C §# 1Of Special Interest to: "I ain‘t sayin‘ I did or I didn‘t. But remember, if this well ain‘t a proâ€" ducer, you‘re blowed up, and it ain‘t Agoin‘ to produce till there‘s a Mrs. Tiller Maddox to see it and to get her whare! We bargained that out, long ago. Yes, an‘ I ain‘t afraid of you goin‘ back on our deal, either. You don‘t dast." "Did you drop that bolt in the well?" Mrs. Durham bleated, in dismay. CARRYING CASE TOUCH TYPING INSTRUCTOR Writeâ€" Remingten Rand Limited "fish" for the bolt and operating funds dwindle away. . . . Furlong offers to give a hand but Maddox objects. . .. Betty insists and overrules Maddox so Furiong fashions a tool which brings up the boit. . . . On the order of Betâ€" ty‘s aunt, Furlong is given a job. . . . Maddox shows his dislike for the new hand, especially because Ben and Betâ€" ty are so friendly. While the two are in town shopping one evening, Madâ€" dox cal‘s upon the aunt, demanding she help his case with Betty or there will be no well. . ... Now go on with the story. CORN SYRUP a most satisâ€" factory carbohydrate to use as a milk modifier in the feeding of tiny infants and as an energy producing food for growing children. wowet 10¢ a day "" thrive on ~**CROWN BRAND® CORN SYRUP. They never tire of Its deliciâ€" eue flavor and it really is so #ood for themâ€"so give the Synopsis Een Furlong, a young but practical oil man and driller from the Pennsylâ€" vania field, drifted into the Texas oil country, broke and looking for work. Finally he fetched up at the Durham home where live an elderly aunt, recently widowed by the explosion of a powder wagon, and her niece, pretty Betty Durham. . . . Perhaps because of his smile, Betty cooks some food for Ben and while he eats he learns the aunt, in town on business, has an oil man, Tiller Maddox, sinking an oil well for her. . . . A short 6 inch boit worked loose from the rigging and is in the bottom of the well. Work has been suspended for days as the crew CHILDRUN thrlua m "Ef‘,ï¬s’f"â€â€â€â€â€â€â€ | rowbDer . . | REMINGTON PORTABLE TYPEWRITER with all essential features buys a new CHAPTER V Toronto of all n‘en **CROWN guaranteed Ben passed his arm around the slim, girlish figure and drew it to him. "That‘ll be about all for you!" He kissed the cheek next to his and Betâ€" ty hungrily pressed her face closer. "Good thing you aren‘t an heiressâ€" and me with less than a hundred dolâ€" beca fruit juice, herb, and tonic tablets cleanse and strengthen the liver, help stomach, kidâ€" neys, intestines. Troubles go. Health must improve. 25. and 50c. All druggists. "Aunt Mary won‘t let him fire you. She doesn‘t trust him any more than I do." ‘‘Say! What has he got on her?" Something Queer The girl did not look up from her driving. She fetched a deep breath as she sald: "I‘d dearly love to know. There‘s something queer about it. . . . Uncle Joe was a sweet, easyâ€"going man and she rode him with a Spanish bit. She never would have let him take me in, when my folks died, only I did all the work. But he sure loved me. When the oil excitement came they rowed and fought for months. Whenâ€" ever he got an offer she claimed he was trying to give the farm away and threatened to go to law. I told you about that. He stood it as long as he could; then he up and announced that I‘d been more of a daughter to him than she‘d been a wife and he aimed to give most of his money to me anyâ€" how, and then he made that lease with the Planet people. That‘s how Maddox came. I think she‘d have poisoned me, if she dared, after what uncle said. When he was killed I supposed, of course, she‘d throw me out, but she didn‘t. No use to do it, I suppose, inâ€" asmuch as he hadn‘t left any writing. As a matter of fact, she was better to me than she‘d ever been. That‘s what makes me wonder sometimesâ€"" "Wonder what?" J Now Free of Bad Liver and Kidney Trouble and Feeling Fine "He let on he was fooling, but of course he‘ll fire me the first chance he gets," Furlong predicted. "Oh, Ben! Why did you do it?" "We were bound to tie into each other sooner or later. You can‘t choose a time to get fighting mad; it‘s as much as you can do to pick good footing." Not until Ben and Betty had finished their shopping and were on their way home did he tell her about the trouble he had had with Maddox that mornâ€" ing. For a moment Mrs. Durham stared at the speaker, then she said: ‘"Tiller Maddox, you‘re a dirty dog!" "Say! I‘ve took all the back talk I can stand for one day. You heard me. You do like I tell you, an‘ you needn‘t to get back from your visit till Monâ€" day," + +9 "Iâ€"I‘ll try again," "You better do more‘n try. T‘ll give you just one more chance. If she don‘t come across, I want you to go visit your folks Saturday evenin‘, an‘ leave her here. Understand?" COULDN‘T EAT By REX BEACH Here‘s another woman 13â€"‘38 "You know vefy weh- l’ll d-o- nothing of the sort." "Maybe you won‘t and maybe you "Oh, your head‘s full of Furlong, I suppose! But what‘s he got? Nothing, Not even a job. Now Tiller wants to marry you andâ€"you better do it." "Tiller came over the other night when you was in town," Mrs. Durham began. "Did he?" "He talked a lot about you. Tiller‘s a fine man, dearieâ€"" Betty broke out frritably: "Don‘t let‘s start that all over again." Betty‘s face was flushed, her eyes were shining, when she entered the house after he was gone. She was surprised to find her aunt awaiting her. Maddox carried out his intention. He discharged Furlong on Friday night, explaining that the well was down, and the next morning Ben broke the news to his sweetheart. Betty was indiguant. She was for appealâ€" ing to her aunt, but he refused to perâ€" mit her, He promised to let her hear from him in a day or so. ‘You behave yourself, or you‘ll wreck }his car," the girl warned him. An inexpensive party frock in crochet wi Pattern 1720 contains directions for making â€" in one pattern); an illustration of it and of Send 20 cents in coins (stamps cannot be a Wilson Needlecraft Dept., 73 QVest Adelaide Pattern Number, your Name and Address. Adjusts Personality Sometimes doubting women and men consult the detector to learn if they really are in love and should marry, he said. It‘s a wizard on perâ€" sonality adjustment cases â€" uncovers hidden egos and complexes and points the way to their correction. "Usually within a few minutes the true or false answers will uncover some repression or hidden traitâ€"freâ€" quently entirely unknown to the subâ€" jectâ€"which is responsible for the trouble." The way it works is simple. The subject is attached to the instrument which records a jump in blood pressâ€" ure whenever a falsehood is told, and the examiner starts a line of questionâ€" ing about the problem to be solved. "The detector finds out things about you that you, yourself, didn‘t know," he said. "Usually a session of quesâ€" tions and answers under the instruâ€" ment (its right name is sphygomanoâ€" meter) shows what is wrong and points the way to a remedy." Dr. William M. Marston, of New York, who originated the blood pressâ€" ure test he has used on all sorts of people from international spies to misâ€" understood husbands, told about it this week. The lie detector has gone domestic. It is now an associateâ€"and a successâ€" ful oneâ€"of advisers to the lovelorn and of consulting psychologists who specialize in untangling family troubâ€" les. Lie Detector Test Aids the Lovelorn Laura Wheeler Crocheted Frock Is Made in Easy M=: That They Didn‘t Know Points Way to Remedy \memeneg K. 200000 0o OSLIECTOY PeqWIEd, coins (stamg‘s’ cannot be accepted) for this pattern to t Dept., 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Write plainly our Name and Address, "Humph!" The exclamation was one of scorn. "There‘s gratitude for you! Mebbe if iIt‘s a real big well I‘d do better, Youâ€"you‘re got to do it, Betty!" the widow cried in distraction. "If you don‘t he‘ll ruin everything. He said so. If that well don‘t come in the farm ain‘t worthâ€"* (To be continued) _ "TZSl alls you? Are you losing your mind, Aunt Mary?" "And you can have ‘em If you marâ€" ry Tiller. Marry Furlong and you‘ll spend your life over a cook stove." "How can Tiller give me things like that ?" *"I‘ll give ‘em to you." After a moment Betty inquired, cuâ€" riously, "How much will you give?" It was Mrs. Durham‘s time to hestâ€" tate, her words came with an effort. "I don‘t knowâ€"mebbe a quarter inâ€" terest," f ochet with roses for a finishing touch. making’the. d{ess in sizes 4 to 8 (all "I‘ve earned my keep ever since 1 came. You‘d have paid more for a hired girl than I cost." There‘s Gratitude! "Oh, hush up and let me finish. We allus fight like this. Your Uncle Joe cared a lot for you andâ€"and I want to respect his wishes.â€" When that well comes in this farm‘ll be worth â€" I don‘t know what. Anyhow, my heart‘s set on seeing you get a good home and have everything. How‘d you like to live in a fine house in Dailas?" "What ails you? Are you losing your mind, Aunt Mary?" "I tell you I won‘t! I won‘t!" deâ€" clared the girl. "The big, black, greasy brute!" * ‘"Now don‘t fly off the handle till I‘m through. I‘ve been pretty good to ’pou‘_ll will." Mrs, Durham‘s lips set themâ€" selves in lines of inflexibility. "If you got a smitch of sense you will. D‘you want to be poor all your life or d‘you want to be rich?" To prepare fruit, remove all skin and membrane, cut in pieces of servâ€" ing size, and chill thoroughly. Serve ice cold in cocktail or sherbet glasses, carefully arranged, and â€" garnished with mint, a colored cherry, preservâ€" ed ginger, bright jelly, or whole berâ€" ries. Emerald Fruit Cup 1 package lime jelly powder. 1 pint warm water. Too many housewives are prone to serve the same cocktail over and over again so we are giving a variety of ideas for appetizers which will brighten your meals and show your originality. _ FRUIT COCKTAILS may be made of plain or mixed fruit juices, tart combinations of fruits and fruit juices, a single tart fruit such as grapefruit, served alone or a mixture of tart fruit and a fruit ice or sherbet. It is only in recent years that the custom of starting the meal with a cocktail has gained such wide popuâ€" larity. Soups used to be the acceptâ€" ed way of opening dinner but the ease with which the modern houseâ€" wife can open a can of tomato juice or fruit cocktail is a good reason for the spread of this habit. Besides, we moderns eat less and lighter foods. Soups tend to fill one up too much to enjoy a good dinner whereas an appetizer just sharpens the appetite and lends an elegant touch to the meal. Cocktails, appetizers and relishes to the meal are as the frosting to the cakeâ€"the â€" imaginative, â€" glamorous flourish that makes a meal an outâ€" standing event rather than a routine performance. i versf vlllia t $ is stitches; mate‘ri_als required RELISHES With a Flourish Women Readers Cotton picking is the most ¢ operation in cotton production, Aluminum, though it is affected by acids and alkalis, is easily cleanâ€" ed <with fine stee] wool. It heats quickly, holds the heat, wears well, is light ana not too expensive, One of the quickest, simplest and best enjoyed first course appetizers is a halved grapefruit or Ugli fruit. Garnish centre with maraschino or mint cherry, Ever tried combining peanut butâ€" ter with mashed bananas for a sandâ€" wich filling? The childrenâ€"and the grownâ€"ups tooâ€"will beg for more. Give spinach an air of elegance and piquancy of flavor by serving it with Hollandaise sauce. And don‘t forget the garnish of hardâ€"boiled egg slices, Recessed mirrored shelves small dining room are both . tive and uscful and add a : touch. E T id EC ED CEOT TV soft brush until all the dust has removed. Parchment shades Cz wiped clean with a suft cloth. The best method of cleaning fabâ€" ric lampshades is to brush with a haw db n 2o ie n dn ie sn e o coc mt t t eC eR WTEnP CECEpPE with border (chopped hardâ€"cooked egg, cream cheese, chopped parsley, minced olives, or other suitable mixâ€" tures). Decorate centres with garâ€" nishes, such as pimiento stars, green pepper cut in fancy shapes, sprigs of parsley, fillets of anchovy, â€" grated cheese, mayonnaise, sliced olives, or tiny slices of tomato. Serve on indiâ€" vidual plates as first course of dinâ€" ner, or pass on tray for buffet enw_ COO0 1000 PW OIICEM . RHTCERS Shape with cutter in squares, circles, strips, triangles, crescents, or any deâ€" sired shapes. Toast or saute on one side and spread toasted side with bighly seasoned mixtures, such as finely minced sardines and _ lemon jJuice, chopped parsley in butter, caâ€" viar and minced onion, olives and cheese, etc. â€" Garnish each _ canape AC 7° Tek enl uit o7 stzviin ul ews c d ' 4::;,"; 1G H N Â¥VAaYV . 1 tablespoon chili sauce 4 teaspoon paprika 4 teaspoon vinegar 1 tablespcon pimiento, finely chopâ€" ped &4 cup mayonnaise Combine ingredients and blend. Clull. Makes % cup dressing. Hot Mayonnaise Puffs 1 cup mayonnaise 1 egg white, stiffly beaten Canape crackers Fold mayonnaise into egg white gently but thoroughly. Pile on crackâ€" ers and toast under broiler 1 minute or until delicately browned and puffâ€" ed. Arrange on platter. gut stale bread i;l NJ ped 6 slices bread, cut in ‘4â€"inch slices ‘» cup Russian Dressing. Cut hardâ€"cooked eggs in halves, lengthwisc, and remove yolks. Blend yolks, anchovy paste, seasonings, and parsley to smooth paste. Refill whites and chill. Cut bread with 3â€" inch round cutter. Toast on one side only. Spread with butter. Cut out centres with 1%â€"inch cutter. and place chilled egg in each circle so that it sets firmly. Pour on Russian Dressing. Garnish with water cress. Serves 6. 1 package lime jelly powder 1% cups warm water %4 cup vinegar 4 teaspoon salt 4 cup stuffed olives, sliced 4& cup sweet pickles, sliced Dissolve jelly powder in warm water. Add vinegar and salt. Chill. When slightly thickened, fold in olives and pickles. Turn into individual molds, filling them %% full. Chill until firm. Unmold on crisp lettuce,. Serve as relish with fish. Makes 12 halfâ€" molds, 2 cups mixed fruit, diced anrd chillâ€" ed (pears, peaches, cherrios, pineapple, etc.) Dissolve jelly powder in warm water. Pour in shallow pan. Chill until firm. Cut into %â€"inch cubes, Comâ€" bine with fruit. Pile info sherbet glasses, adding a small amount of fruit juice to each serving. Serves 8 hardâ€"cooked eggs 1 tablespoon anchovy paste 4 teaspoon Woreestershire sauce Dash of paprika 1 tablespoon parsley, finely chopâ€" Household Hints _ NoOoN! nicHt/ ise, sliced olives, or nato. Serve on indiâ€" first course of dinâ€" tray for buffet supâ€" @ shelves in a are both decoraâ€" d add a modern Mâ€"inch slices, costly is been can be Sheets are usually folded in half. Table linen is folded in half and again in fourths. These folds should be changed occasionally, The iron should always be moved along the threads of the material, either _ lengthwise â€" or crosswise, Clothes except pongee, should be ironed damp, Ironing clothes is sometimes quite a problem, but when the best method is understood, everything becomes much simpler. Lath C SA 2P SIUeN HHH women in every part of Canada, Read what Mrs. C. Wilson, 612 Park St., Nia‘cnn Falls, Ont., said : "My kidneys. didn‘t une» tmmpcrly and_my rest was often dis» t at night. Dr. Pierce‘s Aâ€"nuric was the medicine that helped me. I certain! had a tran‘ time_of it before i used ‘Aâ€"nuric‘ but since I have started to take these tablets 1 have improved beyond my exbectation« * Should Iron Along T hread Of Goods where the family usually gathers. For modern interiors the hassocks get larger and largerâ€"even four feet in diameter and placed in a corner of a living room, where the covering might be fur cloth resembling leopard, tiger, bear or angora, "re YOUR KIDNEYS? mo s Cm omany. CEReEeh": ent shapes. In the bedroom it is placed at the foot of the bed and usually covered with the same colored materâ€" ial as the epreads or draperies, It may have rows and rows of fringe hanging to the ftoor. Some are upâ€" holstered in satin materials and othâ€" ers in leather, They are very convenâ€" lent and satisfactory for game rooms, too, and for other informal rooms where the The old fashioned hassock is coming back into the home furnishing picâ€" ture, and is uailablg in many differâ€" g:z to Leather; Fur Cloth Approved Hassock Is Back uy of your druggist now, tablets 65c "ASPIRIN®" . ?"* i #~ Limited, of Windsor, Ontario. Look for the name Bayer in the form of a cross on every tablet, The "Aspirin‘" method of relievâ€" ing colds is the way many doctors approve. You take "Aspirin‘ for relhief â€"then if you are not i ved promptly, you call the lamilmwr. ©@ "Aspirin‘ tablets aro made in Car)uda. *"Aspirin‘ is the registered woRks 14 2 Wats On BISCOMFORT OF headibolds, . . _ . .7 _ ~~ CCC Here is what to do: Take tw *Aspirin‘ tablets when you feel : cold w?&g onâ€"with :‘full glass o water. in repeat, if necessary according to directions in each pack Here is what to do: Take two *‘Aspirin‘ tablets when you feel a cold coming onâ€"with a fall glass of water. Then repeat, if necessary, according to directions in each pack. age. Relief comes rapidly. 3 1\&3 ‘fngl.iljy need neglect even minor In Home Favor f Tablets have been found very benefiâ€" cial. The action of this stimulant diuâ€" ’ retic in flushing the kidneys, diluting acid, and relievi:g given relicf to men a ;0*® drink a full glass of water. Repeat treat« ment in 2 hours. MADE IN CANADA ed , *Z8e condition which affects t backward writing is mental, to iny ::_y of thinking, and to her a natwal a case for a p;ycli‘ "The condition whi The peculiarity is not op and could not be changed by mecording to P. H,. Mon: Windsor optometrist, We don‘t think anythiny «© i. Agnes was unusually keen to /n when she was a baby and we ==>»t her how to write, But she nlways wrote with her left hand and {=kâ€" wards and the writing had to +o {4 up to a mirror to be read Hea school teacher taught her }» 0 write with her right hand. mirror-vriti-( ll‘-l(}.;n‘il\ ‘ ~V-' ur and more mature than straiphs v%â€" ing with her right hand. "Agnes‘ sight is perfect!y and she doesn‘t see thingy> it comes to writing. It‘s mow ral for her to write backwa~ her left hand than normally 1 rightâ€"and she does both. Tenâ€"yearâ€"old Agnes _Wind-or, is just about the With Left Handâ€"Can Be Child Continually Writes Backw:">: Another girl who carricd dard of prairie pulchritud« international field is E) wood, the Saskatoon Lily, n tiful athlete at the Amstorc pics 10 years ago. Her lithe . loveliness stirred the how ands who saw her. Reck points to Deanna 1 young film star from Winni representative of Western i its best, Deanna, he says, is than the ideal, Reck squints one eye and d@imensions and other derails is," he said, "a brunette, a>« feet four inches tall, She is = ish in appearance, with the so" of approaching womanhood 8J in a lithe, athletic figure." #°° 20 Fears Steel bas been hing his shutters at debutantes, brides und girl athletes of all sizes, shapes ond hues, studying their Jineamens in der varied conditions of lighting Most Often a Brunctts Bob Reck, a Winnipeg artist, pick up where Steel Jleaves off who» m rhapsodizes, "You can oee her riding in the foothills outside Calgary, snow» shocing near Winnipeg, or even zoing about her work on a Sasknichowan farm." _A sportswoman and a lady," phrase Hatry Steel, veteran © man of Winnipeg, used to ep the type of beauty most represe) of Manitoba, Saskatchewan : An "ineffable western air; ing, rather gallant quality guishes the prairie dream & her sisters on either side. The workingman, she said, liked to have a wife whom he 1c was his 4n. ferior, The reason was because he was kept rigidly in his place by his own boss that when he gor home from work he wanted to have £Omeone he in turn could boss, "T», wealthy ‘man on the other end of ho Scale likes to use his wife as n BUDStitute for the beauty he himse}{ |s 1 wble to create. So he turns ho into a dummy upon which to hang diamonds and beautiful clothes." Chivalry Oldâ€"Fashiones Miss B. A. Godwin, of the Associa. tion of Women Clerks and Secretap ies, described as "nonsense nnd olg. fashioned" talk of chivalry in indug try. The chief underlying aim, she de clared, was to keep women aw :\ from the various fields of employment, For 20 years Steel has hbee; 20 Emem “‘l-'!‘nQ _ond public relations at the Londoyp (Cng.) Board of Education, Starteq something when he gave , COnference of women his idea of mere MAN‘S pep, son for placing wome» on a pedesta, They do so primarily, he saiq becAuge they believe woman wil} :« bro0me immobilized and unable 1, Step dowp and compete with him. Emotional Dummics *"Mear, hear," came the pontaneop chorus of approval from 1h» audienge and several prominent repres@Ntative of women‘s organizations added they ungqualified vocal support. ‘‘Men dony put women on pedestals to ennoble them," said Mrs, P. E. o nmu‘\ of the National Union 0; Womep Teachers. "Both rich and poor mep like to keep their women ow sepay ate from the working word as dum miés upon which to hans their qwp emotions," British Educationist Say, It‘s § They Can‘t Come Down and Compete With Man Why Pedestals Provinces Is Lithe, Dashing For ean make out this is Durbin Younger Girl Athletic W_omenfolk?a T ‘il‘e(‘lol‘ of Read ntc llm 1e IM hew ht AUge he > by his me from ‘COne he \‘cum 16 Scale 1bstitute not able into a iamontys five PM ve#s ing Tize 8t rom ve Alâ€" sight hours of starting wor The wall is of threeâ€"inch ghed ‘externally with weas hg, with underfelting and : Jnish sof a three quarter inc And threequarter4ach plas &A wall of this type has ¢ pulating qualities than a brick wall, it is contended there is no need to wait for vut, the house is habitable : it is crected. on a tiny body. Al commercial instituti country have been c in its contines while tria «population 4,080 contributed little but stood ready to servic countryside, with pl resources. ‘Toronto kame position if it wll the rest of Canad: lies with a T5amile : BEHIXD THI taneously with 3 trian coup came surgent drive in such successes | armies wore be toward the soa a was rapidly draw Genevieve Tab The tourist not keep Aus Red Cedar Finds Favor In Brita NO MoORE HA raising days of t baiting season arn the University o The Student Gove last week 10 abs gether, the genera for the past coup endary hazins has n TME FINAL GOAL: An e in ‘The Yorkshire Post, inf British newspaper which is ow the family of Mrs. Authony E« belteve is well worth quoting 1 "Germany‘s final gow! inaugurated by the A the newspaper declared destruction of Prance, French territory, but, as {Adolf Hitler‘s autoblog Itical testament) sets o Germany‘s | last serion military rival and this i for the seizure of as : eastwardâ€"as she may eastern i trary are from C student crepeâ€"h The met apon the wall sectic both hous Jight hour Commentary on the Highlights of the f1 flw H "The milita tria will be fo Czechoslovakis Preâ€"Fabricated Walls In | Highly Resistant tc Weather jwo "show" in 11 workin *h Colymbia tot proof an int. inces O 94 .004 HI en all tober t th »ll hay ions. Th sos were WITHOI onfli MMi )lo Ind () 17 O Week‘s N 00 M t to h b