st effooi _ creased d 10m than likely Avlce had the letter e had writben her in he: pocket: is mun?- t [all lnw otlur ham“, for she had 11 mad enou h to declare hm: ï¬rm mm lve to part. ercy Gunville from (My uterbrook form-er. “I would kill her. I! could sweep her from my path in no or way,†she had wrltten recklessly. She remembered it all a. the a d thou. watching her white, jeweled and: to- er, staring at tha boy 1 terror. '1 will go.’ um waver ll rrlodly; "have the carriage brought man to the ‘udiea' entrance without delay.†A: it in answer to her thonghtl, there was a. hurried tap on the door. ‘ p was one of the boll-boys. ' 'If you please. Ina/am,†he belan oathlouly, "the head clerk in the ofï¬ce at me up to tell you that the 8.30 train as met with a- frightfpl disaster on the takin- oï¬gt-he city; It‘s a. total wreck. uny 0'! t. puunnrl were killed out- luht. The rear car was hurled clean on 0 bridge down into the water below. e bodion have all been removed to the morgue. The clerk says a, martian in at. our dkrpoaal if you would Mk. to go and Lï¬ntflv your maid." I velyn ht. Claire stared hard at the boy. “winking buck 1n doe horror and re. unnance at the vary t ought of such a asl‘ly ‘ mono. , Yet there was no help for it: of com!" aha Inqu no gut ido_ut_1fy guinea “Then, perhaps. 11. wouid be an well for me not. to menMon the rumor that I have Just heard concerning the girl," she re- plied wxly. He fell back as thgugh she had struck him a terrible blow with her soft. white jeweled hand. The words seemed shrieked ontâ€"trumpetâ€"toncued u n the Still air. he roses in the bay w ndows of the sun- it morning-room seemed to stifle him. be world see ed to suddenly darken and Itand still. hrough it ill the terrible Words seemed to repeat themselve ln mocking echoes: “The say the girl has cloned with Harold rename!†At that instant his ï¬ne fell upon 'I‘re- rslne’s letter. and ll 9 a. flash he tore 1’. open and ran his eyes over the 0011- unts; and while he read his fair, hand- 9. face grew haggard as death itself. nd he caught his breath hardâ€"<11! great, lttangllmt throes. ' V The letter was as follows: . . “Peroy,-â€"You. have cheated me out of a fortune. but I flatter myself I have check- sted you in the interesting game of; carts. I leave the village forever, but. I_ not go alone; the aux-trier in my fliï¬lt t charming. bewitoh. 112 Little Guy. K p3. not yours, shall henceforth tesc r love’s alluran kisses. This is my re- venge for wrestlnt from me the posses- tmn of the Pseudo Cotton Mills. New search for your lost love. ton lover. Search for a grain o! sand on t e ses- gore, a blade of grass in the waving Ida. and you wlll ï¬nd it. more easily than you will ever ï¬nd 5 sin. beautiful Deerless any. :Hsnol Tremaine.†«u ...... I In“.-- 11--....‘1‘- .Iâ€" UK now: _uer nuuuu. nuu gamu. un‘lvurr down mm the false. fair blonde farce. "_f you know where Gay is, in heaven‘s name tell me. I cannot endure the sus- pense; do not torture me, Evelyn. 1 will forget that you have spoken unkindly of thtle Gay if you will only tell me, it 1011 know- We†qhqï¬asï¬OHI‘z-S' __A.._ 1.1.- 'vu -uvu. Villa. a nu... av- "I really do not. like to tell on the rumor if it is true that you realy care or the girl!" she faltersd, hiding 1191‘ im led face in the folds of her lace kerc iet that. he might not. use. the tri- umph on it. “You may} oak out unreservedly, Eve- gnl†he one hoaraely. “I cannot bear a suspense: be kind. tell me at. once.â€' She knew the falsehood she was about. 00 utter would. pain him, yet she did not spare him. She hurled her {we still eeper in the ï¬lm lace folds, whisper- 3 1017, yet with esrful dietinotness: "They say the girl bar-has-veloped with Harold ifl‘lfemaiuo.†A That night. when Percy bonded the ex- am“ a tall dam ï¬gure heavily closkod and veiled went y the same train. he took room: at the same hotel in 111011 Percy established himself; order- ing her meals served in <har own apt-rt- ont, however. 0n the aaoond day after 01' Arrival at the hotel, Mill St. Claire at for her maid, and upon this trifling read hang: the tux-nun event w lo ipwreckod two lives, an tore two ov- hï¬ hear“ asunder. in St. Claire had left word at. the of- 39 that she wu 'expmtving her maid on or 8.30 train. and that. she ghould be sent .113» her room atronce when she; grrived. i'Slbvwlï¬yw ï¬x? 3th; “3: 1H? ï¬ï¬ea' FREE on {The marble mantel crept around to 103,; the hojgesg pray ggo-win: impgtielgt. A_t,erti-ble light. flamed into Evelyn St. Olmre’s steel-blue eyes. “I love himâ€"I love him!†che'criod wild- ly. as she rode slowly homeward; “yet, with all my beauty, Which women envy nd men rave over, I ho." failed to Win .m. 1 might us well be plum and ueg r all the good it does me.†A sudden thought ooourged to her-«she would follow Percy Granvxllo to the cit . fad mm him in his attemptl to ï¬nd 11 I out; love i! it lay in human skill and wgmun'l wit. 7 , ' st effective wflhout 5:1 dlscotï¬lo; ' creased dos'el not need . 250. a box it your druggun. "I will to] ow flu ï¬nd 12) attach!" 0 mad. “1 wt! tom my way t r loo a pad ban and can of b‘00d~'fllly 11: any inn who dares oppose me,-and snatch my curling from Haida Tmmnino's am.†"How madly o loves her†thought Evelyn. despairingly; "hq mid nover b. more .to me than 0 1| now while my hat- rqq truliliveeL 7 7 7 , Wll' Ulll! HUIIUEB "it! [I'lell' Im'pWUIUl-IB. What. could Aviqe’s delay mean? she «had hgrself. ’ “Heavens!†[tanned Percy Granville in a voice that was hut-<11 human in its in- tense an uiah. "this is Mumsâ€"horrible." The ve ns stood out like whip-chords on Me forehead. and the per: iration Rather: ed in beads on him white, error-stricken, haggard face. ‘ lee one .mmd, ho sprung .tomu'd tho r. » “0 , Percy, Percy, whn would you do?†a to Evelyn, clinging to him‘ in wild arm. “I am goin out into the world so two Ihjajgoursea lam:- _! bags fqlgahoo ." ho ctigdflhoarqely, :iiiad'iengt mm In] "‘Wh‘at- is it. that you are keeping back E rom me. welyn?" he cried hoarsoly. .seiz- us _both . er h‘audnsu and“ ggziqgggxgoua- Em 'no'iéi' Rii'uiiiTIa'x-uhi'wéié' Wm}; am of her own 9 will. 3 E “on! {Lien ho hum a- new horâ€" can a wear It. raised his right hand and uni-m- g a #4; Halo vow of venue-nee. 'I»wil__ £0110! flu ï¬end {manager he lllmfl Dru III “will GI. I! hush. HIM.“ lA-DRUE'CO .AXATIVES Old folk: who need something of the kind, ï¬nd Far Wcal or for We: CHAPTER XIII.â€"(Cont’d) Or, A Dark 01ml: bride who is lying hereâ€" let. me kiss at (pp cold in death~just ancc, and I will go quietly away. Rsfuse me, and I wear to you by yonder solemn stars I win shoot mysnlf through the hmrt upon her Have. 1 would as soon die as live, anyhow.†he added hoax-sow; “life has little enough charm for me now t-hM slur: Lawtonef’ In vain the old sexton expoatulated. The .voumz man’s grief was so goignant that in nits? at. last he. oonsenfe ; besiden. he wnu ‘mm' indeed. and the promise of the banana ‘Exï¬'éii ï¬fe iii]; "GEM? ï¬blihï¬- ed shafts glimmerint no palely cold under tthig‘hq ofmthe some}; stag-1:5. “You must open this grave for me," he pants hoamely. “Hush! hear me out I will makn you a, rich man for ï¬fe if you will do itsâ€"no; one will know. _ It is rmy With a butter cry. Percy flung himself upon it; the next instant he sprung m hls‘feat. and tamed the old man with a ntvljgnzc'. gleyming light. in his_ blue gym. Thin uhtha gran-v.7 Elia" the sexton. mggnpg befgre a new-11mm; 1110mm; _ Men. women and oh“ en looked curi- oust at the. handsome, air-haired 0mg; min with the bitterness of death n his fqgg as they x:qu him by, "The? Niki?» Withâ€"183m?) Himvâ€"the whole world was nothing to him: he did not even see them. An hour later. with a white haggard fact and a heart on ï¬re, he entered the “up: the cemetery. » 11:» met the old sex- 105m the broad, grqvelpd pat/11.. “A gran wag madmhere today." he said hearsay: “a. grave in which a young and lovely girl waa laidwconduct me to “(â€"1 ml! us. you well for it." Hg follovg his mx_i_de thy-pug}!th lonely Like one mad he sprung from his chair witha terrible ex- : “Ga . my Little luv-«dead? he creamed. “My 011! it cannot be!†Like one mad, he caught, up his hat. and flashed 0M into the street with an awful QX'VV V ’ItVï¬atcd the body would 1:: inbomd that any. as no friend! hard appeared to claim This was the horrifyixig paragraph that met Percy Granvillo’s eyes in km room My]: night. f It wll never be ham: 1:: what men- ;uex- Eve yn St. Oleire approached the men and won him over to he: atrocious scheme: whether she brought all the bewltehing beauty of her clarion: blonde loveliness to hear u In Me susceptible heart. or whether I e tempted him I!" the power {)1 gold. In after year . w on the men ooked back to that n1: 9. fl. eeemed hke 1 dream to him; he never remembered why he had consented to the horrible vow of eternal Iilence with which she sealed hie hue. or why he did not repent ere he eve to eke reporters the next morning t. e elip the beautiful. myeterioue stran- Irer had wntten out to Mm to eend to the; daily gangs for p11 _11caï¬_qn._ ThoOnext day all that was mortal o! the beautiful girl, whose fat-.1 resemblance to Guy was no marked. was laid to rest, and the notice a neared in the evening paper. with a simn a headline "Found Drowned" â€"-n slender. dark-haired. pretty young girl. whose identity had. been clearly establish- ed by an old envelope found in her pocket. together will: a. handkerchief. marked in indelkiblo in): with the name ‘(ia-y Eater- roo .’ An hour later, flushed and trembling with excitoment. Evelyx; returned to her hot-e1. Avice was await,an hey there: the maid had missed the ï¬rst tram. and game bv sh. second, luckily escaping the dmaa- He put the diamona aleeve-Iiukjvelyq hud lost Cram her dren~and whwh lay upon the floor unnoticed until after her departureâ€"flimluny away. and tried to fog-flog the ï¬lth. She drew a lonf garnet lixlnsh mantle over her violet 51 k dress. 1; rew a light veil over her blonde face and golden hair, and a. few moments later was whirl- iï¬g swiftly through the streets and across 0 I'lVOl‘. “It. may be a, use of striking resem- blance, erhlns," insisted the man do:- gedly. " will prove to you, ladyhbeyond a, doubt you've at. fault as to tlns girl's identity. I have known her from child» hood us; her name in Katy Lee. I was sorry 9 c was not good, for she was a nrotty_girl. Her father was a. miller away down 11: Kentucky. Do you see this small star-shaped mark on her left temple?" he asked. pushing back the oldngmg nut.- brown curls; "well. the old water wheel in the mill caused tha£ when Katy was a little child. I dare say there are plenty who remember that accident, to this day; lt- Is not. so man yearvaco. I! you are not. yet convince I will send for the poo- n13 among yvhom‘shojrss stop-12mg." L A Iâ€"ï¬l-l-t The rugâ€"7‘01» wan there ever a more remwka’blc, a. more wonderful re- eeyflfluneflfl she thgught. xflnxdglerringlyL Ile‘orcy Granville oould be branch to bellow Gay dead. utterly Ion to Mm tar- ev'or, inï¬me m: heart. might mu «a he: again: 21'. mm a glorious. golden dream. and worth the magi valiant startle. It um nun! ha nnwn In whnt nun. A deathly faintness seized the haughty, dainty heiress as she was ushered into ï¬lm main apartment of the morgue by the eeper. The scent! which met her gaze, the pine- ous wails of those searching for loved. on_es.Awere_ hegyt-yeudiugï¬o hpay andflgee. u..... v .._..., a“... v v- ..-.__. “130% date you ooitradict me?" she ex- claimed imperiouely. "I have cause to know this girl well; I would know her 9‘ our countless thousan “TL mnv I'm no and»: nf atrikimr resem- vvmvlw-IVVI a“... ____...---_:,__ V Then. as she stood there gazing on the flaws so (atally like Little day's. a terrible. gwm, dark temptation Ila/shed across the rain o; the beautiful, guilty bemoanâ€"a. temptation so startling that It almost took her breath away, a plot so diabolical that it took all her guilty strength to look it onlmly in the lace and oontexnplate 1%. Ah. it also could but brxbe tlna manâ€"- ten: 1. Mm in any way to give out. to the wot: that this girl In Gaynell Estat- broo ; oh, if she could but bribe him to onto that a. card or envelope bearing that nuns was found in her pocket! but Granville fly to tho M rm to View 1 0 remains if he would-if s 0: could at D mhue this man's silence-she won :1 ofy a: nearest and dean-t friendi w dowmton, or discover the g at- in: fraud, tho dud girl’u (u). was I0 “3ng the 3mm Agountolyagt qt Gaz’g. ‘ Temptation Evelyn St. Claire gathered her silken robes closer about her, and glided among the searchers; manning the silent forms upon the pallid, frozen marble beds, feel- ing faint and dlzzy at every step; the odor of the channel-house sickened her. Carefully she made a. tour of the room. Avxce was not there. As she turned away with a, sigh of in- tense relief she encountered two of the attendants. bearing between them a slen- der, girlish form, which they laid upon a marble receptgple, then tlgrned -aw.ay. “ï¬el‘yf'ss. Ola-ire flashed such a look of malignant scorn and triumph on the man thy; it {airly stunned pip, ,m; ,LA ,_ .uv wmvu -_â€"uv Then ï¬eiivuxluwsï¬wciï¬ï¬â€œ536096 what. she had failed to observe beforeâ€"this girl was certainl taller by almost. a head thgnr Little A ny.“ '7M3'réfr'ï¬â€˜1 iiéfléni 'itTTs'Eï¬h’én‘ Ester- bgqokjthe girl _is__dea,d.!†,u ., L-.. The keeper of the place turned to her sharply. . “You. an £istaken, lady." he said. "That is not 0 name of this girl, I as- su_re you: M _ _ _ _ _ _ ‘ n “18:11)!†receptacle Irucu IauLucu awayc One instant Eveiyn gazed on the lovely, nallid lace. around which the soft, dark curls clung in pitiful disorder. as it lay unturned to the dim, flickering light.then Ihg _epr1_1_m_t {inward with a_shrill‘ cry. - 1<,.,- In 1239 King Henry I: the city of vacastle H dig coal. this being: the i-(‘r of its kind granted Smith and Jones were discussing the question of who should be the head of the houseâ€"~th man or the woman. “I am the head of my es- tablishment,†said Jones. “I am the breadwinner. Why shouldn’t I be?†f‘Well,†replied Smith, “‘be~ fut-e my wife and I were married We made ah agreement that I should make the rulings in all major things. my wife in all the minor.†"How has it worked 2†queried Jones. Smith smiled. “So far.†he replied, “rm nmjur matters have come up.†" If, Iona lone! how can you talk like that " cried Grace, Inexpreasibiy shocked; "th to I Â¥ung girl like one of us feeble. helpless. on ought to be glad tint. she has I. roof our her head during her flex-co battlings with grim death for her poor your: Life. If Harry Cheslei 11 had not mm the or 11-! and Men t her here just. when a di , she would we perish- ed, lying there amidst the bluebella with- out one pityiug heart to hear her moans. or hold a. cooling draught of water to her parched lips.†A sneer curved lone Leighton's haurhty. crimson mouth as she shook out the folds of her lace dinner-dross. and readjusted this pearl bracelets on her plump wrists. “I should like to sea her presume in- terfere wlth my plans." she said molly; "if she were dying, the miserable beggar. it would not matter a. particle to me. It was horrible of papa to set. his loot down. as he calls it. that elm hould not be_re- moved from Leighton Hall. The hospital or poor-house is the plane for homeless, wandering vagrants like that,†flashed out qulg Mgr-Sly; 7 N *‘V'i't â€"would lrve Em excellent tdeii.†2132:9111)- ed lone, deli htedly. "We will make it so plougnt for im that he will want to come otton. ‘ “0h. lone," cried Grace, starting to her feet, "I had quite forgotten the cor, ret- ty sick girl Imp-stairs. We oou dn't, eve mer Imam. em: on with the shadow of dent. hover no over the house.†lone Leizhmn's face darkened and her b11931: _eyqs_ enlisted wrathfnlly. A , “Ball: in general are no tiresome," com- plained Grace tilting back in her arm- chair. “Why on’t 'we have a grand fancy muked ball in his honor?-â€"now that would be perfectly delightful; have .tableaua, charades, and all that. sort of thmg. Com- moy balls are such stiff affairs," “0! course we shall have to give a. grand ball for him. send out. cards or an arch- ery party, a lawn fete. horaeback can- ton, gnd a. yachting party. W9 must fluke 1t delightfully pieasant for 11mm. you now." a 'I’o Iona Loishton'e intense delight._ Percy wrote & polite acceptance to her kmd 1n- vloeflon. ting. homvér'.<tha.b it might, be six we. a. porth ‘ before he co d null him“ of the «pie-.1111 0! young Indian 01 Leighton nan. ' lone we. in a flutter of excitement. " wu- mu hi but once." she mid lay u down the an moaogruned envelope and t rain to m eagerly. " at was at us run last season. at he's a dashing an: follow, than. †she went, on an ulnsï¬cafllyw “fair and king]: like the 10mm of Romeo. While I was at Vassar. velyn St. Clair gm room-mate, did not-hing but. talk of 111:: she was desperame in love with him, It I get a good chance. Grace. I will tr to out Eve 8:). Clair out with her hen - some beam." 7 7 “My dear Chesleigh,â€"-An event has hap- pened which renders my remaining to meet. vou. as per agreement, impossible. When I can control my feelings sufï¬ciently to be able to write calmly, I will open my heart to you and let you know the whole sad afln-ir w ich has wra-pxiod my life for overmora l the darkest 3 com. " curl m great sorrow "PERCY GRANVILLE.†This was the note which Harry Chea- Ieig received when ho arrived at the h9g9 about noon that day. "Granville seems to be in prettv dee u'oublog’3 he mused. "By George, now 1. wouldn t be a. bad idea. to make an efl'ort to reuse him from his ties ndenc . ‘ It would be a capital plan to ring hm up to Leighton Hall for a. week or so._ The Leighton girls oould fheer him u 1( any one could. I‘ll get one to sen km ‘1 pressing invitation at once. and I'll join my gnu-ewes with here." T1? next day the invitation we.- duly sen . Percy Granville read the urgent. invitw tiggg over wip_h_ a qrearx 51:115.. He left. the city on the early morning train. leaving the followln note with the clerk ol‘the hotel, to be elivered to his friend when he should arrive. “Therein nothin like plunging into the very whu-lwind 0 ga my to forget. trou- ble, old boy," Cheeleig had written; “you mp9]. oomeJ' Qne swift. terrible glance of anguish, em“; and deep as eternityâ€"oh, God, how wpll he had loved herlâ€"then Percy Grap- vxlle bent still nearer over the cold, gm lish form with an awful cry. The thrilling ordeal was over; he had gazed on the lovely face, wept over it as stgong men weep but once in a. lifetime,‘ land burning kisses on the still, cold lxps.‘ yet he has not discovered the alarm; fraud that had been practiced upon him: The fatal resemblance this .face bore 90‘ that/o! Little Guy blinded even the sharp- en__e‘d eyes_ 9! love. , _ l "He is right," Percy concluded at len $11: “it 1 stay here brooding over the (lea! of Little Gay I shall 0 mad. Yes} I might as well try to see oblivion and fox-50b tulnegs iu_ gygeï¬y _a.q any o’ghgp flag; \It was mely the saddest. sight upon which the pale atars ever gazed as the oofl‘ln was drawn slowly, carefully into the upper air from the cold, damp earth. The die ranted young- man threw him- self on b s knees by the casket, stifling bitter nouns, and with breathless haste gregchinz on the lid with cold. clammy an a. Percy Granville pressed his lips ’00 the beautiful dead face upon which the tem dpr starlight gleamed, with bitter. pas- sxona-te ones. Percy Granville believed that he had looked upon the sweet face of his beautiful girl-bride for the last time in this world. He pressed it pocketbook full of bank- notee in the old sexmn’s hand. turned away. and staggered out of the cemeteg'y, rather than walked, just as the 1’ mt beams of early dawn were strung ins atgwairg‘thg eastern skz. handsome reward was so to influence him. Five minutes Int/er the old msn was working away with a. will. A ohuddor thrilled through the young man’s very Ioul as the 3 Ida struck coldly at_ length unop $119 00 312114. Another instant and it was flung 01!. and the clear, bright, radkmt light, of the stars shone softly down upon the lovely pallid, girlish, cofï¬ned face, around which the damp. dark curls clustereqin beau- t1f_ul tendgr 1111sz V THO Vo'a'swkevf wEi Vieiurned to‘ earth again. an dim terrible secret remained unre- vea e . None flaw (Tome Up. (To be vont-inued.) CHAPTER XIV. }: III. gave to e the right to the. ï¬rst char- slight weight Ceylon Tea when you ask for It, but there are others .‘who would rather make a blg proflt than serve you I well. Ask fol' “Salad-a" and see that you get It. nucx, mxzn or oases. ‘ ton Till Conjurer .Shows Woman How Trick Is Done. Every oonjurer knows that, in one sense, a, trick may be too good, says a. writer in the Strand Maga- zine. I mean a. trick in which the problem is so puzzling that those in the audience are left without the slightest clue to its solution. A trick of this kind never wine the loudest applause immediately ’it‘ is ended, because folk in the audience are too puzzled: to express their ap- preciation of what they have seen until they have had a. moment or two in which to think it over. (I do not say that they always arrive at the right solution even then, but possibly they may think they do!) It is rather unusual, however, to have a. trick which is far too good for one individual member of the audience. I recall such a trick. It was an average good trick with a, slate and some numbered cards, and after I had performed it one night I was quite unconscious ’of the fact that the trick had been much too good for a woman in the audience. I discovered that fact two days afterward. A man called on me in the morning and asked me if I gave lessons in conjuring. At that time I did, but now, when I am asked Most Grocers Will Give You gain: from "I (Ir-t prize) down to \V "'5'- VV"'W'/ Competition 1| limited to men of flu‘ GRIMM CHAMPION EVAPORATOB. Should you own a no" and want to not the but valua out of it. and no not using one of ur EVAPORATOEB. write to us. utatlug how many trees you t p and m w! l ‘quoto you neoeaury coat suited to your quads. You can t :1 enter ntoat1nd may win a club rile. thu- reducmc 00“. o! outï¬t. "I". I II In 3 won for flu but amp 0: o! Imp and aunt com in bymAqril 1Qt!_1_.__olqui_ng‘_dnu o! qgmmetitigu. Supp}.- frog: 339w gunned: gram. ox" .r-n 8hr." Mantra-.1. during the lasi two week! 0! April. Don’t (at! was at once for cop‘y of our "Irln comm Circular." giving the tune†nonunion. ' THE GRIMM MANUFACTURING COMPANY. LTD. 58 Wellington 81.. .Montronl, Qua. I the unrest art of iced: involv- III an outlaw o o Sal, di‘v'ï¬lod Mo u put†gaging from (nut. prize) down to Cold Only In Lou! Dakota PRIZE - x ' COMPETITION m , a your farmâ€"it is the Cause of most of the sickness in your familyâ€"'- beoause it is a: breeding place for disease. Help "YOurself to Health You Can’t Afford to Ignore This Fact It stands to reason that by. allowing the foul smelling, oyteide closet to remain within a few steRs of your Homeâ€"~11; poneons every breath of am you breathe. You and your wife, daughter: and sonsâ€"v-risk ill, health every time you use it. The outside clout is really a, relic of burbarismâ€"mno pro- greuivo farmer should tolerate it. Just: think how your WK. Ina aaughï¬ers mud: hate its publicity. iriconvnnience and discomfort. THE GOOD HEALTH COMPANY ' "e from your farm. Let us a how you how you can install a Goo?!f Health Smï¬tary Clankâ€"right in your own home-«at. a very small 0031;. Imagine the comfort, convenience and protectxon to health it mean: to you and your family. 5 z Mail This Coupon to Us RIGHT NOW UNABLE TO SLEEP. Mathâ€"make up your mind ndw to blot the outside closet râ€"â€":‘â€";.â€"""? rid of that outside closet on Brockville Ontario Dril 15th. cloning dam of competition. 31mpch from gory compou- _bo ox mm In tho magniï¬cent show windows 0! †he Mantra] .ontru. . during the last two weeks of April. WI HAVE ‘TARTED' A that, I direth the questioner’ to an old pupil of mine who understands mLm‘ethods and is_ vvgry pqtignt} - The man seemed phased that I taught conjuring. He asked for particulars about my fee, the time it would take to le‘a n, and so on, and then ï¬nally stu tered out that he had been making all those in- quiries on behalf of his wife. Then he took me into his conï¬dence. He told me that his wife was delicate, and that she had been so puzzled by my slate trick, which she had 'seen three evenings before, that she had not been able to sleep. She was suffering from “nerves,†and her husband felt sure that her health would be seriously injured if. she did not knew the secret of that trick‘; she could think of noth. ing else. I satisï¬ed the woman’s curiosity, and in ‘so doing earned her husband’s gratitude. - ' After washiï¬g a. floor if one {will sweep it up alt once they will be suprised to ï¬nd many little partiâ€" cles that come from the mop, which, ifï¬hort removed, soon get- tracked back on to the door again. The floor stays clean much longer. a. blank book is easy to Carolynâ€"“I can read Charlie’s mind like a book.†Lucilleâ€"f‘Well. / Gentlemen :â€" Pleaoe send me literature gtvin‘g full particulars of the Good «Mn Sanimn Clout. MAPLE SYRUP [PRIZE CONTEST) By nil III-boom. The Good Health Co. rea‘d !†GUUPON