! s ¢ «o t "Good l\’ght." He took her hand and held it between his own. "I sort of feel sure that you‘ll comeâ€"that you‘ll want to come when you realize how much the children need youâ€" how happy I‘d be to have you there." try fi They were silent for several minâ€" utes. He drove the car slowly as though he were in no hurry to reach Barbara‘s home. "Miss Barbara, you‘re not happy where you are. 1 wonder if you‘d consider leaving your present way of living to take care of Richard and Shelia. They need sorieone like you who would really love and care for 2 After Every Meal | Richard Howell went to get the car so he could drive her home. Jim, the man who worked about the place, would stay in the house so the chilâ€" dren would not be atone. Barbara leaned back on the cushâ€" lons of the car and sighed. "I‘m afraid you‘re very tired." Howe!ll‘s voice carried a note of deep They lingered at the table until it’ "Well!" Aunt Hattie had been lookâ€" was dusk. Then, while Barbara and ing out of the window in the darkenâ€" Mr. Howell, his name was also Rich-led front room and she came quickly ard, washed the dishes, the children! into thd hall as Barbara entered made themselves ready for bed. When| "Where you been? Joc Baxter‘s been it was time for them to be tucked in!*"difl' up here to know if you was Barbara went upstairs and kissed sick and me thinkin‘ you at work all them goodnight. the time. Where you been, gutin" "Don‘t go away, Barbara," Richard home at this hour with a man in a Junior begged. | machine? An‘ look at you, all 'mzf‘ "And if you must goâ€"come back zed up. Say, ain‘t you ashamed, with some time," Shiela urged. 'your neck showin‘ and your hair "I‘ll come and see you often," she hangin‘ over your ears? No account, promised. ‘ Just like your mother. She went off Richard Howell went to get the car) to a picnic and come home married to: so he cauld drive her home. Jim,| my poor brother, married him right| the man who worked about the place,| under everybody‘s nose. You fli“'tl would stay in the house so the chil-!married, are you?" W hay d I h The lay cert The Backsliding of Barbara are sealed in ailrâ€"tight aluminum foil. Their fresh flavor is finer than any Japan or Gunpowder. Try SALADA. Young Tender Leaves It Brought Happiness and Awoke Love in Four Lives th Pass it around after every meal n but that isn‘t anything to er. After all, I‘m not a child ive a right to one day out of v they c 1 am," she confessed, "but at all sorry I sneaked off W1 m the t h d have hey do. I know they need it . . ." she hesitated. been easy, trying to bring he mgn said softly, "and ked in toâ€"night and saw . was almost as if all my ‘ayers had been answered. asn‘t seemed as it did toâ€" heir mother died." Then, ent, "I‘m sure that she‘d she knew you were there.1 : sent you to look after ire vyou »mise me one thing?" omise me that you‘ll Even if you can‘t come you let me come and car on Sundays and me for the day? But r all time. We need PART III not answer She was thi ira showed him the GREEN TEA time. We i1 be happy it and let Ime wer. _A mist : thinking that e her parents y wanted. BY COURTENAY SAVAGE Sunday to Wallon and tips used in the music, m uU t | "You went into a strange house lnnd cooked meals for folks you‘d "never seen? Oh, ain‘t you ashamed? ': What‘ll folks say, after all the trouble / I took to bring you up right after | your mother and father died?" ' Barbara offered no comment. "I might have known it," the older | woman went on, rocking back and forth with indignation. _ "Your pa lwas foolish of else he wouldn‘t hnvo‘ married a city girl without a pair) ’o{ pillow cases to her name. Your ma was just plain cmpty-headed.' | Then they both of them died and left | you to me to struggle with. It‘s terâ€"| | rible. I "What‘ll folks say?" Aunt Hattie was working herself into a temper. "Suppose you can‘t work at the store no more, suppose . . ." Barbara frowned and she felt an ache of resentment creep over her. She could not remember her father and her recollection of her mother was dim. She knew they had loved one another, that they had been happy, and that only in the narrowness of Aunt Hattie‘s heart was there anyâ€" thing questionable about their marâ€" riage. \ "No, I‘m not married. I took the day off. I‘ve worked at the store for ten years and never had a real day to myself so this morning I decided that I‘d go for a walk." "A walk? You‘re crazy." i "Yes, over the mountain towards Camdentown." Briefly Barbara told her aunt of the day‘s adventures. ‘ Aunt Hattie was almost too amazed for speech. Barbara laughed. She could help it. L "Good night," she said I‘m going awn);â€"â€"t; C;;: o take care of those chilâ€" not Sheâ€"‘"Yes, that‘s exactly what I‘m telling everybody." | _ Is he satisfied with making his call ' on the eating utensils? Not at all. He / finds rest for the soles of his feet upon | our hands our faces and he particularâ€" !ly affects the cradle where lies the | helples infant. Imagine how easy it ‘must be when the fly alights on the baby‘s lips for it to leave behind the | germs of disease. It has been proved | that the house fly may carry the germs | of thirty distinct diseases and parastiâ€" | cie organisms. Think also how logiâ€" | cal a connection there is beween the |\fly and the prevalence of such a disâ€" ‘ease as diarrhoea among infants in | summer. They All Say So. Heâ€""Now, don‘t forget, dearest, that for family reasohs our engagement must be kept a secret." Traps or poison may be used to catch adult flies but it is more effective to starve them than to swat this danâ€" gerous enemy to mankind.â€"â€"F.D. Flies multiply as they have opporâ€" tunity to feed and find breeding places. Therefore it is important to prevent breeding places such as manure piles and to starve them by covering food and garbage. Absolute cleanliness and the removal or destruction of anyâ€" thing in which flies may breed or feed are essential. | _ With feet clogged with foulness he I I‘ is seen on the spoons, on the forks, on | the butter, the sugar, the rim of the ldrlnklng vessel, the meat, the edge of the milk pitcher. And be sure that as I muddy boots will leave a track across ‘a crimson carpet so the fly will leave ]hls tracks on everything he touches. It is an established fact that flles can convey typhoid fever. <In army camps and in many municipalities where measures are taken to stop tyâ€" phoid fever a campaign against house files is considered one of the most imâ€" portant means to this end. |_After he has stretched his little | wings to dry where does the fly go? | Most likely the fly has a keen sense of | smell. Where does it lead him? Like | the bee, to the pink or crange or blue | petals or the summer flowers? Not at |all. Attar of roses has no attraction }tor him. The odoriferous fermentaâ€" itions of the garbage can, the manure | pile, or the stinking emanations of the |cesspoo) have the first call upon him. ;lt is to these spots he makes his first lvlnit. To list all his subsequent restâ€" Ing place would be tao disgusting. Obâ€" serve for yourself and make a mental . note of them. = | on this score is more than objection. ; It is a disgust so strong that it stimuâ€" lates a desire to slay so that we may 'rid our habitations and ourselves of the enforced attentions of these fifthy 'Insects. Soomner or later, the fly makes his way into our dwellings. He enters to get relief from the heat of summer or the cold of autumn. After walking on filth, corruption and, as likely as not, infection; does he manicure? Not a bit of it. The Toronto Hospital for Ancurables in affillation with Bellevae and Allicd Hospitals, New York City offers a three years‘ Course of Training to young women. having tha required education, and desirous of becoming nurses. This Mospital has séopted the cight. hour system. The pupils receive uniforms of the School, a monthly allowanes and travelling expenses to and from New Yerk. For further information spply to whe Superintendent. The fly is not a fit cor human beings. The objec is not on the score of his And though she did not say so, Barbara knew that her backsliding had led her to the greatest joys the world can hoidâ€"love and duty. (The End.) "Oh, God," she breathed softly, "thank You for letting me go backâ€" slidingâ€"-backsliding." She stretched her arms across thef gill of the open window and it seemed as if she looked alonz the road she would travel. Work was there and the joy of work. Children‘s feet daneâ€"| ed ahead of her. Happiness lay along! the path and it even seemed to her| that time might mellow the heart of| Aunt Hattie and teach her happiness. | Prosently the clock on the Presâ€" byterian church tower struck eleven. She rose. It was time for her to gleep for she must be rested for the new chapter of life that would begin on the morrow. » _ _ "I don‘t know how rich he is but he has a wonderful home and acres, and acre: of fruit.‘ | Aunt Hattie went upstairs to her room. Barbara tried the windows to. see if they were locked and then the door. She went to her room and un-; dressed. She did not go to bed. She ; sat there by the window looking out across the soft summer nightâ€"dmm-!‘ ing. you to asked. "Who‘s going to live with me and help me with the work?" she asked "Â¥ou can get somcone. You can hire them. You‘ve plienty of money." Aunt Hattie shook hor head. "Did you say this man that wants you to work for him is rich?" she k FOLLOWING THE FLY Aunt Hattie was momentarily silâ€" "You can NURSES y the germs| A straightâ€"line cape with a flatterâ€" ind parastiâ€" | ing collar, a dress with a circular sideâ€" ) how logiâ€" ) front trimming and a front tie, raglan beween the sleeves that burst into fullness and such a dls-;held tight about the wrist by a narâ€" infants in row band, and a very flat straight‘ 'back are the interesting points in this“ t that files very graceful ensemble _ Of course _<In army | the cape, No. 1092, is lined with flat nicipalities ’ crepe to harmonize with the gown. It to stop tyâ€" is made on slendering lines and a. ainst house | small yoke is used close about the neck e most imâ€"| to which the slight fullness is adjustâ€", |ed. Soft wool makes this a most at-‘ ive opporâ€"| tractive summer outfit. The dress, | ling places.| No. 1083, may be cut with short | to prevent | sleeves and a narrow collarâ€"band used.| inure piles | Cut in sizes 34 to 42 inches bust. Size| ering food | 88 requires 5% yards of 36â€"inch maâ€"} cleanliness | terial for the dress and 2% yards of| ion of anyâ€"| lengthwise material in any length j ad ar faad I e y aC EiY PV 71 oo oi onl o td a typewriter. In the former accomâ€" plishment two or more notes must be struck at once, an opcration which would be fatal on the typewriter. "Well, if he be motionless." "The Smith boy who used to work for you wants me to give him a job. Is he steady?" Minard‘s Liniment for Backache ce C Sn . o P mA lengthwise material in any length cape. Each pattern 20 cents. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plainâ€" ly, giving number and size of such putterns as you want. Enclose 20¢ in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number, and address your order to Puttern Dept., Wilson Publishing Co., 78 West Adeâ€" laide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by Seadaseme accc 4h return mail Pianoâ€"playing is no 2% yards of 86â€"inch material. Price 20 cents. A more elaborate and vouthful negliâ€" gee may be made from this very useâ€" ful style. It is cut for sleeveless, and by adding the flattering tucked rufflies in some soft material, about the neck and deep armholes, one has an interâ€" esting bit of finery. Cut in sizes 34 to 44 inches bust. Size 38 requires madam‘s | ro straightâ€"line and closes : worn with a attractive lo pattern, No shirred ribb faces the n Te CLIPSE @=â€" N. _FAsfion$ A CAPE ENSEMBLE simp YOUTHFUL np‘0 negligee for room is this ven line kimono. It is es at low waistâ€"lin h a straight sl‘p it e loungingâ€"robe. TI No. 1183, is finis ribbon, contrasting was any steadier he‘d Steady. . * Exclusive Pattems \ he‘p in working igee â€"for this very o. . It 18 waistâ€"line. 1133 NEGLIGEE use in simple surplice When 2nd Microbeâ€""On the Office towel guess!" Teacher (to new boy)â€""What do they call you at home?" Boyâ€"*"Flannel, miss." "But why ?" "Because I shrink from wash‘ng. Thet Last Resort. 1st Microb&~“Everythlng’s so darnâ€" ed clean. Where‘re we gonna go to live?" 10. Send your children to another church school, and publish the fact. Oppose the leaders of your schoolâ€" always! For First AId-â€"Minvard'l Liniment. 9. Park both your plety and intelliâ€" gence at home when you attend church; then accuse the preacher of being "heretical" . 8. Report that the church lacks spiriâ€" tual power, although your own life is like a cinder. 6. Criticize â€" fellow â€" members for things you, too, are guilty of,. 7. Give oneâ€"third of what you can give, 5. Tell everybody that the attendâ€" ance is falling off, though you never got a report of the official count. 4. Lament about the "poor music"’ and the high cost of it, harking backi to the old daysâ€"when you did the| same thing about the music then. Ditâ€" to the preaching. ‘ 2. Repeat every rumor you hear about the way people are cutting down their giving to the churchâ€"and belleve all you hear on the subject. 8. Attend church onl)-' when an "outâ€" side" speaker occupies the pulpitâ€"and then shake hands with everybody that day. 1. Broadcast the faults of the minisâ€" ter. Assume the silence of your hear ers means they agree with youâ€"and so report it. Well made, generous sized properly curyâ€" ed spout. Tip of spout well above water line to prevent overboiling or Note the flattened top of this fine kettle. No waste space above the water level, A very fast boiler, decidedly neat in appearance. TORONTO Ten Ways to Hurt Your Church. MO â€"I‘ve not boiled any garments since" The makers of Rinso receive many such ‘ letters as this. For Rinso not only does the i family wash merely by soakingâ€"it is also excellent for many household duties, such as cleaning woodwork, scrubbing floors, etc. Order Rinso today. Lever Brothers Limited, Toronto. Te < ~ ze ï¬ Adralâ€" Py .\ (ray * ferts C P \ I f “\ [ S W / R'ns | [ k esd ’/’_‘:4 zmoo \ | | 9 es /7 \ y als | A/f h +5 4 17 Y¥‘ |S i. L / AA RB 4AAA § | P TFFFLLLTTHA 17 A aes p%)* w’ /7// // h ) a ts mMMedl s _ |. A yges + ovessstasas | P s ~A| A Crpco e ame ) p n o seee s * ks “) 7B Well Named. "It has cut my house cleaning troubles in half and consequently 1 felt that it was only your due to know that Rinso has a much bigger work to do in our house than just to clean the dirt from our laundry." "I found that Rinso is excellent for removing finger prints from white paint and for washing all woodwork. \_ "A friend suggested that I stop boiling the clothes I washed and try Rinso, which 1 did, with such delightâ€" ful results that I have not boiled any garments since Hinged lid at side of kettle for speedy filling und=r tap or by dipper; being hinged it cannot fall off or get lost. Archaeologists â€" are preparing to' make further explorations. Additional | interest is attached to the discovery | by the fact that the city Mes in waters described by Virgil and near the "Isle of the Lotus Eaters," of which Homer gang. The history of almanacs has been ' traced back to very early times. It has | been ascertained that Alexandrian lGreeks had them, though it is not exâ€" actly known when they appeared in | Europe. The oldest existing almanacs lln manuscript form date from the thirâ€" | teenth and fourteenth centuries, whereâ€" ! as the earliest printed almanac was by the astronomer, Purbach, and appearâ€" ed between the years 1450 and 1461. \ The unpleasant odor of Limburger cheese is due to specific ferimentations induced during ripening. This cheese is made from sweet milk, the curd beâ€" i ing formed into cakes about five inches _square and two inches thick and not pressed. The main cause of the putreâ€" factive fermentation is the extremely moist condition in which it is kept. _ The divers report that many large stone buildings were visible, outlined in dim chadows on the sandy bottom, and that fish swam in and out of the crumbled doorways. The ruins of an ancient city have been found by divers submerged thirty feet below the surface of the Mediterâ€" ranean Sea, off the coast of Tunis. Montreal is now the greatest inland port in the world. The water of the Dead Sea is five times as salty as that of the ocean. The authorities in charge of several big hospitals in England have decided to lift the ban against women nurses smoking cigarettes while on duty, hayâ€" ing concluded that it was impossible to entorce the rule prohibiting the practice. Texas produces 40 per cent. of the cotton of the United States. The criginal mapuscript of "Kidâ€" napped," by Robert Louis Stevenson, broughf$10,000 at an auction in New York City recently. Wall Papers Bend for Free Bookiet. We pay express to any point in Ontario. 898 Danforth Ave A City Under the Sea. BELL BROTHERS Handle, ex ï¬m rigid, shaped to fit the hand and always cool; being rigid you have perâ€" fect control at all times. Facts. This kettle is made in SMP Pearl and SMP Diamond Enamâ€" elled Ware, also in nicke! plated copper ware. The name Savoy and our trade mark on each genuine Toronto Clerkâ€"*"Well, ma‘am, it you thi'nk she‘s in that remaining blanket up there, I‘ll take it dows for you." Clerkâ€""Now that you‘ve seen all the blankets in the store, which one do you wish?" Ladyâ€""Well, I was only looking for a friend, and didn‘t expect to buy." When the diner has fnished his meal he takes the bill, which has also been delivered by electricity, and pay® at the usual cashier‘s desk. When the menu is slipped into the slot it drops to the kitchen below; the server there attends to the order, presses a button, and the food is on Its way to the table. The diner enters the restaurant, selects his table, notes on the menu the food he requires, drops the meau through a slot in the table, and waits a minute or two. Presently there is a humming noise, and in the centre of the table, on a fourâ€"poster tray, apâ€" pears the food he has ordered. ‘ Bteam is injurious to your clock. In the bathroom, kitchen or laundry, you can‘t avoid a steamy atmosphere, and the steamy moisture will rust the steel springs of your clock. Thereâ€" fore, don‘t blame the clock if it doesn‘t last quite so long under such usage; & bigherâ€"priced clock would suffer ir the same manner. Taking it all in all, the alarmâ€"clock, on account of its low price and unusual faithfuiness, is the iGeal timekeeper for rooms like those named above. In a certain restanrant in De: the meals are served by electricity Once in two years your clock will need cleaning and oiling. Let your jeweler do this for you. He has a speâ€" cial oil made for the purpose; and he kEnows how much to use and where to put it, Amateur oiling usually does more harm than good. Needless to say, the better you tres your clock the better it will serve you Taking good care of your clock is goo€ business; it will prove its worth tc you. carefully adjusted if it is to do good work. Do away with this careful adâ€" justment and you do away with acâ€" curacy. Firstâ€"class alarmâ€"clocks havs movements that are adjusted to give better timekeeping qualities. The wheels turn on needlefine pivots of polished steel. Frictior is greatly reâ€" duced in this watchâ€"like mechanism. Probably. you‘ve never the your alarmâ€"clock in just this fore. It‘s a pretty useful me the household, isn‘t it? And pensive, too! So much «o, in f many people consider it a roughâ€"andâ€"ready, _ lowâ€"vriee! For instance, changes in temperaâ€" ture are very injurious to the mechanâ€" ‘lsm. Your clock is in a _warm room all day. At night you wind and set it, then open the windows. You can hardâ€" ly expect your clock to adjust itself to any kind of weatherâ€"zeroâ€"cold or the damp night airâ€"and ring exactly on the dot the next morning. And yet, these are the conditions under which most alarmâ€"clocks must serve, and ofâ€" ten they stand up better uander the strain than higherâ€"priced clocks. Bearâ€" ing in mind these facts may make us a bit more tolerant when our faithful alarmâ€"clocks vary a few minutes in time. ‘ It is sometimes advantageous to bave a number of alarmâ€"clocks about 'lhe house. One of them makes an exâ€" cellent timekeeper for the kitchen, and the alarm feature can be used to tell when to start the meals, or call out the time whenthe bread or cake should ‘be taken out of the oven. Another in the bathroom enables the man of the house to figure trainâ€"time to the minâ€" ute, whilehe is shaving, and he‘ll most likely be on time for breakfast, too! ._\larm-clocln may be used to advantâ€" age in the library, the livingâ€"room or the garage; one installed in each of the various buildings, such as the dairy, toolâ€"house or barn, enables the busy farmer to tell the time without stopping to consult his watch. On the businessâ€"man‘s desk it has a place, while in the factory it may be used to advantage on the foreman‘s bench, to regulate special and particular shop operations. But these are only a few of the uses for your alarmâ€"clock. As you discover others, peculiar to your needs, the clock will become more and more serviceable to you. My, How We Abuse Them! Alarmâ€"clocks suffer abuse from the average owner, and this abuse often tests them to the limit. Perhaps it is because of their usual faithfuiness that they are so badly noglected. But whatever the cause, it is cortain that the life of an alarmâ€"clock may boeâ€"greatâ€" ly prolonged by proper treatimnent. _ Clocks and watches are so common that one seldom stops to consider their real value, and bow much they actualâ€" ly do mean to us. If all the faithful timepieces in Canada were suddenly to cease runnping, the result can be betâ€" ter imagined than described. And if it were not for the thousands of alarmâ€" clocks which "tick" faithfully all the night and then ring merrily to warn us that time for #lumber is at an end, wellâ€"there‘d likely be many catasâ€" trophes in the business world first morning! d tim efully The Electric Waiter Looking for Her Friend YOUR ALARM CLOCK t require careful tre eping Accurate Time here is where they ¢ e on th special 8. But es for By C. 6. Enders ume Auism. you treat mu U Wi bt of y beâ€" ‘er of inex n at bread «proad bure, prass Ths #a w1 ho MA m ‘ dee tinv or the fondan may be Ioing f. e i wP the w el be Car one euy ©0 ha blu #ur of pla brid feas ment thing shine wo. da the Jw THE BRI