1 K The Gates of Hope BY ANTHONY CARLYLE deervinff of either her love or tt* ptrre sweetneoa of her faith in him. Against his will he war, driven to voice something of his overwhelming Tin- Beginning of the Story. Marciu Hal stead, secretary to Mrs. AUlen. is entrusted with some jewels while her employer (foes out to lun- cheon with Kempton Rosslner, his bU-pmothr Lady Rosslavr and her son Gordon Ruthven. Marcia puts the jewels in the safe but fails to find the duplicate key. She consults a noted physician who tells her she cannot live longer than six months; th.n answers the call of a solicitor to find that she is heir to a largro fortune on condition that she marriw before she is twenty-one. Returning to Mrs. A Men's she finds Kempton Rosslaer home as much as possible, and when he was there he wan taciturn, moody i and disinclined for speech of any ort. I He could not help feeling, with a, rising, fierce resentment which he found more than a little difficult to' conquer, that Lady Rosslaer and her son were primarily respon&iMe for the impossible situation which had a- risen. He could rot help wishing, bit- terly, that he had refused to take part in putting 1 straight tho appalling tan- (who tecretly married to Araby Trask) replacing the gems '.vhich his ttep-brother had stolen. Believing him to be the tliiff, Maroi.i promises eil- enee if he will marry her within two <!.!>.*. To -hieH his father's name Kempton consents. At a restaurant Manin f:iii.t anl is assisted by three f tran;i rs, Araby Trask, her father, and a you UK man, Jasper Wa'.dron. CMAl'TKR XV (Cont'd.) She found a curt iK-tf from Kemp- gle that Gordon had made of affairs. 1 Yet, deep in his heart, he knew that he would do the same again should the occasion arise. His one thought, in taking the jewels back to. Mrs. Alden's flat, had been of his father, of the name they both cher- ished so deeply. His one desire to pro- tect it, guard it, and to protect and guard the frail old man frum ever learning the shame that had come upon it. That same thought had driven him liko a goad, had made it impossible to take that stand he would have wished to take, and tell Marcia to do her ton Bossier awaiting her on lur re- ! wo . rst - , 1* or himself he would have turn h.,me. She opened it with tremb- inhniti-ly preferri-d to face discovery Jin'/ fir CITS; read it with lower Ihp and suspicion, to make a grim fiht he'd ix'tvvci-n her teeth. to M*P hv ? mnoccnc-e even against It informed her. without detail, that "j u< ' h <* Ms - But Araby, as well a.s his everything was arriing.-d; that he wai f&. "BOM have suffered, at hur service and awaiting her pleas- i Then- had been the girl to think of ( uie. '; h ceremony could take place I as well as the old man. Tho thought At IIIIY time; it was for hr to name! of her the knowledge of what the thr hour. j scandal would have meant to Lord fine re-read it, then lit a match ' Rosslaer had made him utterly weak. 1 and burned it. Her eyes, when shej And now hw was beginning to feel rai'el them, hold n flicker of dread,] the punishment for that weakness; to hr* - "'n: <!"''-niir:ition. too. . realize how thorny was the path he' But it was not until later, long had set his feet to tread; ubovj all,! at i. ttofiueri loe -cold ftngc-rg had . how imperative it wan -to kt-t-p secret' siippt i the broad band of gold upon 1 that thing which he had done to secure her finger, thnt real comprehension hi release, and, for Marcia, a fortune. I of what she had done came to her. It was all wrong, he reflected bitter- j She looked at the ring with half- ly over and over agnin. He had acted; and criminally in going through the mar- . fi i. m _. l_f_ , I CHAPTER XVI. For more than a week Kempton eyies; then torts t off locked it away in a drawer. |ria((p ceremony with Marcia; hi* was As she did so her sleeve brush* ), an offence punishable l>y law; were against the yellow rcses Waldron had ; it to become known it would heap' ent her, scattering the petals. She scandal upon scandal. But thoro hud! looked down at them with n caught ' been no other way. breath. She was suddenly 1'fraid of | His only comfort was the knowledge the future nnd of the knowledge that ' chut his bondage was but for a term:! she had burned her boats -enterex! ami (hat there was no reason at all' Into bondage -and that there wag no i that the truth should ever become going back! known. It WM-* scnnt comfort, hut it< wax all he had. Toward the erul of the we*.k he re- ceived a little., 'brief, puzgled note Rosslaei saw nothing of A r:Jjy. " He , fro Araby. It conveyed an uncon- couM not bring himwlf to face those , c-iouly wistful wonder at his pro- dear c?yi of h<-rs with th* weight of longed Bbfence iind the fact that she this deception upon his soul. He had missed him badly. 4ldod b> h*ar the sound of her voice, I The sivht nf the big, girlish hand- to fefl the touch of h< r hjnuls upon writing quickened his pulhcu. He him -drwwled immi-agiiraldy her shrank from the ordeal of nic-ting ar--(>, a renewal of those stolen, her; MVtlthelCM that evening lie pre- intimate momi rits which hitherto had Mnied himself at the quaint "Id Chel- been no sweet. | sea IVOUM-. In his own eyes he was unutterably i He found her alone, sealed or the n cad. He wondered, sometime*, if. broad ledj{.- of one of the wide studio had he b**n given a longi-r space in windows. Her slim shoulders were a which to think things m.-r, he would little hunched, her chin cupped in her have gon* through with this thing? As palm, and she was looking away lo- ll was he hud U-en driven l,y despair, ward the tangled trnrden beneath her. we.pt off his feet, carried away by cir- Her mouth looked graver than its cunwtances. ' wont and she wax a little pale. He hii<l not had time to weigh the She turned sharply at the sound of consequences. He had only been his st4-p, iiml instantly her lips i r em fully alive to the reitli/.ation that, ho bled into smiles, the color <-amo ftock- WHH completely in Muvrm'n power; itlk' bwk gloriously over her fiu . that her de&porktioji was such that "Kmnn!" She wits in his triBB, IUT rhe would us that power to the fuM. 1 timers l<K'ked about hU nock, aiul at He hud neun ncaiv.lal and shame, and the touch of b<-i win-in b<lj a >|iiick di*nonor staring him in the facn (fust of pa.tsion >hook the man. His and li* hiwi chofn the only way which arms tlgntmad about her llercely, I).- had pre.rnte<l Itself of averting ibc-m hdd her slraim-d to him while lie kiss- And now he mud KI> tl,,,.,f : i uith f<l her. Tli<-ii ruther abruptly, hi- put it. For nix !<P'IK muni IK In- mu^t en her away, holding tier by the ell>w.. dun- th nhndow of doubt unit dread and uncainoxs. For six nmn!!i. must self?" he demanded remain fettered with chains which <"' well as Hailed all the more, since hi h:id lied in forging them. Flo thanked <Jod for MarviaV do eiiion to go uSrnud; the position in which ho found hinwelf would ho more tanuhU- if them was no pcM^bility of v*n a chance rneehng. He frlt, nulkornbly, that I'vory limn he should ti'4r her voice, be f invert to speak to ).- ' he Motion "What have you lieen doing to your- You don't look Slio 1. 1. |'ii. ..I Then with a quick lit- t.l movement drew his arms :ilpniil her ngnin. "I've missed you. You've n>ver mUsed cvm a day before, you know tind It wim Hilly !mt I WH-- \n: r ly. Kverything's so so empty when you don't romo. Kemp!" She wai laughing still, Imt hen would l>e adding to his d- ! voice held H Iromu-loiis, noti>. AM he f A ruby. In reulitv Mitrcui wan nothing to met the leii<!eriii".ft i if the wide, sweet you Kempton stooped iirul hid his chini him; less than nothing She had m Htiddonly agairsl Hit- rounl white put in hU life; she never would have, throat That tenderness sinned to 1 N*voHholo>im he ccnjld not rid him-elt' < -I every |HI|M- in him throlilmiic , but] at the feeling that hr U><wl likr an l this moment il struck lit his heart; llMtirnioiiiitnl>li> barrier between him ' like reproach A nick scnsv of | and tho Rirl who had grown with ouch j sham, of unwoi tliim-xi was upon him. I He told himself, standing there with "Oh, my dear," -he whimpered, still without lifting his head and holding her very close, "don't love me too much, Araby! It's not worth' It. No man in no man could be! Even the best of us are brutes at times, you know and I I'm not one of those best, my sweetheart not by any manner of means! I'm just a man, very human, painfully ordinary, with all the faults arul fallings and weak- nesses of mot, and more than of many! Sometimes I feel that you can't know the roal me, Araby or you wouldn't care so much! Sometimes I wonder what you find in me to care for at all!" The girl looked down nt him with half-puzzled, half-wistful, wholly ten- der eyes. Then she leaned her check against the crkp hair and laughed softly. It was sweet, that laugh, ami very, very sure. "Do you? Ah, well," in mischiev- ous confession, "sometimes I don't al- together know myself! Except that you are you! That you love me! That, you belong to me to me, and or.4y to me! That you're mine absolutely;] ever and always and entirely! That I| have the only claim of all women in . the world upon you. That you're my man and that my every heart beat, every thought, every breath holds in it something of you! Oh, my dear my very dear! I love you rove you love you! And I shall go on loving you whatever you are, now until the end^-and afterward!" CHAPTER XVII. Upon her words, suddenly, start- lingly, unexpectedly passionate, there followed a little, throbbing silence. Over it rose the poignant sweetness of some bird's sortg in the garden. Rosslaer could feel the warmth of Araby's breast, the beat of her heart against his cheek. For a long moment they stood thu*:j then the girl drew herself out of hlsi hold gently. With a light hand upotii his arm she drew him after her to thej window. Her eyes were a Little dewey when she looked up at him again; her mouth! tremulous. Impulsively Rossluer bent] and kissed it, passionately, yet with a new, lingering tenderness. "I'm r.ot worth It!" he said again, huskily. "God knows, I'm not worth it!" Araby, tilting her head liack against! his nrm, laughed contentedly. Never-' theless her clear eyes sean-hed his face intently and with something of: question. There wre new lines in it; grim lit'f.s that hud never been thtre before, and which made it seem, much older.; The (fay boyishness had fled in his !>!.. There was something of brood- r ir. of wc.-.rin-.-s in his whole expres- sion that perplexixl and vaguely dis- turbed her. After a minute he said. gently: "Are things ^till tfoirvg wrung for. you, Kemp?" And wiw amazed at the sudden violrnee in his voice when hc> answen-d her. I'amnably wrong!" He freed him- self from her hold and v>eiit nearer the window, .staring out with sombre gii7.f. Never ha I what he done seem- e.l more monstrous in his eyes ihan il did now. Still a-tbrill mid tingling with pas- sion for Arnb.v. lhe in-i lions, persist- ent thought of Man'ia ! ever) jar- red nerve in him quivering' Nor could hi- rid himself of rwnunbrance of her Shi- loomed like a pale ghost in tho background of his mind, haunting hint. Araliy .slid -oft fingers it: to his "Still -moiiey'.'" she aiked a little wistfully; and Kempton rouse.) him- self with nn effort. Purinv: the last week he had forgotten money mut- ters completely. His lliiiin.ial diffi- culties hail never >ecmed of 'ess ml iiiirtum-e. Now lie jerked hi-* memory Imek to thi'in and smiled giinily "Only money?" Araby per aivd he '.iokc'1 nt her sharply. \ sudden oveiid of rousing any sort of suxpii-ioti in her mind assailed him. He answered with luirrie.l emphasis. "On'.v moi..'V." Ar.d added, half against his will, "why?" "I only woi. dried. I've never seen you lm>k i|iiilc MS you look to-diiy. Ke-mplnn. Almost ill and "so tired. I thought (-crimps something else might be Irouhlirg you." lie stirred in -.easily, hut she flung tn him. Her uplifted face w.is very earnest as she went on. (To be continued.) in cash -pirizes Many people have discovered that 2 In 1 Shoe Polishes aw good for other things than for shining shoes. Far example! 2 in 1 BLACK Good for polishing motor car*; rdbbhtag uit case*. kodaks, black gloves, rubbers, hats, etc. Z in 1 WHITE cake or liquid Good for cleaning hats, ttains in whiu kirts, white kid gloves, auto tirea, etc. 2 in 1 TAN PASTE Good for polishing furniture, hardwood floors, eta. for tTie Bett List of New Uses for 2 in 1, We are Avardin& Cash Prfres as FoBowfl 1st award $500.00 for the most acceptable list 2nd " 300.00 for next best list 3rd " 200.00 -for third best list 10 Prizes of 25.00 for the next ten flry to find new uses for toy of the 2 in 1 Shoe Polishes, eithet black, tan, oxblood, or brown paste, white cake or white liquid, black or tan combination^ Write on one side of paper only. List uses according to colors. Awards will be made according to decision of special committee, * nj Payment made on or before October 1st, 1922. All lists submitted to become our property. Address: 20 Prizes of $15.00 for the next twenty 50 " " 5.00 for the next fifty 50 " " 2.00 -for the next fifty 100 " " 1.00-for the next 100 list* SasYou Money Prize Editor, F. F. DALLEY COMPANY OF CANADA LIMITED, HAMILTON, CANADA, omens Unique Prize Contest filled. Be sure drip hole de not get stopped up, for it Is necessary that water drip over the cheesecloth cove 1 -- ing. The covering must be scalded j each morning, and it is taat to have two ;.*. 80 that one may be sun-] I ning one day and used on cooler the! Of course, the pan must have at loant two inches of water in it, in which lhe lower ends of cloth rest, so capillary attraction will cause mois- ture to ascend sides and meet drip i moisture from above. The air pass-ing The Little Tin Spoon. Beth thought that nothing could be harder than teaching a country prim- ary .school. Only yesterday little Lucy Herman had fiLllen out of the swing and bumped her nose and cut her Up. Though Beth did not mind applying bandages and salve, he thought how nerve wracking it was! And the day before that accident had happened Mrs. Hall had visited the school and said *he was not satisfied with the progrvs* that her .laughter Fannie was making. Tm doing the best I can for Fun- lhrou *> ?> *f f< ** l u me." Beth had replied with set lips. "t"- the deeper the water After her visitor had gone Reth had ' cried a little. Fannie Hall was stupid. ( n lhe to P sh , elf ; * < he cl< **> l i Was she, Fannie's teacher, to blame P laoe a / V T *, for that ? or " wat * rm ''o n ur cantaloupe, An.! how frighterwl she had been * r tlle I1PXt , n " >a1 ' <>* nwrely a jar of when little Pansy H.ggin.i had >vva! : water tl ? ol anything to raise the lowed her rtsl eraser! Wei!, next vear! ' a "'P ch '' h * l ""5" T, ""** >he would not toarh n nrimnrv school! ^^ to flow on aU sldes ahko ' P 08 - sibly a little more on the side the 'viii'l strikes.- Mrs. A. O. Editor's Note: Canton flannel may also l>o used for covering the loJess refrigerator; aiul n old cotton Ulan- 1 ket i* good. If either of these is used. ' a pan if water should be set on top' the top, into the pan of water, thus serving a* H wick or siphon the cover moist. The mortiirg drugged. Recess came; then it wa.s noon. As Beth was eatirg 1 her lunch she felt some one tugging i nt her skirt. She tuir.eil at.d saw lit-| tie Mai-gie Jackson, her poorest pupil J Margie woio rubber* every <iay U'- ra UNO her shoes had poor solos; andi patciuHl. Her face was thin andi fre.-klod; but her eyes were Mue. and] her mouth was rosy. "Teacher. teaclu-r." she began eagerly, "Mrs. 1-^ rMJ r Shelby gave me five cents for going Dye Old Curtain* after her milk, nnd I liought some] candy for you. Look! It's got a little! tin spoon in it!" Beth opened the little Img that the I child handed her In i! were thnt] gumdtvp.H, an "all-day sucker," two I pink peppermints and a little tin) spoon. She looked down at the thin upturned face. "But, dear," >he said gently, "hadn't you better keep this uses for ahoe polish! Such ta the basis for a novel prize contest re- cently launched by the F. F. Dalley Company, manutactui ere of the famous 2 In 1 Shoe PoUafa. For in*tance^ it has beeo found that 2 in 1 Black Is excellent tor paHtfclng motor cars, reflnlshing suit cases, kodake, black glove*, rubbers and hats. The Tau Past* Is highly recom- mended for poliffhia; furniture, bard- wood floors, and auloe, while the White, cake or liquid, has been used with good result* on stalna in whit* sk ;:;. white kid gloves, polishing sil- ver, window glass, and In cleaning automobile tiree and straw hats So Impressed have the macufao- turere become with iu poasibilltlM, they are now offering $2,000 In each prizes for the discovery of new way* of ucing their shoe polish. One would Imagine that shoe polish rs used exclusively for shlnlcg shoes, but that <uch Is not the case ha.s been amply proved by the Dallcy Company. This proof came through the medium of letters received from people wfco^ beta; of an experimental turn of mind, found that 2 In 1 could be u<w.. to ad- vantage and profit in various way*. o Good Roads in Quebec. The province of Quebec, in 1921. laid town 416 miles of good roads, ol which 55.5 miles were wo-t* macadam. SC2.7 wiles were 52. S rni'n** wen' bltumhuni* macadam, 12.6 milos were concrete, and 5.4 mUns wore macadam with cold patch. Over 4.000 miles of good :.ud* are now being kept In thorough repair ID L- province. Sweater or Skirt in Diamond Dyes You ha\e given it oa.y u.-itri>r 10 mm inan Jiiiyunnic i hud in offer than life ItHolf. That week WH-. IntwmlnaWe; ono at utter w relchodnc- He avoideil bis his face HtiU hidden, thai he WR* not fit to toudi hor; Omt h- was a cad, all kind* of a bounder, pitifully un _ . ^ Mlnard'i Liniment for O^ndriifT. .$. Canadian Spiuuci 1 - Cocking 7lu'ou; ^Panama (2aual. -*$ O r THG SHIPS OP TUT CANADIAN f.OVrRNMCNr MrRi-HANl MARINT r LEFT PASSING THROIX-H Tilt 1 BIG DITCH" ON IHADt OCVELOPINO VOVAiif WT WtfN CANADA AND THK ANTIPODES candy your>olf all to me." "I want you to have it all." Margie 'other replied softly. "I 1 k>ve you." A moment later us Margie pa tit-red .,,-,, forth to join her schoolmate* Beth!f a j,- t*x)k the little tin spoon out of the bag And us s-ho lookod at it the old schoolroom seemed suddenly to l>o- oiwiio bright ami cheerful, and she thought of tho little battered chairs, not mere wooden seats, but as chair* of destiny. The.ii she looked up ami smiled. She, Beth Cameron, was the young priestess nt tl'is htllo alUir of learning. How could she over ha\o dreamed of changing her work! "Diamond Dyes" add year* of wear to worn, faded skirts, waists, coats, fftockinits. swewtors. covering*. hatiR- lugs, draperies, everything. Every IHirkrtfio contains illiecttona so simple any woman can put new, rich, fade- less colors Into her worn garments or draporios even if she lias never djed before Juet buy Diamond Dyes no kind then your material will come out right, booauce Diamond Oyes iiaranteed not to streok. SIHX. or run Toll your druggist whether tho miitcrinl you wish 10 dye Is wool or silk or whether It -.s linen, cotton or mixed goods DYEING YOU will be utonuhed at th re- talu we get b> our modera >\-steH ; dyvinf >i,l cleaning. Kabrtci that ie ibabCv. dirty or poucl made like new. \Ve can restorr :i mcwt delicate atticlrc. Scad one article or a parcel of good* bv pott or exprrsn. We will pay car- riage one way, *nd oar chmgcs .ir tnot re*onabl. \V'.iu ,>:i think of . \eq- ad dveiug. think ol Tho truth Is thnt human enorjry liniitivl. and if NH> much thought is 1 Driven to minor thinir* no vitality will j i bo left Tor the Kivnt thitigr*, L minirnt for Birrs, etc. Parker's Dye Works Limited Cleaners and Djrera 7(1 Yonge St. Toronto \n Our most vMnveiiient dviw is n honu-iuiule u'eless ivfri|t v rtor. It consist*! if a WMo'den frame \\-\\\\ top, contre, and bottom shelves sot on four blocks for feet. It Is pUced In n pan H little liiriter than the woolon sholvos, And It thon covered with n dripping wet clwesecloth, the lower edues of which must rout in Ixittem of pun, )lto whirh p<ir wnt >r until nearly brim full. Over the t>\;> is suspomUvl, by string, n mini! ves-el with a hole in the Iwt- tom. so vvnter will drip from it and piM'i-oljite down nil four sidH of the cooler, wbii-h must be sot n\ir n win- dovv or in a ourront of air Tho s<|iiniv I used WHS mndo from n nmnll v>rni>iri' box, hecntise it had top, bottom, iiiul shelf (centre purti tion). Fiviii ull four ido,s of (lie box I removed nil hoards, lo \\r.(t tri|>s for corner? I vim' n l jUNinrc bilking 1'iin for the wt<<r con talnor, urivinK ull n cont. of white ennxiol pa<Mt for neatness; but U is no cUmn and lry tlmt piiit in not iii-eib-.i The only attention riMniirrd in to kcp top nnd Inittom water contniners Abolish fear ntxl you can ! anything you wish. miDUCB I POUNPJ A MOTTTW S'CBOWfoX^ Mid feUcwlnr iu. Orowtos iit. Sol.l by nil ttruffflid or by mill. R088 MIDICINI COMPANY TB Jurvii ltr**t, - Toronto CORNS Lift Off with Pincers only KHICKS No i-.rr.i to lot rhicV*. Ri fTry cn into a ttrong pro(it*bl bird. Succ*t(ul pol- tTTIU*n r v\>.ri< ('link on Pratts Buttermilk Baby Chick Food Sold erywh*tT on out mon- ey back guirantct. ADVK"E KREE, Tell ui rear tttiublc, PRATT FOOD CO. OF CANADA, LIMITRO Toronto lXxsn t hurt bit* Pu i> lilU "Knvsono" on nchlng com. tnUnt- ly th.n cow stops hurilnx. tiicn shortly >.MI lift it risht off witl> flnsors. Truly! A .<\n- ilniKKM sells A tiny boltie ot Ktvcjonr-" for few cont, sutftctaat to reniovo every hard corn, soft or ctim h(w*n the .<. r.l tho without so:x:.,-s~ or