' "I have used all kind* of pills and powdcri , but nearly everything gave me a great deal of discomfort. I havo been eating KELLOGG'S ALL- 13 1-.' AN now for about five munths, nd it has done me so much good! I will never be without ALL-BRAN in tin- house," writes Mrs. E. Goodale, Hamilton, Ontario. Try ALL-BRAN'S "Better Way" to correct constipation due to lack of the right kind of "bulk" in your diet. But remember. ALL-BRANT doesn't work like cathartic*. It takes time. Get ALL-BRAN at your grocer's, in two convenient size packages, or ask for the individual serving package at restaurants. Made by Kcllogg's in London, Canada. MARRYING MARK by Violette Kimball Dunn CHAPTER 23 . CHAPTER 24 Mark took Valerie to the deu- tistb 'H the next morning, which 11 -in I to Dorothy an answer to prayer. Sh was fresh from hw day with Elbe, and worked up to an Increased state of righteous In- dignation. If her sister's child was out freed from the influence of a creature like the Tredway girl before another twenty-four hours, because there was no decency he assured Klise, it would be In the world. Loucy was in her own sitting room when Dorothy knocked. \.u- : got up courteously, il though she could sea even now that courtesy was not going to play much purl in the conversation. "Will you sit down?" she asked. Dorothy came In and closed thi door. "Isn't It a nice morning" saltl Lucy presently. There seamed * Heed for speech of some sort. "1 was no Rlad when I saw the tun. A dfciitlst seems easier to bear onitthow when it's bright, don't you think?" Ikirolhy stared at her for a moment without answering. "I won't pretend that this U a social all." he said at last. If she expected Lucy to question her further, she was disappointed. The iMrl merely wont on with her Earning. "Yon were unknown to this bouse on my last visit,' Dorothy said. "Or at least, I suppose you were. You established yourself ftrr I had gone back to my own responsibilities. You probably know that I was here to bury my ister. Svcn short months ago!" "Nine, wasm't It?" Lucy asked cheerfully. "Almost a year ago. Time dons fly." There was no answer. She added. "She must have have been vciy lovely." "What my sister was doesn't en- ter Into this discussion. I'm Kolng to crx'.'ik plainly, Miss Tredway, because I havp a duty here. Also because there is no one else to do It. Would you rare to tell me Just when and whpre my brother-ln- law found you?" Cross Examination Lu'-y started. "Found" was such terribly arenrate description. "Jmlgit Urown of Allliiuton. and Mr. Harrows, preside-ill of the Ml- ton Il'ink. recommended me." she said. "Thny worn old friends of my father." "Wli'Mi?" askr-d Dorothy. "I menu, how IMIIK lius It been KoInK on?" "If you nii>:ni Imw IOIIK Is It since Mr. Alexander eiiKHKed nut to tutor Valerie. I'm iifnild I don't know exactly. Hometlmi! In tlio early summer of last year. "Have you a mother 1 .'" "No.' Hald Lucy flatly. Slin add- ed notliiiiK lo the slntemeni. 'That may explain II. At least partially. How old mi; you 1 .'" I. . . put down her "I IM.MM-. S tit- Was very careful nhoiit It, laying her mother's Mold thimble In Us AHC, und putting away her little cIsKorx. ATler this was done, she lookf-d dellhi rately al lioiotby. "Do you know I'm just a little tired of answering questions," aha bald. "Wouldn't you like to tell me what It Is you waut?" "Very well, then. 1 want you to pack your things and leave this house. You may take whatever gifts my brother-in-law may have given you, but I want you to go as soon as possible. I see no reason why it shouldn't be at once." . "Perhaps you'd care to tell me whose authority you have (or dis- missing me?" asked Lucy. She was surprised to see how quiet she was ,and how cold. "The authority of common de- cency. The authority of my con- tern for my sister's only child." Sim was annoyed, and a little afraid of the cool-eyed young woman who looktxl at her so disconcertingly. The girl had not takeu the thing as she expected. "Come, my dear Miss what Is your name?" Will Lucy Leave? "Tredway," said Lucy. "Hare you forgotten? You used it only a mo- ment ago. Mr. Alexander engaged me to oonie here. Anyone can see what my Influence on Valerie, has been. It was my idea that if her father wanted to get rid of me he would naturally let me know." Dorothy sat staring at her. "You're a great deal harder than you look, aren't you?" sbe said. "Perhap* this isn't altogether a new experience for you. I'm per- fnctly willing to speak more plain- ly. In the course of my vlslli with a dozen different women during yesterday, I made a point of ques- <" in ; them. They were all my sister's friends. Women of wealth and position. They assured tue all of them that If present condi- tions eontlnued her, they would refuse to allow their children to remain friends with Valerie." Lucy had no way of knowing that this was ih* purest fiction, Invent- ed at the moment to bolster up a failing argument. She couldn't, <>r course-, tell that Dorothy and Elise had spent a quiet gossipy afternoon In Kllscs apartment. She stood and clasped her baud! tightly. If this wua true if she was really hurting Valerie there was only one thing to do. "Hut I'll have to spo/k to Mr. Alexander first," she cried. "How run I sneak away, as If I' done something I was ashamed oft I've been terribly happy here they've been HO good to me! I couldn't bear to have them think ma un- Krateful " (To Bo Continued) Bacon For Britain Some Pork For Us Ann Rutherford, In the Strat- ford Beacon-Herald, Tell* How To Use What Britain Doesn't Need Huron and ham are being sent over to Britain in increasing quantities, as Canadian producers get into their stride. Such em- phasis has been placed on the need for such food that the other parts of jiiirk have been decidedly neg- lected. People trot the idea tin -y should stop eating pork in order to semi more across the seas. That idea would not work, for there arc many cuts which are not suit- able for shipping but which af- ford perfect meals right here. There are spuru ribs, for ex- m WAS AS CROSS AS TWO STICKS / "Her temper flared at the least thing. Little did she know (hut too much ti.i and coffee was giving her a case of c .ifftinc-ncrvcs. Then some meddling relative persuaded her to try Postum. Before the end of a month she was laughing at me." Drinking rffrint-biv<iri||vi ofi.n rin> Ii- I rhfl, indigestion anil I'rtyiil nervo. If you ar n*rvou and irriubl* why not switch to Potlum for 10 d>i/f. Deliclotii IIIMJIII Poiium U anrirt If Itff from rtffcHnc. M*.! intuntlf in lie* cup > ll,i r. Ii no w>llr. no tiolhdr. Ordtr <Konomu.il Jnjfitit PoMum from your groctr. PM2 POSTUM u. They could not b shipped out. They belong right here, with or without a filling of sauerkraut to briny out that delicious flavor. There's purk tenderloin, a meat fit for a King. Neut squares of it, suitably dressed, are equally at home on the banquet table or at dinner in the kitchen. It doesn't go to Britain. And what about pig's feet? And hocks? Pickled trotters may not look enticing, but they have with- in them that certain something which defies description. They are, in the best sense of the word, toothsome, whether the tooth be natural or stort variety. Sausages need no brief from any one. Served au naturel with apple rings, with tomato slices with ketchup or relish or plain mustard, they take second place to no meat at breakfast, dinner or suppei. Little sausages or big ones, Hanked by scalloped pota- toes 01 baEing powder biscuits ah me! The ilavoi lingers! Last but not least, there's head- cheese. It's mesfcy stuff in the making, but tin end justifies the means. The ugiy head, resolved into its meaty parts and moulded into a quivering jelly was a btund- by in pioilcur times. It helped to nourish brawny tnen and nubie women, it does the same nowa- days, when it gets the chance. There are those who claim it is quite the choicest ii all pork tid- bits. We'd naruly go as iui as thau Suffice it to remark that nectar and ambrosia wouldn't stand a chance on a cold winter's evening in the lamplight when the headcheese is set out on the tal>ie in all its glory. Totality "We are iflut nuiy to Canada more convinced than ever that if wo expect to halt and overcome the Nazi hordes, everybody has got to sacrifice a great deal more than at present. This race is going to go to the swift. There is no time to be lost. The only way to win is through sheer to- tality of undertaking." State- ment by the party of Canadian newsmen on their return from Great Britain. TWO-PIECE FROCK IS GOOD MIXER By Anne VI. un. Build your wardrobe solidly on thu two-piece frock! You'll c>t double wear and double enjoy- misnt out of making- Pattern -11UO by Anno Adams. The blouse is unusually trim with a scalloped lapel colhir, a sc-t-ln belt that shows off H tiny waist and mini- mizes a laiRo one. Make it with lonn, thrru-tninrtor, or uliort nlcevcs. The skirt has a centre panel in front to (rive it just the rifrht Kinount of flare. Mix the skirt, with other blouses, mix the jacket with other skirts. Make both in :> bonnic plaid woollen for chic niid-scnson weur. The dearly illustrated directions in the Sew- ill); Ins! rut- lor help you to get that miatly tailored look. Why not make an extra jacket or skirt ! of contract fabric? Pattern 4!>10 is available in misses' and women 'a sizes 14, 16, 18, 'JO, 82, 34, , 3S, 40 and 42. Size Id, jacket ind skirt, takes !i% yards f>4 inch fabric. Send twenty cents (UUc) in coins, (stamps cannot be accept- ed) for this Anne Ailuins pattern to Koom 421, 73 Adelaide St. West, Toronto. Write plainly size, name, address and style mini her. Goebbela Has A Premonition Propaganda Minister Goebuel* writes in the weekly Das Reich that the "Axis powers arc really fighting for bare existence, and the worries and distress which we all must bear in the war would pale in the f^ice of the inferno which would await us if we were to lose." The article says that Hitler's work "often enough hung on a silken thread," and that "the chance whu'h the German nation possesses is indeed its greatest, b'.t also its last." 1 he article" tells the German people "not to a.-k when victory will come, but rather to see to it that it comes." Victory, GoebbcJs wrote, would require a "gigantic national ef- fort" from which no one could be exempted. "We can be victorious and wa will be victorious," he continued. "Just as a war which is won will benefit us all so a war which is lost would smash us all up. As always in the great hours of history our people has its fate in its own hands." Arctic Indians Donate $432.00 The Old Crow Indians who live north of the- Arctic Circle in Yu- kon territory near the Alaska boundary have sent to Resources Minister Crearar $432 for the relief of bombed out children in the United Kingdom, It was learned at Ottawa. Oollars come liard to the Crow Indians, most northerly of all North American bauds in Canada, so this gitt meant niucli to them. Indians rarely live as far north as the Arctic Circle, usually con- sidered Eskimo territory, but Crow Indians have hunted and trapped along the Crow River for generations. This summer they took their catch of last winter to a trader In Alaska and were paid In United States dollars. Theii Chief Moses, who had been told of the bombings In lyondon, took up a collection in the band. He headed the list with (100 and gome .'I Indian* made up the balance. The chief tied the hills in a red cotton handkerchief and turned It over to the Royal Canadian Mount- ed Police at Old Crow sution. The Mounties sent the money to Daw- sou and there It was deposited in a bank and a cheque forwarded to Ottawa. Mr. Crearar turned the funds over to the British high, commis- sioner's olllce In Ottawa. TABLE TALKS By SADIE B. CHAMBERS Every homcmaker and every family has its favorite food. Some are cherished recipes that have been handed down from one gen- eration to another, frayed, brown- edged scraps of paper, with old- fashioned writing. We love these old recipes even if they do call for a dozen eggs or more. Today's recipes are more practical, and often just as de- licious. Perhaps they will be to- morrow's heirlooms. Anyway the secret is to file or paste in the scrap book the family favorites. Here are four delicacies I know you will want to keep: Sweet Potato Slices medium-size sweet potatoes V4 cup honey 1 teaspoon salt 1 cup corn flake crumbs 2 tablespoons butter Scrub potatoes thoroughly and cook in boiling water until tender. Peel and cut into slices ^4-inch thick. Dip in warmed honey and roll in salted corn flake crumbs. j Place in greased baking pan and dot with pieces of butter. Bake in moderately hot oven (425*F.) bout 25 minutes. Yield: 6 servings. Aunt Sue't Corn Fl*k Drop Cookies Vi cup shortening 1 cup brown sugar 8 eggs H4 cups flour Vi teaspoon soda \ teaspoon baking powder Vi teaspoon suit 1 cup chopped nut meats Vi cup chopped dates 2 cups corn flukes Blend shortening und sugar thoroughly; add o'.r.i and beat until light und fluffy. Sift flour, soda, baking powder and salt to- gether; add to creamed mixture with nut meats, dates and corn f lakes; mix well. Drop from Uhlespoon onto greased baking sheet, flatten with spatula, and bake in modorutu oven (87&F. ) about 15 minutes. Yield: 8 do/on nnikies (2 inches in diametoi'). Aunt Jane'* Kritp Magic Macaroons 'a cup finuioiist'il milk I cup -.h mldcd cocoanut 1 cup o.m-p-.tppcil rice cereal OO U B L. B-A C TtN YOU PAY LESS Cilumet. one of the world's latgeu-sclling brandj of baking powder, probablr COSTS leu than chc baking powder you are using. YOU USE LESS Calumet's 4oubt<i- action permits vou co use less because it gives double leavening both during mixing and in the oven. BETTER RESULTS Calumet's continuant leavtning mean) finer, better tsxrured results for all your baking. Easy-opening, won't-spill con- tainer, with handy measuring device in the lid. LIOI ilix condensed milk, cocoanut and oven-popped rice cereal. Drop by spoonfuls onto well-greased baking sheet, about 1 inch apart. Bake in moderate oven (3oOF.) 10 minutes or until delicately browned. Yield: I'- dozen ('2 inches in diameter). Curried Veal 2 cups sliced onion % teaspoon minced garlic 1 cup diced celery 3 tablespoons fat 1 teaspoon curry powder 1 teaspoon salt H teaspoon pepper 2 tablespoons flour 2 cups milk 2 cups diced cooked veal 'j cup quartered almonds 1 chopped pimiento 3 cups oven-popped rice cereal 3 tablespoons melted butter Cook onion, garlic and celery in fat until lightly browned. Com- bine curry powder, salt, pepper and flour; stir into first mixture. Add milk slowly, stirring constant- ly. Cook until smooth. Add veal, nutmeaU and pimiento; simmer about 10 minutes. Combine crisp cereal and butter and heat thor- oughly; pile in centre of platter; surround with curried veal. Yield: 6 servings. MlM I hiiiiiP.rr-. t i-lfome* leltt-ri frvim inc. r. ,n H rruder*. S U I'lcu-'ii lo receive unvrxloBi OB toplv* for hi-r i I'lumn HDI! U even remlj lo llmra lo >our "pel peetev." lleiiuet* for reclpca *r pedal cm mi* arc la order. AdtlreM your letter* to "MlM Sadie II. Chum. ix-rx T3 \Venl Adelaide street. To- ronto." Send damped, leir-addrruril -nifiii|.i- If roo iii reply Bird Conservation Must Be Continued Conservation work might be continued in order to maintain the migratory bird resources of North America, reports the De- partment of Mines and Resources. Trained investigators of both Canada and the United States agree that their observations of migratory game birds in both countries indicate moderate gains and minor losses, affording a bas- ia for restrained optimism. In* formation gathered at many points, from southern Mexico to the Arctic coast, indicates that the wild ducks and geese of North America have, in general, in- creased in numbers during the past year, but that the increase is smaller than is desirable. Coots or mud hens are abundant in their normal range, but rail* have suffered both from shoot- ing and from severe winter weather. The population of wood- cock, while showing some local improvement, has continued, in general, below normal. Wilson's snipe has been decreasing stead- ily in numbers for some yean and has reached such a low level that the hunting of this bird hai been entirely prohibited through- out the United States. A Busy-Day Cake For Busy Workers By. KATHARINE BAKER Canadian women are busier these days than they have been for a long time. Even our social activities are no longer ways of putting in leisure time but have .taken on new meaning bridges, bazaars and all sorts of parties for raisng money lot war chari- ties, knitting for th hoys n the forces, preparing boxes for over- seas. Of course we're all aware of our first duty on the home front. The health of a nation really de- pends on its daily diet so we're giving conscientious planning In giving our families wholesome, nourishing and well - balanced meals. Cere's a cuke that's the answer to your most hectic day. P.n'v Day Cake 3 cups sifted cake flour 4 teaspoons double-noting baking powder 2 cups sugar 4 eggs, unbeaten 10 tablespoons meUted butter or other shortening '* teaspoon salt Milk as needed Sift flour once, measure, add baking powder, salt, and sugaiv and sift together three times. Break eggs into cup and fill cup with milk. Add another cup of milk; then melted butter. Put ail ingredients into mixing bowl and beat vigorously 3 minutes. Bake in three greased 9-inch layer pan* in moderate oven (375*F. ) 25 minutes. Spread Fluffy Mocha Frosting between layers and on top of cake. Fluffy Mocha Fretting Vi cup butter 4 cups sifted confectioners' sugar 3^t tablespoons cocoa K teaspoon salt ft cup strong coffee (about) 1 teaspoon vanilla % cup walnut meats, toasted and coarsely broken Cream butter thoroughly. Sift sugar, cocoa and salt together. Add to butter gradually with cef- fee until frosting is of right con- sistency to spread. Add vanilla. Spread between layers and on top of cake. Sprinkle with nut*. Makes enough frosting to spread between and on top of three 9- inch layers. Churchill Advises Old Chinese Custom Prime Minister Churchill light- ly suggested in his Housi of Com- mons .speech recently that one of the customs of Ancient Chin* would be of help in evaluating some of the criticizing on hi* conduct of the war. "There was a custom in An- cient China that anyone wh wished to criticize the Govern- ment could memorialize the em- peror, and, providing ha follow- ed it up by committing suicide, very great respect was paid to his word and no ulterior motive was assigned." BOOKS BY MAD. Postage prepaid on all order*. Write for free monthly Book* Guide. BURNILL'S BOOK SHOP 100 Von mo Street. Toronto MM's Fighting Pines a* WmMpl 29 NOW AVAILABLE For ii plctui* d*irl, *u<i eompUU "Crown Brand" ltbl. witfe your nm aud addrM nd tb nan* of th plotur* you want writ* Un en tht back. AddrM Dpt. J n. Tb* C B a d tituck Company Ltd.. 41 Wlltnc- -. tit. L . Toronto ISSUE 4& '41