ABBOTSI< NEW PES -ver for TRACTION §89 A YO =~ ) = 2 ~ x Mop, snow, sand—roads that you thought impassable before—whatever the conditions may be, Ground Grip Tires will take you easily through without the use of chains. If you have to travel on rural roads in all kinds of weather, you will find Ground Grip Tires the best investment you ever made. Put a set on your car or truck today. No increase in price. Puved AS THE GREATEST TRACTION TIRE FOR SNOW AND UNIMPROVED ROADS Firestone GROUND GRIP TIRES FOR CARS, TRUCKS AND TRACTORS Operated By Radio fected by the air commerce bureau ‘ technicians and private manufac- Typewriters For Use On Air Liners turers are capable of 60 .words a Have Been Perfected minute. Typepwriters operated solely by) The Washington-Nashville airway radio impulses have been perfected Will be the first line to have the and will soon be in operation on air-|"¢W machines in operation. The lines, according to Daniel C. Roper,| £°Vernment will finance the installa~ ris fcecretary lof commerce | tion making the machines available The machines will enable pilots to| My to pilots for weather reports. have up-to-the-minute weather re- ports and enable passengers to have the latest market and news reviews while in the air. The new radio typewriters per. The largest sum of “conscience money” ever received by the British treasury, $50,000, has been acknowl- edged by the board of inland revenue. Thou Shalt Not Love — A NOVEL BY — GEORGIA GRAIG } CHAPTER X.—Continued | There came the sound of sibilant} gasps from those nearest. The shuffle of feet stopped on the instant. | Starr and Michael, too, were stricken as still as though turned to stone, their arms about each other ready to swing into the dance, In the momen-| tary hush it seemed that everyone| else stood still, too, listening. But} Sephanie Dale was neither hushed nor silent. In a dramatic, bitter moment she was hurling names at Starr. The kind of names of which| only a jealous woman can think. The whole gay party, their danc-| ing feet stopped for the moment, stood aghast. Almost anything went in their mad set—but not scenes like this. Stephanie was too angry to care. She had a great deal stored up to say and she was saying it all. Michael's face went from dark red to white. There was pleading in his eyes as he said: “Stephanie, please!” She flared out at him, then. “T won't keep quiet! Why should I? I'm beginning to doubt whether your interest in this ‘Play-girl’—she made the name anathema, while her eyes shot venom—“is purely profes- sional, as you insist! How do I know you haven't been her lover, in com- mon with half a dozen other men about town? Probably half the men here this minute? “But you can't flaunt her in my face! If you dance with her, Michael, everything is fin- ished between you and me!” | It'was a merciless ultimatum. At Stephanie’s savage onslaught Starr felt all the life. suddenly. dashed from her body. Now, unaccountably, her greatest resentment was for Michael, ;. +... Though why should she care? | He deserved—well, about anything. But surely not this public em- barrassment. As she recoyered her- self slightly she turned to look at Michael. She saw the battle he was wagnig with himself. He could not afford to quarrel with the girl he wanted to | i I Air Cell maintains itself by simply breathing air. It sounds with the necessity of re-charging. miracle and it is indeed one of Science’s great achievements. Best of all, peak power level is maintained for 1000 playing hours. No dwindling of power as in other batteries. And Layerbilt! Well—everyone knows it is the super “B” battery. Teis built in tightly-packed layers and gives far longer life than the old-fashioned round-cell types. Thus you don’t have to change your “BY” battery as often as formerly, This year, Eveready has eliminated the terminal posts and given you one socket—this means only one connection for each “B” battery, For perfect team work—Air Cell plus Layerbilt, CANADIAN NATIONAL CARBON CO _ LIMITED Hoelifex, Montreal, TORONTO, Winnipeg, Vancouver EVEREADY RADIO BATTERIES T IS AIR CELL that has made battery radio so immensely popular these days. Air Cell—the modern battery—does away The quality of radio reception largely depends on your batteries. Ask for Eveready — and be sure! GIVES like a See...and listen to... the new PAINS ALL OVER HIS BODY = Kruschen Made Him Feel a New Man | Read the experience of this man who had rheumatism so badly that at times he was prevented from work- in; About 10 months ago,” he writes, “I suffered terribly with rheumatism and neuritis. The pains were all over my body and some days I could not even get up from bed to go to work. A friend visited me and suggested that I should try Kruschen Salts. did so, the result being that the pains seemed to gradually disappear. I have been going to work ever since without a break, thanks to Kruschen Salts, and I feel a new man.”—A R. Rheumatic conditions are frequent- ly the result of an excess of uric acid in the body. Two of the ingredients of Kruschen Salts are notable for| their work in dissolving uric acid.| Other ingredients assist Nature to expel the dissolved acid from the PICTURE WORTH $2 FREE A handsome grayure photograph of H.M. King Edward VII1is waiting for youat yourdruggist’s—apictureevery home will proudly frame. Free with the purchase of a bottle of Kruschen Salts. Supply limited—yet yours now. marry, to whom it was generally ac- cepted that he was engaged, and yet how many inen would have accepted a rebuke like that in public? It was plain he meant to pay no attention to Stephanie, or anything she said. He held on to Starr defiantly. Starr wriggled free from his arms. She drawled coolly: “I'll save Michael the embarrass- ment of making a decision by sitting this one out. It's a little warm for dancing, anyway!” She walked across the floor alone, toward the long, open windows that led to the high-up balcony that look- €d down over the city. More than ~one turned to watch her as the music purred on in. the dreamy waltz, marveling at her Courage, | ‘This was a ‘new ‘phase on thé character /of “Play-Girl’, and’ there was’ a) touch’ of reluctant admiration’ and - sym- pathy even in the’ women’s*eyes:. §) high up over New York City. \ The} balconies outside its windows looked down so that one could imagine themselves on the crest of a_ hill, with the lights below twinkling like a sea of stars. Starr looked down on them, but somehow they were all blurred and wavery through a mist that welled to her eyes in spite of herself. In the distance was caught, a glimpse of the glory of the wide river, moon-drenched, turning the craft idling along it it into silver boats. But in the light of day they would be dirty hulks, most of them, with no magic of moonlight to touch them. They would not be silver boats, they would be— That was how Starr felt—tarnished. She stood by the balcony rail, looking down at the lights and at the broad, wide expanse of the black and silver river. Music, muted a little, came from within. The dance was going on as though nothing had happened. Starr was as surprised to find she was trembling as at the mist that blurred her vision. In spite of her brave front, things like this left their mark. They were bound to. She had not had sufficient experience in life in steeling herself. She did not know how long she stood there. It made so little dif- This ballroom at the Mayfair’was) ference. Then the figure of a man suddenly appeared, just a dark blur against the wall of the tall building. | That would be Lance, of course; he} Was never very far away. She was surprised that he had not already followed her out. She moved slightly, glancing from the corner of her eyes. No, not} Lance. The figure was too broad and athletic for Lance. Starr's heart gave| a queer leap. Michael! “Starr!” In the misty darkness the girl's lips twisted, A sibilant little laugh tinkled. z | “Be careful, Michael-Hassan, poison ivy!” His voice came swiftly another eager step nearer. “I want to apologize for Stephanie, | Starr. She had no right to say the! things she did." | I'm as he took Starr said dully; “It doesn’t mat-| | ter, does it? She only said what! everybody else thinks! If I remem- ber, what you've rather intimated yourself.” He spoke her name again, and in| his tone was a world of hurt. | “Starr!” | “Yes, Michhel.’ Somehow it was easier to talk to him when the darkness obscured his arrogant young features. Perhaps it 1936 Air Cell Radio Sets at your dealer’s, was easier for him, too, not to see the painted mask of “Play-Girl.” An he saw was a tragic, white, indistinct smudge that her face larger white smudge, her dre. ed against the rail. His voice was strained “I want to apologize for Starr. No man has the to do to any woman, no matter myself, right too hat is preconceived notions of her, I did to you. I put you in an im- possible position, and then blamed you because you lost your head. It's all my fault; whatever has happened tonight or any other time, is my fault. I didn’t realize it until to- night, when I heard Stephanie call you those names, but I knew then in a terrible moment, Starr, what I had done to you.” j A strange tightness caught Starr Ellison’s throat. Her barriers were down. She could have matched the supercilious Michael with mocking word for mocking word; she had no weapons with which to fight this new, humble Michael. | He had come closer was| reaching for her hands with the big strong ones she knew so well. He was trying to look nearer into her| face and the pools of her eyes that| were hidden in the night blackness. He said impetuously: | “T'ye been a mad fool, Starr! I be-| gan by being attracted that day I Saw you on the street, pouring out | your passionate little heart in just} a few words that meant yolumes to me. I thought I understood, then. And when I saw you for the third time in one day, it looked as if Fate was pointing you out to me, as the girl I had been looking for who could be molded like putty in my own hands, for my own not-too-worthy purpose, making you do exactly what I wanted you to do—for sweet pub- licity’s sake. We get so hardened in this game, as well as in the news- paper game. You know they say that a man will betray his own grandmother for the sake of a ‘story’. That was all I had in mind —a ‘story’—one that should be sen- sational enough to help me line my own fool pockets. I thought I had you sized up—I was terribly wrong. . .. Then you got beyond my control. As might have been expected, with a girl ‘of your mentality. You were nobody's little dumbshell chorus girl. Which L should haye known in the ‘first=place: I was’so fatuously pleased with myself that I was even con- now, gratildting myself that T had found 4 a woman.with brains as well as beauty. . . he He paused, and in that momentary pause the silence ‘was sibilant the music from inside a mere softly purr ing obligato. His voice had a choke! as he went on. (To Be Continued) Conquest Of The North In Canada We Are Unlocking The Treasure Houses Of Nature The Governor-General, Lord Tweeds-| muir, paid a high trilute to the min-! ing industry of Canada at a dinner at the Chateau Laurier celebrating the production of the first ounce of refined radium in Canada, valued at) $850,000. Speaking of the slow and| patient development of the mining by} geological observations of the officers of the mines branch and research on metallurgical problems in govern- ment laboratories, amon other| things, Lord Tweedsmuir said: “On the 14th of July in the year 1789, the Bastille fell in Paris and] with its fall began the French revolu-| tion. On the same day, Alexander | MacKenzie, the explorer, set up a} post on Whale island, off the Arctic! coast. That day in the old world in- augurated several decades of war and a carnival of windy theories of which we still feel the blast. Here! in Canada, on the other hand, was| inaugurated the slow and conquest of the north. “In recent years in the old world, we have seen a similar epoch of con- fusion and unsettlement, the strife of rival dogmas and the eternal rumor of war. In Canada these same years have witnessed a very different kind of movement, the steady pacific conquest of the wilds, the practical business of unlocking the house of nature. Which of fat ause to be fortune. It melee into which patient treasure the two We have good ateful for our good kept us out of the much the world has been flung, and permitted us to continue our fruitful and peace- ful toil.” is the happier? g so of gest globe in the world is being made for next year’s Paris ex- It will show the continents an position and earth's seas on exact scale of one-to-1,000,000 and will be lighted by an artificial sun When King Edward makes cere monial drives to outer parts of cen- tral London around Coronation day special seats will be allocated to children Coffee plants are in flower for one day only, 2178 1450" IN CASH PRIZES FOR THE BEST SLOGANS FOR ROYAL HOUSEHOLD FLOUR $500. PRIZES .* 2, TOTAL $1,450.00 4 Thisis What YouDo: 7 Merely write a slogan of not more tha: hok th Z “hade by th Tri A Master Millers” of "A Gucrantes of Usiform Baking Results”, Z ‘ow may send In as many slogans you follow 216 PRIZES HERE ARE THE RULES: Use a plain sheet of paper and write in of not address of you purchase your Royal 3 lose on November 30th, 1936. All entries must be post- marked not later than that date. Ogilvie office as listed. 5 This Contest is restricted to RESIDENTS OF CANADA, ONLY. Employees of The Ogilvie Flour Milla Co., Ltd. their famili F RETAILERS You share In this, too. The retailers named by Best six prize winners sch $95.00 the will rece! THE OGILVIE FLOUR MILLS Co., LIMITED Montreal, Ottawa, Toronto, Fort William, Winnipeg. Regina, Medicine Hat. Calgary, Edmonton, Vancouver Victoria. OGILVIE ROYAL HOUSEHOLD riivs FLOUR TESTED | Little Helps For This Week: Beloved, if our heart condemn us not, then have we confidenge to- ward God. 1 John 3:21 ¢ © Lord, how happy is the time When in Thy love I rest; When from my weariness I climb E'’en to Thy tender breast. The night of sorrow endeth there, Thy rays outshine the sun; And in Thy pardon and Thy care The heaven of heayens is won. Nothing so much establishes the mind amidst the turbulency of pres- ent things as a look above and a | look beyond them, above them to the good and steady Hand by which they are ruled, and beyond them to the sweet and beautiful end to which, by that Hand, they shall be brought. Study pure and holy walking if you would have your confidence firm, and have boldness and joy in God. You will find that a little sin will shake your trust and disturb your peace more than the greatest suffering, for in suffering your assurance and joy in God will grow and abound most if sin is kept out. As sin gets in peace will go out. nted It Moved “Tt's the furniture folk come for the piano, Henry.” Husband—“But I you the money to y the next instalment.” “Yes, I know, dear; but don’t say Wife gave I'm going to pay them as I've soon as they get it downstairs, decided to have it in the sitt room.”” QUIVERING NERVES When you are just on edge . .. when you can’t stand the children’s noise ...when everything you do is a burden...when you are irri- table and blue . . . try Lydia E, Pink- ham’s Vegetable Compound. 98 out of 100 women report benefit. Ie will give you just the extra en- ergy you need. Life will seem worth liviog again Don’t endure another day withous the help this medicine can give. Gee a bottle from your druggist today, Toolta. EF ihleunie VEGETABLE CUMPOUND Y=