clasped. And Hall, looking at her, realized that here was a phase of Leonie Valence. Up to neow sh> had always been the same greyâ€"clad figure, on the Gloriana, in the boat, at th:e Kensington Now, in tussore coat, Jodhpur, ridingâ€"breeches and a terai felt hat, she looked younget, pretâ€" tier. Eut no, even now, ‘"pretty" was not the word to her; that epithet, which might be bestowed equalâ€" ly well on a daisy, a lamb, or the patâ€" tern of a wallpaper. "And that reminds me that I‘ve b most abcminably inhospitableâ€"neve; themâ€"an aural memory, it‘s called, isn‘t | the town limits. Service was proceedâ€" it? Leonie‘s must be the visual sort. ing tcward Timmins amd Leguere in She never forgets a face, or a book she |the opposite direction. has readâ€"anything she has seen." l K. Haapanen, a passenger with Serâ€" "I kelieve I must have a nasal | vice and two other witnesses, all statâ€" memory!" Halil laughed. "I‘m sure I od that Leguers appeared to walk right Op)ortumty knocks for every manâ€"a woman, of course, gets a ring. ttledâ€"good!" Struan J yâ€"â€" SALLIES to the butler 1 m people e back ; Food Allergy â€" Acâ€" "What is one man‘s food is another y Timâ€"| man‘s poison" is an old saying but the eguere | truth of it is being proven almost daily x of a ' by leading research physicians throughâ€" ics, 78 ‘ out the world. Some individuals are he acâ€", overâ€"sensitive or allergic to certain form»r}foods and other substances and will beyondlhave head colds, ‘snuffy‘ noses, hives, 11 To prevent attacks, the avoidance of these substances is the first thought. As this is not always possible, skin and other tests of various substances known to cause symptoms are made, and when the cffending substance is found, inâ€" jections of small quantities of it are made into the skin to "desensitize" the individual. These injections, or givâ€" ing small quantitirs of the offending fcod, may so arouse or develop reâ€" sistance to the substance that the inâ€" dividual is finally made free of all symptoms. His body or constitution has bzen changed. Although the individual has this tendency, he will not acquire the disâ€" ease or symptoms unless he comes in contact with the substance or subâ€" stances to which he is sensitiveâ€"foods he cats pollen and other things he breathes into his nos> and throat, and things he touches with his hands. Certain drugs also may cause the sympâ€" toms. Fortunately, however, it is not inâ€" herited by all the children, somgtimes cnly one in a family of children inâ€" Reriting this allergic tendency. . The tendency to these dissaseâ€"hay fever, asthema, eczemaâ€"is inherited, but not the disease itself. Thus the grandparâ€" ent may have asthma, the parent hay fever, and the grandchildren eczema. "One may be sensitive to feathirrs, the next to ragwsed psoolen,, and the next to the whites of eggs. And yet all these individuals have the one common condition or characteristicâ€"the ability to become sensitized or allergic." These substances actually poison these "allergic‘ individuals and as the rest of us eat or breathe in these same substances without having these sympâ€" toms, it means that there is something about these allergic individuals that is different from us; that is, there is somsthing different in their bodies. And this ‘difference‘ is inherited as most Cf these individuals, when closely quesâ€" tioned, state that one or both of their parents wer» affected. In May Fever, Asthma, and Eczema, the ‘Tendency Not the Disease is Inherited Ii is now generally agreed that both herdity and surroundings or cireumâ€" stano:s determine our character and dispssition, although the exact proporâ€" tion of each will never likely be known. There is one condition in life howâ€" ever that is believed to be> always inâ€" herited and that is what is called alâ€" lergyâ€"sensitiveness or overâ€"sensitiveâ€" ness to various substances such as fcods, pollen of plants, fur, feathers, and others. These substances are harmless or cause no symptoms in perâ€" haps 98 or 99 of every 100 individuals, but in the one or two cas>s in the hundred these individuals after eating Jar coming in contact with one of these substances may have any one of the fcllowingâ€"urticaria (hives), eczema, asthma, hay fever, head colds, stomach and intestinal upsets, or migraine (oneâ€" sided headache). i 1 w I by hospi of (by James W. Barton, M.D.) nin ‘ appeared to walk right â€"of the road in front of car. He was taken to iately where medical csed a compound fracâ€" at leg, shoulder injuries ations. He was n:portâ€" authorities toaday to be ‘crtably as could be of Pours EChat Bobp Later Mr. and Mrs. Moore left on a motor trip to Muskoka and south. Upon their returm: they will take up residencs at M?:lnite Mines, Timmins. The cutâ€"ofâ€"town guests were: Mrs Walter H:eise, sister of the bride, o! Vancouver, B.C.; Miss Mabel Clurroll Sam DPurrell, D. Fitzjohn, Mrs. Heslop G. Heslop all of Timmins; Mr. and Mrs Clarencs Moore, Renfrew:; Mr. and Mrs. Harold«Mcore, Timiskaming, Que.; Mr. ard Mrs. Ralph Stimesrs, Toronto; Mr. ang Mrs. Cal Babcsok, Sudbury; Mr. and Mrs. John French, Pandora Cadilâ€" lac, Que., and Hector Waller, of Kirkâ€" land Lake., London Opinion: "The octopus can see to the front, each side and to the rear simultaneously, and periodically discharges a quantity of inky fluid,‘ says a naturalist. What a gossipâ€"writer it would make if it could only write. Following the ceremony and dinner was held at Hotel, North Bay. Mrs. J received the guests in an a and navy blue creation 0 hat was an original navy . she wore a corsage of ta with lilifesâ€"ofâ€"theâ€"valley. Her bridesmaid, Mrs. Keith Stirling Timmins, choss a black velvet filte dress with smart white trimming an: black velvet turban. Her corsaze wa butterfly ros>s and liliesâ€"ofâ€"theâ€"valley John French, of Pandor Cadil‘ac, acted as groomsman. The bride looked charming wearin a French suit of tuxedo style in win wool crepe with a threeâ€"quanrter sleevy of logwood scal. Her matching hat wa an imported stitched felt of the dol type design. She worse a heavy gol bracelet and clip and carried orchid and liliesâ€"ofâ€"theâ€"valley. hay fever on eatin (Frcm North Bay Nugget) The weddinz was soleminized in North Bay ThursGay morning, S2ptsmâ€" ber 1, of Claire Leone Clurrell and Robert Barle Mcore, both of Timmins. The bride is th> daughter of Mr. ard Mrs. Jamss J. Durr>ll, Timmins, and the groom is the sn of the late Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Mcore, Renfrew. Rev. Peter Webster, of Trinity United Church, North Bay. officiated. stances. Send today booklet entitled ‘Aller Cents to cover cost c Bell Library, 247 We Â¥ork, NY., mentionit (Registered Copyriszht Ac North Bay Wedding of Timmins Couple b% 0000 0 0000000004004 04404041 00400# 0000# 0 000040 00004840444 %4 449099000000 0094009000000 0000 0 0090008000400 408# 4 0 0 0 0 0 0 Miss Claire Leone Durrell and Robert Earle Moore Wedded on Thursdayv. AMERICA M ,""(!" “.'i’. Continent Represeniatives F. N. WHALEY A. But does your present "worldly wealth" indicate much chance of future retirement? If you deposit $8 a month* with us starting now we will give you back 825 every month for life starting at age 65. Y ou‘ll get back money more than three times faster than you paid Training School for Nurses 8 Reed Block Applicants are be until Sept. 30. . S$T. MARV‘S HOSPITAL hma ADAM, 10 Marshall Block 1N i1 om of crepe. T 1avy blue filt a of â€"talisman ro 11 TV 13 hn a recoption the Empire imes Durreoll these Dr. Bat A,. NTICOLSON 10 Marshall Blk rCtILV t} t ing interviewed from no\ Appointments necessary. ler M. Fidebh Th Neow LY m OÂ¥ it in. And in case of your death before 65, the same policy guarâ€" antees to your family $905 at once plus an income of #25 monthly for 10 years, Sounds like a good bargain? It is ! Talk it over with a North American Life man., *Approximate rate at age 35. In the fall the spindly stems of buckâ€" horn are often in evidence in lawns, These weeds are a particular nuisance because their tall seed heads, shown in the Gardenâ€"Graph lay down as the lawn mower passes over them and then spring upright again. The best method of ridding a lawn of buckhorn is to pull each plant by hand when the ground is soft aftter a rain. Large areas may be treated by piercing each plant to the rook with a pointed stick the point of which has been dipped in sulphuric or carbolic acid. All lawns should receive an applicaâ€" tion of complete fertilizer this month. But to fertilize a lawn that is full of weeds is a waste of money, therefore clean the weeds out of the lawn before feeding it. The fertilizer will stimulate the grass to thick growth, which in turn will cover over the gaps where weeds have been pulled. If, of course, a large area of bare ground is ileft where big batches of weeds have been pulled or dug out, then such spo‘s should be reseeded. 830 Principal and Head Master Rev. Bert Howard, D.D. Illustrated prospectus and information regardlng_ Bursaries and Scholarshlps on request, Early registration recommenuded, Bellevilie with Realdentlal Ascommodation Public, Lower, Middle Hch Honour Matriculation Becond Year University (€) Business Administration at Commerce Music and Dramatle Art Physical Recreation For Boys and Young Men Beware of Buckhoru Courses Offered may be treated t to the rookt with point of which h A THOUSAND SEEDS Nn CEACH r Girls and ung Women ich plant by soft after a ie treated by TP tultHollid[dh