Lost appetites are found, and slow eaters speed-up, when tempting Christie's Premium Soda Crackers are served! That's because Christie's give most people more of the things they like in a cracker tempting flavor, tender flakincss, dependable freshness. Serve Chribtie's Premium Soda Crackers with soups, salads, spreads they're always sure to please. At your Grocer's in //i M economical 2-pound package Christie's PREMIUM SODA CRACKERS "KATHLEEN" Adapted By RANDALL M. WHITE From The M.Q.M. Picture, Kathleen, Starring Shirley Temple SYNOPSIS Kathleen, twelve-year-old moth- trleai daughter of handtome, wealthy John Davis, ha* learned to love Dr. A. Martha Kent, "An- gela", psychologist, who is affect- ing an "adjustment" between Kathleen and her father who ha* neglected her. Her father 1* about to marry Lorraine Bennett whom Kathleen despises and An- gela, to whom Mr. Davis has made no advances, has done nothing to prevent the marriage. Even Max Schoner, kindly old antique dealer who i* about to move to Phila- delphia from Kathleen'* commun- ity in Connecticut, ha* been un- able to help the child in her hour of trouble. She had overheard Angela and her father in an angry dUcuuion of her affair* and ha* concluded that nobody love* her or want* her and ha* run away. QUICK-TO-SEW HOME FROCK CHAPTER SIX By Anne Adam* If you're busier than a bee these days, yet want to make yourself a jolly new home frock, why not order Pattern 4981 by Anne Adams? It takes very little time to sew there are only four main sections back and front. The bias insets at the waist give a slim look to this dress the tie- belt in front is optional. And aren't the white collar and cuffs refreshing note? Top-stitch them if you like, or make them of the same fabric as the dress. The Sewing Instructor has a step- by-step plan that aids in sewing this as quickly as possible. Other choices are long sletwes, revel's .and ric-rac trim, and the belt may be used in buck instead of in front, or omitted altogether. Pattern 4981 is available in misses' and women's sizes 14, 16, 18, 20, 32, 34, 36, 38, 40 and 42. Size 16 takes 3 1 * yards 35-inch fabric and % yard contrast.. Send twenty cents (20c) in coins (stamps cannot be accept- ed) for this Anne Adams pattern to Loui.se Lennox, Room 421, 73 Adelaide St. West, Toronto. Write plainly size, name, address and stvle number. "Kathleen Was run away!" Angela tried desperately to be calm but John Davis felt the impact of her announcement as though he had been struck by a bomb. The complacency he had worn for years like a suit of ar- mor was completely shattered and his soul lay bare, marked by the hideous streaks of his selfish- ness. ."Run away?" he faltered. ||Pr "This was in her room," Angela continued, thrusting a scrap of paper into his hands. "Better phone the police. She had an hour's start. She took her bank." Kathleen's father was helpless. "She can't have gone- far let'* get the car. She what does this say?" he mumbled almost inco- herently. It was Angela who phoned the police. Mr. Davis tried to decipher the meaning of the blurred letters be- fore him. "I I'm going to my only friend," the note concluded. Miss Bennett, in a filmy dinner gown, was most concerned about her "Johnny." He ignored her and her solicitude. While Angela, Mir. Davis, and repeated phone messages from the police, puzzled where to go and what to do to help the unhappy little girl alone out in the night, Lorraine developed a sudden in- terest in the cause of Kathleen's flight * * "What in the world could have possessed the little dear," she ask- ed in words that rang far from true. "Exactly what did she say in the note perhaps you have overlooked some clue." "The note is in the hands of the police," Angela answered, "but it made It very clear that Kathleen was desperately unhappy she felt she wasn't wanted." "But why could she have felt like that?" Lorraine pressed. Mr. Davis was still bewildered) it was Angela who was forced to make the explanations. "She overheard a conversation between her father and me this evening out near the cabana," she said. "Miss Bennett, Kathleen was very much distressed at the thought of her father's re-mar- riage." "Oh, indeed, Dr. Kent 1 think you must be wrong. Kathleen was very fond of me," Lorraine replied. "What gave you that idea?" "Kathleen told me," Angela answered quietly, " and the note in the book she left made it quite plain. That was her reason for running away my leaving, and the marriage." "What book is that in the hands of the police too?" Lorraine snapped. "Where are you going?" Mr. Davis asked anxiously as Angela turned to leave the room. "I think Miss Bennett would like to see the book I mentioned," Angela said. The volume sh brought was one of birthday verses. In it Kathleen had marked one for the month of June. "Mr. Davis' birthday ig in June," Angela explained. * * Lorraine read the first two linos of the poem aloud but she fin- ished in silence. "Sonny, when you take a wife, Just remember, it's lor life. Search for more than airy grace, If your fortunes downward range LOYALTY will never change. FAITH outlasts a silken ankle. ' MODESTY will never rankle. Sonny, when you take a wife, Just remember ITS FOIC LIFE!" "Hut this is only ridiculous I still don't know why you arc so positive in your opinion," '.<>- ruine persisted. "Well, if you must know at this tinie when other things are so much more important, I'll tell you,'' Angela answered calmly. "I don't, think 1 can ever forget | single word of the note Kath- leen left roe. You'll have the op- portunity te read it some time if you care to and when you do I doubt if you'll find my recollec- tion as much as a syllable wrong. It said: 'Dear Angel: When I heard you and father were out walking I thought that what I hoped and prayed for was coming true after all. But it isn't. Father is going right ahead and marry Lorraine, and you're going to South America, and you never did care anything about me. I urn father not to worry or try to find me. He won't even miss me. It's better that way." * * "It is apparent, Dr. Kent, that you have discussed with Kathleen her dislike for me," Lorraine ob- served, with catty insinuation. "It would be silly for me to ask whe- ther you did what your paid posi- tion obligated you to, namely, overcome any such dislike if it really existed. Her dislike of me quite obviously suited your pur- poses to reach John through his' child!" At the mention of his name, Mr. Davis, seated near the tele- phone anxiously awaiting possible word from the police, looked up. "Please, Miss Bennett," said Angela quietly. "Kathleen is lost! Be as catty to me. as you care to be later on tomorrow but at least have the decency to wait until we find her!" "Don't you tell me what to do!" fairly shouted Mr. Davis' bride- to-be," "it wouldn't surprise me if you cooked up this whole run- ning away business you and Kathleen !" Angela turned to leave the room. "That, Miss Bennett," she said with biting contempt, "is the vilest and most revealing thing I have ever heard! . . . I'm going to sit by the upstairs telephone." "So that's vile, Is it?" shouted Lorraine as Angela went out calm- ly. "That's vile and 'revealing' and you're just too shocked for words ! Well, let me tell you, dear, prissy, superior Dr. Kent, I've only started!" * All night long Angela and Kath- leen's father kept vigil in the Davis home and a hundred miles away, in Philadelphia, Max Schoner, too, kept vigil; he was awaiting the arrival of the last hig moving van with some of hi* precious possessions. "Hey! Open up, willya, Pop!" a tired driver called out in the early morning as he rapped on the door of the place "with the even bigger mortgage" which Kath- leen's friend's cousin had willed to him. "Pop" stood in the doorway while the driver and his helper flung open the big rear door of the van. "Jeez!" they exclaimed in uni- son as a little girl, mussed and leepy-eyed, crawled to the edge of the truck and said simply t "Could you help me down?" "Kathleen!" Max shouted as he ran to her from the doorway. "I swear I didn't know nuttin' about it," defended the bewilder- ed driver. Inside Kathleen sobbed out her atory in her old friend's arms. "I had to, Mr. Schoner," she cried. "They don't want me, any of them not Angel, or ... Oh, Mr. Schoner, please let me stay with you!" "There, there now, my little friend," comforted Max "but all night long your father don't know where you are!" "He doesn't care," sobbed the youngster. "Don't tell him Oh, Mr. Schoneir, if you like me at all, don't tell him!" Soon, under kindly ministra- tions, the tired little girl was asleep on an old iron bed in a tiny room piled high and with un- opened boxes. On a table beside her, her old, understanding friend had made a place for the con- tents of the bundle she brought with her her savings bank . . . and the little tinkly music box which was her open sesame to the "lami-of-make-believe!" * * It was a frantically distraught Angela who answered Max Schon- cr's long distance phone call. "She's safe!" she cried as if to some distant unseen power. Then she fell fainting to the floor. Kathleen's father seized the dangling receiver. "Just a min- ute, Mr. Schoner hold on," he said, and knelt to pillow Angela's head on his breast. "It's all right, BRITAIN'S NEW ENVOY TO RUSSIA Now More Quickly RELIEVED With Buckley's New Improved For- ocll 'osier on coughs and coldt Oivet you more lor vour man oir Arcmoaid Olark iierr, above, former British amuassador to China, lias been named to suc- ceed air Stafford Uripps, retiring ambassador to Russia. dear," he said gently. Maybe she didn't hear him. Max confessed his duplicity to a horrified Kathleen when she awakened from her sleep. "You called him after I begged you not to," she cried. "He was awfully worried you didn't know he would worry or you wouldn't do this," her old friend contended. "He said they were leaving right away to see you." " 'They' that means father and Lorraine I won't go -back," Kathleen said with determination and Max wasn't sure his argu- ments had made her change her mind when he left her alone for a little while. The little girl looked at ih music box on the table beside her. "Suppose," she said to her- self, "the door should open and it wouldn't be Lorraine at all? Just suppose it should be Angela and father?" > And that's just what happened and Kathleen looked at the music box to make sure it wasn't playing. "I guess this must be real, all right," the wise little lady said, "because if I were making it up you two would be kissing!" And that's just what happened. "Get your things, darling 1 ," her father said gently, "the family's going home '" THE END "Babes On Broadway" Adapted by Frances Barboiir From the M.G.M. Picture of that name. A Young Actor Finds The Magic of Th Great White Way. Beginning Next Week ISSUE 6 '42 "Blackout Light" Ingenious Device An ingenious device known as * "blackout light," designed to give enough illumination to per- mit orderly movement during periods of emergency blackouts without being visible to enemy airmen, has been invented by W. 8. Cottongim, an Atlanta, Georg., manufacturing executive. Lighting engineers have been closely watching tests with three of the lights at the Atlanta Feder- al Penitentiary a place where blackouts would present an un- usually difficult problem. They say the invention holds much promise for relieving conditions caused by enforced periods of darkness in industrial plants and homes, and as directional finders on city streets. In reality the "blackout light" is not a light at all, but a soft glow achieved by treating a cloth background with a secret self- illuminating phosphorus paint and fitting it into a light reflector. This phosphorus mixture is acti- viated by small special electric bulbs. Theso bulbs will burn for more than 1,000 hours, according to Mr. Cottongim, while the background can be activated again and again* and still retain its ef- ficiency. While tiiose small bulbs go out like other lights when the current goes off, the sei.retly treated phos- phorua background remains lu- minous for a period of from 10 to 12 hours. A six by 18-inch 'blackout light" will give off enough glow to make objects m an ordinary room distinguishable, without being visible from the outside. The light can be made m tho shapo of arrows and placed along 'e street to po'nt tho direction to air-raid shelters, or placed in in- dustrial plai is to point the way to exit.s or fir.: escapes. If used on the outside, without being seen from tho air liny will give enough light to giiidi thosy within 100 feet or so, declines Mr. Cotton- is im. The "hiuukout light" can BJSO lie made in tho form of v;ords. OH BAKING COSTS GST BETTER RESULTS Every- time you use Calumet Double -Acting Baking Powder you save. "You pay less you use less. And you get better results because of Calumet's double- Action. First in the mixing bowl, thousands of tiny bub- bles, released by moisture, start to make your batter or dough light and fluffy. Then in the oven, released by heat, thousands more of these fine bubbles lift your cake or biscuits high and evenly. Remember with Calumets 1 Y<m ptj Itu -Calumet is priced surprise inglr low, probably lower than the baking powder you are now using. 2 You tat ha Calumet's double-action mean* double -leavening so most Caiumef recipes call for less baking powder. 3 1'" git bttttr rtailtt because contin^ nous leavening means finer, better texturs In all your baking. TABLE TALKS Some Tempting Cheese Dishes After telling you something about cheese as a food and as a substitute for part of your daily milk portion, it seems appropriate to give a few tempting dishes con- taining' cheese. W.l.h Rarebit ft lb. cheese (grated) H teaspoon mustard % teaspoon salt Cayenne I teaspoons butter 1 egg Dry toast Place cheese In double boiler or chafing dish and sprinkle over the mixed seasonings. Add butter In pieceij then add the milk. When cheese is melted, stir in a well-beaten egg; cook for a mom- ent. Serve on toast or on Mlt wafers. Cottage Cheeie Heat sour milk or buttermilk until the whey is quite clear; drain in a cheese cloth and let drip about five hours without squeezing. Place curd In a bowl; break with a wooden spoon. Season with salt and mix into a paste with a little cream. Mold and set in a cool pla^e. Chee*e Souffle 8 tablespoons butter 3 tablespoons flour Mi teaspoon salt Cayenne H cup milk 8 eggs Cook first five ingredients as white sauce for two minutes. Re- move from heat and add well- beaten yolks of eggs and cheese. Set away to cool, When copl, fold in whites of eggi beaten stiff. Turn into buttered baking dish and hake in slow oven 80 minutes. Chee*e Fondue 1 cup scalded milk 1 cup soft stale bread crumbs \ lb. mild cheese (cut in small pieces) 1 tablespoon butter % teaspoon salt Yolks 3 eggs Whites 3 eggs Mix milk, breadcrumbs, cheese, butter and salt. Add yolks of eggs which have been beaten until creamy, Fold in whites of egge beaten until stiff. Pour into but- tered baking dish and bake 20 minutes in moderate oven. The composition of cheese .* one-third protein, one-third fat and one-third water. In melting cheese use a gentle heat as in- tense heat makes cheese rough and difficult to digest. A little soda added to milk and water used in cooking cheese, will reiw der the cheese more soluble. ' I, mill.. -r. \relvuine* in run*l loners from Interested reader*. She ' pleaced to receive *unf**tlmm OB topic* for her column, aed I*) even ready to Itateo to your M pet peeves." Kcquevt* for recipe* ee> pedal menu* arr In order. Addree*) TOUT letter* to "MU -.mil.- ll. .Lum- ber*. 78 Weat Adelaide Street, Te> ronte." Send stamped Mlf-addr envelop* If you wlh a reply- Daylight Saving English Invention Attributed to Bricklayer and Became Law In England til 1918 Few folks know that daylight saving time was invented by aa English bricklayer called William Willet. He passed on the Idea to his member of parliament, who later became Sir Robert Pearce. The bill was first introduced into the house of commons before the last war, but a select commit- tee shelved the notion until 1916, when the unrestricted German submarine campaign made extrm daylight in factories essential. The bill became law on May 21, 1916. The original scheme of the bricklayer had been to put the clock forward by four leaps of 20 minutes each, but Sir Robert Pearce amended It to the extra full hour which we enjoy in nor- mal times. Some amusing incidents oe- curred when the bill first became law. The palace officials hired a man by contract whose task was to see that all the royal clocks wore duly moved in October and the spring. Several other go ahead clock- makers followed suit, and offered to do the same at a lump gum down, with a contract to last for 30 years. As most of the clock- makers were well over 60 three of them were imprisoned as a lesson for obtaining money under false pretenses. i I '