H3 it Llil it She wa, at a loss what to do. There was nothing particularly suspicion: h the attitudes of those near her. t lie only person who could purify have had the time and the chance to 50k into her handbag was the wo- un across the aisle. But Mrs. Rockwell did not relish the task of accusing her openly and hi! just decided to call the conductor - explaip the circumstances to him when the Indy across the aisle an; -d went to the water cooler for a drink, leaving 1 black handbag bo- no? $50 bill. She did not know what to do. She glanced about her eau- tiously and found the eyes of the odd- tr dressed woman upon her; when Mrs. Rockwell looked at her she im- mediately glanggd away. Mrs. Rockwell was not a woman of very dvcided character And was rather otssily excited. She lacked the acu- men which enables one to act quick- tr. and she lost much time sitting usher dazedly gazim ahead of her. looked there'. She 8hr c-st up rigid and stiff, gazing straight ahead of her. She had been “mm-d in that marvelously short timc'. She could seareel believe her sens“. She searched the side com- pnmnerts of the bag, found her other money. which she had packed away art-full)". ‘hut 2hert PH yo sigma! tar. Two middle-aged ttentlein sat', three or four seats in front of her,’ heatedly discussing some topic which the could not overhear. Opposite was a rather young woman. oddly dress-i ed. whose eyes seemed to wander rest-u ten-sly through the car. Behind, a; mmhev- and two small children werel conversing tiresomely, the mother 'i',tl deavorine to answer patiently the queuihns of a very talkative son. . Whrn the. train started Mrs. Rock-,' w~il purchased a magazine and pass-1 el an hour or two in its perusal†'iIx-w becoming thirsty, she started» dawn the aisle for the water .eoourrr, and it was while drinking a glass of; waier that she remembered having“ left the handbag in the seat, and she» realized that this was a moot care-i less thing to do. as it contained 0111 her money. Hurrying back, the ssorl', with gome relief that. the bag wan Inmn her hushand had given l men-3y one of the odd little 3i be was generally lavishing up and she had stuck the hill wit into the pineushion and deeid end there not to postpone h any longer and had begun inuuediatetv. Settled at last. the hurry l citement of the last hour see fade to a mere nothing and I for a bis of annoyance to a please“ memory. Reminiseer rehearsed the scenes in her She remembered how fhriter had been, how she had nrde: maid about to do her bidding. I had literally thrown a few info her trawling bag, how tl when a most hurried leave husband. She could rememb tim-tly'huving at the last snatched up the $50 bill fro pineushirm and thrusting it loc her handbag. And now, after confusion and excitement and here she was safe aboard th turd apparently new: the Wm the rush. There were cot many people var. Two middle-aged gentle] three or four seats in from I heatedly discussing some topic the could not overhear. Oppos'l a rather young woman, oddly ed, whose eyes seemed to wand: lessly through the car. Bell mother and two small childret mnversing tiresomely, the motl deavorine to answer patient; questions of a very talkative t When the train started Mrs. wvll purchased a magazine and rl an hour or two in its p 'ihev, becoming thirsty, she t down the aisle for the water I and it was while drinking n gl wait-r that she remembered l " mt, Int eitetnen it of lhe ten " mm b entered had in. all in t ths-, le to do s. reit,e-rtiifrarcg2i He The Fragrance of The Fifty Dollar Bill 'aatrsp,to.arusrartsrii'tgi. VG" . "Wmmww-t-‘xw â€m- “30.3.7. mm the " f ssoiia"rraa'-"r)'2'ali'l,"l'dlt'Ul,'h1St ti M°° â€Wilma-"nib. -_,__h5_ae?0R,Mmaett,taarts.g, She could remember dis- avintt at the Inst minute up the $50 bill from the a and thrusting it loose into mg. And now, after all the and excitement and worry, was safe aboard the train rently none the worse for at 'Jjrillllrlijlhll _ K To, Ohtahs Full ma value he had ordered her bidding. hon own a few eh z bag. how she many people in ago! gentle": "it BY WILSON CLAY MISSIMER ft mncd hurried- been done in ml when she 1d the porter r her she was I been one of eave men o New York sided because [er a present T upon her, [ with a pin eeided then e her hip m) pack1ng y and ex- seemed to f changed a rather rently she we: mind. ered she tiered the :. how she ,v clothes , she had L' of her n. wa S the I i The gravity of the act she herself; and potatoeS. lettuce and apple sauce. had committed or the possible conse-l turnips and cabbages, and as: and quencvs of it should she be appre-lbaeon. handed did not once occur to Mrs.l Karel: aelatrsifieation of the differ- Rockwell. She was one pf those wo-l ent sorts of foods. Cut it out, paste r',':',',':,,.",',,":',":',,,,!,',',?;',;,"','.,',',',',')',',) tei, it over your table, and every day feed ,it never occurred to her that if she '/,'11t'cf,t"gi,1g, something from every one had been caught in the act of going of e cusses. That does not mean through the other's handbag her own that every meal must be made up of story of having first been robbed foods from all five classes, but every 'would not have been credited by tht, day if we are to be kept in the beat :conductor, and the other woman had) physical trim we should have some- only to tell a 1imple little lie to pyt, thing of every sort of food, vegetable yrs. chkwell m a very compromns-f or fruit, animal foods, cereall, sweets mg position. However, she had not; and fats ‘been detected; she had made a really} . . ducky move, had recovered her $50 The Five Food Groups: ibill, and was inwardlg siiniiiti4i(-) I. Vegetables or fruits. Mn; herself that she ha done a clever 2. Milk or cheese, or 0289 or fish, 'tlung£1 2t the rest ofther 'iiiiii or meat, or beans , was ivi etween ing heme . . . Ion the back ind ','tl'tdli'lll' the move-I 113' Cereal: Corn, nee, oata, rye or l merits of this woman across the $513.1 w eat 7 - _ I As she studied her Mrs. Rockwell Xthought the woman had a hard face. [There was nothing about it by which lone could judge her age. The lack of 1the faintest trace of wrinkles might dead one to think she was young, but (the lips were too thin and the eyes "razed about too calmly and too care- ;lesst for a person of inferior use. iHer easy manner, too, gave one e :suspicion that she had seen lots of; [the world and that it would-take a great deal to throw her " her guard. ,Yet there was something about the fare that attracted Mrs. Rockwell,‘ ‘and she found herself at times almost, pitying the poor creature and even', going so far as to advance to herselfl the theory that possibly she was a Ivictim of kleptomania. I She telegraphed her husband and he met her at the train. There was an odd little expression on his face when he kissed her and a certain to- serve in his voice when he asked what kind of a time she had had both of which impressed Mn. iiiriG7ii'i as peculiar. "And about your slumping,†.ho In New York the money went fast enough, but even with what the had saved it was quite inadequate to com- plete the list the had made out. How- ever. when one runs short of funds there is nothing to do but to return home or go somewhere where the funds can be replaced, and Mrs. Rock.. well returned home. When the woman returned to her seat she rather carelessly pushed her bag to one side and picked up a book which she had with her and began to read, leaving Mrs. Rockwell to won- drr what kind of a criminal she was. The sum-esp of her impulsive plan did not surprise her so much as did the extreme boldness of the other wo- man. She had heard and read of the hundred and one little robberies that m-i-ur-nb'oard trains, but she had al.. ways believed them with rather a shade of doubt. That an ordinarily good-looking young woman, whose wearing apparel, to say the worst af it, was rather an odd selection, should be so daring as actually to try to commit robbery in the space of time required for one to pass down the aisle and take a drink of water was indeed astounding. She could read- ily appreciate that it was merely be- cause the time was so limited that the woman did not ransack the whole bag and strip it of its moneyed con: tents. l hind in her seat. Acting on a strange, swift impulse, Mrs. Rockwell took a long chance. Glancing through the car. she saw that the woman with the two children was very busily engaged with them and that the men ahead were at the height of their argument. So she noiselessly slipped across the aisle, picked, up the handbag, snap- ped it open and there, thrust in hur- riedly among a confusion of other things, lay her $50 bill. Mrs. Rock- well took it, returned to her seat and calmly deposited it in her mm has before the lady returned. "You did!" her husband exchimed new wxmderintrly, "Why, what on . " "Why, on the money Ir had saved, but princlpally on the $50 you gave me, dear.' 1toekwi11 stared ate,','. at her. "Ne $50 I gave you! y, my dear, don't you know that you forgot that W te, left the bill. pinned to your isimmshiom where I YGiiii It "ER; morning after you had gone?†( The Jhtd.) uid suddenly. "You didn't do much, did you.'" frpdeed I did," Mrs. Rockwell ro- The country housewife omits the vegetables or fruit, and gives too much baked stuffs, cakes, cookies and pies, with the resultant everyone suf- fers from eomstipation. One can see 1 reason for the city cook, who must buy everything, to omit vegetables. But in the country where vegetables M.rar'."s . 'mlment Relievel can. an. Here is a classification of the differ- ent sorts of foods. Cut it out, paste it over your table, and every day feed your family something from every one of the classes. That does not mean that every meal must be made up of The most common mistake of cooks is to leave out fresh vegetables or fruits, or give them in insufficient amounts, and to substitute too much of one or the other sorts of food. Next to vegetables and fruit, most families use too little milk and eggs. In the city the middle class cook otstigtitute. meat in quantities out of proportion to the rest of the food, with the result' that the family grows irritable and quarrelsome, with a tendency towards diseases of the kidney. Yet feeding the family correctly is a very simple matter, once you Mop trying to make it difficult and scien- tifie, forget calories and vitamin" and proteins, and deal in terms of meat and potatoes, lettuce and apple sauce, turnips and cabbages, and eggs and bacon. 8. Cereal: Corn, rice, oats, rye or wheat. 4. Sweet: Sugar, honey, syrup. .. 5. Butter, cream, meat fat, butter substitute, oil. Barring accidents, in nine cases wt of ten, the afflicted partieshabitua1V eat wrongly. For the greater part of the ills to which flesh is heir are trace- able to wrong habits of diet. l Well Planned Meals. Have you ever wondered why cer- tain families are always complaining and employing a doctor? Why some mothers are up every nlght with cry- ing children? Why some folks ean't travel and eat en route, without hav- ing a trick spell.' . I An excellent healing.liniment for bad cuts and wounds of all kinda is made with one part liquid catholic acid, four parts glycerine and six parts sweet oil. It is just as valuable among the stock as in the home. For sore or inflamed eyes there is nothing better than a boric acid pow- der solution. In fact, it is the very thing which a doctor will prescribe for sore eyes. Take two-thirds of a cup- ful of Warm water and dissolve it in one-fourth teaspoonful .of boric odd powder. Wash the eyes with the solu- tion, using either an eye cup or a soft cloth. If a child's mouth is washed out twice daily with a weak boric solution, it will be less susceptible to infant dis- eases. If the child’s eyes are weak or Bore, this same solution will be found beneficial. _ . For a sprain, bathe well with hot vinegar and salt solution, or with one pint of hot water in which one table-' spoonful of epsom salts has tken dis- solved. _ An excel1eq.Llotion for sore or chair- ed skin is made by mixing to a paste a heaping teaspoonful of boric powder, a little camphor and a awful of melt- ed mutton allow. Allow to stand until cold, and when wanted for use, but a small amount and rub welrinto the skin. To keep the hand! in good con- dition, rub a little of this mixture over they before retiring, covering the hands with old loose kid gloves. Use a little cornmeal with the soap when washing the hands during the day. l A weak solution of boric powder and warm water is excellent to apply to slight cuts and wounds, and if used at once is all that is needed, as it is a fine antiseptic and cleanser. It in a good plan to keep a bottle of the solu- tion ready for use. For burns, bind scraped raw potato onto the burn, renewing when dry. The potato pulp furnishes the moisture which the burn has taken out and re- lieves the burning sensation. There are certain healing lotions that every housewife should have in the medicine chest, as the ingredients for some of the best lotions are found in nearly every home and take but little time to prepare. Tfin, did!†Good Healing Lotions. MANLEY'S DAN " DRGHESTBA 1R,'l,','2igl ‘I to be the best in Ctutada. Any numbor l of musician desired. Write. win or _ phone AI. Mnnloy. " Ozark Cu... i, Toronto, tor open an". V If you have never given the subject of eating properly any thought begin BUY “DIAMOND was" DON'T RISK MATERIAL Inch pachge of "Diamond Dies†con- him direction: so lingo t " my woman 'i.'"Lf.2' any ma rial without streaking, ing or runnin . Druggilt bu color eard-VNke mingle: dye! bon't drink wiih the meal. Drink a glass of water when you sit down, or your tea or coffee at the close. Chewing-that is as important as choosing food. Most men and boys, and some women, bolt their food with- out properly chewing it first. The starch, which should be digested in the mouth, enters the stomach undigested and is " good as lost to us, and the other foods enter in large pieces which are hard to digest. Take at least an hour for dinner, and chew the food long enough to get the flavor. Then meals should be regular. Breakfast, dinner and supper at the same hours every day, and no constant "piecing between meals." Growing children need more than the three meals daily, but the lunch hour should be regular. Give them a glass of milk and a sandwich at ten, and a similar light lunch at three o'cloek; or, if they are in school, when school is over, and nothing more in between. There seems no end to a growing boy's stomach capacity, but do not lee him be test- ing it every hour in the' day, Fill him up, but do it at regular intervals. But the right sort of food is not enough. It must be handled with dis.. cretion. That is, it must be eaten in tugffieient quantities and at regular intervals. droo much stress can_not be laid on both these qualifications to good health. Sufficient means just enough. Too much is as bad " too little, in fact, worse. If we take too much food the body can not use it.faat enough. It can neither be taken up as nourishment, nor eliminated " waste, and a part remains as poison. What is known as auto-intoxication follows, that is, the body poisons itself, and a train of ills follow. Many of our ideas about food have changed in the past ten years, and many more are likely to change " time goes en. Scientists are constantly ,'.g','till5, to ttnd new light on the sub- ject f food values, so it is not wise to An to extremes and follow every new light. But certain things ere de- f1nitely established. We know that: sailors, or soldiers, who are for a. long" time deprived of fresh vegetables and fruits, develop scurvy, which is cured as soon as the missing foods are supo‘ plied. So we may know to a certainty‘ that we need those foods to keep usI in trim. We know that children who) are not fed enough milk or eggs ori lean meat are undersized and anaemic, which shows pretty well that those foods are necessary to growth and bodily upkeep. And we know that however "fuling" vegetables may bel they do not give us the vigor that bread and cereal foods supply. So we can see that all those foods are nec- cessary to keep up in the best physical, condition. - l and fruits should be abundant, and milk is to be found on every farm, the reason for the lack of enough green "utr, fruit and milk in the family diet is hard to see. Yet the farm table is usually lacking in enough of these im.. portant foods. Bogggnc GLOVES If your Olin In not lined hen, _ A eh roe - Made by Ikillod workmen from mom-t leather oht.umhu-- Ooft and pliable. 2. f. 1.0219390, “and iltie%ki, PM!!!" tiptiidia â€Lo-(Bruin "7" Koo-chu- Cunt-Cog: ' traririe% TORONTO Many cultured Russian women formerly of high position in their na- tive country are now waitresses in Constantinople. to-dny. You feed your stock . are- fully thonkht out ntion. Why not try it on yourself? It is cheaper to eat properly dun to pay doctor bills, and Iota more fun. When tog and failure o'er my spirit brood, When life looks but a glimmering, murky cloud, No the out-Bashing from the living maul. Lln'mcm For Burns. Eu Then, then, to rest in faith were worthy victory. . Street or RR The Din-10:1 Merettand'ms Sales Company Bole Canadian Dutributortr, Pleuo and me " once. fret and postpald. the Hooklet "What for In bunny a phonograph." Name....... BOVRII. Ask your metre-t Brunswick dealer to play ANY --iet your own can be the Judge. the amount taken 10 to 20 times That is the nourishing power (passed by in- dependent tseientifie experiment) of iii1tiijl?,i,ttit!,tt,,i,t,i, 12yir%rrki; .LLmited Choose it because of its exclusive all-wood oval horn which amplifies tone according to the laws of Aeousties-for its exclusive Ultona that plays all makes of records exactly as they should be played. HEAR! GOMPARE! DEGREE! ,1, in?! . 1tffllilitlirli:liiigt2 c nerswyers PM “we 8t.. Toronto --41. Macdonald Diibuiet., " Wellington St. w., Toronto PARCELS from the country sent by null or express receive the “no can- NI "teettiogt " work delivered por- Ionalky. The woman in town or country baa the same advantage as her sister in the city in expert advice from the best-known ttrm at Cleanou and Dyen In Canada. AT YOUR SERVIGE Clothing or Houuhold Fumes. For you". the name of “Pater." In: “and perfection In this work ot linking old thing- look lilo new. whether person-J menu at - the not! (run. mm. or household curtain. angel-ta. rm Wruotmmrttuturvaetictrum "emsdrmtr-uefrnststto WHEREVER YOU LIVE CLEANING and DYEING Silk woven of opidar's thread is more glossy and brilliant than that obtained from the silkworm. A scien- titie experimenter once drew from the body of a single spider -nearly two miles of thread. Province {human moth-ttroot and wondez» nu, nun-om. plou- of furniture. Dino: (tom -tfgbqttir to you. “to for (no mun-m nut-um. Eureka Refrigerator Go., lelted Owen Ion-d. on. mom CAL? WORK. ' a. CLIFF . TORONTO " n 8CENTED pen Khybee CEDAR one“. 57-†m1 mm mm. ‘L (3333 The fragrant manly lithe: of "Baby's Own Soap" 1nd in absolute purity have won I great popularity. '1': bat/or Rd] ad best fur has COARSE SALT L A N D SALT Balty's Own Soap make of record 12 to look The Roman legionarie- tough: q barter uvoud with Isa-d, The it , lots ttt ancient Grace. oubsim I c' carom ud at“. oil. The â€full which II the mort for must. a! m “it†animus, can. .905“ but In“. , The turmer- of New England Lu. on occasions shown themselvc.» .~ lam utters u my, yet their a '" In etuettr bread, bum. pie. dour? um and "stables. supplemented hy not! when n " or a cow is I-., 't There is no more pearetul and Lav s', leu nun thou the qrghittto, yet in 2 “moot exclusively 3 ttaah enter. a: l mu commonly consume ten pound" of men not dar. The hymen um taotorfously lk "ID. mt their am comm of hum He. at vacuum", with only at" “on! meat or Ott. Vegetarians have often argued t. a meat diet rendered human: heir. more combat“. and brawl (u; 1 other land, It his been declared l “send-nun VIII productive of m lycoddln. But the “(uncut does r mm to wprk out mustacwl either my. For these and other renmnc heaven am now tthotosrraptwd I' larly and systematically. At His,'-, alone as many as 6,000 titellat p' graphs have been taken in a l and an enormous amount of sin work bu been done at other at, vuon‘u. u well u by amateurs. us of whom have obtained valuabm cum. Some you! no it was press service to determine the dish. our none“ neighbour in the h 61 Cygni, and it supported H clusion that that distance ire l; forty billion 1nd sixty billion A further service has been " to astronomers by photography Junction with the spectroscorr' is the determination at the (1 Amazing is the number of st which (has indicate their presence the heaven. In a certain part of , stellar region: only 200,000 could charted by telescopy. whereas ph, graphs discovered and recorded exactly the same am more than t million. Photography he: In this way a] added enormously to our known of the can. n has perhaps 1. most valuable in other directions. For some years a (a: given the name of sun element- was not anywhere except in w mately it. too, proved t of the etrth u well. These are gm" of extraordinary terest. Never has the eye of .'s,, seen them. Perhaps the light C. them ha been travelling towards 1 earth for thousands of years, a_' though still moving in our direcn with a velocity of 186,000 miles second. will not be vieible trom 11. planet in our lite-time. There is a still atranger probab ity. It in not " all unlikely that l means of u long expo-are we m photograph a atar which vaniahed b tore Man began to inhabit the earth is recorded; but if the expo“ still further Incrensed. more and sun will be added to those a photographed on the earlier pl: Why the Heavens are Pho Stellar photographs, hm both valuable and interest) my be taken direct or thro scope. By either method atua must be driven by to counteract the apparent the stars, or, as a long v: necessary. thou; hodies are ed on the plate by streak: dota. Actually of course. it tie whlrllnx through span Phomnlu of the sun are l nimble for tset.entitic value 1 "neral interest. Those of I no BO. important that it teu no no fewer than tlve ling! pedluom wont In various r. round th Mediterranean 51w 2'l'l,'d'0, one. sun, thc l the sun that are when tlail, , is rounllne work 2:! sum" m I tea-proves that it is Tut', changing. Why the Heavens are Photcg Within “min. the number which can be photographed t is in proportion to the leng exposure. It plate after pl: posed gradually F increasing the time soon comes when c visible In the most powerful CAMERAS THAT REVEAL SECRETS OF THE SKIES Wonders of the Universe Made Known by Astrono- mical Photography Sam. at the most imnr such picture: um {hue of t " In new manly lulu-n i!) and the results mmu to un theories. Home nt,trrttirimrts Instance. that tlttxrr Sn st' ICUOn In the moot. and tl, therefore, [momma to call world. One nut: why indem! that men II eremlinn m. “Sky-anew Are rapidly m one of the most N'narkabm l or the autumn Entibrtions «a graph. They furnfal- a Shâ€. , cation of the strum heme utmnomical photography What's the Best Diet? Mt ion BYCLOCKWORK " IE 121mm know: an alt SSE " di. " IBM's y .pots. 1 "Net li 'iii/d Named air: the I: about 1 per he northen f: fii:ifi' .mn, Jul! ci rrodueet' tul qbe bovine produces u M. and al hrly in ch (We: no s: tttttil the fo mg on or he birds " appear-amp. consulted t'l an by Pl" birds d?0nCr'i' and so fort, (a: about l whether it I Ind if they (mm tbe ir a to them' To John come mt doing. an He had i Jenn we Ind 4htri throne of depend" gighteou: Bil healir tt him I- hlievo IL: . e pn\\|l he kingd they Mow Jesus tV. " and le, l Stud!“ J splint, th prophetic Christ. ha cude of “an, beca that ruler his ilttprir" he saw it in that dI in: an a: tion, or throno of mean? taken? I Himself 1 The a them " TIE tiU.Nit Sh you N The " 11 They Tests of ofthe, urge! y id The demons win IVll '00 l H H, muted) m1 8. "The dd mdlstinctl Imprm M 1921 Farm tario rity Ah