Sust ie who is always loathe to "si the dotted line." Most film stars give away so many autographs that these have meore "give" or resilence. Either an especially flexible boxspring or a coil spring with openâ€"top eoils would be of correct choice. These would give the solid matâ€" tress as much support as is needâ€" ad, and at the same time would cetton or hair, on the other hand and small springs of the innerâ€" spring mattress from being forcâ€" ed down into the bedspring. SUPPORT AND RESILIENCE A solid mattress filled with either a coil spring with a platâ€" form top or closed coils, or a firm boxspring. Any of these proâ€" wides a sufficiently firm foundâ€" ation to prevent the upholstery In buying a new bedspring to use with a mattress which you already have take these poinis The Earl of Athlone, Canada‘s mew governorâ€"general, is shown ehatting with Lieutâ€"Col. W. G. Wurtele during an inspection in Ottawa of the Governorâ€"General‘s Foot Guards. Col. Wurtele is the officer commanding the regiment. Then, of course, there was Sisâ€" ter Anne, who watched from the tower for the cloud of dust which meant the arrival of rescuers for Bluebirds‘ Fatima; Tolstoy‘s Anâ€" na Karenina, and Annie Lavrie, probably the most famous song heroine of the English tongue. Denmark, who became the wife of James VI of Scotland; Anna Ivâ€" anrovna, Empress of Russia, are other noted women of this name. Museum; Arne of Brittany, wife of Charles VIII of France, who united the last of the great fie{s of France to the crown; Anne of ine of Aragon and ending ber life on the scaffold. MANY WERE QUEENS Anne of Cleves was another of Henty‘s wives whom he gallant‘y described as a "fat Flanders mare." The beautiful Anne of Austria whom Rubens has so beautifully flattered in his glowâ€" ing portrait in the Metropolitan accur to most peoplt is probably Anne Boleyn, the unhappy beauty who became the second wife of Henry VIII, supplanting Catharâ€" History‘s "Anne Famous Women The Annes of history are amâ€" ong the most famous of all woâ€" men, happy, unhappy, they star the pages of history with their wvivid stories. The first Anne to Should Consider Type of Matâ€" tress Before Selection Then Cleves; Austria; Britâ€" «â€"CGenreral Reviews mhscon all 1 6e en Toi. sprminss. is an inner should be But aside from the sparse facts already given, his employer could divulge no other information about his late employee. SOME MORE BEHIND IT Still Sally knew there was someâ€" thing eise behind Dan‘s sudden deâ€" parture. Something that she didn‘t understand, but that nevertheless had caused Dan to go away withâ€" out saying a word. She still would not give up hope that he would send her word of some sort. She had to cling to this. She simply could ot believe that Dan would that way as he had been making nice progress. "He did not mention that he had any other offer in mind, did he?" Mr. Blair inquired. "Ouly that he felt this was not the right place for him," Mr. Deâ€" von returned. He added that he had been sorry the yourg man had felt "Dida‘t he give any reason for resigning so abruptly?" Sam Blair asked. He knew this would be a severe disappointment to his daughâ€" ter. In fact Sam Blair was disapâ€" pointed in the lad, himself. She asked her father to find out from Mr. Frank Devon if Dan had been sent away by the firm on a business matter. Mr. Devon was sorry to say that young Reynolds had resigned from the firm. "BEut he didn‘t know what Daddy and 1 had done for him," Sally had reminded. If he had, that might have been his reason for going! For Sally knew Dan‘s fierce pride, his dislike of being helped in any way; she knew, too, that he would not have understood her failure to tell him that her father had been his benefactor. Corey had not been able to give any light on the mystery. He insistâ€" ed that Dan had not said anything, during that last evening when the two young men had been together so lon, about going away, Corey had been so surprised when Sally baé told him that Dan had gone that she was convinced, by his very surprise, that Corey knew nothing about it. If Corey secretly had been pleasâ€" ed, almost exulted, he had given no sign of that. He said he thought it most ungrateful for Dan to behave in such a manner, after all Sally and her father had done for him. to any single Military Address Overseas CHAPTER XIX Almost a week had gone by since Dan had gone away so unexpectedâ€" ly, without leaving any word, or saying goodby. Sally still could not accept the fact that he had gone. She would not accept the fact that she would not hear from him. Mail Order and Remittance to:â€" Last week: To her amazement Sally learns Dan has left the city. Sick at heart, she awaits Corey whom she hopes may bring some news of Dan. with the story. had everything that popularity could win her, except DAN REYNOLDS â€" hero. He might have had Sally but while he was king on skis COREY PORYER was kirg of the social whirl. So . .. But go on W. C. MACDONALD INC., Box 1929, Place d‘Armes, ISSUE. 30â€"‘40 CAST OF CHARACTERS SALLY BLAIRâ€"â€" herocine. i >? _ o t o t o n aen TV 23 2 Infuse 6 heaping teaspoons of Salada Black Tea in a pint of fresh, bailing water: Alter 6 Mflnialiquidiflo!-qummi:m; wbikhot,addb?un?}:cupa ce onid ote o o io oi eeeeet o Lo sugaris dissclved; Aill or hiqurd T water. not allow eoo! ing cold water iqui will become cloudy. Serve with chipped ice. 'llnobmuku‘lhlr'glaqs"u. TRY IT THE "SALADA" wWay © SERIAL STORY SKI‘S THE LIMIT HGECB W TEA BY ADELAIDE HUMPHRIES But Dan had gone away not even knowing about that. He would neâ€" ver know about that now. He had gone away because â€"he did not want to belong to the world Sally Blair lived in. Because ho did not. believe, after all, in Sally herselft. Beyond this she could not reason at the moment. Beyond the fact that this brief letter was farewell her mind could not function, ‘her beart could not bold anything else. What kind of girl did Dan think she was? Hadn‘t he told her, that lovely day by the brook, that he believed in her? Hadn‘t she proved to him, during these happy months of friendship, that she was the kind of girl she should believe in? Looking deep into her own heart Sally knew that though she had tried she had not quite succeeded, had not quite played fair. She just should have told Dan the whole truth about herself and about ber father, that they had been the ones to help him; she should not have allowed any deceit, no matter how small, how right it had seemâ€" ed at the time to her, to lie between them. L But that would come later, all of it. Now it brought only a dull ache, an empty sense of utter loss. Ob, surely this could not be all that Dan had to say to her! All he ever would have to say. This last thought struck her like a blow over her heart, banishing hope entireâ€" ly. For this brief letter was fare well; it was finis. Everything was over â€" forever â€" between herself and Dan. & "YOU‘RE NOT TRE GIRL®" ‘"To be honest" â€" yes, Dan was always that, he could not be otherâ€" wise â€" "to be honest," Sally read again, "you are not the kind of a girl I want, Sally Blair." She knew this should arouse her resentment, her hot anger, her pride and scorn. There was no other signature except his name. No address. No postscript. Nothing more. Not even anything to read between the lines. For Sally, reading them over and over, tried her best to discover if there could not be something more, left unwritten. ‘"Dear Sally," â€" the letter read â€" "I thought I could go away withâ€" out a word. But I find I can‘t. I do not want you to think me ungrateâ€" ful for the friendship you gave me. But you were right. I am a cowâ€" ard. When it comes to your gay, glamorous world. I thought I could adapt myself to it. I thought, for a while, that I was happy in it. But it was not the kind of a world I want, not the kind of life I planned. To be perfectly honest with you, you are not the kind of girl I want, either â€" as I told you long ago â€" Sally Blair," ~ But its contents were what Salâ€" ly read over and over, first with that high lift of hope, then with increasing dismay and despair. A despair tinged with disbelief that Dan could have written this letter to her. x LETTER FROM DAN The letter was postmarked from the little town in the hills of New Hampshire from which Dan had come. He had returned to his home then. The letter began, "Dear Salâ€" ly." It was very short. It was signâ€" ed simply, "Dan." to say. Tor now, of course, Dan would explain why he had gone away, he would explain everything, just as she had known he would. He ould explain, too, why he had not written before. She held it against her rapidly beating heart for a long moment before she gave herself the exquisâ€" ite delight of reading what Dan had She was never to forget the morning the letter came. She had looked for a letter so many morpâ€" ings. Always with that spring of rising hope that always â€" until this morning â€" died away. This morning brought the letter she had waited for so long. The letter she had known would come. That she knew, even before she opened it, was the letter from Dan. He had had some very good reaâ€" son for acting as he had, she told herself stubbornly, over and over. There â€"was some very good reason why she had not heard from him. She believed this, because she beâ€" lieved in Dan. But it did not keep her heart from aching; nor lift the heavy weight that had~ settled â€" for good, apparently â€" on it. HER HEART BROKEN disregard their friendship in this way. COPYRIGHT, 1938 . NEA SERVICE, ING British ver, B.C., to Skagway, Alaska, by steamers of the Canadian National Railways, according to C. W. Johnâ€" ston, general passenger traffic manâ€" ager of the company. "Writer after writer has said that the charm of a trip to Alaska cannot be put into words and in this Inside Passage cruise the lover of the pure wilderâ€" ness beholds one of the most beauâ€" tiful panoramas in the world", he gaid. Following in the wake of the fortune hunters, viewing the same scenes, reâ€"living their romance surâ€" rounded by the facilities and conâ€" veniences of comfortable cruise linâ€" ers, there are now in operation weekly sailings along the smooth Inside Passage route from Vancouâ€" Alaskawards By Inside Passage She wept now, hopelessly, desâ€" pairingly’ her slender body, thrown face downward on the beautiful silk and lace covering of her bed, an abâ€" andonment of weeping. For Sally Blair, who was the prettiest, the most popular of all the glamour girls, who had broken so many hearts during her short reign as queen of them all, had had her own heart broken completely, irreparabâ€" ly, now. Sally took the letter and placed it in her jewel case, turning the key. It was not until later that sho was to take it out once more, to tear it into small jagged fragments which afterwards she was to burn and which, still later, she was to weep over as ashes. 7 es e gL n en Om CCA COCCOp AARSLLELVIONS OL SUILCNES, Send twenty cents in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern to Wilson Needlecraft Dept., 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Write plainly Pattern Number, your Name and Address. Everyone‘s favorite, these modern, easyâ€"toâ€"do them on towel or pillow case and let your needlew tern 2588 contains a transfer pattern of 12 motifs inches; color schemes; materials required: illustr: Children‘s museums are disâ€" tinct from children‘s departments of large museums in that all of their work is strictly for children. All their exhibits are arranged with the young folk in mind, and so are their activities. Of these there must be plenty, to keep the children cccupied. A sample week at the Norwalk Children‘s Museum would find one group filling the school room which now houses it to work on a relief map of theirâ€" own city on Morâ€" day, others studying astronomy on. Tuesday, a stamp session on Wednesday, â€" botanyâ€"only it‘s called a wildâ€"flower clubâ€"on Thursday, a variety of activities on Friday and a movie show for the children on Saturday. Alhough it opened only last year, the Norwalk (Connecticut) Children‘s Museunt has progressâ€" ed so . greatly that it already needs new quarters. In its constantlyâ€"expanding acâ€" tivities, it is patterned after the original children‘s museum in the world, in Brooklyn. LINKS UP WITH ACTIVITIES For Children Weekly Cruises Are In Operâ€" ation This Summer from Vanâ€" couver Up Coast LAURA WHEELER OFFERS NEWEST NOTE IN E_ $ "* aify.u, AAA PB 3 ‘:':"'f...N A 4 F 2â€"¢ f "Ches.s.. % oz 4 4II P ; j eig’f*r% *‘ i g y a ies T:3 se & % ï¬ Q .l:.:.‘:.'-h@":‘n. ?"'i‘\“.;-.;‘_‘_'. h # '\‘ 3 is .'..,".. ’-A.;-.‘-i.:,___:_ ;‘ HIS AND HER LINENS umt s otrrrrmrmrmntrmommnuun c cymmpmennrmnn b V "‘ § ’ -E.;.:':'.. 177 6 ya L# C : AC 450. C im PAX (029° tCéem A s O itc .. (To Be Continued) Norwalk Institution, Only A Year Old, Now Needs Larger Quarters » ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO DAYS COPR. i940, NEEDLECRAFT SERVICE, INC. 2 ies We viment deote ol rale L aane h) n dor ons nc in materials required; illustrations of stitches. in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this Iansamgiomn . _4 lb Adveinnmate l anlnd canbnintse Ayind 2 C s ori) T Pn oo d e modern, easyâ€"toâ€"do designs. Embroider and let your needlework score a hit. Patâ€" About 250 separate construcâ€" tion projects are at present under way in Canada, including coastal defences, fortifications, hangars and submarine defences for harâ€" hours and waterways. its The homemakers of the present have a gigantic problem before them. By providing this necessary balanced ~food they must keep their families fit, that all may reach the highest level of health, that we may all be able to face I hope many of you have obâ€" tained a copy of ‘Food for Health‘ in peace and war, a little booklet published by the Canadian medâ€" ical association. This publication is worthy of special mention and from time to time we shall enâ€" deavor to arrange menus for you based on the fundamentals of this advice. The first purpose of the book is to present in a compact and practical form what doctors and scientists have learned about food through years of study and research. Past history informs us that in times of war, tuberculosis, influenza etc., spread rapidly, claiming the lives of many, who have been weakened from the lack of the proper food. Mb mucaicin Auiio Wv'h\a €2 02000A ELC motifs averaging 4% x 614 PATTERN 2588 "Lock, Dick, See That Boy? Tom is His Father. "Eirawood, York, Pa." In a lower corner was this chalâ€" lenge to Roland: "Hi ya, Happy, see if you can dope this out." + Roland did. He delivered the letter to Dixie (Dick See) Thompâ€" son (Tom‘s son). readers. She is pleased to recceive suggestions on topics for her column, and is even ready to lis ten to your "pet peeves." Reâ€" quests for recipes or special menus are in order. Address your letters to "Miss Sadie B. Chamâ€" ers 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto." Send stamped, selfâ€" addressed envelope if you wish a reply. Tea for adults, milk for chilâ€" dren. Or Baked or scalloped potatoes with cheese or Creamed leftâ€"over vegetables or vegetable salad Bread, whole wheat with butter. Dessert Fruit in season, fresh or cooked or occasionally honey Lunch or Supper Soup (creamed vegetable) or Cheese sandwiches toasted (if desired) or Baked or scalloned potatoes Tea or coffee for‘adu]ts, milk for children. Buttered _ toast â€" occasionally with marmalade or jam. Eggsâ€"scrambled, poached or boiled, one or more a week. The fourth in the group for purchasing is cereal products. First, bread. Then in the second (cerca‘) group is given the choice of rolled oats, rolled wheat, flour, rice, cornmeal, macaroni, tapâ€" joca. Under, the third group come the sweets and flavorings, where tea and coffee are also allowed. Lastly cod liver oil is to be given growing children and those workâ€" ing indoors, from October to June,â€"the months lacking sunâ€" shine. Their suggestions for meals,â€" Breakfast Fruitâ€"Tomato juice; apple, applesauce or fruit in season. Cerealâ€"Rolled oats or rolled wheat with milk. in season. Meals are budgeted a. cording to adults and children and ‘hence the families of differâ€" ent size and the remarkably low cost of 26 cents daily cost per person is reached. We are re minded more money cannot buy better nutrition,â€"it will simply buy a greater variety of more exâ€" pensive foods. When there is not mcch money to spend for food,, first on the shopping list should be milk and cheese; then potaâ€" toes and "whole grain products; next raw fruits and vegetables; and Jastly meat, fish and eggs. the task that may be ours. The protective foeds of course have special mention and one of the highlights of the publication is a reminder that the Canadian farmer produces all the foods necâ€" essary for health. Canadianâ€" pgrown vegetables such as tomaâ€" toes, turnips, cabbage and fruits in season (apples, berries, cherâ€" ries, plums, peaches, pears) can replace the more expensive imâ€" ported fruits. Hence we are adâ€" vised to buy fruits and vegetables READERS WRITE IN: Mail T from _ interested sent his 23â€"yearâ€"old son, Rodion, off to Toronto to offer his services. Grant is donating $150,000, his salary from hbis mew film, "Phila delphia Story," to British war charâ€" ity. Charles Laughton for some time has earmarked all of bhis radio earnings for war relief and Red Cross. Ronald Colman and others bave made similar gifts. BASIL RATHBONE‘S SON A committee working â€" under Dame May Whitty and Boris Karâ€" loff has arranged to bring to Calitâ€" ornia 60 children from the British Acytors‘ Orphanage in England. A special film appeal by Anna Neagle already has raised $100,000 for the Red Cross. Gracie Fields soon will head a group of British colebrities on a tour of Canada in quest of $500,000 for war relief. Basil Rathbone, who himseif won Richard Greene said he would go to England as soon as possible. His studio had several picturo assignâ€" ments in view for him, with the first scheduled to start in about "a month. Herbert Other younger actore affected by the call included Richard Ainloy, Hughie Green and Robert Coote, Past the age requirement are such figures as Laurence Olivier, Cary Grant, Ray Milland, Errol Flynn, Great Britain has calleod home its motion picture actors between the ages of 18 and 31. Other Britâ€" ish subjects in the Film Colory temporarily will aid their homeland in other ways. Picture Actors â€"â€" Wrigley‘s Spearmint Gue is the favorite! Millions enjoy its longâ€"lasting, genuine spearmint favor. Healthful, delicious, refreshing! Get the good habit of enjoying itafter every meal! ons SOME ARE PAST AGE British Movie Artists in Holâ€" lywood Between the Ages of 18 and 31 Are Being Called Brian Aberne and of Ontario that a 12 duction in acreage fect in 1940, It is «he acreage plant bacco will be app acres. The acreage under contract in O a reduction of at l There will probably of five to ten per C planted to cigar 1 bec. Not much C in the acreage plan varieties, producti also limited to the the B toba« the Canadian Acreage passer mess ; girl is Cerman the law; typical : fore througt in erm: meted Fay a 1J revi prog und At th At th words. Many to talk at not at 18 studied t are as fol Bu and vou were byeâ€"by months, by, howâ€"4o wer study by m versity of J "meâ€" words with much at Planted This qwing Oneâ€"third L 1M at _A number children hay word being hoard or ai Arnuld GC‘SQ Studied 50 ha Ai on At 18 At tw At tw x Baby’: This Is b hed 50 h more 1$ The me only ‘ca its equiy least th h RURLEY ( a Ma Us the HER child it ona Il Can month V« m and mor S$1 do.