THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, TUESDAY, 'OCTOBER 27, 1931 omen's Interest in the Home Mr. and Mrs. W. H, Barnhart of Oshawa, accompanied by Mr. 'Charles Hooper and Mr. Howard Hooper, ~ of Detroit, motored through Northern Ontario last week visiting Kirkland Lake and the Lake Shore Gold Mines. Mr. Murray Garbutt, of Port Credit, was the guest of Mr. Jack Anaison of Fairbank Street, last week-end, - LJ * Mr. and Mrs, Claude Bain of Winnipeg, Manitoba, are guests in Oshawa. Mr. Bain is the Do- minion Government Inspector of Live Stock, and is here on busi- ness. * * LJ Miss Maud P. Squires, who has heen spending the summer in Muskoka, is at present the guest of friends in Jovn. . : Mrs, J. L. McKay of Montrave Avenue held a bridge on Friday evening in aid of the Westmount Home and School Club. Mrs, A. Jubb, Mrs, M. Matthews, Miss Cletea Abernethy, Miss Ruth Fer. guson and Messrs, A, Jubb, D. Matthews, and G. Bliss were the prize winners. After the card games, the hostess presided over the serving of a delicious evening supper. "is Mrs. James S. Fraser and Mise Mary Fraser of Windsor, Ontario, were week-end guests of Mrs. E. A. Embree of Mary Street. * LJ * Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Luke, louise and Frank Luke, and Miss 0. Taylor of Division Street spent thie week-end in Belleville, guests of Mr. and Mrs. Glen McKinnon, * Miss Anne Williamson of Tor- onto was a guest in the city over Sunday. . L "Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Moyse, King Street East, who have been on a six weeks' trip in the Cana- dian West, returned to town to- day. NEWSPAPER NIGHT | ATYOUNG PEOPLE'S ~ CLUB MEETING St. George's A. Y.P. A. * * The parish hall of St. George's Church was transformed into the scene of a busy editorial room of a newspaper office last evening. It was "Newspaper Night." The en- tertainment was put up by one of the A.Y.P.A. members, George Campbell, who took upon his 'shoulders the strenuous task of itor of the "A. Y. P. A. Cuckoo", . Y. P. A, members were assign- ed duties of real newspaper edi- tors, reporters, and there was lively fun in getting the material into shape. The affair was entire- ly impromptu. No one knew before he arrived at the regular meeting of the A.Y.P.A. just what was go- "ing to happen. The stage had been set. There were tables for the editors, typewriters for the re- "porters and before the evening wore very far the editor-in-chief had the newspaper staff in full gwing. Stories were written, hand- ed to the editor and the pager composed before the close of the evening. It will be read at the next meeting of the A.Y.P.A, | Young People's Societies CALVARY BAPTIST YOUNG PEOPLE'S MEETING © There was a ,well attended meeting of the Calvary Baptist . Young People last evening. Mr. Nurlbutt and Mr. Beck led the prayers, the scripture lesson was read by Miss Lilllan Steele. Miss Vera Ayres read a very interest- ing missionary message. A guest of the ¢vening was Miss Thelma 8torks who contributed two rming piano solos. Miss Mae Rose' story also of a missionary 'nature brought the meeting to a clo Protect Your Boy SCOTT'S MULSION JUNIOR LIBRARY This night, when 211 4s dark and st And dite at rest, from yonder i Come those . queer folk with tousled hair, And children dear, of them beware They're known as ghosts, There is pronanly no folk holi- day which has taken a stronger hold upon the popular imagination than that celebrated on the even- ing of October 31. Hallowe'en is really an autumn festival as May Day is a spring festival, But peasant superstition robbed the holiday of its original meaning and surrounded it with delightful mystery of ghosts, witches, spirits and hobgoblins. And because of these supersti- tions, Hallowe'en appeals to the public fancy and all its old cus- toms have remained. The ancient Druids had a great autumn festival which commenc- ed at midnight, October 31, and lasted throughout the following day, November 1. Among other things, they believed that on this night the great lord of death, Saman, called togeher all the wicked souls that had been con- demned, within the past twelve months, to inhabit the bodies of animals, Because of the wicked spirits that prowled about on this night, they lit huge bonfires and kept a sharp lookout, Thus it is unquestionably from the Druids that we derive the belief that witches and ghosts walk abroad on Hallowe'en--a belief still pre- valent among rural peoples in Europe. The Romans also had a festival about the first of November which was in honor of Pomona. Nuts and apples, as tokens of the winter store of fruits, were roasted be- fore great bonflres. It appears that the Druidic ceremonies and the Roman ceremonies were graft- ed one upon the other to become our Hallowe'en... It became a general and widespread notion. that ghosts and spirits walked on Hallowe'en. Peasantry gathered together on that evening of Octo- ber 31, built great bonfires to keep the spooks away and shudderingly told one another of queer noises, strange flutterings, trembling sha- dows. And they tempered their fears with feasting. They brought out their winter stores of nuts and apples."--Eijchler. Stories about Hallowe'en will be waiting for you at the library in Washington Irvinz's "The Specter Bridegroom," Hawthorne's "Snow Image," Mrs. Ewing's 'Cobbler and Ghosts," Grimm's "Elves and the Shoemaker." Hallowe'en stories will be told at the library on Saturday morn- ing at 9.30. NEED OF WOMEN LEADERS STRESSED BY JUDGE MURPHY Alberta Juvenile Cc ourt Judge Welcomed by Montreal Women's Clul -- . Montreal," Que.--(By The Cana- dian Press)--Judge Bmily Murphy, Alberta police magistrate and ju- venile court judge, received a royal welcome from the Montreal Wom- en's Club recently at its opening meeting. le Judge Murphy declared roundly that for 65 years women of the Do- minion were illegally kept out of the Senate, She added, "I say right away there should be an equal num- ber of women appointed. Women leaders in all spheres were needed more today than ever before, she added, In a good-humoured through trenchant phrase she gave her opin- ion on the question of women's place in public affairs and deplored in ser- ious accents the voteless condition of her sisters in Quebec, "We owe a great deal to the fair- ness and generosity of men," was one of Judge Murphy's comments. Although she belonged to a Con- servative family, she was appointed police magistrate by a Liberal gov- ernment and continued to hold this office under a Farmer administra- tion. Speaking of the decision of the Privy Council regarding the eligi- bility of Canadian women for sen- atorships, Judge Murphy urged: Don't give up your right to ap- peal!" When women got the franchise in Canada there was no opposition from any government except that of Quebec. "I can lay my hand on my heart and say it will come to you," she asserted, ... The question of whether this civ- ilization is to disappear as others have done before it next occupied Judge Murphy's attention, She felt that its preservation depended largely on the efforts of women who in this country own nearly fifty per cent of the capital and do 85 per cent of the spending, and where they constitute a 300,000 majority in voting power, "If England leaves India today, there will be no white race left in the Orient" was one of the com- ments made, : Ma "We want women leaders today as never before; léaders who are not afraid of being called names and who are willing to go out and fight. I think women can save the world's diplomats or politicians," Judge Murphy said. : There are two. species of bass in the United States, large mouth and small mouth, large mouth bass weighed 20 'pounds (wo ounces, the biggest small mouth bass weighed nin pounds. ¥ No wild animal, no matter how large, ferocious and hungry, ever will attack or touch a skunk. civilization. Peace cannot be left to | The biggest |. WHAT NEW YORK IS WEARING By Annebelle Worthington Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished with Every Pattern' Here's a chic day dress that adopts the one-sided rever treatment. The wrap-over bodice is youthfully slim- ming. The button trim emphasizes the smooth fit through hips and a tailored finish. The tab cuffed sleeves are smart. The skirt is straight and slender given graceful flare through invert- ed plaits at either side of the cen- trefront, creating a box-plait effect _A supple diagonal woolen, fine lines on brown made the original, with plain brown buttons and wide patent leather belt. Style No. 3334 may be fad in sizes 16, 18 years, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44 inches bust. Size 16 requires 2V4 yards of 54- inch, Black crepe satin is excellent for this mode! with scli-fabric belt and the rever of eggshell crepe satin, Don't envy the woman who dres- ses well and keeps her chi'dren well- dressed. Just send fo: vour copy or our Fall and Winter Fashion Ma- gazine. It shows the best coming season. tain our Pa'tern any style showr, The Pattern is most economisal in material re quirements, It c¢nables yon to weir the new frocks at little expense-- two frocks for the price f one. You will save $10 by spy:nd'ng 15 cents for this book. So ir would pay you to send for your copy now. Address Fashion Depart nent Fe sure to fll in the size of the paitern. Send stamps or coin (comin 18 '1 eferred). Price of book 15 cents. Price of pattern 20 cen's styles of the And you may cb~ at cost vrice ot Address orders to: Pat'ern Edit- or, Oshawa Daily Times, Oshawa. NO, 3334. Size oc... vue: wren 'have him back. BURG/SS BEDTINE STOKI W! L/ o de PD By, Thoriton W. Burgess The greatost joy of those who roam Is when at least they're welcom- ed home, ~--Farmer Brown's Boy. Peter Rabbit was. right. Yes, gir, he was right Farmer Brown's Boy was back home. He had returned in the great man- bird that had carried him away early in the summer and he was glad to be back. What was better gtifl, there were very many who, like Peter Rabbit, were glad to Peter, looking out from the dear old Briar- patch, had seen the big plane and on the Green Meadows and Farmer Brown's Boy get out of it with Cousin Tom, who had ta- ken him on 'his wonderful trip clear across the country, It was big news and Peter, who dearly loves to be the bearer of uwvws, was anxious to get over to the Green Meadows and the Old Or- chard to tell the glad tidings. But little Mrs. Peter, who sel- dom leaves the dear old Briar- patch and is always worried when Peter does, kept close by his side while Peter fidgeted about and tried to find some good excuse for going, and could- n't, But Peter was not the only onc who saw that big man-bird errive and Farmer Brown's Boy pet out of it, There are many keen eyes on the Green Mea- dows and in the Green Forest aud the Old Orchard. Sammy Jay had happened to be in a tree on the edge of the Green Forest when that plane arrived, No sooner was Farmer Brown's Boy ont of it and on his way to meet Farmer Brown and Mother Brown, who were hurrying down from the house, than Sammy started for the Old Orchard shrieking the new at the top of his voice. Peter heard him'way over in the dear old Briar-patch, and a look . of disappointment crossed his face. "He'll tell everybody," he mut- tered, quite forgetting that this was just what he wanted to do himself, Sammy did tell everybody At least he told everybody he saw. Frem the Old Orchard he went to the Green Forest and from there to the Old Pasture. he didn't see heard the from those whom he news that by the time that jolly, round red Mr. the Purple Hills only those who had slgpt through the shining hours of the day had not heard it. "Dee, dee, dee, chickadee!" had cried Tommy Tit, almost turning a somersault on the twig on which he was sitting. "I am 80 glad! I wonder if he has brought any nut-meats for me to take from his hand." "Caw!" had sald' Blacky the Crow gravely, but with a lively little twinkle in his eyes. "You don't say so. Well, if we must have those two-legged creatures ahout I wish they were all like him." "My dear," sald Reddy Fox to M15. Reddy, "I shall breathe eas- ier now, We may be sure now that there will be no traps in the 0OJd Pasture this winter, so life Those | did Ree, | and so the news traveled so fast | Sun went to bed behind | will be just that much easier." "It is the best news I have heard for a long time," declared 'Thunderer the Grouse to Mrs. Greuse, "I saw a hunter with a terrible gun over here in the Creen Forest only yesterday, but if Farmer Brown's Boy is back he will keep the hunters away." '1 shall not dread the winter after all," said Bob White to Mrs: Bob, "for when the weather is bad and food scarce and cover- ed with snow he'll be sure to re- member us and put some grain where we and the children can find it." Chatterer the Red Squirrel and Happy Jack the Gray Squirrel forgot to quarrel, "Have you heard the news?" cried Chatterer. "Of course 1 have and it Is good news, if you ask me," re- plied Happy Jack. "The nut crop is short this year, but if Farmer Brown's Boy is back it doesn't matter. I'm going straight over to greet him." Happy Jack was as good as his word, and no sooner did he ap- pear in a tree by the house than Farmer Brown's Boy came out with a handful of peanuts, as glad to see Happy Jack as Happy Jack was to see him. I suspect that Pe- ter Rabbit would hae been jealous could he have seen Happy Jack taking those nuts from the hand of Farmer Brown's Boy. (Copyright, 1931, by Te W gess) Bur- The next story: 'Peter Rabbit Finds Signs." Anniversary Services Portland. --- The anniversary ser- vices held in the United Church were well attended. "The services were in charge of Rev. Mr. McCon- ville, preacher at both morning and evening services. Mrs Newton act- ed as organist in her usual capable manner. The soloists were Mrs Mitchell, Montreal, and John Gar- rett, Smiths Falls {ONE LAW IN FAVOR OF THE CAR OWNER The State of Connecticut has just passed a bill- requiring gar- age men to secure written per- of the ®wner for auto- mobile repairs costing more than $50, « mission nell, with Rev, Mr. Friar, of Franke DRAPERIES MADE NEW "When we resumed housekeeping a month ago I found my drap- eries had become creased from packing. ,I1 hung them out on the line hoping to remove the creases, Then I forgot them. The result was they became bad- ly faded and sun-spotted. "l was heartsick until the hap- py thought struck me to dye them. I just dyed them a deeper green, and as 1 used Diamond Dyes they look gorgeous and new. I have never seen easier dyes to use than Diamond Dyes. They give the most beautiful colors--when used either for tinting or dyeing --- and never take the life out of the cloth as other dyes do." Mrs. J.I.T., 'Montreal. Lacroix, assistant directo: This delightful tea menu suggested by Madame R: at the Provincial School wh @® Look for this mark on every tin. It is a guarantee that Magic Baking Powder does not con- tain md or any harmful ingre- dient, Aontreai Cook- of Domestic Science, outst - TEA MENU Fruit Cocktail Pin results every time you use it." ing School, will come in very handy next time you're entertaining. Keep it for reference. Hot Cheese Biscuits¥ Salad Marguerite Assorted Tea Cakes eapple Ice Cream Chase & Sanbom's Tea or Coffee Madame Lacroix says; "For my part, | always use and recommend Magic Baking Powder because it is-absolutely dependable, Its high leavening power is always uniform. You get the same satisfactory for *HO Tey Madame Lacroix's recipe 134 cups flour 4 teaspoons Magic Baking Powd 2 tablespoons butter Sift flour, baking powder and salt. With two knives, thoroughly mix flour, butter and cheese. Dilute the mixture with milk to make a soft dough. Rell quickly and lightly to one-half inch thickness and cut with a found biscuit cutter, Place on top of each biscuit a cheese cube, one-half inch thick, and bake in oven at 400° F, about 12 or 15 minutes. More than 200 interesting, tested recipes are con- tained 'in the New Free Magic Cook Book. If you bake at home, send fora copy. Write to Standard Brands Limited, Fraser Avenue, Toronto. Buy Made in Canada Goods T CHEESE BISCUITS 24 cup milk 14 cup grated cheese 1 teaspoon salt added imaginatively. ter who works in a beauty shop, lies abed % has to get the family breakfast ore she starts out to her Job in the Pive-and-Ten-Cent Store. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY tious INSTALMENT III "Oh sure I do! I read it in a paper," she said, beginning on her own milk, and talking through, or around, the straws. "You have to eat iron and starch and--and fost- ers," she seid, somewhat uncertain of the last word. "Iron and starch and--what?" he ' asked, fishing for the extraordin- ary word. But she would not be baited. "All sorts of things," she said eva- sively. "These sandwiches are tuna fish and egg--they've always ones that are left. We never get the chicken or ham ones, but we don't | care, do we?" she ended a little anx- iously. "I don't!" Joe sald, ravenous. "How'd you happen to find this place?" he asked, approving of it. "I was after some ideels in our basement," she said. "An' 1 seen this winder. Ain't it nice in here?" "You were after some what?" he interrupted, "Some ideels. Some of them little --well sorter prayers they have all coloured 'up, on ¢~ds," Maggie ex- plained. 'Like * man is useless while he has a {{:nd' an' 'To earn a little, to spend a little less' an' 'There's so much good in the worst of us," she went on, But at such lightning speed that Joe could not make a beginning or an end to what she said. Ho burst out laughing. "You laugh like you were much older than you are" said Maggie, struck with some sudden suspicion. "I'm almost twenty," Joe said, "Why--how . old did you think I was?" "I thought you was a kid," Mag- gle said frankly. "That's" she ended innocently, "that's why I sorter took an interest in you." "How old are you?" Joe countered. "Are you thirteen?" "Thirteen!" she echoed, affronted. "I've been workin' four yearn. Ill be eighteen my next birthday. I was seventeen last Valentine's Day!" And suddenly both were embar- rassed and they stopped talking, in some confusion of spirit, "But when I fist went to work," Maggie resumed, "I was awful lij- tle. I opened a door an' checked umbrellas. You'd wonder they let me in at all. Three dollars a week, they paid me." "Pretty tough!" Joe commented sympathetically. "Oh, I've had my share!" she re- sponded. "We ought to have some thing green with this," sald Maggie again, extending toward him a fresh supply of the broken biscuits. "Where'd you get all this diet stuff?" Joe asked, diverted. "Oh." she flashed carelessly, "the evenin' papers has it, always 8 health column." "But you don't believe all you see in the papers!" Joe teased. "I do some things," Maggie coun- tered uncertainly, after a moment's thought. "And do you do all the things the papers say to do?" Joe asked. "I'm doin' one now." she answer- ed, moving only her lips, "I'm re- laxin." Relax ten minutes after meals. if you're thin. Stand if you're fat. Exercises every mornin'--" "We have twelve minutes," Joe said, glancing at his wrist. "And do you believe all the ideal cards, too?" he pursued. "How do you mean?" she asked. "Well, .don't they haves rules for life on them?" Joe suggested. " 'Lest | we forget, and 'I am the captain of my soul,' and all that?" ! "Was you readin' them to-day?" she asked, surprised. "No. But I know that kind of stuff!" 20 "'Let us then be up an' doin', Maggie was murmuring, as if she | heard the words for the first time. | "Laugh an' the world laughs with you. y "Oh, gosh, it makes me sick at my stomach!" Joe said faintly, between a laugh and a groan. : Maggie laughed, puzzled but sym- pathetic, " "It sorter doesn't mean anything," ghe conceded. "But the 'Si sezzes are funny," she submitted doubt- fully. "The whats?" "The *81 sezzes' we call them that" she elucidated. "They all begin, 'Si sez'." & "Bunk!" Joe commented disgust- edly. She was staring a thim , faintly suspicious. "Joe," she began after a moment "js this your first jdb?" 2 "What makes you think it isn't? he narried. "Becauz--becauz fellers of nine- teen don't usually begin on what you're doin', stockroom work," said Maggie, " 'specially when they talk like do £ ep Li on a farm awhile," Joe sald. "And I travelled with a circus and worked in a bicycle shop," he Maggie was satisfied. She revert- ed to a more interesting topic. "My mother says that all that newspaper stuff about budgets and systems and all that is the bunk, she offered. "My sister has to keen her hands white becauz she demon- strates a beauty cream. and my my mother don't like Liz to use|ge make up--and she won't let me cut my hair--she says it ain't Ilady- like for girls to hob their hair. 'Father livine?" Joe asked. She hesitated. "My father's a--a wonderful man. Yes. he's living." "T live on Goat Hill over there-- my father waits for me at the corn- er, Saturday nichts!" "I live down the island." Joe sald "The ideal life--oh, my God!" he sald, thinking of the hard job she had left, of the sort of home to which she was probably going. "You've got a fine chance to lead the ideal life, Maggie Johnson!" Joe said with a bitter laugh. He turned abruptly and walked a deserted block westward, glancing before him to be sure he had escap- ed the home-going tide from the Mack. And in the second block, he stopped short at a handsome road- ster, parked before row of unpreten-~ homes. Joe got into it, fished a key from his pocket, and swept from the street, The engine purred, the big car moved smoothly away from the city, passed the parks and the fact~ Yory district and the scattered lights jof the humbler suburbs, 2nd so came to the splendid trees and the | great walls and gates of Elmingdale, { home of the richest and most fash- { lonable men and women of that par- ticular part of the world. In between certain magnificient posts of stone and brick went Joe and his car, and to the side door of one of the most imposing of all the 'mansions there. An elderly butler, ventured so far as to lay an eager, do?" Joe asked. "~he's a travellin' man." Some- how she wanted Joe to admire Pap, 'And my mother's--fleshy," said Maggie delicately, "Well, I'll tell you one thing" pare to return upstairs to the store, last night or to-day, either for lun cheon or dinner--" "I'm all right, Allen, and you were a brick to be on the job to Je in. I'm late because I got 8 ob." "You mean you really are working, Mr, Joe?" "I mean I really am." Woy not going back to college, sir?" "Not on your life!" "Why, but look bere, sir," pleaded the older man, distressed, "your fath- er never meant a word he said yes- terday morning, nor your mothers either." "Allen," Joe interrupted, slipping his arms into the dressing gown the man held ready behind him, "can you keep a secret?" "Anything you told me is confi-: dence, sir--" he began reluctantly. "Well, then listen, I've got a job in| the Mack Merrill Department Stores, --the Eighth Street one." * "What's his profess--what's he, shop, "A job in the Mack Merrill Stores, admitting without question the dirty | sir?" The butler was actually pale. and weary stock boy of the Mack, | "In the office, sir?' { 1 "In the office nothing! In the Carting wall papers and ink and cleaning brushes and earrings around the place, I'm going to show my father that he can't stand me up| in a corner and throw mud at 'me! He can't call me a thief and a lar--"" "Mr. Joseph, sir, he never called: said Joe, as they began to gather |you that--I didn't hear that," the up the signs of their feast and pre-'horrified old butler interrupted. "Hear him! Every body in the | - > Lo. "The way to begin livin' the ideel life is--to begin," she read like your sister." "Oh, Joe, why not!" "I don't know. I just know that. And here's another thing, that bud- get and system and efficiency talk is all true." Maggie's beautiful blue eyes wid- ened almost as if in pain. "Oh Joe, 1 don't believe ii!" she said again. He was cross. "All right, don't believe it. But what do you think the newspapers print it for?" "You mean so much for groceries and amusements and clothes and dentists?" she demanded, arresving him with a small clutching hand on his arm. "Certainly!" She seemed to droop. "My mother'd never do it, though! She hates managing. "Well, because your mother would- n't do it, Maggie," he said unplease antly, doesn't make it less true, does 1% dig "No, she said sadly, briefly. And Joe suddenly felt ashamed of him- self. He gave her a steadying hand as they scrambled back through the two windows, and over the bales and boxes in their own basement, just in time to hear the gong emit its sharp double ring. But once again in the roar and rush of the store upstairs, he noted that she did not quite re- store him to the familiar footing upon which he had been before. At ten o'clock two old women, armed with pails and maps, made their appearance far at the back, of the store, and purchasers began to take.on a slightly apologetic note, Then, suddenly, 8 gong struck, and a hundred saleswomen were jam- ming through the 'black back pas- sage, past the enormous service ele- vator into the wet street. Joe, stoop- ing toward a heap of rubbish that. was advancing steadily ahead of a charwoman's wide broom, picked something up and cut through the: crowd to follow the sodden little' coated figure that was Maggie John-/ son. "Here" he said, handing her a| bent card. "I just found this. Iti was thrown out. Since you believe: everything the newspapers tell you, how's this?" "The way to begin livin'" she| read slowly. And she looked up| blankly. "Begin what?" she asked.) "That's all there is. It don't finish » "It's all bunk," he sald, trying to! laugh, "Well, T don't know, Joel' "she an- swered, with a flash of animation crossing her pale, dirty little .face. "What you said to-night made me kinder wonder. I've been doing all these things about eatin', and exer- cise, and washin'" she sald eagerly, "but I guess this thinkin' is just as important. I've been handlin' them ideels, and crawlin' over them, and hearin' about them for three ears, an' to-day"s the first time I ever really looked at one! I guess you're! tired, Joe," she added, concernedly, as they walked toward the corner to- ther. "Next week won't Lé 80 hard. An' I guess it felt pretty good to get that pay envelope to-day, didn't it?" she asked encouraging- igure it did," Joe answered brief-] Vipo you go up?" the girl asked.| welcoming hand on his arm. "Mr. Joseph--sir! I'm glad to see: you back safely, sir, What with-- he coughed delicately-- 'what with the little unpleasantness yesterday morning, sir, and your very em= phatic remarks to me, sir, on the. subject of your parents'---ahem!-- attitude, and then your not returning / "I'll tell you one thing--I wouldn't | neighborhood heard him! No, sir, | he doesn't get away with it," salu Joe. "Now, you run along, Allen, and keep mum, and tell 'em I'm all right; and I'm home!" i The message was unobtrusively, carried to a handsome middle-aged man, who was playing bridge with| three other men in the library, At; pentrated into a luxurious dressing} room, where a beautiful and aristo-! cratic woman was making up her| face between a dinner dance and a} late ball, i This woman merely raised her: eyebrows at the news. : And in a litle while she mounted] the flight of wide, palm-decorated stairs that lay between her suite! and his, and appeared, expectantly,: in his doorway, / CAB (To be continued) =~ #& Martintown.--St. Andrews Pres- byterian Church here was dedicated at an interesting service by Rev. Walter G. Brown, Saskatoon, Sask., moderator of the General Assembly of the Presbyterian Church in Cane ada. Hundreds attended the dedicas tion ceremony. KIDNEY LaBACKAC! ADDER TR A HEUMAT complexion and TM --NA' Piles All Gone Without Salves or Cutting Itching, bleeding, protruding piles go quickly and don't come back, if you remove the cause. Bad "blood circylation in the hemorrhoidal veins causes piles by making the affected parts weak, flabby, almost cead. Salves and cutting fail because only an internal medicine can actually correct the cause of piles. Dr, J. S. Leonhardt discovered a real internal Pile remedy. After pre- seribing it for 1,000 patients with success in 960 cases, he named it HEM-ROID. Jury & Lovell says one bottle of HEM-ROID Tablets must end your Pile mis- ery or money back.