ae SKORD, SUMAS pet as only Christies are soe! See golden brown biscuits, generously le filled with genuine Smyrna fig jam— always fresh and alw ays pure. In the store or on the "phone, always ask for Christies olualily 1G BA / ince /E53 +. un ees The Mania For Speed Giving Way To It Is Creating Havoo In Many Ways There must be no limit to speed. Everything—overything—must Rive way to it. That is the cry, Efficiency, if possible, but speed in any case, writes S. H. T. in Woman's Maga- zine. We are in a stage of transi tion—a period of re-adaptations ot ideas and reactions. At present the panic for rapidity is creating havoc in a thousand different ways. It wili never find us—this generation —capa- ble of fitting quite into the place, Some of us, with, perhaps, a more | agile mind, and a quicker, adjusting spirit, are better able than others to find our way in this mad rush across life's happenings in the world, Some day, perhaps, we, of the gen. erations to come, may have come to possess such rapidly moving minds, cuits — BY — ALEX. PHILIP loved voice calling his name. Publiahed by Special With Thomas Allen, Toronio, On Arrangement Publisher, is Stress of strong emotion. “Mother!” CHAPTER XIX—Continued. | Connie had rehearsed this moment ® thousand times. She stood quietly | | on the steps for a moment, then. slip- eee ped gracefully to the platform, Con- nie herself could not have imagined how changed she was. From coif- fure to dainty French heels she was| dressed as if fresh from the hands of an expert Parisian costumer. So! ” ,, je! 7 , fu dazaling was she that she positively] _>°7™¢! My boy, Donnie! took Donald's breath away. It seem-}_ 1 ed to him that she had grown like a|iUS to all save the great happin magic rose, all at once from a tiny of meeting his parents, His mother’ bud to a full blossom. No fault could be found with the perfect oval of her | lowed joy. in his father’s strong fingers, j with a shaking head. face, or with*the delicate white rose pare the sobs that tightened skin, from which every trace of tan] ‘oat. had gone. The long lashes that He led his parents to the other end fringed her big blue eyes had turned | Of the platform and introduced them to his friends. Robert Rennie's a shade darker than the curling comments Waves of her abundant golden hair. Andy, whose small form had been| ie hidden in the rear, moved bashfully, Vell! forward, fumbling the wide hat held| Ady offered his usual in his hand. “Ello, Connie,” he blurt- | t!o0- “Strike me pink!” ho said. ed. his lips parted ita wide smile of Connie's eyes were filled with soft welcome. eagerness as she Instantly Connie forgot her as-| ™other. sumed dignity and became her warm, | 8S he spoke to Connie was poignant- impulsive little self. With a glad cry ly significant of his deep love for her. she flung her arms about Andy's But Connie, to his consternation and neck and kissed him. “Strike me pink!” breathed Andy, as his hand stole up to touch the a look of cold indifference. Since Connie's arrival Janet's fea- spot where Connie's lips had brush-| tures held a look of disquietude, but Once a Mother Has Used Them ed his cheek. she acknowledged the introduction Connie turned to face the lake |t0 Donald’s parents with a radiant “Oh, Dad!” she cried in ecstasy, | Smile. “isn't it good to be back here A moment later, Connie, with skirts held high, was running down the railroad track. “Going after her horse,” smiled to Donald's again?” She stretched her arms to- ward the ice-clad peaks. A gentle) breeze swept down the wooded slope’ to fan her face as though in wel-| Wainwright in answer come. The blood surged beneath her! question. smooth white skin and went binging) “Will you have dinner through every vein. “Ah!” she sighed| invited Donald . hsppily, as she inhaled a deep breath} “Yes, thank you,” responded Wain- of air laden with the odour of pine) Wright. “We will sleep in the car to- from the hills she loved. Donald, gaz-| night,” he continued, “but Constance Ing at her hungrily, saw tears brim- ming under her long lashes. From the far end of the train aj been busy drawing plans for a cha- tall, grey-haired man assisted a slen- J¢t she intends building on the bluft. der sweet-faced woman to the ground, and then walked towards the station. As they stepped to the plat- form the woman’s eyes rested on Donald, who stood with his back to) her. Instantly she became rooted to the spot, eyes wide, one hand flutter- Ing toward her heart. With the su- with us?” per, the latter leading Pegasus. At dinner Connie showed no signs cf her former shyness. self-possessed, calm and poised as a goddess. A glad lighi filled her eyes as Gillis and his crew ing . She sprang to her feet and with each and everyone. smiled. in his. you with us again, Connie.” us, Mr. McLean?” she usked as she came back to the table, Donald nodded assent. She gleefully to the kitchen, and a mo-| ment later the loggers grinned! broadly as she came through the door leading the protesting cook by| the arm. “Now,” she said as Andy sat down, “we're all here.” She looked about} fees and clasped her hands rapturous-| ly. “It seems as though I had been| gone for years. And oh, it js so nicc| to be home aguir Ske sank to al chair hrtween Andy and the trapper.| “Do you remember, Andy, when you| were dressed as a butler and danccal with John at your party?” She threw] back her golden head and her sil-| very laughter filled the room. | Janet was unhappy from the mo-| taent of Connie's arrival She had| caught the look of adoration in Don-| ald’s eyes as Connie stepped to the| station platform. Standing there! then she had quite definitely aban- doned any hope of winning him. And Janet had been so sure that once she! had held a place in his h Enjoy the 24 Firestone GUM-DIFPED FERES | QUIP your car with Firestones— the toughest, long- est-wearing tires on earth—and know wherever you go, your tires will carry you with greater rt. A great) Gepression, a great w iness of safety and economy spirit, settled upon her. | That evening, as Donald walked than any others you with his parents by the lake-shore, can buy. he turned to his father. “Dad,” he said anxiously, “do you think I have} made good? Will you forgive me for --for——" John McLean's eyes grew sudden- ly misty. “Donnie,” he began gently, “Mr, Rennie has told us all about you. And no man could speak more highly of another.” He drew a news- paper from his pocket. | Seen this?” See your nearest Fire- stone Dealer today. FIRESTONE TIRE & RUBBER CO. OF CANADA, LIMITED HAMILTON - ONTARIO “Haven't you mother-love shin-] It was Vancouver's morning paper | preme, highest form of efficiency, ing in her eyes, she held out her] with a full-page devoted to the visit! “Tut what does it, or rather what THE CRIMSON |} am. of the Eastern lumbermen. There| win) it jead to? | “Donald!” she cried passionately,| were several photographs of the! ne danger is, and a fearsome W EST “Donald!” Summit Mill and one of Donald. The| Donald whirled at the sound of the! paper spoke of him His young engineer whose modern ideas} heart throbbed wildly, his throata felt and energy had given to British Col-| constricted and his face paled under, umbia a logging plant and mill that His arms were around his mother, | father’s eyes, and his heart was fill- yearning, tender, hungry, after these] ed with a great peace. long months of separation. Her face med to his was white and) terial arrived for the construction ot | of life. But surely we cannot exist drawn, but her eyes shone with hal-| Wainwright's new home. That after-| or continue if we have no interest in He felt his hand grippea| noon Connie, andj riding habit, came to the mill office! future, saw his eyes shining with tears. John’ with her foreman to place an order| ; McLean patted his boy's dark ttl casts was proudly restive. With neck arch: | For some time Donald was obliv-|4 he curvetted and rocked while| ess; Connie sat on his back 5, complete lack of embrace almost unmanned him, and that is the heritage of a born horse. : i ept| Woman. Se tea berate erin the hill among the toiling work. | Three ers, her irresistible smile bringing ar | 7). answering grin from the “redshirts,” who doffed their hats and shouted a/ Obedience; It is the great tap-root were simply gasps and a reiterated, “Well! StTuggled up the hill, staggering un: der the weight of building material, contribu-| But althouh Donald strained his eyes for a glimpse of the golden-hairea rider, greeted Donald’s| 929: The glow in Donald's face! | NO MEDICINE LIKE dismay, met his ardent glances with} to use them continually—that is as His strength in the words, “I am long as there are young children in come to do the will of my Father the home. given us by mothers from all parts of Canada. They all say that they! know of nothing to equal the Tablets, | that they find them cient and at the same time pleasant to take. Ont., writes:—"I have three children, | the eldest fourteen and the youngest | = nine months old. I have always usea ‘or painter to the authorities of Nyed Baby's Own Tablets for them and (Sweden) parish church, nearly one shave found no other medicine | insists that we must return to the ola| equal the Tablets as a relief for | home as soon as possible. She hus! ™4ny ailments of childhood.” thorough laxative which regulate the Pilatus, put new furs on his bonnet, bowels and sweeten “the Connie returned with the old trap-| ary drive out constipation and indi- gestion, break up colds and simple fevers and make the cutting of teeth °f hell and made the devil's face easy. She was as dealers or by mail at 25 cents a box perfectly from The Dr. Williams’ Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont. of “redshirts” filed into the big din-| greeted them joyfully, shaking hands| ing on 11th Avenue as headquarters of “T'm so glad to see you, Jack,” she! Association and the southern section in the muscles, and should a cut, or v * “| of thie Alberta Dairy Pool will be be- contusion, or sprain be The big logger took her tiny hang SU" at once, according to an an- “We're sure glad to have nouncement following a meeting of Tepresentatives “May I bring Andy in to dine with| #95: ran! Strength, as to produce at the same time the danger it is, that we shall draw grad. able} uatly, and even rapidly, away fron, the one real fact, And it is a fact, however much we may ignore it. We are, first and always, spiritual beings. The material in us must go, the spiritual must, or rather may, remain if we wish it, The great ana wonderful right we blessed people The next Gay carpenters and ma-|haye, is to continue after the phase as “the were a credit to the Province.” Donald saw the proud light in his clad in fashionable | the spiritual life today, or that of the lumber. Pegasus in silver. | mounted bridle and English saddle Little Helns For This Wo! “Obey My voice, and I will be your God, and ye shall be My people.” — Jeremiah vii. 23. with that self-consciousness Before sind Heating By Radio ae a French Sclentist Saya Wireless Waves Can Be Used To Warm Homes Wireless beams from the Eiffel | Tower may be employed to furnish heat for the residents of Paris, If tentative plans drawn by French en- gineers are put into effect. Heating plants deriving their power from radio waves are oper ating successfully in Germany, #¢- cording to Jacques Risler whose re~ port forms the basis of these plans. Risler said that while the question of wireless heating houses {s still in |the experimental stage, the feasibil- ity of it has been definitely estab- lished. Explaining how the wireless heat- ing plant would operate, Risler sald; “In the laboratory two posts were set up about 80 feet apart. The send- ing post sent out from 400 to 500- volt current waves of two to threo meters in length. All that is to be done is to interpose on the receiving post circuit a filament ‘in vacuo,’ ana it is raised to an incandescent state and gives out quite appreciable heat. “There {s therefore no theoretical difficulty in installing in a house a series of receiving posts which would in reality be just so many electric radiators. This system could be ex- tended ultimately to an entire dis- trict or to a whole city, which woula derive its heat from one central broadcasting station. Dry mouth and parched throat are grateful for the refreshing coolness of Wrigley’s Spearmint. Wrigley’s whitens teeth, Sweetens the mouth, clears the throat and aids digestion, while the act of chewing calms and soothes the nerves. Rents Home By Wireless Member Of Byrd's Party Closes Deal In New York Willard Vander Veer, one of tho motion picture operators with Com- mander Byrd's South Pole expedi- tion, closed a lense for a Westchester apartment by radio from a point Somewhere near the southern ex- tremity of the world, The lease covers a suite in the Dorset, Bronx- ville Knolls, which had been selected by Mrs. Vander Veer, Several days ago she sent by ra- dio a description of the apartment, the rent asked and other particulars to her husband in the great expanse A QUICK WAY TO END BABY’S UPSET SPELLS “Like other young mothers, I wor- ried every time Baby cried,” says - of ice Syracuse, N.Y. woman. ‘Several 11 ee ee ST ROL toa times when she was upset or consti- really expecting that it would reach pated, I tried castor oil but she him. She was surprised, therefore, couldn't retain it. Our doctor told me leaving she rode % roots bear up Dominion; Knowledge, Will; ese twain are strong, but stronger yet the third, | that still, | foyous greeting. AOS B z Knitround the rock of Duty, is not All day pack-horses and men} oy eg Though heaven-loosed tempests spend their utmost skill. —James Russell Lowell. Tenacity of will lies at the root of all courage; but courage can only rise into true manliness when the will is surrendered; and the more ab- solute the surrender of the will, the more perfect will be the temper of our courage and the strength of our manliness. “Strong Son of God,” cries the poet, “Immortal Love, our wills are ours to make them Thine;” and that strong Son of God, to whom this cry has gone up In our day, and in all days, has left us the secret of he saw her no more that (To Be Continued.) BABY’S OWN TABLETS She Will Use Nothing Else To once use Baby's Own Tablets is That is the testimony) and your Father.”—Thomas Hughes. His Itemized Bill Among Other Things Church Painter Cleaned Red Sea A bill submitted by a church inter- safe and effi-| Mrs, John Hollinworth, Maidstone, | to hundred years ago, reads as follows. the Altered the Ten Commandments and Baby's Own Tablets are a mild but repaired the Sixth; polished Pontius stomach. | put new wings on the Angel Gabriel, |non, from her husband to-close the jother ailments arising from inflam- That'ns their’ns. producers of the world. Raw furs are wild life of the northern half of the continent and as such represent the only economic return from areas in the Dominion, Minard’s Liniment relieves pain. a fellow’s breath. to receive a message at her home,|to try Fletcher's Castoria because it 431 Homestead Avenue, Mount Ver-'!S harmless and babies like it, That ended my worries and I’ve used it since for all my children.” Castoria never fails to delight mothers by the quick way it ends those upsets of Nation-Wide Fame. There is babies and children, such as colic, Scarcely @ corner of this great Do- Constipation, colds, etc. That’s the minion where the merits of Dr, reason for its tremendous sale and Thomas’ Eclectric Oil have not been Popularity. Like all good things, it’s tried and proved. It is one of the imitated, but genuine Castoria—the world’s most efficient remedies for PUrely-vegetable product — always sore throat, lame back and many bears the Fletcher signature. deal. mation. Rubbed on the skin its heal- ing power is readily absorbed, and it can also be taken internally. Excelled In Sports But Boy Who Wanted To Enter College Could Not Spell Texas Guinan rélates the one about the lad who wanted to enter a college. His intellectual attain- ments were known to be slight, but the powers in charge of the entrance exams were anxious to pass him, for he was a magnificient oarsman. In fact, he excelled in all sports. “Just put down something,” plead- ed his tutor. “Write down any- thing you can and we'll get you through somehow.” He left his pupil to it. The lad stared at the virgin paper before him for two hours. Then he put down the one word “dam.” The tutor returned and‘in more sorrow than anger despairingly de- clared: “I’m sorry we can't pass you. You've spelled it wrong!” Condensed Information For terse dialogue the following wants some beating: Visitor (referring to some child- ren standing by)—“Whose kiddies are they?” Oldest Inhabitant—"Nibours” . . Widow married widower. Them's two's his’n. Them two's her'n. A Foremost Fur Producer Canada is one of the foremost fur the chief commercial product of the large It’s the running expenses that take Sunlight is about 618,000 times as bright as the light of the full moon. are GooD and / For YOu) GooD thepound Grocers ‘ Papers Cigarette if Baby’s restless nights might be avoided Scalded skin and other skin troubles are common causes ‘ of restlessness, and tte could be avoided by ea ful bathing with Babys Own Soap: Its fragrant lather heals Baby's skin, for restful sleep. “Best for you and Baby (00"” cleanses and and prepares ais erent Thermometer Seventy Feet Long Has Been Erected In Museum Tower At Munich The largest thermometer in the world was recently erected in the tower of the Deutsche Museum at Munich. It is 22 metres—about 70 ft. —long, and shows not merely the temperature of the moment, but the maximum and minimum of the pre- vious day. It is regulated by an- other instrument of normal size, con- nected by electrical apparatus. Not until a thermometer becomes more than about 60 ft. long do you realize how exciting it can be. Blow hot, blow cold, the temperature of the breeze changes from minute to minute The mercury ebbs and flows like a ripple on the seashore, and the spec- tator finds difficulty in tearing him- self away from contemplation of the restlessness of the atmosphere. Brain Capacity Man's brain attains its maximum capacity at thirty, but a monkey's brain reaches its greatest weight be- tween the ages of two and three, and after that remains stationary. Great and good thoughts are true wealth. HEADACHE > RELIEVED fi... QUICKLY This Parely Vegetable Pill bances, removes the intestinal poisons, and sick head- ache quickly disappears. Your whole ‘stem enjoys a tonic effect, consti pation vanishes, and you feel a re- newed vigor. Avoid bromides and dope, they are depressingand harmful. All Druggists 25c and 75c red pkgs. CARTER'S Ez: PILLS expanded heaven, improved the fires They are sold by medicine more awful. Cleansed the Red Sea, | which was really very dirty. Useful In Camp.—Explorers, sur- a | veyors, prospectors and hunters will New Creamery Building | find Dr. Thomas’ Eclectric Oil very Election o} y y ilg-| USeful in camp. When the feet and piece eceenmeryabulla | legs are wet and cold it is well to rub them freely with the Oil and the re- sult will be the prevention of pains the Calgary District Producers’ sustained, nothing could be better as a dressing or lotion. A Record Whale Catch Cargo Valued At $3,500,000 Brought From Ross Sea With $3,500,000 worth of whale of both organiza- i Great works are performed not by wi but by perseverance, ~~ | oil, said to be the largest cargo of its kind ever brought to New York, the C. A. Larsen arrived at Staten Is- land from a six-month trip to the Ross Sea in the Antarctic. Thera were 75,000 barrels of whale oil aboard, - | Whales were so plentiful, said | Capt. J. A. Nelson, the skipper, that | some days fifteen were captured, |some of them 110 feet long, Such a | catch yielded more than 1,000 bar- |rels of oil. | While in the Ross Sea the GC. A. |Larsen was within 200 miles of | Commander Richard EB. Byrd and his | expedition and communicated with eee daily by radio. Egyptian papyri 2,000 years old fre in better condition today than some of the paper which went un- |der the printing presses during the World War. JEVER wait to see if a headache will “y POW) when there's always Aspirin? ‘The —_—_ millions of men and women who | California is likely to become the use it in increasing quantiti first horseless state in the United year prove that it does rel | States, for horses are rarely used pain. The medical pr there now except in isolated regions. unces it without eff | a t, so use it as often as it can A h = 4 Brita act oO istorians, ¢ you any pain, Every druggist Britalh, Tasco sine ate nua ays has genuine Aspirin tablets | won the war, Britain, according to financiers, is also paying for it, | | for the prompt relief of a hea | | | | Add new American Dictionary: Pedestrian—A man who has just parked his car. algin succumbs to Minard's Liniment, | Cine - imvisible difference Many motor oils look alike, but there is a vast dif- ference in the way they perform. this difference is difficult to detect. The invisible difference which makes one motor Untorteaniy oil better than another must be inherent in the crude from which it is made. There you haye the reason why Marvelube gives bete ter engine lubrication than oils refined from ordine ary crudes. Imperial Oil searched the world over for abettercrade--andin South America they found it. _From it they make Marvelube--a pure, carbon« free, full-bodied oil that resists the extreme heats and pressures of modern engine operation, Aircraft operators prefer Marvelube intervals between overhauls. Marvelube because it is the ideal motors. It ensures greater pow bility and greater economy. Ho oe grade of Marvelub. exactly the specifications of you 7 Marvelube Chart at Imperial Oil ae and dealers. aanrwerlun a better motor o from Peruyi because bet ter lubrication means greater safety and longer otorists prefer oil for moder er, greater flexie e refined to meet Consult the rvice stations pgs am Crude wee remna ek) oak o CSN OT eld cana D2 TED ar Se