Fa P« BEGIN HERE TODAY ‘Loring Ranger offers. a reward of vtie hundted thousand dollars for the return of his missing daughter Hope. Ag"ting upon instructions from Hope‘s abductors, Ranger deposits a hundred t)ou:‘undd‘;;ullars worth of bornds at a lWlï¬P ace. ® Dr: Bristow has a private sanitarâ€" ium and in it Hope is held a prisonér. Dr. Kelsey is detained there because he knows of â€"crinfimal dealings of Bristow, Hope* and Kelsey become friends and together they manage an escape in Bristow‘s: car. They ride to an abandoned hou? owned by Hope‘s faâ€" ther. Kels:&e alls agleep and Hope hears the v of Bristow in the yard. Juarez Charlie, adventurer and close friend of Ranger, is trailing Hope ‘to the sanitarium. n "Bris place in myself forever. "Bristow knows there is a hidingâ€" ‘t;g;ttâ€"hevother one." His eyes were‘ place in the house. I am going to AvY€|pig,, points of steel as he came close.to myself up.. Reach my father. _ Love Hope. > % j o ‘ forever. Hope." "Where‘s Kelsey?" he demanded. â€" _ Without givin@g ter impulse time to| She looked at him vacantly, > goot, she hurried back to the cupboard | _ "Who?" i and crept into the passage, closing the] "Kelsey," he repeated, "the man you panel «arefully behind her. Kelsey!went away with. Where is he?" & still lay in deep, exhausted sleep. She| "That man? He was under the autoâ€" tent over him, her lips near to Ris;{mobile, there was :blood on him." then drew back, fearing to waken him.| "Yes, yes, _ But what became of Very gently she slipped the note b¢â€" ; him 1""~ > ks § * ~»% tween his relaxed fingers, and then| She leaned toward him with the air felt her way along the wall until she | of. imparting a confidence. reached the other exit. "That man is crazy. He said he reached the other ex Outside at last; a she had . attracted Shielded by two or th NOW "CALADA" no tea is always the mostâ€"desired. The slight liing off in price of cheaper teas cannot entice the teaâ€"lover from his discriminating cholce. THERE is nothing that has ever taken Aspirin‘s place as an antidote for pain. It is safe, or physicians wouldn‘t use it, and endorse its use by others. Sure, or several lmlleon users would have turned to something else. But get the real Aspirin (at any &nxss.»re,l with Bayer on the box, and the word genuine printed in red: It cleanses the mouth after eatingâ€"gives a clean taste and sweet breath. The cool, comforting flavor of WRIGLEY‘S Spearmint is a lasting pleasure. G ONX wITH THE STORY SwaLLoweDp UP The Finest of All Fine ind any ce out sign that attention. buildings, Nq Oe semge n wBtne ue nige sns T cA t Sn onl BY MesWison Woonrow and concealed by patches of shrubâ€" bery, she reached the gap in the hedge. Passing through it, she made a quick detour to the right to muddy her skirt and shoes in the trickle of a brook; and so at last came to the open space where the wrecked automobile lay. * Â¥% She heard the men approaching who had been whistled back from . the woods, and began dodging from tree !to tree as if attempting to hide. They saw her, as she had intended they should." Two of them caught her. She made a show of struggle, but they held her fast by the arms. â€" In arnswer to their shouts, Bristow and the others came running through the hedge. ' ‘Ah!" he said with unctuous satisâ€" faction as if a weight had been sudâ€" denly removed from his chest. "Now )to get the other one." His eyes were like points of steel as he came close.to Hope. > + * "Where‘s Kelsey?" he demanded. â€" She looked at him vacantly, f "Who?" . "That man is crazy. He said he‘ wasn‘t but I know better. I wanted him to hide in the woods. I know these woods." She passed her hand uncerâ€" tainly over her: forehead. "I don‘t know how I know them, but 1 do. I wanted him ‘to hide here, _but he wouldn‘t do it." He talked about getâ€" ting a boat down on the beach, and when I wouldn‘t go with him he ran away." She waved her hand vaguely toward the shore. * | Bristow‘s eyes bored through her, but she looked beyond him listlessly indifferent. 5 Finally he gave a curt order to have her taken back to the hospital. _ Kelsey woke up slowly, draggingly from his long, exhausted sleep and blinked his heavy eyes. Why, it was daylight! His whole sleepâ€"fogged brain was roused now. Why was the panel open? Ah! There Hope stood in itâ€" No! It was a man. Then he sprang. The man in the opening ducked, and raised an arm to shield himself. "I‘m a friend!" he cried, throwing himself against the side of the cupâ€" board. "Honest; you can believe me. |A friend of Ranger‘s." Kelsey loomed above him, still threatening; but his lowering glance had shifted. What was this he was holding in his clenched handâ€"that bit of white paper sticking through his fingers, _ between _ the spreading knuckles? Juarez Charlie had dodged; and quick as a cat on his feet, stepped from the cupboard into the room. Kelsey had unclosed his hand, and was straightening out the paper. He could see that there was something written on it, but the light was too dim and gray for him to decipher it. He was in the room and at the winâ€" dow in two strides. Here he read Hope‘s message. The rain was dashing against the windowâ€" panes, the wind wailing about the house. f The uprushing blood darkened his face. â€" He whirled savagely, and caught Charlie by the shoulder, shakâ€" ing him hard. "Who are you:‘ Une of their men. Did you help take her?" * "I did not." Charlie wriggled like an eel from that biting grasp and stood rubbing his shoulder. "I‘m one of Ranger‘s men. Juarez Charlie. Do you get that?" _ He swaggered, his hands in his trousers‘ pockets, his head at its most impudent angle. "I‘ve been wandering about with oneâ€"third of a pictureâ€"puzzle, trying to piece the rest out of the air. And you‘ve got the other twoâ€"thirds. They know that I‘m on their trail, and that I‘ve been in Barcelona. They think you‘re drowned." "Drowned? Me?" Kelsey repeated. "In heaven‘s name, why?" Nap k 3 "She told them you‘d made for the shore, and a boat. Then, that terrihe storm. Did you sleep through that?" "I seem to have slept through everything, but my own especial Judgâ€" ULUSTRATED BY 4 IZ'W.SA'H‘!lanb- t CHAPTER XXI of shrubâ€" strikingly like older sister in charge of the inSane younger one." Charlie pursed his mout‘ in a whistle. o $ "Any one else?" "Higgins. An exâ€"alderman. An old millionaire. ° Made a fortune in Wall street, they say." . -éi);rii;arvb(;ï¬;lde(l up with, a stifled exclamation, his tongue clicking his teeth. . "Hobo Bill!l That does settle it. Hobo Bill!l I might have knownit. Hoboâ€" The joker in the deck!" He bobbed about the room like a cork, snapping his fingers, muttering broken phrases under his breath. â€""The hobo messages!â€" This boobyâ€" hatch for a headquarters!â€" _ The nurse, a ringer!lâ€" Ive got the whole thing "In the first place," said Charlie, "I‘ve known Ranger ever sipce I was a boy, and when I heard about his little girl, I~star_tgd‘ out on my own to find her. I know ‘crook psychology better than old Byrnes ever did; but this gang that are holding her fooled rr;e-'f;;fywways from the ace. But last night I got a tip that led straight to Bristow‘s Sanitarium. "I rode as fast as my motorcycle could race from Westchester to Barâ€" celona, taking all the short cuts. It was on one of them that I came on you two. And so I rushed for a doeâ€" tor, thinking you were ready to kick in, and as soon as I reached the village 1 got pinched. So I just turned in and went to sleep; that is, as much as that fierce storm would let me. "But in the meantime my: mascot had got busy. She it was who gave me the lead to Bristow. I‘d had dinâ€" ner with her, and put her back in a bus with her party.. They all went on ‘to spend the evening with some nt friends, and as they came back about midnight, they stopped at the Lone Hill garage for some gas. Up steps the garage man‘s assistant, a shockâ€" headed lunk, that had driven me and my queen to the Inn. He was all twitâ€" tering with excitement, and tells her that I‘ve been arrested over here at Barcelona. "What a headpiece that girl‘s got.‘ Here‘s her friends kind of giggling at her for being took in. She don‘t beâ€" lieve that; for she saw me with Ranâ€" ger. And Barcelona is the tip she gave me. But she wants to make sure. So what does she do but call up the man whose name‘s been in all the paâ€" pers as Ranger‘s attorney, Eustace Minard‘s Liniment Tor Every Pain. Higby. "He telle her that I‘m all right, Two® of them*caught her 19 CHAPTER XXII Hope. . Passes as an UNIARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO then be routs out Frank Brydn,‘ Ranâ€" ger‘s private sécretary, and shoots hinm down here on the morning ‘train to get me out." «i An attractive twoâ€"piece dress of l chambray in soft green shade with black grosgrain ribbon bow tie. The kilted skirt is attached to a camisole bodice. . The jumper has tucks at «ither shoulder with girlish Peter Pan collar and pockets for "hanky.‘ Style No. 262 is designed in sizes 8, 10, 12 and 14 "years. It is very smart in printed wool jersey with plain collar, belt, cuffs and packets. The skirt can be made of navy blue jersey, soft woolen in dark blue, plaid woolen or velveteen, and worn with jumper of contrasting fabric in cotton, wool or velvet. Linen, cotton broadcloth, and challis prints, also appropriate. â€" Patâ€" tern price 20 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred). Wrap coin careâ€" fully. Write your name and address plainâ€" ly, giving number and size of such patterns as you want. Enclose 20¢ in stamps or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for each number and address your order to Wilson Pattern Service, 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Patterns sent by return mail. Minard‘s Liniment ‘cleanses cuts, etc TWOâ€"PIECE SCHOOL DRESS HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS McGill Bld%, Montreal, P.Q. 55 King St. E., Toronto, Ont. 224 Portage Ave., Winnipeg, (To be continued.) The markets for such: au: oil are almost unlimited. In New Zealand and Australia the dairy herds have no surcease from the insect. pests. Northern Quebec and Northern Onâ€" tario arc expected to absorb quantities ‘Of the palliative,<while sportsmen and Praspadtors AbÂ¥â€" British Columbia are ‘Potomfial"bityer‘s. _ . «Fighâ€" oflsâ€"are~grow ingâ€"in importance every year. ag new uses for them are discovered bÂ¥ science and industry. :‘The great increase in the number of small xending., plants wherever fhere are fishery interests of. any‘ importâ€" ance may eventually . solve "the soâ€" called dogfish problem.., C tÂ¥ _. These small sharks, sculping, silver hake and other trash fish witheut food valuge are all legitimate grist for the mill. Fish meal for: liveâ€"sto@k food, fish fertilizer for the land, and fish “onf‘ for & divergity of purposes are in | growing ‘demand. Byrd‘s Paper Supply Totals 60!0( Holyoke, Masg\â€"Materials ~~apon: whith to record permanently a 20â€"000â€" page story were carried ‘gouth by Comâ€" mander Richard <F: Byfd‘s antarctic expedition, it has béen learned here. Sixty thousand sheets of paper were placed‘aboard the City of: New York, twoâ€"thirds of which were for" carbon ‘copies, ~according to officials ‘sof (he ‘American ~Writing Paper Compa.x‘ly, â€"which suppMed this material. <o$ ©The 20000 #hcets â€"onâ€"â€" which Comâ€"f * . e e TLE | people | mander Byrd will inscribe his log and | DRESS DES[GNING ‘they wo other members of the expedition will\ e ! to overl record ‘their scientific data, are said /A School.of proven worth. Graduatel_' other 13 to"be made of components.which will! recommend it., Manufacturers éndorse y;(4 on resist wear. <If the epedition is sieâ€"| it. & "p ** *A * i dian â€"# cossful, ~it=~is + expecied> that, these | Now is the time to enrol for the Fall | country records will be of high historic@l value. | day or evening classes of" tenveach.| ,;, asSsi onmeccovfgclcllll go ... | Send for Free Miustrated ;Bookiet,. To: | q.3 i5 k #. | r< K motor carwith one â€"horn can toss | day. 4@ 3. § ‘heye. ( a> man farther than a ‘bull with two Gnham School of Dengmng extends us cuduahs i= 6 | ~ 274 COLLEGE $T.,.TORONTO | what m K motor carwith one â€"horn can toss a> man farther than a bull with two horns. * ® M * Write for FREE nr'ife book on pickles, salads, salad dressing, n sandwich fillings, etc. COLMANâ€"KEEN (Canada) Limited 1080 AMHERST STREET â€" MONTREAL Follow the lead of representative women everywhere and make mustard pickles in your own home this year. You will be able to select the particular combination of vegetables you desire, please your family, and practice true household economy. For Home Made Pickles 4.%-â€"‘ x\n“é@‘ Mfesâ€"~ us qz;:'te safe to give him fC hri 'g’zé'lie’s Aids Digestion ‘S MUSTARD Sheets Use., L. _ MAGIC BAKING POWDER Boundary Timber C‘.fmd To Expose hnum AUIMFZ‘" "Blaind; *"Wash. â€"Rum runners ‘and smugglers will encounter even more difficulty crossing the border between Canada «and <the .Unitedâ€" States. ‘A crew of woodsmen is at_work clearing all growth for twenty feet along the international line, starting at the westâ€" ern‘ end. / With vision unobstructed, customs and immigration patrolmen will be able to see much farther along the border, and. also develop,.a trail and possibly a highway. The boundâ€" ary will be _cleared from Washington to Minnesota, it is reported. _ 14. Shakespear® works would not 1iterature:~â€"Lord~ ' Madajn Ed/VGda . â€" No AMuni g.w. quu-:t_'[_qgf LTOs® =~ord ~Gore!l:~" * toronto, Skice 100 smallâ€"cueumbers und 1 quart small onions. layers avith salt between. Put a heavy weight above and let stand overnight. Drain off Liquid. Miz 1 Mustard seed, %4 1b. Keen‘s Mustard, 1 tableâ€" spoon black pepper, all in with 1 pint olive oil, stir in 2 qts. vinegar â€" pour all over pickles. Mix well and seal in sterilized Mustard Pickle BISCUITS That‘s the way to assure success. in all your baking~ be included in our Runners The Hon. Robert Forke has shown commendable restraint in replying to Lord Lovat, head of the Empire Setâ€" tlement â€" Board, _ who, at Winnipeg, was quoted as saying that he failed to understand Why Canada s»om bring 51,000 immigrants from . "wonâ€"preferâ€" red" countries annually 204 only 50,â€" 000 from the British Is)es. His Lordâ€" ship also stated, according to a desâ€" patch, that the Pritish people view, with alarm, Canadian readiness to bring to this country what may be termed "subservient peoples." To this Mr. Forke replies that "if 2 CA 9. o uon Wrteriants : WHn‘t â€" ~come to To this Mr. Ferke TOP "** """ . British immigrants won‘t come to Canada, we <an‘t help it. The British immigrant who is able and willing to groom the Jand is practically being Fubsidized to cothe to" Canada. -rn‘: is not the case with the ‘subsorvie peoples‘ referred to bY Lord Lovat. ;'!'h.'y cogm to »Capada even though given no encouragement to do zo bÂ¥ the coyernp@pt." * According to despatches from Otâ€" tawa, Lord Lovat‘s remarks in Winniâ€" peg have caused surprise and are reâ€" garded as "unfortunate.‘"*" . One might go Turther and say that they are deâ€" ‘sidedly out of plave, . Is it anyone‘s l2 su424.) Maranean®s these ‘people come nere M""" â€"""**"" in their possession, remain in the 0¢â€" cupations to which they are directed, ‘and.gare!y becomie a charge upon the community. â€" They make excellent citizens and it does seem A shame that. a yjsitor from Great Britain «should" mpnreï¬'ï¬y go out of his way \to make . disparagin?> remarks conâ€" | cerning them. Some of these newâ€" ‘comers may have belonged to "subâ€" | servient peoples" in Europe, but that "A#* now ithe case >rtich*they become iBiM&Mâ€"'M country is n intavracted in What they were, but ' ,ciu.lm»oi‘.m--»'rus not interested in what the: Ln-btm w un y i Mr. Forkeâ€"himself an Tvs®F _A l *"Aécording to despatches from Otâ€" tawa, Lord. Lovat‘s remarks in Winniâ€" peg have caused surprise and are reâ€" garded as "unfortunate." One might go Turther and say that they are deâ€" sidedly out of plave. Is it anyone‘s fault if 51000 nonâ€"British Europeans decide that, they, , wish to move to Canada and if we allow them to come in?> As pointed wut in an Ottawa desâ€" patch, a . yery large percentage of these people® come here with money in their possgession , remain in the 0¢ cupations to which they are directed, and.;arely become a charge upon the community. _ They make excellent lactve caus a) ts "Aaue! unalh : n ~shame ‘;muntry be blamed? Mr. Forke and his assisants e@qunot . ge over to Great ‘Brluty and .compel. people to scome here. Canada, has inviteg them and "oxtenie assistance. and Goâ€"operation. extends assistance. and Goâ€"0perutUiOn. What more can ghe do? # Lord Lovat, like some others in the Old Land, seems t0 find it difl‘\cult*;_ understand that Canada is and alâ€" ways will be a cosmopolitan country. lThe greatness of this nation is being buf"t upon the mixture of many races. "This is neCessarily the case for if it wgretpoqatple“(pr,,u‘ to transport to the dominion the entire population of the British Isles there would still be room in Canada for millions more. ‘We have in this country toâ€"day men and â€"women representative of practiâ€" cally every nationality under the sun. They or their forefathers have come here dfor a defnite reason. That reaâ€" son was the. improvement of their condition in life and the search for greater. opportunity. _ They reached the «conclusion that Canada offered this. greaterâ€"~opportunity and so they came. Thousands of them have sucâ€" <e6ded "Nrere. They have burned the bridges behind _ them. They are firmly rooted in Canada. Their lives, their hopes, their aspirations are Canadian. Canada is their home. And Candda is glad to have them because they and the many others still to come are alding in the great task of developing our country. {)Ihert!w beingk;iagade to attract people here from Grut‘ï¬riwiu‘ 1 they won‘t come in sufficient numbers to overbalance the immigration from other landsâ€"lands that Teceive mo such !n@urueï¬&uï¬â€™ from" the Cana th Sn t e t\ than Ar uts 43 7 dian â€" aufhoritiesâ€"why @ould this * Lord Lovat and others should take note of the Hon. Robert Forke‘s reâ€" marks to the Empire Parliamentary Association in Ottawa. "We welcome all imm grants of the right type," the Canadian minisâ€" ter of immigration said, "but especiâ€" aly do we welcome those of Great Britain who come here to make their home.. Our policy is to welocme all immigrants who can possibly be asâ€" similated." # Mr. Forke added that be greatly ve gretted paragraphs which had appear ed in certain English papers that British immigrants were not welcome in ‘Canhda. Suwch statements were not in accordance with facts. British immigrants are welcome; no dominâ€" ion "of The empire was putting forth more strenuous efforts to obtain peoâ€" ple from the Old Land, he said. There seems to be a determined efâ€" fort to give the impression that the governmnt is turning away British newcomers ant having a band at the dock every time a boatload of immiâ€" grants: arrives from Poland or some other country. SBuch charges and inâ€" sinuations are, of course, absurd, the best answer to them being that the man in charge of the whole immigraâ€" tion department, is himself a British immigrant. Lord Lovat came to Canada to disâ€" cuss immigration â€" matters. If he made the remark attributed to him at Winnipeg, one must concinde that his prejudices are strongor than his disvretion. Canadais quite ber own Immigra American _ (as .Flying dashes): "Say, bo, 1 guess that an express?" Porter® No, it‘s just â€"doing a bit of It‘ll be back in a minute!" is quite capable of handling Immigration regulations. imself â€" am. immirant many .Vex ago, and is of Scotsmen . who adeâ€"Amy@this countryâ€"â€" Flying â€" Scotsman you call "That? shuntin‘, < m o o Crar the life gupl An Official Or â€"â€"Lopng Jffe and V daughter of ed last Mar Cranwell Ai make the f to the No: Buropean a)l completely demanded, * reputation with 9,000 A; 'obabl)'. t â€"â€"why did prudence at cretion to 1 of winter : treacherous Some h« of the J and Bar eagerno: had cof 4zed as thought tionce returns upon . Hinch ter 3 on bo partu! the y< peer left _ When An III F mancod the family oi jectionable 1 refrained fr with newsp gether with Hinchliffe ha friends into strengthen But Hinc all of these roneous. T favored pos April or N unfortunate him to tak when he di that Hinch] making tre was a dov the only re Mackay wa person in I such a fi the whole liffe‘s until for it H alor 111 1 Eng the FI to aviator despitc twelve in b’ &A m sight of Hinch1i safely 1 combat Harry 1 ambitio the fiel peria! servic nenta their recog Ame twes man ties clal Ame T and suit« tried nent o‘ in 1 pern: driv thrc rI wl th h« trip Im;} vin WA H b of 1 th 1¢ 1t AT