Jes a, and. from: worms. : raw 2 and © or dled f Pp! of J Gaby silk sweater, so that the ment has a striped effect, cuffs, bliar, and other trimmings match: g the darker color. This sweater has a blue and white striped ground with plain blue trimmings. A blue | oap' trimmed with 'white matches "} the silk sweater, which is warm as complain brings fo us, O fai Fi of of visible | long shall I be with you t--Wor esirable Bthoreing abpacintiy to the dis- ciples, whose lack of faith seems to { sr | have been the obstacle in the way their performing a cure. 20. Tare--Or, convulsed. He asked toast in addition to its charming Lines. Fo 'have neglected the means of grace. and spiritual = equipment, tayer and faith, on which the ef- Reinacy of their gift depended. : ---- i. "ORIGIN OF CUSTOMS. Shaking Hands 'and Giving Arm to oe © a Lady, oustoms in vogue at the | Certain present day, such as ng hands or offering the left arm to a lady are of considerable antiquity. It is said that Phoepicians, intreduced the former habit into Britain, and that upon the shores of Mounts Bay many a bargain in tin between eas- tern merchant and Cornishman was ratified by this method of clasping hands. Certain other customs no less widely observed have come down to us from a later period, says the London Globe, and yet one suffi- ciently remote, In Mediaeval times be whe shook hands, whether in sal- utation or as a defensive measure-- So at the present time men pull off their right glove before shakin, ° | hands with a lady. The wearing o glove or gauntlet, indeed, at ome period was something of a challenge in "itself; thus no men wore gloves in She plessnce of 'royalty, an ab- sence h oe of hostile intent. Still & man offers a lady his left arm, & practice which recalls times when sSeort was by no means solely a matter of politeness, but when, in o! arly, also, Jays he who desired ce or castle must as warrant of y perhaps, a ring i serve as a sincerity of its ge the ©o! indicated also absence [528°