brushe« her out Her | Sometimes one would be a trifle late and their paths would cross at one side of the park or the other. Usually, however,; the first heavy thud of seven would sound from the city hall clock when they passed at the ornate founâ€" tain which marked the very centre of the square. Both recognized that to meet at this exact spot was a mark of punctiliousness. Onee, when Mcâ€" Nabb was almost out of the park (and he walked slowly, fearing she might not come at all), he met her almost running at the edge of the square farthest from her destination. He supplemented the raising of his hat with a remark: "Late toâ€"day, aren‘t you?" hat. No harm i Sometimes one and their paths side of the park however, the firs would sound frc One In the Tea Cup : Our new Cook Book conâ€" tains many recipes for deliâ€" cious salads, mayonnais«, pickles, etc. Write for a copy. COLMANâ€"KEEN (CANADA) LIMITED Dept. 1F, 102 Amherst Street, "SALADA" HI is revealed. The flavor is pure, fresh and fragrant. Try it. Black. Mixed or Green Blends. TY Mustard stimulates the flow of saliva, and of the gstric juices in the stomac It neutralizes the richness of fat foods, makes them easier to digest and assists you in assimilating your footl Mustard makes ordinary dishes more tasty. Always have it on the tableâ€"freshly mixed with cold water for every meal. It Pays To Advertise COOK BOOK FREE b was from the country, but in two years in the city‘s mart had given him no little se and perspicacity. He was se and intended to make x of himself. He was emâ€" a pipeâ€"organ factory. atever heights Oliver‘s tenâ€" ispiration may have climbed, ) punch the timeâ€"clock at the rance not later than sevenâ€" ery morning except Sunday. ray to work he passed daily the square in front of the To arrive at the factory on had learned from experience was necessary to leave the seven. hour many were hurrying to rious places of employment. the girl had floated into the Others of her sex who rushâ€" this hour tended to be bent ened. Her wholesome freshâ€" d out; and her appearance in and the girl was not the end of a few weeks lightly when he raised harm in that, surely. nes one would be a trifle paths would cross at e park or the other. Usu the first heavy thud of s McNatk salads, mayonnaiss, | Some had slept there all night and s, etc. Write for a copy. presented weird contortions. Others Nâ€"KEEN (CANADA) LIMITED â€" |lay flat with arms outstretched, like !F, 102 Amherst Street, the groaning wounded of a battleâ€" , fleld. Some were getting up lamely MONTREAL t | and crawling away to suffer the heat , of August in another place. | "All out of jobs," he assured her. eens | MeNabb had ons hand in a coat pocket and twisted his finger about M stm a nowspaper clipping which called u {or a "strong, bright, earnest, willing, ‘ableâ€"bodied young msn with good _ habits, who could play a trombone, "____,, to work in a paint shop." He could ISSUE No. 24â€"25. |coax a few notes from a harmonica, he white waist, picked up for ents somewhore, but which d as a creation of real her patentâ€"leather shoes, out of style, but which apâ€" im as pert; ard her indeâ€" ise, not snobbish, but just dependentâ€" these were all their turn; from the coun» use th ing she was whistling, y, the chorus of a merry lips screwed up devilishâ€" sparkling merrily. Nabb bhadn‘t noticed her iingâ€"nor the second. On ning, however, a buiging ig, a glimpse of her black atter of freckles as she ad caused him to single AT d ny AP B idly and looked it young MceNab, BY LEO NOBLE BURNETT the full charm of ning naturalâ€" onable young wWa Youth is sus was not old T B A. his i "Would you come a few minutes early toâ€"morrow?" She came! It was a summer morning of splashâ€" ing brightness. They sat on a green bench close to the walk opposite the | fountain. They had never sat toâ€" | gether before. It thrust them into a Edifferent retation. "â€" They. became !aware that they were sitting here in | the park, chatting commonplaces at a ‘r,idiculously early hour, for the sole and obvious purpose of enjoying the {compuny of each other. So, on the next morning, he delayâ€" ed purposely and let her meet him just as he entered the square. It was easy after that. Now and then he would add a scrap to his knowledge of her. She said her name was Saraeâ€"Sara Hatch. Yes, from the country, and proud of it. Where did she work? Oh, very well, if he had to knowâ€"in a ‘laundry office. Oliver took on a striped bow tie. There were many things which crept into his toilette that might have been omitted without sacrificing respectâ€" ability. Gradually, quietly, this seventhâ€" hour caprice, which the sophisticated Oliver regarded lightly at first, came to be a thing of his life. He actualâ€" ly found himself looking forward from one morning to the next. He believed that the big things in life are gaincd by taking chances; so he gambled one morning when they met at the fountain. She raised a finger in goodâ€"natured reproval. "There, didn‘t I tell you?" she chided him. She laughed genially. "You just wait. T‘ make up for it toâ€"morrow," were the words he caught. ish ogre, hard times, which laughed an impish laugh into the laundry and pipeâ€"organ businesses. Whatever it was, Oliver McNabb suddenly found his job hanging on a thread. The thread didn‘t hold. All in a day he was whisked from employed to unâ€" employed. Sara Hatch was a good office girl. She was as successful as any one the laundry ever had in convincing a flustered gentleman who wore size sixteen collars that he could easily adapt his neck to the fourteen and a half size which came in his packâ€" age. Nevertheless, in the latter part of the summer, the laundry manageâ€" ment saw fit to reduce its office force. Sara had to go! The clock boomed the first stroke of seven. "Pshaw!" They hurried away. It was more natural the next mornâ€" ing. The naturainess increased. It became a happy little creed. _ The fountain was the shrine seven the hour. He tried to wring from her permission to see her at night. Dance? No? She liked shows, didn‘t she? Her eagerness was obvious, but her refusal was uncompromising. A morning affair, she decreed. He comâ€" plied graciously. Somctimes they had but a few seconds together, someâ€" times a few minutes, cccasionally a quarter of an hourâ€"never longer than that. It was past seven when they left the park on a few mornings, making them both late. Perhaps that was the reason. Perhaps it was the fiendâ€" "Ars all of those people out of jobs?" she asked, indicating the prosâ€" trate forms of wretches scattered about beneath the park‘s maples. The girl‘s tragedy occurred a week following Oliver‘s. During that week he continged to make his morning trips at the usual time without apâ€" prising Sara of his discharge. He assumed that another job would be available immediately. At the end of a week, however, the gg-gvlty of the situation dawned ubon him. They wore both duly serious when they met at the fountainat ten minâ€" utes to seven. Both had been jobâ€" i J \> 4 The hulless variety of oat named| Liberty, originated at the Central Bxâ€"| perimental Farm, Ottawa, has boon| used for four years in experimental| work carried on by the Ontario Agu-‘ cultural and Experimental Union. The average yield ‘during the past twol years was 34.14 bushels to the acre,' standing in fourth position in the varie ‘ ties tested over the province. | Oliver also detoured. He bought a newspaper and sat on the front porch of his rooming house studying it until the old lady came out to serub and drove him away. It was just the incentive he needed. He passed this one up at the start. He tried them all, day after day. But there were six columns of "Situations Wanted," and a scraggly halflcolumn of "Help Wantedâ€"Male." There was a waiting list in the few cases where he might qualify. WANTEDâ€"Men to iearn the barâ€" ber‘s trade; the world needs more barbers. It offered no immediate remunera tion. Anyway, it didn‘t appeal. WANTEDâ€"Bright young man as a breadâ€"wagon driver; must speak three languages. He must hurry too. "Mr. Himmelâ€" blauâ€"â€"" But she was away. She went two blocks beyond the park and circled back to her roomâ€" ing place. She lay flat on her back on the sagging cot and heard Mrs. Riley yell across the alley to a neighâ€" bor that she was going to have cabâ€" bage for dinner. 1 The Irish have had no use for money. By working a few weeks in the year they could sustain life for the whole year, and this continued to be the conâ€" dition in Ireland up to 1846 when a disâ€" ease attacked and destroyed the crops with the result that during the famine the Irish migrated to America in large numbers and it became a habitâ€"which has lasted until the present day. These conlitions were aided by misâ€" government which gave the Irish a chance to be born fighters, while the intervals of peace left them free to dream of fairies and imps so that toâ€" day Ireland has more quaint songs and superstitions than all the rest of the All through modern history Ireland has been more or less poverty stricken, a condition brought about by the fact that the chief food of the Irish has alâ€" ways been potatoes. One acte of poâ€" tatoes praduces twice as much food as one acre of wheat and at less expense and less trouble not only in the field, but in the cooking. As a natural result there has been no reason for the Irish to labor hard and as a natural sequence the populaâ€" tion of Ireland has always increased twice as rapidly as that of England. This brings about a surplus of labor with the result that, as in Indian and other countries of a similar nature, very few of the people have ever beâ€" come possessed of much wealth. And It May Be Good Advice. 1st Ladyâ€""And why are you getting a divorce, dear?" 2nd Ladyâ€""My doctor advises a change of husbands, you know." but was sure that a trombone was beyond him. "One must have experience to get a job, I suppose," she platitudinized. "And experience to get a job," he supplied. world combined The World‘s Greatest Motorcycle. 1 Some real bargains to offer in Used Machines. List gladly mailed upon Walter Andrews, 346 Yoage St., Toronto Sara fussed with her handbag, which contained a want ad clipping asking for a woman with thirtyâ€" eight bust measure to set as demonâ€" strator. Sara was but a thirtyâ€"six. No, it could never be done. The clock struck sevon. She must hurry, she said. Mr. Gruensfe.der couldn‘t stand it to have his employes late. Discharged a girl in the imangling department yesterday for that very thing. Lovely man to work for, but such a temper somatimes! Potatoes Make Ireland Poor. Harley Davideon Motorcycle WANTEDâ€"Men to fill thousands of easy jobs; $85 to $250 a month for the right parties. Well, maybe it was true. WANTEDâ€"Active young man with good appearance for sellâ€" ing; must be a hustler;.Aâ€"No. 1 line. Gas irons. 2( ooom @ & *L \ "Q , Â¥ L us CR Mb Bmers: 5i9 4 20e h aps | o _ â€" onl e , (To be concluded.) sure that a trombone was "Liberty" Oats‘ oc ds | whigh is cut in one with the dress, The _dzgocfiï¬c?-?s†’r'né%e'ï¬ blousé sï¬gï¬ï¬y at . | the sides, in the new manner, by beâ€" a ; ing slashed in and gathcred to the top ,; | of the belt.. Plainâ€"color faille ribbon ;. finishes the round neck and short le‘kimono sleeves, after which the side ,ofeeams are joined, leaving only the , |hem to be turned up to the desired ,. length. Cut in sizes 16, 18 and 20 | years. Size 18 years requires 2% =| yards of 86â€"inch material if made with iahort sleeves. Price 20 cents. HOW. TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plainâ€" ‘ | ly, giving number and size of such | patterns as you want. Enclose 20¢ in ) istamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap |it carefully) for each rumber, and | address your order to Pattern Dept., , | Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Adeâ€" " {laide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by | return r9ail PLAITS ADD FLARE TO PLAIN CONTOURS. The plaited treatment is considered especially attractive in this frock of summery voile, inasmuch as the garâ€" ment retains the straight silhouette, while a flared movement is achieved when the wearer is in motion. The most attractive feature of the frock shown here, No. 1081, is that the patâ€" tern is cut all in one niece. The plaits are laid in place first and stitched to the lower edge of the sideâ€"beit, MEN‘S AND YOUTHS‘ PAJAMAS The man who "wears them" will appreciate the comfort and style of the pajamas here sketched, if made of the new plain color imported Engâ€" lish broadcloths or striped Fnench cambrics. _ The pattern is cut for centreâ€"front closing and breast pocket, or French neck with side closing, and shaped band forming trimming around meck and down isideâ€"front. Large braid frogs and buttons are used to fasten the coat. No. 1110 is cut in sizes 84, 36, 88,40, 42, 44 and 46 inches breast. Size 38 requires 5% yards of 36â€"inch material. Price 20 cents. Minard‘s Liniment for Backache. Te Toronto Mossitat for Incurables, !n effilation wilh Dellevue and AlMicd Mospitais New York City effers a three years‘ Cours® ¢f Training to young woemen, having ths required educstion, and Geairous of becoming nurses. This Mospitai has scopted the eight» hour aystem. . The pupils rective uniforms of the School, a monthly allowance and travellinz expenses to and from New York. For furiner Information epply to ihe Supsrintendent NURSES 4 > 9t < O 4 .7 i @ 9 7\43 * \%":flih 55? C MRk L Tas‘ 4 * ... Sxclusive Puttens FASHIONS Cocoanut Puip as Milk for Use in Tropics. With the discovery that the pulp of young cocoanuts contains practically all the nourishing qualities to be found in milk, scientists are experimenting to find out if the substance can be used as a practical substitute for the liquid in the tropics, says Popular Mechanics. They plan to extract the moisture from the cocoanut and mix the dry remainâ€" der with milk from the water buffalo, which is said to be more nutritious than cow‘s milk. a If any little word of mine can make a life the brighter. If any little song of mine can make a heart the lighter â€"God help me speak the little word. And take my bit of singing and drop it in some lonely vale to set the echoes ringing! The new discovery shows, for exâ€" ample, why the people of the cold north eat blubber and animal oils, while people of the south use olive and vegetable oils. _ Animal ofls, it has been found, have properties that are possessed by the sun‘s rays. In the Arctic regions sunlight is comparaâ€" tively rare, and so fat is eaten in its place. Vegetable fats, on the other hand, do not contain this property. Uncle Levi Zink says the people he is sorry for are the beaus of the girls the Prince of Wales smiled at. Stumbling stones of difficulty in your way? â€" Nonsense! Some one says, "Difficulties are stones out of which God‘s houses are built." Make use of your difficulties! Builld them into the foundation of your character. Wall out discouragement with them. Make of them stepping stones to your garden A young man inherited from his father a large tract of rocky land on condition that. with funds provided in the will he build a house on the ground and Mve there for five years. If in that time he succeeded in making &A living from the place, it was his; if he failed, the property went to some ome else. Until recently no one was able to say just why bread and butter are alâ€" ways associated as articles of our diet. It has now been shown that there is such a substance as an "antiâ€"vitamin," or good property, which nullifies the influence of the bad property in bread and other cereals. TORONTO That father knew his son, he knew that his boy needed just that prod to his pride and ambition to make a man of him. The son built the house and then set about making a living. . He gathered up the rocks and with them built his chimney and his fireplace. He walled his garden with them; he laid his walks with them; he sold tons of them. For the first two or three years he made a living out of the stones. Then when the top soil was cleared and in a workable condition he went to farming. Now he is one of the most prosperous farmers in his neighborâ€" hood. _ of success! Sheâ€""Say no moreâ€"I‘m beside my self now!" His Proper Association. He (to angry helpmate)â€"*"The only person you‘re fit to be with is yourâ€" self!" ,@ â€"A ; ‘ l. Why Bread and Butter? Hard water injures the hands. "Snowflake" softens water, dis. solves grease and quickly cleans greasy kitchen utensils. There‘s nothing to equal "Snowflake" for keeping the kitcl'\:;n sink clean. mm e y 3 es for Snowllake m !tltoh‘;n. Bsathroom, Laundry ; POoTSs and PANS and $INEKS _.â€"» Man is His Own Star. Mn is his own star; and the soul that can Render an honest and a perfect man Commands all light, all influence, all Now 1 Man‘s 1 1 own 1 To him Now I am young and a My blood goes mad to A brown girl pass me That fliles melodiously. fate; Nothing to him falls early, or too late. Our acts our angels are, or good or ill, Our fatal shadows that walk by us still. Wisdom Cometh With the Years. Now I am young and credvious, My heart is quick to bleed At courage in the tremulous, Slow sprouting of a seed. Let me be lavish of my tears And dream that false is true; Though wisdom cometh with t The barren days come, too. For First Aldâ€"Minard‘s Liniment. Nothing is lost untii you‘ve lost your courage. ; Also the SMP Enameled i Drain Board "*Sweer Mrrar Progucers co Tamt $12. BEest Complete White enameled Armco Tron, strong, rigid, very handy; also unique value. Fit anugly to sink. A real plumbing sensation. Price includes all fittinge. Sold by plumbers, hardware stores, or write direct to New SMP Enameled Sink Price Paremid:~ € ared children to care for their toeth] Give them Wrigley‘s. It removes food particles from the teeth. Sutngthsns the %‘ums. Combats acid mouth. Refreshing and beneficial! i 7 222. *A ‘efter every meal" i, coated with purest s!: White mel. . Centre drain; with or without holes. Price includes all fittings. am lack MOWTriaL TORONTO WINNIPEG 184A SDNMONTO® . WANCOUVEP CALGARY 2 o stitch I 1 that asked young Price $6_9_9 g and stab : â€"Countee P. Cullen ib me would sensitive, ie through; 1d not give : fool fo ) see like a d to dove the years iove "On the evening of Aay 8, | Fraser mnd I were playing a gam backgammon by the light of a po ful electric lampâ€"a swinging o whose shade, also a reflector (thi a point of importance), concentr | tife rays on our table. I "We were playing beside a la ‘open window. _Bui this window ’ï¬ued with solid bamboo guards w gave us protection from the wild be | outside. "The number of people wl every year because they do : how to make an epportune mo tainly considerable." said Lov he stroked the head oi a you boy with a face as brown as mon. %, "As he spoke these words the | which bad been left half open, rec« a gentle push, and what happene the doorway froze us to our marr "It was no more nor no less, ; mon. than the king of the jung! royal tiger, in the fullness of his turity, with a massive head, sp}« teeth and claws like daggers, ca; of mangling a man as easily as a claws mangle a mouse. "It was, I assure you, a frig moment. ~God knows that Praser thoroughly familiar with tigers who had the deaths Gf a dozen o[ | on his conscience. * ‘You have disgraceful luck‘ I pushing away the checkers. * over, you don‘t deserve it " ‘And why don‘t I deserve asked. part chance plays in such thi on May 8, 1892, in the bingal« friend, James Fraser, on the the jungle. "On the evening of MNay " ‘Because you play so carel« "Ho began to laugh and sai a superior air: " ‘When you are in luck yo deserts you "The tiger looked at us, a prised, I think, by the un: appearance of the house, as ly by the lamp. However, : were gathered on the tab‘ not greatly disturb him. "Evidently be had hesitai ready his lip curled and it expected that he would leap a thunderbolt. see nert agility & "I bhave no way of meas time which elapsed between : arrival and the event, I!t : been something like thirty We â€" were _ spellbound, gpeechless. Our jungle expo: absolutely useless to us. "At the very moment crouched a small hand child, grasped the la» light blinded the big ; the more so that the : was held at the corre lamp. moved â€" toward enormous muzzle. The step backward, then a be found him=elf short dor, while the boyâ€"this then only seven years o ability to outwit the lor. and to save from death ! ers, rich in experience : in this crisis did not kn fend themselves any they had been miserable Does the Atlantie Ocean r lost continent? Le Plongeon ciphered the hieroglyphics a ruins of Yucatan, in Central came upon Inscriptions des catastrophe which submerge Atlantean continent, legends have survived in iiterature earliest times. It may be that this catastroph rise to the equally widespread be! the Food which ¢sstroyed the eci habitants of our planet. Certai: that the American continent, a)t called the New World, is geolog the oldest land on the globe, =: monuments found in the jung} Yucatan were ancient when the mide of Egypt wore built. The catastrophe is supposed t< taken place about 9000 B.C., © that time there was a highlyâ€"07£: Clvilization in Yucatan, which seem to be a remmant of the io# tinert. .It is not a very large co yet, in spite of the great dificul! exploration, the ruins of 17° have been discovered. Some of are so extensive that they mus! contained half a million inh«} and it is possible that the py: found in the jungle gave the pa‘ a much later date to the Phar» Feypt. I would rather loseâ€"A litt ness than the approval of my 0 science â€"â€"A little:time from work tha companionship of my boy. â€"An election than to make prov I knew I coulid not keep â€"â€"Faith in people‘s genlus tha their good intextions. â€"My purse than be the on» stole It. =â€"â€"Any thing else than my {} humanity. â€"â€"«Amy salary than my right ! press an homest conviction. ity and dexterit Thus, gentlemer was never more s1 Sentence Sermons A Lost Continent. A MANEATER By J. H. Rosny, Aine Translated by W. L. MePhers: w a y Mr : you are in luck y. vay. Otherwise y« close shorily yf w +1 Lt 0w U 1 th perish he gA 36 V w wrap} the be l "Nj ha ta #t Strawherry P 04 eS.IVa‘