Loading...
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.
The Lucknow Sentinel, 1935-01-17, Page 8
£>h ~ • • • ;■<': .W and us. you. // f CHAPPED HANDS? HOI your own interests, coast of ‘Fife. There the holy ••relics' ^^tS'SWsW-ff5'' •, k . i. • ' t ‘ - ■ \ FpUowSimpie Directions Here for Quick Relief t.. Take 2 Aspirin tablets; • * When you have a cpld, remember the simple treatment piefurdd'here . .. . .prescribed' by doctors as the quicks safeway. / ■'. \ Results are. amazing. Ache and dis tress >]go immediately. Because ,of Aspirin*s quick-disintegrating prop- erty/.A’xpirm “fakes hold’’— dlmpst instantly. Nour cold is relieved “quick as ypp capghi.it I? ; ♦ • -/ • All, you-, dp- is/ take Aspirin ahd drink plenty pf' uiiaf^. bo this eyejry 2; fq 4 ,hours tlie first. day—less oftep altetwar^. , . if throat is; sore, the f Aspirin gargle will ease it in as littlq ' as 2 minutes. ' P/ .; As'k-.y.our^bcto.r; _about;!thi^. And' be sure You get ASPIRIN when you druggists have it; Look for the Bayer'in the form of a cross on every " Aspirin tablet.’ Aspirin is the trade inarkpf the Bayer Company, Limited; HOES NdT HARM THE HEART i‘ WELLS t ' ' ' SYNOPSIS' 4 A ■ ■ ■ it- ■ f ■■ ~ .-r Adam' Merlston: ' w...far.roer’X ,spp.« ■’'rarticled-to oi> solicltor.'-makes tftave .hut unsuccessful attempt -lo ;^iW,a.tt. "three thlWes iff a b'akrenatehlnff7 raid« The bagt was torn ^rom the hands -of ;a, girl/' who-afterwards explains tq~Adam: that it’ fidutains. the.'day's_takltigs,jOK:her 1 He.iit^einpts toHrack/th/th.feves and reacheaT/ajr-ipId: jvarehousei . AW. enters The' building ‘while> the*; gjfl watched 1 tljua tdpor^he, ‘footsteps. ■«■'/■ ■ The mafi ’turns out to - be. - . Adam * empldyep—Soryille; R^rkln^ t Admri/in' his private hours - experi ments witth shortt-w.aye* w^releB3t-?r a ,• ■. jWalking, homeward,-dAdaip ip'l,near!y; run down by a large- swift. C^r.-'-r*; j- He eails on Priscilla NoryaL VHer^Tttt'her recounts -th'e history of; ."five, antique , “It-may be silly but/ThaW A '.P<fef; fiively superstitious- objectioire - -to; breaking thaVPfriiriise, even if we ar$ morally.rein Warner sbiqe-.we toax,e, ma&e/every ^effort? ytd trace the man who soliT tfiein,” slaid the1 Pi?Oy • lessor. : ' Adam agreed" that it- was , aif. exr ceedingly difficult, problem.: .“Bpt arq, taiey samauph .ct.$achedj ,tp? cjri^ir4 in-Spain .'ffi^.-they ;niakq. Qon^tiqng like tiiat/wtien selling ;^ea/?”/ • ; ‘!I 'don’t ^inow‘ jwliat' 4ney-, are. But if you'-1 saw' Ttfese Chairs ;’you 'rwcTulq understand- that it- 1 is.” possibly- that owner -jhight-walue--them. Keyond_ . anything pb^essed.” -;.. . . .. > “Then what made him ^ell? .I .all ways understood that ,’^pain was one pf those places- where" one. can*'live on next to: -nothing without being forced to self -one’s ' furniture;’’- ' - *1 m some -par ts ;>that is almost -true but1 at’ the. time L.'.ttought; -the Mar* ,quis ...VaMamonte/ \yas ‘ leputeff .-tO; be an 'extremely, rich, man.”. -^“That-m^ difficult to me.” . '" ' .??^ “r think you may take it that the situation that, had. arisen was of the sort/ that always does- arise in' times of revolution. Valdamdnte was in. Manger, probably arranging _■ an es cape from the country, which I fancy would in. his case be far from easy. .Tire Government" w'ris not prepared to let- the old aristocracy export its wealth-. I think he sold me th© chairs because he thought that, as the pro- ; -peFre"-©'rea=for-eignerF-they^would=b^ -morft ^easily exported. He riiay have .sold other things that he valued, and iwith, -the- samg proviso. Thffli if . he did get clear he wouliSTvb^'ablp- to :gather rqurid .him his most prized beirlooriis to cheer liis exile. That is; how the affair appeared to me at the time and why I feel a particular de^ sire to keep my side of the bargain/” Adam, pondered the moral aand le- ,gal«.problems -, ifiytlved. At length .he ■ .lookeM li-p .to meet ''Priscilla’s. eyes steadily "-Tegarding" him.' __“-What-would .you. say^vas .the right Airing—to__do_?iL_S'h.e asked. t____ 'i think,” lie said deliberately,, ‘•'that at all' costs I would keep my promise//-. • j .' . For that he received a. look that' .was .positively congratulatory. . “Th^re is' just one possibility/b<L curs to rpe,” he continued.'-“That is one might, if dne could find-ri<.pur chaser under such a condition, sell with a’ proviso securing'to. the brig- •inal. owner the right of. re-purchase.'” ' /That-is a suggestion .worth .think ing .about,” remarked Norvhl, and from . the. tone of -hi's 'voice it was evident hd'w .greatly' he. would.gfeel .relievecl-irebji-som.e^su.ck.-jneab.s.^.he could see his ..<w,ay. ciear to dispose of . tihe chairs. . > Blit the girl. Would-have none, of it. “No!’.’ she Said .with quite extra ordinary emphasis.. “I feel as if even that- would be cdoing wrong somehow. Jt would bid. just -trying to abide by the letter • rather than the spirit of. .the deal. /The owner's actual words, you ,hdve said many Aimes, w.ere tli'at you should not let the chairs go put of year, possession without ,giving him the option' to- buy' them . b.ack. Isn’t that what.he said?”. • 1 Norval. siniied lugubriously...“You, are quite-right of epurse,” he. agreed, 1 and then turning to Adam:’ “It- is ob- vddus. we shall never get rid of-our ? chairs with my daughter’s eorisent. I ’ Hol 1 ova all o i a fi h a llv In.. 1 nvo nrif .effect of ? her consideration, making mi^s/fiis' tri1^X;a'f^i^a|S;^'‘. /w/. • » > ‘.'BUt you* hjAven’t/ sfeen the chaise!'*’ he cried../ YowTpally goiwithi put seeing.. minute,, anp (I assure ‘ yoji they are WorttL-" it/' •*, ,/T“*. ■ , Thie three, harHejl' Upstairs'/. to/ a bare low attic with,: ceiling’ sloping! ;,to the J.p4t^ho-.bfe: th&/roof;jit^ WaeLunJ ./u^fshb| jn-'.^e^eopyen-tlp^Vse^r „b>u,t(/it ■bpntaine^(. ip <k$tyi^opi .to .one1, or. two upipces.;1 oflight' furniture, flvei ^M.^—MaBDfat.ev'chairs/ • "' ' . -j « They had high; curving^ hacks^ A’nd’ f S^nfie^ (Writhing/ari^s.i .while from-; u^pejTf. .-’their b^qa^, 9 seats pyojqetP^1 ;^ll/tfise, wojOfi^t iwpijh; /wab elaborately;., and ’intricately; ;(Carvbd,. and':the^whple'- design."'-gave! fohe the impreSSion- That the' ’ cfhftb-; man: had: been undep/fthe urge! ',to' Ye-; ve;-v his..; tortuqus^, ‘ witcli-ridden, ;inediey^.l ,no|hd. in, jmoductiqn: of- some involved and grotesque; fancy of; his oWY /Ejven’Yhi's h^d not-led. him: ' tbl OverloHoic'^be-^fiMhrhT' purpose of "a! cfiairj'/and-'tlier'seats: ladked, ’comfoi’t-; ^plecenpughK tfie padded; backs - be speaking a . restfulness with which I .jihe. . woodwork seemed fpurpo?ely/to ’cbn-trast." -'Thei^-uptidl^fery' was‘ in a. - dull red leathei’. dozenged' - with faded" -gilt* lines; <andrTff‘ieaCh“ oft rthe^lozen-- ,.ge^ was. a little gilded .device, ip. one, a shield, in. another a plu^ned helpiftt' ’or a fletir-de-iys/--'/' ‘ -In Spite:"8f th-'dir' grotesque quaint-j •- ne&s* there:' Was;- an- Mr -.’bL quality, of aristocracy .about- these. -chairs • that ■• . could..pot bp .denied by/he mpst-su perficial observer. . - - ,y • All tiSoughir-of-AdamV-train -seenL- A.d_tb_21iaye-.be:en: lost" in the enthusi- asm of the moment-. ‘ Kofvq-1 ran .his. hand caressingly^ oye-r (the paryipg.as he expatiated oh unique, features. He explained how the joints Were made, .how the .leather had been worked in- /tq shape without; the usual’ foldings' and pleats-,how each pf the devices- had been hand-tooled against a car ved die, the infinite pains of it all; Adam - for-got - his train j, he even for- '■ got his concerri with1 Mr. Corville -Perkin’s dubious1 methods..; He was dMLly==£onscious--4hat—hQ^was-—in-4,he„ presence of sometihlng beyond ordin- p'ry greatness and. that ..his Scylla her. gteat dark.: eyes giowing . plmost; worl "sfiipfufiy, Was “sharing ThisM eliglft- - - / The-only .news when he -returned home after his long late".walk ,frorii jMensibridge was. that- Grimsby had at, last, returned.- The old - cat was 'comfortably stretched s out . in his "usual place, his fright" forgotten. It rWouid have been distressing^to -have., /had to- associate -.the -development oL his-invention /with’ -the sacrifiee :of so ' Old a friend as Grimsby-, . The-state, pf being in ioye; hg'Tound,' made, him ' fonder of al! things .of which lie had ' been fond before.. _ ~ ?__ He turned' eiifhusiastieally next.' day. ;to his scientific -work and man aged in his I spare . time, -to- t^bulate- en'ougii data to £eel confident,that lie would not be dmgrdcq.d'iff the expert ©yes of Professor' 'Sthrling-- when ''lie approached. that-, gentleman/ . •- ’* ./J DuEing ;the iptdrvQnjjng?.-. .daysman.- interesting case h/uL pome^ info - tlig.?’ office, that of a/well.kqbwn j’pugh cSarhcter, wlio -Went'Bjr tfie’ name, of Hagar. He was accused, this- time,' of an attempt to refieve a Visiting’dL amond merchant of his >samples..-* In. view of the. filet- that violence enter ed- into the charge, .and that the evi-' dence sOemed unshakable, fthe. case was generally' looked' upon a'^. likely th Bring Mr. iiagar a' fiirohbr / sub, scantial term of penal servitSde.'* in- some way/ thq man interested Adain, who saw him at th.e Police Gourt jJrq, . ceedings. He ^vas a powerful, fel low,, afhd "though riot; perhaps dull-’ witted seemed to have , an' extraordin ary difficulty <iri making; a 'coherdht statement/ . - ' ' v. .. ■ '' '■ *■ - (Tq be Continued) t Does Your Handwriting Rayed? '/'GEbFEREV??^ CLAIR ' > / ■: (Graphologist) ;?• ! '. XR. Rjfehis Reserved V"'..- (Editor's '^©1^ . readers flavor been /helped to »• greater understanding of them, selves through" sending for ”a person* al character prjalyels 4 from their own handwriting, Have -YOU-?-' See the Invitation In the following art-' lcie)7" ' ’ ;/ 7 ~ ...... ? The early part of a new year is a good time for .Stock-Taking. Just as all business firms generally take advantage of this time of the-year to balance up theife-stock, find out where they arfe short; and what they' can do without, s? HWT each one of us take advantage of this psychol. ogically opportune tiin^ to have a •mental stocky taking/1;/. In' what qualities of character ar,e .we short? What do we lack in order "to take advantage _of the opportuni ties that/ a new “year offer? ’-Are ’we* on the ri^ht track?-' Are we exerting our fullest" energies in the i‘,ight path?—or. are "we pursuing a course that wfll. lead to disaster orbest- to ■ unhappiness ? £ . ■.’'£ Nothing can stand still. We‘either progress or retrogress. And no one- of us wishes to go backwards. • It "is my advice to all my readers that' you-quietly- explore;- ydffF-. abilities/ your^talentsr —don’t, be afraid to tell yourself the truth. Ypu;.’ aire (cheating rio tone/but yourself , when 'you- wilfully overlook, points in which you- are lacking. ' How; can Graphology help you to make the, most' of yourselves?' Well, it can do. w’nat' most people . ar.e fundamentally? uffabJe. to do—It can- tell the. truth about ybQ, > without, bias,or fivour. TtfwiH show up un erringly'^bdr faults and weaknesses and', it /will be quite fair too. It will :sE6w<re(ffraiiy^vlTereiri“^— your/^bud- ;Clrara;cteri sties. --.- - ..y' . Handwriting does1 reveafThe truth a-bp u t: -tb e-.- w ijj-ter—- This-.h-as-b e e n-em- emplified so often, that, today,-'there are very -few-.scepr.tf c§. . /“Madge” • of M'oose Jaw, Sask., whites, .in part: *“I am enclosing a specimen of my husband’s writing as-welj as iny own. .1 would like, .to kno.w,.if iny. husbpncl' intends to. re, aljy .mend'his Ways,'.as ho-has prom-” -iffedi "Wiji- :he keep • his Ivord?” ‘Weil/orMadge,'’your "own . writing -show's^ .that -you--are of a rese'rved -iiarruiOr-TYou—do—irot~revead~iyour'“i’ea'h- leolings. You are. also inclined to "5fTrdy~y;(ju’r . own, '-S”elf-interests/. 'to •sorae extent. Anil' you also Splay '■ Hundreds,/ ©f ..our.and consequent!) .’ ....■' / ■. your husband in has a sbmewhaf somq" Impatient©, irritability/ -1 The writing of dicates tljat he bighly.strung mature. -He is impul.. . -sive/ ..and /often does, thingy with- out really stoppings to consider, care fully what he is doing. There^.nJE/.. other trait in. hjs character that he ought to check. Hd is, a procrastina. tor—indefinite and. rather vacillat- Ing. He does not seem to "to .able to make up his own mifid, or lay down • a definite cp^rs"/”of action. He certainly nee'ds to cultivate more" determination decisive- ness, instead of fiae. least ■ resistance, r/ ■ - AF®8*/ • He undoubtedly means well when lie promises ;yoij^ that-he will mend hif ways, but, I. ’am afraid-that hd akihardly .of/ a. s.uffj;cienti.y... strong '. "character to keep to this, unless: he buckles down, and -realizes that Phis procrastinating and .'of doing things and ?tb his'advantage. i /To •‘‘E.llen,”' Bloor Yq'ur wrting showP been making ; ; your, excitable disposition—and- 1 and- you will .reap the benefit,' Yoiu havq: a’ careful .reg'ard/for ■ order .arid" • neatness., and’-’are particularly scru? pulous -about; details. This is a ,good ’trait/ but 'don’t' b'e'TOo’ fussy/";... Miss M. J., London: Yours is a cool anil poised nature. You are not girl to get easily ruffled, no mat ter how tense "things become. Some- what .reserved—you dfeplay’.a.. ten.d- 1 • encyto study .True, there is some, generosity, but 'you are never impetuous, other; words 4 you-, look ■; before leap; " —-Can _.iyi:r:.--.St,-_Clair~Jielp„ _you?t-Can— he help you ^^telling you the truth about you from your hail'd writing? . - And have you any friends about who you would like to know the real truth—without, frills? Send speci-* •mens of the writing you wish' to .be analysed', stating birthdate in. ■ each case. Send 10c coin fo> each speci men, ahd enclose -With.'a 3c stamped ’addressed envelope . to: Georffrey St. Ciair, Graphologist "’Room 421, —7-3—Adelaide—SV"VV"e st/’ T 0 r o'nto "O n f— Letters are” confidential, and rejj .plies' will .“be fd.fwa"rded as soon as -. ■ possible. ' ? " ‘ ^-rre^-m-Canaa^aniall . -g '■ . Hriirtoictie havA it.: Look fof the 1 ' • 3. If throat is sore, crush and stir ». Aspirin tablets' in. a third of a, glass of . water and,gargleT This'eases tne soreness in*" ■your thrpat almost instantly.. J ie Curious World'■ .Vr/; ■.■•:% .'■.? '' ' Qujeem? Given Fifteen : ; Pttiind Caisket Of T^a i .V . :T-q;rd. . This yfeat is the centenary. of' the rt6a?f?owfng-3. industry in the BrifiilL Empire, and- the "tea-producers bf ™the: Empire. Kave celebtsted-it’~by’ „ipEesenting_„t6..Lthe Queen. a._ casket ...holdipg :15‘ pounds of. tea. .The casket ? ig :;a7. ]t<>yejyr tlung, made of Bombay rosewood . inlaid* with . Ceylon satin- ‘wobd and ebony, and the tea inside is unique; It is blended front ;■ the finest known teas, seven pC^ylon/ six. from n India and from/East Africa. . a \ ■ ■ ■ ‘;riyQne of the components of - rare- ■ mixture is a -tea from ..^accbXiiaiL_tea,^adJA-de^cribp4^as ’ having a “veryfine muscatel flavor.” Lit fe^Yobably. the most expensive'tea insfhe’world; $3.25 a pound,\and is f <-use(Linrmiriute quantities for flavor ings teas, of humbler, vintage. ■ : - Out of the 9,4Q0 commercial^ocean- gbing ships in the world"'today, few- er;thah/fifiyic^^ thnh .^twenty/kndts, and fewer than twenty, •have - a. grossweightof - more than “3'0/000“ tdh&.' ~ ~ ■indefinite way behaving is. not Street, Toronto that you' have an- effort -to --control — ; disposition—and 15. of from two a •• / this D^r Australia's bulldog ant likes to ^figh’t -so much' that- even -when it.. is., cut in two/ a battle begins between "the head and the tail.' Nicknamed “The Boy Mountain,’' fifteen-year-old Bob Wadlow, of St/ .Louis, stands .8 .-ft, high, weighs 25 stone 12 lb./ and takes size 35 in ” shoes. . •If You , Eat Starches Meats, Sweets Read Thb They're All Necessary Foods * But All Acid - Forming, / Hence Most of Us Haves‘Acid Stomach” At Times. Easy ' . Now to Relieve. ’ t A family bf old-age pensioners' are living . together, at Coalvillg/ Ireicest=7 , ershire. The father, BJr. Walter “Brearly,T’is 9'4j; his -1wb "sons "70 and- 68, and ,his two daughters 72 and ,67. Seven times niarried, the nineteen-, year-old daughter of Monte Latif off, J a Bulgarian gypsy, has now fallen, in love. She refuses to pick a quarrel ■with; her eighth husband,, gr.eat-ly-■to. her /fdthei^s indignation, as he -de^-’ pencls for a living oil. the fee which, -in-^tccordance. with the, gypsy custom,- -each—nian,_Dresents to him for the hand of -his daughter.. . , Lion taming lessons ..are being-..giv-. en in a postal’ course by an^American .school. A rival.. organization" trusts that the lion will recognize, the. di ploma: when. _a graduate steps into his cage! Doctors say' that much of the so-, called “indigestion,” from which so xrianyr of- us suffer., is really acid in- tfigestion. "22_, brought about by- too- many acid-forming^ foods in our modern diet.'And that there is flow a way to relieve-yt-his , .aften in minutes!'/ 1 ■ ', . .- ; Simply ’ take Phitiips* Milk of , Magnesia after meals. Almost im mediately this acts to neutralize the Stomach acidity that brings ori your trouble. You “forget you ..have a stomach!” c Try this just once! Take either the- Tamiliar liquid “PHILLIPS’ ”, or, how the convenient new Phillips’ . Milk of' 'Magnfesia Tablets' But be ' ’ sure you get Genuine “PHILLIPS’ ■ i ■ ■ Also in Tablet Form: . Phillips: Milk ot Magnesia Tablets are. now 61. sale at all drug stores everywhere. Each tiny tablet is -the equiva^ -lenTof a/teaspponful cf Genuine Phillips; ■ Mtfk of Magnesia- Phillips ,A; .skull’“lies,>. yellow with age, in a recess behind the cfirtajriT of.'an ole! farm-house near •ChapeLen-el-Frith, Derbyshire. Every tirde the skull is disturljed, disaster overtakes /the farm. ■ • / • - , ' ' ' ■' -, In his place. in Surakarta, .Java, . the Sultan of -Solo maintains a- house hold of 15,000 persons—wives, para mours, dancing; girls, - relatives, priests,. soldiers, . local officials, and servants. .... ’• MADE t*> CANADA Re I ieved/ . "Baby’s Own Tablets have been 6 the only medicine myjotlr children have ever had. In no singleinstance has- it been necessary to ’ consult ’• . our doctor.” So writes Mrs..Harry Pilmer, Cumberland 'Bay, N.B. When the baby • or young child . 'loses appetite; is sleeplfesp or rest- ' less, has ' coated tongue,- colle, Indigestion, cold or diarrhoea or Is teething . ; . give Baby’s Own Tablets for safe, qtifek relief, Price 25c at all drug stores, jo® Dr.Williami’ believe she is actually in.- )oye .with Them.’' ■ •‘Wejl, I do want to keep them, I’ll admit that. u They're quite* th/ lovey- . i liest. 'things "we -possess., .'BUt, it Is' A PPI V HT-ND*^ "■ !-a of instinct . with me that -we nrrLJ 11 ■ - £ /must hang on to them until t£ife Qee how it; soothes i very fast, and I should feel just the " , H25, I same, about th.at ’ if .they ■ wer/ posit'. lively' ugly.”- ■ •'•Right-* thpn, that's ; settled. ' We shall hang on u-ntil they are' sold by ’. OT(jer.6f thp Official Receiver; I think' , b e for it does c 0 m e. 10 uh at. th o u gh '/if*'we tj-tili can’t'find fh^e owner,'we r-'ar/entitled to try to sell under a j.pTos'iso'such as you’Suggested." ^It .^The clock—a rare French sspeci- J. men—revealed■ the blighting informa- «'■ bion that it tyas,.already ,a .quarter I past;'eight. For• ' Adam, time1' had • Mr.AV-. J, ^shcr/s^ '/ped astonishingly, which. W.&s.^' not ,-,Hunter St. W.,. , • surprising considering that tfib coiri- 1 ■ fe'led'froin ratarrh'/f the {.pany consisted of th. most wonder. , stomach, could eat but ■ fui ,gjr] jn the world and u,charming rYr"». l«an wll». !’a<1' tra.'-effid' fell the weaker daily and; had’ world in search “Of antiques. . I *7 should, like- you< to stop/but. I discouraged. After taking I can't let you riiiss your last train and I)t. Pferce’s. Golderi Medical Dis^pVeiy I 1 was al?le to eat, gained in weight and re- slimed my’work.” All .druggists. ..■ • • /' ’ ’*“*■, Link Between ' Scotia and Greece ' ' 'buefjess. Wketif Aiij'h'er /Wfajiop/Wit''Vr' ' ■ Of Heather • prp.prlailely; ■. .the : patron.; saint or /FROM QJREECE TO FIJ/E n:The - saint,, accordirig to tradition, preached tfie-jgdspeL in Greece and.] ■A^Ia/MMio^ an^ 'it was in the city1 OF F.at'i?as/Aii Achaia,. that, after ,a cruel scourging, he met" hi/death by ■crucifixion in the ' year 70 ’A/D. ’It' Was a Greek monk, 'nanjjetf R'egulus „or Rule, who, having ex- 'hupied the bones of St. Andrexyp took- •'tfiem on .board a "ship, and, accofff- '•p'anied by fourteen" other.: imonks,. set" out for some distant-land, eventually*, being"ehst-ashore in ‘;a storm on the- .coast of ‘Fife. There the holy ••relics' were reyerpptly reburied, and a little church. Ciccted over |he saint’s pew grrive? Thp’/, Tt' is said; ’ was/ the /town* of St, Andrexvs founded. 'Although, we. iri Scotland/ do appear eVer ’to :haVe inade much ■ < not of otir patron 7saintu in has. capacity as the patron saint’-also of lovers there is noc^ouht - that St. .Andtews has al-» ways./been ^eatjlyhonored • in this respecK’on £he .Continent. ■IfiJf iu*IS fI; ■ ' . . AMOROUS customs ; . Oil St.-Andrew’s Eve the country girls of Germany who may be desir ous- of ascertaining what will be the - color of the hair of their*diusbands to be, go through the/time-honored . ceremony of taking-.lufid-of the Ikfen"- / 0^ the housp . door and . .repeating ■ ' three times: ‘‘Gentle love, if thou • loyest me show, thyself,”'. The girl / '. then, clsthes through the opened door, at the darkness, and’ ip her-' hand, when she withdraws it, she is / supposed to see a representation, of a lock of" masculine hair. ■ The peasant people of France have a similar custom. /On St. Andrew’s “ ; ' Day itself the French country girl fasts all days, and when /night comes /' she gets into-bed . on th^ wrong side> ‘ and, on lying down an^Telosing .her eyes, saysaloud: “Sweet1 Andrew,?, show me, I beg you, the man whom I am to marfy.” T’;e revelation is not-irnmediate,'but’• comes to ..the. maiden in a' dream when she ’has /' fallen junto' slumber. ■.'_•/ ' bWT MSK BAKING FAILURES HINDS CREAM MARK RCGISTCRCO IN CANADA ’T/' H airill-. have all those holies to walk, girl explained as she tosh. ■ Links/bctw.ean ^cotlapd- and; the Duchess pf-kenf? were- fqtged tri quick succession/ Writes,- May •: Gibsqh -.in the: Glasgow Herald,, fpllow>ng’ kHer first acquaintance’ wd^h.' our country bn her. September visit to' Baltnor’at. One was the conferring,-of the’ Earl/ ,dom' of St. Andrews on «h<?r i^ancC; the Duke of Kent/. .anti hapter . there ■’ ‘ wa^ fhe appoyitrnent' 'of ’ the , Lady. ' ■ Mary Dorothea .'Rope,, sister, of ,thqj Marquis of'Linlithgow, as the Duch- ; . ess’ Lad^-imWaiting. '•■ . . J - But is it- not also ari interesting coincidence- that the Wedding of the. ' Duke of’Kent • was-, solemnized on . ■ St. Andrew’s Eve? For- not-only is , St'Andrew, whose, day is November 30, th'e^Pptj:on saint of Scotland', bat he nas^also. a close association Vzfth the \puches.4’ own country, Greece. Moreover, St/Andrew is, most ap- >»» - Theire’s no guesswork with Magic. It assures uniformly fine results!,That’s why Canada’s leading cookery' ex perts use and recommend It OXClii- . sively. Aftk youfr gxoqpr for a tini/ . feJO ALUM-ThH stafetmfot on every tin . jour"ffuantnitee’that Bakina PoWda- Is free from alum or uny harmful lii^redleht. MADE IN CANADA