$ 4 RItT COLOR STAYS IN "Not all of it," said Glynn. "And 1 fancy they‘ve guessed so since, and are after me again. Look hereâ€"" He unstrapped his binocular case and slid out the cigarette tin. The Pilot looked round at it for a moment, and then out ahead again with the brief comâ€" ment "Doesn‘t look ultra valuable." Ma«ing + to John A, Muston Co. Ltd. 4# Caledonia #d., Toronto. "Some of us might have guessed that," said the Pilot drily. "And they got it at Galilee." for ZREE cor ot ‘The A.l."g FREE â€"â€" Sene the ‘ront of 2 RHY _ Package® "Joe," began Glynn. "I‘m carrying a little packet some people would like to get hold of." voOVu HAav: *BETE WSC Stefan hires a twoâ€"seater n sets off, hoping to catch the his plane develops engine t the liner leaves without him Several attempts are folled, but at Calilee the attache case in which Glynn carries one film, is stolen from him by ;:'n swift substitution of a facsimile &. Stefan drops the case and film overâ€" board as they go ashore from the Flyâ€" ing Boat. Next morning shortly after the liner has left CGalilee, Stefan and Max. who have staved behind, thinking their work accomplished, learn by cable that two conies of the film are carried by the Courier. On the same Mail liner . travels NORAH SEAMAN, a girl Glynn had met only a week before, STEFAN, MAX and DASS. agents of "The Vuiture," deterâ€" mined to steal the film and prevent use being made of it in India. _ _ "Flying Courier" by the Air Mail to Inâ€" dia, carrving two coples of a talking film of the PRINCE OF NAPALATA which it is most urgent shall reach there safely. The Prince is in London, too i1 to travel, and the talking film is sent to foil theâ€"efforts of "THE YULTURE," hi= Halfâ€"brother in India. * * GLYNN ELLIMAN, a pilot of Imâ€" perial Airways, is travelling as a special CHAPTER X CONTINUED The R Now you :an color lingerie, _ shirts. lN slip covers, etce., anc know â€" that the coror will SYAY. The new Instant Rit socks in che coior. Thats why you never aave streaks and spots â€" and why Rit colors .ast ano iast and last 33 Colors. Flying Courier SYNOPSIS twoâ€"seater machine and to catech the liner, but trouble and by Eoya Cabie ne and __ The two moved ° off, following Glynn and Norah without coming too closely up on them, but keeping them, in sight. Glynn evidently knew his way, and, as it had been expected, he made for the chief Bazaar and led Norah wandering through its crowded narrow streets and little shops. They strolled vound, glancing at the workâ€" ers in brass and copper hammering out pots and trays in an uproar of clanking and banging and battering, lingering by the brilliantly colored heaps of carpets and silks spread in the booths, resisting the clamourous efforts of salesmen thrusting all sorts of wares upon them. Just They followed their plan of a hurâ€" ried lunch, and from it went straight out to have a look round the nearer sights, Neither noticed, ag they left the ‘hotel, their fellowâ€"passenger Inâ€" cian ta‘king with a couple of burly, bearded men who were stooping their heads so that the turbans nearly hid their faces as the two passed. | One of the bearded men spoke quickly. "Our men are posted in the Serai Bazaar. These are sure to go | there, as all visitors do. We follow, : and shall send word when we have| the packet." ‘ nourishing form in which arrowroot biscuits are made . .. children thrive on For the littlest babies . . . for growing boys and girls & . » the most delicious, pure, As Glynn had expected, there wns: quite a crowd to push through on the | way to the hotel where lunch waited | them â€" Airways and Post Oflicei people, all ranks of Service men, a mixed swarm of the local inhabitants,| all apparently regarding the arrival) of the liner as a weekly event. + "If we make a quick lunch," Glynn said to Norah, "we‘ll just have time for a turn round to see some of the sights like the Bazaar and mosques that were hare in the days of Harun al Raschid." uk Several times Glynn had to push They came booming in over Bagdad in the early afternoon, catching a glimpse of the go‘lden domes, the hudâ€" dle of narrow streets and roof tops and the green splashes of date garâ€" dens, before dropping down on â€" to the drome. Glynn changed places with the Second again, leaving his cigarette tin in the Pilot‘s locker and adjusting the strap of his binoculars before doâ€" ing so. The case was now slung with the strap under his jacket, and shortâ€" ed up so that the case also hung well up under the inside of the jacket. ‘ Gynn simply. "It will ease my mind a lot." "There‘s Bagdad ahead," the Pilot answered. "As it happens," said the Pilot evenly. "I want to have a look over one of the engines, so I won‘t be leayâ€" ing the bus at Bagdad. You can leave your packet in my locker and forget it." "Joe, you‘ve known me quite a while," said Glynn earnestly. "Did you ever know me pannicky over nothing." "No, nor over a lot," said Joe. "Then bet on it I‘m not stretching anything," said Glynn. "But I want you to help me out. I‘m seared to take this to the town with me. I‘m just as scared to stick in the machine here with it. Have you anywhere you can stow it, while I draw the fire by going off with the empty binocular case." The Pilot laughed. _ "Aren‘t _ you stretching it?" he asked. "The chance of anyone wrecking one of the reâ€" gular liners is pretty thin." _ "If Bagdad is like it used to be," went on Glynn, "there will be a seething mob to get through from the ‘drom to the hotel where we grub. I find that pushing through mobs gives pickâ€"pockets and ‘thugs their best chance. ‘And ‘f I stick here in‘ the machine until its time to start, you. might have a bomb under it or some-] other unpleasantness." "I won‘t forget that, Joe." said Babies was all uP dind fn idys i > 2 for you at Bagdad. This fellow must have had a pal or two there and got them to hire a gang to mix in a street row Thing is how are you goâ€" ing to scotch more of the sort." (To Be Continued) for To him Glynn explained what had happened and showed him the cut straps of the binocular case. "It was only from someone aboard here it could have been known or suspected I was carrying that tin in the case there," he said firmly» "I have more than a guess who the man is, but I have nothing I can charge him with"; and he went on to tell about Dass, the Indian, and the warning that had been given him in London,. ‘ "It seems to be the explanation," agreed the pilot. "It isn‘t likely a whole mob would have been waiting Fow whun‘tck U 28 /W ces e B4W Then, when she had quietened down to something near normal again, he made the steward bring tea and got her to smoke a cigarette with him, and then left her to go and have a word with the pilot again. _ He pointed out the magnificent arch ’of Ctesiphon, they â€" were skimming over no more than a few hundred feet up, the ruins of the trenches near that marked the place of General Townsend‘s troops‘ gallant fighting, and told her some of the story of that part of the War. And beyond, he pointed out again a regular pattern of faintly but clearly marked lines and squares, and explained that nothâ€" ing of those could be seen from the ground, although they marked a vast system of canals and irrigation ditchâ€" es buried under the desert sand thousands of years before. â€" | CHAPTER XI i TO BEAT A GRABâ€"ANDâ€"RUN | . When they took off from Bagdad ‘again, Glynn set himself to restore | Norah to a calmer frame of mind, | and to laugh away the fright of findâ€" fing that knife s‘ash through his | Jacket. "It was nothing," he assured | her. "Only that I was fool enough to | get in the way of a jab meant for | some other fellow. And I only loosed off a shot in the air to scare the crowd E and fetch the police alongâ€"as it did." "Maybe I‘ll tell you about it at Basra toâ€"night," he said. "It‘s safe enough to there anyhow, so let‘s forâ€" get about it. Look down thereâ€"" "Gynn, I wish you‘d tell me what all this means," she said earnestly. "I‘m afraid. These attacks on youâ€" they can‘t @‘:l be accident or chance. There‘s something deliberate about it. Can‘t I know what it is?" pr.Williams* Mrs. Edward James‘ baby had two teeth when less than three months old. She writes: ‘"He has 18 now and I can truthfully say that giving him Baby‘s Own Tabâ€" lets while cutï¬n’ his teeth kept him fit and well". Teething is a him fit and well". Teething is a restless feverish time for babies but the little one can always be soothed and the fever reduced by mm safe Baby‘s Own a Very «gow take, no after effects. Price 25¢ everywhere. the police were still about. "This is getting serious," thought Glynn, when they had reached â€"the ‘drom to which he made his cab drive straight. "That was a putâ€"up ob in the street there, and there wa:« a whole bunel in it. Looks as if every . city a‘ong the route has a_gang of eutâ€" throats waiting for me." Glynn thrust his pistol out of sight. "Let‘s get out of here and find a cab," he said, and the two made haste to get clear of the narrow streets while the police were still about. P Bd w c e e mt Glynn clapped his hand to the binâ€" ocular case. It hung dangling low and swinging by one strap. There was a footâ€"long clean cut in the side of his jacket, one side of the suspending strap had been cut right through and the other just short of completely sevâ€" ered. "Are you hurt?" cried Norah sharpâ€" ly. "Your jacket is_ tornâ€"no, cut." A stick whistled past his ear and thumbed heavily on his right shou‘lder, a knife flashed under his eyes. Thoroughly alarmed now, he whipped out the gun from under his arm and snapped off a shot into the air. The struggling knot about him fell back a pace, and Glynn thrust Norah to the door of a litt‘e shop andJ placed himself before her, gun in hand. Police uniforms appeared sudâ€" denly, and in an instant the uproar stilled, the fighters scattered â€" and vanished. way through jostling knots of people, and more than once it seemed to him. Relieved / 0 ngâ€"as it did." 1 tell me what said earnestly. others. Doing well on this earth does not mean that you are to go out and do At the beginning of his term Mayor J. H. Slackford banned smoking dur ing council meetings. and for several meetings it seemed the councihors couldn‘t find their thinking caps withâ€" out the old briars. Recontly when esâ€" timates for the current year were unâ€" der consideration, the mayor set asâ€" ide ai) restrictions And now genial) counciliors, working in a haze that could be cut with a knife kept the tax rate at $3.55 despite increased bur dens. Truro, N.S.â€"Th. town fathers _re ~miling again. The young lawyer has had considâ€" erable practical éxperience in her profession, too. First, in the sumâ€" mer of 1980 she served in the legal offices of Parlee, wreeman, Smith, and Massie. Of more recent years she has been in the offices of Newel!, Lindsay, Emery and Ford. Hv prg madhigiegen .l sti when you spri onu‘l])r. We¥’net'all’owderâ€"â€"t"é:ey.li fit yâ€"â€"comfortab can pâ€" Prescribed by.yom dentists Prescribed by world‘s leading dentists Prone hon i) oorthe leading dentiste ic 4. e Born in Edmonton, sheâ€" matricuâ€" lated from Strathcona High School and went on to a lengthly and brilâ€" liant academic Career. At University of Alberta she graduated in arts in 1930 and two years later received her LL.B. ‘The following year she reâ€" ceived her high school teacher‘s dipâ€" loma, MAKE YOUR FALSE TEETH HOLD FAST Member of Labor Party Like her father, Dr. Frank W. Crang, veteran school trustee here and in whose footsteps she is closely following, Miss Crang is a staunch member of the Labor Party. "Miss Crang, this occasion becomes more pleasant at time goes on," reâ€" marked his lordship, who sai; it was a matter of great satisfaction to adâ€" mit her. : Eat, taik, sing and shout and never Before Mr, Justice Frank Ford in Supreme Court, Miss Crang, slender and attractive in her flowing gown, took the oath of allegiance to His Majesty the King, ina of truthfuiness in her profession. Possibly the youngest womar to be elected alderman in all Canada, Miss Margaret Tryphena Francis Crang, 238 years of age, of Edmonton, has been admitted to the bar. Margaret Crang of Edmonton is the Youngest City Council Member in Canada Woman Alderman Now a Barrister Happy Again "SALADA Distinctive Quality Elected as Alderman ONTARIO 24 8 TORONTO AF ‘‘T‘ T A Victoria â€" Reduction of 14,000 in the number of persons receivng rexef in British Columnia in February comâ€" Lared with the same month last year was shown in figures issued by the British Columbir Relief Department The totai this year was 114,310 com pired with 128,54€ in 1933. Relief Figures Decrease in B.C. sure the name Bayer in the for a cross is on every tablet of As; When you buy, though, be on guard aga?nst subgtitute;#o be sure you get ASPIRIN‘S quick relief, be Mrs. Farquharson is chairman of the League of Nations committce: of the home and school section. e Toronto.â€"Mrs. C. D. Farquharson, of Wind:or, speaking before the home and school section of the Onâ€" tario Educational Association reecâ€" ently, told her ~ hearers Canadian teachers should consider it one of their first duties to promote peace through teaching their pupils about the aims and accomplishments of the League of Nations. Those results are due to a scienâ€" tific discovery by which an Aspirin Tablet begins to dissolve, or disâ€" integrate, in the amazing space of two seconds after touching moisture. And hence to start "taking hold" of pain a few minutes after ukinql., _ The illustration of the glass. here. Now comes amazingly quick relief from headaches, rheumatism, neuriâ€" tis, neuralgia . . . the fastest safe relief, U is said, yet discovered. Would Tell Pupils Aims of League The Bronte Society, which has just celebrated its fortieth anniver sary, numbers many of the world‘s most distinguished authors among its members, For some years the parsonage, where the famous sisters wrote their classic works, has been in the posâ€" _session of the Bronte Society, which maintains it as a museum, and its treasures attract visitors from Ameriâ€" ca and all parts of Europe. But now Mr. D. Hopewell, president of the soâ€" ciety, aims to remove modern addiâ€" tions to the house and then to furâ€" nish with Bronte relics the dining room in which the sisters are said to have sat late into the night when they were considering the plots of their novels. Haworth, Eng.â€"Restoration of its original state of the somber, windâ€" swept, parsonage home of the Brontes here is planned by the Bronte Soâ€" ciety. Bronte Parsonage To be Restored .- P /§\ it nave To ceraA TAXI AND GO Home. I‘vEe DEvELOPED aA es (amre NEURALcia ) DONT you For Quick Relief Say ASPIRIN When CoWAPE Almost Instant Relief From Neuvralgia MARY . WHY _ (oou'r You TRy 2 ASPIRIN TABLETS, THEYLLGET RIP OF 1 YOUR NEUVRALGIA | JN A FEW MinNuTEes | WN BRAND CORN SYRUP THE CANADA STARCH CO. LIMITED. MONTREAL _2 2E 2 2° ARLAET LU, LIMETED. MONTREAL _ pure, wholesome, and economical table Syrup Children love its delicious flavor. Jhe Preeminent Hotel Achievement This was the highest price obtainâ€" ed for a lot of this size on the Greenâ€" wood market in the past three years. A local firm of cotton factors made the sale to a member of the Greenâ€" wood Cotton Exchange. { Greenwood, Miss. â€""Old Time" cotton prices apparently are returnâ€" ing. A lot of 240 bale of long staple cotton was disposed of here at a price of 17 cents a pound. Pullet No. 8, owred by the Delta Land Company of Nancouver iaid 150 â€"ggs in consecutive days. She nissed laying on the 151st day, and tied with No._2 owned by A. Pennington, of Agâ€" assiz. Cotton Trade Gains High Prices Gratifying Kingsway . Nurseries Bowmanville P Ont Membership FeeW$1.00 Per Year Entitles You to â€"= Free Adviceâ€"Free Consultations Free Seeds or Free Shurbs, Perenials or Rock Plants. 10% Discout on All Purchases For Full Particulars Write Club Dept. Agassiz, B.C.â€"A world record 4 158 eggs in 154 days was claimed ceâ€" cently for two barred Plymouth Rock pullets participating in the annual eggâ€"aying contest of the Dominion Experimental Farm here. KINGSWAY GARDEN LCVERS CLUB 153 Eggs Laid J J RAYMORE Fresh from the Gardens In 154 Days Buy 708 Ontario Chlcazo-cmcuo school teachers were notified recently that their salar. ies will be cut 24.5 per cent. next year, Civil service employees of the city will receive a 215 per cent. cut, The cuts in pay were included in the 1934 fscal budget ot $71,242,610 which in cluded continuation of the 15 per cent, reduction in salaries made last year for city employes by the Council, and the cut in the school year from 10 to 9 months. Chicago Teachers Get 24.5 P.C. Cut Dr Duniap who has studiec â€" ren for the past thirty years an children and grandchi:dren of his said his observations show that * all, grandmother and the in knew a great dea} about babres " ""When a baby cried in grandmothâ€" er‘s time, they figured something was wrongâ€"and it was the same way with the Indians," He added that there &s sometning wrong when a baby cried and "some one should investigate." "Right now." h« said, "I am gath ering information to determine if the thumbâ€"sucking habit lisn‘t due to a baby being left alone too often." Dr. U'Jitl.lpfllâ€"d_l';e-‘:-fl:;l aabres be talked to, tossed in the air, and petâ€" ted and coddled as much as possible. "A baby 1s not a vegetabie. Neitner is it an animal. It should not be eft kione to develop b itself or to devise ways of amusing itself, A baby needs loc'ill life, just as much as go adults." Baltimoreâ€"Modern _ methods â€" of rearing babies were characterized reâ€" cently by Dr. Anight Dunlap, profes sor of psychology at the Johns Hupâ€" kins University as "systemized negâ€" Modern Baby Rearing Methods Deplored The majority of the families studied showed "medium happy relationships" homes in which there was also much unbhappy relationships were largely in between _ children,. Those showing friction between parents and between parents and children. Ongâ€"otâ€"the greatest factors in avoidâ€" ing friction between the children themselves was the parents‘ open exâ€" pression of affection for the children and for cath other. The children‘s affection for each other also increased greatly as the common interests of the family increased, the happiest famiâ€" lies being those in which the children and the parents bad some amusements cnd pursuits in common Famity council greatly increased family harmony and decreased the Amount of parental discipline exercisâ€" ed, It also increased the contidence the children placed in the parents and the satisfactio: the children fel: in the home. Agreement bengrpe- parents on disâ€" ciplineâ€"were found to ‘contribute to happiness in the home. Homes with these.qualitiés were those aiso conâ€" taining the greatest "affection and cooperation " Other elements adding to the family happiness were having most of the meals together, celebrat ing birthdays and holidays as a family, entertaining relatives, chums and family friends and baving the parents attend social functions together, In the 200 families studied there were only 16 cases of muchâ€"motherâ€" dominance, with 150 cases in which neither parent dominated. In the cases with one parent greatly domin. ating there was always friction and unbappiness on the part of the childâ€" ren. HomesJAa.which neither parent dominates much were sonsidered the happiest by the children, of tensior between parents and be tween parents and children decreases, the confidence of the child in his mother and father increases, as does his satisfaction in the family, Parents having little education are in more frequent conflict than those with more schooling. As the amount _ Chief among the elements conducive to a bhappy family: life was lack of friction between the parents and be tween the parents and children. Famâ€" ilies living in rural sections and small cities have less tension in them than families in mediumâ€"size and large cities, ramilies of moderate means, with the parents having joint control of the purse, are the bestadjusted ones. ’.‘JM‘N.Y.-â€"Tumeen elements in ®#@mily relationships build successful family flife, according to the study of tle autobiographies of 200 students made rocently ai Corneli University in a research on family life. These autobiographies, assembled by Miss Mildred: Thurow of the department of of ugriculture, represent: . students rural social organization of the college from farm village and city, their parâ€" ents being from various walks of life and both native and foreign born. All were from families with both parents living with the children in a family relationship. _ Happy Homes Research Proves Rural Famiâ€" Happys Parents lies Have Less Tension p who has studiec chuaâ€" past thirty years and nas Than City Homes ‘dren of his own w that "after the indians t 01 H (04 prec U SPRINGTIM d pt Mti RO Nb