é RD, SUMAS AND MATSOUI NEWS | mouth, Prince Michael and others | who-would naturally be of their par- / had found aces. Brandon's already had But both W orth its weight in gold” - Says Ottawa Matron ime. Beatrice Charlebois could not hold pen to write. ‘Nerves completely shattered, health ruined. Now alert, __ wigorous and strong, she gives praise to Tanlac The two-year ordeal which she through before Tanlac came to nt relief, was recently de- by Mme. Beatrice Charlebois, Rose St., Ottawa. t L endured in that time could ” she said. “I was so weak hardly walk. My eppetite was and my stomach gave no end cf ble. Gas and pains would bring fainting absence from en commented up 1 Yvonne were curious niiworth when the aw that Joanna was not amone 1 gue: “More o nilworth ob- “Have you ye onally mystery,” discovered “affair served. what this pe nEge is going to be? has guarded her secret ten- | Yvonne replied. “It has been the main Il of her pri a tions—ar nobody but ging something of which > has known anything iy merves were £0 eraney wie e atu tried to get her « confi- ed that I jumped in fright | dence time the doorbell rang. My They decided to look about for ‘trembled s0 pare couldnt jher, but Joanna just then came up. ie to write my name. Night : might I've gone without sleep, | When Yvonne looked, suddenly, nervous to lie still for even a few 3 into her face, she started. The Gol- ts. Even my housework be- 23 . {den Girl's exes were shining. } too much for me. calm and steady as ever. Tanlac is | Pigaie conte tt rani "I tried all kinds of remedies in _ worth its weight in gold.” vonne sensed the ‘tenseness of a se two years, but can honestly say Build up your health on Tanlac, ssed excitement. She ad- nature’s own tonic made from roots, ic | vanced to meet the girl, and stood herbs and barks. Your druggist has it. | ° | with her a moment. Stragglers brushed by them, They ize gave me my first real relief. It uilt me upso that I'vegained 11 Ibs., it and sleep fine and have nervesas Over 52 million bottles sold. Eee a a iy would have surrounded the two! Strange Romantic host , but Joanna urged them all aes g to join the crowd under the mimosa roof. When there was opportunity she took both of Yvonne's hands in he: “Whether my little climax is 4 suc- said, very | softly, “or whatever happens—I want you to know my dear that I have tn- derstood many things right along, nd the best of them was—you and ohn!” She dropped the older girl’s hands, then, and went toward the | hidden door that led from the out- er lawn onto the stage behind the flower curtain. Yvonne reached out |to catch at her, but was too late. She cess or a failure,” she = by H.L¢GATES Copyright 1925 by H.L.GATES Published by arrangement with Firet National Pictures, inc went away wi a gaily easy word over his shoulder. | CHAPTER XXXV—Continued -Dorminster also captured her fou ay A @ fleeting moment. He. found her| Ve tried to get to you all day!” ‘ ding at the side of one of the Hee exclaimed. He®* tried to reach stood, undetermined, until WKenil- ‘fg y Pools, shut off from yiew by a ee a ue ee ener ee Tas |worth approached her. She went with luster of columns which supportea have been busy,” she. explained, seats before the stage. - wt jhim to thei ie of the arcs that spread the imi eon aty. Ther been so much to). i¢ their arrival were a signal the ion moonlight. The little lake attend to—bills to be gathered up aa * 2 leader of the orchestra raised his ‘was one of those that were perma and put in a package before they’re|y.ton, The lights were extinguished oe sently part of the landscape scheme lost. And—other things to do. I’ve| ew grounds, and the home of a|S&¢? NO one today.” bihere. wast aeathly then group of swans: One of the majes- “Will you give me time, Jo, to talk jie the breaking of a great wave in- creatures, petulant at the noisy) With you? I can’t be frivolous like} i, sure gasps swept up,.from the promd upon ‘accustomed hours of|°¥eryone else, toni of} dateneo. Slumber, had approached the slender soniething that is for you. Can't we , re at the water's edge angrily, have a half hour?” with a rasping protest. When it saw “Some other time, Jolin. Tomor- | r ea the single form was that of its|W oT next week, perhaps. There's | n arth, Oo the ‘mistress it smoothed ity wings and|®° room inside of me for anything| ~The curtains spread upon vague ‘orld huge frelglt GQ exaned its neck toward her. She’ had but idle chatter. You may take me | shapes that took form in a phantasy a stillness, CHAPTER XXXVI Conclusicn from the offered fit no crumb but it did not back to my guests.” i that slowly emerged from a yapor of There ae may © withdraw its outstretching head, Its] . Tomorrow, then pale blue light. Out of a far back ack. There am Jike eyes remained fixed upon| ‘ Tomorrow.” ground, admirably conjured — by locomotives The appearance of Dorminster,| ‘She let him have her hand for a and main - who had trailed her, drove the water|™oment, but withdrew it gently. | gabled roofs of a conglomerate city f well-paid away. Joanna turned on the Once or twice she stole a glance |loomed. Illuminated windows shone em. There ba 6 ‘comer. into his eyes and saw that they | dully. Miniature streets, crooked ; investment ad “Why did you come just then, teemed with earnest things, just as|and narrow, came down .out of the to almost np ie Teddy?” she protested. “I think in his lips had spoken only inner | pers pective and convergdd upon an n the Dae ; ner minute it would haye sung.|#0%leties. When they were about to open space before the invisible foot » cost per ton 4 always wanted to know what u| Move out of the shelter of the flow- lights—the painted city’s market in the Am =] 7 song sounds like!’” er hung pillars he took her suddenly | place. “Then. listen to me,” he returned,|in his arms. She did not resist, but| In the centre of the square a pillar oul one per 4 ; - F, .. si gaily. ‘I'R make mine merry, I'm yielded to him limply. He felt no| arose, with a rim of water trough at “cheap”. Chines ines men snl ” always singing when I'm with you,|Tesponse in the slim little body and its base. Against this column, her torover you know.” ‘i released lier. He _was conscjous head bowed, shoulders drooped and bis economical “Singing foolish rondelays, Teddy. though, that in that embrace he had! motionless body limp in a posture of Only foolish ones. You mustn't do said much that he wanted to s dj despair, leaned an unknown girl, of fhat now. I'll, permit no one to pe| that she would understand. He was|some warm pulsed type, her body serlous—or disconholate ” |more content, then, to wait until ile! gleaming white through a diaphon of poorly wid, slaves” to | morrow. dra phen eile Pees SP ag "_ He wanted! to talk of himself, and} “51.6 hours passed, gay, colorful ou. drape = ee SS Dee es Ee of her. It was the sublect he always PEASE, os A EASE EME: unched before ght to stone iS | hours, that were speeded by a con-|the youthful figure three old crones ‘fell upon, but she outwitted him} ,_ Re 3 e ait ares Dysteife wad Mbour fo pommandt tinuous piting up of festival s in the garb of witches Simitutnaaresher back to her guests Wensce No grand duke in the old! rhythm ‘with the . = he = Auaaeniy pale “Teddy | 4838 had confounded his guests with | the orchestra ae said sdaoRed AOLIts qutckly. John |@ more stupendous program of sense} a lantern swung, its flame shedding F ly. { 7 en . . x i _,| entertainment. But always there is|a dim, coiored glow. Even as the Sig RAMRMaMen Met Lod anc Was COMING | cimmax-toreuchiaffaire—such-for-in-| audience gasped the weird sym- ‘ap to them. Teddy Imew the signifi-| uch for in-| audience gasped at the weird sy ‘ : ¢ 3 i stance as that time when an oriental| bolism of “the picture—a vibrant, eance of that sudden paleness, and oe L 2 D " potentate endowed his fayorite com | beautiful, unsullied girl hemmed in PAINS Sh, ' a | witches—one of the old swayed in plaintive song of y rock his baby: _—_—————— Be: 77 panion, during a celebration on the} by evil ALL Amette grounds, with a marvellous|crones, one whose lantern glowed in coat of emeralds. The guests of Jo-| sickly yellow rose and still swaying anna and Yvonne knew this time hadjto the music lifted her light so that rived when. shortly after two|its vellow rays bathed the body of ro est ri Two More Cases of Feminine Jll- mess Relieved by Lydia E. Pink- , xe ham’s Vegetable Compound o'clock when the fragrance of mi-|the girl. Across the. sky over the | mosa was heaviest, the moonlight painted city in the background, great ares were swung by invisible hands made by invisible lamps until their mellow glow S concen from behind the stage trated upon the long, lo | built behind the ‘Trianon hou There had been a mystery about i “MISUNDERSTANDING.” pavilion that had swhetted” curiosi (To Be Continued.) During the earlier portion of night it had been wrapped in Now it was bathed in hitherto unheard letters manipulated tic reflection, sp ad. the. word, Barrington, N. S.—‘‘I kad terrible feelings, headaches, back and side 4 and pains all over my body, I | Ues- _ would haye to go to bed every month and nothing would do me good. M _ husband and my father did my one for me as I have two children and ‘we have quite a big place. [read in | A man recently fainted three ness. Z 5 i times at his own wedding. It brilliance, and a orchestra wa Strains that no use, however. They waited until piaying symphonic < s i . the paper about Lydia E, Pinkham's niraneele he came round ch third time and ce anls STC SEI aS with ihe more accustomed ja eo vo oe bg Us and my husband sent to Eaton’s and | With shri laughter and strident) when a young married man gets got ee ely Ae wo gat | acclamattons . the : guests _ swarmed aick lle “inotlicrs alwass~ Amasiies ie ee Sriaditic mall aes aaand Bes down upon the Aiphted pavilion and) pat it is due to his wife’s cooking ¢ le to go out around more. I tell my surged between its columns into the ” friends it is Lydia BR. Pinkham's Veg- | little sea of seats provided for them before a stage draped by a quivering contrasted Common almost enoveh to be classed as uncommon. HIKERS scarce etable Compound that makes me feel ——-gewell.”"—Mrs. Vicror RICHARDSON, Barckivtod Nove Sorts. [curtain of bower petals. When thé } guests all had found their way in Duil Pains in Back } side the pavilion the footmien and ca St Thomas, Ont. —“I took four |terers began their task of. gathering a B Corina Peg tad teat te: }up the various paraphernalia of the Take Minard's in your first fief from the dull, heavy pains at the night, and chauffeurs moved toward ae hea e ata ise ita small of my back and the weakness | their waiting cars. Whatever was to ve 2 aeeebieh | suffered for five years .| transpire within the arbored ‘the Vegetable Compound and ‘using }10 it ula be: the Dreaking, upsgt Golden Girl's fete Lydia FE. Pinkham’s Sanative Wash 1 | ‘be am feeling better than I have forthe | nilworth and Yvonne d = seven years, and advise MY | together to the cluster of s¢ t ends to take it.”— Mrs. F. JOHNSON, had been reserved for Joanna and -@ Moore Street, St, Thomas, Ont. a —— imates, They aw that Betty Wey-| her closest int Teddy Dorminster, and N. OU. 1681 |The curtain of flower petals parted. | In the hands of each} your baking, use AGIc. BAKING POWDER Mode in Conoda - No Alum! MAGIC BAKING POWDER = OWDER Poilu Pays Old War Debt But Creditor is Loser Because Franc | Worth Much Less A French wartime “marraine” or | soldiers’ god-mother, with a flair for bookkeeping, has just succeeded in| collecting what was owed her by her “adopted” soldier for the goodies, | woollens and other things she sent | him all through the war, while he | \was prisoner in a German camp. | The fact that the soldier paid her hospital bill when she fell ill after the armistice mattered: not. The soldier, Gustaye Marchand, Was captured during the first few weeks of the war in 1914. » Without friends, he got in touch with a 'French girl by the usual method — | |adyertising—with the promise that Some day he would reimburse his war godmother for whatever she | might spend on hint. | A Parisian cook, Mlle. Germaine | {ed Pierre, answered the advertise: | ment and regularly sent him pack- | ages of food, clothing «and other | things to lighten his imprisonment. | She expended 3.825 francs 25 cen-} |times. When she went to a liospital, | | Marchand gaye her 1,160 francs, no | | centimes, | | This week, Mlle. De Pierre sued | for the difference and got it. How- | ; ever, she is the loser after all, for | | the francs she spent for Marchand | were worth almost 20 cents each, to pay back, are only about one fifth | that value. Cable Railway in Bavarian Alps | | Train’ Runs Ten Thousand Feet | | Above Valley at Many Places } | When builders of the new Alpine Railway up the Zugspit high official to dedicate the line} | they made one, for they took Dr. | | Michael Hainisch, president of Aus: | tria, to the loftiest point in the country. The railway is a cable stretched to the summit of the highest mountain in the Bavarian j Alps, the Zugspitze, and at many places is 10,000 feet above the yal }ley directly below. The “train” |consists of cabin, which is furnish- ed in lavish style, suspended to the eable along which a trolley carries {the cabin. Workmen in swinging | Seats inspected the line before the | inauguration. | | Nationwide Fame. — There. is |scarcely a corner of this great Dominion where the merits of Dr. |Thomas’ Eclectric Oil have not been tried and proved. It is one of the world’s most efiicient remedies for sore throat, Jame back and many other ailments arising from inflam mation. Rubbed on the skin its heal- ing power is readily absorbed, and it can also be taken internally. | wanted a pavillon | slowly took shape and, like a fantas-| | Provides Real Exercise Medical Men Claim Driving a Car is Conducive to Good Health There still are those who declare that the automobile has * wrong” by the healih in converting everyone to driying or Some medical men dis ‘done nation’s riding. with this view. Many of clare that automobile them de. driving also provides a form of exercise that is benefielai. Walking exercises mainly the leg muscles, while driving brings ‘into greater use the arm and shoulder muscles. The motorist'’s leg muscles get considerab}. stion In operating the brake and clutch pedals. The exercise one finds in car operation has the additional advantage of be-| ing regwiar and not too st uous It takes ss muscle to drive a ear today than ever before, but at that it requires enough muscular effort to be conducive to good health Most men believe in the honesty of their fellow men until after the have indorsed a few notes for their friends jat 25 cents a box from The Dr. V Anxious to Ring Carillon Forty Applications Received by Civil Service Commission No fewer than applications have been received by the Civil Ser ion regarding the em- forty vice Comm onneur for the Parliament ployment of ca: “singing tower” of the Buildings which will peal out for the first time on July 1, 1927, the day on which the the Diamong Jubilee of Dominion celebrates Confedera- tion. While the carillon bells were on their way to Canada from Croydon, England, the Civil Commis- sion has been advertising for a caril- lonneur. Applications have come from all parts of the world, but the only applicants being considered are British subjects with years’ residence in the Dominion. The Commission will call in an advisory board of musiclans to help them se- lect the proper man to play the car- illon. The position will pay a salary starting at $2,880 per year, with a maximum of $3,000. Most of the applicants for the po- sition of carillonneur are Canadians. Some of trem bave had instruction from Jef Denyn, the renowned old carillon master at Malignes, Belgium. Service three Large National Park For Saskatchewan Good Sized Area at Prince Albert Has Been Set Aside Saskatchewan gets a national park by the setting aside at Prince Albert of a good-sized area for that purpose. An order-in-council, after pending for some time, has been passed. For the present the park will com: prise the Sturgeon forest reserve and two additional townships mainly suited to the purposes of summer re- sorts, but the ultimate plan contem plates a much larger extension northward, There has been no action on the scheme advanced by Dr. Bissett, \M.P., for Springfield for a national park in Manitoba. MISTAKES MOTHERS MAKE IN CARE OF LITTLE ONES Many moihers give their children Solid foods at too early an age and say proudly that their babies “eat everything that grown-up people do.” Such a course is almost certain to bring on indigestion and lay the skilled artists, spires and domes and) while those the court ordered him foundation of much ill-health for the little one, Other mothers administer harsh, nauseating purgatives which in real- ity irritate and injure the delicate stomach and bowels and at the same time cause the cbildren to dread all medicine. Absolutely no meat should be giv- en to a child until it reaches the age ‘of 18 months, and then only if ap- proved by the doctor. For medicine, all strong, disagreeable oils and powders should be abandoned and Baby’s Own Tablets given instead. Bab; tally ‘Ss made for little ones. sant to take and can be absolute safety to even the new-born They babe. They quickly banish consti- pation and indigestion, break up colds and simple fevers and make the cutting of teeth easy, They are sold by medicine dealers or by m liams’ Medicine Co. Brockville, Ont. Thriving Swiss Settlements Eight hundred families from Switzerland are expected to come out to Western Canada to settle dur- ing. 1927, according to the Acting Consul for Switzerland here. There are thriving Swiss settlements in Notre Dame de Lourdes, Manitoba, and Stettler, Alberta. New nes to be the Canadian constructed by National Railways in rs call for a total 000. the next three yea expenditure of $18, | | fragrant creamy lather Best for You and Baby too. = Sr 0 Bo ed Mire Mestrest Try Rice Pudding Made this Way :- 1 cup boiled rice 14 cup Borden's Eagle Brand Condensed Milk L teaspoonful yanilla 4 14 cup water 18 teaspoonful nutmeg Mix Eagle Brand and water together thoroughly. Beat egg and blend with the milk andvanilla. Addthis mixture to the rice (boiled) and mix well. Pour into buttered pan and sprinkle top with thenut- meg. Place pan ina dish of water (as for a custard) and bake in a slow oven until a golden brown. E2727 EAGLE BRAND, “CONDENSEU MILK Little Helps For This Week If thine enemy hunger,~feed him; if he thirst, give him drink; for in so doing thou shalt heap coals of fire on his head—Rom. xii. 20. But if for wrongs we needs revenge must have, Then be our noblest kind; Do we his body from our fury save, And let our hate prevail against our mind? What ean ’gainst him a greater ven- geance be : Than make his foe more worthy far than vengeance of the he —Lady Elizabeth Carew. If thou must needs haye revenge of thine enemy, with a soft tongue break his bones, heap coals of fire on his head, forgive him and enjoy t. To forgive our enemies fis a charming way of revenge and short Caesarean conquest, overcoming without a blow; laying our enemies at our feet under sorrow, shame, and repentance; leaving our foes our friends, and solicitously inclined te grateful retaliation, —Sir Thomas Browne. Treat corns with Minard’s Liniment Homestead Filings Homestead filings in Western Can- ada during the first quarter of 1927 totalled 1,030, compared with 1,282 in the corresponding period of 1926. In Manitoba 188 quarter sec tions were filed upon, in Saskatcli- ewan 518, in Alberta 367, and in British Columbia 12. We are told that man is made of dust and yet dust always settles. Useful in Camp. — Explorers, sur yeyors, prospectors and hunters will find Dr, Thomas’ lectric Oil very useful in camp. When the feet and legs are wet and cold it fs well to rub them freely with the Oil and the result will be the preyention of pains in the muscl and should a cut, or contusion, or be sustained, nothing could be better as a dressing or lotion. A Freneh scientist has Invented a vacuum bottle to hold liquid oxygen for use of aviators in altitude flights. The Uquid vaporizes as fast as it is breathed. Proved safe by millions and Colds Pain Headache Neuralgia Neuritis Toothache prescribed by physicians for Lumbago Rheumatism DOES NOT AFFECT THE HEART Accept only “Bayer’’ package of 12 tablets 1 100—Dru mee 3 esl Ee i adie AR aa i