VERA: 10; A. AVL Spanish people for the work d by Premier Primo De Rivera at to prove to the dictator that he is supported by public opinion which will remain with him until he has completed his task." THREE TRAINWEN KILLED INTLLINOIS| Deaths Resulted from a Head-on Collision of Two Trains Edwardsville, Mar, 27.--Three trainmen were killed and two were injured in a head-on collision late yesterday between two freight trains of the Nickel Plate System near the Edwardsville station. Fire followed the: crash and the bodies of the vic- tims were not recovered until firemen | had extinguished the flames. Fourteen | freight cars were piled up in "the crash. Trainmen attributed the crash to confused. orders, but the blame was not" fixed done. od ond SH MH Dh pe e Rue de Gren- T. ged at the Mar- shal's disposal 'a the war and in which he died: In honor of the Marshal a 'new cruiser to be Jaunch- ed in June will be christened "Foch." REFUSE INFORMATION (By Canadian Press) Toronto, Mar. 28,--W.EN, Sin- clair, K.C., Liberal Leader, yester- day failed in his effort to have Sir Henry Drayton, chairman of the Liquor Control Board, furnish him with a statement showing the revenues derived from individual liquor stores in the Province. By a vote of 17 to 12, members of the Legislative Committee on Publi¢ accounts 'sustained a ruling of Chairman Joseph E. hompson that the statement should not be fur- nished, Kingston, -- Dr. J. B. Walkem, Kingston's veteran lawyer, had two fingers of his left hand terrib- ly crushed when his hand was caught in the door of an au:o. | ull size biscuits 'Wit t mil thoroughl ro Economy and Healthfulness Ha of 'warming energy for cold days iMade by The Canadian Shredded Wheat Company, Ltd. SOUGHT BY SINCLAIR | (By Canadian Press) Brockville, Mar, 28.-- Forced down by a small leak which devel- oped in the water line, a Waco bi- plane, owned by the Leavens Bros. Air Service, of Belleville, and pilot- ed by A. Leavens, of that city, de- companied by C. Carr, Trenton, at- tempted to land on the frozen sur- face of Lamb's Pond, near New Dublin, last evening and sank, leav- ing only one wing and the tail ex- posed when the ice gave way. The 2 nts were r d in a boat by Arnold Campbell, a trap- per after they had taken to the wing of the machine, neither wax injured. The biplane was en route from Drummondville, Que., to Smith's Falls and Perth. TORONTO BROKERS HELD FOR THEFT Charge Laid By Woman in Connection With Stock Dealings Toronto, Mar. 28. --Walter T. Smith, Toronto, of the firm of Fred Smith and Company, Brokers, and Fred C. Hastings, barrister, Toronto, were arrested on Tues- day night on charges of. theft. During 1928, they are alleged to have stolen $2,500 from Minnie Misner, Kapuskasing. The com- plainant charges she gave the ac- cused money to invest in stock which, she claims, they did not do in the manner directed by her, Boks and papers found in the brokerage office were seized by the police. Both Smith and Has- tings were released on bail of $5,- 000 each. COMBING MONTREAL FOR MISSING GIRL Montreal, Mar, 28 -- Bridges watched for days for possible xia- nappers, the city's underworld sub- jected to such a scouring us 1 uns never before received, thousands of students probing the slopes of Mount Royal---all have yielded nothing to throw light on the mys- tery of the missing Barbara Pitch- er. McGill students, - acting on the mother's suggestion, that her daughter, by reason of acute wu:sz over her 'studies, might have suc- cumbed to amnesia and wandered aimlesssly on the mountain, search- ed almost every foot of the slopes. 2 TT EN J | to get suds. do. TORONTO TO bl ANYONE PROVING HAT THIS \ OAP .. 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It omy=---longer life to your clothes-- protection It is It means rubbing and rubbing ly made to flushing again, About A 'WHAT HAPPENED BEFORE their p Houston Challoner proposes to Beatrice and she accepts, They have a fashionable wedding. Chal loner is very proud of his beau- tiful young wife and she accepts her mew position gravely. Then Bert, Challoner's son by his fist wife, and the same age at Bea- triee, arrives on the scene. Bert is a wild young fellow Inck of ibility is a "trial to his father, Hugh Challoner and his young wife are ideally happy in the old Challoner home, 7 Hugh decides to try for the Kreutzsmann Memorial for which plans are to be submitted. Bee, who is trying to kelp Bert find himself, does not realize that her husband has a tinge of jealousy toward his own som, Bert finds his father's wife fan- cinating, hut she, sweetly inmo« cent, does mot realize the dame gers of the situation. i CHAPTER XII ey "That was Arthur Reyes' place-- Reyes, who does the etchings. You've never heard of him, I sup- pose?" Bert sald, sitting on the arm of the chair in which Reatrice had established herself with the book, and looking over her should- er. "No, T never have." "It's in a little place called the Rue Visconti." "I never heard of that either." "You wouldn't have heard of that." "On the Rive Gauche?" Beatrice asked, look'ng up with a knowing little laugh. "yep," he answered, pleased and surprised. "How'd you know that?" "Everything Hugh ever did, when he was studying in Paris, seemed to happen on the Rive Gauche", she explained. "It's a great place--"' Bert said slowly, with an ache in his voice. "Paris?" "Paris." "Hugh's going to take me there some day," Beatrice said content- "edly. "To the Hotel Meurice, I have no doubt," Bert supplied lightly. "And to Versailles and Fontaine- bleau, and to the opera and /Ciro's and Cartier's. Go in the spring, and drive in the Bois." "That's what I thought!" she as- sented eagerly, looking up. But at the quality she found in his smilp her own face changed, she flush- ed brilliantly, and frowned. "Were you making fun of me?" she asked quickly, sensitively. "No, not of you. Look, there's the girl I really liked," Bert sald, touching with a well-groomed fin- ger tip the figure of & woman, in a summer photograph, "That was it the races, one day, That's Mad- ww." "With the dog?" : 1 "With Poum. Yes. Madge Templeman. You can't see her face---she's very pretty. Here--" He turned pages. "That's a better one of her," he said. "Oh, Bert, she is pretty!" "Isn't she?" "Is she there now?" "No. She's back in England, I believe. Or maybe they're in China. Templeman was to go to China." "Her brother?" "No, darling. Her husband." "Oh--7?" Beatrice said slowly, meeting his look with her confused, youthful smile. "Exactly." Bert ruffled the pages, his arm touching Beatrice's bare neck as he leaned across her. Suddenly conscious of herself, she said in a tone of compunction: "Qughin't you to be going? It's just eight." "I don't mind being late," Bert said carelessly, "I did something for you today, ma belle-mere,"" he addeq abruptly. "For me?" "Yes'm. I went over to the At- jantie Electric and applied for a job in their drafting-room." "You didn't, Bert!" "I say I did." "But why-----why," she said eag- erly, squaring about to half face him, and still conscious that his arm rested on her shoulders, "Why leave the firm?" "Becatise I don't belong to the firm, and I know it, and Dad knows it. I'm a' privileged character there--and 4t's not only that. It's , not only that if I'm late or make mistakes, I'm not called down for 'it Uke the rest, because I'm the old man's son." he explained, stil] with his air of not caring much one way or the other, "but it's aldo that it 1 do have an inspiration--if I do anything decent--I don't get the credit!" ; "I don't quite get that, Bert, I should think they'd be only too | glad to give you any advanta they fairly could." "That's just it. They're given me such a break alréady that it only sounds like more graft; of course Mr. Bert's idea is the best, of course it was Mr. Bert who thought of that!" : "T see, 'I--gee." "So I'm to be over with the At- lantic people, in the blue print too, and see what I can do on my own." "Does your father know?" "Not yet," | "Oh, T am glad of this," Beatrice exzlaimed. "It will delight him. 'For TI think he's been afraid there would be eriticlsm of this--this crown prince stuff...... Come in, Hugh!" she called, as there was a sound at the half.opened door. | "Wasp't that your father?" asked. turning to Bert. "T didn't see. It might have been Marshal, to sav that the Ron- trews are waiting downstairs for she - i gato laughter, & 1 7d i siniong] Ce i Kathleen 4 gE 3 me. They're to pick me up." "That was what it was! Well, 1ly, then." - "Say that I'm a good boy," he id, when they were both standing g each other, "You're a good boy!" § "No say it as if you meant it, , "You're a wonderful boy!" "That's better, Did I tell you that 'your hair is exactly the color of Mrs. Templeman's hair?' "No." She laughed, confused and ireproachful and amused, "I don't think you did. I daresay it's im- rtant--" "Supremely important," Bert said solemnly. "Good night, my \dear old faithful mother." « Unsmilingly he kissed her on the forehead, and they hoth burst Then Beatrice went o her own room, to await Hugh, (who 'had had to take some business {associates to dinner downtown and .establish them safely at the thea- {tre, and Bert snatched up his hat and overcoat and ran downstairs to join his dinner party. To her surprise, Beatrice found that Hugh was already at home, lying on the couch, and looking pale and fil. ' He had a stupid headache all evening, it appeared, and had de- frerted the visiting architects at the first possible moment. "But, Hugh, I didn't hear you come in! I was in Bert's room while he was finishing dressing. He was telling me about Paris. and he showed me some pictures, Huzh, I'm so sorry! Have you had as- pirin? Would you like me to--" She fussed about him, solicitous and sympathetic, softening lights, moving a great crystal bowl of sweet peas to a a distance, so that their too-powerful fragance should not distress him, shaking up pil- Tows. He had been chairmen at the horrible dinner, and she sus- pected t"2t he had eaten nothing. Presently he opened his eyes to find her presiding at a low tray, ready to dispense tea and very thin hot toast when he was ready for them. "Fow {ig it, Hugh?" "How's what?" "Your head." "Oh,clear as a bell!" "Not really!" she exclaimed. with such heartfelt joy that tears came into his eves and he stretcho® ul a hand and took hers and held "The minute I'm home with you, my dear, and safe in this room, nothing worries me!" he said. "But, Hugh, what was worrying you?" "Oh, thoughts--thoughts. 1 wondered what made you think that rou loved me, Dee, and I 10 k= ed at myself--a 'ry old codger among those other dry old cod- gers--"" "Hugh, you poor simnleton! You don't deserve anything half so de- licious as this--this is my best spider-leg, that old Chang Lo at the consulate gave me," Beatrics, both hands mow busied 'with his cup said reproachfally. "Is it dear?" he said apprecia- tively, meekly. 1] is. Now drink 'that, And eat that. And lere's jam too-- shall I spread it?" Half past eight o'clock, and yet it was only dusk now in the plecs- ant upstairs rooms, whose wide- open windows looked out tonight upon high tree branches sweet with damp new leave- Moonlight was struggling with the half light in the garden, trickling down through the trees, laying a timid shaft of silver across Beatrice's up- stairs porch, where she sometimes sang in the = mornings, Hugh thought, while she fed her parrot and played with her kitten's and dried her brilliant hair in the spring sunshine. Her primroses everywhere, her photograph on the desk where Hugh was working on the Kreutz- mann Memorial, her books com- fortably piled heside her pillowy couch; the Indications of her six weeks' invalidism all about, and yet the evidence of her living. glowing vitality here too; her books, her kitten her writing desk with its black wax seals and li't'e lamp; os tapestry, : tangle of n and green wo Bows g ols In & shallow And here she was herself, the goddess of the enchanted apart: ment where he had spent the %ap- piest hours of a happy life, the tall, lean, eager, red-headed girl who loved so to be useful, loved so to busy herself maternally with his toast and his tea. She caught the black velvet %it- ten up from the floor, during one of the baby animal's stealthy mar. ches from the shelter of the tea table to the shelter of Hugh's chair, and set him down, wobbling a utused, among the plates. Ll lick that Steam up, Plut- "Aren't you having tea, Bee?" Hiot, T hind Ney pa: pAikS on » ad Ne! ri : about seven," y 5, me 8 nay 'Have it with Bert?" Oh, no. He's dining with the Archibalds, or somewhere. No, I had it alone in here, in the comp- any of the late dear queen," said Beatrice, glancing at her book "It's wonderful--it's piting, but wonderful, isn't it?" she asked ini nocently. (To be continued.) (Copyright, 1928 by Kathleen Norris.) ry! PS -------------- 1 British Houses Adjourn London. -- Both Houses of Par- liament adjourned today until Ap- ril"16, when Chancellor of the Ex- *hequer Churchill . will. introduce the Budget, ty Friendship Pact. Belgrade, Jugoslavia. -- Repre- ia today formally signed a pact of friendship which had been un- der negotiation for some time, teresting time plainti 4 moon," Her io 'premises retu | the 4 entatives of Greece and. Jugosla- I ne ha ees ancouver; BC, March 27.<0n Ip- | Tica dec mbes. ee iven Hee in Sonn ig t very of taj -covered fire- screens of an Per 0 bof to a bride who had directed these be left at her house. They were valued at ($250. When defendant's "driver the house 8 the 'place closed, been house, had gone a The discovered (that a basement door was unfastened and ut the screens in there. Before ghie @ccupants of the goods were stolen. ; Plaintiff contended that defendant company should not have made de- livery in the basement of an unoc- cupied house, and for so doing she claimed that the company should stand the loss. But the verdict went against the bride. 2 Take Care of Your Hands Red, rough hands in- dicate a lack of pride of steaming hot water and put them directly in water that is icy cold. More important is the kind of sesp you use in your housework. You wouldn't think of using cheap, harsh soaps for bathing or washing your hands. Then why use it for your household washing tasks? You the most effective soap for any kind of Princess Soap Flakes are not expensive iss Edited by ILDA DORAN ROSS Economics Covaselary Mrs. Ross has been studying improved methods of housekeeping for many years, ond in these poges she gives to the housewives of Canada ideas which she believes will prove helpful, will find that Princess Soap Flakes are cleaning, and they will never give you red hands. ; A Style Column for Beds Heavy white counterpanes with stiff pillows went out of vogue years ago. Here are a few suggestions for the up-to- date bed: -- I think the taffeta bedspreads, quilted in beautiful designs, trimmed with deep ruffles and flowers, and gold and silver lace, sre loveliest of all. Extremely popular, also, are the lace bed- spreads used over coloured silk or sateen. Such spreads as these call for dainty silk and lace covered boudoir pillows in har- nionizing colours. For every day wear, crinkly spreads of coloured rayon and bright organdy cushions to match come first. Then there are spreads of 1 colour cotton or 3 " A Page of Household Hints by many women because it can be washed with less trouble, But even white linen, if washed cares lessly, gets discoloured and streaked after several washings. - 'To guard against this, 1 use Princess Soap Flakes, No matter how soiled the sheets and pillow cases may be, a few minutes in a tub of rich Princess suds makes them snowy white sgain, And if you have trouble with coloured sheets and pillow cases, it's probably be- cause the soap you are using is too harsh. 1 have tested a great many soaps end by all tests have found Princess Soap Flakes the best. You will have no trouble in washing coloured linen if you use these pure soap flakes. Use them also for wash- ing your spreads -- cotton, rayon, lace and silk wash beautifully with Princess Soap Flakes. And they are splendid for blankets. In fact, they are safe to use for anything which you can put in plain tepid water, If you will write me, en~ closing 4c postage, I will see that you receive a free trial package, Do not hesi- tate to write me about any of your wash- ing or cleaning probl My address is 64 Natalie Street, Toronto 8, Ontario, When Buying Sheets Besides allowing for the turning of hems, never forget to provide for 8 certain amount of shrinkage. When ironing on a table, place two or three sheets of newspaper between the ironing sheet and the blanket, and your ironing sheet will not rub up, Guarantee Palmolive guarantee to replace any wash- able which, by reason of its hambray, with signs and chambray pillows the same way. So much for the outside covering. To me the linen is of far greater importance. The very latest sheets and pillow slips come in delectable shades of mauve, blue, pink, yellow and green. However, plain white is still good style, and is preferred trimmed in having been washed with Princess Soap Flakes, has been damaged in texture or its colour made to run, provided such garment has been washed in accordance with their instructions. Hite Oran Rove Destin {lastrated is Dominion Inlaid Linoleum No. 7602 avail- able in other 8, Nos. 7608 and 7604. want to copy. ed designs; soft or colours to your taste; Domolac finish «+ « these but a few of the feal behind the Dominion In vogue. Give your home the kind'of floors you have always want- ed . . . artistic, colourful, dif- ferent , , « the kind that put character in each room .s. the kind your friends will Dominion Inlaid Linoleum the mellowing touch of the The : Domolac Finish This' wonderful lacquer finish is applied to all Do- minion Inlaid y beautiful floor. Stainproof, wear- proo , polishes : scarce an ef- fort. 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