Here's Way Remember the pictures below when you want fas{ relief from pain. Aspirin eases even a had headache or neuralgia often in a few minutes! 'An Aspirin tablet begins "taking hold" of your pain practically as soon as you swallow it, And Aspirin is safe. For Aspirin does nol harm the heart, biel ttom, grating. An Aspirin tablet starts to disinte- grate and go to work. : Relieves Pain in Minutes mses BAD HEADACHES, NEURITIS AND RHEUMATIC PAINS EASED ALMOST AT ONCE an Aspirin in a water, Note t ORE it touches the A IN 2 SECONDS BY SYOP WATCH What happens in Science Now Remember these twp points: Aspirin Speed and Aspirin Jaf , And, see that you get ASPI 1x, the method doclors prescribe. It is made in Canada, and all druggists have it. Look for the name Hoga in the form of a cross on every Aspirin tablet. Get tin of 12 tablels or eco- nomical bottle of 24 or 100 tablets. lass of t BE- it is disinte- these gl appens in your stomach--A HRN tablets start "'taking hold" of pain a few minutes after taking, When in Pain Remember These Pictures Aspirin is the Trade Mark of the Bayer Company, Limited TUDOR By MRS, STANLEY WRENCH (Author of "Sing for the Moon" "Strange Lovers," otc). 1 CACICICIICICICICICIICIICIN I ICICIACIAON ICAI SYNOPSIS Michael .Borue, 4u. unmarrled, born and bred in a Birmingham slum, in now a wealthy motor manufacturer. One day he visits the countryalde around his old home and rescues Daphne Eden from a menacing tramp, He falls In : love and proposes. Daphne accepts and introduces him (0 her father, who greets him with the words "Qdet out of here you cur -- you ruined my home -- stole my wife -- curse you!" Daphne's father dles and she disap frars, Michael explains to her friend, Irs. Gregory, that he was misrepre- sented. He buys the old 'I'udor House owned by the Hamill-Hardy's, Mrs. Gregory promises to mail a letter from him to Daphne arranging a meeting Daphne does nolL appear, On the way home Michael collides with a car driven by Diana Hamlll-Haray. Mrs. Gregory dles. from her solicitors. At the solicitors she is met by her stepmother. Daphne hear~ She would never see thirty-five again, Daphne was sure of that, and fried to remember just how long it was since the tragedy had happened in her father's life, Ten years she had been with Mrs, Gregory, and a DO NOT PUNISH YOUR CHILD Here's Easy Way To Quickly Help Your Child's Failing Children should not be punished for bed-wetting caused by weakness of Kidney or Bladder. Mothers will find our pleasant Home Treatment quickly heiptul io, Hel little ones. Send no YY, but write today for FREE TRIAL TREATMENT to prove it. ADULTS with Urinary weaknesses that disturb rest should also find our treat- ment of amazing value. VANDERHOOF & CO. LIMITED Box 247, Dept. 35 X23 Windsor, Ont. . . Bn Every Time You Eat yooh food particles bet tooth; Ie ark, moist warmth of CA SEs ad the perfect condition for quick decay which turns into live bacteria. An unclea prone, Mer i 20g Met Jotion are made easantly help orm the clean th and om babit. fade by Caulk of Canada, for more than 50 years manus * facturers of materials for dentists. A two-weeks' or 200 at Dept. stores. 3 > Nervous, Weak, Dizzy? : IF your day begins » with frayed nerves, backache, periodic pains or weakening drains, on should take r. Pistoe's Favor- t e Prescription, Read what Mrs, J, Som of 18 Power } } t., Toronto, Ont, £aid: '1 was completely rundown in' health, My nerves were in bad sha and I had headache day after day. 1 ano strength at all--was miserable. I fook two bottles of Dr, Pierce's Favorite Prescription and it was not Jong before 1 gained in weight, my nerves rt oma) aid Li sironges and more . a fine builde V N All druggists, New a i 0 ct Hquid $1.00, Large size, tabs, or liquid $1 3&" Write Dr. Pierce's Clinic, Buffalo, N v. for free medical advice, LLL The HOUSE year before that she had struggled, fitting pieces together. like a Chinese. puzzle, helping to get her father back to life and sanity, "He has had a very severe shock some kind", the doctors said, but ex- cept that her step-mother had run away, apparently, left him for some other man, Daphne had never known what happened until that night, when, with livid lips, and with eyes like burning coals, her father had poured out his story, "What made you ask me that?" en- quired Lily Eden, watohing Daphne cunningly, "If your dad is dead, what odds does it make whether I ever knew a man Michael Borde?" She waited, and Daphne's heart beat fast, How much should she say, and what should she say now? "Father believed you left him ...... with Borde," she heard herself saying hating herself, and with a curious huskiness in hier voice, Watching her step-mother,-however she saw her eyes harden, then they narrowed into slits of cunning, "What's Borde to you?" she asked, watching Daphne, and furious with herself, Daphne found her face flush- ing, and saw the woman's eyes light up swiftly, She smiled, too, a slow wise smile, and clenching her hands beneath the tablecloth, Daphne realiz- ed that she had given herself away, "Oh, I see," went on the other "80 i's that, Well, I'm blowed," and she flung back her head with a vulgar laugh, "I've heard of that happening before. First the mother, then the daughter, eh," Daphne's finger nails pierced her flesh, she bit her lip to keep back her anger, but as the waitress approached with the food, she was bound to be silent for a moment, The woman was common ..... im- possible ..... she shuddered, but she must sit through this now, and make the best of it, Toying with her own meal, she choked down that sick feel- ing, but aftey a minute or two, Lily Eden glanced at her again, d "Well, what of it?" ghe asked, "So Borde has been making love to you, eh? What's he doing? I know the garage was sold, for I took the trouble to go back there a year or two ago to see", She chattered on for a minute or two, between intervals of eating, and Daphne kept silence, but shrewdly put two and two together, So it was plain that her stepmother knew noth- ing of what really had happened, It Was evident, too, that she did not know that Michael Borde was a rich man, This puzzled Daphne until she remembered that Multiple cars, and S-- Multi-Motors, was carried on as a motor combine, although it was a one man concern, As she leaned back in her chair, the cold blue eyes of Lily Eden met her again, "Well, we'd best talk sense, Da- pane," she sald, "I'm willing to let bygones be bygones if you are, After all, you dad is dead, you say, so it's no use wasting breath in talking over his foolishness, He was cracked about me when we married, but he yas older than me ..... you know that' she smiled complacently, "and he ought to have had more sense and made 'allowance, Michael Borde was a youngish chap, just my own age," Suddenly Daphne put out her hand with a gesture, that spelled decision, "Don't let us discuss it, please," she cried sharply, "I don't think we shal] agree, "Well, you asked me," she cried sulkily, then as the waitress again approached: "Yes, and coffee to fol- low, You don't mind, "do you, Da- phne?" she cried, smilé that was intended to be coy, "Mind it I smoke?' and taking:out a battered case, she drew out a clgar- ette, then offered it to the other, "You don't? No, I don't suppose you would, Your dad was always a bit of a Puritan over women smoking," (To Be Continued.) Children Create Imaginary Friends This Mother Thought Her Son - Was a Born Realist But He Had His Dreams Too - "Whom are you talking to?" Mrs. Smith asked, Jackie was in his play- room alone, not a soul within con- versation distance, "I was talking to Tot{ynail," sald Jackie. Mrs, Smith suddenly said, "OB, Tottynall, That's nice. Well, you and Tottynail go ahead and have a good time," And out she breezed wondering whether she had done the right thing or not. This was the second or third time she had heard of "Tottynail." There was no Tottynail--of course-- Jackle had just made him (or her) up. He played alone most of the time, There were few children in the neighborhood and none his age, Jackie was three, plus, that is to say In his fourth year, REALISM VS. FANCY. His mother herself was a realist and so was his father, She had stacks of books that warned against dreaming and imagination and the "escapes" of people who could not face facts. Now here was "Tottynail," She had heard of lonely children, and even ones who weren't so lonely, manufacturing dream children, but ft never occurred to her that one would come to live in her very own house with her boy, of all beings, She had thought that was for girls, sensitive, sweet, cuddly little girls who liked to play with dolls. Jackie was all boy. He loved trains and cars and airplanes and noise- makers, He roared when he cried and stamped when he was mad, A born realist, she had told herself, who was certainly of the earth earthy, Where he had,got.the word Totty- nail- goodness only knew, Nothing had ever been said or read or brea- thed to suggest the name. It was sexless and so was Tottynail. PLAYMATES 1S SOLUTION, The problem was, however, what to do about it? His father would likely make fun of the dream child and that would kill him (or her) off forever, But would she allow it? It had to be decided now, She went on welghing the facts, Jackie stil] was jabbering to Totty- nail, He was very kind and polite and solicitous, unusually so, She de- clded that he loved the little friend because the friend was silent, admir- ed Jackie, in fact was the ideal per- son the little fellow craved and needed, She went to the bookcase and turned the key. A time and place for realism, but a timé and place for imagination, too. Then she did a wise thing -- went to the telephone and arranged for her friends to drive out once a week with their children, They decided to take turns having the party, And she decided that on Jackie's fourth birthday he would go to kindergarten, y ~~ Relieved/ Mrs. Edward James' baby had two teoth when less than three oiitls olds Fhe iites: To has now an n [1] that giving him Baby's Own Tab. lets while cutting teeth kept him fit and well', 'Teething is a restless feverish time for babies but the little one can always be soothed and the fever, reuoed by t, safe Baby's Own LT ef to take, no after affects, Price 280 everywhere, iil iams' r BABY'S OWN TABLE -- turning with al Orange Pekoe Blend 1m & F vesh from : the Gardens' Intellectuals Russia Asks Aid of Once De- spised Group Asked in Art And Architecture np -- NEW YORK. -- Russia has done a very neat and generous about-face in both architecture and art, espe- cially painting, says Jean Lurcat. Be- cause of a shortage of technically trained men, she has been forced to turn to the once-despised "intellect- | uals" who were anathema ten years ago, he says, Lurcat, one of the best known French painters, is in New York doing the decorating for the Monte Carlo ballet's new Andre Gide piece. He has come from Russia where, at the government's request, he made a study of artistic conditions in Russia. "The new situation is particularly noticeable in architecture," said he. "Russia looks now like America did in 1928--buildings going up on all sides. But 'the buildings exhibit the most curious paradox. "I recall an immense one, 15 stories tall, a block square and in the best American apartment-house style, It is very modern and in the spirit of the new Russia. Next door there is another new building. It is two stories high, and just as perfectly in the old tradition. "So I asked the cause. It is that Russia has not yet been functioning under its present system long enough to produce thoroughly competent architects of its own. Many of its architects have been imported, mostly of the 'modern' stamp. But working side by side with them are the ren 'nants of the old 'intellectual' class. And these are turning out buildings just like they built before the revolu- tion." Z * Bright Colors License Vogue ---- Green and Blue Predominate In States' 1935 License Plates Washington, D,C. -- Designers of automobile license plates for 1936 have caught the spirit of those in the fashion marts and the same col- ors will predominate in the parade of cars and the parade of the well- dressed, according to: the American Automobile Assoclation. The A.A A, pointed out that black, green and blue will stand out on lic- ense plates as it will in the apparel .worn at fashionable teas and along the avenues, . Thirty-three States and the Dis- trict of Columbia, will change their 1934 color motifs, said the national motoring body, and thirteen states will retain their 1934 color schemes, reversing. them as to numerals and background, In all 26 motifs will be used, Two states, Arizona and West Virginia, will retain the present col- ors on 1935 plates, Black aad yellow, found by the U.S. Bureau of Standards to offer good visibility, will lead the parade, being used in five states, namely, Oolorado, Florida, Kentucky, South Dakota and West Virginia, : Second honor will go to white on green, white on blue-and black on white motifs, each to be used in four states, Orange and black, blue on white, and white on black will each be used in three states, Beyond these.] more standard" colors will be a wide Old Reliable Remedy Still Best For Chapped Skin: R ch hands are irritati od biped be also a Fribbens, danger . from infection, when the skin becomes very raw and cracked from _ exposure. : : The old reliable remedy--Hinds Honey and Almond Cream--is still a favorite remedy after being on the market for over 50 . Ever 1875 this soothing, liealing lotion has been the choice of men and women in every walk of life, for its instant relief from suffering, rapid healing and remarkable protective qualities, 'In cold weather, hands, neck and face need 30 keep them free chgppinig and danger of infection. Hinds Hi atmorbed by the skin : i a "no trace of stickiness. shaving. Any druggist can supply you. us Issue No. 46--'34. ' a oa ~ +. . 42 | variety of hues, such as blue on cream in' Arkansas, colonial blue on old 'gold in Delaware, black on rob- ins-egg: blue in: Indiana, and' gold: on maroon in 'Minnesota, The District of Columbia, which has. used a black and yellow com- bination for seven or eight years, re- versing them as to numerals and background, will use a green on white motif in 1935, J The: Canal Zone: will:: use plates with light blue letters .on a canary yellow background; Hawall, black on yellow; the Philippines, orange on black, and Porto Rico, black on yel- low, The Plugger He isn't very brilliant, and his pace is often slow; there's nothing very flashy in his style, He has to dig and labor for, the things he wants to know, and he's busy learn- ing something all the while. + The clever men go by him in a hurry day by day, and the 'stars get all the mention" and the fame. But the patient, steady plugger--in a thorough sort of way--keeps. on going, and he gets there just the same, . : He's a quiet sort of fellow, and he's backward in his speech, You'll never find him clamoring for ap- plause. He will listen "to who has anything to teach, and he never wearies working for a cause. He may take a little longer with the task he has to do than the genius whose talents seem to run, but you'll find the patient plugger at the finish coming through and there's merit in * his labor when its done, He is slow in getting started. He must know the reasons why certain things occur and in a certain way. There is nothing" in his method to attract the passerby, and at times you'd think he's wasted many a day. But when brilliant men have faded, and stars have lost the light; when clever men have stumbled in despair; when the great have come to failure with the goal they sought in sight, you'll find the patient plugger get- ting there.--Anon. The Power of Will There is no task, be it ever so-hard, No battle, though ever so long, But the task may be dope and the ' battle be won, _ If your will to conquer is strong. There is no truth, be it ever so deep, No change, bg it ever so great, But the truth may be thought and the change may be wrought, If you will to mas.er your fate, There is no sea, be it ever so hard, No obstacle ever so high," E: But the sea may be sailed, and the obstacle 'scaled, If you have the courage to try, There {8 no sin or mistake of the past, : Can keep you from reaching your goal, It you but tap the source of that deep hidden. force, Which lies in the depths of your 'soul, Dr. Werneét's Powder For HISE TEE ~~ Can't Slip or Slide Bptinkle on Dr. Wernet's Powder and ° won't have to think about your alse teeth all day long. Joyous com- fort is Jou, Eat anything you want --it holds plates firmly in place--they positively - can't i or slide. Forms. Jrotacive cushion for sensitive gums, ves no colored, gummy substance -- keeps mouth sanitary, breath pleasant: Prescri by world's most noted den« tists. The cost is small--the comfort great. Any druggist. 'wave ga friendly greeting with its another Bulgaria Refuses To Allow Women To Practise Law Although the first Bulgarian wom- an lawyer qualified as long ago as 1906, the . Government still refuses them permission to practisp at the Bar, f The opposition of men lawyers is declared by the women to be mainly responsible for the ban, The women have started a cam- paign to induce the Government to lift the ban on women lawyers of whom 103 have qualified by passing the requisite examinations in jurls- prudence, : Ask Hunters To + po Spare Squirrel Elkns," W. Va.,, -- The hunting season opens soon and trainmen on the Huttongyille branch of the Wes. tern Maryland Railroad are asking hunters to spare a certain gray squirrel which lives in a tree beside the tracks, : "For nearly: a year the trainmen say, the squirrel has come out of its nest daily as-each train. passes to bushy tail. : ! i : BURGESS FL22 FOCUSING LANTERN Red Enamel, size 4X4. Uses 2 Standard No. 2 Unicels.. Sells at 90c, complete with Battery. ) BURGESS BATTERY CO. Niagaya Falls, Ontario QUIVERING NERVES Yield to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound When you are just on edge... when ts can't jun the ¢hil- dren's noise . ... when everything is a burden ;. . when you are irri- table and blue, .. try this -medi- cine. 98 out of 100 women report benefit. It will give you fat the extra en you need. Life will seem worth living agafdt; "°° "HOW TO AVOID ILLNESS When you begin to feel fagged out at the io | of oy day, look out. Illness is. just around the corner waiting to lay you low. At times like this there's no ike Wincarnis, the great tonic that has won over 20,000 recommen~ dations from medical men. Wincarnis is a delicious wine, not a drug. In each bottle there are all the nourishing. elements of 214 lbs, of grapds' ' adaed "vo the strengthening elements of béef and guaranteed malt extracts, Theso elements in Wincarnis, will quickly restore lost energy. They will help you to sound sleep, vigorous awakenings and active, enjoyable days. Drink this delicious. wine regularly three times each day, and soon years will drop from your shoulders. To pick you up when. you are out of . sorts, to soothe your nerves, enr our blood, or in cases of nervousness, Ioana, andeiia eid Sebilieh: take incarnis. t a r-- Agenta: Harold F. Ri & Co, Ltd., oronto, i 1 and economical table Syrup. Children love . its delicions flayor. Engaged Women Too Possess ive Another Man Proves Kiplin Was Right -- "A Go Cigar" is a Smoke, Atlantic City, N.J.--Within a day after 'announcing their Mrs, J. E, Barker, 56, of Great Neck, L.I., and Jacob Miller, 61, of - To- ronto, have broken off in a huff, The sprightly former: musical com- edy ingenue checked out of her hotel to return to New: York, declaring that "Miller obviously {8 not of my strata", The wealthy retired Canadian manufacturer left .a few minutes ahead of his one-day fiance, taking his assortment of suits and assert- ing "I wouldn't marry her now if she was the last woman In the world," Shortly 'after they had posed for sound news reels with youthful dan- cing, tender gestures and questions and answers about Mrs, Barker's cooking, the two flared up when she demanded he "take that filthy cigar out of your mouth Miller, his pride deeply Injured, went out alone on a night tour of the beach front hotel grills and clubs, and related that he found much jolly fe- minine company for solace. Mrs. Barker remained in the hotel to con- sult with Mrs, Nelle Brooke Stull of Elyria, Ohio, founder and - president of the Widows' and Widowers' Club, which has been holding a regional meeting here, Five other men, chosen by Mrs, 'Stull from the club membership, are on the list of appointments which Mrs. Barker expects to carry out in New York. "I thought I knew him from his letters," sald Mrs. Barker, "After we corresponded since last Easter--but personal showed me that hg simply is not my kind after all." Mrs, Stull herself, who has done magazine staff writ as a love ex- pert, commented that "women be- come too possessive-As sodn»as they are engaged. Before that timg they shut their eyes, admire their men friends' this and clothing and conver sation--but after the engagement they start picking them to pieces. "I-believe that she hurt his pride and he flared back, She should be more tactful, Famous Church London Edifice Removed in "Piéces for Re-erection in More Populous District, LONDON. -- For the first time in the history of the Church of England one of its most notable places of wor- ship has been ' removed, stone by stone, to a new site several miles distant. Thirty years ago, St. Andrew's, in '| Wells . street, near Oxford Circus, was one of the . "fashionable" churches of London. Every Sunday the broughams of Kensington Mayfair filled Wells street. Edward and Queen Alexandra were often in the congregation. Sarah ' Bernhardt, the actress, was married there, The music at St. Andrew's was of a high order. It had its own- choir school, and Joseph Barnby, the famous com- poser, was for a time its organist. With its reredos of alabaster, and with other fittings as elaborate, St. Andrew's. was one of the. choicest according to the Victorian standard, COST COVERED. Changes in social custom gradu- ally reduced the congregation to but a. faithful remnant. These pious old-timers, however, were suffici- ently jealous of the glories that had been as to appeal to the Privy Council . against the closing of the church: The effort was vain, but the faithful few were perhaps mol- lified . when. an undertaking ° was given that the church should be removed in its entirety to serve a more populous district. St. Andrew's has now risen again at Kingstfiry, one of the rapidly growing new suburbs of north- western London. The removal from Wells street to Kingsbury has been an expensive matter, but the cost was more than covered by the price received for the site in Wells street. Ask Better Plan ~ For Air Control LONDON.--Need for a properly co-ordinated plan on a national gcale for the development of civil aviation, to make regular commer cial air transport possible, is urged 'by the London Chamber of -Com- merce in a memorandum submitted to the Air Ministry. : Suggestions put forward include provision for ground equipment and trafic control of British air routes to be vested in a-statutory body on which the Air Ministry, the Post Office, aircraft operators, insurance and commercial interests among ' 3 v4 pure, wholesome, others should be represented. The sweetest bird builds near the ground, x The. loveliest flower. springs. low; And we must stoop for happiness, It we ita worth would know: \ engagement, ° acquaintance. Follows People and King specimens of ecclesiastical splendor 3 ¥ 1B ~ BES a | ee : ALS