ABBOTSE Te ORD. STMAS AND MATSQUI NEWS ~ ! J og c " nal é i 1 5 e | A Wonderful Camera . | Joanna regarded him with her’ de | fences quivering aj her finger tips. i More \Wonderfulin Some Ways Than “Of course they would—some would!” | H } | How Saati Zoo Started Natural History Enthusiasts Respons- the Human Body There is a camera in London which jis capable of recording pictures at the rate of 300,000 a minute. Strange that man can make machines more Later in some ways than the hu- jman body. The human eye, in com- )parison with the camera, cannot re- {ceive more than thirty impre i ja second. The new camera is | Umes as fast. Let a yase be blown jup by a charge of powder and this |speedy camera will take a picture of |the explosion which will show the par- lticles of- the vase being blown from} the centre. Shall we not haye a camera some day which will detect the madly | whirling atoms and electrons? “Swat the fly" with GILLETTS A teaspoonful of Gillett’s Lye sprinkled in the Garbage Can prevents flies breeding Use Gillett’s Lye for all Cleaning and Disinfecting Shall | we not haye a_mdchine which will |show us what the’ scientists already: /imow—that matter is force? When we haye learned atomic energy the steam age seem as out of date as the stone age—Grove Patterson in Duluth Herald. Costs little but always | effective fo use will | i ee Td eilures of he — Romantic (oveAdu | as a broken idol” while they were |the police.” dancing. by H.L.GATES — Copyright 1925 by H.L.GATES Published by arrangement with First National Pictures, Inc, | “If you are of the mind to be amus- CHAPTER XI.—Continued. ou wi 7 lable."| “Shall we begin with Roddy?” bran. zou, nya’ tind odds: most aap | don asked, and they did. Joanna] Janna thought Brandon was chat- | sought him out on the floor as Bran-|/¢nging her, but he gave no sign of It. | don explained him—drawing for her a’ She pondered, a minute, the malaga eurious picture of a wastre 1—but alot that cryptic declaration of Kenli-| picture she classified as of a romantic! Worth’s at the edge of the PARED floor, | idler in a colorful domain. “T shall play for you, too!” spoken to} = Das hi inna, by hho was unim- A bachelor lodge at Palm Beach er, Joanna, by “one Who) was UD | where he was host~to that company! pe ca ue at women whose nusbnds tor at rye for same mre home for the money with which their} = = wives blossom gorgeously and reck-| is | fenety = hencathue ther enioridae paling jeluded her, of what had been spread | 4 Aces icine Slave atepalieys |before her by her mysterious money, | ie Lee © t Mere ae echoed across her brain. Her heart,) eM hots names | Which had neyer lost its uneasiness | shone golden in the purlieus of society, jase. hen garagey mm ons| to) Gray apn et Metiion cintiaca daublemamone the | ouce became / suddenly buoyant. | ‘ ah +t oh apa Green- |5omething in which~she was the stake eit ines a botatatts Soakiind |—that was what Kenilworth had call-| ch Village; ‘ts england, } 2 where he hunted, occasionally, with 2% ueawase0ing oh. about. her, buy the hounds of a country lord, and a| Whatever Its portents, At: glready ‘haa) : * = oe |brought to her two men with quler, ) beau-gallant patron of all the beauty) Eee a estar as a eet 2 a : "| : itigiiigarreithat iaksrance Bae promise that they would lay | ‘i ' 3 a sfege to her, that they would sue for) . “A woman need never fear of being) ay 1 ee seen with our Roddy in attendancel simatic tah Soa fee ae upon her,” sive adden to his 8e0*\ heads as they try to be on their feet, eral description. His affairs are 50 she had described them to Graydon, many no one a ae of them Or|»ut men of the world, of the world becomes interested in a new one.),. fawalswere seal i J jwhere jewels were real, where galety He adds just the proper perspective to |was genuine, where romance need not any young wo1an’s background, for be marred by the sordidness of Koned to be admired by Roddy is a cachet of tnt make-believe! The world.that extremely romantic worthiness.” |was without the restraints of meager- “But his business—doesn’t he really | pegs, do anything?” Joanna wanted to know. Brandon. “I wonder if ever I shall “¥e's of a family, you know. In-jbe like her?” herited money. 1 believe he would) Brandon’s question came quick- explain that it is the duty of heirs | ly. Afterwards Joanna remem- who can to help those of the genera- bered this, and that it reminded her of dion who can’t to pay the price of their ‘Eggleston’s’ quickness ito ask her, pleasures. That keeps him moder- | “What else?” when she promised to ately fond of youth—young youth, buy something else than dancing such as your’s, or seasoned youth, | pumps. such as Yvonne's. “And Yvonne?” she suddeniy asked was what Brandon asked. “T think there is ‘no girl I know who would not give her soul—almost—to be like her,” Joanna replied, so softly, and suddenly “wistful, that Brandon knew she indeed, echoing a deep yearning. “You see,” she went on, “she is the model we all try to copy. So I suppose she must have all the good things of life that we try to get little tastes of. Idon’t know just how to say what I mean, but I know that the store had a copy of one of Yvonne -| Coutant’s one time, and | that I spoiled four yards of two dollar | silk trying to imitate it. But I couldn't |do ft. Ididn’t know how. And even |the store dressmakers couldn't get the jright hang to it. They couldn’t know how, either.” THIS WOMAN NOW WELL ' Her Suffering Relieved and Health Restored by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound dresses, Toronto, Ontario. —‘‘I am certainly very grateful for the benefit I have re- ceived from Lydia E. Pinkham’s Veg- etable Compound, also the Sanative Wash and the Liver Pills. In the early spring I was suffering so much from loss of blood that I thought I would never be any better as doctor’s medicine relieved me only for the time being. I saw the Vegetable Compound advertised in the “foronto Star,’ and I find the Vegetable Com- fund Tablets the best for me. ave been taking them since Spring, and I intend keeping them by me all the time. After reading your Pri- vate Text-Book I saw it w Bary to use Lydia E. Pinkham ative Wash, amd I can safely say I _ feel a different woman. My friends remark how well I look. I am a very busy woman, but I am ready at all es to boost your medicines.’’— Mrs. Cuartes Grrrix, 949 Land wne Avenue, Toronto, Ontario. _ You may be having an experience similar to Mrs. Giffin’s and will be interested to know what she did. Every sick woman can feel confident that Lydia EK. Pinkham’s Vegetable pound ip ince we are told that it does help 98 out of every ‘women who take it. Sold by druggists everywhere. © —how to be “That is out, before, t know | but L know that’s it. how, wouldn't be aking the best of life.” The ghost of a smile that gave cyni- cal expression to Brandon’s-face came {to the curye of his lips. For a mo A eiath he eyes leaping about the room, watched they rested on Yvonne 1 her among the danc lers, and when they hovered abour |Kenilworth. Then he murmured | “A good many people in the world |would have a different analysis of Yvonne Coutant’s recipe for what you |term making the best of her life. Some would pass a different judgment than ~—— I+ghe knows how.’” or she | when | j when she tracec them r | sion. “And you think Yyonne knows how! what you have wanted to} it I hadn't reasoned it She |- watched the girl, watched her | she indignantly agreed. alw “People are you are not just like they are, or like they think you ought to be. What is one’s life for, if not to bea enjoyed? } “And having good time isn’t} necessarily being wrong abou; it, you know! Is it?” He met her plea for understanding | promptly. “I can imagine no better bargain than unfettered conscience al- with an unhampered pursuit of one's own desi and old-fashioned critics be hanged!” ’ “Well,” J a. considered, “that as if you mean that I have the about things, so I suppose! it’s all right. Anyhow I don't see why people can’t say their prayers with a smile as well as they with grouch!” To that sentiment,” Brandon pro- posed, “I suggest another cocktail.”| He produced Kenilworth ver flask | a can | ltrom under a serviette And filled her|°f the number of habitual criminals | hour, glass. She smiled across at him,| |while she sipped, and felt that she haa| The last figures given in a govern: put up another good battle for miei} rights of youth. When Kenilworth and Yvonne were} again at the table Kenilworth begged | |Joanna to tell him “if Brandon wrap- |™€n. ped me in scandal and delivered me} “That is something I shall have to consider,” Joanna returned. “He |told me you were not at all dangerous, | death Sentence can be passed only in lor, at least he gave me that inipres-| connection with murder. I shan’t be at all afraid of you.”) “And that is both a promise and a} challenge. ‘I accept both!” Joanna's pulses raced when Yvonne proposed to her that she come to her | own place and make it her home. “For| a time, anyway. You will want to be! getting away from your old atmos-{ Certain distance of the Houses of Par- phere, you know, and I shall love sO have you with me—as long as you} wish.” | What Kenilworth had said flashed | across her mind, his prediction of just this inyltation. She fancied that she! pressed even by such exquisite women | caught a flicker of his eyelids when | Sunday is Mable to punishment, while|@uces distinct musical notes when she glanced at him. For one brief} TM Jinstant the vision of John framed it-/dred years old that forbids anyone to a flash the realization that had so far) oie among her thoughts, but it faded {leave his own parish on a Sunday to | quickly when she had shaken her head | a little, to drive it away. Any thought of John had become unpleasant. It aroused defiance inside of her, rebel- liousness. Always when he appeared | in her mind, she saw herself, at first, | going up to him, her face lifted, her| lips held pleadingly, for the greeting greeting that had been so customary between them. his sort of vision) hurt, though. The phrase that ran so | often across her brain would come} back—“Would that fit- in, now?” | This time il was the thought of Jolin} coming to her and finding her with} ryvonne. There was something about} that which wasn’t right.” So she \gave that little shake of the head and |drove John away. . (To be continued) | Ancients Built Largest Statue | if |No Other Has Equalled the Colossus | | of Rhodes | The ancients still hold the record) in some departments. | Yor instance, the great pyramids of | Egypt have never been equalled either | Hin size or the weight of material used. |It has been siirmised that the delta} jof the Nile was so uniformly flat that) {the ancient Egyptians, Seéing moun-} : iz ayes p ster | “Do you want to be like Yvonne?”)‘#ins in neighboring lands, determin-)},.¢» ed to build high.” | No statue at present standing in any (part of the world can compare for | sheer size with the Colossus of} }Rh It was long believed that \this mighty statue of brass bestrode |the mouth of the Mediterranean is-| Jand’s harbor, and that ships in full sail passed through its knees, but} |this is not now thought to be true. | Even Shakespeare s in “Julius | Caesa “Te doth bestride the Tara row world like a Coloss The} statue stood 126 feet high, and one ot} its fing arger than aman, It} was executed by Charles of Lindus, | stood for fifty-six years, and was then thrown down by an earthquake. | , | Here Centuries Before Columbus | Scientists recently discovered a} gle of knots which, translated, re-} a knowledge of Oeluge among} lest clvilized people, | The first white clyilizers | id to have come to America| 2,300 years ago, centuries before Col- | structures ‘‘mountafns 8 W umbus was born. Wool From Northern B.C. There was shipped recently from Terrace in the Prince Rupert district half a ton of wool, the first that has} gone out. It was from the ranch of William G. Goodwin, of Kitsulkallum | ened to Kamloops. | | cons Small Boy (to butler who has open- | ed door In response to ring).—"Please, sir, is this the fourtifhouse from your jlert?” | Official Report Issued Every Year By ible For Present Valuable Collection The London Zoological Society orig- inally consisted of fifteen natural his- tory enthusiasts, who met at regular intervals to discuss animals. Eventually they decided to rent a site in Regent’s Park, where fish could be reared, waterfowl bred, and a small menagerie of animals kept—the be- ginning of the Zoo. Today the collection numbers some | thousands of animals, birds and other | creatures—and is worth untold wealth. | The first animals to be brought from jabroad by one of the Zoo's emissar- jies—who nowadays comb the world for specimens—were those captured in the Falkland Islands by a keeper |named Lecomte. = | When he returned with one sea London Police jlion, a wolf, a goose and two gulls, Every year, says a writer in a Lon-| everyone went wild with excitement, don paper, the police iake a census | and Lecomte became the hero of the Clean to handle. Sold by all’ Druggists, Grocers and General Stores That delicious flavor of fresh mint gives a new thrill to every bite. Wrigley’s is good and good for you. Interesting Facts In Government “Blue Book” at large. The Zoo’s first hippopotamus, a | species of animal that has always been ment “Blue Book” just published, show lord of the biggest “draws,” arrived in| that nearly three thousand Persons Regent's Park just three-quarters of a regularly commit crimes for a living, | century ago. over five hundred of these being wo-| There were also 341 houses of receivers of stolen goods “known to INES! Sear Ask Your Grocer for our Famous pSardine Cook —S There are any number of interest- ing facts in the official reports. For instance, many people believe-that the Balance in Easy MONTHLY Payments Write for particulars to our nearest oMoce Remington Typewriter Co. of Canada, Limited Winnlpeg-210 Notre Dame Ave., Calgary—110 Sixth Ave Wi ri 55 liament. Xe. West, Vancouver-556 Seymour Street. Woman Runs Paper Mill Swedish © Woman Has Handled Business Successfully For Years — A Swedish woman, who owns and successfully operates a pulp and paper mill in the northern part of Sweden, Fanny Unander Scharyig, was recent- ly a visitor in Winnipeg on her way to Edmonton, where she hopes to per- suade one of six sons to return homo with her. Mrs. Scharvig was widow- ed in 1910, and has since headed her husband's business with an annual output of 150,000 tons of paper, which {s sold ‘Tr-Sweden and England, KEEP CHILDREN WELL DURING HOT WEATHER Music Of the Elements |Orchestral Effect Produced By Wind Under Certain Conditions | We are so accustomed to man-made |musie that we seldom realizé*that the Actually, elements haye ways of produclitg, however, the sentence may be pfa- | Busic Ge TIE Gait ab EO Ae nounced for treason, Dinter, or. for 5!ates there are fields of bamboo that setting fire to a Poveriiene Git) or i certain conditions make a yolume arsenal, of sound that from afar strikes the Legal crimes include such things as a ae ae huge ee af eee challenging a person t duel, A ees eager byas Smal Bo Sree Sones eatin anh *y which POLES UO ED eeiieg Hb. bam bog Isteinss the wind, blowing through the eee produces an astonishing variety There are all sorts of acts about the ie notes that sometimes blend in one = observance of Sunday still in force, great open-air symphony, though they are seldom or néver cat | Another form of outdoor orchestra ried out. Under a very old clause|!S to be found on the Scottish coast, any person “travelling by boat” on a|Where the sand, in sme districts, pro- |walked on or struck by a stick. Water, in certain circumstances, is |capable of ylelding extremely pleas- else. {UE musical effects, a fact realized by |the ancient Greeks, who had a number : of musical instruments operated sole- * Miller's Worm Powders are a prompt |!¥ by water. Certain North Amerl- relief from the attacks of worms in|can tribes of Indians make music by ears oe Bee poweiil in thelr filling buffalo hides with water and action and, while leaving notNing to be | ;,,. i di red as a worm expellant, have an eae (RO TRUATSEOLES, ox X invigorating effect upon the youthful} Little Helps For This Week system, remedying’ fever, biliousness, | When I awake I am still with Thee.) loss of appetite, sleeplessness, and} —Ps. cxxxix,, 18. _ 5 Eyery mother knows how fatal the other ailments that follow disorders! caused by worms in the stomach and bowels. Sull, still with Thee when purple} hot summer mionths are to small morning breaketh, jehildren. Cholera infantum, diarr-- When the bird waketh and the hoea, dysentry, colic and stomach ‘ shadows flee; {troubles are rife at this time and han morning, loyelfer than the | often a precious little life is lost after int daylight, {only a few hours illness.- The mother et, Dawns ithe sweet consciousness, I am|who keeps Baby’s Own Tablets in tho Leaying his apartment at St. with Thee! jnose feels safe. The occasional use James’ Palace for an evening out, a —Harriet Beecher Stowe. |of the Tablets prevent stomach and friend who accompanied him sympath-| I would eyer awake with God, My|POwel. troubles, or if trouble comes ized with him because he could first thoughts are for Him, who hatn|suddenly—as, it generally does the ed with him because heacould not gad Ars! 5 Brees Or » Who hath) paplets will bring the baby safely about unrecognized like ordinary peo-|made the night for rest and the day/through. They are sold by medicine ple. for work, and who hath blessed botn.| dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box “['ll bet you £5 nobody recognizes/If my heart be early seasoned pith | fromthe ae fe Medicine Co., me between here and Trafalgar | His presence, it will sayor of Him all} YO wee Square—about five blocks away—jthe day. Wales replied. The bet was taken. - Wales and his} friend walked three blocks without in-} cident. Then a woman stared h at Wales, and the friend claimed there is an act just over three hun- engage in “sports or pastimes” where. Wager Remains Unsettled Prince Bets £5 No One Recognize Him On Stroll The Prince of Wales is looking for a sympathetic arbitrator to settle a Would | | Fairer tl Not Harmful To Eyes ‘The Terror ofeAathnalcomes*lika n| If you can read, write or do other thief'in the night with its dreadful| Work without tiring your eyes, there tral throttling, robbing its victim of breath.|is no xarm in going to the moyles, ‘a jIt seems beyond the power of human | specialists in eye diseases say. Testa ne Na heshioe ae oa ot with 150 persons showed that those “She didn't recognize me, or sho} Kellogg’s Asthma Remedy. ‘Then re- |who suffered eye fatigue after watch- Rola GRVa mn healt Lon malta ar |ef comes with arush. Life becomes|ing a motion picture film, also became ae i ates renponded ake ae Re worth living, and, if the remedy be/{ired whens doing other work that af- § es al s See er s used persistently, the disease 1s put| rected the vision, so that the movies ermanently to rout. Take n S) vittute, sf eet Ra Were not responsible for the trouble. Minard’s Liniment for Dandruff Recognized as a leading specific for the “destructfon of worms, Mother Grayes’ Worm Exterminator has prov’ ed a boon to suffering children every- where. It seldom fails. His Majesty’s Understudy The young wife was busily plying her needle. “It’s too bad,” she com- plained to her husband, “the careless way the tailor sewed this button on.|~ This fs the fifth time I’ve had to put it back for you.” King George Is Often Represented By A Deputy Owing to the number of public and eectel engagements King George has be IGLOS ie Lo to | and there drenched with water? Now, a deputy. jwhat part did you take in this dis- The man who represents the King, jee $ Jones (meekly).—“The left leg, sir.~ be he prince, peer, or commoner, be- comes for the moment invested with} - a $ ° ° No Vacation Kit kingly rank. He must be addressed | 8s complete unless it contains jas “Sir,” no one must sit down in his | |presence, and h ake, ‘ DP he. takes protection from sudden attacks of cramps or colic, Don’t forget jover all others at whatever function) Chambertaln’s Colic & Teacher—“So you admit the unfor- tunate lad was carried to the pump TAD PINPLES OVER A YEAR On Arms and Limbs. Lost Rest. Cuticura Healed, “I was bothered with pimples for over a year which affected my arms and limbs. The pimples were rather large and red and quite hard, and festered and scaled over. They itched and burned causing me to Scratch, and I Jost rest on account of the irritation. “A friend recommended Cuticura } Soap and Ointment so I sent for a free sample. There was a difference after using it so I purchased more, and after using two boxes of Cuti- cura Ointment and three cakes of Cuticura Soap I was completely healed.’ (Signed) Miss Martha Hinsche, Box 13, Fillmore, Sask., Noy. 10, 1925. Use Cuticura to clear your skin. | things. Sample Kash Tree by Mail Addr 2 Depot: “Biwcbouse, Ltd, Montreal” on | Ointment 35 and Sc. | . . WSS~ Cuoticura Shaving } Minard’s precedence }he may attend on behalf of King George. | At all public functions attended by| 3 the King, a reception committee must | be appointed to receive him, and the| same ceremony must be aecorded to |the King’s representative. | When attending any ceremony in| London, the King’s representative is provided with one of the royal car- jrlages, but no outriders are sent. Nor {s he ever accompanied by a military | |guard, unless he is a member of the lroyal family, AGENTS WANTED To secure orders for men’s, ladies’ and children’s hosfery. No capital required. We pay highest commiss{ons, Year round work. Send for catalogue. Porter-Hoslery, One Bloor St. East, Toronto You'll never acquire popularity {telling your nc ibors to by aw how Liniment for Warts “Stick 2c. Corns and