mocah gy L ¥ © re 8 A Page of Interest to Wor nen Fashions Recipes "SAVE THE COUPONS Get this Beautiful Silverplate (Wm.Rogers & Son) FREE! COUPONS IN EVERY POUND AND RALF: POUND PACKAGE The Michigan Kid by Rex Beach - - Synopsis Jimmy Rowan was hopelessly in Jove with Rose Morris, the prettiest girl in Dover, Michigan. Of course, that was years ago, in early school days . . . but It was hopeless for Jim- my because he was just "that Rowan kid," desperately poor, while Rose's family was rich. While Jimmy was working his way through college, Rose Morris moved away and the home sold for barely enough to pay the mort- gage . . . Jimmy vowed to himself he'd get rich . . . and find Rose. Eas- ier vowed than done and years passed before Jim Rowan finally landed in the Klondike . . . there to gain wide reputation as a gambler, known as "The Michigan Kid." On hls way out at Nome, Rowan came upon a meeting of Michigan folks scheduled so he attended. There he came upon Hiram Morris, old, worn and hungry. Morris, with his daugh- ter Rose, is prospecting a claim. Row- an hires as helper and goes out to the claim, ordering supplies sent. From Rose he learns of the father's strug- gle. Now go on with the story. CHAPTER VI . Young Hayward was in Nome, but Jim got one of the Bonanza men to go to Rose's assistance and also he borrowed a horse for himself. It was not many miles to town, but it was a wretched night and he was glad when the animal wallowed out of the icy mud and he felt the plank pavements under its feet. The first doctor he found was ill; another had been called to Fort Davis; the third was engaged on a confinement case, but promised fo accompany Jim in perhaps two hours. There was nothing to do but wait. Jim was wet and cold. He stabled his horse, returned to the main street, and entered the first saloon he came to. It was late; there was nobody at the bar, but some of the games were still running and there were a few figures at the lunch counter in the rear. Thither Jim made his way in search of a cup of coffee. There was a stage at the end of the place where, in the earlier hours of the night, a vaudeville show was given, and at the piano were gathered several weary women of the dance-hall type. One of them saw Jim and spoke to her companions, whereupon they turned and stared curiously at his back. Young Hayward rose from the faro table and approached the lunch coun- ter. He had been drinking some and losing considerably. There was an un- pleasant curl to his lips. Jim had hitched himself upon one of the high stools; he had raised his mug to drink when Hayward pushed it away from his lips and called to the white-aproned waiter, saying: 'Here! Give this fellow a square meal." At the same time he crashed a twenty-dollar gold piece upon the counter. British Remedv for RHEUMATIC ACHES It becomes increasingly obvious that the Rheumatic Sufferers of Canada have for long been seeking a new remedy for their nagging aches »:d pains. How else can you account for the enthusiastic welcome given to Fynnon Salt, a combination of natural salts of the Earth? 'Whenever anyone who is subject to the €or "tures of Rheumatic Pains decides to take Fynnon Salt regularly, life for him begins to wear & brighter aspect.- No longer do the pain-racked joints defy his efforts to secure longed for relief because the corrective ingredients in Fynnon Sait--Sodium, Potassium, Lithium-- just won't be defied. Uric Acid can't remain in the system--it has to move on, move out. Wh sufferers who have turned to Fynnon Salt have had good cause to bless the day they gave it a trial Wherever the subject of Rheu- atic Pains crops up, you will hear the praises of Fynnon Salt sung. Take a }4 teaspoonful of * FynnonSaltina tumblerful of water gveiy morn- ing for your Rheunzatic Pains, Sciatica, Lumba- £0, etc., and you willsoon berejoicing that life has become bright and cheerful again. Your drug- gist sells Fynnon Salt, the proven British remedy, 75¢ a large package. If you have any difficulty getting supplies, write: Laurentian Lgencies, St. Gabriel St., Montreal. 1] [ssue No. 15--'38 C "Thanks," said Jim. "I'm not hun- gry." "Ham and eggs for a friend of mine," Hayward cried. "And give him the change." Jim eyed the speaker coldly, as if from behind a mask, but he appeared to take no notice of the tone Hayward had used. 'Still in an even voice he said: "Nice of you. I've seen the time I'd take it." He lifted his cup for a second time; again Hayward took his wrist. It's a Phony "Look here, Rowan. I've been want- ing to ask you something. It's about that offer for old man Morris' claim. D'you know what I think?" "I don't believe you're capable of thinking, right now. If I were you, Hayward, I'd go home and go to bed." "Is that so?" Hayward's disagree- able smile became more pronounced. "I'll tell you what I think; I think it was a phony. I think you tried to put something over--tried to grab something." "Well? You can't arrest a man for trying." : "I'll tell you something else; old man Morris is honest, but I think he's in partners with a damned crook." The men eyed each other. Very quietly Jim said: "Se! You're just spoiling for trouble, aren't you?" "With you, yes." "I'm sorry, but I can't oblige you tonight." He'll Kill You "Ha! Nor any other night. T've discovered something else about you, Rowan. You haven't got the guts of a guinea pig." Hayward had not low- 1 ered his voice during this colloquy. Those people in the rear of the room had heard most of what he said, and they were looking on now in mingled curiosity and apprehension. The dance- hall girl who had pointed out Jim whispered excitedly to her compan- ions. "Funny what a fool a man can make of himself," Jim told the young fore- man, "Some day you'll realize how badly up against it a fellow can get without knowing it." "Bah! You rat! There's only one way to treat a--" Hayward raised his open hand to slap this object of contempt, but the blow did not de- gecend; he did not finish his sentence, for suddenly his face was deluged by the blinding, scalding contents of Jim's coffee cup. With an exclamation he reeled backward, almost into the arms of the women at the piano. He dashed the liquid from his face; with his sleeve he wiped his eyes, cleared them; he gathered himself to rush upon the figure still sitting motionless upon the high stool. But one of the girls flung herself upon him, twined her arms about him, and in a voice high-pitched, vibrant with warning, she cried: - "Don't touch him, Hayward! He'll kill you! God, man, that's 'The Mich- igan Kid." Hayward"s struggle died suddenly. It came still-born. Into his purple face crept a look of astonishment, then incredulity. (TO BE CONTINUED) White Lilac The Queen's Favorite Spring Flower One of the Queen's favorite spring flowers has always been wkite lilac. Ske likes to decorate her private ap- artinents with branches of this. There are to be more whita iilac trees at Windsor and Sandringham. Others are being planted in the gar- dens of Buckingham Palace and loyal Lidge. Another favorite flower of the syringa or "mock orange oftan called by Queer is hlosson."" as it is country folk. A great deal of attention has also been given during the past few months to the Royal nurseries at Frogmore where so many of the flow- ers for the Royal Tables are grown. Catalog Of Don'ts For Perfect Wife Here's what the perfect wife should not do, according - to Dr. Ethel Dukes, co-director of a "child psychology institute in London. Dr. Dukes, in a speech on "The Successful ~~ Wife," listed these "don'ts" for a woman who wants to make a good job of marriage. Such a woman, she said, will not: Domineer her husband. Criticize him in presence of others. Ei imr Insist on changing him. Refuse to be friends friends, Try to show him off. Make him a cushion carrier or an additional servant. : Insist on constant entertaining in the house and out of it when he is tired and wants his cosy slippers. Despise his homespun qualities when she has had time to improve her cultural and social qualities while he has been hard at work. - Run down his mother or other rela- tives. Get into debt: Neglect him while she runs after "higher things." Refuse to have children if he wants them and there is no medical reason why she should not. Use any feminine wiles or neuro- tic illnesses to make him subservient to her. with his Links Disease And Emotions Doctor Says Tense Feelings Over Lengthy Period Are Dan- gerous Abnormal emotions over a lengthy period of time will bring on diesease of an organ, Dr. Franz Alexander, the director of the Institue of Psychoan- alysis, Chicago, told a meeting of the Detroit branch of the American Asso- ciation of Medical Social Workers. Lengthy abnormal emotions will produce diseases such as stomach ul- cers, toxic goiter, diabetes and per- manent high blood pressure, he said. Continuous fears, aggressions, repres- sed wishes, result in permanent chron- ic emotional tensions "which ~~ fturb the functions of vegative organs, he added. : "Increasing knowledge of emotions in relation to normal and disturbed functions required that our modern physician treat emotional conflicts as just as real and tangible issues as vis- ible organisms," he said. "Emotional conflicts arise during our daily life in the social contact with the enyiron- ment." Soft Frock In Festive Mood Delightful For Summer Wh PATTERN 4745 By Anne Adams What a thrill to wear a pretty frock that you've made all by yourself-- and when the pattern is as simple as this one is, you can have your new dress finished in record time! Anne Adams offers you choice of two lengths in Pattern 47456--one for dress-up afternoon wear, and a longer, more formal version for your evening parties. Note the pointed- up waistline--it fits to perfection-- and there's nothing quite so flatter- ing as the dainty sleeves, soft bodice, and V-neckline. For fabrie, choose a colorful synthetic print, or a shad- owy sheer. Illustrated step-by-step sewing instructions included. Pattern 4745 is available in misses' and women's sizes 12, 14, 16, 18, 20, 80, 32, 84, 36, 38 and 40. Size 16 takes 33 yards 89 inch fabric, and 2% yards lace edging. Send Twenty Cents (20c) in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this Anne Adams pattern. Write plainly size, name, address and style num- ber. Send your order to Anne Adams, Room 425, 78 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. "Golden Apples of Hesperides" Do you remember the old Greek le- gend about Hercules and the golden apples of Hesperides? It is generally believed now that those golden apples were really oranges, the oranges of Spain which were remote and myster- ious wonders to the Greeks at that time. It is a very picturesque story -- how Hercules was sent to get the gol- den apples from the Hesperides but had to ask the help of Atlas, the mighty man who held the heavens on his shoulders. But Atlas was pretty well tied up with supporting the hea- vens so a bargain was struck where- by Hercules took over the burden while Atlas went after the prize. The casualness with which they tos- sed the heavens from one to another in those days seems amazing, but no more amazing than the casualness with which we obtain oranges today would have seemed to the Greeks. This once rare fruit comes to us now from much greater distances than the Greeks ever conceived of. Besides the fruit from the United States which Canadians have been eating for many years, we get beautiful oranges from Palestine and the Orient. WAKE UP LIKE A CAVE MAN Feel Full of Life--No More Tired, Dull, Heavy Mornings Keep your liver healthy and you'll feel great every morning. When you wake up feeling "rotten" your liver is out of order. Your liver clears the blood of poisons, separates the nourishing part of your food from the waste. Supplies energy to muscles, tissuesand glands --gives out bile, the body's laxative, helps stomach, kidneys and in- - testines to work properly. A mere bowel movement isn't enough. "Fruit-a-tives" made from fruits and herbs, will strengthen and build up your liver like nothing else will. You'll be amazed how well you are every morning. - Try Fruit-a-tives. All druggists. FRUIT-A TIVES £5 Here are two desserts made with a basis of quick-cooking tapioca cream combining eggs, milk, tapioca and or- anges to make a wonderfully nutri- tious dish. Among other food values, oranges contain iron, one of the few elements which milk lacks, so altogeth- er the balance is perfect. Orange Tapioca Cream 1-3 cup quick-cooking tapioca 1% cup sugar 14 teaspoon salt 4 cups milk, scalded 1 egg yolk, slightly beaten 1 egg white, stiffly beaten 1 teaspoon orange or vanilla extract 4 oranges, sections free from mem- brane. . Add quick-cooking tapioca, sugar, and salt to milk, and cook in double boiler 15 minutes, or until tapioca is clear, stirring frequently. Pour small amount of tapioca mixture over egg yolks, stirring vigorously. Return to double boiler and cook until thicken- ed. Remove from fire; fold In egg white and flavouring. Place few sec- tions of orange in bottom of individ- ual serving dishes and cover with the tapiogs m2xture. Garnish with addition- al orange sections and whipped cream if desired. Serves 8. Chantilly Orange Tapioca 4 tablespoons quick-cooking tapioca 14 teaspoon salt 1 1-3 cups boiling water 1% cup sugar 1 cup orange juice 1% grated orange rind 1% cup cream, whipped Add quick-cooking tapioca and salt to water, and cook in double boiler 15 minutes, or until tapioca is clear, stir- ring frequently. Add sugar, juice, and orange rind. Cool. Fold in orange whipped cream. Chill until thickened. s. Just before serving garnish with very 2 Pile lightly in sherbet glas fine 14 inch shreds of oran~e rirl. A Modern Cloth Made Of Glass Fabric of Great Beauty and Util- ity Is Now Being Manu- factured Every woman knows what a glass cloth is--a cloth for drying or clean- ing glass. The description is taking on a new meaning, for the latest kind of glass cloth is just that--a fabric made of glass. Five years ago the Owens-Illinois Glass Company, at their Newark, Ohio, laboratory, began certain experiments and discovered a process which is wholly new and invaluable. They spun glass so fine that a human hair is four times thicker and wove fabrics out of it which are soft, flexible, dur- able--incredibly so. Coming into ev- ery-day use are ribbons for electric insulations, cloth for air-filters of air- conditioning units, for industrial fil- ters, for wallpaper, curtains, table- cloths, even wearing apparel -- all fabricated by familiar textile machines from lustrous thread spun from fila- ments of pure glass. Won't Break When Dropped If the new glass cloth is dropped it will not break, it will just crumple up like ordinary cloth. Many designs can be worked into it; it will wear a long time and it can be washed with soap and water. The lustrous quality of glass cloth permits its use as "paper" on the walls of otherwise dim places--stair wells, hallways, apartments. Moisture-proof, it is perfect for the bathroom. Its fire- proof nature makes it desirable for draperies, tablecloths in restaurants, furnishings aboard ship. Remarkable Permanence But industrial applications make fibrous glass a true, large industry. Heat-insulation in stoves, refriger- ators, and walls already consumes vast quantities. Thin glass thread and tape, wound around electric wires, mean resist- ance to heating effects, to moisture, rot, and attacks of insects. They mean also remarkable permanence. All of which looks as if a new fab- ric of great beauty and utility had been discovered for home, office and industry. And that is exactly what has occurred. : Mandarin Nails An Extravagance New Yorker Contends They Mark Decline of Our Cililization In the old days Chinese mandarins let their fingernails grow and Chin- ese women bound their feet. The ob- ject in each case was to show that the possessors of the fingernails or feet did no useful work, and this was thought to be a credit to them. The American women do not bind their feet -- and for that matter neither do modern Chinese women -- but some- thing which is called a "mandarin fin- gernail" does flourish in these parts. A New York Times reader wants to '""do something about the practice." One sympathizes with her, but sym- pathy is as far as one can go. The minority of women who wear mandar- in fingernails cannot play a piano or operate a typewriter or look after a baby very efficiently, and they cannot wash dishes at all. They do feel, how- ever, that they have gained something and as long as they feel that way we shall have to put up with them. Be More Individual The reader who brought this subject up is afraid the long nails are one of "the manifestations of a moral regres- sion toward the extravagant follies ap- parent in declining stages of civiliza- tion." Certainly no civilization could long survive if every one, male and fe- male, allowed the nails to grow an inch beyond the ends- of the fingers. But civilization can stand a good deal of nonsense from minorities. The dear ladies are merely trying to fol- low fashions in looks just as their hus- bands and brothers so often try to follow fashions in opinions. In each "case the compulsion of the crowd is felt. The -cure for that, and the cure for many of the world's troubles, is more individualism -- and not indiv- idualism of the rugged kind, either. The greatest number of ships vis- iting Argentina last year were Brit- ish, with Greek second, German third, Italian fourth, and American fifth. STOP THEM SCREAMING! If you worry--with that queer taut feeling in your stomach--take PHOSFERINE. A few tiny, economical drops each day will help steady those ragged nerves, improve your appetite, build up your strength. At druggists, 50c, $1.00 and $1.50. 68 PHOSFERINE Ri enic | healthy tissue and (CHILDREN of all ages thrive on "CROWN BRAND" CORN SYRUP. They never tire of its delici- ous flavor and it really is so good for them--so give the children "CROWN BRAND"! every day. Leading calSicians Tro- nounce "CROWN B D*? CORN SYRUP a most satis- factory carbohydrate to use as a milk modifier in the feeding of tiny infants and as an energy producing food for growing children. PB The CANADA STARCH COMPANY Limited Being Hostess, Cook Combined Advice Contains Many Kitchen Tips That Result In Smart Serving Many women have to play the role, of hostess and cook at the same din-: ner. They realize the necessity for, serving meals without the constant bobbing up and down from the din-, ner table to the kitchen that is dis- concerting to guests as well as the hostess. Dorothy B. Marsh suggests in Good Housekeeping ways to serve efficiently and cut down on these' trips to and from the kitchen. Save Steps "Suppose, for instance, you're to have tomato or fruit juice for the, first course," she says. "Save steps by serving it with the main course. Then when it comes to vegetables,! choose two that you can combine in| one serving dish or arrange side by! side on it. Serve one vegetable on! the meat platter when you can. Or, make vegetables a part of a homey. main dish in a casserole." Also, suggests Miss Marsh, share honors with the host in serving ev- erything from the table. In this way you'll save many kitchen trips. And always dine with a small table or tea wagon on hand. Use it to serve from, or for dessert things, or water pitcher. Iodine Named > Best Germicide Iodine is the most efficient of nine leading germicides in the elimination of bacteria, the Department of Baec- teriology of the University of Cali- fornia has determined. Dr. A. J. Salle, assistant professor of bacteriology, directed the work, which covered a wide range of ger- micides. Of all the germicides studied, io- dine showed the least toxicity for mercurochrome the highest. For this reason, Dr. Salle said, iodine appeared to be the germicide "par excellence," because it was highly efficient and did not destroy tissue, Next best was Hexylresorcinal. Rose oil produced in Bulgaria last year weighed 6,105 pounds. plane--half an hour over myriad lakes &%. and virgin for- est--then Cold Lake,Command- ant or La Carpe --and TROUT, bass, too! grays and northern pike. GrayRocks-owned camps-- excellent equipment--good guides. Write for folder, F. H. WHEELER, ~~