n>T>^ ui rij<» f ♦ Y-ou •Will EnAoy H =B^ SALADi H B4M GRCEN TEA TK« e«quUite flavor Indicates tH« perfect blending of cKolce teas. A»K for a paoKage todaF* FIEE UMPLE If BIEER TU UPOI KfllEST. "UUDA." TtMiTI Woman's Sphere PENNY PLAIN BY O. DOUGLAS ri COIMfQi ,01^} •^ou mar bav* your obotc*â€" penny plain or two-penct ^imn Small Boyâ€" "Penny plain, please, tbe iHoney." It's better ralue (or Copyright by Gtorgt U. Doran C: ' CHAPTER VII.â€" (Cont'd.) "Wbat dots Mr. Jewett do?" "I don't think he docs* anything much: taps the barometer, advices thu nrdener, fusses with fowls, potters mandarin. "You must meet Mrs. Hope. To describe her is far beyond my powers." "I see. Well, go on with the hou$es on the hill. Who lives in the one at THE ^^.TH TO BEAUTY. After all, a woman's most sincere fn the garden, teaches ths dog'trlcks.i the corner with the well-kept garden? It makes him happy to feel himself! "The Prcstons. Mr. Preston Is a rushed, and to go cairyiiiK unopened ' lawyer, but he isn't' much like a law letters at tea-time. They have nojytr in appearanceâ€" not yellow and I children. Mrs. Jewett is a dear. She parchmenty, you know. He's a good collects servants as other people col- ] shot and an ardent fisher, what Sir lect prints or old chinn or Sheffield Walter would have called 'a Just plate. They are her hobby, and sheileevin' man for a country writer.' nas the most wonderful knack of man- 1 There are several daughters, all must aging them. Even now, when good j cal, and it is a very hospitable, cheer- servants seem to have become extinct, ful house. Next the Prestons live the and people who need fivi- or nix are] Williamsons. Ordinary nice people, grubbing away miserably with one There is really nothing to say about and a charwoman, she has four pearls them. . . . The house after that is This forms a protection for the tender „_ ^.._. „„„.„.. „ „ »„v.. tissues and if the day is spent in the|;;;;|^h"sVfr'voIces and gentle way's^ the"home"'of"thV two"Miss open, drying winds will not harm her I perts at their job. She thinks about' Speirs. They are not ordinary. Miss skin nor will it be possible for the them all the time, and considers their jAlthea is a spiritualist. She sees vl- dust raised by household tasks to clog comfort, and dresses them in pale grey ; sions and spends much of her time the pores. with the daintiest spottecf muslin with spooks. Miss Clarice is a Budd- Any superfluous cream is gently aprons and mob caps. It is a pleas- 1 hist. Their father, when he lived, blotted off with a soft cloth and the "«â- « <^« ?<> ^. *>»« Jowetts for a meal, was an elder in the U.F. Church. 1 i-,. «„Mo, i\r.Ty^^A «««, tko ♦.»o ♦« everything is so perfect. The only sometimes wonder what he would say .cy patter flopped over the face i<^. ir^^^^^ck is if any one makes the to his daughters now. When he died stimulate circulation. A dusting of | slightest mark on the cloth one of the' they left the U.F. Church and became powder will remove any shine left byj giiver-grey maids brings a saucer of | Episcopalians, then Miss Clarice the cream. water and wipes it off, and it is aptj-found that she couldn't believe in vic- It's all very easy, you see â€" none of to make one nervous. I shall never arious sacrifice and went over to the steaming and hot packs that once forget going there to a children's Buddhism. She took me into her bed- were deemed necessary. Just soft party with David and Jock. Great- 'room once. There was a thick yellow cooling creams to nourish and protect I »""* Alison warned us most solemnly , carpet, and a bed with a tapestry the skin from the effects of wind and, J»efore we left home about marking icoyer and almost no furniture, except »»i,„_ «i„„«,. ..« «,...> i^o /./»!,)«,•♦.,' the cloth, so we went rather trembl-j â€" is it impious to call Buddha fuml- weather, plenty of pure, ice-cold water|i„ , ^5^^^ ^^^ ^ splendid tea lo ture?-a large figure of Buddha with or ice, and one is equipped correctly ^he dining-room, with silver candle-la lamp burning before It It alt to do battle with Father Time. sticks and pink shades, and lovely j seemed to me horribly unfresh. Both It is very important, however, that china, and a glittering cloth, and! ladies provide much simple amuse- the creams and tonics be applied cor- heaps of good things to eac â€" g^i'own- ment to the townsfolk with their rectly. The beauty specialist has up things like sandwii'lies and rich clothes and their antics." studied the structure of the face and cakes, such as we hardly ever saw. "I know the Speirs' type," said ^T„"1^.p^rHpT!^^n\^H^T«n^heiknows that every stro was quite small and loved his Pamela. "Foolish virgins.'^' more be regarded as wasted than the -j rrcam that is'f°°d even more than he does now, dear time devoted to the care of her teeth | ^"stj'eJ^st right Cream that is,,^jj,jj ^ ^^^^ ^^^^^^ ^^^^ ^j^^ ^ or bodily health. i ril^^^^.T^',"'!, 1"^^ K^i^^^^^^tll!; h^ell china-if only they had ,iv% as she was friend and remoresless critic is her mirror. When it Ulls her that she is looking well, that her back hair is be- comingly arranged, and that she is really very good to look at, she may go upon her way, confident and well poised, serene in the knowledge that although beauty may be only skin deep, it is a very comforting posses- sion. On the other hand, when friend mir- ror declares ffiat h%r face is showing faint lines, that her skin is losing the firm contour and tints of youth, and that she is rapidly assuming some- thing suspiciously resembling a double chin, she knows she must proceed at once to take the necessary steps to chock the ravages of time. Good looks are so great an asset to a woman that the time which she spends on their preservation should no Mother^s prescription JOHNNY is taking a pretcrlption. Hl» careful mother â€" the family health doctorâ€" Qrdered It Her dalljr ounce of preventionâ€" Lifebuoy Soapâ€" wotlw wonders â- in combating disease. Every day your children touch ^Irty objects *nd cover themselves with germ-laden dirt. GMVe them Lifebuoy â€" the health soap. Lifebuoy protects^ The rich creamy lather of Lifebuoy cairles a wonderful health element deep down into every pots. The (kin U completely purified, and cleanaedâ€" delightfully •amulated. LIFEBUOY HEALTH SOAP More them Soap - a Health Habit Tbe odour vanishes att»r tut, but the protection reiUMina. to do; we haven't even mills like s* many of the Tweedside towns." "Will people call on ra«?" Pamela asked. "Is Priorsford sociable?" Jean pursed her mouth in an effort to look worldly wise. "I think you will find it sociable, but if you had come here obscure and unknown, your existence never would have been heard A smooth healthy skin, clear com- '"^"y **-'•''';»" ^'""°'''"="t^*t^« ?'''" I us mugs-and asshe was putting' spinsters,â€" the . plexion. shining hair and well-kept «« »* ^^^^}^ •"" Produce the desired down Jock's cup he turned round aud- Miss Janet, and hands bestow upon their possessor a'"""'" certain confidence and ease and most ward The movements must be up and outward, coaxing the wrinkles and lines from the certainly add much to her happiness j *""''"=« »"° "'""' '»''*y and contentment. mouth and eyes. The..e attributes to beauty are! Select the powders and creams with within the reach of every woman who|t^« "^most carej be very sure that • is willing to work a bit to securei^hey are pure and fine. An astringent them; therefore, if your mirror tells '««««"«"*; «« . ^^ ^^°^^^ t^« P"«« you that old Father Time is beginning ^»'«^^ t»'«=l««"«'"ff"«i'" °P«"«' f,"'^ to adorn your face with his telltale '» bo"<:-«<:ld wa«h f<"- the eyes after world would come to an end. There seemed no other way of clearing up the mess. I was so ashamed, and so your race witn his telltale ,---"-â€"â- • T" 'V "nT'" lu" sorry for my Poor Jock, I couldnjt lift lines, you will very wisely prepare **>« ''^""ty treatment wil leave them my eyes, but Mr. Jowett rose to the ' ' J f I refreshed, rested and bright. occasion and earned my affection and The cotton pads are merely folds ofiunending gratitude. He pretended to absorbent cotton. The patter is al^nd it a very funny epmde, and 'nade to do battle for your good looks. The city woman, with time on her hands, will go to a reliable beauty specialist, where she will receive a treatment that will bring back the glow of youth to her cheeks, soften her skin and brighten her eyes. Regu- lar clients of the beauty specialist spend an hour a week in her comfort- able chair, whereas real seekers of beauty are even more frequent pa- tients. But it is possible to keep one's good looks, even if one dwells in the desert, for every one of the beauty special- ist's methods may be followed at home if one will devote just a few moments night and morning to good looks; and a very satisfactory little home course of beauty treatments may be evolved. All that will be necessary in the way of equipment will be two or three pads of absorbent cotton, a good cleansing cream, a skin tonic, which may be nothing more than writch hazel, a skin food, perhaps also a vanishing cream and the patter, of which more, shortly. At night, just before going to bed, the face should l)e cleansed carefully with a pad of cotton dipped in diluted witch hazel, then into the cleansing cream, following the motions adopted by the beauty specialist. This treatment should be followed by a brisk patting with the patter moistened in ice-cold water. This will awaken the tired and sagging muscles. Then, if her pores are large and con- spicuous our womaTi may apply a spe- cial pore cream that will in time make tbcm less noticeable, or perhaps eradl cate them, or she may simply use a skin food, leaving enough on her face to feed the hungry cells while she skeps. In the morning she will cleanse her face with the cream and skin tonic, putting on a little vanishing cream. square of absorbent cotton placed in a basin of cold water, and folded under the water, so that a firm sur- face is obtained; whon finished it is about four inches long and two wide. Use the patter by holding one end of it in the hand and slap the face brisk- so many jokes about it that stiffness , ^, „, , .J - , „ ._^ M of, even If you had taken a house and "Next to Woodside is Craigton," i ge^,tled down. Priorsford hardly looks went on Jean, and there live three I ^yer its shoulder at a newcomer. Som« spinstersâ€" the very best brand of of the 'little' people might call and ?,"-â- ?""„*; ^}^^ Mary, I ask you to tea^the kind 'little' people I Miss Phemie. I don't _h„t " denly and his elbow simply shot it out I know what Priorsford would do with- of her hand, and sent it flying across out these good women. Spinsters they the table. As it went it spattered are, but they are also real mothers in everything with weak tea and then Israel. They have time to help every- smashed itself against one of the one. Benign Miss Mary is the house- keeper â€" and such a housekeeper! Miss Janet is the public one, sits on all the "Who do you call the 'little' peonle?" "All the people who aren t m a large way,' all the dwellers In the snug little villas â€" most of Priorsford, in fact" Jean got up to go. "Dear me, look at the time! The boys will be home from school. May I have the Committees. Miss Phemie does the book you spoke of? Priorsford would flowers and embroiders beautiful be enraged if it heard me calmly dis- things and is like a tea-cosy, so soft -ussing its faults and foibles." She and warm and comfortable. Some- 1 laughed softly. "Lewis Elliot says how they always seem to be there , Priorsford is made up of three classes when you want them. You never go _the dull, the daft, and the devout." to their door and get a dusty answer, There is the same welcome for every- one, gentle and simple, and always the vanished from the party, and we all! bright fire, and the kind, smiling faces, became riotously happy. And Mis. and tea with thick cream and cake of Jowett, whose heart must have b . n wrung to see the beautiful table ruin- ed at the outset, so mastered her emo- tion as to be able to smile and say no harm had bfien done . . . You must only awakens the sluggish circulation. Use it after the massage and you will need no rouge. â- RONDEAU OF A HOT STOVE. "When winter comes," says Ma, "I'll go To where the summer's overflow Of all the things our garden grow; Our berry patch; our orchard too; Stand waiting in a shining row. "Atop my pantry shelves. You know. They're pretty, even as they grow. But prettier, I'm telling you, When winter comes! "But stoves are hot in summer, so There's many hunts the portico. And fans themselves, and takes the view ; (I understand their feelings, too)! The same hot stove's a blessing, though When winter comes!" Pamela, looking for the book she wanted to lend to Jean, stopped and stood still as if arrested by the name. "Lewis Elliot!" Yes, of Laverlaw. D'you know On the Old See-Saw. The old see-saw swung to and fro With Ita merry load, In the long aco; One mind so filled with fancies sweet As skyward bent or the earth to meet; Now as bird that sailed the air With Its happy song so free from care; And then, as a rider so brave and bold Whose flery steed he scarce could holdJ What of the one that shared the sport.' Riding the air as a chip from port? How could I tell If his dreams rang true, For he sat in silence the whole game through. With his shaggy coat of white and tan And eyes that looked as man to man; Yet Pals more true you'll never see On the old see-saw, than my dog and me. â€" Qeorgina Stlmpson. ly by flapping the other end against' Bo with me and see Mrs. Jowett, the skin. Ice is very beneficial to the'fon't tell her anything in the very skin; it makes the muscles firm and ^^r^„^4^^^Ji„')3* "^^"^^ *^ **** slightest "Tell me more," said Pamela â€" "tell me about all the people who live in those houses on the hill. It's like reading a nice Cranfordy book." "But," Jean objected, "we're not in the least like people ir. a book. I often wonder why Priorsford Is so unlike a story-book little town. We're not nearly interested enough in each other for one thing. We don't gossip to ex- cess. Everyone goe^ his or her own way. In books people do things or are suspected of doing things, nnd are immediately cut by a feveri.shly inter- ested neighborhood. I can't imagine that happening in Priorsford. No one ever does anything very striking, but if they did I'm sure they wouldn't be ostracized. Nobody would care much, except perhaps Mrs. Hope, and she would only be amused." "Mrs. Hope?" "Have you noticed a whitewashed house standing among trees about hnlf a mile down Tweed from the bridge? That is Hopetoun, and Mrs. Hope and WRKLEYS After Every Meal If 8 the longest-lasting confection yon can buy â€"and It's a help to di- gestion and a cleanser for the mouth and teeth. WrtQlty'm means bencllt â- â- well as pleasnre* the richest and freshest You ' him" by any chance'" know how some people beg you to visit I "f used to know a Lewis Elliot who them, and when vou go they seem to j,ad -seme connection with Priorsford, wear a surprised ook, and you feel but I thought he had left it years unexpected and awkward? The Dun- 1 ago" cans make you feel so pleased with "bur Lewis Elliot inherited Laver- your.self. They are so unselfishly in- , law rather unexpectedly some years terested in other peoples concerns; ' ago. Before that he was quite poor, and they are grand laughers. Even Perhaps that is whnt makes him so the dullest warm to something ap-; understanding. He Is a sort of dis- proaching wit when surrounded by tant cousin of ours. Great-aunt Ali- that appreciative audience of three, son was his aunt tooâ€" at least, he They don t talk much themselves, but called her aunt It will be fun if he they have made of listening a fine turns out to be the man you used to art. j know " "Jean," said Pamela, " do you actu-| "Yes," said Pamela. "Here is the ally mean to tell me that everybody in book, Jean. It's been so nice having Priorsford IS nice? Or are you merely you this afternoon. No, dear, I won't being charitable? I don't know any- go back with you to tea. I'm going to thing duller than your charitable per- write letters. Good-bye. My love to son who always says the kind thing." the boys." Jean laughed. "I'm sorry, but I'm But Pamela wrote no letters that afraid the Priorsford people arc all evening. She sat with a book on her more or less nice. At least they seem knee and looked Into the Are; some- 80 to me, but perhaps I'm not very dis- times she siglkad. <,. SECOND-DAY SANDWICHES. When sandwiches have been left over and have become slightly dry, place them in the toaster and toast 'iirlitly on both sides. S : ve at once. The heat will fresher iu» the sand wich 51S pood as new an ' will make « titbit, <lten more appeti..inc: than the sandwich was in the first place. One point to observe is to serve the sandwiches in a very neat and attrac- tive manner, perhaps cutting them into triangles. If there has boon let- tuce in thr> sandwiche.s, this should be removed, and if it is at all wilted, replace with fresh lettuce before the toasted sandwich is served. her daughter live there.' "Nice?" Jean nodded her head like It Burns as It Goes Down. "There's a wonderful flow of water along the Canadian border." "Fire-water, I suppose you mean?" criminating. You will tell me what you think of them when you meet them. All these people I've been tell- ing you about are rich people, 'in a large way,' as Priorsford calls it. They have all large motor cars and hot houses and rich things like that. Mrs. M'Cosh says Priorsford is a 'real tone-y wee place,' and we do fancy ourselves a good deal. It's a commun- ity largely made up of women and middle-aged retired men. You see, there is nothing for the young men KEEPING CURED MEAT. When hams, shoulders, or other pieces are tiikci out of the brine and dried, .sew each piece in a taut cover- ing of chvespcloth, and brush it all over with melted paraffin. When taken out of this covering, the meat emerges clean and there is no loss of meat or time in getting the paraffin out of the crevices. , PAPER LIGHTERS, "j" Tlio little old-fashioned papea^^igtlt- ers arc convenient when usinioa gasl or oil stove, whore you can ligjjl onej flame from another, and thejjj save striking a match every time. -Cat a newspaper into strips an incn wide and about a foot long and startRit one rorPtT to roll diagonally. tUn over the top whi-n do;ie. 'They^rtu.'st be rolled tightly. We always 4gp a lot of thorn handy. ^ .. Minard't Liniment H*ali Cuts. (To be continued.) THE MAGNET CIRCUS. For the boy who has outgrown blocks or for the convalescent, there is probably nothing which will furnish more entertainment than a large pow- erful horseshoe magnet and a box of assorted nails â€" preferably of the smaller sizes. With the nails may be built swings with tack children swinging In them, and trapezes for the most exacting acrobats. On the top may be built an Indian wigwam with weather vane ! atop, and a horizontal bar with its crew of acrobatic actors. | Even cats and dogs may be made ! with tack legs and ears, a nail body and a shoc-tack tail. For Sore Feet â€" Mtnard'a Liniment. A Top Game. One boy spins his top in a three- foot ring, runs as far as he dares, sticks a peg In the ground and runs back to pick up the top before it stops spinning. Then In turn each of the other boys spins his top, races to the peg, lifts It and plants it a little far- ther away, and then tries to get back in time to catch his top before it falls. U th* top falls before the spin- ner get* back, the pee Is returned to its last position. B^ch boy has three trlala. Let some one else play the fool; i| is too easy a part to be worth yooi effort. a â- II SPRAYERS. OIOOKRS. nSDinW&l »K''A'«S In.n.«Il.t. ur rtnAlrs. All st'od) ihlppvd from warphouM At (Itiflph, Ont. All (lluvn «tiuli<r«l witb shoM mm truck. Spr&yen; 100 sallun ttnk. 13 aos- ylci, Trll>K*x pumv- raUloiiu« awl prices oa miuvit. A. E. COMAR. :0 Park Ave.. GMl>k. Ont. Oatttrlo uul MlrUlnio Distributor. THE KITCHEN SHEARS. Keep a pair of clean, sharp shears hanging on a convenient hook in the kitchen. You will find them the great- ' est possible convenience for many un- j expected purposes. They are much better than a knife for trimming off , the rind of bacon. They arc espe- . cially desirable when snipping up' marshmallowr. for a salad, and often save getting out a chopping knife ami bowl when only a few pieces of green pepper or other garnish is to be cut in strips or small pieces. The shears should always he wiped and hung up where steam wi'.l not strike them to cause rust. 4 IT .SAVES MENDING. It always worries me to see the corners of tablecloths, theeta or blankets flapping on the line in a strong wind, for I know it means that those same corners -.-ill be frayed and worn. On a really wnidy day, 1 al- ways double these larg» pieces length- wise and pin the four corners lo the line. Here Is The Pump You Need SMART'S TANDEM OOUBLC ACT-/ HO PUMP Pumps more easily, mere silentlv and more efficiently than the Win^ type model which it has definitelv repixed Repairs easily madewitb houseriddtoob. Con be drained lo prevent freezing. Easily primed. J^ AOCXIT ITA1 VOun HAOOWAOe STOPE i^tlAMES SMAHT PLANT â- BtuCKVIll! .ONT. , Honey and lots of It- a hundre<l pounds In each hiveâ€" is to be iound on the Kelly bee farm at Oakville. and In the photograph above Mr. Kelly Is shown at work with bis busy llttla frtenda. Ef£DMt; ^IPP The n.'iin lino is usually open for the fellvv who travels with a full I head of steam. ISSUE No 30â€" 'X4w