mdents Wed 39 Years an to Marry Man At Al P.K. anadiam m. Cane ports to t. How» in come he total ts ‘l ueepy, 1, and lowed who ports on ie« the & C 8ts ib« 19 oned to at the 1 ding fa ing for y unch. ut e | assure you my intentions are strictly honorable. You forced me to this courso as the only possible way of arâ€" *ranving a teteâ€"aâ€"tete." Pretoatete is a mild way of exâ€" prossing it!" she retorted. "I‘m sorry," he said gently. "I‘ve beon a brute to tease you like this. As a matter of fact," he lied swiftly, "the launch will return for us as soon as the others are put ashore. Everyâ€" upon ind h h th to h tione MA thrilling! y( 3 ':():1. come," he murmured. "Kidnapâ€" pinz is hardly the word. You‘re aboard your father‘s yacht, you know. Th Oh, Jar ront T Why Canada‘s Favourite Tea HOSTAGE HEIRESS Qu arc he h th e stared at him. ‘"*You mean . . . planned this?" xactly," he told her urbanely. : launch man was quite amenable uite true." Gregory fiipped his ctte into the water and turned er with a faint smile. "I menâ€" d certain arrangements." mil h h m _ we‘re riled. * _ except hrugged. "I‘ve been trying to : a moment alone with you for t two weeks. But you‘re alâ€" urrounded by that crowd, who com to stop for breath." we‘re absolutely marooned!" iled. "And there‘s no one else not funny!" she stormed at told you we shouldn‘t linger ‘hey‘ve all drunk so much me that they don‘t realize left us behind. We can‘t swim w upon r fathe p in y precisely the right moâ€" lease her arm and light a nonchalantly. They were upon the deck of the Fleetâ€" father‘s palatial yacht. A n rode overhead, and the ters of Riscayne Bay glimâ€" ctt" Gregory Gason beckâ€" net Dunne as she lingered of the yacht‘s ladder, bidâ€" cll to her guests embarkâ€" e in the sleek motor â€"gory was older than Janet ot and, in her eyes, war sophisticated." n, or we‘ll be stranded on : told him gaily. t*" He took Janet‘s arm down into her eager face. certain arrangements ..." f his fingers caressed her ct Janet‘s pulse beating a CHAPTER 1 as suddenly broken by from the motor of the ran to the rail with a ery. Gregory followed niling with satisfaction. me off and left us!" she questioned T ELo By DAVID DRESSER marooned!" no one else led _ watch egory said one will think we were simply careâ€" lessly left behind. And in the meanâ€" time . . . we‘ll have an opportunity for a little chat in the lounge." He smiled convincingly. "Oh!" Janet breathed in quick reâ€" lief. "The launch will really come back ?" "Of course," he reassured her. Time enough, he thought, for her to worry when the launch, following his instructions, did not return. He took her arm, leading her toward the lounge. He opened the door with a flourish and motioned for her to enter. Glaneâ€" ing back, Janet saw the shrunken form of the watchman on deck as he went about the task of turning out all illumination _ excepting â€" the _ riding lights fore and aft. Then, Gregory softly closed the door, and they were alone in the snug lounge. The Fleetwing was Cyrus Duane‘s pride and joy. Equipped with powerâ€" ful engines. she was fast as a racing craft; and, designed by a famous firm of shipbuilders, she was a veritable floating mansion, A curious strain of circumstances had served to anchor her in Biscayne Bay, unmarned, at the beginning of the winter season. Cyrus Duane was a hard man. Captain Coleman, masâ€" ter of the Fleetwing since the day she was launched, had discovered in his employer a man more stubborn than himself. There had been friction beâ€" tween master and owner on several occasions. A few weeks previously, this friction had developed into a bitâ€" ter quarrel, and Captain Colem>n had departed from the yacht, swearin~ he would never set foot on her deck again. The crew, loyal to their chief, had followed the captain ashore en masse. Cyrus Duane. in New York, had cursed roundly at the telegraphed news, but had do‘syed seeking a new master ard evew t ntil he could come tn Miami a~d : «â€"~ +~~ matter perâ€" 80 Jane«. Visilad® dilcuuas ~ 10â€" AAWAATTT had commandeered the yacht for this night‘s party, employing a local firm of caterers to arrange all details of refreshments, music, and so forth, Now. she sank into a deeply cushâ€" ioned chair and breathed a tired little sigh. The party had been a grand sucâ€" cess, but she was glad it was over. This was her first season, and already she was beginning to feel apathetic about parties. Life had proved desâ€" perately disappointing up to now. The endless round of social gaiety seemed unimportant somehow. She wanted to live vividly. There must be much more to living, she thought, than she had discovered thus far. Sometimes she lay awake at night and longed for an opportunity to do something reckless; dreaming chaotic dreams of one day emerging into a world where she might live dangerâ€" ouslyâ€"love daringly. She gazed at Gregory Gason specuâ€" latively. Her sense of inner exciteâ€" ment grew stronger. He sank into a chair before her. A little silence fell between them. Gregory lit a cigarette. He must be very cautiousâ€"very careful not to frighten her. So much depended upon lulling her into a sense of false seâ€" curity, so that she would not immedâ€" iately note the swift passage of time. When she realized that the launch would not return, he hoped it would be too late for her to upset his careâ€" fully laid plans. He was a patient man. He had planned this coup p@a tiently. Biding his time until circumâ€" stances conspired to aid his ends. He congratulated himself, now, as he swiftly reviewed the perfection of alis d s in â€" Miami, his plot. It would be several hours, at least, before Janet would be missed. Morning, probably, before anyone would think to come to the yacht in search of her. And that would be too late. Who would believe her story? The launch tender was prepared to swear it was Janet who ordered him not to return. Quite damaging enough evidence, Gregory reflected, to force a very handsome cash settlement fre:a the millionaire, Cyrus Duane, to keep the matter quiet. Blackmail? Perhaps. But he was fully prepared to marry Janct, he reminded himself, should Cyrus feel his daughter‘s honor deâ€" manded such reparation. Of course he would marry her! Why not? She was the heiress to many millions, and unâ€" deniably attractive, besides. Evidence of Sir Bernard Salisâ€" bury, Famous Pathologist, Fearâ€" LONDON.â€"Drop in at the Old Bailâ€" ey, most dreary and historic of all London‘s famous courts, and they will whisper to you that the person in the witness box giving evidence on behalf of the prosecution in a sensational murder trial can hang you with a sinâ€" gle hair. Single Hair Often Sends Murderers To Gallows MILD BRIGHT CIGARETTE TOBACCO IN THE BIG PACKAGE They will also tell you that, next to the gallows, murderers fear him more than anything on earth for it is a matter of record that at least a score of notorious murderers have paid the extreme penalty as a direct result of his evidence. You can see for yourself that deâ€" spite his 58 years he well deserves the reputation of being one of Engâ€" land‘s handsomest men. Furthermore, he is one of England‘s busiest men because they still murder people in this country; have very gruesome murders in fact, even though they have no gangster warfare as in the United States. Instead of shooting his victim down in broad daylight, the English murderer inclines towards more stealth and usually endeavors to conceal his crime. An Exact Science This is where the man in the witâ€" ness box comes into the picture. He is Sir Bernard Spilsbury, government pathologist, who has made detection of crime an exact science. When he tells the judge and jury that a certain individual was murdered in a certain particular manner there are not "ifs" CROCHL You‘d never guess that the charming design of this scarf was formed by joining simple 4% inch medall ons together! Just a bit of your leisure time now and then and you can crochet a lace cloth, spread or scarf that will be the envy of all who see it. Use string. Pattern 1252 contains complete directions for making the square and joining it to form a variety of articles; mater‘al requirements; illustraâ€" tions of the square and of all stitches used ; a ph.otogrnpi.n of !:I_xe square. _ Send 20 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred) for this pattern to Wilson Needlecraft Dept., 73 Adelaide West, Toronto. Write plainly PATTERN NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS. Never Crocheted Before? You Can Do This Lavra Whes‘er Dezign (TO BE CONTINUED) ED MIEDALLION No Peolice May Adopt Homeszun Dress QUEBECâ€"Snappy homespun uniâ€" forms may replace the traditional blue serge which has garked Quebec City policemen for gerer®ons, if a sugmestion made by Quebec Mayor, J. E. Grego‘re, is acted upon. His Woreh‘p fee‘s that the grey homespun uniforms would not only provide a decided contrast to the orâ€" dinary erder of things, but would a‘so encourage Frenchâ€"Canad an in« dusiry. There is a possibility of the law also be‘ng adorned with colorful wool‘en belts, such as those worn by snowshoers and "Coursurs dos Bois" centurics ago. Th‘s is suggosted as a tourist attract.on. attached because, in his own estimaâ€" tion, Sir Bernard is always right. Uncanny Accuracy It is for this very reason that Sir Bernard is not exactly popular with barristers whose business it is to deâ€" fend accused persons. Let Sir Berâ€" nard tell a jury how a crime was comâ€" mitted and if his evidence is against the accused the unfortunate person is as good as hanged. Only a few days ago an eminent lawyer protested that Sir Bernard is "almost a god in these courts, because no one is ever allowed to disbelieve what he says." But Sir Bernard has an easy conâ€" science for he has yet to be found in a mistake and has again and again demonstrated the uncanny aecuracy of his work, as in the case of a young woman by the name of Molly Phillips who was found dead in Exmoor in 1931. There was some doubt as to how she died, the body being found in a marsh with one arm missing, and nearby a hair was picked up. Sir Berâ€" nard concluded that the hair belongâ€" ed to Mollie Phillips because it matched hair found on & brush she used the day before her disappearâ€" ance. But there were no roots attached to this particular hair, so Bernard concluded that it had been bitten off by an animal and similarly accounted for the missing arm, and established that she had fallen over a boulder face downward and been smothered. In this case, with a single hair he cleared everybody of suspicion; but there are cases in which he has figâ€" vred where hair has identified the murderer Sealed Doom of Fox It was Sir Bernard‘s evidence which scaled the doom of Sidney Albert Fox, who was hanged for murder of his G3â€"yearâ€"old mother in a Margate hotel bedroom after he had insured her life for £1,000. Sir Bernard exploded something of a bombshell when he told the court that the woman had died from strangulation, even though no outward evidence was available. Fox had taken great pains to cover up his nefarious deed. He had set fire to the room and the defence was conâ€" 6!' I'â€"l\ |§ fak@.ls BABYS OWN â€"SOAP : B:est kr You and Beby too Issue No. 37â€"‘37 ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO PATTERN 1252 my"B¢( V oA Ne C @oua ty Ask any Canadian what his favorâ€" ite dessert is and the answer will be "ice cream." Some may say ice cream and cake, others ice cream and apple pic, but ice cream is the favâ€" orite throughout the country. You all remember the old methods of making ice cream. You cooked the custard foundation, boiled the sugar, melted marshmallows and did a whole lot of tedious tasks to get a quart of the family‘s favorite dish. In fact, we know of one "horse and buggy" era recipe which required 14 different steps. â€" But that is all over and hundreds of housewives are getâ€" ting a big thrill out of the ice cream powder which can be purchased so cheaply and easily now. There are all kinds of flavors and even one unâ€" flavored powder which gives you the chance of adding your own favorite flavor. From ice cream powder you can now make delicious desserts in a few easy steps. When serving ice cream let your imagination do the decorating. There are many tricks that add novelty and finer flavor to this old favorite. Sauces, for instance, are particularâ€" ly good to pep up ice cream and either chocolate or butterscotch | is always popular. Maple syrup, nuts, coconut and whipped cream will enâ€" able you to make very professional looking sundaes right at home. YOUR FAVORITHE DESSZERT ICE CREAM â€" EASILY MADE Here are a few recipes using the new ice cream powder and we‘ll guarantee that you and your family will be more than pleased with the results. fident of an acquittal because there was no external marks of violence, But they had not reckoned on Sir Bernard. First, his investigation reâ€" vealed no trace of soot in the dead woman‘s windpipe, nor was there any carbon monoxide in her blood, proof positive that she had died before the fire started. Then, he discovered tiny bruises inside, the grim tale of how pressure had been applied until life was extinet. Cuts right through clogging matter @ Just use Gillett‘s Pure Flake Lye C\* . io c im _regularly...nndyou’llkeeptoueu. 3 "* es tub and sink drains clean and . d# ~~% w ~oanai running freely. It will not harm B 3 . m hm enamel or plumbing. Banishes . # i/ %3 L t j unpleasant odors as it cleans. n s‘ p ~ , Gillett‘s Lye makes light work of /W l £ + d dozens of hard cleaning tasks . . . € l saves you hours of drudgery. Keep *Â¥ e a tin always on hand! { water. The action of the Mess o tyo Itsolf heats the water. Nwenat FREE BOOKLET â€" The Gillett‘s Lye Booklet tells how to use this mwmmaw Send for free copy to Standard _lnpllw..MAvo.nlMlt..mo.t. 2. Pasf "A have so much trouble with sluggish drains"‘ "Use GILLETT‘S LYE. it clears the dirt right out‘"‘ hrey Woman‘s »*â€Â» ’é # & % World x . & f !"’/’(\*- By Mair M. Morges TB DESSERT â€" e Lye <€ M n" ilets, ,3 hy ie o n and JR es k narm itA ge % ons 0 ishes g 8 > 9 y â€" _ i6/ % ' rk of SSR f & 19 B . + + % " ‘ ‘ e A..f,». ored ice cream powder, 1 cup cream whipped. Cardmelize sugar until golden brown. Add coffce gradually â€" and stir untl dissolved. Add milk very gradually to ice cream powder, stirâ€" ring until dissolved, then add coffeeâ€" caramel mixture,. Fold in whipped cream. Turn into freezing tray of automatic refrigerator and frecze as rap‘d‘ly as possible,. Stir when frozen 4 inch thick on sides and tw‘ce more For 1% quarts, couble the recipe above, using full contents of packâ€" age. Freeze in cne or two tvays 8 to 6 hours. COoFrEE C j4 incna thick on sices and tw.ce more at 20â€"minute intervals, Freezing time: about 3 hours. Makes % quart. cream powder, Foree berrics through sieve; add sugar and lemon juice, Mcasure and add enough water io make 5 cups. Add this m‘xture very gradually to ice cream powder, stirring until disâ€" solved. Freeze in freozer, Mies 2 quarts sherbct. Baked Alaska is the last word in fancy ice cream deiserts, but you can get the same effect with a lot less effort by placing small squares of cake on a board, top with ice cream and mask with meringue, Place the board in hottest oven to brown the meringue quickly and serve at once. This dessert will call forth cheers from the family and beâ€" cause it is so quickly and casily made, it can be served often, To ensure that postmen will deâ€" liver particular letters only into the hands of persons to whom they are addressed, Czechoslovakia has issued a special triangular stamp. 2 cups crushed red raspberries 1 cup sugar 6 tablespoons lemon juice 1 package strawberry flavored ice tablespoons sugar cup strong coffee cup milk package (scant 1â€"3 cup) unflavâ€" RASPEERRY SHEREET AHRAMEL IC then add coffeeâ€" Fold in whipped freezing tray of or and frecze as Stir when frozen s and tw‘ce more CHEAM Erglish Writee Explains Why CGlamor Boys and Girls of Holâ€" lywoecd Leave Her Cold. In those days when the teaching of human relations invades even the bestâ€" sellor lists and everyone is interested in captivating everyone eise, charm and glamor are confusing many peoâ€" ple. Mme, Marceline D‘Alroy, English writer and lecturer on these subjects, explained both qualitios and still had time to announce that the glamor boys and girls of Hollywood left her cold. Mme. D‘Alroy, who has sailod 4 a vacation here, has beon in Am« before as charm consultant in «e ment stores to instruct eustomers employees how to develop their ch "Charm is the best inside a pe: expressed outwardly, gestures manners, spoech, gestures clothes," she said, »while glamor : ly is a commercial fake, put on outside only, like makeup. G:: vit With her biack halr seem‘int « blacker â€" against | her wideâ€"brimm white straw hat and her smile a wit both quick to flash, Mme 1D‘A‘ looked «ualified to describe char» "Springboard for Development" She favors the current crave America to teach personality becau althouzh formulae for charm : "ridierlous," they teach people think about being attractive and ": as springboard" for development, American women are the most be. tiful in the world, she said, partly | cause of their lack of selfâ€"canscio nC "They have wonfidence in thor selves, their clothes. They are co gcious of self, but not selfâ€"consciou English women are too selfâ€"conscion und it shows in their faces." She admires the way American wom» en dress and sees a trend this autâ€" umn toward black dresses, in which a woman looks "dowdy, dangerous or distinguished . . . and American wom» en have enormous distinction." English men, however, she consid« ers the peers of American men in the mattor of clothing beause they prefo® one good suit to two less good €ncs, Enslish men wear a suit even if it is rather old, but because the suit is really good it remains attractive, Young People Not Too Wi‘d Mme. D‘Alroy believes that Amor ican mon have more freedom in thcir choice of clothing. A man in Engiand usually gives away his occunation his dressâ€"bowler hat and white «l for a lawyer, for instance â€" but America an automobile salesman Urge Women Seek Imnuortant Pasts University Women Teld Coaneâ€" dans Hold Too Few Adâ€" TORONTO. â€"â€" That the t.me i come when the International Fod: tion of University Women | sho come to grips with problems taki the attention of the world, was | general opinion of the Internatio Conference â€" Committee â€" mecting Paris, Mrs. R. F. MeWilliams, of W nipeg, told the Canadian Federat in convention this week at t~* y yonto University Women‘s (‘n». Great care had to be taken, she stated, that nothing was donre which would cause other governments to for» bid. as Germany and Italy, their f« d= crations from taking part in interna» tional programs or problems . Any communication with members of the German federation was utterly impos» sible, Mrs. McWilliams said. Mre. Mo» Williams, a former president of the Canadian Pederation, is slated to suCâ€" ceed Miss Isabel Brittain, Montreal, as Chairman of the International Reâ€" lations Committee ~* * Câ€"nadian Federation. Canada is besls« i . 0@ enLRutâ€" ened countries ia appointing women to administrative posts, the Commitâ€" tee on Education found. The commit» tee recommended that the federation use its Influence to encourage appoint» ment of women in education work; that women be encouraged to qualify for higher administrative posts and be aggressive in applying for them: al=o that university women take deepor in« terest in educational, administration in their own communities by sttendâ€" ing, or gecuring reports of, mestings of Boards of Education, The position of Inspector of Schools is the highest administrative post that has ever been held in Canada by a woman, it was pointed out, and there have been only four such appointments, all of them in postâ€"war years. In England, out of 365 inspectors, 81 are women, and in the United States a third of county superintendents are women, researck minictrative PoriUons Charm Vital American wom» stinction." ver, she consid» jean men in the ause they proefo® less good €ncos, suit even if it is use the suit is ns attractive, t Too Wi‘d eves that Amer freedom in their man in Eagiand is occunation by . and white shirt «tamce â€" but in gestures n estures & e glamor m« e, put on 1 eâ€"up, Glan but charm Lom d @ d n 18 in a 44 tot t t% wb