«mm^i!ik::i.: IWIIi!llWl4|/4lj|,.._i_ II l|ripilll||||ji ouiif^ Tender Leaves II »nd tips used in SAUDA' GREEN TEA n BMW, Ar« sealed in alr-tlgHt altunlnun^ foil* 'THeir fresH flavor is finer thacn anjr Japan or Qui^powder. fry SALrADA. The Way the Voting Went BY EDITH BARNARD DELANO. CUP^ 4r jtf-AAy- DAINii CLOTHES fUK liABY. Comfort and daintiness combine in these extra garments for babies who must look their prettiest every hour of the day. When taken for an air- ing in the pram, a long coat of soft warm flannel, with dart-fitted cape, and round collar having scal'-oped edges and touches of embroidery, would be the very nicest thing to wear, especially vfhii) a bonnet with turn-back extension of matching ma- terial and embroidery is worn with it The pattern also provides a short jacket, and the extension may be left of? th-3 bonnet. Cream cashmere makes an adorable kimono when tied with pretty ribbons down the front and under the arms. The kimono pat- 1 tern is perforated for shorter length. Coat with cape requires 2 '4 yards of j .^6-inch material, without cape 1% I yards, short jacket % yard, long I kimono 1 % yards, short kimono % i yard, bonnet U yard. The complete pattern is cut for one size only. Price 20 cent*. Our Fashion Book, illustrating the newest and most practical styles, will' bo of interest to evory home drees- 1 maker. Price of the book 10 cents the copy. Each copy includes one coupon good for five cents in the pur^ chase of any pattern. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS, Wntt your name and address plain- ly, giving number and size ol- stich patterns as you want. Enclose 20c in itamps or coin (coin preftrred; wrap It carefully) for each number, and address your order to Pi.ttem Dept, Wilson Publishing Co., 78 West Ade- laide St., Toronto Patterns aent by return mail. Milk Dffles Chlorine. Chlorine does not kill off germs In iDlIk a« tl does tn water, probably be- oeuso the chlorine cannot penetrate the fat globules In milk. Slip » t»ej ^«^»» yonr pocfcd tnMit yoa tio home lo* Ote«HMryean4riaM lartin4 niTCt • for p l g â€"rfi aitngBt WMttyaa/Mirinfr flNoldn^ or wImii ^jTMlltnU finlMMT, "The Wop." Ms name was herd to pronouncf â€" BO they called him "the "Wop." He rtppe<^red at the mouth of tbe shaft one day In ApVil. By means of profuse ges- tures be m«4« U known that he had talked much of the hundred and fifty inllea from the city and was looklnc for work. A good-natured foreman put Mm down on the book aa No. 409, gave him a Bhovel and sent blm down the shaft to perform ordinary labor. Some of his fellow workmen laughed at th« man's unintelligible attemptR to speak English! most of them Ignot-ed him. In a little while the Wop bad learned the routine, which, for him, "was" noth- ing more than to All a barfow wltb earpi and take it to the shaft. * No one knows just bow It happened. But there It wasâ€" a stick of dynamite and a Gl'.ort length of sputtering fuse attached, lying on tbo ground near the portable forge. There were then about thirty men in thut bit of the tunnel, many feet under the surface of the ground, and there was only one way out â€" up the shaft ladder at the end of the working. There was no elevator save the "dirt hoist." This short sec- tion of the great aqueduct had not been Joined to the rest ot the tunnel; It was a blind alley at both ends. Some one pointed .to the dynamite and lighted fase. No one was quick enough to take_ hold of the dynamite and disconnect the fuse. Ins.tead, with one accord, they ran toward the single ladderâ€" that is, all save the Wop. It was the brightly glowing fuse end doubtelBS that caused the panic. These men were accustomeil to dynamite; but it was always fired by an electric detonator. Some of them said nfter- ward" that it was the hissing point of fire that frightened them. Whatever the reason, they stormed the shaft, and under their rush the laddei swayed and fell. They were trapped. It was the Wop that saved their lives. He saw and understood. With a warning cry he swooped down on the dynamite. The fuse was almost burned out. He did not try to detach fuse and fulminating cap. Instead he turned toward the far end ot the tun- nel. Part way down the tube was a huge mound of loose dirt waiting to be removed. The Wop ran up this sloping mound and hurled the explo- sive as far as he could. That Ir.stant came the explosion. Happily the great pile of earth acted us a baffle plate. The men were deafened, but no one was Injured save the Wop, whose face and neck were badly burned. "It's funny,"- said one of the Wop's fellow workers, "but none of us thought of the man's being human like UB. We couldn't understand his queer talk and laughed at htm. But he was â- white' all through. We learned that he had a wife and three children and loved them as much as we loved our families. Ye«, he was "wlilte." His akin wag swarthy, and his English was terrible; but he was white.' " PART II. "Cut a ditch acroaa Henry's back lot But the women of Wisdom yHla*/^":® and aero., nrine and Sam Har- ^jpent many a pleaaant afternoon '*•,'»' rwidcome to x»w land and b* cai:ii,j upon ««ch other and driving only a Utt.e ways from the river about the hiU.. On registration day You'd dran the pond olTj^nd ,^ rid warcoly • household, scarcely a di^ '>} »»>• nuisance. I tell all and .un- tent farm but was r^preMn^ed at '^^ J~?. •** " V***" tTfr";,., . the town office. ' 'â- ^'' ' â- "<» }^'^ «'^'' ' V**' ^''" ,, _, . , , »«* stood up to reform before now ried. "It ain't like I want the>offioe," _, ^ . „ ^ i. j The next nnorning Mr. Gregg had another consultation with Mr. Morse, ,,„, , , , , ,. . „ and before they parted Mr. Morse was l^°T*"!.Z"*..'j „il-!^-fl! w^n to •»»? W« lag and laugh aloud. â„¢ . _ Time was short. Men may speak of said he, "but the school board's no place for a woman." someone agreed; and someone ela repeated both remarks at hla own „j^ p,y^j,^.^^but political exigency supper table that evening. "No truer word was ever spoken," Mid Mrs. Wing, when tha sayingt were told her. "The School board is no place for a woman unless we wo< men want our influence felt in all the is aa contagious. Before the weak was out everyone was telldng of Z«' bina Gregg's bright idea of draining the pond, to rid the town of mos- quitoes, to clear away a nuisance from under the very windows of so public- activities of our children. Woman's j spirited a lady as Mrs. Almixa'^Wing, place is indeed In the homeâ€" and wo- ! and to endow tho town itself with man's home is the great wide worid." On the whole, th« women were in- creasingly proud of Mrs. Wing. Even some of the men seemed to favor l»er election. four acres of good rich land â€" ^why, it would be the richest anywhere, men said, and right in the middle of the village, moreover. Within a few days I more volunteers were joyously dig- "She's got a lot o' brains, Mis' Wing, ging the drainage ditch, has," said one. "There's wasn't any-,' "it can't bo done," said Low Hail thing Charlie Wing ever did that she j "i tell you, the hmd under that pond didn't have her say^in, and folks say she's just about doubled his property since he died." "Eee-uh. And he died young," said Lew- Hall. Hayirtg was over, but tobacco was coming along. The men were ex- ceedingly busy, with no time for cam- goes down into a peak upside down- No tellin' how deep it is. And what'll you do with ali them fish?" "I'm fish warden," said Mr. Gregg. "Itll be my job to take care o' the flsh." "Good food wasted, that's what," said Lew; and 21ebina, thoughtfully pnigning; still, it was felt that as | cubbing his chin, looked towards Mrs things had been m Wisdom, so they ^i^gs windows. would be. The town had always been ruled by men. Then Mrs. Wing pre- sented a new bell to the schoolhouse. On the first of July she gave a flag- pole and a new flag for the Common. She even read an address on the oc- casion of the first running up of the flag. "Women must ever look out for the Rumors are bom in the dark and spread in the day. Before the next nightfall everyone in the village knew all about it and word was being car- ried into the hills. "It just goes to show how sure of himself Zebina is," said some of the men. "When he starts out to do a ' flmaU tab'-M wars laid and waiting^ on Mrs. Wing's lawn. In the kitehan coflTae was ateaming. Its aroma valt-i ing towards th« Waiting crowds. \ fvoiILt were gstting hungry. Evan ' I Mrs. Wing's ea'jn waa becoming a I fluttering anxiety. I "I aent out soma tube," sha said. I "Ths pans are aU hoi, but ma/be | , somebody bettar teka down a pail or ! : two, so's to get th« first catch up to I the house as soon as they can." I So pails ware sent to the men at tha , far and of the pond. Hunger inereaS' ad, and impatisnoa. At last the small . group were seen to ba maring. Through the dusk man were coming around the edga <rf the plasa wfaara the pond had basn, soma carrying paik, aoms tuba. A faint ch««r want up and woonan hastaoad back to Mrs. Wing's kitchen, that all migbt be raailly for hastily cooking UM^flsh. Two men carried the kc^gest tub between them, bore it up to the kit- chen door, set it down and melted away into the shadows. The people who had come from afar in anticipa- tion of the fresh fish supper, the peo- ple who had waited and hungerea, at last even tha women who had been pouring fat Into Mrs. Wing's frying pans crowded around the tub, even unto Mrs. Wing herself,^ In the tub reposed an eel. A large eel. A graat-grandfatherly, eel, fat and sleek and slumbrous. But one eel, only one. 'The men who counted the votes on Monday said that as far as they could make out not a woman yotad for Mr. Gregg; in fact, that gentleman got sev<en votes; and there are Just seven bachelors In Wisdom. (The End.) . . ,,„. , thing he goes ahead and does it, and public good "the address said. Since .« does it right." And others said, the days of Eve, wotnen hpe served. ..^^ ^binks he'll please Mis' Wing so's she'll resign before the voting." And to that others replied, " 'Tain't so. He says that rebuttin' on the pond like she does, and having stood the nuisance to long, it ain't any mora'n right she should have all the flsh." For that was what the flsh war- den, thj origrinator of reform, had de- They must ever stand ready to serve, to give of their time and their strength for the benefit of thoee around them and of those to come after them." Alvah Rice, hovering on the out- skirts of the group around the flag- pole, remarked cynically, "Maybe Eve cooked and dished up and all, but she „^.^j_ g^ ^^^^ ^ ^^^ ^^ ^^ ^^..^^ had an app.e hid up her a.eeve. Well ^ ^^^^^ ^^ jjrs. Wing to that effect, adding that he hoped she would re- I88UE No. Railing Sunken Riches. Over a hundred years ago off the coast of Pondoland, the E^ast India- man, Orosrenor, was lost, togethar with her cargo of gold, silver and pre- cious stones worth more than two mil- lion pounds. Up to the early part of tha present oentury two attempts had been made to reach the treasure, but both failed, the first on account ^f the lack ot spe- cial gear, and the second because tha strongly-built hatches could not be opened. In 1906 operations were again s'at^ od, this time by a syndicate flo:ited"ln South Africa. But It Is waa now found that the ship had become aurrounded by sand and had completely dlsap- l>ear«d. Luckily the weather kept fine, Eo a dredger was set to wqrk to re- move the sand. Seemingly the effort waa oearlng successâ€" yet it failed. The force of the eea caused the walls of sand to collapse, to that the work ot men and dredger was destroyed. Two years ago still another effort was made, this time in a totally differ- ent manner. It was hoped to recover the treasure by way ot the land instead of the-tea. The Groevenor was not a great dis- tance from the shore, so It was an easy matter to sink an Inclined shaft below the floor of the sea, and then tunnel out to the ship. Before the operations could com- mence, however, a great deal had to l)C done, tor the nearest village Is forty to nfty miles from Port St. 'ohns In order to get the material, roads had to be made; and after thta work wiA completed It took another two or three montbi before t>ie ma- lorlal arrived. The work of salving the Orasvenor'a wealth Is still going on. The money and prseioua atones have not as yet hpen reached, but It Ia expected that before kmg siiorese will crown the sal- Tag* men's effort â€" or Homewheres." It was known that the special town tr.^eting was to be called for the . ^^i j^ ^i,^,.^^^^^. ^^ fourth Monday in August. The month' appreciation of tl came, and daily, at evening mail time, Zebina Gregg waylaid one man after smother. He borrowed Lew Hall's horse and wagon and drove out ceive the fish as a testimonial to her well as a mark of the way she had un- complainingly endured the Tiuisanco BO long. All in all, Zebina's stock was ris- ing. Even some of the worr»en were into the hihs It was to be observed ^^^^^ ^^ j^^,^^^ ^^^^ j^^ ^^^ ^ ^j j,^ that either the heat or his unwonted I ^^ ^^^^ ^^^ ^ ^^^ ^^^^^ activity was wearing on h.m. Several g^t ^^„„^ ^^ ^j^ ^j^^^j^^ ^^^^, times he held prolonged consultations I ^^^^ ^^^ ^ j^^ ^^^^.^ ^ ^^^^ with Cyrus Morse. could 2^bina Gregg was leaning against a pillar of the narrow porch that ran along Henry Hillis' store on an even- 'Lt!°jTjj:!'lK'.r^ "n 'Jt^Wing, wWle gratifled at the gift of deserted the store for a seat on the porch floor. There were seven or eight other men in like position, their feet hanging over the edge; only Zebina was standing. Energy was at a low ebb, conversation lapsed. "That pond," said Zebina into the silence that was broken only by the rattle of tree toads and katydids â€" "that pond is a public nuisance." Two men nearest the south end of the porch turned their heads and looked at the moonlit pond aa though it were something new. "Bc'en there a k>ng time," said Lew Hall. "Too long," said Zebina. "Why, Just think what a nuisance that pond must be to Mis' Wing. Right under her winders, you might say. It's a breeding I^aoe for mssauitess. It floods in tne^rlng. It ain't healthy." "There ain't a healthier place In Uie province than Wisdom," said AKah Rice. "AU's the matter with iMa town, folks needs a little shakin' up once in a while to keep 'em from dying off of old age." "Why, that pond was there when the Indiana - come," said Lew Hall. "My gran'father said when he was a boy, all you had to do to get a mess o' fish for dinner was to throw out a line into that pond. Nowadays folks are so dum lazy they wunt even catch fish to put into their mouths. That's that." "I agree with you, Lew," said Ze- bina Gregg. "This town sure does need some shakin' up. Moreover, it needs reform." The men looked at him. Something told them that Zebina's ingenuity was working. "Take that pond, now. It ain't right to leave a damp, unsightly place like that right in the middle of the village. It's an eyesore. It's a waste of good land. It's a â€" a danger to the community, mosquitoes and malaria and all." "It's plum full o' good fish," aald Lew Hall. "Ain't anybody ever took a fish out o' there, not since I can re- member. It mutt be Just a-wrigglln' vrith flsh." "It wouldn't be so much of a job to drain off that pond," ZcUna went on. That remark duly reached Mrs. Wing; whereupon the Saturday Ga- zette published the news that Mra fish the town was about to bestow upon her, felt that she should share her good fortune with her neighbors. The pond was to be drained the Sat- urday before the special town meet- ing. She cordially invited all and sundry of her fellow townspeople to assemble on her lawn that Saturday evening. She would make of the event' a gala occasion. There should be, t not a saVad-and-cold-meat supper, not a baked-bean 8upi)er, not a sugaring-ofr supper, but â€" a rarity indeed in inland Wisdom â€" a freah flsh supper. The weD-advertised day came, bright and clear. The night befort, the earth left between pond and ditch waa Mttle more than a dike. On Sat- urday morning Mr. Gregg himself, with a shovel and pick, freed the waters of the pond. But the drop to the river waa not great The waters receded alowly. Very slowly. So slowly that practically everyone in the village, and a score, or more from ] ths hills had assembled before the last water drained off; what little reinainn| ed was heM in a depression at 'a far | comer, and duik came while men were | still working there. By that time people were lining the road and the drier ground bordering the place where the pond had been, They could not see what was going on across the still soggy expanse, except that a jgroup of men, marshaled by 'Mr. â- Gregg, were gathered there beyond,' occasionally busy with thovels. "That's where the hole is,^ said Lew Hall. "No tellin how deep it is." "Seems like the fish are mighty quiet," said someone. "They know their day has come," said Lew. "Folks could 'a' been eat- ing out o' that pond for years, if everybody wasn't so dumb lazy around here." Personality in. Music. The personality of the interpreter of music is the most important element In the Interpretation. There are artiste whom the public consider second or third-rate musi- cians whose technical. ability perhaps even surpasses that of the outsitand- Ing favorites, and yet there is lacking the real message th^ differentiates the greater and lesser artists. It Is an old topic, indeed, but It has to be dis- cussed repeatedly, if for no other rea<- eon at least because little children wHl grow up and become new genera- tions of music lovers. These dear young ones have to learn that the in- terpretative artist is no artist at all If he gives na expression to himself. A parrot can talk quite wisely at timea, but it does not know what it la saying. The confident young' planlat who marches out on the stage and re- cites a Beethoven sonata according to the rules and regulations laid down by his teacher ia no artist. He 1» usually not even a good parrot. But the play- er whose personality can not be smoth- ered will elttier interest or enrage the hearer. He has something to say. The rules of music have their place, but it is the real genuine spirit of music that It is more Important to get i into one's nature. It Is the getting of I music into ourselves In order to put ourselves Into the music. i, . A Lesson in Manners. We find In an English newspaper a story that Is attributed to Mr. Lloyd George, who Is reported to have told It on his return from his recent trip to the United States. We suspect that the story Is not his, but that of an In- genious British Jokesmith; however. It hits amusingly one of the Republic's national fallings. In going from New York to Chicago, the ex-premiler is represented ae say- ing, I observed a pretty little girl chew- ing gum. Not only did she chew It, but the insisted on pulling It out In long strings and then letting it fall back in- to her mouth again. Finally when the thtiur was beginning to get on my nerves the <AUd'a mother leaned over and in an aMAlble whiap«- said: "lAurcella, don't do that! Sit up and chew your gum like a little lady." Bow toniflilie PICKIiES â€" Vraoeh PicUaa, Cacam- b«r. Chow Ckow, Moatard Catrap, Oraan Toms to Sauceâ€" These, and many otiiar daliglitlal recipes (or PlcUat, Baucea, Savories, Sandwiches, Salads, Egc Dlahas â€" are in our new Kadps Book. Wa will gladl/ Mod yoa a copyâ€" free. Write for it today. i6a AaihMM SbMt MOimuUL 818 Veen's , E\Mii9rtara di^egtion Right, But Wrong. I suppose that most people are now eating more fruit at their meals, that many of us have resumed tha cold- bath-ln-tha-mornlng habit, and that, when It la hot, practically everybody flings windows open to cool "stifling" rooms. Three case.* of excellent in- tentions â€" and bad results. For otir methods are wrong! Take, first, the "open-window" ques- tion. During the night hours the tem- perature always falls, and there la coolness out of doors and within. Then the eun rlsies, the odtside air is rapidly heated, and "to keep the house cool," we fling our windows' open ^nd admit the heated air. Windows should be wide open dur- ing the night, so that the cold air may enter and take possession, and closed during the day. The heated outside air should be refused admission. Tha cool, night-gathered alx will then hold its own, especially If all Inside doors are left wide open, so that it can cir- culate. Blinds, too, should be drawn In all rooms not In use. Try this method, once, and you'll adopt it permaneatly. Fruit cools the blood. Its juices and acids hold other virtues. But practi- cally all its merits are cancelled if, as is us-ual, it is eaten at the end of a meal. Eat more fruit, but always at the beginning of a meal. That cold morning "tub" Ir quite e.x- cellent for the winter, if you can stand 11, but quite wrong "for the summer. It should be obvious that the braced up, stimulated, all-aglow feeling that fol- lows a cold bath In winter Is not what you want In summer. Try a tepid bath. That reduces the blood pressure (of great Importance to many), ai^ Is far more effective aa a body cleanser. Perspiration, a sum- mer product, is a poison, and cold water, of the "hard" sort especially, doeis not remove it from the skin. SXCBttENT OPPORTUNITY for making a aplendid Income by be- coming our representative tn your town to take orders for the fast and easy-selltng RADIO PACK, "a hot water bag without hot wSler." For particulars of our very attractive pro- position, write us. Mark*. Merrltt A Ce.. 1 Bleer St last, Toronto S. Lucy â€" "Yes. Oeorge and I have agreed that be go his way and I'll go mine." Luluâ€" "I notice a good many gfrki seem to be going his way now he hat that new racer." ..1 o . â€" Minard'a Linimsnt tor Dandruff. Sentence Sermons. It's No Small Thing -To aspire to be a great mother. â€"To deterre fho confidence ot your 12-year-old son. â€" To occupy cne hour of the time of any audience. â€" When a young woman trusts her self tn the company of a young man for an evening. â€" When a child perpetratiia hit flrat deception. â€" To be allowed to ahare the tron- hlea of a friend. â€" When modesty Is sacrificed for popnlar applause. One of Britain's Pioneers. The Faraday Society, which recently decided to limit its activities owing to the Increased cost of printing, is one of the many associations which have grown out of our national habit of hero-worship, says an English writer. Michael Faraday won fame as one of the pioneers of electrical experi- ment, and his work In this direction shows how much can be accomplished with primitive equipment. The ma- terials from which he made his first galvanic battery were seven halfpen- nies, seven pieces of zinc of the same size, and seven pieces of paper soaked in muriate of soda. Equally simplel was his first trictlonal electric ma- chine, preserved at the Royal Institu- tion. It wai made from a ginger-beer bottle. Minard'a Liniment for Burns. Pat's Good Point. Pat waa a good husband, but ocoa- slonally he wenld go on a spree while his family got along as best they ooald. When he died suddenly the netgh- bors were shocked, and a kindly wo> man, chatting over the fence with Pat's wife, tried to comfort her by tell- ing of Pat's good points. "Ho was such a man of princlplo," she tald. "And am I not»the one to know It?" replied the wife. "Sure and every Saturday night from the first day we were married didn't he come home and 1 place hi* pay envelope' in frojt of me as regular as a olock? Not once did he mfss all the time we were married. Of course, the pay envelope was always empty, but look at the principle of the thing." « An Anelent Superstition. In ancient times the turquoice was credited with power to read the human mind. " ' â- â- ' ==^=:g==8at ONTARIO ODLLEGE OF ART Cranac Park . nj^ranm DNAVINC-mrKrnNC-MOCKlLI.VC-DE5lCN DWIOMA OXHISE • JUNIOR COURSE. TEACHCR5 ODUKSE • OQMMERCIAL -KRT 0-AREIO UCA- Pr-v-i-.. Session 192&-2< opens October &th For Prospectus apply to Itogistrar