A blend of the world's most fragrant green teas GREEN TEA Rainbow Gold by E. C. BULEY <â- «»«â- »««»«»»«â- »â- â- »»»»â- «»» Dan I'ruii-oti aiij (.JorJoii W'-'sliiby And gold In the arid Ijiisli of Auslralliu They stake tliuir claim and start the long' Journey to the const. VVestcrby has a tlaiiteo, Gladys Clem- ents In England, but when they arrive In Sydney he marries a pretty blonde. Gordon Inrwards a photo olf Dan to foriner (I.Thcee, Gladys Clements, In London and when Dan arrives she bo- jlleve he Is Gordon. Qvo Cllchrist, a jtyplst, obtains wurlt In iledlicott's of- 'flee, the broker who Is lloutlng the 'mine. Eve and Dan fall In love but iwhen Evo Is conl'ronled by Gladys she jbelipves In nun's diinllcity. 1 Dan charters a plane back to Aua- ^tralia to check up on Westerby. I "Mot to notice that Social Couiacts jhaa been buaier than over during the paat fortnight. My innocent dear, Mr. iUedlicott and Mr. \Vef>tbiiry have .pas.sed on all their share.s in Uaugong 'or most or Iheni; and at a premium ot ,300 per cent or more." } "Do you really mean it, Fraukio?" i "Everybody knows about it except I just you," Frankie replied. "The pub- lic just opened its mouth after that story about the piles of gold in the {shop window; and the Chief and Mr. Westbury fed them- Mrs. Mi'-dlicolt has turned her •iO,*00 pouud.s or 50.- 000 pounds into four times as miicli by now; and that partner ot Dan's must bo worth every penny oC 100,000 pounds.'' "But it's not fair," Eve protested. "It is scarcely honest. There may be more rich stones there. The reports make that clear." "That is why .somebody elso is now holding the baby," Frankio said. "Do not look so shocked child. The mine may be as rich as we hope, and then somebody will make a lot of money." "And iC it isn't," Eve said "They'll losp; and then they'll blamo Dan. Be Is stuck out there working himselt to a shadow; and he wouldn't sell a share imtll the mine has been proved. "While these peopleâ€" Frankie, cannot sonielhlns? be done about it. •'What do you want to do?'' Frankie asked. "Have you any sympathy with the people who want to get rich so (juiek. They know the risk they are takinir. don't they, and isn't Mrs. Med- licott entitled to square herself, while she has the chance"? She backed Dan with lier money when no one would look at his mine." "That sotinds Jght enoush," Eve agreed. "But it is wrong somewhere, Frankie." "Listen, dear." Frankie said. "When Dan went out to look for that mine he risked all ho had, including his life. If he'd lost it all, would there have been any .sympathy for hira? N<», not a scrap, then Medlicott bought in, and risked 10,000 pounds. If he had been struck, wlio would have sympatliised with himV The papers triod to stick him with it, didn't they" 'Some of them, I suppose," Eve agreed. "Buâ€" t â€" " e "Hold on," Frankie fiwept along. "Now ws come to the speculators. They wouldn't have the shares at one pound, but they tumble over one another to pay -i pounds and 5 pounds for them- And we know â€" you and 1 â€" that there is a good chanco that they will be wortli a lot more than that. Is that true'.'" "Of course, its' true," Eve said. "Then why worry about the alterna- tive chance?" Frankie asked. "If they lose their money what does it matter? "I know why it matters," Eve said triumphantly. "Because the money they lost will have gone into the poc- kets of men like Westerby. It will not havo been spent in proving the mine, or looking for more gold. And , if Mrs. Medlicott is entitled to get her money back, as soon as she can, that man Westerby is not entitled to a penny. Ho ought to be in goal, instead of rid- ing around in a Uolls-Royce." "There's something in that," ad- mitted Frankie. "Well, let's hope that there's lots of gold for everybody. But Dan Prescott certainly has let him- self in tor the hard work and all the k)ck.s that are coming" •'He's a great big fool," Evo said, wiathfully. "Nothing else but a soft- headed ninny." "I kuow^ a worse," Fraukio said, witli a roniical sideways look at her friend. "Who's that?" Evo asked. "I sup- posii .something personal is coming.'' "I'm talking about a fathead of a girl." Fraukio said. "She sees all this going on, under her very nose, and she's too proud and loo pig-head- ed just to drop a lino lo the injured hero. .\n(l he has buried himself in the desertâ€" too .shy and too scared to do anything about it. The two dear fools are eating out their hearts. But this girl " "Stop, stop!" Evo begged. "I'll not stop." Frankie said. "That lollop of a Westerby woman comes To Original Shaieholders of Pickle Crow & Central Patricia and fo others who may be Interesfed Pickiti Crow SharcH sold in 1934 at 50c, llicy have been selling â- Icndily for the past few Kceks at above 96,00. Central I'ulricia cuiild be bought in 1933 at 17c, It now aells above 93.40, We, who sold Pickle Crow at 50r, now oflTcr Gateway Patricia Culd Mines shares at 2Sc. Tha Pickle Lake-Croiv Rteer district ii now a prornn gold producing area • • . one which we mainly iponsored and dcvelopo<i. You may well believe, therefore, that we would not have purchased 700,000 Treasury shares of Gateway Patricia onlriKht if we were not fully satisfied of lis unusual . porsibililics. facts About Gateway Patricia The properly consists of 27 claims (about 1,080 acres) directly adjoining Central Patricia, running for one mile duo wcit and one-half uiilo on iho north. On the projected lino of strike of the Central Patricia main ore bodies GatcMay Pulricin has a Icneth of one mile. Ijitc»t devclopmonts on the new ore bo^Iies at Central Patricia â€" 1,200 feel nearer the Galcnay boundary â€" give a.ss^ays â- bout $11.00 per ton. The conlrnct fur dininond drilling on Cntcway has already been Id. ir you wish lo parliclpalf in ihl.s new venture, send in your order pr4implly for shares nl 23e each or urilc for complete prospectus. Vac the coupon below when sending in your order or when writing for furtlicr parliculnrs. H. R, BAIN & CO.. LiMiTED. "^^ Bain Building, 304 Bay Street, Toronto q^,^ I M>i$h to <iiI»Kfibv' for iliarca o/ Gatcwiy Patriclft Gold Mine* I.initi«<l nt twcitt>'rivc cents p«r »barc. PIrot niftnify n 1 >in tnflotins cheque for ^... to cover purchai*. n S#nd itofk %I(It Jrjift •lUchciI to , t*lf4i« >«nil me fiiitlier iniormaiion on GutcHty Patricia Gold Minai* Sis^ied ^ AJJrf^t , ^ Ai tbl* i«sii« hja b<cii unJerwiccen, thv coinpjiiy haa already received paymcni or conimi(nt«nt tu p^y from iho undcrvritMf, cnnxqucntly tha prtH-««di of ihia ii>ua vill not BO Into ihc ; rjiur\ of the cooipanv whoa* acvuritje* iit« hereby lolH to you. THIS DASHING YOUNG FASHION IS A JIFFY- KNIT SAYS LAURA WHEELER JIFFY KNIT BLOUSE WITH SKIRT PATTERN 1192 "Girls, it's a Jiffy-knit!" says Laura Wheeler, .ind every one of you will want to make this stunning two-piece dress. The skirt you'll do in a record time â€" it's just plain knittintr, while the blousa combines a simple lauy stitch •(vith yoke and sleeves of drop-stitch. Choose a colorful Shetland floss. Pattern 11!)'2 comes to you with detailed direction for making tha jiffy-knit blouse and skirt shown in sizes 16-18 and 38-40; illus- trations of them and of all stitches u.sed; material requirements. Send 20 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred) for this pattern to Needlecraft Dept, Wilson Publishinsj Co., 73 W. Adeliade St., Toronto. Write plainly Pattern Number, your Name and Address roliing Into tho place, smelling aloud to houvcu. She enrages me. The more money she spends on her perfume the more sho reeks of unthinkable things. If you'd got any grit in you, Dan Preacott would bo told that his pal is double-crossing again. Not that he ought to need any telling.'' "But I couldn't write to Dan now. " Eve pleaded. "He'd think â€" he'd think I couldn't do without him." "And can you?" Frankie asked. "Im- becile! Take pen and paper, and write to Australia" Dan Prescott sat under tho flap of his tent, and looked out upon the de- solation that was called Dangong. The dry season had come, and once more the plain at tho foot of Feathertop Hill was a dust heap. It was disfigur- ed now by the rubbish left behind, to mark the secene ot an ephemeral gold rush. Tho mobs who had come to the field by plane and car. by motorcycle and camel train, on push bikes and afoot, had gono again. Dangong had been proved what Dan had said i^, was â€" not a poor man's goldfield. No- thing remained to show that more than a ihou.scind adventurers had re- cently camped there under canvas, except the heaps ot bully beef tins and the ashes ot extinguished fires. The spring had ceased to flow, and the creek had dried to its last water- hole. The chug-chug ot the oil-driven pump wag regularly maintained to show that Dan's precaution alone had enabled tho eighty miners who work- ed on the Dan.!;ong developments to remain on the field. Their camp, a layout of tents in orderly rows, wag tliero to prove that some design and purpose existed behind this invasion of the deaert. (To be continued) Baliy Food CombiiKitions of and Fruits Are Favored Vegetables Sees Extremes Bible Institute Chief Says Young: Folk Belter Or Worse Than Ever TORONTOâ€" The good young peo- ple of today are better than ever, in the opinion of Dr. Paul Rood, presi- dent of the Bible Institute of Los Angeles, who is here for the annual meeting for the World's Christian Fundamental Association. Dr. Rood characterized tho differ- ence between modernism and funda- mentalism as a question of authority. "The modernist makes the fallible reason of man his authority. The fundamoiilalist accepts the infallible revelation of God as his authority. The modernist believes in salvation by work, tho fmdamentalist in sal- • ation by grace." Frogs* Legs Giue Jobless Income LONDON, ONT., - Door-to-door peddlers havo been ofToring Loudon housewives many kinds of foodstuffs during tho past few months, but a new delicacy camo :ipoii the market during the past few days. Frog legs at •!() cents a dozen have lifted some of tho unemployed from a meagro oxistcncc into 'i position of comparative affluence almost over night. With the biggcRt crop ul frogs in the ilistvlct for soma years, unem- ployed workiuf! in pairs have caught as nuiiiy tt tlOit frogs in h morning at ilif> t'oves In South Loudon, When baby's solid food diet con- sists of just two or three teaspoons- ful of vegetables a day, it's really quite a problem for mothers to get much variety into his meals. Unfortunately it isn't practical to prepare just a few teaspoons of car- rots one day, a few tablespoons of spinach the next. And the result in most homes is that baby gets the same vegetables day after day, or that you are forced to the extrava- gant practice of throwing away per- fectly good foods. What most mothers haven't real- ized until recently is that this lack of variety in baby's diet may lead to imperfect nutrition. No single veget- able or fruil; contains all the minerals and vitamins that babies need. In view of this fact, the recent intro- duction of solid foods for baby in combinations is quickly winning the approval of leading doctors every- where. Three combinations of vegetables are offered. Spinach, carrots and peas are included in one; tomatoes, pumpkin and string beans in an- other; and beets, peas and asparagus tips in a third. There is also a com- bination of prunes, pineapple juice and lemon juice. All of these combinations of baby foodo were recommended by leading baby specialists to provide a diet of balanced nutritional values, and all are prepared by a .special method ot homogenization which makes them far easier to digest and much more nourishing than the same foods pre' pared by sieve straining. Perhaps some inspired Burbank of the future will succeed in growing a single vegetable or fruit that fur- nishes all the vitamins, minerals and other food essentials needed to satis- fy normal nutritional requirements. But in the meantime, mothers can solve the problem by feeding baby homogenized foods in balanced com- binations . "Science repeatedly has shown its ability to transcend the limitations of the human intellect. It has crashed through physical barriers too fast, for our minds to encompass."' --David Sarnoff. The Graphochart Shows how til TL-ad character tConi iiamiwrilinji;, at a i;!ance. lOc PREPAID Graphologist Room 421 73 Adelaide St., W. Toronto luue No. 21 â€" '3« Lesson They Never Learned Two persons were killed and six- teen injured in automobile accidents on Western Ontario highways over tha week-end. That is a pretty good record con sidering the fact that sprine; has scarcely come to Western Ontario yet. Wlien warmer weather comes and cars get really going on the highways, if that rate is maintained, we may look forward to an eventful summer. One of the fatalities was the old story of a man driving a horsa ve hide after dark without carrying a light. The other was the still older stoi-y of trying to beat a locomotive over a level crossing. The injures received, most of them very serious, were from the usual run of accidents â€" too much speed to hold control; passing on a hill, head- on collisions, etc., that had their ending in sixteen people going to tlie hospital, from which some will emer- ge sound ; some maimed for life, and some may never come out alive. Everyone of tho.se drivers knew the risks of highway motoring. Everyone of them had seen or heard of the other fellow meeting injury or death in week-end accidents, and no doubt every one of them had con- demned those other fellows for their careless disregard of safety driving under similar circumstances to their own. But they never learned the lesson. Neither will many others. This week-end many more will go to the hospital and a few more will go to the cemetery. .-Vnd next week-end it will be the same. Apparently the numan race is in- capable of learning lessons of cau- tion or even common sense, as far as motoring is concerned. â€" The Hu- ron Expositor, Sealortb. Motoring Under the Alps It will be poKsibb to motor under the Alps, between Swl:<,i.iiaud and Italy through the famous Simpioa tunnel, if plans submitted to th* Swiss Federal Railway authoritiea are carried out. The plans are for the establuh- ment of a motor road through on* of the two railway tunnels. Th» work of conversion is e.xpected to cost some three million Swiss francs â€" about $100,000 at current rates. l/ion tim - jEoMiTUcui WITH r Coleman V SI:I.F-HE.\Tlt\iti •<fe^-^^^ "The science of evolution sustains tho theory that mind has an increas- ing influence over matter." â€"Phelps Phelps. Pricad as Low as $5,951 Now yx>n ran tron la Co«l comfort to ko} part of the Iioqb* even uutdoora beneaU) â- flhatl«t[*«. 'nieCola- mta Iron ii Bflf-hcA^ Intr. No cordt not coonectiooa. Carry St uieit anywhere. Se»* «ral motirii (irmtlable mt N«w Low Pricas. A*k votir dealer oi vrit« n<i for Frt« llbi* iriirtFtMer ur.tjdetaili. TiM CttUnuiB Lmmm ynd jto v^o.f Ltd * Oept. WL ii7 Toronto, . - Onl. IRON Why Ye« Should Hav«U 1. Co»i9 onlT H^ u hour to uao 2. Lights Inttantlf 3. Heftts tn t few •ccondi 4< CuicUv retdr (oc use 5. MainrtinseveaheM 6. Hottest BC the point 7* Iroxu with Icucffort 8* Ssvet ! i ironlna time 9. No fitcc to build 10. Ko Aflhci to cur? YOUR OWN HOME A» Low A> $15 Monthly Oatalog^ne Ft** Over SO Fluui HALLIDAYS wl*- HAMILTON 2 V4 DOZEN CIGARETTES FROM EACH PACKAGE Suckindham Fme Cut MILD • C*OOL- S M CO T . H ., Tho»e Who Know SEEDS Buy From W.H. Perron & Co. Ltd. Specialists in Seeds and Garden Accessories 935 St. Lawrence Blvd., Montreal Their lO.'JG (Sarilen Booi< (15C pages), bilingual, und the most complete and beautiful aeed cata- logue ever put out in N'ortli America, is sent Free on Request. Properly Designed Sales Books Cost No More! Let us show you how wc can improve the appenraiicu of YOUU fialcK books. IT Phone This Newspaper or wrile The Wilson Publishing Co., Limited 73 Adelaide St., W., Toronto