.Q D. " Ith, H high 1tnnde7i,5iitiviGc wnymnn at something." 'm of ti. cm." aid In. 1hatr-WhnBor, “not of your own feel, in!" Muhammi It’s - .._ -----.. wv. " am w "aw m'""r, “Sometimes I've gone In of an after- . . . Yes, yes, I naked the manta noon to we Jean, and found her darn- md Chnrt brought me the string tre ing 'stockings tn her shabby frock, bit. but it was ttll thin "ttff. 1'11 lose) with . look on her the as if Ihe knew the post, bit It’s than the wnyusome happy mm; . sort of content; Every day more rushed than mother. _ ed, brooding look-and I've envied her. Remind tthe, Janette, to get some thick And so I talked of all the gaietiea I "rirut tomorrow. I've no time to In was going to, of the new clothes I was down to tho town today. Why. bless getting, of the smart people we know. no. my morning letters Ire hardly and .11 the time I was delpisihg my- looked at yet." and he fussed oat of "lf for . fool, for what did Jenn the room. laurel She ant there with her mind Mrs. Dutr-Whailey rose to so. fun of books md poetry and those "Them. Mrs. Jowett, I can (lop-ud- boys .1†b so shearer], devoted to; it on you to 100k after that .eo.l?eethttrt was nothing to her how much I buck- 'ind 910056 bo firm. I find that eol.. ed; and this fortune won't change her. More an apt to he very lazy and Money is nothing-----" ttnrnrnlmtious. Indeed. one told me (To be continued.) frankly that in her district she only' -----H------- Went to the people she knew. That': . , ,- e....e Isn't the why to collect. The only way? 'jfjo%a" EErjiiiiii5ii'i' 1stoirettntomteh ttout-o lyeey 'hfi2il n/:‘ Ta the doorstep is no nae. they can so y'srpfgl, r 2: . l, - send a maid to refuses-and sitl t ‘ I than till they give . subscription! 1 Every â€It since 1 took it on there. 0 l, has been a: increase, and I'll be: r", 7a 1 frightIully disappointed if you let it,' () - le. ’ 1 go bnek." '. ’ I "t don't know," id m5, "Pen nfmid 1 could hour In in n stranger's his. 1nd Y!". of: My)! given my. Mm. Iowan looked depressed. She hewh-tftotroemo"otttte%rG collector: on record. She Ina gulltily "In that lho often ttdvumt people not to (In; that u, if she thought their circumstances unshared! "Thei no, all three, dear boy-Pi and Mrs. Jowett. "Tim and I quite, 1,919" they mom own. Timl Nt would an more tham that toi,', who me cry." Ike snorted. "I wonder I T what fool wanted to luv. Jan money. l ti Such an tmprnetieat custom! sun-t Imply nuke duck: Ind duk- of it/i - It "my to .11 Ind sundry, pou- 're "be the whole neighborhood." I “Oh, I don't think to.†Miss Duncan I b my in. "Sh. bu ma a hard mime ' poor child. Such I Pathrtie mito‘ ‘ do Ins when her [rut-aunt died undl th.", Via David and Jock and the. I Corvu- Nntonl No one“ long!“ the could may, but 0hr I tue she has boon to plucky. the“, as .n the good fortune that lilo G ubdnghor. PsA?yinrpttserlia who: Jock an about this. I do like!1 that boy." Pd Mrs. Dal-Why looked " the antitank] won-n More her with Mr acorn. “This ianh a relation." Mrs. Jowett uphinod. “It’s some one Jean wu pad to quite by chance. I think it b no "at. It Quite Inde- one want' to cry. Dear Joan!†Nt can be true. The Jnrdinos kn no relation. that could have the! my." When the spoke her voice was shrill with - In who of her “You: to control it. had not troubled to uh to her portion, whom she had My: felt the could tmt myâ€. Io poor 1n- lhe and of no ucount. It had been bad mouth toknowthattNrwtrsontermsirf Intimacy with Pamela Heston 3nd her brother: to hear Miss Heston uy that Ibo meant to take her to London and nan-ruin for her and to hear her sug- put that Muriel might go to Jan’s cubes had been calling, but tho Ind rust the reeolUetion from her, re- Beetirue that fine ladies said much that they did not won, and that prob-bl, “a promised visit to London would - materialize. And now to be told this? A fortune: Jean-lt was too absurd! i Mrs. Dutr-Whalley said nothing for . minute. She could not trun barrel! 3. spent. Despised Joan, whom she 'SheU quite well, but hm’t you heard? She has inherited a km for- tune." "Hats anything happened to hot? I any hot the other day and lb. won all right." CHAPTER Xix.--tcont'd.) Per, on subscription to may it." I': Miss Duncan'., kind Nee ttytit"lt'P'" n this "rhtitm of asantly. She was quite willing tol . {in u, Mrs. WNW, " long aol y4',ut',fa'.'1,t.tl1t'gtdh'u,.,, a,†that lady pleased. She thought she! "Welt, by]: I needed soothing. so she agreed with quoted rudely. good d d- . . . *Ilnlllendovordlthopaperlnn e mrythlng she and, and made â€â€1"“.th books tomorrow Muriel and little remarks, at intervals. Mrs. Jow- tr . I . I go " to London on Friday“! route on was pouring out a mound cup of for the south. It will be pleasant to to. for Mrs. Dali-Whallcy when she i ter- said, "And have you heard about mtg}; . I','?,,.',',':':':"',',',':,",.",',',':,,':,'.:,,'; Hale Joan J-rdinc?" l.T. trtyr. '. .__ __ " __ _ â€GUI No. '--'go. Pee."-"'" - in. your atom-my plus or We.“ Idem gum: Boy-"Pony DUI. - Nb but" uh. " PENNY PLAIN but . . . well, if on than "he CMRMMI.MCO. "Better tt dinner of baths where love u than a stalled ox and hatred than. with." Minard'u Linlmont for the Grim “There goes Policeman Jones in I uptain'l rig. Only a you no he wu wanting a sergeant: can." Muriel shook her head. "It’s no good peeing when we are by ourselves. AI a family we totally lack charm. Minnie tries to make up for it by a great deal of manner and a loud voice. Gordon-welt, it doesn’t matter so much for a man, but you can see his friends don't really care about him much. They take his hospitality and lay he isn't a bad sort. They know he is a mob, and when he tries to be funny he is often offensive, poor Got-1 I suppose it h eharm--a thing that ean't be "quired." "What non“, Muriel! I wonder to but you. I'd like to know who bu chum if you Imven't. It is a ailly word Anyway.†than you do, but I hope I have thel, some to purr congratulations. Wel ean't help it anyway. You and II nren’t summed to Jean, but there's! no use denying most people ere. AndI what’s more. they keep on liking her. She Isn't a person people get easily tired of. I will: I knew her lecret. "My dear mother," she said, "why excite yourself? It isn't clever of you to be so openly annoyed. People will hush. I don't say I like it my better Muriel Ianed'uck in her cm; and seemed absorbed in balancing her Mitr. por on her toe. Mrs. Duff-Whalley was knitting a stocking for her son, Gordon (her hands were seldom idle), and she wnv- ed it in her exasperation as she talked. "Here are you. meant, as any one can see, for the highest position, and instead that absurd little Jean is to be cocked up, I girl with ho more dig- nity than I sparrow, who eouldn't keep her place with a washerwomnn. I've heard her talking to these cottage women on if they were her sisters." C, Mrs. Due-Whack, .niffed. , " 'The conic- an a feeble folk'," she Iquoud rudely. "Weil, good-bye. I " shall lend over all the papers and col- lecting books tomorrow. Muriel and _ I go " to London on Friday' on route for the south. It will be pleasant to have a change and meet some inter- ,ming people. Muriel was just saying it's a cabbage’s life we live in Prion- ford. I often wonder we stay here. .", "I know whet'll be the end of it," she said. "You saw whet e {use Miss Reston made of Jean the other dar when we called? Depend upon it, she knew the money was coming. I dare any she and her brother ere " poor as church mieo--thoae aristocrats usually -r--and Jean's money will come in useful. Oh, we'll see her Lady Bid- borough yet. . . . . I tell you what itl is, Muriel, the my this world's 'a-) end is past making about." Mrs. Dae-Wuuey went home . = Angry woman. After dinner, sit- iting with Muriel before the tlm in the glittering drtrwimr-rooen, the discussed the matter. “Thn's tro-tteu had “norm auc- w??? (iiiS)),piii'iiii) ssiii, 1 f t , $lll Uniform Success. Adams, an English astronomer, and Lavender. a Frenchman, set them. selves to search for some possible cause of the perturbations in the habits of Uranus. They worked indo- pondenuy and without the knowledge of either that the other was on the tob. Bat each reached a theory that there must be some remoter body in They checked back their calcula- tions and found no errors. Whatever was wrong, they decided, must be wrong with Uranus. Something was diverting him from the path they had charted tor him, or interfering with the schedule which mathematics in- sisted he should follow. They reached certain conclusions based upon all the known futon. Uranus should behave thug and no. At a certain time he should be here-at mother certain time he should be there. And he wtu"-approximately. But approximation did not satisfy the star-gamers. They wanted exactitude. The trtstronornertr, alter watching him tor a while, began to calculate the di. monlions of his orbit, the speed ot his motion and other interesting facts concerning him. For a. time it was called Herschel], after its discoverer, but the name now generally accepted la Uranus, which presence the mythological nomencla- ture already bestowed on the others. Uranus was oldest ot the Greek god- end the firtrt ruler among them. coal mining being carried bn in tk mall way. tt is new a thriving town ot tome 5,000 inhabitants. _ _ V _ It did not occur to the astronomers, who Joined with Mr William in ob. serving this new body, that its dis- covery had pushed the boundary of the solar system further into space. He had become wen acquainted with their movements. He had woven them into his myths tad his religion. He had made them arbiter, ot his del- tiny, and read " future in their pun- age through the signs of the zodiac. He had made a telescope for him- self. an imperfect instrument com- pared with those which we have today, but better than any he had the means to purchase. He was trying it out in a sort ot grand survey of the heaven- when there tell within its field e stranger to this shepherd ot the stars. It was a faint point of light against the night sky. with a siighty greenish tinge. Sir William did not suspect, at first, that it was a planet. tt hitherto un~ known member of that group which circles about the Bun, and to which our world belongs. The planets Mr Wil. liam knew had never been discovered --that is to say within the memory of the race. Man had grown up with Venus. Mercury, Mara, Jupiter and Saturn as his familiar companions. It In less than a century since Nep- tune, the outermost planet of our solar "atettt--perhaps I should say the out. ermost known planet-was discovered. Uranus. the ‘Seventh from the and. was found accidentally by the great astronomer. Sir William Herschell. Mr. Frank Dickaee, R.A., has been elected president of the Royal Aeadcanr, succeeding " Aston Webb, retired. due to use limit, Mr. Dicks†II the son of a famous artist and an artist of repute flimselt. Here's a photograph Pken in 1866 ot Westvnle, Nova Scotia, shearing A Little Lesson in lelng DISCOVERY OF NEPTUNE To know that this power exists-to know that you are responding to it when you do the things that ai"?, worth while and tine and 11mseltisrr 43 to realize a purpose and meaning In liv. ing which give you a new Law of Human Conduct. with which to work out your problema.--s. J. Duncan- Clark in Success. On a large liner there are two miles of deck. i I confess that two billion milea--- more or leas~~is a long war to travel for a lite lesson, but it has always gaeemed to me that in this very won. derful, and very beautiful, story ot the manner in which we found an un. suspected member of our solar sys- tem by noting the influence ot his un- seen presence, in a splendid llluatra- tion of a truth fundamentally import- ant to right and effective living. The visible world will not account for all that we see in human life and character. I am convinced this is true. I am convinced that the telescope of faith which finds this influence in a spirit- ual power which is wisdom and good. ness and love and beauty- -a power we call God ~has made a great discovery, the recognition of which is essential to an understanding of life. Men do things which are contrary to every instinct of 'elf-preservation-- men deny themselves material satis- faction for ends which hare no rela. tion to their physical lite-men sacri- lee themselves to serve their fellows -often to serve people they do not know, sometimes to serve people they know and dislike. Why these perturbations in the cal- culable orbit? Why these departures from the so-calied "natural" course? is it not because fhnrn must T... -_---, - â€mu um au-uauea "natural" course? Is it not because there must be some mighty inm1ence invisible to the unaid- ed eye, the physical eye, 'which is pull- ing upon the life ot man, even as Nep. tune pulled upon Uranus'.' Given I.“ such circumstances in any particular instance you mly be able to "ure exactly how a man will ttet--it they be the only circumstances. But experience will show that men frequently do not act according to Any prediction so formulated. It you take into your calculation only those obvious factor: which con- cern the preservation and satiatio- tion of physical life you will leave much unexplained. However the observatory to which Leverrier soon after sent almost ex. actly similar calculations began an immediate search, and presently an- nounced the discovery ot an eighth planet whose position and nature ex- plained completely all the mysteries of the seventh‘s movements. This eighth and last to be discovered of the planets was named Neptune. We have known him only since 1848. Adams arrived at a theoretical posi- tion first-a tew months ahead of Let. verrier. He sent his calculations and hypothesis to the British astronomer royal for verification by telescope, but the latter was too busy to attend to it. the solar system whose influence we: “feeling the new planet. Then each figured out about where that body ought to lie in order to produce the effects which they had noted. about Jute folks. Picture cut-oats, rowing cards, as- c..'t;d woo {on bca;ls of various shapes and cuinrs. numeral frames, per: Iwards and pegs. parqactry blocks, toy mmgey for use inpiaying store, colored cnyons and blunt kindergarten scis- sors are only a few of the Irticlec ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Small children living in the city have an advantage over their country cousins in being ab.'e to attend kinder, garter). A catafogne of kindergarten :uppiies wil! suggest to mothers an endless variety of materials, which will entertain and at th:, same time ".-cvo', of educational wine to the While you are waiting for the skin to improve, you can get rid of the black dots which mark the pores by rubbing vigorously with a bit of ab.. sorbent cotton saturated with hay rum or a good toilet water. is always more distracting than her buck hair! Then, too, the people who sit back of us, whether at church, at entertainments, or in trains or trolley cars, are not diverted by our conversav tion, so have ample time to study the condition of our skins. If you have any doubt about the skin on the back of your shoulders, get a flesh-brush with a long handle and scrub every day with hot water and soap, until you have made your skin fine-grained and white again. The back of the shoulders should be able to stand a more minute scrutiny than the f ront of them-for the oh. vious reason that it will get stared at with more attention. A woman's face She could get a very excellent long- handled bath brush which would do the job to her satisfaction, and bend- ing and stamping exercises would lim- her her muscles so that she could reach around and wash the back of her shoulders without even the help of a brush. But the real reason why some wometr.-and nice women, too- neglect to keep the back as clean-look- ing as the chest and shoulders; is sim- ply because they don't see themselves there. It’s really a fine plan to have a mirror above the bathtub, and it’s certainly a necessity to have a hand- glass and a long mirror, so you can view yourself from all angles. , CARE OH THE NECK AND SHOULDERS. With the present style of dress, the condition and the appearance of the skin on the back of the neck and across the shoulders is of great im- portance. One of my correspondents wrote that she couldn't reach around and scrub her back as thoroughly as she could her arms, and the malt was large, dark pores between the shoulder blades. Fried Carrots-Cook with soup. When done cut into thin slices. Fry one onion in one tablespoon of butter, add carrots. Sprinkle with salt and pepper, minced thyme, parsley and bay leaf. Fry ten minutes and servo hot. Other Continental dishes for fried, baked and escalloped carrots suggest new flavor combinations. Russian style.---Make a syrup of one cup of sugar and one cup of water by boiling ten minutes. To this syrup add two cups of diced carrots, which have been previously browned in two tablespoons of hot fat Ot butter. Cook all together until carrots are tender. Brown in oven and serve hot. fire for ten. minutes. Add one and one- half cups soup stock, cover and sim- mer for half hour, add one teaspoon of chopped parsley and serve hot. Flemish Style.--Serape, slice and cook, one quart of carrots in one quart of boiling water to which has been added one teaspoon of salt, until ten- der; drain. Heat two tablespoons of fat, add one small onion, brown light- 1y, add the carrots, season with one teaspoon of sugar, one-quarter tea- spoon of salt, one-eighth teaspoon of white pepper. Shake well over the ENTERTAINING SMALL BOYS AND GIRLS. In Russia and Frander, tliersrten add sugar to bring out the delicate flavor of the carrot. But perhaps your family is tired of boiled and creamed carrots. If so, here are a few interesting Old World recipes that home economics students have found in foreign cook books. Tho moat inexpensive and lasting rouge for both blondes and brunettes Its-carrots. They should be taken frequently nt mean! time for they are rich in iron that helps to make glow- ing compiexions. CARROTS TAKE THE PLACE OF ROUGE. The exquisite fu,ror indicates the perfect blending of choice tees. You Will Enjoy A0)! for a package today. . FREE “In! of IIEEI m Ml WE“. "sauna." 1mm Woman's Sphere GREEN TEA Musical Mice. -" Mrs. Mouse-iss, since We have been min: in " ukulele the children have beoome very musical!†Mlnlrd's toe Oprah}: and Bruit... SCOTCH CAKE. Half pound of butter, 56 pound of suglr, 1 pound of sifted flour, 2 083'. 1 cup sour milk or buttermilk, 9‘ taps. soda, 2 taps. each of ground cinnamon, ail-pica and cloves, % tap. grated nut- meg, % pound of raisins, % pound of currants, ‘A pound of citron. Cream the butter and sugar to- ;mmnu, then cdd the yolks of the eggs, wl hw‘mn. Add the sour milk, in whivh no soda has been disuolvod, "nd the flour, spices and fruit, well floured. Fold in the whites of the eggs, beaten stilt; then bake tho dish in a slow oven 101' mu- hour. < This is a deiicious substitute for the more expensive fruit cake. l of Fashions Send 15r in silver for our up-trs date Fall and Winter 1924-1925 Book The Pattern is cut in 4 Sizes: 6, 8, 10 and 12 years. An 8-yenr size requires 1% yards of 32-ineh mm terinl for the slip or underdresa, md 2% yards of fUrurud material, if made as illustrated. If made of one ttttr. terial 4 yards will be required. Pattern mailed to any address on receipt of 20c in silver, by the Wilson Publishing Co., 78 West Adelaide St, Toronto. 4969. Lace auu "chiffon are here combined, but the style may allo be developed in other materials. Two colors of chitton, or chiffon on net would be attractive. Or mam and crepe de chine, or figured silk and taffeta would be quaint and pleasing. A and table mny be made " a comparatively low cost. A popular- size table in six feet long, thirty inches wide and twenty-four inches high from floor to top of troy; but a Imall- or one may be made from on old kit- chen table, which should be strongly re-enforced. The metn1-lined tray should be four inches deep. Filled with clean, white land and placed in the play room or in a protected corner of the porch it will be a great Joy to the children, who always like to play in the dirt, and who are often pre- vented by disagreeable weather from playing out-of-doors..-). C. G. _ A PRETTY PARTY FROCK b', MOTHER'S GIRL. listed. Many of these may be pur- chued at s ten-cent store. A brick of artist’s modeling clsy will furnish hours of entertainment. At tlrst the unaccustomed fingers may be unable to do more than mold msrbles, apples, plums and similur ob- Jects, but in a short time they will undertake more dlffiealt models. Espe- cially gifted children will delight in modeling their pets and other animals on the farm. FOR We make it . item it; 'J','.'.'""', askrOgulll'ly " Nib“: Jd'. ter. t 0e _R n “mp-g-them in W heatth .-R. o. Broim. "Why, man. to-he you'd think him " place " I am!" Not Flt to Love, "You don't seem to be u love on that neighbor of y It was that trip in Labndor. with the adventure, on the Ice. And the needs of that “lick mun "not." and his family that lmboddod tn me the Lure of Labrador. And so for twenty- seven years, I have worm, can.“ In the economic, actuation! Ind no“ cal relief ot the Deeps“ tttthermen of Labrador and northern Newfoundland. --Dr. W. T. Grenfell, noted explorer A halt-clad, brown-fared azure, ir. Ing motionless on a miner-ulna bunch ot boards neu- our ship, spoke to me. "Be you n ml doctor" I told him I called mynlf that. "Us hasn't got no money, but there’- a very sick man ashore. if no be you'd come and no him." Working in. underground lodging- houses brought me for th- am timo into touch with real poverty. with shipwrecks from the coast of human. ity, drifted up on the last beach. l become a licensed dooior and Bur. gecx in 1886. It so happened that the tiret Mission to Deep-Sen Fishermen was being prepared. They wanted o young doctor who could also be a spiritual adviser. Mr chief, lir Prod. erick Trent. Jaunted my going. Five year: of North Sen work followed. It was not until 1891 that In impru- Iiou wu mode on my mind that un- doubtedly intitutrremi all my suble- quent actions. / "While the above ittsturetioo are , being carried out, read all you can in 1good musical Journals and books upon the art of accompanying. beer til the {accompanieta you can, so you mu be Fable to retain the good and reject the 'bad points. Much of am can be done 1by listening attentively to the criti- icisms of the audiences. particularly to “be unbiased musical people. Last, .but by no men- least. try And put hour-elf in Iympnthy with the one Iyou Ire accompanying. and he" the (battle is won." I In: at medicel college. I did the out. patient work in the tan Side. One any. I followed e crowd into a tent. tt proved to be an evangelistic meet. ing of the then femoue Moody end Senkey. When I left, it we: with e determination either to make religion I. real effort. to do u I thought Christ would do as a dorior or abandon my profession. I than loud the an. " I child, - Inch od the Sud- ot Doc m dear to me. While at college, my long vac-[10ml were tttstring trim. While Thirty-two you! ot my lite in" been spent in work for deep-sen tigtv ermon, twenty-seven of than you! being pulsed in Labrador and Nov- toundland. "When I. tnir amount of accuracy [In been obtained it should not be hard work to secure another student in voice, stringed or wind instruments. who would Arrange for one or two (and ponibly more) rehearsal hours during the week. It this is persisted in, it would become a mutual bemsfit, and the accompanist would begin to be the one sought for, instead of the one seeking. Probably it was with this thought tn mind that I ccruin young nun who wanted some any to go through col- lege, got " {other and mother to buy I piano " that he could lonrn how to accompany singers "ieietttly. Luckily lhe did, tor it turned out inter on that he run able to my " whole way ‘through college as a result ot the "pin money" he made doing accompunyin; work outlidc of school hourI. Ber iicving thnt others might be induced to follow the same course, the troy in question his given the-e suggestion- on how to accompany wett. "Wrat," he nyl, “teke eimple eons locompenimente end try to only" the chord- before pinyin; them. Too may sue" It e chord, heedless of whether it ls e triad or e chord of the seventh. and In the majority of one. the guess is wrong. When the piece cen be played at proper tempo (this Ihould be slow at first), neck a vocal- iet who will try it with you. and note etch and every error made. It prac- ticed alone carefully, there should be few. Bet aside part of each practice period for the same peinstaklng work that is put upon scales. A good accountant In. been tor-v "yc't-tu"ett-tifee" thin. to be aid in hm of this Imo- moat. " in well known. “company. in; in Ill art in Itself. Pow piano stu- dents can do this kind of work well, no matter how brightly they any shine " soloiotl. The ran-on in that they do not concenmto upon Accom- paying. Puid War MI! Colcge by AeottigeringSi-. The Lure of Labrador. m to b. unsung any :hbor ot yuan} hear that follow an " Important In an. explorer, g! grith the tip of the $htngr with all lurk Ssvoettoodnnd ,riththoupottl Wi Efficie is m kind FEEDING POR EGG I’RHM ll v1 A poultry export brought btuqriate points at the imm by mm which are of vi, CI. of the hm flock W W corn, equal paru lo fri n VG! eh, nub Oh but son" Cid barley are not tir - bulky feeds wit “out fourtasm [mun much food in Imam the bodily weight of ll weight can gown: th, ova Bari "nmr must ' My Beside: the man of scrunch grain, it hr . for hnndfuls the day when ' houses. This he); buy. A good dr null parts by w. Jinn. ground On lime, but is Clan food I and keep up out the your ditiom family hon amt. man gmin, but are prndl than fifty " in th will for furnishes Ground c COW was the last aw what " (trim Inlm Ind unifying watched from arm-ind in 1 any . " ground poultry 1n feed Ade If m H One , so mm a uteri. M tlprxr tout tor It d ta TRAINING OUR CHILDREN du, " ft h