style of the expensive clothes which Georgina gave her. There was still a strong sweetness of daphne in here reom, and though she loved the smell of it, she threw open the window, :uhnrvomnluflc-u-.udfln out. Looking out she could see the plage, almost empty at such an hour; she leaned further out, gazâ€" ing a last farewell at the blue exâ€" panso of tne Mediterrancan, and glanced down at the gleaming marble pavement of the terrace below her second floor window. net harm the heart. Be sure to look for the name Bayer in the form of a cross on every Aspirin tablet. Aspirin is made in * esda and all druggists have it. Demand and Gek °_ really hers, those few simple things which she had.bought with her own money and had laboured to make in eunning imitation of the beautiful Miss is Fontaine made no further protest, though she was at a loss to know what she would do without Joan to keep her amused. Joan went back to her room to to get away. Somehow he had rubâ€" bed all the gilt off this life of inncâ€" eent sham. Fiers Hannen. She knew that her fright about him was unreasonableâ€" comfortally with Smithers to look after you. And I shall be able to have the house in Eton Place all yeady for you when you arrive." "But why this sudden hurry? After all we are only going to stay for another four days?‘ M "I‘ve had nybur from motherâ€" and anyhow, â€"you see, it‘s awkward for me, staying here with Lord Edâ€" ward about." Do_cull not tell Georgina about This Name* Means Extra Fast Relief aon d se t a d d after all, you can get home quite comfortably with Smithers to look h. _ lt CCCOF} °2F FEHcd the whole packing. Finding a ten nc e * seorgina, she gave the box to the maid and told her io have it sent down to Mr. Hannen‘s yacht, the Corsair. She went in to Miss in Fonllln'o‘ "Joan! Why?" “MMM-".‘ this morning‘s train! Do let me. in the sw """'g"..""».. Te sweelness o ; e ""-0-';- face, mocking absolute! determined " flowersâ€"after what she had 1t was too insulting. ..?'W‘:.:'m.mnu th from tore it up and *A 6 PIRI N flj Hdoi(Far es > poss » ww M P n---u-v-__-“‘.!‘ YH€ HEART From Pain Smiling faintly, she retied " she said. "I want you go back to London toâ€" el‘vet and Steel PEARL BELLAIRS and breathed ; she saw ROMANCE or DICTATOR her vEGETARLE comrgun#d L lic, Be cmd Don‘t endure another day without &ohlnuo-‘luuu-dnï¬'l uhdnh.mdnuh.ha By 'ux.:hnn-nvhhlnmn of sort willing to occupy his time! It did indeed seem ridiculous. But there was still a little seent of daphne left in the roomâ€"sufficient to remind her that he had found time for her. * If she stayed she saw herself endâ€" ing up on very bad terms with him. I=~ that case, supposing he discoverâ€" «4 about her father? He had the power to injure her, he could, supâ€" posing he had a grudge against her, make things impossible for her father at the factoryâ€"he could even turn her father out of his job. ‘ Tears were in Joan‘s eyes as the train pulled out, and she waved a temporary farewwll to Georgie, and 4 final one to the brilliance and deâ€" "I‘ll slip out through one of the side doors of the hotel," Joan told Miss la Fontaine when she was ready to leave, "I‘ll tell them to have a tax! at the side entrance, 1‘ I #o by any other way T‘ll be sure She did slip out by the side onâ€" trance aud no one saw her drive away with Miss la Fontaine in the wildly honking French taxi ie alf : dazen people to whom I‘ll 1.® to say goodâ€"bye â€" and 1 haver‘t a moment if I am to eatch the train. You must say goodâ€"bye to them for me, Georgie!" Looking at it like that, to stay was too great a risk. anxious to please. Instinct told Joan that this spoiled bauty was doâ€" ing all she could do to extract a smile of approval from Piers Hanâ€" of 100 women report the woman singled out Piers Hanâ€" nen on the terrace, to bestow her attention on him. Leading her escort she went out of her way to get to Piers Hannen at his table. Jorn could not hear what was said, but from the general Allh‘.‘chdll..h.-'.. '“‘W,Mm«-n. from the plage, escor‘ed by a midâ€" dle aged man whose family corenet she knew > be decorated with strawberry leaves. The woman was one of the most ln-onhlhlubknblomu,. leader in style, in beauty and in wit. ""hmdflu-.u.. might not have locked twice at this couple at whom everyone in Cannes was in the habit of staring, had not When you are just on edge «+ -h-nucn'lâ€".‘hm noise 1: : when everything you do inb meating ) Par‘iÂ¥in Epet 68 h.‘lvflaa our af Y0d women feport ECY m CCC s a goid Leading her escort she went o-t‘ pipe organ, m-m by celebrated o(hrnytogfl!oflcnlnmuum.&o rarest of woods and at his table. Jmmmmm--um-nmu.m what was said, but from the general| diamondâ€"studded electric light bulbs appearance of the lady, her ges.) no bigger than wheat grains, It is tures, every movement since she Presided over by a fairy princers who um«mm«mulmmmm nen, made it obvious that she Was| =â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"_________ _ QUIVERING Sshe contemplated him with as much unkindness as ‘her gencrous sould had in it. If she went out of “‘Mdflohtdhnnu-. h""h-dnhrnco,.ug.‘ Mmttohnu.-kuih again. When one had made up one‘s mind to leave so much enjoyment m""“il-.ltwym ip --unom-unh-unly. Yes, there was no doubt of it. â€" Those wide shoulders and the ruddy hair on ‘hb’dmb.d.vlukhw- all her viewpoint allowed her to see ;I'N-.---mm... It was Piers Joan looked more Hannen, i w0 Harn P wht hem WOR NERV ES aA newspaper, sho reverted, probably gradually an individual style of writing. ..."-c wores, she gredually begs express her own indiv.duality character. This confession gous tke very heart of the valus Ceanhologv. d s My correspondent says* "If writing is so characteristic of the Rndividuai, why do the schools insist that . the pupils imitate a copybook pottern® . .‘. 1 myself was an excellent copyâ€" book writer, but as soon as I was not forced to write in that way, 1 stopâ€" ped and wrote in any old way. 1 must add that most of my friends who were miso excellent copybock stylists at schoo!, now write no bet» ter than J do". wPmme® e v are & uho reverted, probably gradually, to a1 individual style of writing. In orh»+ woros, she gredually began to express her_ own . indiv.duality and character. This confession gous to thke very heart of the value . of Graphology. ot t We it writer, once she was away from the arbitrary M.f{ E.‘. e vew It, will be obvious that educationâ€" al authorities cannot take . every angle of things into their considerâ€" ation. Their task, in regard to writâ€" ing, is to teach the radiments of it and for this reason, they have to ?"5‘ a standard style. It h;ul- estly impracticable to attempt to teach hundreds of pupiis to take but a single school, and yel allow them all to use their ewn systems. It is the same ':h mlu."::' to write as t:ulu of hl:'. We must g* irom the simple to the complex. The real essance of this quertion, w ols § Hnts thet B WHAT DOES You ï¬ HAnpwritnc Â¥CZz®% E REVEAL 9. ALittEh â€" Geottiey st Cuir The doll‘s house is really a castle which Colleen has spent more than nine years in furnishing, It is 14 feet high, stands 9 feet square on its base and is set on a precipice. _ A study in costliness and perfection, it Ionuuelw-lou as a gold pipe organ, ‘pictures by celebrated artists, the ~rarest of woods and A very interesting question comes to me in the mail, and because it is of considerable bearing. on the posâ€" sibilities of character reading from handwriting, 1 am dealing with it in this article. Manhattan Island s really being !"“'-mam.m architectural feature, . which . is scheduled to tour the world. ‘From the small fee charged to view it, Miss Moore hopes to build up a fund for the support of various crippled children‘s homes. fnything but a dependent and a hangerâ€"on, unless she married her 'l’!â€"'hlll-.loul'd'ud light of the Riveria. She to leave itâ€"but still. she course, no compulsion is practised on those who don‘t incuige. Ginger ale is on hand for the tectotalers! New Ymumnlh“ Of a woll‘s house that is famous on two important counts; (1) It belongs to the actrer=, Colleen Moore, (2) it is valued at 4435,000. © § CL00 + CCemnng at nine o‘clock, &A daring young girl, on a series of Aying trapezes does stunts fifty. | her four feet above the heads ot the fascinated patrons, ' And the reader‘s anxious enguiry l# answered even before it is thked, There is a strong net to catch the 3: fying figure should she miss her | grasp. Besides, ber turns are done |principally over a cleared space high abore the centre of the buge room. bepy 0 _ 1 COOre of th °* WmTormg before a dearth -hmmmum-m hmuly“:.--y.m-nh-. thange from secrecy of hotel kitchens, And there‘s the beauty partor that is maid to be serving cocktails to its customers while they submit to shampoos . and permanents, _ Of taken 14. . ___* _0Â¥ "iG _ way, bas taken its name from this vaudevilie Aitraction, ‘The building was formerâ€" ly a millionatre‘s stable, hence its helght, and the bare brick walls are lo.ouluolnuumumn-. modernistic art elsewhere, Another famous restaurant which has succeeded well enough to form a chain attracts the customers who like to see their dinner cook over enormous open freplaces, ‘The idea aP Teasaugecra ie . of gatering befora while the chicken restaurant, by the Graphologists maintain, and prove the truth of their claims by the acâ€" curate character delin¢ation; they make, that handwriting is the hallâ€" mark of the individual‘s character; that people write in & Certain way because their characters and natures are of a certain type, 814 they posâ€" sess certain definite cMBeacteristics In spite of various w and styles of writing, we ultimately express our own individual style and in doing so, present & PMture of our characters. Jt is becan®e of this that a char«ter reading Of Ywurself from your handwriling can b# 5> definiteâ€" ly helpful to you. _ Would YOU ":“. have YOUR character . analy from _ YOUR handwriting ? This well â€" known Graphologist can helpyou as he has helped so many other®. And he may be able to help you 10 know your friends better. Send specimens of the bandwriting you Weh to .h‘ analysed, stating birthdge in c«cb gase, Rend 10¢ coip f6¢ ach .md-‘ men, and enclose with A3¢ stamped Clair, Room 421, 78 Adciate St. W.. Teronto, Ont. All isti@"fare conâ€" fidential and will be snswered as quitaly as possible, \ believed to be entirely uccidental Cleveland paperâ€"Thicves are beâ€" Neved to be responsible for the theft, Headling in . ‘Toledo paperâ€"Blaze Is Laid to Combustion. lo, N.B. Mrs. Roosevelt im mione when" we "ond make th trip, or whether the Presiâ€" dent woud accompany ber. hoped to spend some time during the WASHINGTON, â€" Recently Mre. strangled had it staved there much Corkum‘s fourâ€"year old *0n & ¢¢nt : bribe him to sleep, but it‘s £0ing cost a lot more than that. He â€"ewallowed â€"the cent. â€"Heâ€"was rushed to hospital in DBridgewnter, .‘M‘.- Xâ€"ray examination, locatâ€" coin stuck in his :r'"'- A delicate eperation remoy t. Doctors said ke would |ave Bribing Child With The name of Chal®® *4800. son of the ...‘",Mx’nvcnlnr. is among those mentio<d in Washâ€" ington as ‘::,‘;, 1:8. Federal Housing rator Mr. Ediâ€" son was first H.«.mz Adminisâ€" Iesue No, 19â€"‘35 _ Suggested For Post at for New Je envelope, 10} Cent Proves What They Mean The accident . is They gave Willis PP The objection is frequently heard that gardens and flowers cost too much or that they take too much time, _ The truth is that jt is not so anuch a matter of money or time as It is of desire and disposition, . If we are disposed to have gardens and fowers and really desire to have atâ€" tractive home surroundings, we will have them no matter how busy we may be. Information as to suitable varieties for planting may be obâ€" tained from your local !* " sal Bociety or from the unimn« woule tural College, T*% cost in any event need be onty trifing and the amount spent on the nursery stock necessary to improve the average home will be found one of the fnest Investments that can be maZe, It will pay great dividends in s«isfaction and will inâ€" crease the v» se of your home, Your ind‘sidual efforts in making your hom more attractive will im We are influenced to a greater ¢xâ€" tent than we realize by our surâ€" roundings. Childen are particularly sensitive in this regard. _ Surcly a home in and around which flowers are grown is a better place to bring up children than a home where 10 attention whatever is paid to these friends of the plant kingdom, As the twig is bent the tree is inclined, is nouluh’“udnnwoh eonpection with the training of childâ€" ren, If children are taught to love fowers and to become familiar with them, their hearts will be flled with love for these things which leave less room in their hearts . 14 minds for the things that burt and destroy, ‘The season approaches when evâ€" ery homeâ€"owner in Simcoe and th" surrounding . villages of Norfol. County should be giving thought to the beautification _ of his premises and thus to the improvement in apâ€" pearance of his community, _ While horticultural work has enjoyed a treâ€" mendous boom iA Norfolk in the last few years, there remains plenty of room for r:n.‘ut development. Every â€" unimpro or lo-oeubo-uomm by the judicious use of trees, shrubs, fowers and wellâ€"kept grass, The old saying that r home is not a home until it is rianted very well emphaâ€" sizes the necessity and wisdom of planting. Further, the progressiveness and thrift of a commodity or a municl« pality are often reflected in its apâ€" pearance and the best advertising that any community can do is to priâ€" sent a pleasing, inviting appearsnce to the world â€"â€" an appearance of prospérity and industry, reflected by wellâ€"planted and wellâ€"kept public and private gounds, BEAUTIFY YOUR HOME BROWN LABEL â€" 33 % ib. ORANGE PEKOE â€" 40¢ & ib. vuMBLUN T24 AND SURROUNDINGS decision of the which will be final. Whether you a of silk stockings or not, we will mail to sll eatriom «4 charge, our famous bookletâ€"‘Th4 4. Send 2s many as you wish; prove your street and thus have a part in beautifying your community, Incidentally you will have helped to make a more beautiful Canada,â€"The Norfolk Observer, PecErera se ons it m on NC ce 5 ahhom, to jokn A. Henos Co. Ltd. io m of Monarch flob’-.up‘ua- hn-uhrmï¬bâ€" guaranteed $1.00 be given as prizes to 1,000 entrants, ‘There are dozens of in 33 bane builant eotors: how which tan hp::lu-“h--?-b* ‘l.â€"hn.hy"-h‘y-“‘-h.z wflflmâ€"nun _ * *‘ _ HoW to w pairs of Monarch m :l%o::;c’r Jobn.::;'g | Are You Sluggish ? To Throw O Energy Toomaume Jut as we do, aBd ang Ill“ one must shuddor pasufully to Woers the on‘ vosslite remedy ‘wes to summon a nelghbor and have him Resqh wag $eiapHe forth ant of your The hardy cave dwaller of old never had modern delicacios like cake, creamed chicken sad ice cream. He gnawed his meat <f the bone and ate usbuiled grainâ€"and, sccording to some modern thto:ints, because of that tue: he Lad nealtny lnnc,nr.ll.lnm_» fessor of anthorphology at Denver Univewaity, har been lcoking at the skulls of apclent clig dwellers in Mess Verde Naticsal Park, and he It has even been claimed, since the phrase is found in use by Thomâ€" as Rymer, a writer of the time, that it was the Great Pire of London, in 1666, '&hmmrfl"' and that _Mook and Crook (or Croke) were a firm of lawyers, famed as assessors and valuers, who did much legal work arising thereâ€" A much more farâ€"fetched explanâ€" ation is that the phrase . implies "foully, like a thief," or "righteousâ€" ly, like a bishop," the heok being the instrument used by footpads to lay hold of unwary travellers, and the crook being the bishop‘s erozier. and probably the best, is that forâ€" merly poor people were allowed to eollect firewood in the woods of a neighbouring manor, both for perâ€" sonal use and for sale, and they often carried a hook or a crook with which to bring down withered and rotten boughs. Various explanations of the origin of the phrase "by hook or crook" have been urged; but the simplest, and packed in a tin by the "butter pat" champion of Cadby Hall, Lonâ€" don. No machine has yet been found to equal her dexterity. that the ‘last Ming Emperor (1628â€" 1643) forbade its use. Tobacco is said to have been inâ€" troduced into China from Luzon (Phillipines) in 1530. ‘The Chirese twice as many trains (passenger freight) per mile of route track as the German lines, more than twice the clergy of the Church of Engâ€" hntl “.m eightyâ€"years cll-a“â€"n ,400 are over and 391 “MMM t Britain‘s thriftiest countries are Lancashire and Ceshire, Last year their inhabitants saved nearly £21,â€" 500,000 throught the Nation! Say» ings Movement, an average of 43 188. 6d. per head. _A woman was motoring down ® narrow country lane in Yorkshire when a white hen fluttered out of the hedge and flew in through the window, alighted on the steering wheel, and finally, after a few seeâ€" onds, settled on the vacant seant next to the driver, A flock of crows ‘which perched on the clectric power cables serv« Ing the city of Heljo, in Korea, emused a shortâ€"cireuit which put out ull the lights in the town, stopped tramways, closed cinemas, and caus» ed a breakdown in factories. Aroused from a nap by firemen who told her that her house was on fire, Mrs. Nettie Nelson, of Oak» land, California, advised them to put it out and dropped off to sleep _ Diring a, whirlwind ""ï¬ a sixâ€"foot sake fell from the c Into one of the principal streets of the foreigw quarter of the city. Medical sclence has reduced the mortality ‘rate about one per cent. a year for the last thirty years, and, as a result, 600,000 more persons afe alive today than would be if public health conditions of 1900 ex« A‘Werried householider cumbed & Jupanese "mountain at dawn, deter« wined to ml sulcide, but was zo overwhelmed bBy.,the beauty of the ~sunrise that he "thanged his Who Said It First ? Thank Your Dentist QUEERX WORLD