hin : 4 hy CEES uy i i2 ' gh ho ESE RULE A ATER FEE A PRN 1 ' or Vi; ' A ASE a v Les" =) ~ Q ; EL OE THE SYLVESTER By BLANCHE ROBERTS DIAMOND F050, Banonsts "05% Yar: Befiey Monroe takes na 11% from the handbag by 1) uy" Los Angeles depart. Dien SA an effort to keep Jog 'o liogstonal thief with whom WA). from taking it from irs Dan Brewster, state's #1 Dan' are in love and Tstify her possession of fo av ghance, being forced wh Wh apartment when shes ane she boards In the fog and FOE, ti'Carey, young lawyer LUN ills niother near the scene. Sir Avaous ndme, Honey Roe, 1s dls- J iubfed by: AYt but he agrees to keep J Ar secret, 'He takes her to a cemetery Ys share she buries the diamond. = Returnin ff aear San Francisco; at her: request, an {3% "to ti Carey house, Honey sees Joe Dan- re burnv's" coups parked in front house of a neighbor, Mrs. Rita. of the CHAPTER IX " puey didn't want Art to know wierd AX the coat she wore. In fact, to cover up her agitation, she laughed freely, almost too freely. Tf Art had not "You'll feel as slim as you look in this] Pattern 4656 does 'lovely things for your figure: with a deép surplice- neckline 'yoke -and an easy skirt. Sews beautifully--goes everywhere! "This pattern, easy to use, simple to sew, is tested for fit." Includes complete ilustrated instructions. "7 Pattern 4656 in sizes 34, 36, 38, 40, 42, 44,46, 48, 50. Size 36 takes 3 ds 35-inch; 1 yard contrast. ssi TWENTY-FIVE CENTS (25 gents) in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern, Print plainly SIZE. NAME, ADDRESS, i STYLE NUMBER, . Send your order to Box 1, 123 p +' Eighteenth Street, New. Toronto, NAL EEY CARE 2 } . od . Sal somethign dreadful was wrong, !- that'. she was shaking underneath been so preoccupied with thoughts of his sweetheart at the moment, he might have noticed that the laugh bordered 'on hysteria. When they pulled into the garage, Honey hop- ped out of the car promptly and ran ahead to the house. 'As it was very late, she went at once to her room, but not to bed. t She knew now why Mrs. Riba's eyes had seemed so familiar; why they had disturbed her ever: since early evening when she had met the woman, They were like Joe's. - Mrs. Riba, of ceurse, was the sister he had spoken of vaguely at times, but he had always given the impression that she lived in some foreign coun- try and that he seldom saw her. But that was like Joe--never let ting one know anything definite abut him or his family. She had gonk>aroind with him for months, and yét, she knew nothing tangible of his life; she could only guess, and up until recently, she had not done much of that. She had merely coasted along, intent on one thing --the diamond, and how-to get her hands on it. at * = * i "Why did he have to come here of all places?" she demanded of the four walls. "Why couldn't his sister. live in San Diego or New York?" She walked the. floor treading lightly in her stocking feet so the others would not hear her. She must not fall into Joe's.hands under any 'circumstances. The love he felt for her would not keep him from being utterly cruel Jn trying to force from her the whereabouts of the diamond. However, he would _ never get the stone; she was certain of that. She would die at his hands before she would tell him where it . WAS, "He shall never have itl" she ~vowed to herself. "And he may not kill me until he does. But Joe knows ways of 'torturing his vic-- tims that would be. worse than death. And I will be no exception." She shuddered and it was not from the cold, damp air which blew in from the Pacific. It was - stark, naked fear of'thé future.that sent wave after. wave of shivers over her slim body. Tears came to her eyes. "I don't want to die," she sobbed and fell on the bed. "I want to clear myself with Dan. He must know that I am not a thief and believe in me once again." . * Mh - \ It was nearly dawn when she finally drifted' into sleep, only, to be awakened again by. insistent knocking on her door. She opened sleepy eyes, then sat up startled, "Who is it?" she cried, heart pounding excitedly. "Let's go fishing," called Art. cheerily, i "Fishing?" she,repcated as if she had never heard of the sport before. #Oh! Fishing." She relaxed. "Is-it- time to go now?" "Sure it is," he told her with an Ontario. o -amused chuckle. "Get up, sleepy ms r pi "CROSSWORD wT T EL, 31. Bt ¥ ot ' tA at rest 23. Place 20, ret agents a1 4 34. stake PU ZLE 23; or a time = 36. io 4 3. More rattona) ; 24, bonatght batted 35: Stiok a - , Summit ° ROSS 6. Numeral . 41, Color 1 Badlward : __T. Ourselves i Pees Tih 42, In what tendency "8, Fish - 4 baked elay cond 4. Runs 9. Greek market 2. BO0O8 or 4. Late comb, 10, And not | 'entting with ' 44, Receive Ax preduct : 11, Make leather - the grain 47. That man azelle = aor te - ake Preaa : ! 7] trikes the b " 4 i { | | * 18 \ ~ H ! ¥ 3 2 ¢ ARR © Answer elsewhere on this page : - the comfortable bed. - How. Can I? by Anne Ashley spots from the painted wall above the gas range? A. Wipe the wall with a cloth moistened in kerosene, Dry with a clean cloth. b. How can I disinfect the car: pet in a room, after a person has been ill? A. Tear some newspapers into small pieces and soak them in a solution of formaldehyde and water, Wring out the paper and scattér over the carpet. Then sweep them off with a broom, k : : QQ. How can I place flowers in a base, making them stand properly, when there are only, a few? A, Place a few corks water and they will hold the flowers in place. QQ. How walls? A. Try using two ounces of borax in two quarts of water and one teaspoon of ammonia, Use about half of this quantity to each bucket of water and no soap will be _ required. <Q. How can I wash a raincoat? A, A solution of one pound of alum to three gallons of water is excellent for washing .a" raincoat. Do not attempt to wash a raincoat with soap. Q. How can-I prevent silk thread, "when sewing on the machine, from unwinding too * rapidly, and also from tightening and breaking? A. By placing a .small plece of felt on the spindle, under the spool. Q. How can I remove coffee stains from white material, when laundering has failed to do so? A. Rub a little soap over the can I clean painted of peroxide "over the soap. Rub " together and the stain will vanish, Q. How can I fill nail holes in woodwork? A. Sawdust mixed with glue is. excellent for this purpose. ' er Unspliced Once More--Gloria Swanson -- Remember? -- once - Mrs. Wallace Beery, once Mrs. Herbert Somborn, once the Marquise Falaise de Coudray, once Mrs.s Michael Farmer, once Mrs. William M. Davey, is now Gloria Swanson again. The star of the silent films has just won a Reno divorce from Davey on the ground of pro- - longed separation. head. Ma is going .to loan you some slacks and a shirt to wear. And I just packed a lunch basket, sar- dines mostly." "I'll be with 'you in a moment," she 'said and crawled wearily from After she was fully. awake and into the fun of fishing, Honey for- got her troubles for the minute and enjoyed herself, not that she was a very good 'fisherman, Art seemed to have all the luck. Once she ealled him Dan. He did not notice and she thought with pain in her . heart: : "Dan. is calling for me---he needs" me, That is why I sald his name Just now. Oh, Dan, my darling, I love you! I will. come soon--very soon,- I hope." wills * SI EE ~ Art spoke just then. "Ma sald Mrs. Riba invited us for dinner to- night, in your honor. She thinks we are sweethearts." Honey's heart seemed to pause in its beating and a cold chill rushed over her body, taking away all warmth and security. * "But she has company now," she faltered. « "That won't matter. It's probably her brother, She has one living In 'Los Angeles. I believe his name. is Dakburne. You may know him." "The name Is familiar," she re- plied from between stiff lips. She fishied in silence for a: while and he was inclined to do the same, But suddenly, she inquired: "Hoy good a lawyer are you, Art?" There was "no gaiety in her tone, only dead seriousness. fi "I've only practised two years, but I won all the eases I ever had. Is that what you wanted to know?" ° he asked, looking over at her with probing eyes. : ~~ (Continued next week.) \ Q. How can .l remove grease . in the stain, then pour a small quantity: harles of Edinburgh with : ® & 8 & 'Has His Mother's: Big Blue Eyes--Camera study by portrait Photographer Cecil Beaton shows the 5-weeks-old Prince his mother in the baby's room at Buckingham Palace. The Prince is said to have inherited his : mother's enormous dark blue eyes. : "DEAR ANNE 'HIRST: If some- thing doesn't change soon, I'm afraid I'm going to tell my hus- band's mother and father what I think, and wall out . .. We've been married five months. keep 'staying on becayse they need our board until his father recovers his health, "I even dislike eating here, because my mother-In- law keeps talking about high prices. She does all the buying, and she let. me do anything: Don't -you think. I should cook for my hus- band? He works at night. At 23, I'm a good cook; I did a lot of it for my own family, "I spend most of my time in my room: I hate to go downstairs, my mother-in-law always watches what I do. They both get on ty nerves; though I know they don't mean to. My husband gets burned up, too. I would get a job, but I time one would make it almost impossible to be with my husband at all. "If my in-laws say or do some- thing again 'that' I don't like, I + know. I'll move, and fast--even if I have to go alone. I'm all mixed up, Anne Hirst. ap : DISGUSTED," It Is Her Home #* I hope I can. You can make. * your life easier, and your hus- * band's and his parents' too. It * hinges on: the simple little trick * of putting yourself in his mother's "* place. . * The honie you are living in is Six proud 'and stately birds to make your linens more beautifull ~ Two each of three stunning motifs In easy stitchery and vivid color! Join, the proud owners of pea- eock linens! Pattern 813; transfer of 6 motifs 3%4x6% to 6x12 inches. Send TWENTY-FIVE CENTS _ In coins (stamps cannot be ac cepted) for this pattern to Box Jd, 123 Eighteenth Street, New Tor- anto, Ontario, Print plainly PAT- TERN your NAME _ sad ADDRESS, 2d ws § We - _has so many leftovers! She won't" can't finda night job, and a day--- . Can you help me? - {ANNE HIRST | "Your Family Gounselor J - _ Eighteenth ~ Ontario. * your mother-in-law's home, Try * to realize how her former life has * been disturbed. Now she has a * sick husband to nurse, and a * is already "rights." talking about her Her pattern of living has been "distorted "by her son's marriage. "She doesn't ask that you. help her at all, and she tries to make* you feel at home. Yet she has a routine to follow--a routine in which it is upsetting to fit a younger woman who wants to serve her husband. She likes, to be in her own kitchen alone, as you would be in yours. Try to put yourself in her place. You are, in a sense, a guest in her house, Conduct yourself like a guest--eager to help, but not Interfering. Perhaps you can fit yourself in assisting. her, follow- ing her ways of doing things. Or, if your husband's hours per- mit, you, and he to have dinner together, you might arrange to prepare. that dinner yourself. . hind. It works well all around. affection for those she leaves be- Why not try it? : * * * L020 2% JE UE JE BE BE NE IR IR NE AP LE 2B JE JE JE BF BE BE JIE BR IEP u ' 'Living in the home of someone else shows up our breeding and tol- erance. If you try to reverse your sition, you will better understand Row much you can help, Anne . Hirst can help you' realize this, i. at Box 1, 188 Street, New Toronto, you write her cates a consciousness of a divine * daughter-in-law in the house who By Rev. R, Barclay Warren The Boyhood and Youth 'of Jesus i Luke 2:39-52; Mark 6:3ab. Golden Text-- The child grew, and waxed strong in spirit, filled with wisdom; and the grace of God papal" Two Hollywood kids were talk- ing as they walked home from. school. ."I've got two little broth- "ers and oné little sister," boasted one. "How many do you have?" "I don't have any brothers and sisters," answered the second lad, "but I have three papas by my first mama and four mamas by my last Nn * was 'upon him. Luke 2:40. . From infancy until thirty years of age we have only one picture of Jesus. But that one tells us all we need to know. Jesus was a real boy. Joseph and Mary travelled for one day in the 'large caravan before they were alarmed about his absence. Can't we hear them as- suring one'another that he was with one of his chums and would join them when camp was pitched?| His evident humanity is further empha- sized by the question of his neigh- bours "years later, "Is not this. the carpenter, the son of Mary, the brother of James, and Joses, and of Juda, and Simon? and are not 'his sisters here with us?" But Jesus was different, too. To attend the Passover Feast for the first time had been a thrilling ex- perience for him as it was for all boys. He was now a "son of the law," But for him it had a deeper meaning. His 'understanding aston- ished the teachers of the law. His % answer to Joseph and Mary when they found him. in the temple indi- FiL Lil £E mi [>~ Ew Ol Bim ~ NE BEER WRREY mF ~ £3 SxS Ewe aks | Seo: mission, "Did you not know that it is my duty to be engaged upon my Father's business?" * * * Jesus was an example even in boyhood. He went with Joseph and Mary and was always obedient to' them. Much of our juvenile delin- quency can be traced to the failure of children-learning to honour thelr parents. The child who doesn't learn to obey his parents will be a problem in school and in the soelal order generally. The cruel parent is. the one who fails to traln wp the child in the way he should go. Jesus - was sinless In boyhood. DEIRES BimiS|S Answer to This Week's Puzzle ~[» WL aon ¢ VOICE BAC OE SYMPTOMS 60 3 In Whispers Unt Lymo olped by ) hoarseness Fe TMOIDS. AS Be FOR INSTANT THROAT RELIEF Tempted as others he ylelded not. H' was the perfect life. Quick i 5 "Delicio®® Beef Upside Down Pie Piomie: Mm plieiseme 1 tsp. celery salt 3 cup sliced onion' : 3{ top. white pepper 1 can condensed tomato 5 tbe. shortening soup 34 1b. ground raw beef 3 tsp. Magic Baking Powder Sife other flour, baking der, }§ It and cally an an Emtii h f lended. in -- er . at 475°F, for about he utes. n ht i upside "on Iatge ISSUR 8'-- 1949 ae a Re Rising Dry Yeast stays fresh in the IF YOU BAKE AT HOME--jyou'll be a month's supply of New Fleischmann's ~ Fast Rising Dry Yeast today. +7 It's herel New Fleischmann's Royal Fast Rising Si 'Dry Yeast, the modern granule form that's always there when you Want it. No need to keep it in the icebox--~New Fleischmann's Royal Fast for weeks--ready at any time for speedy action. Just dissolve according to directions on the package; at its fast rising action--delighted at the delects' able flavor, finer texture it gives to breads. Order : Royal =~ At your grocer's;