\â€" SALADA" FA Healthful exercise for the te and a spur to digestion. A ic iasting | refreshment, soothing nerves and siomach. their guns; now they cbu;n_tho dents In their fenders. BJ MO N m * ~a $%. & fo th @1 dressed spec biles wide W wouldn‘t rather wait and get mobile when she‘s twenty. "Stop, Look and LAsten" would be all Fight, except that the brakes won‘t hold, the windshield is dirty and the Jit rattles so you can‘t hear. H at T Th D¢ T E: A. 664 for that reason is never sold in bulk. Your grocer sells this delicious blend. Try SALADA. 1$9VUE No. 36â€"‘25, When Exposed to Air 13€ Ing ad v pla H The Stingy Man. iis daughter asks him for an i cone he asks her if she we re Â¥ sky Â¥ to see how far your car fore it needs repairs is to i friend. ntion re getting t XI D tea loses its strength and flavor. ‘count tells of an under age that was badly smash auto accident. No doubt !l do some rehearsing beâ€" out for a drive again. in ¢} tunre for ou in your car that the engine affords benefit as well as pleasure, ut ga n it," said the dear litâ€" chauffeur thanked bher h e signboards and coming to." Polarine." of HMank Ford‘s new the birds will have count the notches in s me. So was I to stop automobiles nanufacture automoâ€" miles per hour when called the "Baby a bouncing baby! in W r€ MEAL ke lifte serfously," _autoist as he hit ‘andering Jew is oking for a place or the man who park where only & to be more People arao now lue, it may ofâ€" and it always & lot of ground ‘e know you are ly for a party? the teeth «_A long» uction part at an auto ast T see The substitution of other properties in the place of ons or more of the hydrogen atoms has been the basis for much exporimenting. The possibiliâ€" ties contingent upon thisstudy of comâ€" pounds are immense. A thousand difâ€" ferent substances, Including every varlety of dye and a large number of drugs, have had their origin in benâ€" zene. The vast number of derivative disâ€" coveries, and the consequent wideâ€" spread influence of benzene, is typical of the discoverer. ‘ Keep Minard‘s Liniment in the house. atom potnt A hundred years ago Michael Faraâ€" day discovered benzene. Of all his disâ€" coveries, sclentists consider that of benzene to be the most important. The centenary was recently celebrated. At the time of Faraday‘s discovery, gas was compressed into iron sylinders and supplied in the same way as oxyâ€" gen is toâ€"day. With the natural curtâ€" osity of a scientist, Faraday examined the gas and so discovered benzeneâ€"a , Grapes are often prescribed for peoâ€" ]ple with poor blood, while oranges are excellent food for people with inâ€" 'fluenzn. So, too, are lemons, while both oranges and lemons are valuable | laxatives. the gas and so discovered substznce composed of six bon and six parts bydrogen The actual form of joine the carbor and the hydro Pineapples are also valuable as diâ€" gestives, for they contain a ferment which digests certain foods such as meat, cheese and white of egg. Bananas are admirable, especially for people who cannot digest starchy foods in the ordinary way. The fruit must, however, be very carefully chewâ€" ed and converted into pulp before beâ€" Ing swallowed. _ Apples are particularly helpful food.' Because of the valuable acid apples contain, cidersis constantly advocated as a regular drink for those who have rheumatism or gout. Apples, too, are good for a sluggish lver. f As with every other fruit, they are better eaten raw than cooked, for heat destroys the: vital qualities stored in the fruit. should be When the fruit acids are absorbed Into the blood they are transformed inâ€" to carbonates of lime, potash and soda, which make the blood alkaline, as it Another great advantage in maklngI one meal a day of fruit is that most fruits contain valvable salts of lime, prtash and soda which unite with the| alkalis of the body, forming neutral' salts. It is only necessary to avold the foods clashing by making the whole meal one of fruit to find that, Instead of causing indigestion, fruit will tend to cure it, for many fruits contain in their jJuices a ferment which aids diâ€" gestion. digestion products period, n | ous kinds fruit. Bimilarly, actd frui cooked green vegetab hearty meat meal will mentation. Fruit and bread will often disagree by setting up fermentation, the yeast acting on the.sugar and starch in the There are people, it is true, who say fruit gives them indigestion and acidâ€" ity of the,stomach. This is certainly possible If fruit is eaten with the wrong foods. Fruit has none of these drawbacks On the contrary, it has nothing but ad vantages. During recent years doctors have come to the conclusion that the quanâ€" tity of bodyâ€"building food represented by meat, fish, fowl, cheese and eggs we; eat is excessive for our needs after we have reached our full growth. , This excess imposes a strain on the digestion and overloads the body with products which, acting through a long period, may produce diseases of varlâ€"| We are constantly being urged to eat more fruit and there is good reason for it. It must be a comfort to be rich enough to keep the old car, despite its decrepitude. Some people are like Fordsâ€"it takes a good crank to get them started. Say it with four wheel brakes save the flowers. roadâ€"hogs never brings down the price of pork., Why do they list Ford sedans under the heading of pleasure vehicles? Make Fruit Your Food Benzene‘s Birth. acld fruits eaten after ables or after a 11 also cause ferâ€" car "No!" he said, making his mind up decisive‘y. "No!" They‘d make him give over the farm at ones, _but at least he wou.d have pesce. "I‘m goâ€" ing to live with Lucy." Old Theron had a camsoâ€"clear picâ€" ture of himseif, joining Ela‘s moek husband as the target of his chi‘â€" dren‘s acerbity. "When?" Ela impalsd O‘:d Theron with the question, and before he could move she thrust at him again. "But of course, father, you‘il come to live with Sam and me." This last was her countermine against any unâ€" seen menace in the plan of Lucy and Nicho‘:as. Old Theron saw Lucy‘s round proâ€" file lift in repressed mirth. Sh> testâ€" ed the dishwater in a broad unconâ€" corned silence. She was rot above plaguing her aunt and uncle. If sh> had start‘ied them now, she would, it was imp'.icit, say nothing to put thom at ease. |_ _ "I made it myself," Lucy replied. \In her young voice Old Theron deâ€" | tected a g‘eam of amusement as Elia 'g!anced down at her own less satisâ€" ]factarily fitting costume. * | _ But then, Old Theron reflected, ’Ella hadn‘t inherited her mother‘s | ability to wear clothes. It had been ,Marion, and it was Marion‘s Lucy, | who had Libby‘s trick of making herâ€" | self pretty in anything. l His son and daughter whec‘ed questioningly upon Lucy. What trick, their suspicious gaze demanded, was back of this? It was very plain that they feared a move to block them from the farm. and "1 guess you ain‘t heard yet that Lucy and Nick are going to get marâ€" ried and take over the Leniban place." Anything O%d Theron thought, to turn Ella away from censure. ‘‘Made it yourself!" Disbelief was pointed. Ella turned accusingly to Old Theron. More extravagance. ’ For O‘d Theron Ella had other | manners. "Father, dear!" she cried, | and running forward késsed him twice. | "Many, many happy returns of the l da'y." % 7. cma Ella burned a dull red from Ella had taken a second look at Lucy. "A new dress!" she said with a surprise plainly conveying disapâ€" proval. Inwardly Old â€" Theron repeated Nicholas‘ grimace. He turned to Sam‘s loose handshake and sour, "We‘ll, pa!" | and me, we both want the farm to go on down from kin to kin." That was the second key to Old Theron‘s bitterness. This land which | he had made fruitful, the home he had |rm’sed, would pass into alien hands. | He was swept with such regret as can be felt only by one who sees the beâ€" loved work of his hands facing disâ€" aster. If only he dared to stand up against Sam and Ella If only he did not know so well that Lawyer Pollock] would trip him up! "Let them have the place," Lucy, said. * "Let ‘em have it and go sit on the| point of a tack," Nicho‘as advised.‘ Both spoke with gfreater heat beâ€" cause just then Sam‘s automobile rolled into the yard from Indian‘ Point. | ’ "If I give you the place," he said gloomily, turning his face to Lucy‘s restful hand, "they‘ll put up that story to get it away. And whether I do or rot, they‘re ready to ask to be put in as trustees. They‘ve as much as to‘d me that I can‘t prove to a court I‘m fit to have the run of proâ€" perty. They"l get that Lawyer Po:â€" lock to make a fool of me. And once they get their bands on the pace, Lucy, you‘re done. Ten suits won‘t make them let go. 1 "And as soon as I‘m gone, they‘il sell. That ain‘t what I‘ve worked for: over fifty years. Your grandmother Just the same, Old Theron refectâ€" ed, the libel, however absurd, was ominous. He recalled Ela‘s deft alâ€" lusions to suits which had stripped heirs of property because their kinâ€" ship was questioned. nod,. E.Ja allowed Lucy the greeting when the girl smiled om the table she was clearing. offered a noncommittal, "We.l, INHERITANCE PART II. BY DELOS W LOVELACE. her ‘"This is the gown, mad anteo a fit." "What is the price?" "Two hundred dollars." "I also guarantee a fit 1 band kears that." Farmerâ€""Waal, I‘ve beard a ning account of it." ~Summer Boarderâ€""I supposs . you know the histcry of the battle of Bull Run ?" Whaswa,, (ope _1 33| T006 o ARETSS : W iEne Overys woman:â€" must include in her ;.I Theron abruptiy. ’wardrobe the oneâ€"piece tailored gown ; | _ "What are you planning to do Withl that has become as much of a nocesâ€" ‘ithe homestead when Lucy and Nich-,sity as her houseâ€"dress, It gives ‘fo!as go?" lslender lines and has a wellâ€"dressed ‘| ~Old Theron frowned. Pistois right| as we‘l as a business air. In these ‘ back at his nose! Trust her to see) days of popular downâ€"town luncheons l‘the chance they would have with him‘ and teas combined with the shopping ‘jalone, away from the farm! |'tour, madam always looks chic in hor '] For two cents, he thought indigâ€"| oneâ€"piece tailored costums. The picâ€" _ nantly, he‘d show them both. But hib‘]ture shows No. 1059 make up in dark , courage flickered and died before the| kasha, with lighter kasha used for |haunting picture of himself harried | collar, vestee, cuf trimmings, pocket by that PolSock; made to look like a‘pipings and buttons. The gown coses | foot. with one large button and bound butâ€" ' ‘"Why, I guess it‘ll be best to do tonhole. A setâ€"in pocket at the right | what you want." He put it that way front, from which a crisp handkerâ€" ! to save his pride. chief protrudes, adds another interest |, EZa‘s face, and Sam‘s grew rigid|to this comfortable dress. _ Wools, ‘in an effort to hide triumph. It was| heavy cottons and linens lend themâ€" |plain they had not expected so easy| selves to this useful design. It is |a victory. !splendid for the woman of large proâ€" ’ "I suppose we might as well sett‘e, portions, as we‘l as for the more sienâ€" everything toâ€"day then," Ella mused.}| der figure. Cut in sizes 38 to 48 | "We‘re going right to the courthouse.| inches bust. Size 42 requires 5%' What do you say, Sam?* yards of 36â€"inch material. Width at ' Sam‘s grin was sharp with admiraâ€" ) lower edge of skirt in medium size [tion as he agreed. There was another| 1% yards. Price 20 cents. exchange of triumphant glances. ’ Our Fashion Book, illustrating the The automobile stopped in front of| newest and most practical styles, will ; Indian Point‘s redâ€"brick courthouse. be of interest to every home dressâ€"| Tommy Fitzgerald wa‘s waiting. maker. Price of the book 10 cents "Gluck‘s waiting for you, Mr. Garâ€" the copy. Each copy includes one! butt," he said, coming forward. coupon good for five cents in the pur-!' Gluck was John Tait‘s attorney. chase of any pattern. "Pollock‘s in that case, too, ain‘t| +\ 4 > % he?" Sam leaned up to speak to the | HIW TO ORDER PATTERNS, deputy. | _ Write your name and address plainâ€" "In up to his ears." Tommy spat.| ly, giving number and size of such "Him and Israc!." patt:rns as you want. Enclose 20¢ in (To be concluded.) stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap ‘ PSRA it carefully) for each nuember, and address your order to Pottern Dept., II TL V ~I RRRfem | |Wison Publishing Co., 13 West Age 1 For two cents, he thought indigâ€" nantly, he‘d show them both. But his , courage flickered and died before the | haunting picture of himself harried { by that Polock; made to look like a | fool. Sam‘s grin wa's'sharp with admiraâ€" tion as he agreed. There was another exchange of triumphant glances. "1 suppose we might as well sett‘e everything toâ€"day then," Ella mused. ‘"We‘re going right to the courthouse. What do you say, Sam? EZa‘s face, and Sam‘s grew rigid in an effort to hide triumph. It was plain they had not expected so easy a victory. "What are you panning to do with the homestead when Lucy and Nichâ€" olas go?" Old Theron frowned. Pistois right back at his nose! Trust her to see the chance they would have with him alone, away from the farm! The machine was barely out into the road when Ella turned to Old Theron abruptiy. pic "How sgilly!" Ella protested. "Faâ€" ther isn‘t fit to leave the farm." "What does Tait want?"" Sam deâ€" manded suspiciously. Ella came swiftly worward, catchâ€" ing at the proffered document. > "A what?" she frowned. "For father? What for?" "Just a summons," Fitzgerald said reassuringly, putting it in Old Therâ€" on‘s hands. "To testify at the Tait suit." 3 Before she finished speaking, the fat young deputy was at the door. "Got a summons for you, Mr. Garâ€" butt," he announced with easy forâ€" mality. "It‘s that Tommy Fitzgerald, that deputy sheriff," Lucy murmured over her shoulder after a glance through the window. He drew back, for their eyes were like highwaymen‘s pistols. Unexpectâ€" ed‘y the pistols, so to speak, were withdrawn. Sam and Ella faced about to the door as a rattling autoâ€" mobile turned into the barnyard, and a high rolling voice called, "Hi! Mr. Garbutt at home?" meager neck to the high pompadour under her black hat. Sam lowered at Lucy. Then Ella looked at Sam and Sam at Ella as though with the muâ€" tual thought, ‘What about his proâ€" perty?" As one they turned upon Old Theron. is the gown, madame. I guarâ€" its Will Be Mutual, when my husâ€" run |TDCm~) equivaient to â€" the wholo o‘ ‘ England, less Yorkshire und Devon. Minard‘s Liniment World‘s La:g_ett Farm. Sir Sidney Kidman, the Australian cattle king, owns what must be the world‘s largest farm. It embrace; more than 40,000 square miles, an area roughly equivalent toâ€" the wholo n*° Dear God, upon this May o heat Make a drop of mercy creep hearts of those Who wield the lash above the ed backs. Who vivisect and drug, or k food and drink; Would maul and jolt about an, e C i Ne ue TV ; NOESC 1 laide St., Toronto. Patterns sen return maii ONTARIO ARCH TORONTO THE SLENDERIZING TAILORED GOWN. A Little Prayer. Rinso is the only soap you need on Washday ‘Dissolves comp * Soaks dirt out upon this Â¥lay of etifiing Rinses thoroughl used by Physicians. creep into the keep from harnessâ€" t by a ~=Sxeer Merac Propucrs co " > mowTréiat Toronto winniPpto Price, complete, $6.00 For sale by plumbers and hard ware stores throughout the country, or Selling waste paper enabled the Lonâ€" don County Council to save the rateâ€" payers £287 in a recent three months. Delicious! "Think, my friends,‘ ‘he said, "of a poor neglected wife, all alone in the great dreary house, rocking the cradle of her sleeping babe with one foot and wiping away her tears with the other!" What a Sight. The preachem was a young man and quite nervous, but interesting. He was making an eloquent plea for home life, and was descanting eloquently on the evils of the club, telling his congregaâ€" tion that married men in particular should spend their evenings at home with their wives and children. Why get along without a kitchen sink any longer? Hers is a new SMP Enameled Ware Sink, the very latest, Made of rustâ€"resisting Armco Iron, with three coats of purest white enamel, samae as on bath tubs. Size 20" x 30" x 6" deep, with 12" back, complete with straincr, brackets, all fittings and directions for setting up. we . } C cinfiniiarte tssn tinns hss ic es s § 2 Price, complete, $12.00, When first introduced into England these oranges were generally sold as Maltese, but the red pigment being so startlingly different from that of the ordinary orange, the name of "blood" was soon adopted. The coloring, however, is not reguâ€" lar, and it often happens that while the main crop of a Maltese tree may be true "bloods," odd oranges from the same stock will have a pulp of the orâ€" dinary yellow shade. One variety of orange, which originâ€" ally came from Malta, though it has now been introduced elsewhere, has the peculiarity of a pulp generally of a deep red color, rather like that of blood. Put the spicy deliciousâ€" ness of Mustard into your salads and sandwiches â€" sauces and savories. Serve it freshly made â€" rixed with cold water with your meats at breakfast, lunch and dinner â€" use it in your cooking. It makes everything more tasty and aids digestion. Our new Cook Book tells you how tlo!-o Mutud#m-:\; and appeâ€" t w or + It‘s FREE, ** S OE COLMANâ€"KEEN (Canada) LIMITED Dept. 1F, 102 Amberst $t. Montreal en aids digestion The "Blood" Orange. Saved by Waste. ere is a new Sh_ap e ‘Sink, the very rustâ€"resisting Armco ‘Hecond Scientistâ€""Ah! I a14 not know you claimer .so close a relationâ€" First Scientist (vléwln: monkeys in ceage)â€""It is apparent to meâ€"â€"" tails of what occurs at a marriage ceremony in the Philippine Islanis When two Negritos marry, the whole 'trlbe is assembled, and the afianced | pair climb two trees growing close to | each other. The branches of the troes are then bent by the elders til! the heads of the couple moeet, and when the bride‘s and bridegroom‘s heads have thus met, the marriage is ~doâ€" clared legal. 1 APwoline t i. Pb ts d tacscaes T i 'the fair woman® being minus the ring itself. In this case, therefore, instead of sitting down to the breakfast, back the couple hurried to the church, and were thus practically married twice on the same day. A very uncommon kind of marriage was once celebrated in Cumberland. Both parties were deaf and dumb, They held Prayer Books while a friend pointed out the different passages in the service as the clergyman spoke them, and they made the customary reâ€" sponses in the deaf and dum»b alphaâ€" bet. After the party had left the chut s It was discovered that the clergyn‘An had forgotten these words, and, of course, in their absence, the brideâ€" groom would be relieved of his most serious obligations, to say nothing of oultryâ€"Farming of Long Ago. As is common knowledge, it someâ€" times happens that this little article is forgotten, and there have been cases where the doorkey of the church has had to do duty; but it is not often that that portion of the marriage service, "With this ring 1 thee wed," etc., is omitted. Yet there is an instance of this on record. It occurred at Liver pool. Now a word regarding that allâ€"imâ€" portant little article â€" the wedding ring. _ The Consul filled in a blank certifâ€" cate, which was forwarded by him to the authorities in Italy, who, in the presence of the parish priest, exhibited it befort the bride, who in turn afâ€" fixed her signature, accepting it as her action. The marriage became perfectâ€" ly binding, although, of course, the newlyâ€"married couple could not posâ€" sibly live together for quite a little time owing to the distance they were apart. Finally, let us But possibly the most unconventionâ€" al and peculiar marriage ceremony on record was that performed years ago by the Consular Agent at Cincinnati. The bridegroom was a wellâ€"toâ€"do resiâ€" dent of that town, and the bride lived in Italy. When the wedding was perâ€" formed the contracting partiecs were thousands of miles apart. There was a Colonel Grover once who married an American giantess. He, too, stood 6ft. Tin. The pair, when they appeared in public, used to reâ€" ceive as much as £150 a week. Marriages of Freaks. In travelling shows the freaks who help to draw the money from the pubâ€" lic often intermarry, and it is not an unusal thing to find the fat man marâ€" rying the skeleton woman, and the tatâ€" tooed man the bearded lady, but someâ€" times two like freaks marry. But having receftly heard a good deal about elderly men marrying young girls, let us start our list of extraordinâ€" ary weddings with one that occurred in a Surrey town some years ago, when all the old fo‘k seemed to run amok. In this instance an old man of seventyâ€" eight years of age (he had been a solâ€" dier) led to the altar an aged damsel who had herself seen seventyâ€"two sumâ€" mers. There were three bridesmaids, respectively aged sixty, sixtyâ€"cight, and seventy years. All of them wore spinsters. The best man was seventyâ€" five, so their combined ages brought the total up to nearly four centuries and a quarter. | Generally speaking, the idea of a wedding is the conventional one, but there are cases on record where the tastes of some people have not agreed with this. ‘Indeed, there have been some yery eccentric snd very romantic marriage ceremopies solemnized. Men and women, the very opposite in charâ€" acter and disposition, have been united sometimes the union proving a happy one, sometimes the reverse. . The Wedding Ring Omitted CURIOUS MARRIAGE A Parent. E just give a few de w , from fathâ€" ‘mire of the vhich opens r vaults, in £ is done. h vault, and 1ro W