m1 sit I C l -r H0ius1:vVIr;F 4...: ‘Ill DAITODIL nirtpaeeumtoctncrwverineu. —————— Btlrduatorseafoem, floweror Ofouu-cariyqrringflowersthe winlodnir. .. rialffouiit. Itliisbcdffllolrpnouzmwortiw ‘ comubdonflaeswallow 1 once a day and then rub vnhl into the let i - . When the board dries it will be a baautiful white, and have so odor of dampness, such as these boarcfiifrequentiy acquire. (when ours ropnmc rum 1 r1 non snap: MOTHER For. many years the Queen has beenliiiiierested in the work of the Orossway Central Mlission in London, and she, always reads the magabine published in connection within} _ In ac-ecent number there ap- pcaredian appeal on behalf of I woman living with her two children in an upstairs flat. Her landlady would nm, allow her to have a perambulator in the P888889. and the harassed mother badly needed a folding perambulator which she could carry up to her flat- The mission has received a mes- sage from Buckingham Palace that the Queen has seen the appeal and _. has sent it from Eastbourne to an official at the palace with a direc- tion that a double-folding type of pram which she had seen at the British Industries Flair should be cent to the woman. THOSE TINY RED VEINS! Quit/c a number of people are worried to tind that tiny red veins- are appearing upon the slurs-d‘ their cheeks and noses. these- are known technically by the name of “ typemse." This is one of the complants which must be dealt with at once, for if it is neglected there is little or nothing to be done slbout it later. - It is usually those who posses a. very, thin skin who are most ' troubled with these tiny veins, and one of the best ways of avoiding trouble is to protect the skin as much as possible from the cflfects of the weather, and to avoid using vitheryery hot or cold water for washing the face in, the ideal water temperature for this kind of skin is ‘lukewarm. Bennenottouscicsonthefaoe Ind avoid using strong astringents, heartland. when, Andca-kestbewlnd ofMarch nth "' ~ has even’ been’ favourite _ _ . called thasefiowers “garlands of the in- ia-nal gods." Ovid, again, repres- ents it as having been named after f a‘ youth who piued away because he l fell in love with his own image ‘reflected in s pool. The name Jonquil is a corruption of the French “iunctifoliusfl or rush-leaf, and daffodil is Probably nothins more than the old English name “affodilefl which means "that which comes early." Daffadowndilly is believed to be a corruption of sat-hon lily, which » name is still retained in many rural districts. In Heriifordshire and certain other countries in England it is still cirstomary for children to gather these flowers and place them. on sticks, and carry them into town singing the while the old ditty, "Daffydown-dilly is coming to town." Thecustom ispopuiarly known as "going a-daiffying." All the species of the nurcissl have a more or lea pleasant edour which in its mildest eiifecis pro- duces drowsiness: while the com- mon doffadil possesses a - ' nous juice, though it- has been used on the Continent medicinally. A qusnt s - is associated with the daffodil in many parts or the counts-y, ‘where it is considered un- lucky to bring into the house the first daffodil of the yeah-W. G. nnsrony or nun-menus on your: smvm Silver bought this year makes history. To conunemouate the King's Silver Jubilee, a qaecinl "Jubilee mark" will be stamped on British silver bought during i936. The mark" is a. tiny picture of the heads of the King and Queen. Behind the tiny hail-marks m our silver lies the romance of l as these are definitely harmful in their effects on this type of skin. i All massage on the checks should be gentle and only the finger-tips used ‘for this purpose as the main object is to avoid any kind of sever; friction which would in- crease the circulation. PREPARING FOR. THE IUBILEE Jubilee is making its in- fluenoc- felt already in the Edin- burgh shops. Bows and necklaces 7 ln the Royal colors-red, white. and. blue-are much in evidence- I, One has even heard of a lady who K tried‘ '7 to produce a pot of hyacinths in these Royal colours, l but, unfortunately, the flowers re- ; fused ,_ to bloom simultaneously! l , themselves have provpd more successful, however.) ‘ 013e, also notices Jubilee soap, in nae green shade. bearing the im- pint of Their Maiesties‘ profiles. A n cardigan ‘in "dirty white" qltgmnte buttons of blue and Rd _. mjnpdon the dressmakersn raciée ( designing spring rubles . g whi and blue. Orow-ns and Prince d aha‘ feathers are seen in clips ° and brooches. New silver u being a with the special Jubilee l ifiark. Even the white fox is now dyed Iipmiee blue or Margaret Rose a 3 r i .1 hundreds of yea-rs. Look at a sliver article-o. cigarette c889, or I- nopkin ring. You will see on it a number of little marksflThese are the hall-maria, first put on silver- by’ goldsmitl-is in the fourteenth century. ' ' Since i300 the hell-mark has only changed six imes. It started in 1900 as a pi ure of a leopards head. The fourteenth century gold- smiths stamped this mark on their silver to show that the metal was up to a. certain standard. Then came the “malvrfs me/rk" in 1353- This was another check on the quality of the silver. It took the form of the initials or other sign of the man who made the article. Grasshoppers, nmrigolds and squirrels were amon8_ we W]? maker's signs. Nowadays the in- itials are always ueed~yvu W117 and them 9n your piece of silver. The next hall-nmrk was the secs-yer’ mark, introduced in 1513. This is a letter. manger! each year- From the letter and the shape of the shield on winch it is engraved the expert can tell exm age of any piece of silver. Another hall-mark you will see on our silver is the lion, orcorrectly, the "Lion Peasant." This mark was introduced by Quvfll Elizabeth. Ilhelion showed that the standard of silver reduced under Henry VII ., had been restored to its fomier value. Nowa- E cum.’ ,. days the lion shows that silver is of “I can only take one of you," said the conductor of a. crowded tramcar to two women waiting in the rain. “But we are mother and daugh- ter. Surely you won't separate us?" pleaded one. . i "Not likely," replied the conduc- tor, reaching for the bell. "I did so once." “What's the price of this tabla?" “Three guineas, sir," replied the furniture dealer. “Too expensive. You must be ignorant of present-day values." "Well," drawled the dealer. 1 ought to know a good deal." "Possibly." answered the cus- tomer, “but why label it 'mahog- any?" zeal sterling standard- . Four hundred years ago pro- vincial goldsmiths found it im- possible to have their gold and silver “assayed" or tested in Iondon. In those days cagying valuables around the country was a. risky business. So they started assay of- fices in pig provincial cities. To avoid clashing with London's asay mark of a leopards head they took their own hall-marks. These persist even today. A tiny anchor on your silver means it was made in Birmingham, Sheffield-made silver has a. crown. Ohester silver three sheaves and a. dagger, Glasgow silver a combina- tion of a tree, a. fish and a. bell. London. of course, still has its leop- ard. But today he has lost the clown heusedtowearsnd looksmorelike a out than a l '. Keen ..-. A Qulvaiz-luc Den-r flown her. course, a man not O! ‘that i! There would not woman. But i-hly are not. their making adlvihg; A little grud with her hilsband. contend that it. being struck dawn by responsible and could this correspondent is because she no lon nrrus: susruusl Murderers Granted Second Reprieve BOSTON. Ma. L-(APJ-Jrving and Murton Miile , brothers, mg Abraham Faber, who were ‘- ’ i- ed to die in the electric chair thy week of May 10. were granted n second respite until June 5 by flqy- ernor James M. Curley today, Counsel for the Milicns and Forhans WHHENS TEETH amé/ _ . gums quiml granule I of 5 people eufier from h See your deadngewieeyon sear-menu‘ Faber are, seeking a U.S. Supreme can attain bllldb-fltlt loveflilmt. and hflbilflid duty, and all M3117 517911’! who could hln it into Dear Miss Dix-I without fail when I ‘There is no way, wrote you about being neglected wives if more women this , cfiort t0 hold him. They will It takes more character t 80 deliberatelyto work to make he n t sheudid it and ‘ __'__ ' u ' the wan out, and wif h the same results nine t?» ouet b’! 29:“! Fbrdltve other woman, that she that the h ds aerial a ill-h‘ an o l h n l the v e‘ powers of convention and society fight $1‘ lugrdsidem meme“ advantage over time seam if only she had the energy m do u, ourselves are in love or not. likes hiswlfe L‘ i. wasmuch interested lonely and forlorn because Mycasc wlasimilu- to her-g. .- DorotllyiDiwfaLetftver i e11‘ When Shit?!’ .__ Cri" ‘led G‘ I’ light.” u is in But I'm still struggl‘ ing to keep up with him. to be agood cook nd housekeeper but enough. she must be a pal, a ' comrade and a good sport. A WIFE WHO WON OUT. beso manyladies hldthe in Reno nor so many lscrymcse. iniellisunce and determination of They would rather lose a husband than mnkg the let their house come tumbling down around It is the more strange that woman ‘marriages a success wh being depends on it. For marriage is It is 1w- iob. and ii she loses that as any other woman who finds a Most wives who lose their. husbands‘ lightning, not have ger meets all my heisboundto en not only their love nirik slip in her pay gingly given alimony does not comfortable living that the woman has who is a wife in good standing make so little effort to make their lives but their physical well. a Woman's business, her means '91 she is as out of luck envelope Saturday compensate I01’ the affections, as the phrase Boos. was an act of A bolt 1mm the bmggi; Pmvénwd- ThBy are sure their husbands for which they were in no _._.._._.. h“ "10 Iverese Woman possesses to do as did and recognize that i; she is losing her husband 1y, o1 his requirements rself over to his taste. in a wife, and to her wile thousand ties of association . _.___._ ‘M! the love light Boing out on the domestic um toot am l. girl oi’ 1'1. have fallen in love evm, We may -_-_._._ by which we . ' DOROTHY DIX. Ilowean Itell absolutely m and when a boy is in love with me? ld°n'twmm°m-flk°llllmistaike. Iwunttobeaurveoflovewhen I m“ “- . norms Answer: - All. l‘ nobody in the world u wise 9810118): w tell real love from can tell for certain‘ whether we have all the symptoms, “chills and teatthesoundofa‘ The new and sleeve dines which famous. v And the whole afl Court review of the case. . The youths an‘: charged with the killing of Forbes McLeod, police- man and native of during a. robbery. t MISCOUCHE CONVENT SCHOOL Honor roll for the month of April. Grade Ji-l Vera Allen. lX-—- Madeleine Arsenault.‘ fiulllgosie Arsenault, 3 Thelma Arsen- Grude VlIilI-l Ruth Small, Martha Bark, 3 Lucille Poirier. Grade VII-l Tommy Keefe, I ‘fizzy MacDonald, a Naacirc Poi- Gradc VT-l. Alphonsus Keefe, 2 Gertrude Dcslioches, 3 Mildred Guysbow, us“ fashion. Plain sheer crepe cotton prints as batiste, chiffon other weaves could played. inch miterial with for neck ltlmlls or coin Wrap coin care 11511111137111‘ hil- ' enact Kay's. m on» '1 1110661. carry Justthat subtle touch or "cachet"_for which Paris hie: nnish voile, etc. and Style No; 586 is designed for sizes l6. i8 years, 36. 38, 40 and efl-inchcs bust. Size 36 requires 4 yards of 38- inch contrasting. Usc braided cord trimming. . Price of PATTERN l5 cents h (coin is preferred). fully. v'*"'-'i1¢I——II-—d|-II--—n$-j NO. N0. Sin eonsoeono un-‘n-n-nu-selevaoi u-FASHHIONS FOR SPRING .-. neck and mark today's is_so alir is so easy to silks and sheer linen, also be‘ ern-, $6 yard of ee- lllllli. - _ H -.~.. grown-ups . . . perfcctlybalanoed SH R Expect Triumph For Young Star (Following h the second of a Oanadhn PIES serial cl’ l8 intakes of canadhn taunt; and golf play- ers who will compete in English and. Scottish tournament; this season.) M Generally speaking. Robert D. (Bobby) Murray of Montreal, 20 Yen-rs old and ambitious, is the most promising young player Canada has ever sent to the international mn- nis wars. There may have been , W , . sunzooan “Wul-Ifigg: rum amide! w, " fifflubiftiuflitiuiWugfiidfiitm '13s- rucs-a-uunuuwlontlunninl-ll- n: mo: m CANADA, - or CANADIAN ‘WHEAT May 1.-—(O.P.)— ‘M others just as good, but they were girl or boy we bed such a time and think th each other. bt Ire in love when they are , vé 811M‘ l1 grit. and so in love with lo there is that feeling of ‘HINGE against this lttltllde tOWStd life." I know that a girl of girls do. appliances are make as theyllsed to be. Take your part in them as a matter can't do as much and alarms support yourself, so that i1 you mdependcnt and have something ' which to fill your life. cook's comm "cumin cons ousrann shredded very nne, stantly until yellowed Add 2 cups or i pint can d corn, teaspoon salt, ti 3 eggs beaten Mix all DATI OATOAKI that no one ever loved before as wade Then six months afterward we are asking: "What was the name of that "U!!! "P011? Smith? Or was it Jones?" Pmoiioflly c"?! man and woman who marry are wildly in love at the ey cannot live without each other, they were mistaken in their sentiments and‘ have come The young are partlcularlyapt mm f‘ . um 596""; Ilblosloebini v with. ti- _ theycanthrowthc oglllllflfiu! ir romance over my w elm; Dear Dorothy Dir-rleasc tell me what I eel that my whole lifcjs mined been cripple. when the other girls talk about their I feel as if I don't belong anywhere and my he hopelessness. H Toloce heartisworsc thanloeingyourlcg, hopelessness llld achieve what Stevenson called “the brave That means making the best o! things and not letting a. misfortune drag you down into defeat. yourags wlntstndoallofthethings thatother Most o: them you can do, because so many wonderful artificial now that crippled people are no longer handicapped B0 d0n’t give up lud I091 physically u the other girls. do. in the twee. 4m. you must make u forit than they d0. and make yourself so entertain will enjoy sitting out dances and tennis games with you. Andgetsomethingtodothatwillmake ahouldnotmarryymwillbc Heat 2 tablespoons butter sub- m‘ and softened. 1 1v,’- ‘oecreamnntlffliblflflli “whit-findin- i mvcr sent abroad. Murray goes to Wimbledon and other maior tournaments in the United Kingdom equipped with I- claeslcal style and a fine BMW! game that the veteran Willard Orocker taught him. Be is ranked behind only two pllyfl‘: in Canada, Maul Riainvillc and Gilbert Nlmns. The Canadian lawn ‘Ibnnis As- sociation selected Mum and Laird Watt of Montreal, Caro e Icon _ Eleanor Young of V uver, for the m-itisb invasion Intel! be- cause of their youth. The ides. is to develop young players rather than accept annual Davis Oup beatings from the United States with the youngsters getting little or and that our love is evlrllsting. yet 10$ 116W often actually to hate t. mo; °Y - n-w-i-a- . 8o watch your nepw" ‘cheek your cmotlurwbcn mummuuwtttau-p-tuuiffifitummuu ,0: how much you vivisect your thrill-I, on be able to fir‘ belon- haud whether what you are experiencing is a" passing fancy or the passion. Atthslsstyouwillhavctotrirattcbifl. r _ _ ' _ - . , rxmovmrnlx. I , Iemdcsboutmysoeiallife. uaelamhandicsppedbybeing Gertrude. You must fight tbatyoulfllcft outof Wow. orcourae. realiutbatuyqll wsyofdsnclng bygivingmorementally ingandauceabletbatmen you a cancer. some to L'ite rahtaifé rf.. EAT no chance to tub port in eves these slluflmfl- Inst summer Murray lccrcd some notable triumphs." He eliminated Rainvillc from the ‘Quebec chem- piouships. Don lea-bong, brilliant Jamaican star.‘ fell before his styl- ish stloking in the quarter-finals d the Ontario singles, end he topped legiate tennis. He won the singles and leaned for a doubles victory, on behalf of McGill. Then he suc- capture the doubles. In the Canadian in- door f ‘ “ last winter he , again defeat-ed Watt in the final: -' has a preference for but his half-voile?! and his overhead hart Nunns were at the same stage. ‘w. eeaeeXPerienccnevei-eamctc . Martin or Nunns. - Offer Prayers For Hitler (A. r. By Gunilla’! Special WM! , Ema-m, April sc-Golcmn pr»- . ems for lucr Adolf Hitler inhiswoltasm-iesaviourotthl nation from Bolsbeviam" were o!- fered up in the Protestant churches tonight as an overture to the labor celebrations tonmrrow. . Rflborts in the city that mun hehasplannedfortomorrowwen l? U81‘!- teresting to do and tum: about with m“ by u” "'°p""'d“ mm nonarmr on: ,._.__.___-i. Minn-d‘: the great Blbblll‘ Iillllefl _ ~\_ ' '<>§'=?.°§“§u'.'='°u'3u““"' 123.9% c ' R ‘ ‘(crongcuplardhlioghlogglk "o ‘°""°°"~ MIR-O-KLEER! HOSIERY..15$ i RING a SP ILECAST= (LE-Ail. MADE IN CANADA .noloA-4pn§r.“..‘r "nus-snaps _| . ‘I \ ‘ - ' oivur manna n" m", finenpndmaviivfltldlnatiunin ' -- r -. '- - nmceiuv usririoin‘ [cum ;-“ r-,-f.<o c-sma- * ul Ofifiiifilyllllil‘ own ,1 ‘ -\a\;;;4;O