Tighten Control Over Adoption lonor Girls Like Dance Arran aws to Protect Children Suthciently Strirgent in Great dritain JWS Wws Light On Cashion Terms aining School At Tec Okla., _ Inaugurates O ial Activities wpied by varous . _ It is popular wiably _ produced ecmbroideries are mcrally known as ‘y is really broâ€" numerous piere= in round, oval, s, combined with notifs. _ Or openâ€" iz in shape and 1 with a stiletto, : Quite Fan ize Person at the U.S. Deâ€" cure has studied r years and has its just as beneâ€" ‘urtous, and that iz ago given uP s, we have the â€" conducting its x Control Com ~dred doliars ofâ€" ‘lubs killing the eâ€"month P@M mmendations aimâ€" ontrol over the i in Great Britain ajority of a home »vinted to investi. f adoption soc‘eâ€" t that all adoptâ€" r confirmation of a probationary Dumb Animals her sorrow u ‘orb ‘dden to arâ€" oad by any forâ€" tish subject take a magistrate hag rt, a license perâ€" Usiced . »estâ€"behaved int, ind enjoyed n ow â€" with the ( them college lent picked for + at Tecumseh vho didn‘t quite ved to be just e in order that next time Mrs. ves a dance for ry takes its i in France mportant type isually a masâ€" n finme threads, if and flower ors characterâ€" cncountered ecmbroidery in crossâ€"stiteh is solidly filled is a heavier ons should h ighs or county urnham _ said, "social backâ€" turn to a norâ€" s to hold the rotating . the jualify eral cases of # of children, n used reâ€" nmer frocks, term for drawn out formerly asâ€" ut now faâ€" llens as well â€" l')veryliody it success. to familiâ€" ns used by ay be well definitions are quite (or should others are hurn milk 1 dressing cating. technique 1 next to twist of a work emâ€" â€" with a fine tw U Three bandits seize a transcontinâ€" ental bus, and force the driver to guide it up a mountainside to a loneâ€" ly log shack. They want a valuable secret formula believed to be in the possession of one of the passengers, Finley Trump. To add to the sinistâ€" er situation, a raging forest fire, creeping up the mountain, traps the group. . The first night, one of the bandits _ is _ mysteriously _ strangled with h‘s own bandana, and the next night, a seconc one meets the same fate. The third bandit, Stutter, is vverpowered and bound. In the middle of the night, young Dr. Nick Strand and May Lawrence, pretty nurse to whom he had become engagâ€" ad, Jiscover Trump strangled to death with a bandama. Two persons are issing, Amelia Langor and Kenneth Canada‘s FavouriteTea ed Miss Jones. ind May stood looking down ic slumbering Mrs. Jenkins, 1 been prostrated when told husband‘s disappearance. The of the fire nearer and nearâ€" 1 be heard â€"and the constant and boom of the everlasting Grit lay under their feet, and ng they touched was hot. " said Miss Jones, "the murâ€" pects to get out of this." sh you‘d tell me if you have sp‘cionâ€"who it is," sighed it really didn‘t seem to Death was so close anyway. says he doesn‘t know who andana." s with his on, the k‘tchen d Miss Jones *"Has it ocâ€" you, by the way, that if it hotter, that sample of gun r whatever it is, may blow kingdom come?" here ran it be?" shuddered ne was coming up the road unsteadily. _ Clinging to May stared into the velvety Then, out of the shadows, ! the figurs of Amelia Banâ€" TERROR MOUNTAIN Can laid a han® upon her arm. an"" he demanded. ittle Jenkins man," shudâ€" iss â€" Bangor. . "I couldn‘t ho can? I heard him pass nd I took out after him." d and sank down on the bus. "He must have been find a way out, but he be running right into the n, I lost sight of him. Oh, ever make th‘s trip?" uddenly, she caught sight dy of Trump,. and her #ed open. reached her, she stared at n lackâ€"lustre eyes. Her in straight wisps. azy little fool ran right he muttered "I couldn‘t : quick steps were returnâ€" hurried to meet him. Lefty‘s bandana," he anâ€" "He‘d left it in the kitâ€" n he beat it. Only Stutâ€" ere now." e Bangor woman is gone!" She and Jenkins! What CHAPTER VII !eft the house and : lus, where she sat moicy board resde a said â€"Strand. "What‘s By MADELEINE SHARPS BUCHANAN But the murderer t of this â€" of that i sleeping tablet," *T CEA Lady Aberdeen got in touch with Mr. A. G. Brown, a former provost of Fraserburgh, who, after making an extensive search, discovered that it was at Ladysford thit Mr. Macâ€" kenzie King‘s grandfather, Mr. John King, had spent his early days it was only a few days ago that Mr. Brown received conclusive evidence from the Register House in Ediaâ€" burgh that Ladysford aad actually It was by the happiest of cvinciâ€" dences that Mr. Mackenzie King was able to satisfy his lifelong wish. When he heard that he was to be offered the freedom of Abordeen, he immediately wrote to Lady Aberdeen asking her if she could make some inquiries as to the birthplace of his grandfather. "It is a great pleasure to me to visit the home of my grandparents," he said. "I only wish my father would have been here along with me." It was indeed a day that the Canaâ€" dian premier will look back upon with the happiest of memor‘es. Again and again he expressed his delight as ke examined the old manor house which was his grandfuather‘s home beâ€" fore he went to Canada with the Royal Horse Artillery. a earved wooden chair which had come from the old church at Tyrie. Morpheus‘ Greatest Domain He traced the birthplace of his paâ€" ternal grandfather to â€" Lagysford, Tyrie, and had tea in the room in which probably that pioneer was christened. _ Before leaving, . Mr. Mackenzie King was presented with Mr. W. L. Mackenzie King, prime minister of Canada, was anle recentâ€" ly to satisfy a lifeâ€"long ambitionâ€" writes the Aberdcen Pross and Jourâ€" nal. be it Visits Home Of Grandfather And as she walked back to the house, wiping gritty cinders from her hot face, she whispered, "Can thit A strange excitement seemed to have taken possession of Miss Jone:. She stared off into the flames. If they never got down from here, if the flames wiped them out, no cne would ever know what nad transpirâ€" ed among the passengers of the illâ€" fated bas. Miss Jones‘ lips were grim. ‘They would have a showâ€" down aimong themselves. however, beâ€" fore the end came. She would see to that! The truth would be known beâ€" fore death reached them. "My brother brought them back from the War," offered Miss Bangor, at her s‘de. She was coughing, and her eyes were rimmed with black ""Miss Jones, 1 don‘t want to die!"‘ "Who does?"" Miss Jones said shortly, and handed the glasses back to her. Amelia Eangor took them and returned to the bus. Without interest, Miss Banyor enâ€" tered the bus and returned with the glasses, which she handed to Miss Jones. Miss Jones, walking to the rise of ground to the left of the log house, examined the glasses before she looked through them. They were very powerful. "Amelia," said Miss Jones, "I should like to see your field glasses." Linp, dejected Ame"y Bangor. Dawn wasr breat ng. Jt was a dawn none of them would ever forâ€" getâ€"shot with flames and cinders and ash. 999 (To be continued) They motored to the house, which is surrounded by a lovely garden, descended on ihe surprised occupant, Mrs. Davidson, tenant of the farm cf Ladysford, and for an hour Mr. Mackenzie King explored the buildâ€" ing and its surroundings, be‘ing charmed with the oldâ€"world atmosâ€" phere of the place. ie was parwevlariy interested in some cld stome stops rear the house which rorved as a morntirg and disâ€" mounting place for ponies, been the home of Mr. John King. The Dominion premer covld hardâ€" ly wait to visit the old rlace,. Among the highlight of his over seas visit were attendance at the royal garden party at Buckingham Major Palmer spent a very busy time while overseasâ€"it was six weeks of novelty and also of rather poignant memories, for three days were spent in the beautiful cemeteries, where thousands _ of _ Canadian _ soldiers sleep, around the Vimy Memorial, Major Palmer reâ€"visited the Vimy batâ€" tleground almost 20 years to a day after he crawled up the old trail, wounded. He walked that trail again on his visit to the cemeteries last month. It is the same trail that he remembered so well. Major Palmer flew to and from Paris, making the 185â€"mile trip across the Channel in 90 minutes. He marvelled at the marked progress that aviation has made in England and on the Continâ€" ent as compared with Canada. "Only in Paris was 1 told that Canâ€" adian apples were used," said Major Palmer. "In London, it was South African raw fruit, New â€" Zealand cheese and buiter, and Australian canned goods, raisins and wines. Canâ€" ada may be doing a big export busiâ€" ness to the British Isles but a Canaâ€" dian certainly doesn‘t get that imâ€" pression on a visit. You seldom see Canadian goods on display and rarely hear mention of them. I think the one thing that Canada needs is a good, brisk advertising campaign in the Old Country." The building, which is st loust 250 ST. THOMAS. â€" Canada is falling down badly in advertising it farm products and in getting the British people "Canadianâ€"minded", according to Major F. R. Palmer, who has reâ€" turned from a six weeks‘ visit to the Old Land. Traveller Declares Other Dominâ€" ions Are Overâ€"Shadowing Canâ€" ada; Back From Six Weeks‘ Visit to England. k Canadian Products Require Caz Advertising In Old Country wKnit it, and live in it!â€"this cool, operwork blouse of string, whose body is of lacy stitch, yeke and sleeves of plain. It‘s lovely in yarn, tos. Pattern 1251 contains directions for making this blouse and a plain knitted skirt in sizes 10â€"18 and 38â€"40 (all given in one pattern) ; illustrations of blouse and stitches used; materials used. Send 20 cents in stamps or coin (coin preferred) for this pattern to Necalecraft Dept., Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Adelaide St., Toronto. Writr plainrly PATTERN® NUMBER, your NAME and ADDRESS. COOL KNIT OF SUMMERY CHARM IN BLOUSE BY LAURA WHEELER "Are we providing homes, or are we only providing structures" 1 think people are aometimes happier in their old slums than in some of theâ€"I dare sayâ€"‘modern slums‘." 2. Suitable shelter at the right price. 3. Access to the fresh air. 4. A reasonable amount of leisure and also of quiet. 5. A job of work. "Proper housing of the people is ong of the most important things in preventive medicine," Lord Horder told a mecting of housing experts. "Houses that are real homes are needed. food. LONDON.â€"The five basic prinâ€" ciples of life that lead to health and bappiness have been laid down by Lord Horder, the King‘s doctor. They are: It was in this house that Mr. King‘s grandfather was baptized on May 8, 1814, and when Mrs. Davidâ€" son insisted on her distinguished gues? having tea in the room in which probaily the ceremony was performâ€" ed, Mr, Mackenzie King‘s delight knew no bounds. Home, Not Structures, Held Need of The People y«»rs old, is built very solidly of granite. and roofed with old Scots slate. A twoâ€"storey house with two side wings projecting forward, it has that substantial appearance typical of the old manor houses of Scotland. There is no doubt that the British people are preparing for any war emergencies that may arise, yet none appeared to be unduly alarmed, Maâ€" jJor Palmer reported. Instructions are being given in the use of gas masks and the proper things for people to do in event of air raids. At the air show he was handed a pamphlet, dis tributed by the Peace At Any Price organization, uring British people to resist all municipal and national regulations and to decline to take part in antiâ€"gas drills. Major Palmer also attended the Royal Air Force Show, the Internaâ€" tional Horse Show, and the Kingw@reâ€" view of the exâ€"service men was a most impressive sight, he said. The exservice men woere one and one half hours passing the reviewing stand, marching twenty abreast, Railway Electrification Major Palmer was greatly interestâ€" ed in the rapid strides being made in England in the electrification of steam railways. Larger depots are being built to accommodate the longâ€" er trains. Everywhere he saw signs of this progress, The Southâ€"Eastern Railway is electrified out as far as Wimbledon. At the Leeds Military Tattoo, Major Palmer watched the staging of an imitation aerial raid, just one of the many evidences of the preparedness in the British Isles for the possible visit of an air fleet from a hostile nation. Palace grounds, when he was greetâ€" ed by King George VI and enjoyed a fiveâ€"minute talk with Earl Stanley Baldwin, the former premler; atâ€" tendance at the Aldershot Military Tattoo when he was guest of honor at a dinner given by the Northumâ€" berland Fusiliers; and a short trip to Scotland. He brought home many sprigs of dried heather for his Scotâ€" tish friends as mementoes of this visit. FEnough of the right kind of PATTERN 1251 The Brockyvlle Recorder and Times writesâ€" In contrast to this new trend toâ€" wards larger sizes comes the measure ments of an 1$â€"ytarâ€"old modern Venâ€" us, Miss Barbara Allen. She has been chosen to represent the perfect woâ€" man in a physical health film. Broad shoulders and fairly slender hips give the best effect with modern clothes. The swagger coats will howâ€" ever, disguise any discrepancy of hip measurements as long as the should: ers are broad enough to carry the "swing" of the swagger cut. Modern women are growing plump er, according to word from London, Eng. Dress sizes which were regarded as standards a year ago are no longer accurate. There is no return to the full figures of before the war, but the craze for slim "plankâ€"ike" figures has definitely waned. 4 inches; weight, 114 pounds; bust, 34 inches; waist, 26 inches,. Heights are also being increased. Instead of the Sâ€"foot 4â€"inch average of 1934 or so, women today average 5 feet 6 inches in height, according to the new dress "stockâ€"size measure ments. Bread should be cut thin for sand: wiches, edges should be neat, and the filling and butter spread evenly to edge of the bread. Dayâ€"old bread of close, firm texture is the best to use. Before slicing the loaf, remove the crusts; if long, cut the loaf in two, Perfect Girl Is Growing Taller She Is Also Increasing Her Weight, According To French toast with jam is a very nitce change from the usual French toast with syrup or sugar and cinnaâ€" mon. It is a particularly welcome change at breakfast and is also a good lunch or supper dish. It‘s really just bread, milk eggs and jam and so is fine for the children who love it. And now for something new in sandwiches. A book could be written about sandwiches aloneâ€"a different kind could be served every day for a decade. They lend themselves to so many variations! 2 cups sifted cake flour 2 tablespoons baking powder 14 teaspoon salt 3 egg yolks, well beaten 1 cup milk 4 tablespoons melted butter 3 egg whites, stiffly beaten. Sift flour once, measure, add bakâ€" ing powdcr and salt and sift dgain. Combine egg yolks, milk and butter. Add to flour, beating until smooth. Fold in egg whites. _ Bake in a hot waflle iron. When done, brush with melted butter and spread jam over half of waffle and fold over, Cut in half and dust each portion with powdered sugar, and serve hot. Will make four 4â€"section waffles. If you‘ve been making jam today and have some left over which wasn‘t enougl to fiill a bottle, or if you‘re family are so enthusiastic that they want to try the jam before next Winâ€" ter, you can give it to them in more ways than spreading it on bread or toast. A hot waffle shortcake is the perfect thing to serve when there are just a few present. It‘s a grand desâ€" sert any time of the year but will prove especially welcome now. Her perfect figure is: Height 5 feet There :re plenty of times, too, when we wish we had a new kind of sandwich to take to the picnic or some delightful snack to serve on the porch of a hot summer evening. Here are a few ideas on what can be done in the line of giving spice to your next picnic supper and â€" evening snack: We speak a word or two for the Right now, most of us are trying to find ways and means to serve the family nourishing food without too much trouble or fuss. The Summer is not the time to spend long hours cooking heavy meals and yet variety, flavour and nourishment are still in demand is far as meals go. The Traffic Officers Snacks and Sandwiches Woman‘s World By Mair M. Morgan There is the additional consideraâ€" tion that the work which these officâ€" ers carry out is distinctly hazardous. Many of them have suffered serious injury in the course of duty, others have given their lives, And yet the average traffic officer does not comâ€" plain. The highway traflic officers do not possess soft jobs by any means,. Ofâ€" ten having long "beats" which they must patrol regularly day after day sometimes from early morning to n ghtfall, they are compelled to spend long hours in the saddle, and their duties do not by any means end when they lay up their motorcycles for the night. (There are reports to be preâ€" pared, courts to be attended and alâ€" ways the highway traffic officer must be on call to investigate an accident which has occurred at some point on his "beat." highway traffic officgrs, representaâ€" tives of the law who are not always regarded with favor by the people who use the roads but whose eliminaâ€" tion would soon be followed by a carâ€" nage beside which present casualties would be infinitesimal. 1 cup dried figs 1% cups water 3 tablespoons quickâ€"cooking tapioca 1â€"8 teaspoon salt 4 teaspoon cinnamon 14 cup dates, ground 4 cup nut meats, chopped 1 tablespoon lemon juice, Cook figs in water 5 minutes, or unâ€" til softened. Drain; place 1 cup of liquid in top of double boiler, bring to boil. _ Place over rapidly boiling water, cook 5 minutes, stirring occa jonally. Grind figs; add with reâ€" maining ingredients to tapioca. Cool â€"mixture thickens as it cools. Makes 214 cups filling. © juice and pulp) 2 tablespoons quickâ€"cooking tapioca 1â€"8 teaspoon pepper 4 teaspoon mustard 2% cups (%1b.) grated cheese 1% cups (% lb.) dried beef, finely ground 14 teaspoon Worcestershire sauce. Bring tomatoes to boil, using top of double boiler; add dry ingredients and bring to a brisk boil, stirring conâ€" stantly. Place over rapidly boiling water, .ook 5 minutes, stirring occas~ ionally. Add cheese gradually and stir until melted. Add beef and sauce. Cool â€"â€" mixture thickens as it cools. Makes 2%, cups fiilling. B LA CK HE A D S Blackheads simply dissolve and dise eppear by this one simple, safe and sure method. Get two ounces of peroxine powder from any drug store, sprinkle it on a hot, wet cloth, rub the face gentlyâ€"every blackhead will be gone. Heve @ Hollywood complexion, 1 cup boiling water 3 tablespoons quickâ€"cooking tapioca 14 teaspoon salt 4 teaspoon pepper 4 pound boiled ham, ground 44 cup sweet pickle, chopped 1 tablespoon scrapped onion 1 tablespoon vinegar 1 tablespoon mayonnaise, Place water in top of double boiler; add dry ingredients, bring to a brisk boil, stirring ccastantly. Place over rapidly boiling water, cook five minâ€" utes, stirring occasionally. _ Add the other ingredients. Coolâ€"mixture will thicken as it cools. Makes 2 cups of filling. Quickâ€"cooking tapioca supplies a longfelt need of the sandwich maker by making it possible to have soft fillings that do not soak into the bread even after several hours‘ standâ€" ing. Wrapped in waxed paper, sandâ€" wiches made with these newâ€"type soft fillings are just as fresh and moist at the end of a few hours as when they were first made. _ These sandâ€" wiches not only keep well but are really satisfying. crosswise, and then slice the long way of the loaf. Nippy Cheese Sandwich Filling Minced Ham Sandwich Filling 2 cups strained canned tomatoes Fruitâ€"Nut Filling ONTARIO . 91â€"‘ 37 When pursued, the chuckwalla, one of the largest lizards of the United States, crawls into a narrow crevice in the rocks and inflates itâ€" self so that it ennnot be di«‘s@ged, (5) Refusing to set aside trivial preferences, in order that important things may be accomplished. (The Blue Belly (1) The delusion that individual advancement is made by crushing others down. (4) Attempting to compel other persons to believe and live as we do. (2) The tendency to worry about things that cannot be changed or corrected. (8) Insisting that a thing is imâ€" possible because we ourselves cannot accomplish it. Qual ty, not size, should be the watchword. _ Comfort , not â€" pride, should be the aim. This is the policy that has left Timmins in the excelâ€" lent financial condition it occupies today. There is no other town in Canada that has made such honest prowth in so short a period of t‘ me. This is the vision of the oldâ€"timers of the Porcupine. Look arcund and see if it is not good. The rap‘d growth of Timmins has, perhaps, overshadowed the two other large towns of â€" Porcupineâ€"Schuâ€" macher and South Porcupine. They have not expanded to the same deâ€" gree as Timmins, but who dare say that their citizens have not been as happy and as well situated as those of the bigger town* In these two progressive towns there has been growth and expansion to meet the needs while the finer things of lifeâ€" education, music, cultureâ€"have been given due place, There has been the true commun‘ty spirit in Schumacher and South Porcupine no less than in Timminsâ€"and it would be a shortâ€" sighted or unthinking person whe would deny that the community spirit is greater than any material growth. 2 But that growth is only incidental â€"size is not the one and only thing desirable. It is immaterial whether Timmins be a city of 50,000 or 100,â€" 000 people, or little larger than it is today. The big thing is that it shall be large enough to house its people as comfortably and healthily as posâ€" sibleâ€"that it should be a prosperous and progressive place in the true meaning of the words, with a happy aad contented citizenship. Those who have watched Timmins grow from a few tents and cabings in a clearing in the bush 25 years ago, have every faith and belief in the great growth of the town of Timâ€" mins and the expansion of the other towns of the Porcupine. In the past Timmins has been little concerned with growthâ€"more conâ€" cerned with true progress, The deâ€" velopment and expansion of the town has been a natural one. One by one the real essentials have been secured. In retrospect, it appears the best policy. It is well not to attempt to run before the legs are strengthened by walking, Even a little standing at first, avoids bandy legs in later life. There was little tendency to put on more "front" than the "backing" warranted. In other words the av» erage man believed in having a good working suit or business dress before he bought a ‘"soup and fish" costume. Timmins had a waterworks system before it had cement sidewalks; a complete sewage system, before good roads; fire protection before adeâ€" quate street lighting; schools and churches before other less essential things. Indeed Timmins yet has to secure some of the things that other less fortunate towns have believed as most necessary. Timmins has avoidâ€" ed "booms" and the false progress that appeals to the racketeers. to the ground." By the same token the oldâ€"time vision for Timmins and the other towns of the Porcupine, was for communities large enough and modern enough to serve the needs of the people. To those who think that size and greatness are interchangeable terms, progress may appear as something to do with bulk or numbers. But this was not the guiding star of the oldâ€" timers who made the commun‘ties of the Porcupine. Their vision did not run to delusions of grandeur. When Abraham Lincoln was asked how long a man‘s legs should be, he ansâ€" wered, "Just long enough to reach Size of a Town Does What will Timmins be like 25 years from now? A city of 100,000 one may say with pride! writes the Timmins Advance. There may be visions of imposing buildings, expandâ€" ed industries, progress in material ways. Only recently a local man foretold a city of 50,000 as the fate of Timmins within five years. Five Mistakes