a ae CE ERE EEELCECCCCEECE TEESE ‘MEAT WRAPS WIN TRADE Your competitors’ meat may be just as good as yours, but you can excel their service in a striking, By using Appleford Sani Wraps protect the purity of your meat, and constantly | impress customers with your high standard of < economical way. you cleanliness. for prices. Lond, ~ ecceeseseencecceceseceeceio a eee Waxed Pa: ex C 320 Davie St. Vancouver 66 * Appleford supples these waxed sheets with stock printing or your special advertising message. COUNTER CHECK BOOK COMPANY. LIMITED HAMILTON, WESTERN oes 2: fer Martin & Co. Regina time to see Teddy Dorminster, the one | Who was born a lord but could per- |suade no one to consider the coincid- fence seriously, come to a standstill | before the slight, girlish figure that | stood directly in his path from the re- | ception hall, where he had just turn- ed over his coat and slick to Walker, across the room to the garden. Teddy Dorminister kept none of his secrets or his enthusiasms to himself. He | brought a new store of both on nis | daily droppings in at Yvonne’ was, in a measure, 4 continuo house when she was in tow The newcomer stared into Joa nna's face frankly. He fumbled in his pocket and produced his eye glass, which he carefully screwed into his eye. Then he scrutinized her again, utterly oblivious to her equally abashed stare at him. “Jove!” young Dorminster exclaim- Ask CANADA ‘Western Waxed Paper C 90 MeDermott Ave, Winalpeg eR EKKLL SaaS 4 K ed. “What a pretty girl!’ Yvonne Lepynight 9b by LL CATES Published by arrangement with First National Pictures, Inc CHAPTER XIII.—Continued. There!” the woman on the cush- fons exulted: “You are delightful) again, as you always are when you're) trapped. Now I shall sip my drink, if { may, while you proceed to your cross examination. See? Lam care- less of my wits; I expose them to the same whiskey.” “Satire becomes you, wonderfully, he said regarding her as with a deep) sense of appreciation. 2 _ master painter will parody the Ma- _ donna with you as his model, and § give the world a new masterpiece. Your lips are set just right for him, now. Presently I shall drink a toast especially. to everything that isn’t -Madonna-like about you, since“I can do that better than paint, Mean- while, { admit to being curious. Mind you, only curfous. What are you going to do with—or to—the girl?” 4 “Do you think an impulse of last ‘Anight, born of my own thrill at the riot that must be golng on in her mind, must necessarily be so definite £8 that? With some hidden motive “behind it?” _ He did not at once reply. His ~ ithoughts seemed to have wandered .off-for a moment. When he spoke again his tone had lost all yeneer of banter. “I do not believe you ever surrendered to an impulse in your life,” he said, bis words studiously measured. “There can be nothing in common between you and this girl who has no other masque than her own natural vividness. She’s more likely to be a thorn than a foil. So you have a motive as clearly defined as the pretense you are trying» to bring Into your eyes.” Yvonne treated him to her=silvery Jaugh and would have interrupted hin, bit he went on, calmly; “Brandon 8 “Someday 2} avel In Pain eisurely travel the ba nd, bong tga of a star pret Be ; mewbers ce obviously playing a game. I am convinced that he knows where her yet. money came from and why, despite ~ his elusiveness, And I am convine- ed, too, that you do not, yet you de- “Tiberately spin a web for the girl and play spider to the fly. Why?” THEY SUFFER NO MORE ‘Two Women men iOwe Health to Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable C Compound St. Adolphe, eaateniok: very weak and nae great pains during "| my periods so that I could not sweep the floor. The pains were in the right side and ex- tended to the left and then down- wards. It seemed as if the body. was heavy and upside down. It is for these troubles I took the Vegeta- [ile Compound. I saw about it ina paper and one wo- man prevailed on.me to take it, It has helped me in every way, the pains are less, and I have more appe- Site. a pleasure 4p recommend Lydia E. Pin 8 Vegetable Com- pound to other women, EA DE- Lore, St. Adolphe, Manitoba. Found Great Relief Toronto, Ont. —“I.am at the Chan, of Life with hot flashes, dizz dq weakneas and nervousness. I had head noises and was short of breath. I was this way about six months when I read about Lydia E. Pinkham’s V etable Compound in the newspapers. I have taken eight bottles so me and found great rehef.’’— Mrs.R.J.SAL- mon, 112 Lawlor Ave., Toronto, Ont i | disappointed. | ly {dulled your wits after all,” she ob- served. | sha all give you your triumph. la motive. picture it. » | shall probably like her tremendously, | though that is of no importance. ii | motive means evil to*her. be up to her.” up ftosher, I should imagine,” worth agreed. an added problem. don associate in your plotting? “what a pretty girl!” | why =| and come out of Iny female Hindu goa- dess pose. Ww. N. ae oe + ‘j was In time to hear Joanna’s reply: “How in.the world did you ever happen?” CHAPTER XIV. Across the Threshold Both Joanna and Lord Teddy were Bucied by Yyonne’s peal. of laugh- ter. Yow, Teddy, you know what _| everybody thinks when you're around,” she declared. “You must really make up an answer some timg.” Turning to Joanna, she informed. her: “He's not always so bad-mannered, you know. I fancy you'll get along famously. Y’ll present him as Lord Dorminster, but you must just call him Teddy—it fits him better.” To the man, who struck Joaniia as some- rs of an overgrown youth, she add- “This is my new portege, one ’'m Sake to be very fond of—Miss Man- ners. After awhile you'll be calling her Joanna.” Lord Teddy was all embarrassment and contrition. “Oh, I say!”” he fum- bled, “I thought it would be someone who—ah—you were haying to sing or dance, or do something like that, you know tomorrow night perhaps! Didn't know she was a friend. “Sorry, ter- ribly!” Joanna who had ncaa ideas of what one does at_a meeting with a lord, even a Teddy sort of one, scrambled desperately for what she would have} termed, concisely, the right comeback. She was disturbed, too, by that apol- ogy for supposing her as one who had} come to sing, or to dance, “or some-| thing like that. It implied some- thing, she didn’t know what, but something about her that was not as it should be. Yvonne shot a frown) at Dorminster and went to her rescue. *“Run* along now, Teddy,” she com- manded. ‘‘Phere’s tea or alcohol, whichever you prefer, in the garden. You know everybody in there. Miss | Manners will remember, anyhow, that you were perfectly in earnest despite your rudeness.” * Be wanted to add something to his to straighten it out, but bustled him off unceremon- jiously. To Joanna she said: “He’s a dear, is Teddy. lows me around the world. He says} wherever I am some husb&nd's young Oprmister exclaimed, | wife needs consolation and it’s his duty to on, hand. And he de- clares he's perfectly Sincere about itz If he thought to proyoke the woman he cross examined, Kenilworth was She studied*him eool- “I’m not so sure my whiskey argue beautifully. I I have As clearly definied as you As for the girl herself, I “You 2 And t doesn’t follow, necessarily, that my That will “There's going to be quite a lot put Kenil- “You simply give her How does Bran- on apology Yvonne He fol- “Jove,” be “Now, Roddy, I didn’t guarantee to go into details. There aren’t any, You may be unperturbed, how- ever. Brandon wanted me to ask her to come tome. He doesn’t-know I consented—and you wont either, until you discover for yourself. Now then, I’m going to uncurl my legs (To be continued) Moslem Laws Are Strict New Ones Issued Carry Severe Penalty For Violators New commandments have been Is- sued by Ibn Saud, leader of the strict It’s becoming uncomfort yWahabi sect of Moslems and now able. So I shall be pondering deal no longer. You observe I do not ask you what your intentions are toward my ward, as I should, but that is de- cause I'll see for myself. I know your procedure perfectly.” | includes the holy cities of Mecca and Medina. Attendance at the prayer services on Friday—the Moslem Sab- bath—is made compulsory, while ylo- lators of the tempe e@ laws He gaye her his hand and helped| liable to six months’ imprisonment. her to her feet. “I have a sense |Severe punishment is to be meted out of being completely baffied,” he Te+| to distillers or yendors of*strong | marked, ruefully. “I learn only| drink, a second offence being punish-| what I already knew, and nothing | able by deportation. The use of to- more, except—’; suddenly his~tone| bacco is also an offence punishable | altered. cept that you would tor-) jwith imprisonment, and anti-religious) ture every living thing and wreck | agitators will be severely dealt with. every castle that was ever built in the | Public security “officials have been air if Brandon would hold out his hand | geven full authority to enforce these to you!” “That,” she retored, “Is the high- ball Perhaps I had better chanze| my brand of Scotch after all.” when Kenilworth dropped into the are regulations. Customer (on Sunday morning).— But! “Give me change for a dime, plea had gone Yvonne) and I hope you nearest chair, Had he returned ‘and studied her; at any/ time luring the next half hour, he| A man isn’t ne ily would have concluded that there could | because his wife happens to be worth) be no doubt about it this time. She/ more than he fs. pondered, ; | It wa Walker stolx who was 5 enjoy the s worthless in the afternoon when | behind his mistre. ing tea to a small com- | of men and women around the} ame stone tab! in the winter gar-} den, on which Kenilworth had perch-} ed himself earlier in the day. “The mademoiselle is expected’ has ar | rived,” the butier murmured. | ¥ rose at once. “I shall be back In time for o cigaret, at le: she added to her excusgs. She cross- ed ber drawing room, from its en- || Rheumatism. Apply Minard’s to the painful pany bis spot and get speedy relfef. {| who onne un- master of a big Arab kingdom which } trance into the winter garden, just in free booklet on Baby's care | | and eedin Bordens Condensed Milk The Borden Co.; Limited MONTREAL 14-26 Not Im nected With New York Mannered City James Dunn, writer on the Lon- don Daily Mail, who is known for his articles on the “seamy side of life” under the pen name of R. B. Corder, has concluded his visit to Chicago and New York city and sailed for London on the Cunarder Aquitania. According to the impressions he gave to a--reporter before leaving, Mr. Dunn did not appear to have been greatly pleased with New York, es- pecially its police courts. and its noises, “The best side of New York,” Mr. Dunn sald, “is the outside. The more I saw of the city the better I liked such charming retreats ax Mquntain Lakes and other similar places in New Jersey and the various nestling nooks of Long Island. “New York is the only: city that screams at one. London hums, Paris coos, Berlin drones, but New York just yells. O, Henry has written about the voice of the city; but it isn’t a voice, it’s a vice. “Not only is New York the noisiest, but it is among the worst mannered of cities. The prevailing idea seems to be that rudeness means efficiency and politeness spells weakness. New| York should take lessons from Chi- cago in manners. In Chicago they | may mur ey you, but they don’t grate |on you. “Nerves, just nerves. That is what |New York is suffering from, and| | everybody is rude to everybody else |because eyerybody’s nerves are ‘on| edge. I am not surprised. Take your taxicab and automobile. Every- | one seems to have a different shriek, | groan, whistle or hoot, and when you get on top of these the fiendish, ear- splitting sereom of the fire engines you have indeed a city of dreadful din. | Cleopatra Ate Onions Ancients Were Very Fond of Salads Such as Moderns Enjoy | British food experts who have been making a special study of the history jof salads say the tomato is the single Pe ingredient modern times have {contributed to salad making. The |Pharachs—even the beautiful Cleo- | patra—ate onions in large quantities | in their salads, and used garlic and |other high-scented ingredients. Con- fucius ate cucumbers and the ancient Chinese used mustard, watercress and nasturtium leaves and flowers in mixing theit elaborate-salads, which often contained hard-boiled eggs. Ancient Persia also was very fond of salads, and used lettuce and radishes, much as they used in modern salad making. Sour wine, not unlike mod- lern vinegar, was used on lettuce by |the Persians four thousand years ago. A Power of its Own.—Dr. Thomas’ Eelectric Oll has a subtle power of |its own. All who haye used it know this and keep it by them as the most luable liniment available, Its uses are innumerable and for many years it has been prized as the leading lint | ment for man and be: Japan Has New Intoxicant |Man Claimed to be Overcome View- | Ing Cherry Blossoms A new intoxicant has appeared in Japan. In the precincts of a shrine} at Kameido in Japan the other day, a pollceman on patrol discovered what |he took to be a corpse. He telephon- English Visitor Says It Ig Noisy, Iil-| .., |the time of his death. Long Life Records Some Animals Attain 100 Years But Trees Reach Thousands Members of the vegetable kingdom easily beat those of the animal king- dom where length of life is concern The life of the great forest trees may vary from 100 to 4,000 or 6,000 The cypress, it e for 350 yea the chestnut 600, the cedar 1,000 to 1,500, the yew baobab tree 5,000 years. A hundred years are attafned by, some of the longest-lived animals, such as the elephant, the crocedile, and the tortoise. Pike and carp have been known to live from 60 to. 150 years; eagles, crows and parrots from 50 to 100 years, ‘ A Shropshire, England, farm labor- er, Thomas Parr, is credited with one of the longest lives on record. He is id to have been 152 years old at At 120 years he married a second time, and for fnany years continued to work on the farm. 450, the 300, the oak 500, and the ‘ “Laws For Pedestrians Punishment For Vienna Citizens Who Violate New Rules Under modifications in the munici- pal laws of Vienna, persons who’ talk, whistle or sing too loudly in the streets may be fined 30 cents. For repeatéd offences jail Mo are DEOk vided. If a person is. delected reading , a newspaper or bodk while walking along the street, thereby “impeding pedestrian traffic,” he may be sub- jected to a similar fine. Stopping a friend in the middle of a roadway, a carrying of packages of undue sizes and using bad or un- seemly language, are among other punishable offences. , ° Miller’s Worm Powders prove their value. They do not cause any vio- lent disturbances in the stomach, any pain or griping, but do their work quietly and painlessly, so that the | destruction of the worms is imper- ceptible. Yet they are thorough, and from the first dose there is {mprove- ment in the condition of the sufferer and a cessation of manifestations of internal trouble. Little Helps For This Week Be still, and know that I am God.— Ps. xivi, 10. Fret not, poor soul; while doubt and|’ fear . Disturb thy breast; The pitying angels, who can see How vain-thy wild regret must be, Say, trust and rest. Strive not, might Can.never wrest The meanest thing to serve thy will, All power is His alone; be still, And trust, and rest. —Adeline Anne Proctor. Do you, know what Luther sald? “Suffer and be still, and tell no man thy sorrow; trust in God. His help will not fail thee.” This is what Scripture calls keeping silence before God.° To talk much of one’s sorrows makes one weak; but to tell one’s sor- rows to Him who heareth in secret, makes one strong and calm.—Tholuck. nor struggle; thy poor Minard’s Liniment relieves stiffness British Columbia Sheep For Russla Forty-six pure-bred Hampshire sheep purchased in British Columbia for the Russian Soviet Government left Victoria recently for Vladivostock. This is the second shipment to go for- ward from the Dominion to that mar- ket, the first haying been made last year. Wealth may be a great*care, but a girl naturally expects great care when After Every Meal It doesn’t take much to keep you in trim. Nature only asks a little help. Wrigley’s, after every meal, benefits teeth, breath, appetite and digestion. A Flavor for Every Taste_ Uighin Food Value ; Low in Cost Ask Your Grocer for our Famous Sardine Cook Pants It is is SRER DOWN BUYS A REMINGTON PORTABLE TYPEWRITER Balance in Easy MONTHLY Payments Write for Eeesciais fo Our nearest omice Remington Typ: of Canada, Limited ‘Winniper=210 Notre Dame Ave., Calgary-110 Sixth ‘est, Vancouver-556 Seymour Street. The. Old-Fashioned Grandmother London Newspaper Finds There Is No Such Person Now A one-day’s search by a London newspaper for the old-fashioned grandmother who fs usually pictured as sitting quietly darning socks by the fireside, has failed completely. The inquirer compiled a list of seven grandmothers, and then set out to find oft what they were doing. No. 1 was in Parls buying frocks. No. 2 had recently acquired a two- seater automobile and had driven up ‘|inté the Midlands to see her son's sons,