an Althoush Â¥vonne, Annette, Ceâ€" cile, Emilie and Marie Dionne are the only living quintuplets they are not the first quints born in Canada. Dr. Norma Ford, assistant profesâ€" sor in human biology, at the Uniâ€" versity of Toronto, claims. Knows 47 Cases Dr. Ford has for some months been investigating record of mulâ€" tiple births and has added two auâ€" thenticated cases of quintuplet births to the 45 cases already known. Of these two new cases, the Canadian quints were born Feb. 15, 1$80, to Mrs. Adam Murray at Egypt, N.S., near New Glasgow. The babies, three girls and two boys, did not long survive. The other case was in Italy in 1914. Professor of Biclogy at Toronto University Cites A Case of In Canada Before Quints Were Born Germany has made it clear to France and England that the Reich‘s colonial empire will have to be restored before a general European peace can be guaranâ€" teed. Of the former German possessions in Africa, shown in black, France holds a mandate over Togoland (1) and Camerâ€" cons (2) with a minor interest alâ€" lowed to Britain in both; South Africa (5) holds a mandate for Southwest Africa (3) and Britâ€" ain a mandate for Tanganyika (4). Is in the Late Afterzoon A Half Hour or So Before the Evening Meal In Beginners must be willing to acâ€" eept for their first jobs anything that will provide experience, acâ€" eording to Helen M. Patterson, proâ€" fessor of journalism at the Univerâ€" sity of Wisconsin. Women succeed best in placing themselves in those jobs which do not interest men or for which men do not qualify, Miss Patterson said. She also pointed out the need for organized groups of writers to interest the schools ¢f journalism in offering courses of practical value to women writers. What Journalism Schools Do At present journalism schools centre their activities around techâ€" nical training for newspaper reportâ€" ing. Yet the demand for women writers in the newspaper field is deâ€" cidedly meagre compared to the great demand for women journal ists in the magazine, editorial, and the promotional fields. Reporting and publicizing within the food, cosmetic, and apparel industries is largely woman‘s exclusive field, as is writing on such specialized topâ€" ics as home decoration, child care, public welfare, and certain phases of education. Although women stuâ€" dents make up a large part of the student body of the journalism schols, recognition of the special ©pportunities open to women, or a survey of the field in which they may work, is not generally included in the service of the schools. The Proper Time To T ake Exercise Beginners eept for th that will ; eording to 1 fessor of jo sity of WisC best in plac jobs which for which n Patterson s out the nee of writers . of journalis: practical va What Jo At presen How To Start A Viriting Careger Cevinners Must Be Willicg To 7 ake Ary Job for Experience Cermany Wants Them n al M FAlDn h helpi aws He : most doy caten a and a light lunch piece of candy or banana, or bread or 5 o‘clock, and xerciseâ€"golf, ridâ€" n, walking, tennis e should have his 1 a half to an hour ning meal so that d digestive forces â€" best. Eating the ercise eal al when tired is al time for the or professional ecening and before retirâ€" blood away ns G in "What‘s that? No, but I‘d know them. Later, one killed the other with his own knife. Both desperâ€" ate characters." Dan‘e eyes roved to the corners. That jarred her too! "I thought there might be some little thing, unimportant, of course, which you might not care to have get out?" Mrs. McDonald was very disâ€" turbed that he knew the remainâ€" "Yes. But I haven‘t informed the police yet. We‘ll have to, soon, of course, but your instructions in Mr. Graber‘s officeâ€" Yes, there were two. It was with a knife, in a taxiâ€"cab during a traffic tieup. Corner of Broadway and Alton. That stirred her! Colwell had thought it would. She was breathâ€" less an instant. "You do?" "I know who the murderers are, Mrs. McDonald." He listened attentively, putting in a word here and there. Graduâ€" ally the lawyer‘s imposter wife calmed her tumultuous grief that should, to be convincing, have been a trifle less tumultuous and a bit more hysterical. He waited. Several gasps came to his ears and a wailing "Oh dear! Oh dear!""‘ She went through her act, but it did not strike Colâ€" well as a very good act. She nevâ€" er could earn a living in the smallâ€" est stage part that required emoâ€" tion. Of course, when one poses as the wife of a man who lived and died a bachelor. . . . No "Mrs. MeDonald" There was no Mrs. McDonald and never had been. Colwell had been aware of that from the first. "If you want it stranght out then, something has happened to your husband. I thought perhaps the police had been there? Someâ€" thing very serious. I‘m sorry, Mrs. McDonald, but your husband was murdered an hour or so ago." "I am very sorry, Mrs. McDonâ€" ald," Dan reported over the teleâ€" phone later. "I have some very bad news and 1 don‘t know how to tell you. Brace yourself, Mrs. McDonald. It‘s very bad indeed. Dan felt genuinely sorry for Soup Catterby. It was his fault that he had been murdered by the revengeful Quillen jumping at conclusions. Although the dead man himsel?{ had participated in a murder an hour or so ago; he was a rat. Another Knife Straining to see better, Colwell did at last attain a partial view. Bradshaw, alias Soup Catterby, huddled grotesquely in alley filth, his shoulders against the brick wall of a skyscraper. A look of unâ€" speakable agony etched lines from his twisted nose to his mouth, from the corners of his mouth downward, and in parâ€"‘lel grooves in his gaunt cheeks. lie had the same terrible expression MceDonâ€" ald had worn. "Betcha it‘s his own?" one of the policemen exclaimed. "Look, he‘s wearin‘ the scabbard under his pants, and it‘s empty!" Colwell threaded his way out of the crowd. It appeared that Quilâ€" len thought his pal had tried to doublecross himâ€"that he figured Bradshaw, alias Catterby, had obâ€" tained that package from the newsstand by the magic name Sweeney, and had sent it to some hiding place by a confederate. A knife, its handle slimy with blood, was sunk to the very hilt in his chest. One of the policemen shrugged. "Where‘s the quick? I told Sarg. to shoot over one of them doctors. Not that he could do much: Soup was plenty dead when we found him." "Soup Catterby," one growled. "Somebody jammed a knife right through that pretty striped tie. Say, that‘s the niftiest tie I seen today, and it‘s my birthday. Thirtyâ€"nine. I got two swell ties from Clara, and fromâ€" "What the hellâ€"Catterby?" "How come Soup went out from a knife? Who did it?" Sure enough, deep in the alley was a closeâ€"packed knot of people. By standing on tiptoe Colwell could see over the heads of his neighbors two uniformed men who rose and stood aside for the squadmen. Neither Quillen nor Bradshaw was in the lobby. Colwell turned back the way he had come and slowly became aware that people hurried past him with an air of exâ€" citement and curiosity. Then a squad car siren whined and the vehicle twisted in a sharp right angle to plunge down the alley. Dan moved faster. Synopsis Detective Dan Colwell of the Graber â€" Vael private â€" detective agency is assigned the job of shadowing lawyer Arthur McDonâ€" ald whose wife fears gangster enemies are plotting to murder him. McDonald is murdered in spite of Colwell‘s watchfulness. Dan is hot on their trail and susâ€" pects a sinister plot. . . . "Sportsman Flies High" . . . & Colwell had the by Lawrence Keating The small hotel lobby panelled in dark wood was indirectly lighted to give a sort of garishly modern version of an old English inn. Dan kept thinking the next few minutes would be risky. He stopped at the When, exactly, was the big stuff due and how was it coming? If he was clever enough he might learn that in the apartment of Miss Heâ€" len Fane. But he would have to run the gantlet up there and it wasn‘t going to be fun! Because a quarter of a million dollars more in snow soon was due, Arthur McDonald, brains of the ring, had received the thirty thouâ€" sand dollar package merely as a tryâ€"out of the smuggling scheme. Quillen wanted that, but more, he wanted the big shipment. That was why he had killed the lawyer, to get it all for himself. Probably Mcâ€" Donald had tried to hold out on the small package, arousing Quillen‘s hate and greed and the decision to get McDonald out of the way. That two hundred and fifty thousand in narcotics would put this small capâ€" ture Dan had lucked into, in the shade! Colwell did not relish the visit he was going to pay. He drew a deep breath of reluctance and forced his steps toward the revolving door, But it seemed absolutely mecessary to put his head into the lion‘s mouth this once. He had to learn the exact application of those numâ€" bers on the slip of paper found on the running board of McDonald‘s taxi. They were of great value, he suspected with a thrill warming his breast. Enough to put a man on Easy Street for life! ver and paused on the sidewalk to gaze about him. The Kennebec was a tenâ€"story affair of tan brick in a neighborhood that once had been fashionable as attested by the few sprawling mansions which still had evaded the wreckers. Mostly there were other lower middle class apartments about, and delicatessâ€" ens with smoked windows. A balâ€" loon man waited glumly on the far corner, a few automobiles rolled past, and there were several young women pushing baby carriages that contained the small song and daughters of twoâ€"hundredâ€"aâ€"month clerks watching clocks downtown. This picture, so appropriate for every home grows quickly in wool or silk floss. Start it now for a gift. Pattern 1848 contains a transfer pattern of a picture 12 x 16 inches; color chart and key; materials needed; illustration of stitches. Patterns 20¢ each. Write Wilson Pattern Department, Adelaide St., Toronto. Dan hung up and stepped out of the booth. He fished a cigarette from his pack and lighted it. The thing grew more complicated. But thinking back he could detect no error on his part. He had that packâ€" age, and that was okay! _ Colwell thought it was working all right. This case ought to be profitable. His taxicab drew up to the someâ€" what tattered canvas canopy whose begrimed white letters spelled Kenâ€" nebec Hotel. Dan paid off the driâ€" impression she paused to confer with someone at her elbow, alâ€" though he could not be certain. "I have your ‘phone number but haven‘t looked up Mr. McDonald‘s home address yet; will you give it to me? Oh, I see." Colwell nodded to the mouthpicce. "-‘iill Fane‘s apartment 707? By An Exclusive Laura Wheeler Pict Fascinating to Do WALL HANGING terole brings relief because it‘s a “m-flna.t"â€"NOT just a salve. Recommended lz many doeâ€" :gn amz nu;ehl; Made Cguada. in ree strengths: Resular trength, Children‘s (mild), and Extra Strong. All druggists, 40¢ each. J Approximately 62,000, or 5 per cent. of the telephones in Canada, are operated by rural coâ€"operative systems, in which there is a totai investment of $19,193,394. Don‘t let chest colds or croupy eoi?bs go untreated. Rub Children‘s Mild trength Musterole No. 2 on child‘s ;hroatland clhes§/I at ?:eel This ;mlgix: orm 0 ar Musterole penetraj warms mstimuhbes log:l cireulaâ€" ition. Floods thr:lprqnchinl tubes ;"ith ts soothing, relie vapors. Musâ€" terole brings reli‘:ï¬eum it‘s a The island of Zanzibar, off the coast of Africa, must be a paraâ€" dise for women, because the offiâ€" cial report reveals that men not only rock the cradle, but also do all the houseworkâ€"even the weekâ€" ly family wash. He strove for a Don Juan grin. "You know how it is when a man can‘t break away from a woman?" Chuckling, he poked a square fist into the clerk‘s chest. His chuckle was infectious. The young fellow‘s black pompadour twitched forward as he grinned. He folded the fiveâ€"spot and tucked it safely away. "I‘ll do that, mister. Who should 1 ask for?" It‘s Urgent" Lefty was known here, then. Had been giving the girl a play, Dan happened to know. The clerk lookâ€" ed in surprise at the fiveâ€"spot Colâ€" well passed him. "Say, did you ever visit people and wish you had an excuse to leave? Do a favour for me. You ring me up in 707 just thirâ€" ty minutes from now. I‘ll do the talking; the point is, you are a friend who knew I‘d be there, and you insist on seeing me. It‘s very urgent." the way, has a Mr. Quillen, a man in a dark suit, rather wide mout!f big shoulders, come in to see her?" «"No, sir, not today, sir, that I noticed." CHILDREN‘S coUGHS THE LIPTON MELODY HOUR C B L Toronto C B M Montreal Women‘s Paradise "Your Lipton Melody Singer" â€" Brilliant Young Soprano (CONTINUED NEXT ISSUE) PATTERN 1848 The Lipton Ensemble Presented by Thos. J. Lipton Limited, Packers of LIPTON‘S FULLâ€"FLAVOURED TEA ~ For a fine Musical Treat be sure and EVERY SUNDAY 4.30 P.M. . Featuring d 18 West Sickâ€"Room Diets Should Include Custards We don‘t like to be pessimisticâ€"â€" but we do like to be prepared, Winâ€" tor seems to bring with it an inâ€" crease in illness and various phyâ€" sical disorders which make double trouble for the housewife. Besides all the nursing that has to be done, there are special diets that have to be prepared. Meals which would be eaten with gusto at any other time, make an invalid shudder with disgust. A patient‘s appetite is a delicate one and food suitable to the occasion is one of the best roads to recovery. Pamper a paâ€" tient‘s appetite but try to include, subtly of course, all the nourishing foods which they need to build up health. Eggs and milk come high in this category and there is no beiter way of insinuating them into a diet than in desserts, These cusâ€" tard recipes will find a place in alâ€" most any sickâ€"room diet. A Special Prize will be given for the best recipe for an individual dish. Contest Editor, Room 421, 73 West Adelaide St., Mrs. H. M. Aitken, staff dietiâ€" tian and radio commentator for the Canada Starch Co., Ltd., will act as Contest Judge. 1st, $5; 2nd, $3; 3rd, $2 $10 in Prizes beaten 6 tablespoons sugar 14 teaspoon salt PREPARING FOR WINTER OFf Interest to Women . Readers . 3 eggs, or 6 egg yolks, slightly For the Best CHRISTMAS OR NEW YEAR‘S DINNER MENU Let Your Good Cooking Earn You Money CCconUut cuP CUSTARD Mail your entry now to: Quaker Corn Flakes | with box tops from delicious Quaker Corn Flakes! Try §unker Corn Flakes with the better fiavourâ€"you‘ll love them! Crisperâ€"tastierâ€" especially irradiated with Vitamin "D", they‘re better to eat and better for you! Ask Mother to order Quaker Corn Flakes today. ie In Burns and Scalds every second counts, So keep a tube of Mentholatum always within reach . . . ready for every emergency. ‘The moment a burn or scald occurs, apply Mentholatum to the affected ï¬mt and relief will quickly follow. This healing balm soothes the t;:rtumd tiui;n}‘)s . . . cools and draws otll‘t the sting and burn . , , promotes quick, hedth?:l healing, Mentholatum is used by millions of people the world over for the relief of chafing and chapped skin , . . head and chest colds and catarrh . . . neuralgia, headache, and scores of other uses. Nonâ€"irritatingâ€"it is harmless to the most sensitive skin and relief is yu~ranteed or money back. Get a 30¢ tube or jar today. A6 BURNS, SCALDS CHAFING beaten % cup sugar 14 teaspoon sailt 4 cups milk, scalded 14 cup mapleflavoured syrup Combine eggs, sugar, and salt. Add mill: gradually, stirring vigâ€" orously. Place 1 tablespoon syrup in bottom of catch wellâ€"greasod cusâ€" tard cup. Fill cups carefully with milk and egg mixture, pour:>g slowâ€" ly against a spoon held over syrup to avoid its mixing with syrup. Place custard cups in pan of hot Combine eggs, sugar, salt, nutâ€" meg, and cocomut. Add milk graduâ€" ally, stirring vigorously. Pour into custard cups, place in pan of hot water, and bake in slow cven (325° F.) 35 to 40 minutes, or until knife inserted comes out clean,. Chill Serves 6. 3 cups milk, scalded % cups coconu‘, premium shred 1/8 teaspoon nutmeg eggs or 8 egg yolks, slightly GOLDEN RIVER CUSTARD YOUR LOCAL DEALER‘S NAME APPEARS ELSEWHERE IN THIS ISSUE DICK TRACY, Box 100, Peterborough, Ont. I I in the Dick Tracy Secret Serv‘ce Patrol C Please send n:.t-b‘etze':uoï¬dd all metal Dick Tracy ol:-dn the new revised 1939 Dick Tracy Secret Code Book, and ofhcial Patrol Pledge. d enclose 2 Quaker Corn Flakes, Quaker Pufled Wheat or Puff | _l_iï¬e_l:o_:. tops 5 ...'_ft not now a member ) Or i am a member Rice box top 1 am not now a member {) â€" Or i am a member and want nnS year badge C mpw T ie uh i0 water and bake in slow oven (350* F.) 35 to 40 minutes, or until knife insorted comes out clean. Custard should hold its shape, while syrup spreads over and around it. Serves NERVOUS More than a million women have re« a'wd benem-vlg not let Piniham‘s mflound help YOU, too, to go "rmil« Ing thru" trying times like it has othor grateful women for the past 3 genera« tions? JT MUST BE GOOLD! §obs Quivering nerves can make you old and haggard %mky wd’hud‘ to live withâ€"can keep you awake u‘lfhu and rob you ef good ‘e.lth, good times nnd What you should try is a p:mi(-ulml{ fnod woman‘s tonicâ€"and could you zs lor va:!flning whose benefits are bettor than that worldâ€"famous Lydia E. inkham‘s Vegetable Compound? Lot wholesome herbs and roots help ature calm your shrieking norves, umz up your system, give more energy an make life worth 't‘!'!."l again. _ THE AWFUL PRICE YOU PAY F6R BEINC KOMCL Montreat, 1*Q. nair Dy® 1410 staaley In the great struggle . f o+ life, everything depends on the age you appent to be; but don‘t be discourazed IXOMOL, _ with its 19 natural shades, # i v e c buck to hair its lost youth. Sold ut all (doru s benatt y d «*