sideration for othersâ€"both marks ofrcï¬ncm.cnt. Ask for ~ coss The use of Wrigley‘s chewâ€" ing gum after every meal takes care of this important item of personal hygiene in a delightâ€" ful, refreshing way â€"by clearâ€" ing the teeth of food particles and by helping the digestion. The result is a sweet breath that shows care for one‘s self and conâ€" Good taste and goc;d health f demand sound teeth and l David would marry Dora! In spite of a.l he had said, she believed that he would. Dora wouldâ€"go back to the Red Grange as a happy wife, whi‘st shoâ€"Always the world had turned a ee‘d shoulcer to herâ€"always her place had been in the shadows. y It was on the second day that she . met Dora FishsÂ¥ and came but'chok-g ing and afraid. Something in the other | girl!‘s insolent beauty had set fire to the smouldering jealousy in her heart.' The Red Grange! It sounded to her very much as the nams Fairyland must to a ehil&â€"n'something wonderâ€" ful and unreal, something of which one omy hears and nover dares to sée. And yet once she had been thore. Once, for a few short days, she had had her peep at paradise. Nothing cbuld take that from her. She would always have the memory to hug to her heart. 1 C | She spread her arms on the litt‘e round table, and laid her head on them. tramping the pavements. Surely it was| A batch of soldiers swung past her on‘ly a dream that she had z-vttr'w'J'Ade »in the road singing cheerily. â€" Their the velv ty lawns of the Red (}!':Al;',{?ib('i"-ï¬ were thick with dust. They lookâ€" and driven with David! :"::â€"â€"â€"'â€"â€"â€"-â€"â€":â€":- She had kept her thoughts resoluteâ€" | ‘ ly from him so far, but now, alone am]} * » > *4 £ wearied, the memory of him came| surging back to her. ‘ 4 ® { How he must hate her now if he * knew everything! And, of course, h(-'; did knowâ€"Monty Fisher would have | told him. How he must hate her! ) ‘i A wun.ever might come. Ahe spent the first day tramping from office to office in search of work, but the result was discouraging. In spite of the war and the consequent shortness of men, there seemed no plage for her. Many times her name and address were taken. "We will slet you know if wa hear of anythilrg." s she woul.d do it again. The on.y posâ€" sib‘e thing was to shut out the past, bolt and bar the door of her heart agairst memory, and be prepared for whatever might come. She haroly gave a serious thought M'uri is ha;py in her new bmo' until Monty Fisher exposes her to | David. â€" Mary disappears. David asks Monty to help him m her. Montï¬ï¬j sorry for Mary and tries to help David find her. £ now co on wirk tu® story. | But Mary was no weakling. After} the first moment of anguish she faced the future resolute‘y. She had manâ€"‘ aged to keep hgers‘f before. Welil,| Weviattat ~de‘ uiss n Prevhâ€" b+ s sc Ullllalu! Me leaves Dolly under the care of | Mary Furnival." Nigel#is killed and Doliy marries an o!r sweetheart and | kails, for America with him. > When Nige!‘s brother, David, calls to see Nige!‘s widow, Mary is ashamed to tell kim of Dolly‘s marriage. David | mistakes Mary for his brothet‘s wife and takes her to live at ï¬ed Gnng’i with his aunt. T ud war is declared, Nige! is glad to enlist.| She Truly satisfyingâ€"only 43c Very Fine Quality â€" 18§VE No. 44â€"‘24, HIS DRoIHFR BEGIN HERE TOâ€"DAY marriage of Dolly and rton proves unhappy. tR by rupy ayirs AY. to Dora‘s last words. She did not and Nigel realy believe that David was thinking )Y. _ !M.qf pynishing her for what she* had "Will you come somewhere and have a cup of coffee with me*? I‘ve been working late : the officeâ€"" m She wou‘d have turned and left him had:it been possible, but she knew it woulid be unkind and discourtcous. Evans rose to the occasion. quainiance, hne had been kind to her.l ~â€"To my home, for it gives me most. But there was something now in tbe, «To my chureby for it has taught expression of his eyes, the tone of his me most about Go.l. is voice, that bewildered her. She drew ; â€"To my conscliénce, for 1 have to her hand away nervously. {live with it. P * "The world is such a small place,| â€"To my G6d, for to Hjin 1 owe isn‘t it? â€" It‘s wonderful how people everything cise. . oekd, * 1. *4 4 do knock up against each other." 4. * HHF . . nmnakt s i fatan:: in .& Mary did not know what to say. She had liked ‘him during their brief acâ€" quaintance; he had been kind to her.l But there was something now in tbe} expression of his eyes, the tone of his voice, that bewildered her. She drew ; her hand away nervously. 1 "L never thought we ‘should meet any more. I am so glad to see you." He had been thinking of Mary a moment since; he had been thinking of her ever since the morning, when he had been called into Mont‘v Fisher‘s office, and been questioned &bout her. And now here she was ; now they wore face to face again. He held her hand in a glad clasp. His heart was thu K ing wild‘y. He broke out again, o‘a; mering a littls. x ut Te _ As she turited a corner a young man coming quick‘y in the opposite direcâ€" tion ram against her. He apo‘ogized, raising his hat. They were close to a street lamp, and.by its subdued light each saw the other‘s face. . Mary caught her breath. #f "You*" she said. * 6 Young Evans colored to the roots of his hair. For a moment he could only stare at her. Then he put out his hand. <»."" > "I was beginning to think we shou‘d never meet again." o ed tired, but their spirits were high. She thought of Nige!. Once he had been one of themâ€"he who was now sleeping almost forgotten somewhere in France. |_ She tried to eat the tea the landâ€" ".-dy brought for her, but the thick _slices. of breadeandâ€"butter and. the cheap tin tray, with no dainty linen |eloth to hide its ug.iness, brought a |lump to her throat. It was absurd, so ; she tried to argue. *. | * She rose resoiutely from the tab;e, She fe‘lt that®he wou‘d go mad if she stayed any longer in this rmm,*'ith‘ its stuffiness and ug.iness. P CHAPTER LVI. THE WHEEL OF FATE. 4 . The streets were dark and Gninterâ€" esting,â€"but there, at least, she could breathe and move. No four wal‘s hemâ€" med her in. The horrible feeling of being in prisom vanished. The tears rushed to her eyes as she thought of Miss Varney. The o‘d lady had been so good to her, had been genâ€" uiney fond of her, she ‘was" sure. Wou‘d she, too, now hate her, as David assured.y would? . If she had been the adventuress they would all think her, she would not have heen.satisfied with that. .She would have wanted money and clothes, and perhaps jewels. t And, after all, what had she done? Deceived himâ€"yes. But he was in no way the loser for it, unless one countâ€" ed the few happy drives she had taken with him, the few nights she had spent underhis roof, the few meals she had taken at his table. % Mary caught.her breath. "You she s&id. She took her hat, and went out 1J T â€" 939 1 Winarc‘s Liniment fto. "Madamc, if you‘l} buy the car we‘ll put your initials on free,." < > ' "Ohn,.it‘s not the fnitial cost. . It‘s the upkeep." £ _8 f e > «â€"â€"To my town, â€"for, that i9"_Where 1 make hy HYINE â€"5% 2 8om. j +. al â€"To my governmiént, for wikhout I would have‘no liberiies. Disgusted Native~"Noâ€"th of this town haven‘t ha‘f th they were born with." Visitorâ€""Do â€"you think the governâ€" ment wil} find the census of this town large?" % ROirT Ew a * it e 4 "C h > > adran repmatatiinrs. tco, the story Miss. Varn4y had told her. of the Gray, Lady at the Rted Grange.. David was a Brotherton,. _ Mary didâ€"not answer. She was reâ€" thembering what ‘Dora Fisher had said â€"that David"was furiousâ€"that ‘he would â€" never ï¬rgiye herâ€"that< he meant to see that she Wwas punished for her deception. â€" Sha r&®nembered, ‘WHe is looking for you everywhere: he,!loped-l coqld he‘p him find you." you "Oh!" There was somcthing afraid in the litte ejaculation. "How did he know you knew ns What did he ask "About me?" ; _.â€" "Yes. Mr. David Bretherton." â€" + He heard the little catch in‘ her breath; saw the way her Bands clasped each other conva‘sively ‘_"David Bretherton? Howâ€"how do you know him?" "He is a great friend of Mr. Fishâ€" er‘s. I am in Mr. Fisher‘s office." _ There was a litCe sitence. Suddenâ€" ‘y he leoked up. "If you spoke quite honéstly, you would say that you do not wish to sce me again," he said. Mery colored. vijo+ * "I should not! B have so few friends; but you don‘t understand." He stirfgd his coffec vigorously. "Perhaps I understand better than. you think," he said at last slowly. "Perhapsâ€"" He broke off. "Someone was agking me about you toâ€"day," he added after a mament. "She was not for himâ€"this girl with the sad fade and stvect eyes; he know that, éven while ho knew, too, that he loved her. you." e § « "He spoke the words with «umssy ‘sinâ€" cerity.~ He kopt his eyes on his plate. His heart was pounaing under his ofâ€" tice coat, ‘He would gave givem aryâ€" thing had he dared put out his han(f and lgy it over her own; but some? thing restrained him. « k “Oh, yu!n * es He colored a litt‘e ‘at her evasive repiy. B « ~**You don‘t want me to know whet_'e'.'" She looked distressed. "" 4 "Oh, please don‘t think me unkind! It isn‘t t'slt; butâ€"but I haven‘t time for.friends. 1 know you think it horâ€" rid of, meâ€"especially when you were so good to me." "But you are stil living in Lonâ€" don*" t "And where are you living now? Not in the same flat?" "Oh, no; I left it a long while ago." It seemed a long whilsâ€"Shough she knew it was but a few weeks. _ Mary answered, smiling faintly; that she was quite well. She did not want to talk a%)out herself. She tried to turn the conversation into ‘other channe‘s. She questioned him about his work; she talked about the war. She talked ‘feverishly about â€" every other subject under the sun, and yetâ€" after all, Evans‘ conversation came back to herself. ; | To my friends, for they forgive me 99 I Believe mLoyaltyâ€" «<p only think what is nice about Census Not Large (To be continued.) Generally is. NOâ€"the peoplg} &"f the. sonseg aja Provide Unity of Background. The ceiings, walls and floor should in each cas> form a unity of backâ€" ground., A s to the ra'lation,h.'vp of ceil ing, wal‘s and floor, we must be gmded by nature.‘ y "~\el im "Canada is a good country for a man with little capital getting a good start in life," concludes Mr. Andetson in his letter. _ + "Theroe are {airly. good roads throughout Western Canzda and they are getting better every year. Most farmers drive a motor car and they drive all the year round except on a few odd days in the winter. l1 the essential modern conveniences are to be found on the farms in Albertmeand the other western provinces of Canâ€" aila, including | good schools, teleâ€" phones, rural mail delivery and radio. _ ‘"Among the principal advantages of farmin‘g in Western Canada is that the highly productive land will yield more wheat, oats, barley and other crops per acre thun is common in Nebraska," states Mr. Anderson.. "Land in Westâ€" ern Canada is still low priced and taxes are low compared with those paid in the United States. My taxes on each quarter section of 160 acres are only $40 per year and there is no. persqonal property tax on farmers‘ pro-‘ perty. In a recent lotter to the Edmonton Board of Trade, L. W. Anderson, of Bittern Bake, Alberia, who came from Nebraska in 1905 with only $100 4n cash and zow owns a 512 acre farm {‘le ‘equipped ~and worth â€"sevdral thousand dollars, told why he is satisâ€" fied with farming in Canada. ; Minard‘s Liniment for toothache. Write your name and address plainâ€" ly, giving number and size of suâ€"a patterns as you want. ~Enclose 20¢ in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carcfully) for each number and address your order to Pattorn Dept., Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Ade laide St; Toronto. Patterms sent by reture mail. _ The secret bf distinctive dress lics in good taste rather than a lavish exâ€" penditure of money. ~Every woman should want to make her own clothes, and the home dressmaker will find the designs illustrated in our few Fashion Book to be practical and simple, yet maintaining the spirit of thke mode of the* moment. Price of the book 10 cents the copy. / ‘ *LOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. ~_ This litte dress of attractive design for daytime and schooltime would be equally effective if fashioned of figurâ€" ed or plain materialâ€"with contrasting collar and setâ€"on vestee, An inverted plait in centre front gives the necesâ€" sary fulness, and the sleeves may be long and gathered into narrow wristâ€" bands, or short. A beit fastened with a buckle in front is placed at top of the hips. No. 1303 is in sizes 6, 8, 10,‘ ,12‘3)1411 14 years.‘Size 8 requires 2%4 yards 32â€"incle matorial ; or 2% yardsl 39â€"inch. * 20 cents. Canada a Good Country. NTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO PRACTICAL AND DECIDEDLY * o e s o e w + No m "How can I keep my feet dry ?" "'I‘r,:v our pumps," _ replied the bright shoe clerk. Withhold not then the words o} &aï¬se for kindly words so oft impart Fresh sunshine to the drearest days. ‘tis but a bird clipped of its wings. & Oh, lips! There are such simple ways you can enrich another‘s heart! the Of what "Well done!" Two words so swiftly said, and yet they fall like sumâ€" mer rain, Are to the hungry spirit bread; the sout quite parched> revives ¢ again; * And hope returns that once was fied and energy flows through each vein, . When those two words, "We‘ll done" are said. The son: * To prevent chapped hands â€" per that one simple phrage, ag fragrant as sweet miguone:}o. Oh! _ lips of mine, be swift, to praise! e â€"â€"Wilhelmina Stitcb. R457 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. Be Swift to Praise. A package of Rinso is a package of miniature soap bubbles. * & No Boiling â€" No Rubbing Just Rinse with Rinso uns olin bow Reliet. n@ no comfort brings;| is surely naught until! curess the strings. the unspoken thought? a hbird clipped of its labour | _ A Rollsâ€"Royce drove up to the footâ€" |ball field of the private school, and a | very importantâ€"looking woman called | out to a liittle fellow in uniform: "Will | you please call my son, Master Agerâ€" l non ?" Drive S$i0Â¥viy, at Bridges. . Automobilists should drive slpwly at bridges.and ai culverts, A bad rut or stone in the road may throw the maâ€" chine against the structure. . lost In justa moment there was a shout "Hey, Skinney, your. ma‘s heret" Jackâ€""Oh, no Jack Dick 32 pages packed full of splendid ad selecting meats, f. ‘fl"z!:nmio- of _..ï¬::.' to every householder I & Made by gig: the makers of Lux® © â€"~** d 3 , , preparation of same for 44 Democracy. Not Lost. ill is engaged." another ‘°0d "’out simply Miss placed t 0 ~ i ~ 4 SPEED OF EA R TH B bear them still twittering and talking together . whilo they settle Sor the night.=â€"Laura Lee T "ldson, in "Isles oi Edex." , L OH C i e °C painted sky. When Carkness falis cries, â€" little dark wood along the shore met its mcture at the waterline, object and reflection doubled to look like skeletons of glant crayfish, long lizards or buge spiders and crabs. The purple martins were fAying low, focks of them, going home to lleeq. Every evering they wheel out ~over the lake with twittering P°" yepe Iniy C AOR e ‘out over the lake with a dancing, butâ€" terfly flight, twittering and calling in gentle, coaxing tones. In nesting time they hang on the heads of thistles, busily plucking off down for lining for their nests; they perch on the mu}â€" leing _and gather seed from â€" every standing weed, working energetically, their black caps set perkily over one eye. Gay little birds, their whoe lite seems a joyous holiday. It was a shining, still evening, with every tree, rock and overhanging bush reflected as in a mirror. _ The Grift On the topmost twigs of the poplars goidf@nches wore swinging, â€" spots of shining yellow against the blue. They are the most charming little birds, so fearless and so friendly. They flutter I packed a dinner pati, stepped.in a rowboat and started off down the lak, â€"~,. . Along the side of the island ! went, through the narrows betwoon this Jand and "Bleke‘s; past the lons shore, where the watéer maples beck )n and white Mm lean" over to see their reflections; past hbigh clifs with Terns and little Gedars gW#Wing in tho crevices. The boat was beache1 on the sand, I climbed a steep hill, crop: under a fence and my walk began. U; hill and down through groves of maple ‘IM hemlock, by the shore of ponds, over small bridges, the road wandored on. _A chipmunk skipped along the top of a fence, his cheekâ€"pockets buig ing with corh filched from a nearâ€"by barn. His ua-mz: back was markâ€" ed with the long brown stripes left by the old squaw‘s fingers when, accordâ€" Ing to the Indlian legend, she tried to m the father of al chipmonks, and to hold him.* . â€"> Professor Courvoisier verified his discoveries by a» third method, using a ml::gr of quicksilver and so arrangâ€" ing two telescopes against its surfare that he could see the cross of ore in the cross of the other. He then no ticed that the cross of one telescope fulfilled certain movethents which he attributes to movements of the mi~ ror .called forth by changes in (th» earth‘s gravity. The mathematical on‘ culations based on this experiment a) so indicated a speed of 750 Kkilomco.ers a second. That the Milky Way and the other stars are traveling at t\ same Speed through the cther Prov sor Courvoisier deduced in a most in genious manner from the nebular spirals. A change of the direction of gravity, for instance, would manifest itself in a shifting of the gzen‘th recognizable by measuring its distance from cer ‘tain stars. Buch, shifting of the zenith w discovered ~ by Professor Cour ‘nzler. ang its extent pointed to a speed of the garth of 750 xilomeéters a second,. A change in the strength of gravity can be ascertained with the help of the‘speci of the pendulum of clocks. Here the research work of the astronomér was greatly aided by the transmission of time signals by radio., The resuits obtained in this direction also pointed to a rpeed of 750 kiloâ€" meters a second, | Owing ty the earth‘s rotatory mo tion, every‘ part of it must once in each 24 hours face once the front and once the rear in its journey through space; the result being that every part will be fAattened while it does so andâ€"will experience certain changes of the direction as well as of the strength of the earth‘s gravity, Each part of the earth, therefore, will experionc« certain fluctuations of gravity within 24 hours. Now ‘Professor Courvolsier has @ctually discovered such fAuctua tions O gravity, from which he. has deduced that the earth must be travel ing at a speed of +750 kilometers a second tirrough space. He employed several independent methods for de termining: this, eack of which led to the samre renu’. x »‘|| ~SAVANT RECKONS ,1 Professor Courvoisier based his en perimentsâ€" and ealculations on th, theory of the Dutch â€"z@vant, Loren: who maintaitmed that objects traveling at great «peed contract in the dire« tion in which they mare moving, an that, therefore, the earth would be come flatten@d@ at the front and back in its course. Such a change in th« shape of the earth, according 10 Lorenz, would result in a change of the direction and in the strength o{ the earth‘s gravity at the point whore it is flattened./ © The sunm :nd its planets, therefore also the earth, as well as the Milky Wayâ€"in short practically all stars vis Ible at nightâ€"move through spaco i ‘a speed of 750 kilometers a second aecording to Prof. L. Courvoisior of the observatory in Neuâ€"Babelsbers near Potsdam. This figure is not on‘!; interesting in itself, but the fact that it has actually been determined is sai) to be of the greatest importance, sino accordifg to the theory of relativits it should bo impossible to ascertain the speed of the earth through spa~ Shifting of the Zenith Esland Friends. tu7 THRIFT