Suf Sur and other medicines. They dgre mild and harmâ€" less. But your liver understands and takes the hint. For sale at all druggists, 50c. (B) tive conditions, especially thoge due to overâ€" eating, over indulgence in alcohol, lack of exâ€" Your liver has a big job to do. Make it do what it is supposed to. Its job is to produce 18 to 36 fluid ounces of bile every day and send it through the system. If it falls down on its job you suffer. AND HOW! _ The most effective stimulant for the liver &nown to medical science is calomel, which in small doses is of the highest use in congesâ€" MAKE YOUR LIVER Produce its bile Not On Good Terms Mra. Durham had returned from town. She was a woman of indetermâ€" inate age. Her eyes were pale; her nose was hooked like the beak of a hawk; her lips were thin and set in avaricious lines. Immediately upon meeting Furlong she wanted to know whether he believed his experiment would succeed, how he proposed to go about it, how long it would take, and the like. Ben was noncommittal and he refused to raise her hopes. Before ke Rad finished his meat he had conâ€" vinced himself that the woman stood in some sort of dread of Tiller Madâ€" dox and that her fear of antagonizing him almost equaled her anxiety for Botty Derhkam was staring at Furâ€" long with an apprehensive pucker beâ€" tween her brows. "Ain‘t that our luck, for a little bitty old bolt to ruin everyâ€" thing? Can you think of any wayâ€"*"* "I can think of one way that won‘t cost much to try." "I don‘t want any strangers exporiâ€" mentin‘ aroundâ€"" Maddox began; but the girl exclaimed sharply: "You‘ve been experimenting for two weeks at a hundred dollars a day, haven‘t you? It‘s our well. Let Mr. Furlong have a go at it." The driller exccuted an exaggeratâ€" ed4 gosture of acquiescence. "Right you are, Betty! But if this feller puts it on the bum, don‘t blame me." Then to Ben he announced: "Help yourself, pardner. You heard the boss." | «o . By REX BEACH l &«3 *“L“â€&‘;Jï¬ï¬llflfllllltfl 'Jflyi,!’.’â€â€",â€â€â€â€™ | PowDer . _ | Leading physicians nounce “C&OWN BRAIEB)"‘ CORN SYRUP a most satisâ€" factory carbohydrate to use as a milk modifier in the feeding of tiny infants and as an energy producing food for growing children. "A thrive on **CROWN BRAND* CORN _ SYRUP. They never tire of its deliciâ€" ous flavor and it really is so good for themâ€"so glve the children "CROWN BRAND‘" every day. (CHUILDREN of all ages theloa a. AMD Au ar O For lovers of green tea CHAPTER II GREEN TEA In the course of time Furlong finâ€" ished cutting the end of his steel casâ€" ing into a series of teeth, and these teeth he then bent slightly inward. This done, he attached the device to a tool and lowered it into the hole. Even Betty Durham and her aunt Mary, who looked on with growing suspense, understood now how he proâ€" posed to pick up that boit. He had shaped those tapering teeth so that they resembled the curving fingers of a hand, and his delicate task was to drive the casing home against the steelâ€"hard bottom of the well until those fingers closed, until he clinched them over the obstacle. It was a task less difficult than it sounds. "Tiller won‘t lose his job," the enâ€" gineer asserted, positively. "He don‘t loqe anything he goes after." «Not to be killed? Sureâ€"" "Naw! To get in with the widder an‘ Betty. Lucky for them, too, that he took to lookin‘ out for ‘em. If he makes this well they‘ll be movin‘ inâ€" to one of them Dallas mansions with marble bedsteads." "Humph! He‘ll never made a well if he keeps dropping hardware in it. In my country a driller that careless would lose his job." "They figgered some air current was responsible. Kind of a Godsend for Tiller, wasn‘t it?" "And Maddox wasn‘t scratched! That stuff certainly acts queer at times!t" â€" "What happened to the driver?" ‘What d‘you reckon happened? All the trace they ever found of him or the outfit was part of a hoss‘s leg hangin‘ on a telegraph crossâ€"arm about a hundred yards up the grade. There was a hole thirty foot wide where the wagon had been and the railroad iron was corkscrewed for a quarter of a mile. They found quite a bit of Mr. Durhamâ€"enough to hold a funeral over,." he "He was blowed up. It was when the Planet Company was getting ready to put down that well on the northeast corner. Maddox was workin‘ for the company thenâ€"movin‘ the rig onto the ground. A powder wagon came by an‘ the driver stopped to ask his way. You‘ve seen them trucksâ€" six hundred odd quarts of nitroglyâ€" cerine in square cans all set in feltâ€" lined racks to keep ‘em from jarring. I allus been scared of ‘em, but them drivers pound their wagons over these rough roads like it‘s so much molasses they got. Old man Durham went across to the road and give him direcâ€" tionsâ€"he stood there watchin‘ the wagon as it drove on. The driver was trottin‘ his horses, an‘ when he crossâ€" ed the railroad track it let go. Jar set it off, I s‘pose. Tiller says he saw it all, but he don‘t remember hearin‘ a sound or feelin‘ a shock of any sort. All he seen was a big black cloud, an‘ when he looked for old man Durham "Say! How come Mr. Durham get killed?" The engineer of the rig watched Furlong‘s work with the interest of a fellow machinist, and of him the latâ€" ter inquired finally: After supper, by the light of a gasoâ€" line torch, Furlong resumed his work the while Maddox vainly tried, with the new device which his employer had brought out from town, to grapple that obstinate piece of steel a fifth of a mile beneath his feet. But it was blind work, monotonous work, dispirâ€" iting work; time after time the clumsy fishing tool was raised and lowered, but its jaws refused to seize the trouâ€" blesome bolt. It was a job as hopeâ€" less and as baffling as trying to pick up a pin with a pair of fire tongs atâ€" tached to a string. Furlong‘s success. Ben wondered why. Another fact he discovered â€" Betty and her aunt were not on the best of terms. wasn‘t there. The fence was gone, (TO BE CONTINUED) to for "B" certificate. The subjects would include: Personal hygiene and phyâ€" sical exercises; cooking and everyâ€" thing related to it; housework; nursâ€" ery work; laundry work; needlework (mending, dressâ€"making and so on) J practical housewifery (such as tap reâ€" pairs); dietetics and Catering. Class "C" or lowest type of diploma is to be given to girls of schoolâ€"leaving age who have taken their preliminary domestic science course during their years at school. Anyone employing them at a minimum salary of $2.50 per week with room, board, laundry, and health and unemployment insurance, would be asked to consent to their taking further training at the times set aside in the schools for classes for "B" certificate. The subiante wanla Parliamentary interest has not stopped there. They have mapped out the course of those young women who want to take up housework as a paid career. Three classes of certificate are to be sranted for proficiency in domestic science and should the holdâ€" ers go into service they are to be paid according to their qualifications. Princess Elizabeth has domestic science on her curriculum and reâ€" cently sent a cake made and baked by herself to a Welsh family. And every little girl in the United Kingâ€" dom may be compelled to learn to shop, cook, wash, sew and iron as she is now made to study how to read and write. A bill to be seriously discussed in parliament during this season proâ€" vides for this. The reason behind the bill is that a shortage of good cooks in their own homes is inspiring portâ€" ly, dignified members of the House of Commons to drastic effort. Housekeepers ® No longer is British cookery to be the butt of facetious remarks from the other side of the Atlantic. Cookâ€" ing in England is about to become an almost universal accomplishment. British Maidens Will Be Taught Home Sciences Bill to Be Discussed In Parliament To Insure Good Cooks arnd It‘s easy to crochet this frock of mercerized cottor leaf pattern throughout except for the yoke in a 1388 contains directions for making the dress in si one pattern); an illustration of it and of stitches ments. Send 20 cents in coins (stamps cannot be accepte Wilson Needlecraft Dept., 73 West Adelaide St., " PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS Evening materials are organdie, silk and dull crepes, stiff satin, tulle and printed crepes, A strong contrasting feminine note is seen in lingerie details for suits and dresses in frilled jabots, ruffled vestees, laceâ€"trimmed < collars and cuffs. The new feather hats take the form of white hens or black ducks with red beaks and tails in the air. Patou‘s new collection stresses the Moyen age in formâ€"hugging bodices extending beâ€" low the hips to meet short, pleated skirts just covering the knees. Masculine Note Many twoâ€"piece dresses and suits also follow this design. There is a pronounced masculine note in strictly tailored threeâ€"quarter jackets for day wear and a similar styling for evening coats. PARIS.â€"Longer waists and shorter skirts are the striking changes greetâ€" ing newly arrived stylists and buyers viewing the latest collections in foreâ€" most Paris houses. Waists Longer, Lucky Clover Leaf Design For Laura Whecler Party Dress I T T 1 eeeeeaatine CHILD‘S CROEliE_TEI_D DRE_SS *~â€" PATTERN 1388 Feather Hats In Form of White Hens or Black et this frock of mercerized cotton. It‘s the same cloverâ€" ighout except for the yoke in a simple mesh. Pattern ections for making the dress in sizes 4 to 8 (all given in illustration of it and of stitches used ; material requireâ€" amps cannot be accepted) for this pattern to 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Write plainly . NAMD 223 annnmas J 7 The blushing powers of blondes, brunettes and redheads have been tested in New York by a spectroâ€" photometer, an instrument which measures colour. The girls were told a joke and the spectrometer recorded their reac. She knew that Wocdrow Wilson drew up the Ningâ€"Power Treaty, that the United States bought Alaska from Russia in 1867â€""for $7,200,000," she added gratuitouslyâ€"and that the longest river in China is the Yangtse. She knew all the answers. With an air of boredom, as though impaâ€" tient for something hard, she replied glibly that Paramaribo is the Capital of Dutch Guiana, that Lake Michiâ€" gan is the fifth largest lake in the world with an area of 22,460 square miles, that the buffer State between Russia and China is Mongolia, and that the Suez Canal was opened in 1869 and built by a French engiâ€" ueed named Ferdinand de Lesseps, f Walking Encyclopedia "That‘s spelled with a small ‘d‘ and a capital ‘L‘, she advised gravely, for the benefit of newsmen. "Just ask me anything you like," she said. "They call me the walking bogl_( of knowledge." In a quick, piping voice, Jean Kathâ€" leen Demers, 3â€"yearâ€"old prodigy of Tracadie, N.S., rattled off wisecracks and random facts from an apparâ€" ently inexhaustible fund of knowlâ€" edge at New York last week. Maritime Prodigy Refuses To Be Stumped By Most Abstruse Questions Flung at Her In New Girl, 3, Knows All the Answers 1/3 1/3 When you make a batch of Lady Fingers, serve them for afternoon tea or with ice cream and be sure to keep enough to make an Angel Charâ€" lotte Russe. That‘s such a grand sounding dessert,â€"makes one think of Paris and Vienna and restaurants, famed the world over for their exâ€" quisite food. But don‘t let the name stump you because you can make a perfect Charlotte Russe right in your own home. We are including that recipe too. It isn‘t very often we get a request for a recipe for Lady Fingers nowaâ€" days. The fashion for these delightâ€" ful little bits of pastry seems to have waned since the coming of readyâ€" made biscuits. But for the sake of our inquirer and for those of you who would like to revive these tea dainties, we are going to give it. Dainty LADY FINGERS Blushing Blonde Issue No. 10â€"‘38 The blornde‘s blush was the Lady Fingers cup sifted cake flour. whole egg. egg yolks. Dash of salt. cup powdered sugar, 1‘%4 cups sifted cake flour. 1 teaspoon baking powder. 14 teaspoon sait. 1 cup sugar. 2 eggs and 1 egg yolk, 4 cup orange juice 1 tablespoon grated orange rind. 4 cup water. Sift flour once, measure, add bakâ€" ing powder, and salt, and sift togethâ€" er three times. Add % cup sugar to eggs and beat with rotary egg beater until smooth. Bake in greased, flourâ€" ed pan, 8x8®x2 inches, in moderate 1% cups sifted cake flour, Â¥% teaspoon salt. 1 cup sugar. 6 eggs, unbeaten. 3 tablespoons butter, melted. * 2 tablespoons lemon juice, Grated rind of 1 lemon. _ _ Apricot jam. Raspberry jam. Sift flour once, measure, ad1 salt and sift again. Add sugar to eggs in bowl. Place over smaller bow] of hot water (water must not touch bottom of mixing bow!l) and beat with rotary cgg beater 12 minutes. Avoid beating violently. Remove from over hot water and continue beating 10 minutes, or until mixture is cool. Fold in flour mixture thorâ€" oughly, but gently. Fold in hot butâ€" ter and ismon juice and rind. Spread thin on 2 large, shallow, ungreased pans 15 x 10 inches. Bake in modâ€" erate oven (375 deg. F.) 12 minutes or until done. Invert pans on rack for 1 hour or until cold. Put layers together with tart apricot jam. Cut in half, spread on top of one half with tart raspberry jam, and adjust other half on top, making a fourâ€" layer cake. Dust top with confectionâ€" ers‘ sugar. ‘ 14 package (4 tablespoons) lemon jelly powder. 1 cup warm water. Dash of salt, 14 cup powdered sugar. % teaspoon almond extract. 1 cup heavy cream. Lady Fingers. Dissolve jelly powder in warm waâ€" ter, Add salt and sugar. Chill unâ€" til cold and syrupy. Add almond extract and cream. Place in bowl of cracked ice or ice water and beat with rotary egg beater until thick and fluffy like whipped cream. Turn into mold lined with Lady Fingers. Chill untii firm. Unmold. Serves 8. 2 egg whites, stiffly heaten. %4 teaspoon vanilla. Sift flour once, measure, and sift again three times. Combine whole ege, egg yolks, and salt, and beat unâ€" til thick and lemonâ€"colored. Fold suâ€" gar gradually into egg whites and continue beating until mixture stifâ€" fens again. Fold in egg yolk mixâ€" ture and vanilla; then flour. Shape in oblongs, 4% x % inches on unâ€" greased paper in baking pan. Bake in moderate oven (875 deg. F.) 12 minutes. Makes 30 lady fingers. "*" + i1 " . pyliagth funt"_ n Orange Sponge Cake Angel Charlotte Russe PACKAGES â€" 10c POUCHES â€" 15¢ Â¥/zâ€"lb. TINS â€" 70¢ #umg cmvss en g 4 oven (350 deg. F.) 30 minutes, or until done. Remove from oven and invert pan until cake is cold. $1,000â€"aâ€"Year Mouse: Minnic, a singing mouse, earned $1,000 during her first year as a performer over the radio in Chicago. The whistling language is centuries old and is produced without use of fingers. So expert are the people that they can send aud understand the most intricate messagesâ€"and can make themselves heard four miles away. The whistling language is "spoâ€" ken" by a section of the population of Gomera, one of the Canary Is lands. In a remote part of the isâ€" land the people of the villages comâ€" municate with one another by whistâ€" ling across the deep ravines which separate them, Py w« COLDS Given Fast Relief T alking in Whistles ©@ "Aspirin‘ tablets are made in Canada. "Aspirin‘‘ is the registered tradeâ€"mark of the Bayer Company, Limited, of Windsor, Ontario. Look for the name Bayer in the form of a cross on every tablet, SORE THROAT This medicinal gargle will act almost like a local anesthetic on the sore, irritated membrane of your throat. Pain eases promptly ;rawness is relieved. pleasant. This is all you do. Crush and dissolve three "Aspirin‘ tablets in oneâ€"third glass of water. Then gargle with this mixture twice, holdâ€" ing your head well back, The speed with which "Aspirin‘ tablets act in relieving the distressing symptoms of colds and accompanyâ€" ing sore throat is utterly amazing . . . and the treatment is simple and lets with a full glass of water. Take 2 " Tabâ€" year. Building construction in loa<â€" ing cities is four times as great as in the depth of the depression in 1932. Despite rising costs building ~onâ€" struction in Australia in 1938 is * pected to at Jeast equal that of is a single straggling end (mo= men seem to achieve this now) even more I like perfect; hands. I‘ll confess that I have two s nesses where women‘s looks are cerned. 1 like a perfect!; brushed and set head of hair, v The older generation says dis<\~‘nâ€" fully: "Men hate a girl to put a} that stuff on her face," and a |!: of men join in that chorus. But do they hate it really? Personally, I‘d hate my wife <~ be stared at, but I like her to be loo}â€" ed at! That‘s a subtle distinction,. if you like. â€" But, interpreted, it moans that I would not like to see hor with scarlet lips and nails, dyed or bloschâ€"= ed hair, and painted on eyeb: *"Woman of the World" What I do like is to see Celia = ing like a "woman of the worlo"~ as though she had no makeâ€"up on at all, yet with her complexion loo}ing too good to be true to natw: I like the smoothness of powdere | «in â€"â€"a matt surface, I‘m tora it‘s callod â€"and definitely, and a little d~‘ ly, I like lipstick, Well, I can tell you, 1 po=i: glowed with pride. Of course, | vaguely noticed this about Ccli fore, but now I came to think a t s » »% Fresh and Healthy Then a third voice joined i: "Oh, she‘s all right, just much sense about makeâ€"up, th: Jones (that was me) ought to duce her to his wife, She is . er woman, if .you like, always fresh and healthy out in t)« and yet in the evening mans change herself completely." "Good heavens, just look at that girl! Rouge and lipstick and red nails complete. Why on earth does she come on to a golf course like that?" And someone else said, with a chuckle: "Well, anyway, she ; rattling good game." Two or three weeks ago at golf club, writes Adrian Hall i: London Daily Mail, 1 overhes man say scornfully: Mere Man Discusses Question of Makeup Says There‘s a Subtle Distinction of their newlyâ€"gained rights, ‘The silence is total, save for one popular Paris afternoon newspaper which played up the story on its front page under this somewhat sour, twoâ€"col umn headline: "Madame, you don‘t owe your husband obedience any longâ€" er but your husband remains the hoad of the family." The almost complete silence ob served by the French press in rogard to the passage of this revolutionary bill indicates that Frenchmen are try» ing to keep their wives in ignorance Peaceful Revolution The law, in effect, brings about a peaceful but veritable revolution in the relation between the sgoxos in France for by it French women no longer owe obedience to their lus. bands. The word "obedience" is honce. forth stricken out of the marriago sop vice in all civil weddings porlormed by French mayors, But the now law goes much further than this. Conterp ing, as it does, numerous civil liber tieg on French wives hitherto donied them, its effects will be felt in many fields of French life, More undor the dispensation a French wife may now sign and receive cheques, tostify in court, execute a will, act as guardian, make a legacy and sign a contract so long as she is acting for herself, Howâ€" ever, even under the mnewly enactod reforms a French wife cannot enzage in business without the consent of her=L husband. % though this bill which becomes l:; since it has already been passeq by the Senate does not establish fuy equality of rights as betwoeen tho goy. es, it nevertheless, registers a notable advance in this direction in a country where the women, not even enjoying the right to vote, probably oc« upy a more imperious status than in any other great civilized nation, As one French nowspaper remarked: "The passage of this bill by Parliamoent is a sort of juridical 14th of July 1or the French women, since it marks thetp successful storming of the notorious *antifeminist Bastille,/ the Code Na. poleon, which embodied the contep. tions of the Roman law in rogard to women." ‘amber of Deputies without discus. ».on adopted a bill conferring import. ant civil rights on married women, a1. Added Civil Rights Include Dj,. &o‘uablhsbande. French feminists celebrated jagt week the great victory obtaineg for the cause of women‘s rights when the French Women _ Gl;in Victory "Mead of the Family" a** the the these mission journeys 0f 100C NI chosen apostles we see how wvHJ suited the objects in view that t ghould go in pairs A man by self has many dangers. The p? ence of his colleague would re him to his true position and re1 him that he was not about his work but his Master‘s. And he them authority over the unefl '\lls' ':l with clo 4, And Jesus said unt« prophet is not without hon his own country, and amor kin, and in his own how true it is that home ana « town are the hardest place to witness! The Nazaron see how a carpenter could phet." But why not? It i surroundings which deter chararter, but one‘s self. No Mighty Worl 5, And he could there do, work, save that he laid his learn and to blind +« their unbelief, mbout the villa; whigh amazed 0 ter ; unreasonabl ple. The one t ing them from : phot come fro m decided in t the man who 0: in the midst of somehow, he al and a worker of Jesus o be "the synzgrogue, an ly testimony, yokes for oxer The son of James, and Jo mon*? and an with us? And the othe yesterda them toâ€" The «© gogue. And astonished. they wore 1 than every © ehurch. â€" Sa man those (} wisdom that and vhat m wrought by had come ov eould not ac become the : miracles. O evidence in h ang what wa wntil he began his pu The twelve disciples y into Galilse probably : of Capernaum. », is not 1 village carne held the posi lage blacksmi few places w ed from his brought up t carpenter, J in building a the lake, in n suns@Bou6. ai LESSON Xx. SERVING WITH WHAT WE H Mark 6:113. THE LESSON IX ITs sETT Time.â€"Winter, A.D. 29. Place.â€"The events of the h" of our lesson occurred in City of Nazarcth, whore Josus | 1, And he wen That is, he wont um, where so mu: carried on, And ewn country; an. Jow him. The 1 by the Galileans birth at Bothlehc: and the village w ed (v.3) and wh his youth (Luke 4 ealled his countr; come to And v The Vilas 1d ill of their > Master‘s ion journey ostles we S it _Â¥ / wh and . makit V He 1t pai m n t} t 7 e | 4//4 =~< to