uncle‘s house at Roma Cleft they are to stay. Marjorie knows Cartwright but "cuts" him and explains that he lives with his wife at the Manor House at Roma Cleft, and that the girl with him is evidently one of a long succession of companions, none of whom has ever been persuaded to stay at the Manor House for long,. Next morning, Marjoric and her two fricnds are swimming towards an old wreck just off the shors when Jimmy sees a girl in the act of diving from it. There is a haze over the sea, which does not, however, exâ€" plain why the girl cannot be seen when they reach the wreck. Jimmy, diving, brings the girl to the surface and finds that she is Phyllis Laleham. Later, he and Tubby, attracted by the barking of a dog, find the dead body of a man lying against an upturnedg boat. CHAPTERS IV to VI.â€"Jimmy waits by the body whilst Tubby hurries back to Roma Cleft to inform the policeman there. Phyllis asserts that she did not dive, but was struck on the head by someone who must have been hiding on the wreck just as she was about to do so. Jimmy and Tubby accompany her to the Manor House, which they have alâ€" most reached when they hear the squeals of a dog and the thug of blows. Phyllis and Jimmy rush through the gates, but Tubby is stopped by the lcadgeâ€"keeper. Tujby knocks him out and hurries after his friends. They find that Cartwright is illâ€"treating a dog, and when Jimmy interferes, Cartwright attacks him with a whip. Jimmy knocks him down, ang Cartwright xetues mutâ€" tering threats. CHAPTER VII There were many who called Terri vale Wake, solicitor, of Bedford Row, : nard man. Those who didn‘t, gave him a harsher name still. Both partics left him entirely unmoved. CroIl andgd lony + as "Tubby"â€"are North Devon and a girl who is in t] of the "bounder‘ that her name is that of her com|j wright. At the sta by are met by Ma uncle‘s house at to stay. Marjorie "cuts" him and e with his wife at Roma Cleft, and 1 is evidently one o A few days before the events already recorded, he sat at his desk in his priâ€" vate office, a letter in his hand. He had read it through many times, his eyes behind their glasses flinty and calculating, his fingers caressing his long chin, his face with its heavy, jutâ€" ting nose as immobile as the granite from which it might well have been carved. CHAPTERS IT croft and Tony "Strange," he mutter: under the circumstance sent her theore!" A discreet knc his chair, In th clerk. Alfred J6 face and pointe craft and slyness of his master a Several his tongueâ€" one withot was engag convenienc them he w ed, but bef herself apy Below Read it, "A lady to see soft announcemen give her name." Wake â€" frownec coming when it d ing. For the nex! desired above ev with his thought Hundred are enjoyi: Fortune." you may s ments of t to date, a: the story is given hi to date. 10 ASsert lerrivale WAaKe sI discomposure would be overstatin case. More than once it had been red that the crack of goom itself : find him awaiting it in his chair moved. There was just the slig hardening of the frigid eye, the mentary droop of heavy lids, and he was himsolf again. "You may directed. engaged SYNOPSIS OFP PREVIOUS CHAPTERS hou frowned. The then it did, was the next few m ibove everythins thoughts. | things were «C ieâ€"to say that h out an appoint: ged,. that she n 1€ mpan statior muttered, "strange that Ba 11 18 illlâ€"Lrealtling og, interferes, Cartwright a whip. Jimmy knocks irtwright retires mutâ€" iders of The Adva serial story, "Tryu 12e com) s OUuU dou iqubtediy have statâ€" s uttered the visitor the clerk‘s shoulder. rrivale Wake showed i be overstating the ce it had been averâ€" of goom itself would intment, that h e must await hi ter office. One 0o btedly have stat mpany of a man e. Tubby learns lis Laleham and George Cartâ€" Jimmy and Tubâ€" Cottle, at whose i Cleft they are e interruption, s doubly annoyâ€" minutes he had n# to be alone Deen 1 ma â€"Jimnim who is I should have ennin th he tip of , _ Pruant 7? If not, w instalâ€" published ‘ take up synopsis slightest the moâ€" ind then y Ashâ€" ; known train to ested in E a man 1 learns ynopsl he Un =â€" h With a perfunctory word of apology which made her smile, he went out into the clerk‘s office, closing the door behind him. For an instant or two she sat motionless, but as soon as she heard the murmur of his voice on the outer phone she became galvanized into acâ€" tion. Enatching a bangle from her wrist, on which hung a tiny key, she inserted the latter in the lock of his table drawer. Next moment her eyes and brain were taking in the import of the letter he had thrust there. As if nothing had happened in the meantime, she renewed her thanks for the money he had given her. Then, just as she was going, an apparent afterâ€" thcught made her ask a question. "By the way, Terrivale, what‘s hapâ€" pened to that pretty exâ€"officio ward of yoursâ€"Phyllis, wasn‘t her name?" For a fraction of a second she was afraid that she had aroused suspicion. His glance flickereda from her to the drawer and back again to her face. Her eves, however, were entirely withâ€" out guile. "Phyllis Laleham," he said shortly, "oh, she‘s got a job. Wouldn‘t stay at home." With fresh inwarga amusement she noted that he did not divulge the loâ€" cality of Phyllis‘ job. Nor did he apâ€" pear to have sufficient interest to inâ€" quire it. Instead, she made her final adieus, passing through the outer office as if unconscious of Alfred Jennings‘ admiring gaze. Her departure was the signal for Wake to resume his air of brooding inâ€" trospection. He did not take the letter out of the drawer again, however, since already he knew its contents by heart. At length, when he judged that his late visitor must be well clear of the premises, he picked up his hat and stick and strode into Jennings‘ room. "I‘m going out to lunch," he said. "Back in about an hour." The clerk nodded, and for ten minâ€" utes longer continued to apply himself to his work. Then, with a glance at the clock, he rose deliberately and beâ€" took himself to the head of the stone staircase outside leading down into the well of the building. His habitual She drew a lorg breath as she read it. Then she dropped it back in its place, and reâ€"locked the drawer. She had barely composed herself when Wake reâ€" entered. "No,." he snapped, "T‘ll speak to him from the outer office." One other thing he did. With a swift motion he transferred the letter in his hand, and its envelope, to the drawer in front of him. This he locked. Then, his countenance wreathed in the frosty smile he kept for his less important clients, he heaved his long form to its feet to greet his caller, Bleak as it was, this smile vanished abruptly as soon as the clerk had closed the door. It was evident that the woâ€" man who had just entered was not unâ€" known to him, and just as evident that she was unwelcome. "You, Elise!" he said harshly, though he kent his voice subdued. "I told you sly expressicon intensified, and it was only when he had satisfied himself beyond doubt that his employer was safely off the premises that he returned â€"@nd this time he went straight into (Copyright) raight into|speakes of cise, gradually increasing the amount until the patisnt was able to be on his feet doing light work for about five hours a@ day. This "hardened up" the patient and when he returned home he | was better able to prevent a return of the symptoms of tuberculosis. Toâ€"day we find that just as fat is a ‘ handicap to the average healthy indiâ€" Once more he read the letter through, as if desirous of memorizing it word by word, A copy? Would he have time? He would have liked to copy it but did not dare risk itâ€"Terrivale Wake had a way of appearing unexpectedly before his time. So, leaving everything as he had found it, he slipped back to his desk. To all appearances he haq never left it ‘when, in all due course, his emâ€" ployer returned. "Listen, you guys, no more trouble outa you, or we‘ll have to take you outside and give you a goingâ€"over, see?" Turnâ€" ing to the teacher, the other said, "Just call on the B.B.‘s any time you need help, lady." "What are the B.B.‘s?" she asked. ‘"Big Brothers," he replied. "We‘re the school Gâ€"men." A young working la: high schoo reports to where she taining dis soundless whis apparent in hi "So that‘s I he murmured. he going to d be watched, w you, Alfred to do the sleu existence hag not away of anncunc and rea had don And as J ‘very B.B. is a Big Brother to Every Tough in School Toâ€"day we find that just as fat is a handicap to the average healthy indiâ€" vidual so also is "too much" fat a hanâ€" dicap to the tuberculosis patient. Many fat people have thin blood. A little exâ€" trg fat is considered safe or even adâ€" visable, but a great amount of fat interâ€" feres with heart action and with the circulation of the blood. feres with heart circulation of th The thought nc culous patient wi plenty of meat, tables, ‘butter, cr when it agrees Perhaps the b treatment of var ing the patient fcod but to eat the lawye In typho given ple he was f (Registered Copyright Ac probably : chreeâ€"mon carrots, to minced liv In other ing foods giv cally and so 1 that he is be allment. Ry James W. Barton, M.D., Toronto reatment of @4 patient with tubercuâ€" osis was measureq by the amount of veight (mostly fat) that he had acâ€" The survey now owns and adminisâ€" ters 99 refuges, covering 2,188,433 acres. The bureau actually has provided 3,â€" umulated during his stay in the saniâ€" |177,831 acres of bird refuge land, howâ€" orium. Patients were sent home | ever. Options for the purchase of nearâ€" veighing actually mors than they had | ly 1,000,000 other acres have been apâ€" ver weighed before. After a few weeks | proved, and these areas, through speâ€" r months at home the fat, in many |cial permits from the owners, are now ases, began to disappear, therse was a}|or soon will be functioning as waterâ€" reat loss of strength, the symptoms |fowl refuges. , eturned and the patient returned to! The land now owneg by the bureau he sanitorium. |for migratory waterfowl use is valued This induced the sanitorium officials | roughly at $14,000,000. Several additionâ€" o give patients a little work or exerâ€" |al millions of dollars of valuable land ise, gradually increasing the amount is owned by the various states and used intil the patisnt was able to be on his | for refuges. eet doing light work for about five Before the ducks fly south again, the iours a@ day. This "hardened up" the |bureau expects to have some new winâ€" atient and when he returned home he|tering ranges. Six refuges are beino arc.â€" is at home the fat, in man gan to disappear, therse was s of strength, the symptom and the patient returned t urned. TO BE JennIin leuthin nt with an allâ€"round dietâ€" eat, eggs, milk, leafy vegeâ€" r, cream and cod liver oil rees with the patient. he biggest advance in the f various diseases is allowâ€" ient to not only eat more eat the kinds of foods he 1e New Yorketr) ibstitute teachey pa . Lieb, in Hygeia, ew models in diet." the patient is now urishing foods where tarved. Meat is now sm, in Bright‘s disâ€" of the kidneys) and ssure. Starchy food:s » diabetic patients. y grandmothers are when they see their being fed ce, sCcraped beef and o4 a Kkey whose suspected. He, too, s furtive thrusting hen his visitor was brought it to light ‘arefully than she e had more time. lips pursed up in faint flush became OM of Poutrs patient hims body needs, lance with the Bodp esd the tuberâ€" s and morale fight off the the nourishâ€" ength physiâ€" lies es, is it?" isâ€"what‘s 11 have to timeâ€"and are going THE PORCUPINE ADVANCE, TTMMINS, ONTARIO (From Brampton Conservator) Edward Beatty enhanced his reputation before a joint meeting of the Canadian Chamber cf Commerce and the Kiwanis Club of Toronto when he gave utterance to another of his inâ€" spiring and constructive addresses. Here worth pondering: "The system of society which we have inheritsd, ang with all our faults, have improved, is not ours to dissipate. It is a trust from generation to generaâ€" tion, and with every willingness to perâ€"| mit and encourage attempts to improve It, it is our duty to pass on to those who replace us, the liberty for which our fathers fought, It will not do fori us to take refuge in the assertion that erconcmit law is on our side and that economic truth is great and will preâ€" vail. Truth will prevail, but before now | it has gone into eclipse for longl is an extract from this speech well | | | it has gone into eclipse periods." Plan Sanctuary for Wild Ducks and Geese Seeking safety ports for transient ducks and gesse, the United States govâ€" ernment plans to acquire 5,200,000 acres for birg refuges during the next four years, according to a despatch this week from Washington, D.C. A spokesman for the Bureau of Bioâ€" loegical Survey, which has supervision over migratory birds, said last week at Washington that the bureau‘s goal was the acquisition of 7,500,000 acres of reâ€" fuge lands by 1940. To achieve that, more than 1,000,000 acres must be obâ€" tained annually. It has been recommended the bureau purchas> and develop 2,244,000 acres of nesting refuges, 1,096,000 acres of feedâ€" ing and resting refuges and 1,879,000 acres of wintering refuges, or a total of 5,219,000 acres. The only furriers ‘in the Porcupine district doing fully guaranteed work on the premises. Our modern shop is completely equipped to handle the finest fur work. Hundreds of satisfied customers is your assurance of perfect satisfaction. Estimates Gladly Given 2 Empire Block Phone 1160 Kenneth Delosier died in the hosâ€" pital at Rouyn last week as the result of injuries received in an accident in a stope at the Noranda Mine. Delosier and a partner were operating a crushâ€" ing machine underground, and in tryâ€" ing to start some material through the crusher he pitthed forward, falling down the stope a distance of some 100 feet, He was still alive when he was reached ten minutes after the accident by reseue workers, but he passed away in the hospital about an hour after he was admitted there. Delosier was a native of Port Arâ€" thur, and was only 23 years old at the time of his death. His mother resides in Toronto and was at once notified of the sad accident. The young man lived for a time at Eganville before going to Rouyn to take employment at the mines there, Present Generation Owe Debt to Past and Future United States Government Now on Plan for Shelterâ€" ing Transient Birds. Before the ducks fly south again, the bureau expects to have some new winâ€" tering ranges. Six refuges are being acâ€" quired in Arkansas, Louisiana, Missisâ€" sippi anq Texas. These have 355,000 acres, Renfrew Mercury:â€"Business condiâ€" tions and living conditions would be better for all if those who had the means would pay their bills. One of the severe hardships of all business is that those able to command credit keep on commanding it, thoughtlessly perhaps, despite the fact that they have the Rouyn Miner Killed in Hundredâ€"Foot Fall in Stope Fevere nardsnips Oof all Dusiness is that those able to command credit keep on commanding it, thoughtlessly perhaps, despite the fact that they have the muney and could pay,. Let those who can, do their part toward keeping cash in circulation. "Pay what thou owest," is one of the divine injunctions, Most Reasonable Prices © REM Criticism by the parents of the food and care given the five famous Dionnes no doubt has stirred interest in the daily life of the quintuplets. Minute detail of a day in the lives of the Dionne quintuplets was described last week by Dr. A. R. Dafoe, their physician, as the babes entered upon the last month of their second year of existence. Plenty of vitaminâ€"giving foods and iliquids. milk, fruits and vegetables and their juices in raw and prepared form:; and a minimum of starchy foods. That, in a nutshell, is the diet Dr. Dafoe has | prescribed for his charges, and which is followed rigidly, with, of course, day I to day changes for the sake of variety. Seven o‘clock brings bath time, which usually requires almost an hour. At eight there is breakfast, joined in by one of the nurses. Prior to breakfast the babies are given a quantity of acidolphus milk, the first of a ration that amounts to approximately 20 ounces per baby per day. Breakfast itself consists of egg, bread and butter, milk and arrowroot or other similar biscuit, Milk given at this meal usually amounts to about five ounces, and is the first of approximately threeâ€"quarâ€" ters of a quart per baby per day. Life for a quintuplet begins at 6 a.m., with cod liver oil for vitamins‘ sake, disguised in fruit juice, usually orange. This is the first of two daily doses. Dr. Dafoe said they drink it just like water. After breakfast the babies play for a period of about two hours, indoors or outdoors as the weather dictates, with milk or water being given them freely should they show a desire for it. Just before noon dinnertims arrives, and that means soup, vegetables, bread and butter, milk or custard desserts, and milk. The whole is preceded by a quanâ€" tity of acidolphus milk, which, by the way, is given to promote healthy elimâ€" ination and appetite. When they are availaole, fresh vegeâ€" tables are always used for the babies, but when it is impossible to procure them homogenized canned fruits and vegetables are resorted to. Soups conâ€" tain the groung pulp of the vegetables from which they are made, while the vegetable course itself usually consists of some green vegetable. The "green mush" which was criticized recently by the babies‘ parents was asparagus tips, Dr. Dafoe states. Toâ€"day the babes are perfect in every detail, Dr. Dafoe revealed. Their little limbs are strong and straight, their bodies are evenly proportioned, their muscles Aare developing gradually and normally, and their mentalities and inâ€" dividual personalities are developing constantly. Each of the babies is daily becoming a little different from her sisters as their individual characterisâ€" tics are allowed free rein for developâ€" ment. Starts ‘at 6 a.m. Says Dr. Daâ€" foe in Describing the Daily Schedule of the Dionnes. Daily Routine of the Life of Quintuplets After dinner comes sleep time. That Quaker Corn Flakes are the on‘!/y corn flakes with a moneyâ€"back guarantee of better flavour printed on every package, Start Day at 6 a.m. a quintuplet begins at QUAKER ASSURES YOU OF THAT To ©@ Quaker Corn Flakes are better value too ! They cost no more and in addition to the exclusive features mentioned above they are the only Corn Flakes irradiated for health with Sunshine Vitamin "D". And every package contains a valuable coupon exchangeable for useful merâ€" chandise. Ask your grocer for Quaker Corn Flakes in the yellow package. BETTIER FLAVOUR OQWWM THAT IS OUR CONTRACT WITH YOU © Your own taste serves judgâ€" ment on Quaker Corn Flakes, If they are not better flavoured, more delicious than any corn fakes you ever tasted, we guaranâ€" tee to return your purchase money in full ... there are no conâ€" ditions other than those exacted by your palate andsby the palates of your family. usually lasts until about 2.30 in the afterncon, and is followed by a play period, indoors or outdoors, according to the weather. About 8.30 or 4 o‘clock the day‘s second feeding of cod liver oil is administered. The babies ars then free to play and romp for another hour, and are given milk or water if they want it. Sn Bath At five, especially on dull days, the babiss get a sun bath in the rays of mercury are lights, which lasts for half an hour. This, of course, is to simulate the sun‘s rays, and during this period, the hospital nursery bears considerable resemblance to a nudist colony. At fiveâ€"thirty the second bath is given, with dinner following at from 6 to 6.15. It consists of oatmeal and other cooked cereals, which the babies relish considerably. This is accompanied, of course, by bread and butter and milk, and preceded by acidolphus milk. Seven o‘clock means lights out in the nursery, and by eight the babies are settled down for a night‘s sleep that carries them without interruption to 6 a.m. Sometimes one of the babiss will wake for a drink, but it is more usual for them to slsep through the night withcut waking. REPRESENTATIVES F. N. Whaley A. Nicolson 7 Reed Block 10 Marshall Blk YOU GET IT IN QUAKER _ . CORN FLAKEsS® T‘wo Railways Seek Entry to Northwestern Quebec Two railways are seeking right to enter Northwestern Quebec to tap the mining areas of that section. The identity of the interests behind the two proposed new railways does not seem to Je plain, but it does seem that a railâ€" way in the area referred to would mean a decided boom for the country with increased development. Northwestern Quebec has been more or less handiâ€" capped by lack of railway service im the past. The best service seemed to te promised by a subsidiary of the Temisâ€" kaming and Northern Ontario Railway but the intended entry of this road was for considerable time blocked in the apparent interests of other railways. It is to be hoped for the sake of Northâ€" western Quebec and its development that the matter of rights for one or 2sth of the two new railways planning to cperate there will be decided wholly on the matter of the interests of Northâ€" western Quebes alone. Toronto Telegram:â€"The average boy is a curiosity. He is always nicer to the sister of some other boy than his own sister. "vwou waNT BETTER.