only instruments to ‘guide‘ her. Last July 1 Mrs. SheMoon #scaped death when a plaresin:â€"which she was riding was struck 4d *midâ€"air by a plane piloted _ by _ Hom Chapple, killed im the accident. Native of Nev»'w, Mrs. Shelfoon went to h a few months ago. To qualify for the license she had to »4ly > #blind" over a crossâ€"country «ourse, with Possession ofâ€" the . bertificate will entitle Mrs. Shelfoon to pilot passenger planes, but she gaid she doss not expect to er the eontrols of an air linc husâ€" band is one of 2:’ boldâ€" ing a transport t‘s ~A and the couple is belnv" A the first in %anada to rï¬%ï¬cb a certificate. _ Pn k C y ols â€" Euit o l .. Mrs. Daphne Skheifoon, member of the Hamilton Aero Cfilb,r is beâ€" lieved to| be the first woman in Canada to qualify for a public transport airplane ~pilot‘s certifiâ€" eate. It was announced she had passed successfully all tests of the department of civil=aviation and that she shortly would receive her certificate. * o e ce 0 Mrs. Daphne Shelfoon of Hamâ€" ilton, Ontario, Passes ‘All Tests of Civil. Aviation Violets are seen everywhere in overwhelming quantities. Canada‘s First= Woman Pilot Brickâ€"reds, Violets ~ Among colors worth watching.are dull and bright peacock, as well as old gold. Smart comers are. the shades between red and ‘brown; operitif, old port, Maderia, sherry, vermouth, _ rustyâ€"reds, Pempeian, terraâ€"cotta, carnelian and the wood tones, such as mahogany, rosewood and sandalwood. Rosy Georgian brickâ€"reds are prevalent. Soldier: red jackets, trimmings or sports costumes entirely of this shade: lend bright accents to the style picâ€" ture. Cerise and magenta are wagâ€" ing a violent offensive against their paler sisters; Florentine pink is sure to triumph. 3 PARIS.â€"The winter collections Introduce many novel color gamuts, both rich and piquant. But buyers and smart women have the last word concerning their style perâ€" manenecy. A few stayers are all of the wine as well as many of the fruit tomes, such as currant, mulâ€" berry, plum, prune, raisin, date and amethyst. Lichen and fernâ€"greens are quietly maintaining their style ground. Grays are assured color facts; all shades are good from ron to pearl; and that holds good. for all hours. Greys tinged with blue or amethyst are especially notable. . Elephantâ€"gray is import ant especially for accessories of suedeâ€"surfaced leathers, as shoes, bags and belts; these accompany green, wine, purple. redâ€"brown or black costumes Fruit Tones Dominate in Paris Collectionrs for Autumn and Rich, Piquant _ Hues Featured she hoes or weeds, transplants the young rice, or cuts the winter wheat. In autumn she moves with bent back down the field with a sickle, helping menfolk "cut and thresh the riceâ€"the major crop of Japan. Two farm jobs seem exclusively hers, the picking of tea leaves and the tending of silkâ€" worms. w0 Other _ household duties are quickly done. Except among theâ€" wellâ€"toâ€"do, the general custom of poing to public baths and buying readyâ€"made clothing frees the women from many hours of houseâ€" work. The cotton kimonas are washed out and hung to dry on poles run through the sleeves. Stretching on the pole is the only ironing necessary. Country Women In Fields The country woman, after givâ€" ing the family a quick breakfast of rice, pickles and hot tea, ties the baby on her back and makes for the fields. With kimona tucked up, she engages in aoy kind of farm labor. Sometimes she works alone, more often side by â€"side with husband or son. In the spring A minimum of‘ tim& qd Iffior. is required to get the Japanese family started etery nby;in;,,Bod\, quilts are rolled up and put awdy ‘ in a closet. ~«Chopsticks rrqd bowls are rinsed out in either‘ hot "or cold water and.left to.dry, saysâ€" the N H.ional "(Iw)zrnphi:r’:\lazl- zine. Even Me®Alaily.cookin® takes little tinte. Figh and rice are the staples. .F'i!f'l"txï¬l')ften eaten raw, and rice € cooked at ‘any time and w {;di- in .a wooden: tub ;» be s(eï¬vzh"mld. Vegetables are few. Peas are cooked in‘ the pod, and the big white carrots and cabbages are pickler. " > Micimum Time Speat in Cookâ€" â€" ing and DishwosKing= . Women in Japan .: For Fall. Have Few Chores® t to t ver the iir liner, husâ€" 13-Cua boldâ€" lot‘s and elieved ‘te be the to receivg such a ae 2 o h a few I 1 Igtior)‘| [ 5 anese | "o" ,‘Bed'-..‘! ~ es 60 awiay ‘ . { howls l » e ot "or ue «avs» l uhi t * ~concgrcssonme pevaimeiom Fisk drove his" men without mercy, but it was maddeningly futile work, his blind grappling, this interminable experimenting with one device after another, He became irritable and jumpy; his hands shook when he wiped the stinging sweat out of his eyes; he cursed the desert aloud when its heat rendered the work doubâ€" ly hard. Working on that Jerrick floor was like working upon a bed of coals. Every piece of metâ€" al that flesh fell upon was hot Don maintained this hopeful atâ€" titude; in his wife‘s presence he continued to be cheery, but out at the Homestake, where he‘ spent twentyâ€"four hours, he was anyâ€" thing but optimistic. Nor was he a pleasant person to get along with. _ Under ordinary â€" cireumâ€" stances he would have refused to be unduly perturbed by the oil game and grappling blindly for a bit stem in the bottom of a steelâ€" lined shaft a quarter of a mile deep is slow work at best. Someâ€" times it takes weeks. ** But cireumstances were not orâ€" dinary;: Gloria‘s heart was set on catching that boat, the days were slipping past, and Don could no longer blind himself to the truth that she was seriously ill and ought to go. And yet there was mnobody here he could send with her, nor could he leave until the well was in. The directors wouldâ€" n‘t stand for that, ‘even if he could bring himself to.do such a thing. It so happenedâ€"as it usuâ€" ally does happenâ€"that no time in the entire history of the comâ€" pany‘s operations could have been more unpropitious than the presâ€" ent for a mishap such as this. The treasury was low, there were bank loans soon to be .met! Nothing less than big new "production" could avert a serfous crisis. If he lost the Homestake, the company was w’re'cke_t!. hi enough to blister; the stale waater For two days his nightly report was the, same. Had the.â€"acetdent occurred earlier, he would ~bave proceeded, ‘upon failurg to txap ple the troublesome bit, stem,,;t0 sidetrack the ‘obstruction, so he explained. In other"‘ words . Khe would have ‘drilléd past" it‘ y alâ€" lowing the second. *bit‘to be deflectâ€" ed by the first. The lost, tool was, in reality: a fortyâ€"foot stéel shaft. standing in. the bottom‘ â€" of!: the" hole, and it weighed many hunâ€" dreds of pounds. Inasmuch as it was tipped so that its upper end rested against the side of the well, it was not easy to get hold of it. This new drilling would have reâ€" sulted in a erooked hole fiftv or sixty feet deep andâ€" would have left the obstructing tool standing upon a shelf of rock. By explodâ€" ing a small shot a few feet below this shelf the lost bit could have been dropped into the pockei â€" sidetrackedâ€"after which the old shaft could have been carried on. Not to Worry But Fisk declared he was afraid to attempt this maneuver so close to the structure. Other oil men had warned him against doing so. Twice something of the sort .had been tried in the El Centro field and in each instance a ruined well had resulted. The shots had searâ€" ed the rockâ€"due perhaps to some peculiar characteristic of the forâ€" mation. Again he told his wife not to worry; new . fishing tools were on the way up from the coast; McKay might have the obâ€" struction out before they arrived â€"in fact, he might get hold of that stem at. any moment. That was the way witl fishing jobs. > ‘Cool Waters _ e s S S #§ by REX BEACH Don left again during the most cruel heat of the afternoon; he returned _ about midnight . and Gloria gathered from what he told her that these fishing jobs were tedious at best and that the crew was getting along as well as could be expected. + s " ho lmes _ Synopsis ._ Young, ambitious and efficient Donald Fisk of New York, enginâ€" eer and key field man for a small oil corporation, is sent into the desert heat of El Centro, S.A., to bring in paying wells in a very promising fheld. He takes his young wife, Gloria, with him and together they endure the soulâ€" trying heat and dust in the blazâ€" ing desert. Against great odds, the drilling has progressed until Fisk is certain that oil will be sruck, so he makes steamer reserâ€" vations to take them home and away from the hardships his young wife has endured so bravely. Gloria is beside herself with joy and days too soon starts to pack luggage. Then . . . NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY. t i 4 + Futile Work CHAPTER IV . _ Parquet flooring needs to be well brushed, dusted and then cleaned occasionally with a good «wax polish softened with turpenâ€" â€"tine and then polished . with a weighted polisher covered with a Some corks will stick, no matter what you do with them, but next time just try dipping them in pure glycerine and you will not find that they will stick again. Fill a large old spoon with alum powder and heat this over a gas jet until it melts. (it is betâ€" ter to use an iron spoon for this purpose.) Smear the broken edges of a china or glass article with this preparation while it is still hot and liquid, then press firmly together. It makes a very secure join. It sometimes happens that a door hinge will work loose owing to its weight making the holes too big. This fault can be got over by plugging the screw holes with dead matches or thick pieces of wood, if the holes are very big. Sharpen the driving end of each of the plugs. _ If your electric door bell is getâ€" ting a bit weak you can easily remedy this by buying a little salâ€" ammonias, then mixing this with some water (about three pints to half a pound) and filling up the battery jar with the solution. Have some plaster of Paris and mix it with milk instead of water to fill up holes in walls. The milk prevents the plaster from setting too quickly, and it also makes it waterproof when it is set and therefore immune from the efâ€" fects of damp. This mixture can also be used for filling up any holes or knocks in the wall before it is papered. Two strands of string and two large needles make these squares quick to knit. As only the easiest stitches are used even a beginner will enjoy making them. They‘re lovely for a bedspread. ‘Pattern 1867 contains directions for making square; illustrations of it and of stitches; materials required; photograph of square. > Send 20 cents in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this patâ€" tern to Wilson Needlecraft Dept., 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Write plainly pattern number, your name and address. » € "We‘ll catch the next" "boat," sure." esimevalt inilhal cit cce uh recun wb Fisk nodded; his facé Was workâ€" ing. "I know. But T:â€"can‘t leave. 1 can‘tâ€"without : throwing: away everything we‘ve fought for. The so. Oh, Don, I haven‘t 'strengtii left to stand another disappointâ€" ment !" Fisk told his wife grimly one day that ‘they could not make the boat. She took the announcement much as she would thave taken a blow in the face. It left her pallid andstricken with something infinâ€" itely worse than pain. She crept away, and a few minutes later he found her weeping. She made no sound, there was no expression of grief upon her face, but tears of utter exhaustion were coursing down her cheeks. Â¥ To Miss the Boat "Honey! Honey girl!‘ her husâ€" band cried in agony. "Don‘t take it like that!" f She tried to smile. "I‘m so tired, Don! I‘ve been planning that he and his men swilled down their throats was tepid, and ‘even in their sleep they were thirsty. Household Hints [JIFFYâ€"KNIT SQUARE oys im h (Wo pate Nee 1000 hk uie d \l". ol + acipntntt you‘re boiling <anything capecially for women from wmm herbs and roots, helps Nature tone up your system and thus calms irritable nerves and gives you mmore pep to really enjoy life. * For om‘:o years one 'o-.nvh- told anâ€" Tnwale funstidnal gnarders with Piersrat Compound. Let it belp YOU!I the difference. HOW YOU CAN ATTRACT MEN Hot hands can be refreshed with a powder made of two parts talcum powder mixed with one part_ borax. Worm holes in furniture can be filled almost invisibly by this method. Crush some whitening and mix linseed oil to a paste. Buy a little â€"coloring matter of the right shade and mix it. Add a very little french polish just beâ€" fore filling the holes. Polish when quite hardened. Hairbrushes can be. cleaned with pipeclay instead of washing them in the ordinary way. Sprinâ€" kle the pipeclay dover the brushes until the bristles are filled with it. Leave for 15 minutes, shake out, and then rub the brushes togethâ€" er to get all the clay out. . Open the oven door after the gas has been alight for a few minâ€" utes; it lets the stéam out and the oven will heat up quicker. And never lét a gas jet flare up around the sides of a saucepan. It‘s wasteful. It‘s the underneath of the saucepan you want to heat, not the air around it! in a saucepan, and it needs a lid, place a bowl of water over the pan in place of it. You‘ll have hot water for washing un then. A washingâ€"up bowl of water placed in the oven, if you‘ve space for it, also gets hot enough for washing up while the rcast cooks. Table knives.â€"If handles are stained, a good rubbing with a soft cloth sprinkled with peroxide of hydrogen will restore them to their original color. gold. Monoethyvienediaminoteranaproâ€" phyldisromogold. Tha.lousacetylacetone. ~.Ethylsnediamine. Hyd:oxyquinoline. s Diamondicthylether. * When scientists got together at Cambridge, England, for the meetâ€" ing of the British Association for the Advancement of Science, a new high in long words was struck by Profâ€"ssor Charles Gibson of Lundon University when he spoke on chemistry. Some of ths words be used were:. Dibenzylshulphidddiethylbromoâ€" New High Reached In Lengthy Words Day after day the work at the well went on. Many. times Fisk was tempted to blast, but the men talked him out of the idea. (TO BE CONTINUED). s "I suppose so." Gloria > tried unsueccessfully to check the tears. **My people, ‘too! We wouldn‘t have our triurmph, would wé? You mustn‘t mind me. I‘m such a baby! I‘lH be all right as soon as I get home." M company will go to ‘smashâ€"you understand!â€" I‘d chuckâ€"it ad if it were mine, but the crowd relies on me. They‘d never forgive me. I‘d .be. a quitter!" _ PATTERN 1867 VA;! TORONTO "It has long been mg contention that women‘s place in the political scene is becoming more and more importent," she said. "When you consider that it has been only 20 years we‘ve had the vate, it is phenomenal the extent to which "women are participating in the atâ€" fairs of their community, state and country." $200 For Any Old When making mustard add a drop of salad oil. This improves flavour and appearance. Lamp or Lantern! She said that women‘s "sixth sense" and the common sense deâ€" rived from the household and childâ€"rearing problems prevented them from being fooled easily. Men can be, she intimated, beâ€" cause they haven‘t had such valuâ€" able experience. Sixth Sense Is Aid To Women An inherent "sixth sense" and ages of experience in â€"running households and raising children qualify women especially for parâ€" ticipation in public affairs, said Mrs. Millard E. Tydings in a talk at Baltimore last week. 14 eup chopped walnut meats Bring sugar and cream to a boil, stirring constantly. Boil, without" stirring, until a small amount of syrup forms a very soft ball in cold wauter (232 degrees F.). Cool to lukewarm (110 deâ€" grees F.); beat until creamy and of right consistenâ€"y to spread. Add vanilla and n:uts, spread quickly. If necessary, place over hot water to keep soft while spreading. Household Experiernce And Child Raising Qualifies .. BLACK CHOCOLATE CAKE 2% cups sifted cake flour 1 teaspoon baking powder 4 teaspoon each soda and salt % cup butter or other shortenâ€" ing 2 cups sugar 3 egzgs, well beater 4 squares unswectened chocoâ€" late, melted 1 cup water 1 teaspoon vanilla Sift flour once, measure, add baking powder, soda, and salt, and sift together three times. Cream buiter; â€" add â€" sugar â€" gradually, creaming t,horouphl_\:. Add egrgs and beat very well; then chocolate and blend. Add flour, alternately with water, a small amount at a time, beating after each addition until smooth. Add vanilla. Bake in greased pan, 10â€" x 10 x 2 inâ€" ches, in moderate oven (325. deâ€" grees F.) 1 hour and 10 minutes. This cake is delicious with the folâ€" lowing frosting. 4 Here is a chocolate cake which will answer any demandâ€"whether it be for a party, family dinner, or a fancy tea. . .Of‘all the things that. chocelate glorifies with its | rich, . lascions flavour, chocolate cake is the one that.reigns supremé. And &n ideal ‘chocolate cake cannot be made by simplyâ€"adding chocolate to your favourite cake recipe.> Chocglate contains a.considerable amount of starch as well as cocoa butter and it cannot be added successfully to a plain cake recipe without cHangâ€" ing the amounts of some of the other . ingredients. Cocoa should rever be substituted in any recipe which calls for. chocolate. because chocolate, is so much | richer in cocoa butter than cocoa, it makes a richer, more tender cake and one which remains moist longer. For the best results, the ingredâ€" ients specified im each recipe should be used. 2 cups sugar 1 cup sour cream 1 teaspoon vanilla SOUR CREAM FROSTING CLORIFYING Chccolate Cake. For Public Life For change â€"Robert 1 * Monthly, I verily believe My fair impression may Be all from that one day No shadow crossed but ours As through the blazing flowers We went from hnines L. se g Happiness Makes Up In Height For What It Lacks In Length Oh stormy, stormy world, The days you were not swirled Around with mist and cloud. Or wrapped as in a shroud, And the sun‘s brilliant bail Was not in part or all Obscured from morta‘ view, Were days so very fow I can but wonder whence 1 get the lasting sense Ot so much warmth and light, if my mistrust is right It may be aitogether From one day‘s perfect weather wÂ¥ °> ls ul 3 OO P CCOWET enb When, starting clear at dawn The day went clearly on To finish clear at eve. Passengers of the Nascopie, ships oflicers and six red coated Royal Canadian Mounted Police attended the wedding for which the bride travelled more than 7,000 \miles. The wedding was held about 400 miles north of the Arctic Circle and 1,100 miles from the North Pole. Flowers, Arctic Poppies _ Flags and Arctic poppies, picked by Eskimo children, decorated the saloon. ‘The ceremony was perâ€" formed by Rev, A. Fleming, Angliâ€" can bishop of the Arctic. The bridegroom was formerly of Forgue, Scotland, and the bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Wallace of Peterhead, Scotland. The ceremony was held in the saâ€" loon of the Government supply ship Nascopie, now on its annual Areâ€" tic tour. Probably the most northerly white wedding ever celebrated in the Dominion, took place at Arctic Bay on the northern shores of Bafâ€" fin Island last week, when Allan Robertson Scott, Hudson‘s Bay Company post manager married Eileen Christina Wallace. Picturesque Ceremony at Arctic §ay, Hudson‘s Bay Company The guests admitted, in a body, that sweaters and skirts were all they wanted. Cardigans and pullâ€" overs might be of different shades, several skirts are essential, but with.the exception, of "gadgets" to enliven the outfit, it was a uniform that they had no desire to change. "Gadgets" include costume jewelry, charm bracelets, tricky lapel ornaâ€" ments and scarves. . Sensible Slippers Lounging pyjamas might as well not be packed for these students who study in flannel robes, zipperâ€" ed down in the front. Nor should you send your daughter off with cunning mules, ostrich?%betrimmed. They all wear flatâ€"heeled, soft slipâ€" pers. College rules demand quiet in the dormitories, As far as lingerie goes they want pyjamas copied from their brothers, a few ho‘lding out for nighties. Most Northerly White Wedding A Boston story held a "college clinic‘ recently and obtained some surprising information. After a tea party, lovely clothes were brought out â€" with not a twinkle of interâ€" est. College Clothes Remain Simple Sweaters and Skirts Are Still The Most Popular went from houié-tt;-;o:é. change of solitude. pbert Frost, in The Atlantic Christies Biscuits "Jhere‘s a Chri:t; ‘Biscuit for every taste . Sortvapisipaiapt $ sp wreristeamatisiah se ci i Mh Gum as an aid to strong, healthy m. cleanses tlrem of fooddp.l’:- , massages the gums. Aids diâ€" facais: Helps heep you heshtng? meals, you thy Take uom:l::pme for the children ibetr? > lsnt t eacdscac ic k o 0:0‘ tfuy‘ wl‘ll I?n‘ltl coss â€"â€"Plenty of Styles To Black is as popular as ever, and your first fall street dress more than likely will be black. But for the second one or for an afternoon mode, look at the color situation carefully before choosing < black again, Wine, plum, rust, lavender, purple, mustard, teal blue, sage green and elephant gray are not to be dismissed lightly. It takes more time and thought to introduce colâ€" or into your wardrobe, but the reâ€" sults can be worth the effort. However, :o varied is the fall and winter dress picture that no shopper, whatever her personal likes and dislikes, possibly could have any difficulty finding an acâ€" cepted style that is especially flatâ€" tering to her. Daytime skirts are quite short (14 to 16 inches from the floor, deâ€" pending on the shape of your legs). The majority are flared, although straight,; slim versions and those with spaced pleats are featured, too. Bodices are fitted to accentuâ€" ate the bosom, make the waistline tiny and hips slim. High necklines take the spotlight. Shoulders are very definitely square, and long sleeves are favored by most couturâ€" iers. * NEW YORK.â€"New fall daytime dresses dramatize natural feminine curves and are, for the most part, essentially youthful. Daytime Dresses For Fall Stress Youthful Lines Issue No, 38â€"‘38 2, O â€" _ like _ _ them sODA CRACKERSâ€" PREMIUM Choose From wutons> spniser & @ aude %@) + * Australia wi #radio communi Also comp} extension to ‘tion project, tion of anoth This would b Marie distric: The su is all tha this yoar tawa, cor until som liest. is ph)'nh:..., po to be detormi: momically fous hvol\'c the cor ©cross Swift (%; frrigation of o land . Would Water 7 Reha) katch engin for t1 yet i Big Irrigati« Survey C« th 18 Th RE O1 s O b fi W th n M Problem Wi able One ern â€" Sask Grasshopp Dlmllze H An 0 mCtio at thi failing tirem: cipal ed on Mi 45 ve Born Perth C taught . Ottawa to Port who ree was Soq mer â€" pr teaching toria C« from Co entered Ottawa | affains « John A. ister. 11 )1 Port R« Hospi(a ing ilin Ran A W Samwel Henry + lisher, Dies at Hi D 46 San M l t O For