i0 "SALADA" A of My maid; you have too aA car would be a gre Jock and Mhor wou! scould go touring all must begin to see t think, perhaps, Dav rather stuffy to stick teven if that place when the whole wide to be looked at. . . I old cure in Switzerla retired from his livi r‘.ï¬\:y, set off to se told me he did it bec: sure when he enter the first question G him would be. ‘And w Te had It was odd how empty her life felt when it ought to feel so rich. She had the three boys beside her, Pamela was next door, she had ail manner of | schemes in hand to keep her thoughts | cceupiedâ€"but there was a great want . somewhere. Jean owned to herself | that the blank had been there ever | since Lord Bidborough went away. It! was frightfully silly, but there it was.| And probably by this time he had quite forgotten her. It had amused | h Befreshing and beneficial! children to care for their teeth his .2 A C ;lee them Wrigley‘s. 1 removes food particles thae :?â€"t.“g;__L,- g W 1 the whole wide world is waiting : looked at. . . I remember a dear ure in Switzerland who, when he ed from his living at the age of ‘y, set off to see the world. He me he did it because he was quite Lk _/% 8 10. ' ntering in, smiling over her shoulâ€" _ at Mhor, who was swinging on gate with Peter by his side. Oh, Pamela, 1 am glad to see you. vid says I am using the money in h a stuffy way. Do you think I Wi 1 hor ‘after eéér? meal" 1 think you ; you have t has won it millions of users. Finer than any Japan, Gunpowder or Young Hyson. Ask for SALADA. The Delicious Flavor Parentsâ€" CHAPTER XXIH hen he entered heaven‘s gate t question God would put to ild be, ‘And what did you think world?" and he wanted to be sition to answer intelligently colored. Solemn Small Boyâ€""Penny plain, please. lï¬ better value for the money." it your supper in a room g with lights, four Titia he wall wenty naked girls to c} Shopmanâ€""You may have your cholceoâ€"penny plain or twoâ€"pence iugh that place whole wide w oving fancyâ€"but to herself her h dislovalty.. Richsa 1 he does David want you to do*" sked, as she threw off her kne‘t before the fire to warm ito hers. She ned to feel th agine himself i hed. "Something like that, Anyway he wants a smart 8s the tin knew fror PENNY PLAIN ate p‘ain, are you going to eing twopence colored? u_ should get another too much to do. And i great interest to you. o think Jean would be ‘an, whose heart leapt it at the mere casual would love it _ all round in it. You ee the world now. I David is right. It is itick in the same place place is Priorsford) once, anc a motorcar. me to wear earrings, and wear the newest ked girls drawn from the leaves of GREEN TEA rom Copyright by George H. Doran Co. *kly, h It was M poke of him (Cont‘d BY O. DOUGLAS love, someâ€" a dull little ks that men even as she art rebuked itians on‘ Jcan gave a great sicb. [ "Lovely," she echoed. Lovely, inâ€" » change| deed, to be awsy from housekeeping aring a Pamela r shoulâ€" vou "I should think exceilently well. I dined with him one night and he seemâ€" ed in great spirits. He seemed to be vory much in request. He wanted to take me about a bit, but I‘ve got out of London ways. I don‘t seem to know what to talk about to this new genâ€" eration and I yawn. I‘m better at home at Laver.aw among the sheep." Mrs. M‘Cesh came in to lay the tea, and Jean said: "You‘ll have tea here, Cousin Lewis, though tkis isn‘t my visit, and then you can go over to hillview with Pamela and pay your visit to her. You musn‘t miss the opâ€" "Yes; I heard that, but only the rub in. U.sea home-rpade swab, ma other day. It was a most unexpected by wrapping cloth tightly around windfall. I was delighted to hear| mop~st1qk. In afew hours go over t] about it.‘" Jean looked at him and‘floors'wnth a polisher. Gocod for wo wondered if he were well. His long and linoleum. holiday did not seem to have improved | ___‘_-_ his spirits; he was more absent.‘. B‘& _ Opportunities se‘dom _ con minded than usual and disappointingâ€"| labelled. _V unintcrested. ]â€"% "I didn‘t know you were back in‘ Priorsford," he said, addressing Pamâ€" cla, "till 1 met your brother in Lonâ€" dom. I called 0?1 you just now, and “DIAMOND DYES" Miss Bathgate sent m over hore." "Is Biddy amusing himself well?" COLCR THINGS NEW Pamela asked. ® 1 "Were you so very busy that you couldn‘t write so much as a post card? And I don‘t believe you know that I‘m "Cousin Lewis!" cried Jean. "Where in the world have you been? Three whole months since you went away and never a word from you. You didn‘t even write to Mrs. Hope." "No," said Lewis; "I was rather busy." He greeted Pamela and sat down. and poor peopie and known paths for a lttle, and into leafy Warwick lanes and the rich English country which she had never seen. "And then," Pameia went on, "you would come back appreciating Priorsâ€" ford more thain you have ever done. Yoa would come back to Tweed and Poet Tower and the Hop~toun Woods with a new understandirg. There‘s nothing so makes you anpreciate your home as leaving it. . . Bother! That‘s the bell. Visitors!" | It was only one visitorâ€"Lewis Elâ€" liot. "Well, if I _Everybody should make a pilgrimâ€" age in spring: it‘s the correct thing to do. Imagine starting on an April morning, through new roads, among singing birds and cowslins and green new leaves, and stopping at little inns "Everybody age in spring to do. Imagi» morning. thro * Was meant ior smalil ways. "Poor Pennyâ€"plain‘! Never mind. I‘m not going to preachsuny more. You shall do just as you please with your life. I was romembering, Jean, your desire to go to the Shakespeare Fesâ€" tival at Stratford in April. Why not motor there? It is a lovely run. I reant to take you myse.f, but I exâ€" pect you would enjoy it much better if youw went with the boys. It would be great fun for you all, and take you away from your philanthropic efforts and let you see round everything m er the nightâ€"love‘ly mp me too «. ... He was an old dear. When% you come to think of it, it is a litt!ei ungrateful of you, Jean, not to want} to taste all the pleasures provided for the inhabitants of this earth. There' is no sense in useless extravagance, but there is a certain fitness in things. A cottage is a delicious thing, but it is meant, for the lucky people with small iress i a, see‘r Th lis CVe at it mo# it the w it with interest, and he light in them, went either, I mall wan ingrat ar 2l d th ons Mrs. MC Jean And N U In it the m h often int in a true. I Pamela. e can don‘t chink Here is a method of finishing floors which is cheap and very satisfactory, for the longer the floor is used, the’ better the finish becomes. It requires one bar of paraffin shaved into a ketâ€" tle. Place over a fire, and when smokâ€" ing hot, remove from fire and pour into the paraffin sevenâ€"eighths of a! quart of kerosene. This makes enough | to finish two floors of the average | size. Apply to the floor while hot and rub in. Use a homeâ€"made swab, made | by wrapping cloth tightly around a(‘ mopâ€"stick. In a few hours go over the floors with a polisher. Gocd for wood' and linoleum. AN INEXPENSIVE FINISH FoOR FLOORS. "Oh again! For Sore Feetâ€"Mlhard's Liniment. V "He was waiting for Jock," said Jean. "Did you notice that he was very »clean, and that his hair was sleeked down with briiliantine? They are invited to bring Pceter to tea at the Miss Watsons‘, and are in great spirits about it. They gensrally hate going out to tea, but Jock discovered recently that the Watsons had a faâ€" ther who was a sea captain. That fact has thrown such a halo round the two ladies. that he can‘t keep away from them. They have allowed him to go |to the attic and rummage in the big | seaâ€"chests which, he says, are chockâ€" | ful of treasures like ostrich eggs and |lumps of coral and Chinese idols. It | seems the Miss Watsons won‘t have lthese treasures downstairs &s they Idon’t look genteel among the ‘new art‘ | ornaments admired in Balmoral All | the treasures are to be on view toâ€"day (Jock has great hopes of persuading ‘the dear ladies to give him one to ibring home, what he calls a ‘Chinese | scratchor‘â€"it certainly sounds far | from genteel) and a gorgeous spread! | as wellâ€"Jock confided to me that he | thought therse might even be sand-, | wiches; and Peter being invited has| (filled Mhor‘s cup of happiness to the | brim. _ So few people welcome that | marauder." | |__"I wish I could be there to hear the: | convarsation," "said Pamela. "Joch) | with his company manners is a joy." l | (To be continued.) The consumption of tea, it is estiâ€" mated, increased in 1924 thirtyâ€"nine million pounds. The price, as a reâ€" sult, may go to $1.00 per pound, but even then, tea is the cheapest beverâ€" age in the worldâ€"aside from water. GREAT INCREASE IN TEA CONSUMPTION Here is a ‘"Yes, do come. I expect Jean has had enough of me for one day. I‘ve been lecturing her. . . . By the way, where are the boys toâ€"day? Mhor was swinging on the gate as I came in Hs told me he was going somewhere, but his speech was obstructed by a larg> piece of toffee, and I couldn‘t make out what he said." "He was waiting for Jock," said Ye Olde Village Pump. shucks, the pump‘s frozen up come | _ There was once a girl with pretty ‘ankles, andâ€"who didn‘t know it. | _ There was once a father who liked | to act as night nurse to his offspring. | _ There was once a postâ€"office assistâ€" ant who said "Please" and "Thank you!" King George‘s famous yacht, the Britannia, is regarded as one of the fastest yachts afloat. _ She carries 9,235 cubic feet of canvas when in full sail. A "tube" railway is proposed for Venice. It would cover the length of the city, a distance of eight miles. There was once a woman who went to dress and said she would be ready in ten minutesâ€"and was. There was once a man who gave more money each week to his wife than she could spend. Handmade Frock of Dotted‘ | Voile : \_ Simplicity is the keynote of this dainty frock, suitable for all 0c« casions and cool as summer breezes, Sleeveless oneâ€"piece slipon dress with long drooping shoulders falling in graceful folds under the arms Pretty round neck slightly gathered. Slashed at shoulders and finished with picot edging or rickâ€"rack braid tends to beautify the model. Sum« mer silks, voiles or ginghams are good for this becoming frock. Girls® d@ress No. 1003 cut in sizes 6 to 14 years. Size 12 requires 21g" Fards 36 or 40 inch material. i The Marconi Wireless Tei. Co. of Can., Ltd Montreal. Halifax, Toronto, Vancouver, St. John‘s, Nfid. be arrange d throug h your local dealer. Also send your name for free radio booklet "PD." If it h a ppens there is no Marâ€" coni Agency in your town have your dealer write us. We want you to have a demonâ€" stration in your own home of the M a r c o niphone, master radio reâ€" ceiver. This can ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO The spirit of faun play always leadsz a contestant to recognize his opponâ€"| ent‘s skill. | Minard‘s Liniment Fine for the Hair. 1tha.n ‘warning them Sunlight Soap Cor. Bay and Adciaide Sts. All deposits are secured by the entire resources of the Province of Ontario. Remittances should be made by Post Office money order, bank cheque, express order or registered letter, and should ne addressed to your nearest Branch, where they will receive prompt attention. Province of Ontario Savings Office The confidence the rural communities have show this Savings Office .s indicated by the large increase in posits, which are now over $20,000,000. The security afforded by the Province of Ontario Savings Office, together with the facilities extended by every Post Office in Canada and other countries, make it possible for everyone to deposit their savings in this instituâ€" tion. Interest is allowed, compounded halfâ€"yearly, with full checking privileges. I‘m always so proud of â€" my snowy hedâ€"linen â€"" 519 Danforth Avenue. x ie â€" Other Branches at Hamilton, §t. Catharines, §t. Mary‘s,~ Pembrokke, Brantford, Woodstock, Owen Sound, Ottawa, Seaforth, Walkerton, Newmarket and AyJmer. â€" W / «. ok ï¬t vavie a eAA _ . a 4 "For clothes, dishes and general housework I always use Sunlight. Every bit of Sunlight is pure, cleansing soap, and so it is really economicalâ€"and my, how it does clean! Sunâ€" light is so easy on the hands, too!" Lever Brothers Limited, the largest soap firm in the world, make Sunlight. "The pure Sunlight suds quickly search the dirt right out, and leave every single thread swéet and clean. Only a light rubbing may perhaps be necessary at times. Then a good rins}f and everything is as spotlessly white as your heart could wish. "And I change them often, too, because they‘re really easy to wasgâ€"the way I wash themâ€"with Sunlight Soap. ""When guests come, especially! My sheets and pillow cases are so snowyâ€"white, and have that fresh, sweet smell of perfect cleanliness. Banking by Mail HEAD OFFICE: 15 QUEEN‘S PARK, TE?\ONTO Torento Branch Offices: Strink Bovrile s leads| Use Horn Sparingly. opponâ€"| Try to drive with using the horn as illttle as possible. A sudden noise may | stop pedestrians in their tracks rather ONTARIQ Cor. University and Dundas Sts. says Mrs. Experience in deâ€" Sâ€"12 The subtle movemens pool have produced some " fectsâ€"islands wander |; ghosts from shore to sho~« a tree trunk ticks up out of | like the arm clothed in v! , which bore â€" "Excallbu>." \varning finger and again back into the Cimmerian 4 | _ One writer has estimat least 10,000,000 tons o 1} | have been churned into Asp during the ages in Pitch L ;is known as Devil‘s Cauld ’ the natives. About 4,000.00( already been removed. and | surface of the lake hed *a feet below its former leve;, ing its history the viscous flowed its banks and made the sea near La Brea. Now : supply is shipped | fron which fairly reeks of its sto: Aephalt boulders stick up « sand along the shore !ke ; hirck gea worine, the plles o are taked with pitch, the + are of the same matevial, biack children of the islansg dol‘s whose little black * bodies rre made of pitch. Columbus Saw Island P The island is really a be: sort, its roads are exceient essy to reach from the shore, its green trees tower skyline from far out 2: sea third voyage Columbus saw mountain pesks, which ga rame, rise out of the sea or 1498, At the foot of these | ters the group of building forms the canital eTty Par raimer nondescri hich has growr up ies of the old Spar About every three the pitch swallows w the sleepers and they and readjusted on th though about £60.000 are being taken from year, the little track moved; the pitch con ways. Scars "H Like the Bur seems never to the daughters of eatch water in a see the results night a great g horizon, and at level again. _ It is said that th bearing lake is 11« knows how deep i almost uncanny with the removal o0 the area. â€" Rails : been built out into day the laborers di pitch, which break fintlike fractures, into a car which ru day they mauke a gides of the track v when they return the trough is fille: solid for them to that is never finish« above his kneos. ° The sensation pro over its surface is : treading upon some ; flesh gives beneath ti bloodâ€"warm, and the surface in the blind sun seem to rise a breathing and the wa in the furrows supge mal is perspiring. It is said that the : its 1 tion aboy zanie known C ably would ha his imaginatior fights. Howeve so many intere told does not "inferno," founiain Dante kn« ably wou! La B: which Supply Seems Inexhaust When Sir Walter Raleigh on the shores of Trinidad to vessels with pitch from th« "ake, he said there was +; the substance for all the vexs world for centuries to come, . the demand which modern â€" has put upon the supply has changed the truth of hGs sts: ©The most southerly is West Indies and the larg British Islands in the Cari the exception of Jamaica, the Venezuela coast, Trin yearly large quantities of ; bitumen. The pavements of city stre« to the clop of horses‘ hoofs ; whir of automobile tires, in tribute to the island‘s a=»p) posits. Radio and telephone » veberate the refrain,. Even :\ of houses shut out these #ou well as the cold, with the x mous product of this emerald i: the southern Caribbean. Supply of Asphalt is In~. haustibleâ€"Furrows Fill Again at Night. TRINIDAD CANPAYE STREETS OF WORLD n bout peaks, which gave it its e out of the sea on July 31, the foot of these hilis clusâ€" group Of buildings whhich capital City, Port of Spain, nondescript modern town s growr up‘on the charred he old Sparish city. ? ~WALTER RALEIC»; "PAID" HIS VESSFI « uncamny | feature removal of the a= . _â€" Rails and sleep lt out into the Iake laborers dig up chn hich break off with Tractures, and t;: r which rums on va w JD" HIS VESSEL s WITH PITCH. the een He imbus saw its thres which gave it it the sea on July 31 t of these hilis cius of buildings whict City, Port of Spain cript moadern â€" town Stv VC 1) Island Pesks 16 V« iW I fas saw its three i gave it its A on July 31. Pi venezuela ng on the . On his he 18 on th apmmame n ns o goa wh Ap rd mu WI t1 T he W