* y * J s # & ’ a < $ 4 * _ jegst I There‘s a Treat | for you and your children in | the Peppermint sugar jacket | and another in the Peppere â€" | mintâ€"flavored gam inside. , mt es * Arranged in a straight line, the railways of the wor.d woy!d reach to the moon ~and back againâ€"477,836 copy. HOW TO ORDER raTTERNs. Write your name and address plainâ€" ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20¢ in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number and address your order to Pattern Dept., Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Ade laide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by recturn mail f A new frock of chic simplicity, suitâ€" able for both street and afternoon wear, and developed in back creze watin with long ts and ‘ower aleave section of contmasting color georgetta, There ars gathers at each shoulder where the tack comes over,to join the front in yok> effect. The lower edge of the bodic= front is gracefully curvâ€" ed and joined to a twoâ€"piece skirt flnr-‘ ed at the lower edge. The twoâ€"piece | weeves #rs a new fashion note nnd' may be gathered into a narrow wristâ€" . band, or left loogs and s‘ashed at the| back. No. 135M is in sizes 36, 38, 40, | 42, 44 and 46 incheos bust. Size 38 requires 3% yards 39â€"inch mte.'ial,' and % yard cortrasting for tie and aleoves. 20 conts, ‘ Our Fashion Book, ilustrating the newest anc most practical gtyles, will | bo. of interest to every home dmo-l SMART FROCK REGISTERING PARIS INFLUEXNCE, 1889 © No. 37â€"‘20. is the outstanding leader in Canada. By Virtue of Merit Price of the book 10 cents the "SALADA" Utmost value in long Laâ€"sâ€"t.iâ€"nâ€"g delight. EVERY MEAL HERE haven‘t put in any goép!" â€" _ "Aw, AddlestJcks!" said the boy, "we‘re going for a boliday!" Jobuny was packing hi- bag to go camping wpqh bis mother came in. bevettnebtediii. .ccmncmmedecd Minard‘s Liniment fo bruises. mountain ash treee As theâ€"twilight deepens in the perâ€" vading August haze, and the bouleâ€" vard darkens, the row of ash trees is faintly etched again=st the western sky. Off in the deep, mauve valley the vividly red sun floats in the mist. â€" It is a silken silhouette in crimson. It is a toy balloon strayed from the hand of a baby giant and sinking behind the tips of the purpling mountatns that hover over the mountain ash. But it is also in the dusk an inflated scarlet berry tossed into the sky from tha Houses that border along the bouleâ€" vard are screened by the serried rank of the ash trees that form a lane into the tity> A few of the ruby Jewels of the treed have fallen from theéir setting upen the gray walk. N g A leafy filagree waves around the berriea as the green robe of the tree quivers in the breeze that strays into the tranquil ening scene and touchâ€" ea the ruby jewels. ~"" uJ . NO .10 An&t: i The degu.tory converutf& was carâ€" * «yer «se {ried on.by ~Miss Varney and Fisher. Mounhin Ash. is }Mary hard‘y apoke, and scarceiy Searlet berries shine upon the trees | touched the tempting dishes set beâ€" through the August haze hovering , fore her'; she felt as if every mouthâ€" over the northwestern city which nestâ€" ful wou‘d choke her. She .wondered lea amid the sturdy evergreens. They | th’t the e‘mov‘ion of her a’chmg heart are like small red ballsz on a Christmas , was not c.nny.ata_.mped in her face. tree. The amber berries of the mounâ€"| _ She was b’-‘i':!m"'-! t:y u;:;y‘::g tain ash have been turned by the now as never ore w e: awiftly advancifig season into crimson " so hated the ordimu:y sub'urban Ai{e he rlllnter;- t)h‘ h!iu b(;ver the boulevar]d." had bezg hiorc:t'idto)}:::: :';::: :oi: n‘:tl; It was July en the berries were pale mage. & cou.d sy and wan, l&lll and yellow, but the = the way his face had‘ always lit up at ripening August days have gtven tbe: mention of the Red Grange. .She, who fruit the rich shades of the red apple. | had been there but a few weeks, loved A leafy filagree waves around the it a‘ready. . How much more, t!len. berries as the green robe of the tree| must he have cared who had lived quivers in the breeze that strays into | there all his life? | the minds, Here or above; be true at any price! says Browning; and in another place: "Well, now ; there‘s nothing in~nor out 0‘ the world ‘oo«l'l'_popt truth. When.we come to*#eal values who will say "No" to that: pass: Benjamin Franklin hbad a saying, drawn from some sad experience of his boyhood, that it was possible to "pay too much for your whistle." You want that whistle; you want it badly ; you covet it with every fibre of your beingâ€"but the price! "There‘s the For the truly honest man there is only one way to take, and that‘s the right one. He never thinks to debate with himself the pros and cons of takâ€" ing the wrong one. He decides on prinâ€" ciple and not on expediency. even though I may never :ei to wind ward of the law. The moment 1 begh-x to wonder whether it will pay me to be an honest man or a crook, I am already a crook, L am not concerned to inquire wheth=‘ er honesty is the best policy or the workt, bocause if it is a policy at all , it is not honest, and If it is honesty Itf knows nothing of policy. Where doâ€"l cent people are concerned, honesty | and policy are never associated, but , only honesty and principle. I _ Personally, I do not see why anyone who has been‘accustomed, at home and at school, to regard anything that Isn‘t straight as crooked, anything which !s not: abowéboard as underhand, ~and anything which is not quite fight as quite wrong, should require to write to me on an issue soâ€"stmple. _ Many letters come to my office from young people in business houses and offices, telling meâ€"of trade tricks which give them a lurking and uncomfort @ble suspicion that, even if they are not positively diskonest, they are at least hardly consistent with their own Ideas of "playing the game." * It is greatly improved in its parody form: "Honesty is the best police man." Certainly the type of honesty which has no deeper root than the canny sense of its expediency is only & poor thing. . The anclent adage about honesty being the best policy was probably fArst uttered by some old rogue with his tongue in his cheek! A Real Holiday. Playing the Game. the sky from tho David met her at the foot of the stairs. "I am going to drive Fisker to the station. Wi:l you come with me " =~ _ Bhe flushed to her eyes. She knew that it wo‘;{l be wiser to refuse, that David‘s absenco would give her the opportunity sha wanted to leave the house uniticed. But the tomptaâ€" tion to go with him was great. } It was a ‘ove‘y night. She.could picture the long drive tq the ua;hn‘ through the silent country lanes, the through the silent country ilanes, the: added drive back, when she wou‘d be with| ney." It was only just after cight. She knew that it wou‘d be ‘useless to atâ€" tempt to leave the house for another two hours, but she finished her sma‘ preparations. bathed th* tofrrs from her eyes, and went downstairs again. she would ever l];end tn‘th;zé I';ow; This was the shutting <f the door uzon har brief glimpse of Paradise. ' k CHAPTER XLIIT s s POR THE LABT TME, â€"_~ Instead of following Miss Varney to the drawingâ€"room she aipped away upstairs. Tears binded her eyes as she went. This‘y'u‘ the ‘ist evening _ She had meant to write to Do.ly, but the dinner gong rang before she had written more than a coupie of lines, and she thrust the letter hasâ€" tily away. Every detail of that last dinner was stamped indelibly on her brainâ€"the ‘ong, beautiful room, the shining sil.â€" ver and wonderful gass, the paneled wa‘‘s and glearfting armor, and David, the last of «l the Brethertors, sittine silefit and â€"abstracted at the head ‘of the table. . "@ iDoly‘s letter froma locked drawer :nnd spread it out before her. ; _ It was strange, she thought, that | Dolly‘s letter and Monty Fisher should , have come so near together. It had | been wondorfu. that she had been jeft | so long undiscovered. i Her omy hops lay now in flight, to get away and leave no trace behind her. & And any day now David might hear from Dolly. Mary know Nigel‘s widow very well, know that mon‘y was everything in the wor‘d to her; that she wou‘ld leave no stone unturned to get anything she could from David. Mary sat down at the litte writing table which Miss Varney had had placed in the room for her. She took It was one of his many possessions which Doly had lefi behind her. She had cared nothing for the man; now be was gone she cared nothing for anything that had been his. |_Monty looked away from her bowed |head. He would have given a great 'deal in that moment to have been able Ito recall those impuilsively spoken . words to David Bretherton. He was l.!owly beginning to realize what it was in this woman, who was not really | beautiful, and not in the least smert, ‘that had so endeared her to this quiet ! household. | This was ber last night at th» Red Grange, A‘lready she had put togeiher the few things she had brought with her, and packed them in a bag that bore Nigel Bretherton‘s initials. Mary laid her tzomb‘ing fingers in his. "Yor are very kind," she said, then turned precipitately and ran from the room. i L "If ever I canâ€"be of use to you hope you will ask: me." There was something so womanly about her, somethingâ€" He could. not define his feelings.© Impulsively he held out his hand. . a l e S® L m o k PE 00R 022 ashamed to tell him of Dolly‘s marâ€" rlage. David mistakes Mary for his 'brot_her'a wife and asks her to come to live at Red Grange with him and his aunt. A letter‘comes to Mary from Dolly saying that she and her husband are safe. . Monty Fisher toks David that Mary is not {Iige»'.’s widow. David says he had already found that out. NOW GO ON wWITH THE STORY. "You don‘t despise me, then? Iâ€"I thoughtâ€"" | Bhe covered her face with her‘ hands. The marriage of Dolly and Nigel Bretherton proves an unhappy one. When war is declared Nige! is glad to enlist. He leaves Dolly und'r_tFe care of Mary Furnival. Nige! is killed and Dollï¬ merries an old sweetheart, Robâ€" ert Durham, s Do!‘y and Robert sail for America and word comes of the sinking of their ship. When Nige!‘s brother, David, calls to see Nige!‘s widow, Mary is meli uc 2s Au e e ies (Camd ONTARIO ARCHIVES BEGIN HERE TOâ€"DA Y HIS BRoIUFB TORONTO vYVY i4 _ ) by ropy _ayars "What is the matter with you toâ€" day ?" ’ "What do you mean?" "‘On.y that you seem changed, someâ€" how. Don‘t you like Fizher any better ,than you liked his sister?" ‘â€" Fhe protested in«gnantly. | _"I suppose you will never forget that. And I do like Mr. Fisbher; I ,think be is vory nice." i id David softly. k you," said D "Therk "I am giad." .Théare was something @ry in David‘s veice; h did not speak mgainfor some minutes, then: "So youâ€"are going to stay with them in CHAPTER X11v. > MARY I8 AFRAID. "I never thought of such a thing," said Mary. "I to"d you before that I London after: a% her. David was driving the car very wowly; he looked down at her, tuen< ingâ€" his whole body‘ a litt‘e towards PHECETRITTT mm ~# "Do you know Fisher very weur’1 he asked abruptly, as be took his seat| beside her. _, l She shcok hor head. : % f â€"~"*No. Iâ€""â€"She‘ broke off; she had| beea, going to say that she had ©J.y / seen him once before in all her life,! but stonpedy she knew that Doy had seen him many times. * <p "No, not vg:ry well," she a low voict. David was frowning when .mefy reâ€" turred to the car. ~She saw lis face for an instant in tho glare cf¢the bkcad.ights. hn & . & ing in his voice for her when ho said: â€" *‘Iâ€"wha‘l hore tessee you in t<wn before ‘ong." ; L Fisher be‘d ber hand a than was strictiy nec thought. ~There was a ing in his voice for her w y hk am xo c i said that he had to.d David novhing. She rtood beside him while Fisher l:AdE ?zim goodâ€"bye. Mary obeyed at.onee; it never ccâ€" curred to her that David had no in tention of. leaving herâ€" awlone for a mcment. _ She never ‘doubted. that Fish<r had spoken truthfully when he When the station was.reached the two men got out. David looked atâ€"Mary.â€" . ‘"Won‘t you come and sce the last of him?" he asked lightly. "It wi‘l do you good to have a litte strotch." David hard‘y spoke. Once or twice he half turned to addross a remark to Fishe:, but for the â€"most part they wero al? sient. There was a crescent moon in the sky. It peeped down at them shyly through the dark branches of the tall trees; it shed a faintly si‘vered light over the .fresh‘y prowed. fie‘ds and white country roads. [ "It is not summer yet, you know," he told hor when she dec ared that she was qdite warm. * _He wrapped the rug careful‘y round her knees. Even after they had startâ€" ed he put out his hand cnce through the darkness to @we if she was well covered. You don‘t know how to take care of yourse‘d," David said, smiling. "You won‘t mind the back seat, Monty? It:; rather cold for a lady." Mary protested she preferred the back seat; she did not mind the night air in the least. When the car came to the door he turned to Fisher. "You won‘t mind the back seat, Monty? (It‘s rather cold for a lady." She ran back for her hat and coat. When sho came again down the stairs David was sti.l standing where she had left him. There was something in his manner that gave her a little qualm of fear. She roused herse‘f with an effort; she was afraid that he might suspect something from her manner. She ansâ€" wered quickly: "I will come; yes, of course I wil come. I should like to." Won‘t y» "Why do you kesitate?" he asked. There was a charp inquiry in his voice. His eyes sought here insistâ€" ent.y. #izhs you come and see the of him?" he asked. staying with strange Eid add>d, in Minard‘s Liniment for toothache. " If she only cared to to" him! In |aching imagiraton she cou:d see herâ€" lse'ff turning to him. hear herself sp akingâ€"the sobbing confession: but !in reality she sct there, her hands |elasped convu‘sively togother beneath ’the warm ruz, grudging each fiying | momer®, cach last word. She leaned batk beside him with a lt sigh of happiness. David spoke suddenly. ""What are you thinking about ?" She started. "Nothing. At least, I don‘t know." Hgâ€"turned the car round into a narâ€" row side road. His voice was quite even; she did not see the sharp :ook he cart at her as ho bent towards the wheel. "It is quite early. We wiw go round the other way." "Need we go hom» just yet? It is such a ‘ove‘y night, I don‘t want to go home just yet." When they neared the Red Grange she spoke: __ Mary bit her lip. She had tried so hard not to remember that this was the last time she would ever drive like this with David; sh> had tried to forget that this was th> last chapter of her sic.en happin=ss, but something in his voice, in his manner, brought it home to her with suffocating force. ‘ Sh: loved him. ‘She oved his voice, his :augh, his grave eyes; she Ioved! everything about him; and yetâ€"â€"yetl she had wilfu‘y dceived him, wilfuly J led to him. 192 Or Dluein 8. IT MUST SATISFY you on Tuachine is do its improved aluminum agtâ€" tator that forces the soapy 6. IT MUST 84 _ water through the clothes. its quiet, emo 4. IT MUST SATISFY you on 7. IT MUST 84 its elimination of hand rubâ€" everything y« bing. Power Washe If it does not, return it to us at our expense and you the purchase price, $70.00. .. It your dealer does not seli this machine, order dir Weâ€"sell you this machine on the condition that it must setisfy you. SOLVES THE WASH DAY PROBLEM on the farm. Belt it to any small gasoline engine. CONNOR POWER WASHER MODEL 26 IT MUST SATISFY you on its capacity to wash the finest clothing without Injury. IT MUST SATISFY you on Its capacity to wash the dirtiest _ clothes _ absolute‘ly clean. R 457 Resultâ€"clean, sweetâ€"smelling clothes, hours of time saved and the hand work changed to just rinsing. Rinso dissolves the dirt, you rinse it out. 5 You will never know how easy p h 4c s 0% + l +¢ & « « » i ies it is to do the washing until you‘ve | lnso used Rinso, the greatest time and Thenew king labour saver the housewife has 3. h i ever known. e (ee © ".° 2 wl B is : :P soaks© < * dirt out 6 in Bies h Mess Made by You simply dissolve for 25 seconds the tiny bubbles in hot water, soak the clothes a couple of hours, or over, night, rinse them well in clean water andâ€"that‘s all. No Boiling â€" No Rubbing Just Rinse with Ringo _â€" bubbles. A~ ooo 3 A p b RThenewkind [ :. r. "of soap 8 " :° :Ai\â€"\ l e 2P spaks<© p . of. odirt out= (To be continued.) J. H. CONNOR & sON, A package of Rinsc is a package of miniature soap (Order Yours Now) And used my clothesâ€" (He found some old, worn, shabby sh« ; That pinched my toesâ€" He took the hat so broad of brim [ From off my head ‘And put it on that scarecrow thing |Then shot it dead! Now, every time I g‘ance outside I seem to be * | A shabby, old fat farmer‘s wite For hawks to see! Nevor negiect oling and greasing certain parts of the engine because of their inrocessible location. John put a scarecrow in the yvard ’The sky is lilac, the sky is roge: Fainter and fainter the red glows; s The winds would be stil!; The dove is caning,; The dusk is falling, On the yellow hill. Lullaby, lullaby, clucks the quail; Paster and faster the colors fail; The winds grow still. The dove, is he calling ? ‘Tis ti e soft dusk falling ° On the purple hill> Lost is the*M!ac, lost the rose, In the shadow the rabbit knows ; The winds are still; The dove is dreaming, The loveâ€"star gleaming Over the darkened hill. â€"John Vance Cheney, in‘ "At the ver Gate." 1 WP~IDIDZ you expect in a Power Washer. IT MUST saAtisry you on its large four position Wringer that will wring from the ring Ing or blueing tub while the machine is doing the washing, IT MUST saTispry you on its quiet, #mooth rupning. IT MUST SaTispy you in everything you exnert in . W Made by â€" the makers of Lux . order direct from us Dusk in the Redwoods. Lubrication or Hawks to See o o o is is Essential will refung Dorothy Moore shabby shoes ‘At the Sil red wood Of recent years the Canadian export ,uade in whale products has slumped 'sompvrhut. but the present season is expected to mee an improvement The 'whnle meat canned in British Columâ€" bia has gone in large part to settleâ€" ments between Liberia and the Congo in Africa, where is achlieved m very rapid popularity and is highly regardâ€" ed as an article of diet. Janan is also a very heavy purcheser. Trade fAgures _show that in the eleven months ending February, 1926, 838 ewt., worth $4,335, wes exported. In the same period endâ€" ing February, 1924, the Agures were 4,396 cwt. and $37.315. In the same period exports of whale oll, which woent entirely to the United States and United Kingdom, amounted to 424,39% gallons, worth $241,591, as compared with 781,188 gallons worth $417,350 in the previous eorreapnn&iu; pertod. â€" The whale is a warmâ€"bloodedd mamâ€" mal and its flesh is exactly similar to beef with but slightly coarsar texture. The canned product has no oily taste and it is cheap, palatable, and easily digested. The analysis of canned whale meat has shown that its faod value may be compared with that «of round steak. Some time ago it was estimated that 100,000,000 pounds of whale meat cou‘d be supplied the peoâ€" ple of the American continent from the British Columbia coast annually at a price of about 1244 cents a pound Export Trads Improving. In the British Co‘umbja whaling inâ€" dustry, whickh has been kighy modernâ€" ized, the entire carcass after being inâ€" fated with air is towed back to the whaling station and there stripped of its blubber and meat. The Canadian Pacific coast indusiry | ennually proâ€" duces sbout 400 tons of whale bone meel and 200 tons of meat and4 blood for fertilizing purposes. A â€"«mall quantity of the latter is sold as ferâ€" tilizer in British Columbia and the reâ€" mainder is exported, principally to the United States. In the old days whales were hunted for their bone and oil alone. "Toâ€"day the utilizationof the moat is an im portant phase of the indusiry. Though certain prejudice stili exists against the use of whale meat for human conâ€" sumption on the American continent it !hau long been favorably regarded clseâ€" 'where as an article of diet. The old American whalers regaled themselves ,lon tasty whale scraps while on the chase and the Eskimo has long regardâ€" ed the stranding of a whale on his shore eneficia, act of providence. The J’ce have long appreciated whale at as an article of diet, and the Scandinavians relish the Resh of the mighty mammal. In the food shortâ€" ege which exiated during the war years a substantiel export trade was developâ€" ed in whale meat from Canada to cerâ€" tain European countries. There are signs that the whaling inâ€" «lunry on the British Columbia coast is becoming more active and proftâ€" able. This year, for the first time in the history of whaling there, a seaâ€" plane is being used in the prosecution of operations from the base at Rose Harbor. in the spring, too, forty exâ€" perienced Arctic whaiers were brought from the Old Country and engaged for work with the whaling fleet, supple menting its activitiee. They have been settled on smail farms on the west corast of Vancouver Island, simiâ€" ’lur to the crofts they occupied in the north of Scotland, where they are able to combine the pursuit of agriculture with whaling. . * wear my windows Every day, Three tail poplars Point the way., â€"â€"Almira Richaréeon Wilcox. Pointing ever To the sky They help to keep My thought high i The taking of whales and the securâ€" ing of byâ€"products from their carcas lm is now a recognized and well esâ€" tablished industry on â€"the Canadian "l'aclflc ccast. In the summer months three whaling stations are operated in British Columbia, one station being :on the west coast of Vancouver Isâ€" land, one at Rose Harbor situated on the south end of the Queen Charlotte Is‘ands, and ibe third at Naden Harâ€" bor on the north end of the same isâ€" lands. During the past twelve years 7,619 whales have been taken by the British Columbia whaling fleet, the largest yearly catch being 1,198 and the smallest 187. During the year 1925, 269 whales were taken and proâ€" cessed. Granting to me Much of strength Which is drawn from Their green length Near my windows Every day Three tall poulars Bend and sway ; African Countries and Japan Buy Large Quantities of Whale Meat Canned PRODUCES 400 TONS OF BONE MEAL ANNUALLY. Pointing Poplars, OF PACIFIC COAST Has Many Utilities. Troneser. ‘Trade figures e @leven months ending 8388 ewt., worth $4,335, In the same period endâ€" in B.C. oving. i whaling in ighy modern Nee out « the po four c courso ing, p: which the os each ¢ fifteen the «) fourt days later lates® enouy the F ha th» day try ke th so the shij in / at mark in C lare 8t sh tre 4.1 th mA ke M n MYÂ¥ TY taat EK pa ms mÂ¥ oper #m th th ma M+ statement to the op the prairi mda. Th: m« NO m provinces poultry ; the pop: market in province | Of operat on OJ @1 in Joct- M T éo1 po POULTRY Th