Al^yays Buy SALADA GREEN TEA n B0W TKe little leaves and tips from hi|{K mountain tea gardens, tnat are used in SALAD A are ntticH liner in Oavor tban any Gunpowder or Japan. Trjr it. =3%t PENNY PLAIN BY O. DOUGLAS Bhopmaaâ€" "Tott majr buy your oholc*â€" penny pUts or two peuc* colored." Bolornn BmiJl Borâ€" "Pennr plaln, pln««. It's batter rtln» tot the BODey." •is Ctfyrigkt by Oewye a. Dorm C*. CHAPTER XXI.â€" (Cont'd.) "Who, indeed ! Oh, they're a h«^arty got the fur coat people. Has Jean rhe coveted?" "She hasn't. It was a great disap- poiritment, poor child. She was so excited when she saw them bp-injj brought in rich profusion, but whc'i ^.„.. » . â- , „ .. i „v, Z.:^ tu ^ 11 I â- V. marry off her girl as well as possible she tried them on all desire to possossi ci.„ v. vvjii.r\. 4. 1.*,. 1 .u . u u 11 I °"^ "^*' aiTomplished the first part they became her so '" ' - ' She might have been a I.ipton or a Coats, or even gone out and discovered the .South Pole, or contested Lloyd George's Welsh seat in the Conserva- tive interest. As a woman she is crib- bed and cabined. What she has set herself (o do is to force what she calls 'The County' to recognize her, and h«d no thought of seeing Mm. Indeed,' 1 had no notlun that he had stiii a connection with the place. And then Jean suddenly said his name. 1 knew then I badn't forgotten; my heart leapt up in the old unreaeonabie way. I met himâ€" and thought he cared for Jean." | "Yee. I used nometimes to wonder why T>ewi8 didn't fall in love with Jean. Of couree h« was too old for her, but it would have been quite a feasible match. Now I know that he cared for you all the time. Oh, I'm not surprised that he looked at no one else. But that you should hav« wait- ed. .. . There muat have been eo many nuitors " I "A few. But some people are born' faithful. Anyway, Pm so glad that' when I thought he cared fur Jean it made no difference in my feo'.ings toj her. 1 should have felt so humiliated if I had been petty enough to hate her for what .she couldn't help. My brother Biddy wants to marry Jean, and I've; ! great hopes that it may work out all right." Mrs. Hope ."at forward in her chair. "I had my suspicions. Jean has changed late'.y; nothing to take hold of, but I have felt a difference. It wasn't the money â€" that's an external thing â€" the change was in Jean her- self, u certain reticence where there had been utter frankness; a laugh more fi^quent, but not quite so gay and light-hearted. Has he spoken to her?" "Yes, but Jean wouldn't hear of it." (To bo continued.) a small »ix-ineh square of wood with tiny holes drilled one-half inch apart, and could be made at home, Ui>ing half match Bticlui for pegs. Dolls, kiddie care, and the more common playihings all have their place, of course, but something differ- ent is always welcome, and for the •ifort put forth you are amply paid; â€" R. H. cnc left her They buried her, somehow. iU.i She saidi through sheer perseverance, and I've hereelf she looked like 'a mou.se under! "V.h "^^e will accomplish the seo- a divot.' whatever that may be, andi°"'^= h. girl ,s pretty and well dowor- they really did make her look like tivc'!^;,j .^"^", ? ''k.ng for the woman. «,,»«/ „/„ .;„ „ _ . • I especially if I haven't seen her for a out of any six women one meet.5 ni ' i;,,t^ 'pu„- _ u-i • u ti,. ^„„4. I.-,,. ^ 1 u- I '"tie. There is some bite 111 her con- tne street, hur coats are very levelling t.iings. Later on when I get he to Ixmdon we'll see what can be done. Jean needs careful dressing to bring versatioii. Mrs. Jowett is a sweet wo- man, but to me she is like a vacuum cleaner. When I've talked to her for «„i lUo* ,.^.„ _ 1 », I 1 • u - ten minutes my head feels like a out that very real but elusive beautv -,,„u;„„ lu * i. u 1 j ,-,f l.o-t- T ,.«-=., .„.! A u â- iu ' cushion that has been cleaned â€" a sort 01 liers. I persuaded her in the mean-! „/ .,. , n . i- , »;.-,<. f« ™„f » „„<-. 1 »t. . J .1. 1 °i empty, yet swollen feeling. 1 never tn.ie to get a soft cloth coat made with „.„ „„j„^Zt„„j u^ »« r ». u o clii^tr ,.„ii,. „„j „„<» ou 1*^'" understand how Mr. Jowett has a i^Kunk collar and cufi . . . She was, .«^o funny about under-things. I want- ed her to get some crepe-de-Chinn •vliings, but she was adamant. Sho! didi''t at ail approve of them, and said she liked under-things that would boil. She has always had very daii-.fyi thing's made by herself; Great-aunt' WHEN WILL TEA PRICES DROP? A shortage In the world's tea supply, In the face of an enormous demand, is forcing prices up to very high levels. Tea merchants realize, however, that lea at a dollar a pound only brings the day of a drop In price so much nearer. Tea growers are making such tre- mendous profits that over-production Is bound to come at any time. gone through life with her and kept his reason. But there's no doubt men like sweet, sentimental women, and I suppose they are restful in a house. . . Shall we have coffee in the draw- ing-room? It's cosier." In the drawing-room they settled Alison taught her to do beautiful fine' '^.°*" *^^°''^ ^^*^. '''"^ ^^'"^ contentedly Woman's Sphere •ONK-PIECE ROMPERS." sewing. Jean is a delightful person to do things with; .she brings such a freshness to everything, is n^ver bored, never blase. I was glad to see her so deeply interested in new clothes. I confess to having a deep •distrust of a woman who is above try- ing to make herself attractive. She is an insufferable thing." 'I quite agree, my dear. A woman of her appear- deliberately careless »nce is an offence hand, the opposite can be carried too far. Look at Mrs. Jowett "Oh, dear Mrs. Jowett, with her lace â- silent. Pamela idly reached out for a' i book and read a little here and thera; ' as she sipped her coffee, while hei| I hostess looked into the fire. The room 1 seemed to dream in the spring sun- i shine. Generations of Hopes had lived' I in it, and each mistress had set herj I mark on the room. Beautiful old cab- i inets stood against the white walls,' I while beaded ottomans worked in the i early days of Victoria jostled slender But, on the other' P'^'PP*="'^*'^ chairs and tables, an 1h. r»rr\.A in J ^^""B^ cwn/orlabie Chesterheld A andi down-cushioned arm-chairs gave the comfort modems ask for. Nofhingj and her delicate faded tints, and heri ''"''^®'' °"*^ °* P'*"^*' ^^^ ^^^ ^^^"^ ^'^^t tears of senUment and her marvellous! "â- "' ^''^oous proportions took all the; maids'" incongruitiesâ€" the family Raeburns,! "A good woman," said Mrs. IIope,!f*'« Q"5«" .A""« cabinets the .ninia-| practical style '•biit siilv She fears n c'rancht „'' 1 tures, the V ictonan atrocities, the weak . *-''^- -^ ^'''^^ simp.e praeueai siym th:; st^oerthr5:vn.''^rm''Lw::i7':'--'-- ^^etches the fv^-^'uv^h^o^rtnttv "iCxt remind«l of her when I read "Weir; ^^f ^^ J^, ^^S' ^f^^^^' gin^lSS^^^ ciu'fd'^4 u^^ them into one pleasing whole. There! ^o^*^'^„'â„¢''*^'- . . • . e- .^4 is no charm in a room furnished from I ^h^ Pattern is cut in 4 Sizes: 2, 4, fi and 8 years. A 4-year size, 11 made with sleeves, requires 2 yards of 27 inch material. Without sleeves it re of Hermiston.' She has many points in common with Mrs. Weir â€" 'a dwaibly body.' Of the two, I really prefer Mrs. Dufl'-Whalley. Her great misfortune! was being born a woman. With alli that energy and perfe<a health, that j keun brain and the indomitable strain that iii-ver knows when it is beaten,] bht might have dor.e almost anything. showrooms, though it be correct in every detail to the period chosen. Much more human ia the room that is. . ., , , t, 1 ^ , j „.»„ full of things, ugly, perhaps, in them-j '^TllL^JI'^ .!!!f: ^"'^' *"'' *="*"' selves but which link one generation to another. The ottoman worked so I of contrasting material require % yd Pattern mailed to any address on laboriously by a ringleted great-aunt I stood with its ugly mahogany legs be- receipt of 15c in silver, by the Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Adelaide St., WRKlEfS "Mer every meet ' thUdrentoeartibri Mr 'tmtkf dive them Wrlgley'tfJ It reaMvct isod particle* fimn dw teeth. 9tmiMlMM iOnt ftttSM. Coabats add . Hr„ Q.,U„ K "'-'r«-"' "''f':"^ I Toronto. Allow two weeks for receipt side a Queen Anne chair, over whose! , .r faded wool-work seat a far-ofT beautyj "^„*^'',"', I had pricked her dainty fingers â€" and! j both of the workers were Hopes : ' while by Pamela's side stood a fire-' screen stitched by Augusta, the last! of the Hopes. j "I wonder," said Mrs. Hope, break- j ing the silence, "what has become ofj UwiB Elliot? BEAUTY-SHOP SECRETS. When you lean back in your com- fortable chair in the gray and rose boudoir of a beauty sliop you marvel at the shining array of bottles and jars on the glaas-top table. Some- times they use as many as eight dif- ferent preparations on your face and neck. But you don't want eight separ- ate jars of cream on your dresser. Here's the secret: Most of these creams are made from one good basic cream. Just as a good cook can make one batch of cooky dough turn out a dozen kinds of cookies, so one good cream can be made to serve a variety of needs. Treat the basic cream with lemon for a tanned, dry skin; with peroxide for a tanned, oily skin; with benzoin for a super-dry, tanned skin; with flaxseed ointment for pimples; with sulphur for blackheads; with real cream for medium-old wrinkled skins; with orange for premature wrinkles; with eggs for old wrinkles, and with sweet-smelling flower oils, for windy days. Doesn't that give you an idea? One jar of good, rich cleansing cream is enough. You can add all the variations yourself, and most of the ingredients can be found in your kit- chen. Keep the basic cream by itself and add the extras to the pinch of cream you take from the jar. For example, the juice of tomatoes, canned or fresh, is an excellent bleach and astringent for an oily skin, with black- heads. After you have washed your face and pressed out the larger black- heade, put on the tomato juice. Before this dries, pat in a little basic cream. A bit of ripe banana mashed with the cream and rubbed with an upward cir- cular motion on an old-looking, wrinkled neck will help to whiten it. AIR AND YOUR PLANTS. Wilting of plants in winter is avoided by increasing the amount of moisture in the air. It is not neces- sary to keep the plant roots in water or to soak the soil continuously. To khcp the air damp, nothing has bren found which equals a pan of water set on or near the stove, repster, or radiator, says Nature Magazine. The water in the pan is evaporated and di-^tributed through the air, reducing th» transpiration from the plants. Spraying the leaves with water every clear day also increases the moisture content and acts as a general tonic to the plants. Watering the plants two or three times a day is not good prac- tice. For winter plants a good general rule to follow is to watch the soil at the top of the pot. When it is thor- oughly dried out, water the plant. When watering, add enough to satur- ate the entire mass of soil. Do not just wet the top and trust to luck that the soil in the bottom will get wet enough. One can usually be as- sured that the entire mass of soil is soaked when water runs out of the bottom of the pot. "I saw an Ad - in the street car "Not long ago I saw an ad in the atrect car, 'Soaking takes the place of rubbing'. The next day I sent for a package of RJnao and tried it. I was delighted with the result and now wash my children's ckMhca without any effort what- soever â€" they soak themselves dean in the Rinso tuds. I just had to write and tell you how 'won- derful' I think Rinao is and have told several of my friends to try it "It is wonderful for scrubbing 9aon. Without a doubt the best thing I have ever ueccL I abo cleaned my enamel sink with it and it ia splendid." The fongoing letter is but one tA the maoy rtcaivad by the m e k e r i of Riaio from womea who are enthuaaitic about this newer, eaacr, better way to wada and dean â€" the Rinao way. Lever Brotbcn >j'"'*t^f, Toronto. Rinso '<•». -'.1^'' IU87 .Send 15c in silver for our up-to- date Fall and Winter 1924-1925 Book of Fashions. KEEPING LITTLE FINGERS BUSY. My little Elnora Louise will be four I haven't heard from' years old in August. Something must him since he went away. Do you knowi absorb her attention at all times, and BefreaUai aad bearflcialf Ml SZAUCD TIOHT KEPT RtOHT occasionally it is up to Mother to sup- ply that "something." Now, when imagination is encouraged and de- veloped in a child, the most important step toward education has started. I first realized the problem of keep- ing a little mind and two tiny hands occupied when Elnora Louise was two years and two months old. I noticed OUR FAVORITE PUDDING. This is easily made and is delicious to serve to either the family or guests. Beat half a pint of cream. Dilute half an ounce of gelatin in half a cupful of cold water. Add this to the cream with half a cupful of boiling water, half a cupful of sug^ar and one tablespoonful of vanilla. Add chopped nuta or fruit if desired. Cool, then stir and place in cold place to jell. I pht this pudding in sherbet glasses and cover with chocolate sauce made like this: One cupful of confectioner's sugar, one teaspoonful of butter, one tea- spoonful of vanilla and one table- spoonful of cocoa. Add enough milk to make soft stiuce and beat thoroughly. The pudding is also good served with cream. where he is just now?" Pamela shook her head. "Why don't you marry him, Pam- ela?" "For a very good reason â€" he hasn't atked me." "Hoots!" said Mrs. Hope, "as if that mattered!" Pamela lifted her eyebrows. "It ie . , generally considered rather necessary,! ''«'â- r«ach'nB out for magazines and; isn't it?" she asked mildly | studying over catalogues. | "You know quite well that he would' I^et«miined that she should have a ask vou to-morrow if you gave him"'""'' <>' *»**â- ^^"< '""'** especially for the slightest encouragement. The!*^" weA», 1 went through the store- man's afraid of you, that's what's' ""'"'"i "'"^ ^\Mii^d n scrapbook which wrong." I ''*'' funii.sheti instructive and ncvcr- Pamela nodded lending amusement. It was the pride "Is that why you have remained! "^ Elnora Louise's po<se.s.sioMS for Pamela Reston? My dear, men are;"'«"y ni°"*h»' fools, and blind. And I.ewis is modest ^^ ''P*'"' "'f'>' *1"''''^ '?""" *l'N as well, nut . . . forgive me blunder-"" '''"P^^ ?"''' /"'' " "".'' °'' ^"*'i I've a long tongue, but „„..! "cveral spoo.s and some string. Mlnard'a Liniment fer the Qrlppib Better by one sweet soul constant and true to be beloved, than all the kingdoms of delight to trample through unloved, unloved. â€" John Oxenham. JJhftPofaiq^ouf Hereli a taity nourishing dith you maynot have tried. Every member of the family will reliih it.| One of nearly a hundred tested recipes in the Kraft Cheese Booklet.jr»froi^ mail coupon.'' â€" â€" â€" â€" -^^ Twins for Noise. "Well, Pat, do the twins make much noise at night?" "Praise be to HIvin! Shure each wun cries so loud yez can't hear the ither wan." «•»♦' â- nft-lMUrM .^ CkwMGa.iaBita4 tnl mt Ckuu BtdM B«ek. llitiwL Naint . ... „..«__*.^ kUrm The Ritz-Carlton Hotel e-leSS America's Smartest Resort Hotel. Famous for its Euro- pean Atmosphere. Perfect Cuisine and Service. Single rooms from $5.00 Double rooms from {8.00 European Plan New Hydriatric and Electro - Therapeutic Department. GUSTAVE TOTT, Manager â- *i 1 ll 11 X ing. you at my age I might keep! would think lit still." "No, I don't mind your knowing. ; don't think any one else ever had a i suspicion of it. And I thought myself 1 1 had long .since got over it. Indeed, I when I came here I was contcmplat- ; jngmarrying some one else." , Hi'eil ifle, did you know Lewis was , here when you came to Priorsford?" j "No I'd completely lost trace of him. I wa.s too proud ever to inquire after hini when he suddenly gave up coming near us. Priorsford .«ugge«t- I ed it.<iclf to me as a place to come to for a rest, chiefly, I suppose, liecau.ae '1 1 had henrd of it from Ijewis, but I Elnora Louise a'so has some colored wooden beads to string, but her trea- fjsure now is a peg board. It is merely FOREIGN BONDS and STOCKS Government, Municipal, Industrial .4ustrl»n Italian I-Vench Polish Oei-man Russian Wiitf^ f'lr infoimalKm and latest offerings R. 0. PATTER80N ^"(ire'gn Securities 112 St. James St. Montreal, Que. Minard's for Sprai'na and Brut We learn wisdom from failure much \ more than from success. We often! discover what will do by finding out what will not do. 1 Some folks have taken so much pa tent medicine that nobody will ever know what ailed them to begin with. -i COLOR IT NEW WITH "DIAMOND DYES" Bea.ilitu! home dye- ing and tinting ii guaranteed with DIs- raonrt Dyes. Just dtp In cold water to tint toft, delicate shades, or boil to dye rich, permanent colors. Each lo-cent package contains direcllouj so simple any woman can dye or lint lin- gerie, slika, ribbons, skirts, waists, dresses, coats, stockings, sweaters, draperies, coverings, hangings, every thing new. Buy "Diamond Dyes"â€" no other kind â€" and tell your druggist whether the material you wish to color Is wool or silk, or whether U U linen, cotton, or mixed goods. ONTARIO Banking by Mail The security afforded by the Province of Ontario Savings Office, together with the facilities extended by every Post Office in Canada and other countries, make it possible for everyone to deposit their savings in this institu- tion. Interest is allowed, compounded half-yearly, with full checking privileges. The confidence the rural communities have shown in this Savings Office ia indicated by the large increase in de- posits, which are now over $20,000,000. All deposits are secured by the entire resources of the Province of Ontario. Remittances should be made by Post Office money order, bank cheque, express order or registered letter, and should be addressed to your nearest Branch, where they will receive prompt attention. Province of Ontario Savings Office HEAD OFFICE: 15 QUEEN'S PARK, TORONTO Toronto Branch Offleea: Cor. Bay and Adelaide 8t«. Cor. University and Oundas Sta. 619 Danforth Avenue. Other Branches at Hamilton, St. C.itharlnea, St. Mary's, Pembrokke, Brantford, Woodstock, Owen Sound, Ottawa, Seaforth, Walkerton, Newmarket and Aylmer.