abysmal nigh vented him f really were;: web of desp; tempt to fig] seoemed rathe on agony thy But éent of Later, whe truth of the the enigma, his own lack whcle thing., ng then that kadge of hum secondâ€"sight, . right conclus pieced the 1 There aro tin forth so clear see the cbviou the truth! Mix before lunthâ€"delicious homeâ€"made bread or rolls before supper. No kneadâ€" ing. No overnight setting. No hard work. No failures Send coupon below for FREE booklet telling all about the Quaker Easy Method of baking. Quaker Flour is the quality «// parpase Flour made by the makers of Quaker Oats. The though As the night struck, then â€" felt more an Clara would d not already d sorts 3i terrible mitting suicid: rehearsed her ies, he would . his forehead hands were w wWITH THE EASY QUAKER METHOD of bread bméz'ng for Bread, Cakes and Pastry Oblivicen. been arri only add vincing h mited .m among m Valuable Baking Book FREE T‘he Quaker Oats Company, Dept, QFB SEenilenceâ€" hand had Racul 1 Ccoill from You‘ll nev And he flight hac tured by the her life. All had bez>n tc abcut Big clerk at hea geret. As h to imagine h overwhelmed cf enduring 1M AND CNCT THURSDAY APRIL #TH 1935 killed 11 11 1 ROLLS A ; HANOMAN«*3 TWO SMILES / f'D" ym se _ 4t it 4"â€)’/ /M nem} CHAPTT iA R red ner agonized reâ€" ering, swaying figure: n! I‘ve killed him! k to me again!" it the unhappy girl‘s t> seek death and 2 fact that she had d imprisoned would nental anguish, conâ€" ‘he had indeed câ€"mâ€" id was an outcast in â€" Raoul 21 COiQ SWEeat. earned the simple r and the key to was astounded at ‘spicacity over the uld not help feelâ€" th his great knowâ€" ire and his almost 1ive jumped to the m the start, and together correctly. n problems are set one cannot fail to onâ€"Snce on knows s depression, but e in piling agony the interminable ntal agony preâ€" x things as they enméeshed in a id not even atâ€" rture to Raoul. , and midnight n halfâ€"past, he convinced that rself if she had He imagined all et ways of comâ€" tal, and having oans and agonâ€" it all again, till _ palms Of his ‘Oold sweat. nope, utter il1d be capab priscn, ight that h: irough Gorâ€" t was easy hope, utterly was â€"torâ€" ira taking and effort the truth It was Clara‘l mom Raoul remained gazing upon tha vision of terror and suffering, and a:s he gazed his expression gradually lost its tenseness and bewilderment, and h even smiled faintly. Then suddenâ€" ly, without any warning, he burst out laughing. Nor was it a mirthless, nervous laugh, but a hearty laugh that doubled him up as he could never stop. And Raoul besides luosly was capering in the most spont; But Arsens Lupin could not long remain by a tangible fact. If the truth had remained obscure on account of its very simplicity, now was the time to tear aside the veil. Dawn tcuched the trees in the garâ€" den, the wan light mingling with the electric light in the room. Clara‘s face was strangely illuminated as she kept repeating manctonsusly. "I hadn‘t the courage to kill myself . . . I ought ts have, oughn‘t I? .. . You‘d have forgiven me then . . . but Raoul ‘gazed at her in breathless astâ€"nishment, scarcely seeming to hear what she said, so engrossed was he in thinking, thinking. . . . The problem was absurd in its mere statement: Clara stood there, facing him yet Clara was in a prison cell at police headquarters. Beyond that he could not seeâ€"he must not try to see. Raoul and Clara gazed at one another, speechlessâ€"he, dumbfounded, trying to grasp the fact of her presence; she wretched, bowed with shame, her whole appearance seeming to say: "Don‘t you want me back here? Can yu weleme a murderer? Will you send me away?" At last, trembling with angush, she managed to falter aloud : "I hadn‘t the courage to kill myself . God knows I wanted to . . several ums I leaned out over the w'lter but my courage failed me!" «Clara‘s dramatic appefirance, deathâ€" ly ï¬ale, her face a tragic mask of desâ€" pair and fatigue, her own eyes burnâ€" ing with fever, her dress torn and dirty, seemed to Raoul a nightmare halluâ€" ciration. That she should still be alive seemed pssible, but that she could have escaped from the police was maniâ€" festly impossible! The police as Raoul knew only too well, were not in the habit if thus lightly relinquishing their prey; there was nC known instance of a woman having escaped from police headquarters, especially one guarded by Inspector Gorgoret. What could it all mean*? Clara‘s dramati ly pale, her face : pair and fatigue, ing with fever, het seemed to Racoul totally unexepected apparition of Blonds Clara at dawn at the door of his recom caused him the greatest surâ€" prise and shockâ€"not to mention its being a complete mysteryâ€"of his whole career. A feeble hand was pushing open the door of the room. Then a sudden anguish seized Raoul and he felt powerless to take a single step to meet this unknown visitor, who might be the searer of fatal news. Racul could see the first streaks of dawn showing above the trees. He persuaded himself, childishly, that if Clara were not already dead, she would never have the csurage to kill herself at the beginning of a new day. Suicid> needs the complicity tf night! Then a church clock struck three. Rasul tcok out his watch and followâ€" the second hand in its labzring journey. Then he suddenly shivered. Someone was ringing at the gate. Could it be someone bringing him news? At any ordinary time, he would have made sure who was there, coming At such an hour, before pressing the butâ€" ton that opened the gaite. But now he meorely cpened it from his room. He could not distingush in the gloom who was coming up the garden path and into the villa. Slow, very faint steps wer> mountâ€" ing the stairs. | h3ur »s of that terrible nigh Two c‘clock struck . . t] ; ‘r\ / cosaroe on /Arsne [yon B laughing so hilarâ€" ubsxuut delightedly neous fashion as then the half Kincardine â€" Review:â€"Maidâ€"Pleazse, Mrs. Whaite, will you come up to the bathroom at once? I can‘t make out whether Mr. Whaite is scalding to death The plantin windbreaks for cultural crops. wastelands whi which would su The protecti slopes and hill erosion and of 1: ect to blowing The conservin that the distribution of restricted to the folloawi The reforesting of su the production of fOorest The improvement cf lands which have beco The reclamation of wastelands which are â€" Distribution of Farest Trees by the Government (Registered in accordance with the copyright act.) one very coml sleepnessness is worryin gettine enough sleeyp. The above guide m worry less, and have a ical examination to loc infection. The point then is that we should all sleep at night 6 to 9 hours according to constitution or habit, and if we are not sleeping shcould find the reason and correct it just as we would find out what is causing loss» of appetite or weight. Ressiarch physians working on the pr:blem Of sleep tell us that when the obstacle to sleep is simply a nervous state of mind, anxiety, or other depresâ€" sing emotions, the patient finds it difâ€" ficult to go to sleep, cften staying awake three or four hours fussing, but finally gets to sleep and thereafter‘ sleeps unâ€" til However whin the trouble lies in some physical condition such as high blood pressure, cr some low or slow poisoning of the system from infection, the indiâ€" idual falls to sleep readily enough but wakes up in two or three hours and after ‘that finds it almost impossible to go back to slgep. As sleep is as important as food and loss of sleep causes one to be just as irritable as when cne is hungry, the cause of sleeplessness is naturally very much worth finding. The Ontari nignht, friend was 01 Didn‘t I stab "Yes, You s of his kind 1 you read the . "NC, I didn of seeing my 1 "Your nam not pi right is dead By James W. Barton, M.D., Toronto CAUSES OF SLEEPLESSNESS Oh. n wWhat dao you m You can‘t have my child! But Big Paul‘s d Clara, sunk in her misery, looked s erly dejected at his unseemly exâ€" jititn that Raoul rushed at her and zing her in his arms, whirled he: ind in his mad danc> like child ally depositing her on the divan sayâ€" igh he must express in eve ten€in . ithis 1sS Cc of danger.‘ 2 not.": Racul, what do stab him?" You struck Valthex ind have nine liv _ the papers?" didn‘t dare. I w ike, and wh and decide iculde: my nam name‘s W overnment anncunces lly mean tha _ to câ€"imfort m eveningâ€"or _1 morning nov follawing purposes 1€ t forest growth. forest planting of ich are subject to soils which are subâ€" drifting. water flow by forâ€" slopes at the headâ€" f suitable land for Orest crops. Cf existing woodâ€" become depleted. of unproductive y common cause ¢cf shelter belts and rotection of agriâ€" n 1y helnp us to complete physâ€" ate any hidden of Pour$ blame yourself mmitted a mw Tbat Boby 6 me? : _ rather last nowâ€"my old that Valthex roductive idle and owth. ibout no but villains 3. â€"Haven‘t as much r1ad your wit] DJ Y ou‘re afraid superhb ADVANCE, TTMMINS ONTARTO Toronto may nst get its $1,000,000 waterfront tunnel after all. The house ~f Commons adjourned for Easter withâ€" ut having sanctioned it. Western Ontâ€" ario members want the money used for slum clearance in Toromto, not a "‘luxury." Oitawa Journal:â€"Now it‘s Austria that is wanting an army. Well, if, as we are told, all these big armies are merely to maintain peace, why should not Austria be let help? MEMEBERS OF COMMONS WANT MONEY FOR SLUMSs CLEARANXCH BUILDING IN CANADA is some thing quite new in "home" maga zines. It is profusely illustrated. d# lightfully easy to read and beauti fully printed. The Spring Pla: Book number contains pictures an foor plans of twenty charmin: homes and summer cottages. Ther are illustrated articles on moderniz ing, furnishing, gardening and rea estate development. Also ten pic tures illustrating the "Evolution o the House" since 12,000 B.C. It will pay anyone interested it building, peoperty maintenance o improvement to receive this magaâ€" zine regularly. Send only $1.00 for four Plan Bock numbersâ€"Spring Summer, Autumn and Winter, 1935 If after receiving the Spring number you are not delighted, mail it back and your $1.00 will be refunded imâ€" mediately. BUILDING INX CANADA 201 Fullerton Bldg., Toronto, Ont Thanks Babies .. .. YOU‘VE DONE A REAL JoB / St. Lawrence Starch Co. I BEE HIVE corocn CORN SYRUP on a diet of milk, corn syrup and rum." The Corn Syrup used was Bee Hive Golden Corn Syrup â€"the product of the St. Lawrence Starch Co., the largest indeâ€" pendent manufacturer of corn syrup and starch products in the British Empire. This all â€"Canadian Company appreciates the © "During the first critical 48 hoursâ€"life was sustained in the Dionne Quintuplets legisl@tion or In the fif! hsusing proje various cities specifications ment entrand wced ‘but the Fire Retardent Lumber Coming to the Front Now of fire ret Cunardâ€"Wh is being fitt 2°r. coming pa n d, Port Credit, Ontaric, Manufacturer of Bee Hive Golden Corn ss Laundry Starch, 8t. Lawrence Corn Starch and 5t. Lawrence Ma on the subject. fifty million dollar federal bject for slum clearance in ies in the United States the ns actually call for apartâ€" ince doors of fire retardent 1T 11 1y CA Tor s of fire re no door ma 11 manufact n / Recent Fiction at iC Recent fictisn add mins Public Library "Boulevard." by F Some More New Books Addâ€" ed to the Array of Works of Fiction at the Library Here. It was only natural that this company should be enthusiastic and a logical development that the public of Canada be informed of the part played by their product. The response has been so gratifying that the Company publicly says â€"Thanks Babies â€" You‘ve done a fine job for a real Canadian product. honor bestowed upon their product by these allâ€"Canadian sisters. as al adyv UOF 4iiG¢C UCS, 410 ancisco Bay raill z> housing pr.:â€"ject arâ€"marked 1500 fiivd there is a posstb 14,000 feet of fire wane w wvmmemcom Toronto Mail and Empire:â€"Quintuâ€" additionea to the Timâ€" | plets Loss in Weight Again. â€"Headline. rary are: No doubt worry about the distressing by Katherin Havilandâ€" ‘ happenings to Quebec power companies. house. vative and fiit 5 ncw under ies, and timbe Ourham Corn Starch, "Jan:nica Grove," by Mary Barrow Linfisld, (Romance of the post Civil War period in Louisiana.) Micheal‘s Wife," by Alice DeFord, (A man marries a wonman for compan=â€" onship, but the calm is sson broken.) "‘The Bannetman Case," by Jeremy Lord. (A dipicmat dies and secret service man turns detective.) "Gunlock Ranch," by â€"Spearman. (Westetn. Cattle rustlers and love interâ€" 11 form.") Earth," by Margaret (Novel of a New who "went <+»a life for fatheyr moves ) a small town,