salada quality and price make premiums unnecessary fresh from the gasries pllliftl washburftchild f deoix heise today brena selcoss an orphan receives s last iissake from her father before h dies o not afraid it any dorosei threatens you something will proteel you brena and peter de wolfe fall in lovo in london and brena tells him the never found that scrap of paper again yes she said i had kept thei purse it belonged to my mother 1 1 kept it in the lining last year 1 story of her life after her fatliea itcutu found the scrap of paper and while livtak in dallas texas she t here asked peter eaferlv went to st louis to marry jim ilunnc- ll s nele asmu rcur eagercy pin who failed to show up hennepins yes she rose opened a box on employer compton iarmalee then maiv lonl-lielvo- ind five the torn bit ries her and they travel widely parma- 1 bookstielves and gave tne torn oic lee seems to fear somethiiir and ho too to peter vanishes as did jim hennepin parma- p examined the crude drawing lee seemed very interested in a scrap of l etcr cxcimincu ine viuue uiawiii paper hearlnc the fikitre of the aztec and the two words this sign scrawl- deity kukulcan which hennepin hadji j ven to brena but which had been lost uiniciui he as interrupted bv brena s voice peter glanced at this mirror saw him self stopped the expression on his own face alarmed him ho imagined that upon it was the first faint ex pression of terror written not as it is written upon the face f a man who is a coward but the dim suggestion of fear of unknown dangers and of subtle influences peter had an unpleasant idea it was thac his subconscious self as en deavoring to transmit to his conscious self some message of warning that many things ir the great lib rary had been disturjed since the mo ment when parmalee had walked out oblivion was evident the cor- ponjcncc on the large desk in the tre of the room had been gathered into a reat pile and tied with string the papers once held by a waste bas ket now empty had been poured into the open fireplace and most of them burned the study had the sir of hav ing been cleaned and straightened peter who had brcnas permission to examine anything ound at first no interest in the correspondence the mail was the miscellany receiv ed by a man whose personality had no power to be loved or remembered who was on the mailing lists of bok deal ers and others desirous of reaching a man of means by persona letters ad dressed to his weaknesses ov his vani ties there were a few ieters from stock brokers as to investment changes and a few bills one of these bills was the oniy piece of matter that gave peter the slight est interest it was from the famous el go ox with the story well said peter dewolfc as brena finished her story that is not a very pretty story the gray iglit of early summer dawn filtered through the chintz cur tains of brenas apartment no peter she replied it is not a pretty story she shivered as one who having no sleep feels the dawn as a wet shroud you can see now peter why the time when your arms were about me and your lips were on mine is the it was filled with the tone of agony of sickness of soul peter be merciful he wheeled about she had been sitting gazing at him cant you see peter that you must say goodbye to me cant you see that it is torture not to say goodbye cant you see peter that i want you to go that i want to go myself back to beconshire to beconshire to my gar den my books the wide view over the sv eep of open country cant you see old john henry wycoit of baltimore of whose death peter had read this bill was for two thousand eight hun dred dollars an account that had probably been settled by parmalees attorney lanfrew it was something of a bill for one book a book describ ed as kolbs privately reprinted ver sion of the jesuit jiss entitled ex plorations of father carlos in mes- c lero desert shipped via registered post on 18th inst below this state ment of account were the words please see letter the letter was missing but peter searched among the burned papers in the grate and was rewarded by two bits of paper upon which were the yours most truthfully of john henry wycoit and the words reluc tant to present but you and below only this justifies and the owner future of canada revealed in past getting ready for 1930 accidents tha tide of motor traffic will soon be swelling with the coming of summer it is some comfort to know that along with safety first injunctions from many quarters bell telephone linemen and construction chiefs will bo found on many highways carrying on their big 19s0 construction program the bell men are practically all skilled firstaiders they undergo a thorough training ia that useful art and their timely aid ia all parts of the province has saved the lives of many who without skilled initial attention to injuries would have been in grave danger over 2300 bell employees men and women successfully passed first aid examinations in 192s sixtythree per cent of the 7500 male workers are qualified first aiders end she said if i knew i was free peter 1 could not see more of vou i are only obliterating that memory could not bear the thought that you you dont think there is to be an too would that i want the memory of these days thou aware of vom possession of thc to end with your kiss that now we vanish he finished and laughed she did not answer but vou cant believe he began that some deathdealing agency has damn it the thing is absurd given it to you already then well you forget that i have lived close uncover this trail of fear that tracks to this thing you might believe too you dear itv the work first if you had heard not mv words but you dare tho words of life itself dare said peter dont make youve told me all f of me do you suppose id quit brena sensing the presence of a now j want to go and get the facts doubt said wearily yes peter all brena i want to knock to pieces this he walked up and down the rug j hideous waiting youve done this un touching the repetitions of the pattern l want to come ani s vou jvith the toes of his shoes then brena if you love me what about this kukulcan you love you peter she buried her face in her hands he stood before her i want this scrap of paper he said i want the keys if youve got em to that hotse up the hudson i want a letter to lanfrew the lawyer i want your permission to do anything i want burn the house down per haps i may cable you for more facts if i want them it added somewhat to peters need of thinking when he found at the dock in liverpool a plain envelopo address ed to him in which was a scrap of torn paper upon it in typewritten letters and unsigned were the words be warned before it is too late peter raised the scrap of paper to his nose it as pungent with an odor of some strong chemical damn them whoever they are ho said this time theyve got a fight on their hands a thin film of dust covered every thing in the parmalee home to peter tho whole house except that part which brena had occupied seemed to imperfect copy accordingly he not in your confidence peter turned toward the library shelves and found the book was a ending now he asked weve definite work cut out for us first weve the job of getting your s i0c of bookraakin m j freedom or finding out and proving thirtyseven the two preceding leaves of tho book had been torn out to be continued on a picture found in a second hand store time pushed it from a parlortable where for long it stood and with the tender- est care twas handled as some loved one viewed it there i found it folded in an old brown book among things faded dusty and for sook and at the face i c mid not help but look she had it taken on a summer day twas long before times thieving took away that hairs young gold done in that girlish way she dressed for it and tied that rib- boa so and stood before the minor all aglow the style says ic was forty years ago twas giveu and received a kindly thought eye3 lit with joy on getting it i wot now giver and receiver are forgot th european regards music as a pleasure a joy the american looks upon it as a course in education george jean nathan great men should not have great faults la rochefoucauld use minards in the stable life like good golf is made up of many little things each one of which helps thc score i better digestion steadier nerves clearer brain are all factors that count and are gained from thc use of wriglcys alcr every meal and the feet preservation peter reading the descriptions of the old missionary who had braved the terrors of thirst and heat to penetrate eastern new mexico suddenly came upon a hiatus in its continuity page thirtytwo began a description of lost pueblo where according to legend a city whose age was of centuries had been ended as a punishment for fail ing to worship the god of water a scourge of thirst has been visited upon fronl t il went as tle the degenerate indian dwellers who had been so long protected by the ter rors that the waterless desert must have had far more warlike tribes who would otherwise have attacked them the well around which the pueblo had been built the very life of the people had been dried up in one night by a miracle many and curious are the carvings ujion the walls of thi3 lost pueblo said father carlos especially i noted a figure of great size a serpent with feathers like a bird a figure such as is seen never but in the lands to the south and beyond the great river tho next page began these ac counts of treasure aro but the poor speculations of tho ignorant long after the sandstorms have covered thc pretentious dwelling places of man such perversity will endure that worldly avarice will conjure into be lief the tradition of fools this was not page thirtythree but page thirtyseven the pages between were gone for a moment dewolfe was puz zled this was not a perfect copy after a moments reflection lie felt be filled with unpleasant ghosts of the i thc humiliation of stupidity personalities that had lived in it lie opened no door without the feeling ing was the imperfect volume that that one of these invisible beings had just stepped out of the chamber from another eixt the stairs up which he of course the copy ho was examin- parmalee had owned originally tho one sent by wycoit probably would bo found in its place on thc shelves where climbed complained gently as if feet i brenas husband had put it one of were following his the last acts ho ever did in that house peter had found nothing in his surj in less than three minutes ho had vey of the house that could contribute foi nd the other copy of the quaint old to his purpose he had looked without j book and taken it down more reason for looking than a desire he blew the dust off the once gilded to see where brena had lived and to ton of its pages and as he did so he confirm hi3 belief that except in the j noticed that at one place the pages did not quite press close together the volume fell open there at page issue no 14 30 library used by parmalee nothing could be found of any significance he was about to return to the lower floor when he saw in front of him upon the bare dusty varnished boards a distinct print of a human foot it was of a small wellformed foot and the next beyond and thc next until they stopped where the stair carpet began there sprang into his mind the ref erence of parmalee to footprints he found himself listening now tho vic tim for the moment of fear as if sud denly the contagion had reached him then it occurred to him that thc prints probably were- made by thc caretakers young barefoot boy peter j smiled again and went down the stairs at the bottom of this flight above jthc hall stand was an old carved chi- jicjc frame holding a dusty mirror owner moved fathered the choice things family loved by chance it was to this dim region shoved thi3 picture served its day recalled a face a world jogged memory a while i place it back but whose it was i have no trace alexander louis fraser minards will kill corns elevation of soul i know of but one elevation of a human being and that is elevation of soul without this it matters nothing where a man stands or what he pos sesses and with it he towers ho is one of gods nobility no matter what place he holds in the social scale chanuiug real dyes give richest colors for cery homo use diamond dyes are the finest you can buy they contain the highest quality anilines that can be produced its the anilines in diamond dyes that give such soft bright new colors to dresses drapes lingerie diamond dyes are easy to use they go on smoothly and evenly do not spot or streak never givo things that redyed look just true even new colors that keep their depth and brilliance in spito of wear and washing 15c packages all drug stores iamo highest quality for so years itraltmiliijqjm sell yours in the highest market deal with an old reliable bust nes house with a reputation of moro than sixtyfive years for square dealing best prices paid prompt payments case returned quickly cases sup piled coc each complete deliv ered payment in advance- reference your own banker write for weekly quotations the whyte packing go limited established over 65 years 7880 front street east toronto 2 ws will pay yoa tha following- prices or hlgrher if irarkot war rants for ricn earars dolivsrsd our warouonso op to ana includ ing april a 1930 rresli extras 27c dli frssli firsts 25c cloz rrosh seconds ana cracks 23c doz s3 m a i ai ii 5 when its stock pails water pails or dairy pails be sure that the ones you buy have the smp label of quality the shield shape red and green abel is a guarantee of finest quality made for heavy duty sjp slow dipt gal vanized pails arc strong sturdy and will give long service every scam and crevice is clean smooth and rustproof watch for this label on galvanized ware popular prices from 55c to 285 a vroiuet o 8 general steel wares col bovey reviews growth of country at lions club diminution rather han enlargement in the size of cities an increasing im portance of food production as a na tional iudustry and the end of modem rush and worry were amougst the guesses about the future of canada made by colonel wilfred bovey when he spoke on looking backward and thinking forward in montreal re sently colonel bovey in a rapid review ot canadian history said in canadian history books that too much stress was apt to be laid on the doings ot politicians and too little attention was paid to the work done by the real pioneers of science and commerce he was recently reading a history of the dominion which devoted nine page3 to the canadian pacific scandal and 10 lines to the building of the cana dian pacific railway the only re ference thac it made to banks was one to cariiers visit to the banks of the newfoundland that kind of his tory lie added was all wrong colonel bovey recalled that during the war with america james mcgill founded the north west company john molson operated steamships ou the st lawrence three years before they were used in england and alex ander mackenzie had already blazed the trail for confederation when he made his way to the pacific coast again during the rebellion canada used its first locomotive steamers were plying on the lake ontario and st lawrence river between montreal and quebec was as busy as it was today that progress said colonel bovey never ceased till tne years of the world war and during the war can ada so conducted herself that she won a plaec for herself in the counsels of the world during the final battles ot war the canadian corps defeated a3 many german divisions and recon quered as much territory as the whole united states army while little economic progress was possible in those years the nation had found itself so that after the war the progress that had been made was as tounding canada had discovered the north and the air the future ot the north was very well assured and the value of air transport to the do minion was remarkably well realized it was because of that history that said colonel bovey he was prepared to make some guesses as to the fu ture of the country his last pro phecy was tha while canadian pat riotism which was new would be come idealized it wouid never cease fifty years from now he concluded our sons and daughters will still be inspired by love for canada the can ada that they will know far better than we ever may nowadays people take aspirin for many little aches and pains and as otten ia they encounter any pain why not it is a proven anti dote for pain it works and aspirin tablets are abso lutely harmless you have tha medical professions word for that they do not depress the heart so dont let a cold run its course dont wait for a head ache to wear off or regard neuralgia neuritis or even rheum atism as something you must cn- you can always turn to an aspirin tablet for relief aspirin is always available and it never fails to help familiaritt dura only a physician can copo yourself with its many uses and with th cans of such pain but avoid a lot of needle suffering rraotmarkrto birkenheads son fluent speaker viscount furneaux discusses political situation at oxford union loudon viscount furneaux 22- vearold sou and heir of the earl of birkenhead revealed at the oxford university union more than a trace of that audacity in debates which first brought his father into notico when after his maiden speech in the house of commons lie was hailed as the white hope of conservatism the oxford union was considering a motion endorsing right hon stanley baldwins latest pronouncement that he would submit to the people tho question ot import duties on foreign products chiefly food ill the form ot a referendum when the conservative party was returned to power i seem to see some similarity in two notable conversions those ot lord rothmere and if one may say so without irreverence of saint paul remarked viscount furneaux speak ing of the comedy provided br lord beaverbrook and lord rotli mere he described them as those two noble lords who eventually embrac ed with such screaming and disgust ing exuberance on the whole viscount furneaux said he thought lord rothermero had finished a had third to mr bald win had accepted tho conservative senders position and found himself wheeling the freefood baby whlcn he always loathed in an alien peram bulator ho riiight end by deposit ing the unwanted bantling cither on mr baldwins doorstep or with tho porter of the dally express ofllce he concluded it is understood viscount furneaux will start first in tho city the fin ancial world thus reversing his fath ers career the earl of birkenhead after a brilliant political career is now a power in the financial world literature and life one ot tho greatest mistakes the moralists many of whom aro literary critics mako is to imagine that liter ature is primarily a representation ot ilto of course it is nothing of the sort life consists for the most part of innumerable ordinary moments ot which thc lives of ordinary people are made tip literature scrupulously pushes asido tho ordinary person or takci him into account only in 3omc moment in which lie becomes extra ordinarily interesting or beaui