'â- ^-^rvw> • "'ll»" U m i hu^ . wM iiiiii u. I â- â- ii mii iiiii M iiii i iii w ' I 'li y i n m Quality Guaranteed SALAM TEA The Jade God By .MARY IMLAY TAYLOR CHAPTER FOUR But to reach him through that crowd of fashionables, to get him •way from Pam, teemed for i while impossible. Here and there Landon was greeted by friends and acquaintances. One woman asked for Teddy Banks, another â€" having heard that the fine looking strang- er was also a cousin of Landon's â€" asked to have Mark brought to her house. "He's «o interesting," she said; "io unusual!" Landon was in a white fury when kc finally got Mark at the door of the smoking room. It was beyond the conservatory and the departing The Great BREEDING Aid For CATTLE, SWINE and other LIVE STOCK vo/Â¥r UCKLEY'C MIXTURE ll t»tl»PM'S t*H€iSt siitmg e»99ii UMP ept» piMtprt B BACKACHE? Look out for Trouble With Your KIDNEYS If your back achea Of if you have 41iturl>cd (deep, burning or smarting, look •at (or trnuble. This condition !â- a lure rign that your kidneys are not fully lidding )rour blood of poisonous acids and wastbs. When the kidneys slow up, wastes 'xillect. Backache, dizxy spells, peffy eyes«&d rhc!.«u..>ic pains may follow. Vout kidneys need help â€" and there <s * ttme-tried, proven way to help them hnown as GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules. These Capsules contain care- fully measured quantities of that widely koown diuretic called Dutch Dro;s You will find thdr action fast and effective. Be sure you get GOLD MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules, the genuine and original Duifli Drops- -packed in Canada Get a Mr packaitr from vour dl'UKRist I ISSUE 8â€"19*8 A NEW DAY DAWNS guests had drifted out of it. Th« room was empty save for the dii- tolving cloud of cigarette imok*. Landon beckoned to Mark. "A word with youl" he uid hoarsely, closing the door; he wa« pale with rage. Mark stood easily, facing him; there was a splendid vigor about him that Landon had not seen in his poor, rough and ready suit of clothes. It could not be said that clothes made the man, but the man shone radiantly through the clothes, there was something »bout him â€" in this house-broken, scented at- mosphere â€" splendidly, heathenish- ly alive. He smiled at Archie's wrath. * * * "You've lost," he said casually; "I'm asked to dine." "I know it," replied Landon fiercely, "but you won't â€" you'll go home!" "Better fake your defeat more calmly," counselled Mark; "you're not a good sport." Landon gasped with anger. "I've watched you," he said thickly; "you've trespassed here â€" you've dared too much. Now, you'll get outl" Mark's eyes met his mockingly; for a moment their glances ground on each other like crossing steels, then he laughed. "Listenâ€" I've won and I'll stay; the dinner was the acid test, you know. Do you think they'd like you for trj-ing to cheat them? If you drive me out, I'll tell them what you did â€" we'll go together." Landoti whitened yet more. "You've got to go," he raged; "I'll make you, â€" you paid imposterl" * • ♦ Mark swung around in pagan fury; he seized him and shook him. Landon was big, but in the other's hands he might have been a reed. Mark threw him aside like a helpless puppy; then he gapped the money, five hundred dollars, down on the table. "Take it, there's the price; it's infamous, unthinkable; I repud- iate it! I'll stay because I'm asked; because I will! Go out there and tell your story â€" if she believes it Mrs. Lynn will show you the door!" Landon knew it; he reeled un- steadily on his feet; he saw stars, his face was ghastly. He struck the money fiercely and flung it in the fire. As the flame caught it and the costly smoke went up ha heard Mark's tormenting laugh. "Tell them, you've played a mean trick on your hostess; you've done a thing no gentleman should do; a thing to damn vcu socially; go and tell her! You'll suffer. I'll stay," said he with sudden passion, his eyes flashing their flame at Landon. "I'll stayâ€" and you can't put me out â€" the wager's won!" * « * Mark Grant kept his word. He stayed. In the first flush and ex- ultation of his love for Pam he would have walked through fire to stay. But he had no such or- deal; Landon had felt his fingers on his shoulder; the cinch of them had left the young man's muscles sore. He wanted no more of that. He gnawed his rage in silence. He saw that he was trapped. If he told the truth to get Grant out, he would 1^0 out himself in disgrace. Strange to say, he had not thought of that, he had it to digest while he watched Mark's triumph at the dinner. This strange fellow; this heathen with iron fists, whoever he was, had found his tongue; he talked well. Not of travel and ad- ventures, Landon noticed, but of life. He had a horribly lucid in- sight; he saw through people's motives, and he was well read. No one could question that. He had caught Burleson's interest â€" the great man, usually wearied and self-absorbed, listened to him with marked .ittention, studied him, too, Landon thought, as if he searched his memory for that face. ♦ ♦ * As for Pam, she s.it next to Mark and looked up at him with wide, fascinated eyes. He was "so different," tiiat was what all the worsen thought Mrs. Lynn, who liked a new lion first at her table, smiled across at .\rrhie Landon. Her look said plainly: "Thank you; he's delightful!" And Archie gnavv- ed again upon the bone of his wrath. How to get liim out â€" that was the question: Mark, knowing This little Dutch lad stands before shattered house in his liberated home town in Holland. An iiifant when Nazis invaded country in 1940, boy has known only oppression and war, but he smiles as new day dawns for Holland. k, threw him, once in a while, a dare-devil look But M.-.rk himself was not as happy as he looked. The atmosphere of the place was like a hot-Iiouse, fragrant and warm â€" the glow of shaded lights â€" the soft voice.e of the women. Abruptly arose the vision of prison fare â€" fifteen years of it. The dare- deviltry that had made him fling defiance at Landon melted in Pam's shining glance. What right had he, an ex-convict, to sit be- side her, to touch her hand, to look into her eyes? A kind of fever seized him; once or twice it was in his mind to rise and shout the truth at them. Then Burleson held him from it â€" one of the men who had helped send him to prison; who, no doubt, like Fosdick, be- lieved him guilty. Covertly now he studied him; a gray face, a worn old man, grown miglitily prosper- ous, but not happy; he had lost his wife and three ions; riches alone weighed upon him. Did he ever think of the boy he had help- ed send to prison? It gave Mark a kind of impish satisfaction to sit at his table, only he' wanted to shout his name at himâ€" fo defy him. Then Mrs. Lynn addressed him, smilingly. "Mr. Byram, I want to ask you about Stella Byram's wedding. Were you there by any chance?" (To Be Continued) AjtUwuS'WKttUt Mittens for all the children, in BO time at all! They're knitted on two needles in a straight piece. Well-fitting, in sport yarn. Make gay stripes out of scrap wool. Very easy to knit. Pattern 679 contains directions for mittens in sizes 4, 6, 8 and 10. Send twenty cents in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern to Wilson Needlecraft, I>ept., Room 421, 73 Adelaide St. West, Toronto. Print plainly pat- tern number yo.ur name and ad- dress. "What a Christmas Present"! - His Wife "Holy Smokes!" yelled Sgt. Jo- seph Waldt, "What a Christmas present." The "present" was his wife from Baltimore, Md. She walked into his hospital room and it was th« first time he had seen her in three years. Mrs. Waldt was a gift from a group of Tulsa people who had earned Joe's story. The sergeant had been wounded in France and sent to an Oklahoma Army hospi- tal to convalesce. His wife missed him in New York and she was a working woman of modest means so she couldn't follow him to Okla- homa. So Tulsans got his wife a plane reservation, a hotel room and sent her a stack of $10 bills for expenses. A delegation met her at the airport pinned a gardenia on her and took her to Joe. Individual DeviVs Food Puddings }4 cull suKai- ' cup flour % cup milk 'A teaspoon soda C squares, unsweetened choco- '/j teaspoon salt late (2 oz.) 'A cup milk li cup shortening 'A c"P -Mi-Bran J4 cup sugar 'A teaspoon vanilla extract 1 egg 1 eup whipping cream Combine % cup sugar, !4 cup milk and chocolate and lOok, stir- ring occasionally until thick. Cool. Blend shortening ^\tyar and egg; beat until light and fuffy. Add chocolate misture. Silt ilour witli soda and salt; add to first mixture alternately with 'A up iiilll;. Add All- Bran and vanilla. Pour into star or any fancy shaped iiio'^'s'. or .ilu'llow greased baking pan and bake in a nu.ilernlo r. .lu (:"(') l'".> -'wm 40 minutes. Cut into squares, serve with wliippid i'iK.:m, if i! -ii.d. Helps Chedc Colds Qukkly ^ You can often check a cold quickly if you follow these instructions. Just as soon as you feel the cold com- ing on and experience headache, pains in the back or limbs, soreness through the body, take a Paradol tablet, a good big drink of hot lemonade or ginger tea an<! go to bed. The Paradol affords almost immed- iate relief from the pains and aches and helps you to get off to sleep. The dose may be repeated^ if necessary, accord- ing to the directions. If there is sore- ness of the throat, gargle with two Paradol tablets dissolved m water. Just try Paradol the next time you have a cold and we believe that you will be well pleased, Paradol does not disap- point. Dr. Chase's Paradol CHRONICLES of GHGEB FARM By Gwendoline P. Clark* < i/^ Well now, have you got all those "thank you" letters written; the tree and all the Christmas decor- ations taken down, and your New Year resolutions made? If you have then you have done better than I â€" hut then it is only New Year's eve with me so I have hardly had a ehance yet. * * * But I have been thinking about the new year and how best we can make use of it. Don't you think we often let these winter months slip by without making as much use of them as ^e might? May and June, with all the work that early sum- mer brings, is right with us before we can turn around, and it some- times finds us with jobs that could yery easily have been done on cold winter dyas. What about those housedresses and aprons, those srliQoI dre.'sts for the ki^dfes, and the light-weight underwear that iirr he v,i: diiln't have time to mend before it was put away. It is a great time too, for housedeaning draw-ers, cupboards and closets, isn't it? And of course, some of yoti will do just as I do â€" put things away so carefully you never find them again! And then there are letters to write: and maybe there are friends we have neglected ... the new year is a grand time to check up «n our sins of omission â€" and per- haps clear up a few misunderstand- ings. There are times when the hest of us give, or take offence, wlieii no offence was ever intended. I had an instance of this just re- cently. A few months ago when I was in Toronto I phoned a friend with whom I correspond â€" not fre- quently but enough to keep us in touch with one another. She ans- wered my phone call that day and her voice just about froze me. "Well," I thought, "so that's that!" But at Christmas time I got a let- ter â€" my friend had been in a bad way for months â€" nervous break- down, I imagine, and she said "It it taking me quite awhile to gath- er up the broken threads â€" especial- ly those of friendship â€" will you write and let us renew our friend- ship even if i^e cannot tee each Other very often." That letter has already been ans- wered but had my friend not writ- ten how easily we could have drift- ed further and still further apart. * * • Life is too short for misunder- •tandings; too fleeting for us to bear a grudge for fancied wrongs. In our friendships, in our family circle, and in our social life, couldn't we learn to be a little more tolerant? We cannot all think alike â€" it would be a dull world if AWAITING ORDERS Like thousands of our boys on the western front, this alert soldier •waits orders before moving tank further forward. we did â€" but we can a^rifcast recogf- nise the other person's right tt differ from us iwithout getting peeved about iU So, in this new year, wouldn't it be a good idtt to think, not so much about wh»< it may hold in store for us but rather of what we have in store foi; it. The former is beyond our con- trol; the latter is something elia again. Incidentally we might learn to accept present conditions with a good grace. Do you know I heard of one person who sent an order to a mail-order house for over on* hundred dollars worth of goods. The order when filled amounted to a little over seven-fifty! â- * â- € Here's iriple-acfmg speedy relief from MUSCULAR PAIN Don't be miserable. Don't suffer^ another minute from musctilar ach« or pain. To get quick relief, all you need do in many cases, is take a fast- acting Instantine tablet. Instantins goes to work immediately â€" acting in three ways to give you comfort: 1. Speedily eases pain. 2. Prolongs relief from pain. 3. Reduces "depressed foeling." Gives mild, stimulating "litf.*^ And, you 11 find Instantine's fast action equally effective in relieving the dto- corafort which often comes with a cold or sore throat. All drugstores have Instantine. 12 tablets 25^. a product of A« Bayer Co., Ltd. RHEUMATIC SUFFERERS Accept This Generous Offer! Any dius: store will return yo^r money, if one bottle of Ru-Ma does not Mivc you relief from rheumatic aches and pains, sore, swollen and painful Joints. No matter how long you have .suffered, you must Bet re- lief or "no pay." Try Uu-Ma an(| be convinced. Accept this i^eneroif offer now. f^lLLIAMS f . 2k aMPHORATED \ty/ MUSTARD CREAM '^•^^^ gives ilHieh rellel to back pains, caused by strains oi exposure to cold, preventing rheumatic ot musculai lumbal compHcatkms One application gives retulta nmHttMwtntwTwoaiiijtiiii tm'to!' <> ; V. ^.. «1 % t