, _~._...____._.__ sv JANI ensure llcllslll lllllvllllslrr mulls - - lfilisflll- Arts and Soienooihmihppllod 91th B_s°:dB‘_.,.‘h-_~_~;M_h‘:--::: l A walrasee .. .. certi sates mil"! °i t - - I" “m” ’°"°°"' m" “"1"” l a naltlefggrflilfleatlggreolrviito- ' A allure veaas ls ti o . l: Blflsj," Mu}; F,,,,',§,,"‘,‘,, ‘illlltglglvfvizgllr um stelillod antag- Medicine. Law. and Theology , ' . ‘tven as electives in B.A. Course. - Have you any ttnsxelltrf" _Mary asked, to my astonishment; the bad said nothing of desirfnfto ulpsnont Largest under raduatefacullyin m the Maritime rovinces. Three 2g’, t 1 h .....:..':.: m- ' 5°'°“°' 5““d"'"' °d°'“ "Can we see the one you think IY""‘"“"“ .‘“d"h7"°"""“"‘5' might-he empty." Mary pinobedl my arm. I realised I was to say bpenaes _ =spenseeliBhhlnd°V°Y$Z°°°w nothing so, rather dared, I follow- ~ |_ .. -. - a “nest-qr scum. i;ll.li..ll.|l.. l.l..ll.. ‘rt-u tern sodas spleens-l- m. lm same that Mrs. Lynch charged us. The room was neither so light, nor given in prizegaad scholarships ed h“; ' ' _ YIQFIY- 5"“! i9‘ "hm-l" \° Tile‘ room was a small one at the slrmTvFa-‘i’ "fithlglaicun ointl " top of the house, the price tile "'°"'- "ll h‘ l" rmlllllign". m‘ - gitrurswand hot wste and s EiZil .‘ ~ _ _, t A - - f so clean, so I couldn't understand . ' Mary's action in wasting so much fmm" Acddlillflllltlfsttmiilary timéal 31x13; abopttlt. ' H it'll...‘ nazintvrfwfieio Imago" - ' ' t i e o . 0i , “film” ‘ ' --'- m" s‘°"" awny,"nshem‘t3old raalamwhenwq Bwt- l "lfilellhllffl", £$m§m I! i ' A Residential School reached the street. “I fooled 'enl I ‘ "all right, didn't I‘? Got to'hand it . .Tho.AIus.—To prepare Girls and t YoungWomeniercompietellving. h"; Cannon-Twelve; irfdludlnq College Matriculation. General, Music, Art, Expression. House- ‘ hold Science, Business. TheFocnlty.—Twcnty-iollrTeachers of fine personality and Special l "lfrairlin, to mo this time." "I should any I have! I hadn't the slightest idea what you were about." ' - "Didn't I know it. and wasn't I scnirt you'd give‘ it away‘! I'm afraid we ain't done with that bloke. He's-stuck on you, Zena That Joe called him 'Mlke'—jusi ,The Equipments-Modern and First think oi, a fellow named Itlikc try , C_ ass in every respect. lng to shine up to you—s girl narn Jsull Sch l.-F Y u r ed zemfl", ‘ pupl: no or o n“ I coll‘.'lnt keep from laughing. ‘llslrmlggnr-Write for illustrated gar???‘ lazrlflyes sggtwsguijzfsel m” . "Mike is a very good name." I ro- Iflrfl- ‘I. DeWOLFB. lhlh. Prllldpll- tllrncd. ' "But I hops you are not him...- lama rigilt, It|ary—they make rne yery ~ lllleaayfi ~.- g , ‘~ ,."'Don't~ you worry, 1m‘ look after as»... Bigcitiea has queer folks in ‘llhem, Zena. “When they find yol~ can take care-of yourself, they ain't takill'_ let? you‘ alone; " but they rte-hill’ on trust, and they won‘ ls ‘you he good if they can help themselves-especially such swim:- na them." Silo jerked her head backward in the direction the men had ilken. l was really more alarmed than T cared to let Mary know. To inc“ that this ‘Mike’ had tricrl to trllll Ill-mullet School "to . Young Men.- ‘Rlloly-Sooolid finances-Collegiate. ManuaiTrakl- in‘, Business, Special Courses. [suborder-Modern Residence, Good all menhldeai LocatlclnS len- Bo vlronment. Modern yrn- o me long before I knew Mary, pre pulp , Experienced Teachin cluded all idea that he might! b: Stafffldoderate osl. attracted to her, not to mo. I Q Porlllustrahd lialople oi llfNlilltiil lnoro freely whorl i rccal led that she soon would he work- ing in tho samc place with mo, and that we could go to work and ro- tllrn togcthcr. My first day at the restaurant was arm-breaking and heart-break- ing. Ily night I was so tired that I doubted my nhiiity to get homo. I staggccrd as l walked, then rlm fllllllllllillll)’ to the car when I heard some young follows laugh and hint that I was sozzled." ~I threw myself on the bod all dressed" but my weary body would not allow me to rest. Whcn Mary value in I was snbbng quietly, ut- tt-riy wrecked, hopeless tirat I over should be ahio to keep my promise to Motilor, and make her a home. Why, I could scarcely keep my own body and soul together! ‘ "What is it,.honey? Them fellows ain't been‘ botberin’ you again, has they?“ "No, Mary, but I never can stand it to carry those heavy trays! I am so discouraged. Don't give your job llp—-~thnt restaurant work is killing." ~ "But I have! I told Rosenstisn today, and goliy, didn't he flare up! -I told you I was the hllll cheese. I- wns foolin', but to hear him go on you'd really think I was. lit information apply to e1". 'MARGAR‘ET'8 l...» cosmos re»- liAllIDDdIil-Ifilrfilu HILL AGADIIIO COUIII IIOI rllranaronv 1o Iosroon ‘ssaralcuurmrs, III-L GIIKIICIAI. coolll. IIIIIC -— Al: >—HUIJIIIIIOLD $ina—rultllcal. ILIJIICU- isod—-aallo-—-ewlassnslo I'm. than llsunuv. Pldlllfl ‘ Ins Imansall. I. Insane. . , n-l-syf-‘i sauna-armada. w. 15 08nd” not an opfllolfln- _ ' "$1 ROYAL vlc 0RIA ' COLLEGE I nmNTnnA" ‘ bogged so hard I told him I would‘ ll Ilrllsllmlvwlltl. nonnlcoie FDR gmy ppm Balm-day night, WOMEN l1 D‘ I groaned. For all that I had told WIRING‘! ATTIIN Ill}, Md}! UNIVERSITY (Founded and endowed by the late II t. Hon. Baron Uneth- eona and Mount Ilovll) s: Courses lending’ to degrees in Ares, separate in the main from ihosmfzr men. but. under identi- al lion itions; andto degrees in e c. for residence i. prllcationa hou d be made early an accom- gdotlon in thoCollege in limited. For prospectus ‘and informm‘ Mary not to give up her work for that at tile restaurant, the thought that l trad to go out alonelfor titrat- days longer was almost more than I could ‘:u~: ‘You're sick!" she_ declared. "No, aiary, I'm not—I'm just dead tired. Go get your dinner. I don’ want any tonight." "Not on your- oil, all right! You lay right there il i come back, You'll foel better by_that time." I must have fallen asleep in spite of my woes, for when Mary came - .i.n, her arms laden with bundles, i did nor boar her. ' "Woke up now, Zena-dinnerxis served!’ she said, shaking me a bit. CHAPTER I37 Even now I shudder when I think of Frthose days in the , ‘restaurant; those first days when - - alone I tried to keep up my courage ‘when t. You Get! ‘ion apply to The \\'u_r|I|-I|. "tired as a dog" l'i.?‘ii‘.l.".'.%'..s'b- ‘ii :34 sleep a full of‘ to???» Privsio ‘the ugly ‘Imam’ you need . EUROPEAN PLAN ,, ' t I i A C2lf€1lIi'S81€C-‘. " don of ‘jevmy line if Jewelry", marks‘ 5hr Stock; . lpylornptlywiththeaid iv- wv-aro- """' gd to have you‘... i, : ‘ Iefihl was; and eliminate it W. ao- ". ' to know." "Boats all, don't it, Zena, how thy act. Well, never mind, some lnoraeslu, _ Treatment A : roveraeslp. Than t with Cut u I knew well that’ as soon as Mary came I should bear things better, yet I felt terriblyselflsb that I had said nothing to her. If it should turn out badly, and then Rosen- stisn should refuse to take her back, l would feel so guilty. All day Sunday. we washed and ironed and cleaned. _Wlthout say- ing mucll, Mary seemed to realize that hor untidiness worried me - thllt sh ewould be more of a lady in my estimation if she were neat and tidy. It was strange. when you hink we were the same age, how eager she was tqlilo as I wanted he rto. Just llhinLwas enough to =naka',her forswear the habits of her llfeilrne. 4 Q ' "You know what‘ real ladies do, l don't," she would say. ‘I know what them kind what pretend to be and ain't, do — lots of thenl-- but when it comes to the real think i'm as foolish as n baby. And, Lana," she would add, "I do want ‘o be a lady sometime more'n any» thin’ in the world. But till you come along I had a swell chancel" Mrs. Lynch was as pleased as could be when she found Mary was to work in the same place with mo. "It's better for the both of yces." the declared. "Ollc oi yces ‘aim cal-e of the other. Not sllyln‘ out you botll be good girls either. But (Jhicago is Chicago, just iollle my other big city, and girls can't be too careful. Just-don't believi- any shiliy-shallin’ men and.you'll he all right. If I hadn't swallowed tllc things Joo Lynch told me, hook, line and sinker, I wouldntbe. a -ontin' rooms in me ouid ago. Ila had n smooth tongue, Lynch had. begorra! Loike most of the Irish-- incl-tilt incllldell—and it sure didn't take him ‘long ‘to git round Kitty Iioggorty, that's rne. A ( fcv» "illifiilih words, a kiss, and tllcn tho pronto. Didn't takc long. but bo- gorra the rcpntn‘ has been‘ long onough to make u‘p. 'I‘he Good Book sez, or did I hoar it sonlc- wherewhoro, that tbim what mar- ioa in haste, riponln at their lots" llrc. Tran it is, ivory word! So took out. girls-Chicago mcn has‘ mighty cousin‘ ways." Mary and I both laughed. while I lssurcd -ller' she need not -ION4t about either oi us getting married iuat yet. "lt’s a troso I'll have before I step out," Mary declared, "and a iinc one too. I n.rl't goin‘ to got married hilt oncc, and l'ln goln’ to have all the trimmlns, ain't you, Zonal" "l never expect to get married, Mary,’ I returned. Someway; l didn't fest like» laughing. The iihollght or Kenneth Lawrence flashed through my mind, What would he think of me now-a wail rese in a cbeapirestaurant, taking live and ten-cent tips? “Sure you will aom-e day," Mrs. Lynch, who had lingerod, broke in "iiut Lnlm yollr_ time, Miss Zena. It's awful ‘to marry. wrong." After she left the room, ,Mary" aaid: . - "Did you moan that, Zena, about not getting married?" , "Yes, Mary." "Honest Iajun, don't you axpoct to marry no one-ever?" "No, Mary." _ "Did you have a fellow what lov- ed you die, like they do ill atoriesi", "No——hut Mary. who would went to marry a poor unhappy girl like me‘! Then, too, I have promised to take care of Motber—you know, to make a home." “I've been thlnkin' a lot about that Zena. Don't it sort of fit in with what Mrs. Lynch told us abou hurrin.' No fallow wants to marry a whole ready-made family, 1 fitness. But perhaps some day- wo'li find a fellow what might help *—if he loved us enough." "That's just it, Mary-IF he 1dr‘ ed its" enough. I guess not many would do that-mot men we wfant Young men we are apt to meet day we'll have good positions, then avail ‘MIDI them. where they git "Chm. Nth home‘ and go to bod." I; Hold. ilointing toward‘ the hall. R°m°mh° t‘ Io have been laund- "l"! i" My; tomorrow we have " to be waitresses." , .. ' .5 l9" ‘ ‘ CHAPTER 58 ‘ Mr. Watkins seemed‘ to like Mary it onco. She really was a yondgr, 3M started right in asif she had been n waitressJili her life. About ln hour‘ after the place Qpgngd w," llhimened to be near each other for l moment, and as. 115g“ “m; ‘Yhflildo-nfldjdid: ' ~' .‘ "My first flak. Zonal t felt taxi bosanr ,when I took the aim-q. 10w I'm iookiN-forkm)" O l had been so embarrassed by use». t (Olin- g“h°. mar? .._ Sq Lpoc l "Gee, but I'm tired!" Mary aaid ‘do we até‘ oar luncheon. - ‘mile ihanjve had been able to l!- ’but have been completely relieved gird. and to‘ which we both .did l s it. . ‘ihglty nifty grub!"_Msry added ft r ’ . r.‘- '_ l i n ' Mons, I'm goill‘ . ' head waitresses. 0dh- ever‘ ,‘ r . roars I never would oven motile feeling that l was making qelfalppbject of ‘charity, or ho ism-ll cyept them without flush: » Ye . ‘realised thatl was ohsh". ,-I needed the tips. lt.was aiomerydor tho patrons to give Should I obiool. it would" foolish. but probably object of radicals. eted my pride and my r t| only be, a better e a moment. isn't It ‘gobd?’ I returned, _ .' ' m going to make good here. to be one of tbolil you see if I ain't." "i haven't a doubt but you will. Mary. But - I never shall-.—,I couldn't!" - From the first day I had worked in tile restaurant, I had noticed a young lllan who seemed to take all his meals there. lle had attracted lite by the embarrassed way he tipped me. lle was tall and very thin. lle ate delicately, also very sparingly. He looked like a student, l thought, yet seemed a bit old, about ll0. His clothes were shin)’. but hc was always very neat and clean, ills linen spotless, his peas shined. ‘ , ' "That palefaced guy is failing 'ill love with you, Zena," Mary said about a week after she commenced io work in the restaurant. _"-‘IIc wanted him to today, but motioned that ho wanted to sit at your llle. _ "Don't be imagining things Mary. Ilc probably hadn't a single thought oi me. Perhaps he liked ‘he location of the table. ' “What you blushin‘ for if it's that‘! lie looks all right—poor tho. , Waterman . a well train-aid highly esteemed wouldn't take the place the head, She Feels‘ ‘Till! I . f, 'Yelll_s_Youllgel mts. MILLIV save TANLAO ENTIRILY RELIEVE!) HER 0F HER TRO LES- OAINQ 8) P0 ND! "i have not only gained thirty povlnda in weight by taking Tanlac, of a case of stomach trouble which has hotheyed me for twenty years" ‘was the ..fl"efiiia'rkable statement made rselntlyfmy Mrs. L. Milley. St‘ John woman living at ll’ It. Andrews St“ St. Johns. Newfound- land. ‘her home previous m bpr coming to Btalobn, N. 8., "l can't ifegln to tell all I have suffered in the past on account of indigestion) Even though I lived on bread and milk moat of the "m6. I suffered the worst kind of Dlllns in the pit of my stomach after outing, and the gas formed in such quantities that I could hllrdly breaths and my heart would palpitnic fearfully. I fell off in weight until [was a mere shadow of what I used to be, and was so tired and weary all the time that I could llardiy kepp going. My frlclld have told me since my recovery that they never unpflcidd -I would live very long. and I never thought‘ myself that I should never ‘be a woli woman again. "But Taniac has made a new wo- ‘mlln of me and I have gained so tmllctl in weight and strength that llly friends arc amazed at the won- derful change in mo. I can now eat anything I wish and am never lr-ouillod in the least with pains, gas or alpitaltion. I sleep so rnuoh hctlcr at nlght tha l gs up n bet up ill the mornings full of energy and Noll can't marry a poor man, Zena. Not as poor as him. Ho couldn't‘ take care of your mother I know. "As he never will have the chance‘, Mary! What's the use oi talking about it? Some way I am sort of, sorry for him. I wish he wouldn't tip me. He looks as if he didn't cat enough." "Better take his want to ilurt his feelin's. night. tips. bad seen he didn't order bnrdly_ kind as your young man, and ho just give mo one look anti said‘. "i do as others do. You-have serv- ed rrle vcry nicely." Then he lcftil jcents by ills platef-bc bad only rat‘ 15 cents worth. ._ Mary had often astonished mi‘- b? ‘little things that showed her Jllhdn ness. She probably woud novor_ have mentioned this exper onct; Ilnd Inot aaid l wished the young rrrlln would not tip me. , ,After this talk with Mai’! .1 watched lllin when became in. If. was as silo hall said. IIB ffifllfliill other t leg, often waiting lltliil someone of no llo could sltwllflrfl I WOiltl wait upon him. He always spoke l‘ . slmtly hofore lle OIIIPPPAI, and aftor he had illlishod. llatl a glliet, cultivated voice, and l aha beautiful teeth. white . pvt"... iOllo day he laid a beautiful ronc from tho table. lie blushed as he »d‘ld so. I knew as well as if he had told Wmo. .tile ,I‘OSG togive me, and aso that "he probably colldnt afford to do both. l thanked him. but waited to plqk.,lt,- up llntll lle had gone, . . Bile had observed the incident ‘fl guess I know when a fellow is.in xlove!" ' TELLS HER STORY CHAPTER.- 59. h; ZENA L'.. . . jrflfhtifls it is not strange that the gift of a rose should have ap- pealed so strongly to mo. It was the first flower I had had given mo 'in months. And neither is it per- haps strange that I, who had re- ceived costly bouquets of orchids and roses without a thought, ahollld -have treasured this nlaglo blossom. In a way, too, it invested the giver with a new interest for me. A bit of sentiment was almost as M" Her dress collar hurt her and she. “not knew" the skin at the ack of her neck was cracking. It was. l ‘Then "'67? m ~----.--~.-- aw was ‘suggested h; Anni Emma-who had l ilf- k l d til b d ti tibia a; £5.25 133d mod overnight: , my tilts thatl k what she folt. glttwmgtlflglhol tr-ilshittt Ltd. ...ift'___........._....s.-tfllill 4 < . , w. . ‘ ‘u ' “fin ‘ "some one to taking them n. l . ‘r .,_g..,.,,,u.- Mai w“ f... w s. aqswn-a-w-swenvrt}v "' u tips if you don't ‘m. R. ll. Cameron & Co. (irapalld, I tried and H. l‘. Ooobon, Murray River. that gag with an old man the other - Told lllm W6 didn't OXIIGCL hi-s Iie know I was lyin’ and that l- noihin' at all. Ile was‘ thtl-LJIIIYI". Ila noticed when he smiled that he and beside-hills plate when lle got up that he had lJDiilIilL ,, "What-dill I tcil you?" Mary,- nail-j ., many tones of them seat me thatl - are about them times I feel quite ten years younger. In all my days I never came across a medicine equal to Tanlac, and l feel, it nly duty to tell everybody about the way it helped me." Taulac is sold in Charlottetown by Reddip Bros-., in Montague by H. J. Maison, J. P. White, Murray River, l-LM. Chisholm. North Try- llnusual as were flowers in ghllndrum life ' I placed the rose in a glassot water until I Wflfili. home, then nit- cr carefully cutt i‘ a bit oi the slcml placed it before Mother's Picture in the only Qiase I had. , "l told you that fellow was gett- - int: sweet on you." Mary said when she saw. 1"Feliows like hlln don't give roses unless they mesa some thin‘. Now that fellow Mike could Hive a girl a whole flower garden and~llot mean a thing only that they was tryln' to get around tho girl for no good. But them sort — i asked his name of the cashier, he—" ' "You did!" I interrupted, “I don't ace how you could. What was it?" I asked more eagerly than I had meant to. ~ ‘Curiosity killed the cat, Zena! I've a notion not to tell you. But it might work the other way with you and kill you if you didn't know. Ho's got ll nice lady-like name, just "k6 You would know he'd have. its IIltroid-Moore." Then: "Sounds kind ll like lltim, don't It.’ "Yes, I think it does—liarold M00115" I repeated softly. ‘ Mary laughed gleefully. III )' ‘ "You ARE hit!" she cbortled, making mo blush crimson, aiul wish she had not known of the rose. "No, Mary. But I wish you could kllow how trangely that rose has ltllsdo me feel. I used to have to lust -o‘k them as a. course.’ matter of ’ "Didn't you say thank you " "Of coursa,.l thanked the boys whenever they sent mo anything it would have been very rude not to. But l. thanked them carelessly. It was because I had always rocelv~ ed gifts of flowers from them. But it has been so long"——l stopped, sl- most overcome by my thoughts — tile happy, care-free other day-l, Dad and his love, his kindness, ray he-cutiflll home- - "Tell me all ‘about, it, Zena. please. I have wanted to ask you so many times, but was afraid lt would make you feel good to talk of when you your Father had things-before died. For an hour I talked. Talked as I had notsince dad loft us‘. 'i‘hore was something in Mary's sympathy that drew me to tell her of llii tho little happenings or my girl life. I described our house the furniture, my nw rooms. I told her of the servants/the cars, and other luxur- ioa that went to the making of life pleasant for rne. Occasionally she interrupted rne. ‘loss, that must. have been a whale of a. house! What did you do Willi Ml them servants‘! My, I nev- or dreamed I'd really KNOW any~ one what had all them things!" and so on. Bat when I told her of the boys and young men she kept perfectly still until I had finished. I told her l’! h“ PHI-II‘. of Gregoryo Btullrt, of Granville Dawson. I also told ilcr of my girl friends, of Clgudg Shepherd. Edith Wren, and Rose Hartman. 0f Gregory and cloud“; ~51"!!! engaged, and oi,the gay phi‘- {los \V6'"!W| to ‘lnvn, I (won mm ‘her of House Saunders, the-lam l.» much Olilel‘ titan I was who had Wani- to nlagry me. But qt Ken- m“! . irhhco laaid nothing. I mu - o explain my feeling, but " 1 imhoaidlmttaik of him. “ ,_ 3,, ,_ _IIow con-yo! live likhsledoil all how canyon work tnshatv restaurant. You're a brick!" knew her intention, .. Jlere around use addwhe W" 9W, . ll " I hailifltifilfh meg I toltl ‘ bee who“ ‘WWIWDIIM ill; "l! W3! awful to he there alone, member." She couldn't help trying - that: Mary was right—-I "bad” {Iarold Moore, to use her expree-l aion. sion. uite happy now that Mill to tease me even while sympathis- ing with mo. s, . AN INVITATION’ CHAPTER“ \ _ As the days passed I realised Gradually he commenced to talk to me. Just a few words aviirat; then. ii I were not busy, he loiter- ed a little and told rne a. bit about himself. Ills aims at first, and that he was an. assistant secretary la the Young Men's Christian As- sociation. I didn't know much about such positions, but I was sure it didn't pay very well. lie looked poor. lle asked me no questions. I lik- ed him for that. But I also told him my name, and where I lived. it seemed he had a room near, and asked if he might sometimes walk hollle with me. - "l often have to go back to the office, but when I do not-—if you would allow mo I would like to walk bolne with you." _ ' "But I never walk!" l exclaimed. "lt is too far—l am too tired." "Of courae—l should ilaveknown you couldn't walk such a distance after being on your feet all day. I always walk, because I get no ex- orcise a all. Ilut perhaps on Sun- drly-—I might call for you and we nligllt'~" _. "i would enjoy that," I interrupt- ed, sorry for him because he seem- od so embarrassed. "That is, I would enjoy it occasionally. I can't.» go anywllerc oiton on Silnday. It is illc only day I have to llttond to iitilo necessary things-washing and mending!’- I added not want- ing him to think I was making ex- cusce. " I know.‘ I do those things on Sunday too." "Sounds terribly beathcnlsh. doesn't it? Especially for you." l returned aughing a lltttle. "l had an idea that Y. M. (I. A. young men were very religious " "One can't be so very religious when one is poor." he replied, at which we both iughed, although I am sure neither of us knew why. Surely being poor was nothing to laugh at. I had begun to think it was the greatest tragedy in the world. "Dad used to say the keeping of the Golden Rule meant real relig- ion." I aaid more to myself than to llinl. "I try to do that. Tell mo about your friend," he nodded toward Marry Murphy whom I knew hall‘ been watching us. "She’ a dear! I don't know what I should have done without her!" I replied entbuaiacticaliy, telling him more than I meant to of my- ixclf by my tone. i-Ie looked sharply at mo for n. moment, but made no reply. When ho rose from the table he ewid: "I will call for‘ you Sunday at i o'clock if that le n convenient hour." , "That will suit perfectly. have ilnislmd my work that lilac." "Don't work too hard, so ‘that you will not enjoy ollr walk," he admon- iabed. Just why that thoughtful little spec-ch should make rne think of Kennett Lawrence. and bring a lump in my throat, I do not know. But suddenly Harold ‘Moore was blotted out. and Kennethl-ltotxl ill his place. lt. was Kenneth lAwr- cnce who had been thoughtful for mo. It was Kenneth‘; gtrong lean face I saw; Kennoth's lithe vigor- ous body, lnatead of the pale iaccd nonomlc ‘looking Iiaold Moore -—' thin almost to cmaciation. And l felt all suddenly like crying out to him to come and take me away from all that .l hated from this cold-hearted city which like all big cities seemed so bard toward those wllo most needed kindness. Then, as always now when i l-holltht of Kenneth Lawrence in this way, the bot blood dyed my cheeks. and l felt a sort of shame “B l! I 1W1 Elven myself unasked- unwanted. I llad thought at times that hall lfennoth cared to find mo he would have done so. I little realized that tho breaking up of ollr home, leav- ing no address, the moving to Chicago without giving (Ilauda or ‘any of those who might inform him MW We?! 0i my whereabouts would. would make locating mo almost lmllossiblo. Had Mother not re- quired that promiae from him, bed we been allowed to correspond, — “BIB my thoughts invariably halt- ed. _ I had nothing to do with "whnr might have been." it was all I could do t.o manage the present’ llqlslzll! “Califomia syrupbr Figs" Child's Best Laxative Accept "California" Byfnp of Figs only-—look for the paras Call- fornia on the package, then you are sure your child is having the bent and most harmless physio for the little stomach, liver and bowels. Children love its fruity taste. Full directions on each bottle. You must suyWCalifomia." - a lillli}'l'»"r.ll.‘t”fil'.i'i“ahi.°lil.. ro- a "l shall‘, Mothers Know Iilat l. Genuine iiastoria . j For liver Thirty Years lSlllli. ' van ouluun conrveuv. annuals elrv. ' " I To TiloseWilo Bake XPBRIENCB has taught loud cooks that there is no dour quite ls good as Beaver Flour. IEAVER F L0 ls lheldeal flour forall baitinlpurposes. It is i. blended , "' Mlbinlnl the richness and delicate qualities of the world- fsmed Ontario Winter Wheat with the strength and body o! Wostefn Hard Wheat. , ' Bearer Flour imparts to baking-l the qualltleavvbieh snake‘ Your bread, pies, cakes and pastries real food treats. Try ltl Sold by your grocer. THE T. H. TAYLOR CO. LIMITED, Chatham - - Ontario In IZYKO "- and/n {920 Q, What n treat is in store for those who have yet to brew their first pot of Marie's Selected Orange PekoeTeal 1 ONLY TABLETS MARKED “BAYER” ARE ASPlRlNif-i, y ' Not Aspirin at 'Ali without the "Bayer crgss" \ f r _ contains proper directions for .6016! only . uine Aepirim-the Aspirin Heldaoho, Toothache, Porsche, Neil preterm by physicians for over nine- ralgia, Lumbago, Rheunflflsril, Nellri‘ Canada. tie, Joint. Pains, and Pdin go lly ken Tin boxes of l! tablets but spiria’ which afew mate. larger "Bayer" , "Invest 0flO' .-l'haue In only one Aspfrln-"IayorW-Yon Inst say In . ocotlcacldestcr of flillcyilr-scid. While it is well known that Aspirin IIGIEI sl Aspirin islthe trade mark (registered Ganadai at ‘Bayer IannfQul-e sea ufuturo, t assist the public against imitations. tho Tabloid of final! will. be steam: vr ~ ‘ uses lurk. the "lam filo" ‘ The porno "Bayer" identifies the s and now made in a