^ c Just oH the press â€" New, Large, Colored, European INVASION MAP S«nd Only lOc itii Cents 111 t'oiii or Stamps to Cover Cost oi Haiulling THis Offer for a Limited Time CLASSIC PUBLISHERSâ€" DEPT. W. 7 ADELAIDE W. â€" TORONTO 1 lOc » SERIAL STORY . Murder on the Boardwalk BY ELI MORE COWAN STONE Last Week: Jaspar escapes from th« police and the others are al- lowed to go home. Bill tells Chris- tine he saw Wilmet near the stu- dio at 8.0, at Jaspar was trail In^ her. She realizes the inspector was certain she knew Jaspar. CHAPTER X "Then," Cliristint said slowly, If you're right, Bill â€" if he is skulking in the dark somewhere â€" and if he docs kill some one else, I'll be â€" well, a sort of accomplice, ^on't I â€" because I didn't tell the police who he was and have Ihem lock him up?'' "Nonsense! Not telling all you know doesn't constitute yon a cri- minal. If it did, most of us would Spend a lot of time behind bars." But in spite of Bill's light words, his voice was tense with worry. A newsboy came along the Boardwalk shrilling, "Wuxtry! Read all about it! Moidfr on the Boidwalk! Wuxtry! Wuxtry!" Bill bought a copy. "Here's a good light," lie said; and they stopped to read. Most ol the first two pages were devoted to the sensational murder if the wealthy and exclusive wi- dow, Mrs. Emma TallJert. , • * • At one of the item.-; Christine â- tared with blanching checks. "You said awhile ago," she fal- tered at last, "that not telling all I knew didn't make me a crim- inal. . . V.'hat would this make me?" "An unknown person," the item read, "has mailed to this office a document purporting to be the will ol Mrs. Emma Talbcrt. According to that will, the dead woman's en- tire fortune â€" except for a sub- stantial bequest to the butler who ^,,J^ua^fl1iccIei A cool idea in ;i smart siiiii.iUT fashion! Daisy medallions crochet- ed in airy straw yarn make up this feminine calot and bag set. Crocheted accessories dress up the simplest costumes. Pattern gSTi contains directions for hat and purse; stitches; list of materials required. Send twenty cents in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern to Wilson Ncedlecrafi Dejit., Koom 4'2\, 7a Adelaide St. West, Toronto. Write plainly Pattern Number, your Name and Address. STOP SNEEZING Hay fever sufTerers say there's notliing like NOSTROLINE for inntant action. â- Jfou tmear NOSTROLINE up your iKisf, where the trouble is. Stuffiness, â- nrrzing, sniHing, irritation are relieved immediately. Breathing is easy. NOSTROLINE helps keep the nose Iwalthy, 50c at all druggists. ClIMON, taiSIOl. ENGLAND FLY-TOX 104ll has served htr for years â€" is left to htr only relative, Miss Christine Thorcnson." "It couldn't make you anything but what you are," Bill tried to say reassuringly, "sweet and good and honest." A good deal of space was given up to the mysterious beach-comber who was at large after having been arrested in connection with the case. The rumors were (1) that he was a notorious underworld cha- racter; (i) tliat he was an anar- chist who hated the rich; (3) that he was a homicidal maniac. A great deal of significance was attached to the footprints leading from the rowboat toward the booth where the body was found, one pair of which, police were re- ported to have said, had becrr iden- tified as Mrs. Talbert's. One item told of a strange sea- going launch which the Coast Guard lights had picked out, ap- parently drifting at anchor a mile or so off shore, directly opposite the booth where the tragedy had occurred. According to the news- paper, a detail from the Coast Guard had motored out and board- ed it, only to find it abandoned. A last-minute story told of the finding of tlic murdered woman's car, and the discovery in it of a hypodermic needle and a quantity of a powerful drug. "So the inspector's key did open the car," Christine said. "Key?" echoed Bill, who was frowning over the item. In a moment he added, "Oh, those boys use can openers"; but his voice sounded flat and strained. • « ♦ .^side from the space given Jas- par, Bill and Christine received the liqii's share of publicity. Bill came off with flying colors. The impres- sion conveyed was that he had pur- sued the killer along the beach in an heroic attempt to prevent the crime. But Christine was horrified to find herself played up in lurid co- lors as the "Boardwalk Mystery Girl''... "WHY." one headline .screamed. "WAS THE COUSIN or THE WF.AT,THY MRS. TALBERT MASQUERADING ON THE BOARDWALK UN- DER AN ASSUMED N.AME?" There was a gruesome dcicrip- tion of the finding of the body, graphically contrasting Mrs. Tal- bert's rigidly cloi>^tcred life at ex- clusive Bcacliiuont with the law- dry setting of her violc-it death. Over that, Christine shed he- first tears. "Oh, Bill," she choked, her voice breaking at the stark pathos of it, "all these years she hasn't had any one hut me, and I â€" I never really- tried to he nice to her... .And now 1 haven't any one either." Bill drew her to one of the benches that lined the Boardwalk and gsthercd her gently into his arms as if she had been a very little girl, and she sobbed against his slionldcr until grarhially slic found relief. Presently, he said, close to her ear, "You've got me, Christine. You'll always have me â€" if you want nie ... I didn't mean to tell you â€" not for montlis â€" because I didn't dare think you'd believe me. . . I hardly believed inysell that it could hai'iitn all at once A Vote For Variety Are you a one-way cook? When you start with cherries do you always arrive at cherry pie? Don't be so set in your ways. Venture into new flavor fields. It makes menu planning much more exciting! Try a cherry pudding. Not just yi ordinary one but this one made witii All-Bran. It has a nut-like taste that is a perfect foil for cherry ilavor. SOUR CHERRY PUDDINGS 1/3 cup shortening 1 teaspoon vanilla extract S/3 cup sugar 1 cup sifted fkiur 1 egg 234 teaspoons baking powder \/'i cup All-Bran ]/2 teaspoon salt 8/4 cup milk 3/4 cup drained, cooked cherries Blend shortening and suga. together thoroughly; add egg, beat well. Soak All-Bran in milk; add flavoring. Sift ilour, baking powder and salt together; add to first mixture alternately with All-Bran and milk. Put five or six cherries in bottom of each greased custard cup and fill two-thirds full with batter. Bake in moderate oven (375°E.) about 25 minutes. Serve hot witli Cherry Sauce. CHERRY SAUCE 1 1/2 cups' cherry juice 1 1/3 tablespoons cornstarch 1/8 teaspoon salt Add juice to cornstarch and stir until smooth. Add salt. Cook slowly, stir until mixture is clear and cornstarch is thoroughly cooked. Serve hot over Cherry Puddings. Note: Use sweetened, canned cherries. Water may be substituted for part oi juice it necessary. that way. But this is whal I've wanted from the first." Because she had been so sure from the beginning that Bill was safe and wholesome as the fresh tea air and sunshine; and because she realized all of a sudden that this was what she had really wanted from the beginning, too, Christine did believe him, and clung to him as the one sure, sane refuge in a world suddenly gone insane. SHOOTING STAR Lieut. Wayne Morris. fori-ier motion picture star, walks across Pacific Fleet carrier deck to ready room upon returning from his third mission of the day against Japs. Lieutenant Mor- ris, who flies a Navy "Hellcat" fighter, was in recent Marcus and Wake Island raids. And because this was Surf City, concerned first and only with its own interests, its own antusemenf, its ow-n desires, the Boardwalk crowd eddied and passed without a backward glance. At length Christine sat up, pro- testing bef\veen tears and laugh- ter, "Bill â€" all these people! I couldn't have believed I'd ever do a thing like this." .And Bill said, a little unsteadily himself, "So far as they're con- cerned, we're not even here. . . .Anything could happen to any one on this Boardwalk, and no one else would even notice." Later, in the crisis that rushed upon them with such cruel inevita- bility, Christine was to remember his words. * • * Wiien they finally reached Chris- tine's door. Bill took her almost roughly into his arms again. "I wish to God I didn't have to leave you alone," he said, his voice hoarse with trouble. "Promise me that you'll be careful, Christine â€" if you have any idea what tlie word mean.*." Once in her own room, Chris- tine set 5> steniatically about the examination of her belonginss. I'm a superstitious fool, she thou.:;ht in the release of htr new happiness. But I've got to be sure. .At length she found it â€" in a big manila envelope into which. be- fore she had left Xcw York, she had hastily stuck some canceled checks she didn't quite want to throw away. "It" was a thick sheaf of thou- sand dollar bonds. There was notliing to indicate whose they were; and Christine did not look through the bundle to find out how many there were. .After the first- frightened look, she dropped them as if tlicy burned her lingers and sat staring, lier sliaking hands tight at Iter throat. ♦ • ♦ Her first impulse was lo call Bill; but there was no ttltidione "ill her room. To reach c^wv. she WELCOME TO FRANCE Mamma and the youngsters extend cordial greetings to an Allied Eoldisr stone wall in Normandy to shake hands with a French baby. Quality Guaranteed ! "SAIAIMC HEADS BOY SCOUTS IN CANADA Hon. and Rev. H. J. Cody, C.M.G., M. A., L.L. D., D. D., D. C. L., Pre- sident of the University of Toronto, who was elected President oe the Canadian General Council of the Boy Scouts Association, on the nomi- nation of the Governor-General, at the annual meeting of the As.50cia- tion in Ottawa. One of Canada'i leading educationists, Mr. Ccdy suc- ceeds the late Sir Edward Beatty. must go into the public hall and risk heing overhead. She did the only other thing that occurred to her. Making sure that her rather flimsy door was locked, •he pulled the heavy bureau in front of it. and went to bed. Christine dul not I. ope to sleep; but after a while she did. She was hardly dressed next morning before she was sum- moned to the te'ephone. It was Bill calling. "Bill," Christine said swiftly, "I've got to see you. Something "Listen!" Bill's voice was sharp with warning. Don't use words that mean anything over the tele- phone. You've probably got a re- porter in each pocket. . . .And don't be worried when you read ill the paper that the shoes of one William Yardley have been found to fit in- to one pair of footprints found by the police.'' And the other pair, Christine re- membered, were Cousin Emma's. (Continued Next Week) MOTHERCRAFT HEALTH NOTES COMPLEMENTARY FEEDING By com|>!cmcntary feeding we mean the giving of additional food iiiinicdiately after tlie baby has nursed. In all cases where §j2 the supply of breast milk is deficient it should be comple- mented with a .suit- able artificial food. The chief pur- pose of this feeding i,s to maintain baby's normal growtli wliile wc endeavour to bring ftp tiie mother's supply. A\c must first ascertain the daily allowance o; food necessary for baby's age and weight. Having discovered wliat baby needs lor I'lie day. we proceed to find out what he actually gets in a day. The method of lest weighing is as fol- lows: â€" Weigh baby in his clothes before and after each nursing and make up with "the artificial feeding what he .should have for his age and wcigiit. When test weighin.:; baby you will find that he does not obtain an cuual amount of milk at each nursing. Usually he obtains larger feedings in the morning and .""mailer ones during the afternoon and evening. If is important, not to over roinidciiient as baby should go to the bri'.ist sufficiently hungry to suck vigorously. .Another import- ant point is to take care that bahv does not get the food icc easily from the bottle or he may refuse to nurse. A mother sometimes wonder* how she is to know whether baby'g feeding is adequate or not. Here are some guides which wil; help her: â€" 1. Baby's weekly gain in v eight. 2. His general behavior w!>cther he is contented, sleeping \ve:l and not showing any signs of being up- set. 3. The type of bowel action, whether tiity arc normal or fre- quent green and curde"! â€" By permission c; th.e New Zealand ilotlicrcraft Socictv. Sixty trained British G'rl Guides are standing by awaiting the call to do special relief work in Europe alter the invasion. Y.M.C.A. PRESIDEM You Will Enjoy Staying At The ST. REGIS HOTEL TOUONTO % r.tvry lliHiiii «\llli lliilli, Sho»- rr iiikI rrlrplionr. % .>>lnRlr, .'5L'..-i» Mil â€" llolllalo, l(:l..-iO up. «;oo<l l.'ooil, l>liilnK noil Itnnv- Inn Mehtly, Sherbourne at Carlton Tel. RA. 4135 H. J.:-.. e.- Humpiirey, cf ioronto, vice-president, eastern lines, Can- adian Pr.cific Railway, who was named president of the Cauadijn Y.M.C.A. at the Anniia! rr:tr;->o at Montreal of the NationEl Council of Canadian Y.M.C.A's. Xenllewayto>t«p ooiistipatiwi" "Believe me. you sliould trv ALL-BUVN for constipation â€" if it has the iv.nie cause mine had. For noth'ng I i,ied keeps nif so re- gular, so gently. " No closing â€"no nasty harsh pur- gatives. Here's all you doâ€" if yoiu: constipation is due to lack of "bulk'inthediet. Simply eat KELLOGG S ALL- BR.AN regularly, and drink plenty of water. This nutritious cereal h^lps toprcxlucesmiX)th-working"bulk" rttcl Pr^P^re., wastes for easy elimination. ^\ou 1 like the happy relief so much you 11 want to stay regular. Eat tasty, toasty ALI.-BR.AN daily. Grviccrs have U m 2 handy sizes. Made by Kcllogg'a 111 London, Caiwda. .1 ; 1c <r \ \-