"And to think the Cathneys," Jack spoke scornfully, "would lend themâ€" ‘"Yes, but there are many spies from other countries watching. Traing and automobiles aren‘t fast enough or safe enough." "But why did you choose a plane?" Jack asked. "Didn‘t you know there was more danger of an explosion?" Valdmirz moistene back and forth. "I lonsing to your gove to have it, and Cath 3t. When he had it chosen to deliver it «ommanded th ch The puzzle began to fit and form a patternâ€"a pitiful pattern, with Leola as the victim. She must have es eaped Ned, found Norm, and come to warn them. * Who employed you?" Jack shot the question at Valdmirz. "My government." The man‘s teeth ecased to chatter momentarily. He made a protense of standing erect. "What‘s the name of it?" Jack Jack and Elinor started at each other. Both thought of Leola, her strange message to Elinor, her franâ€" tic wire to Norm, her disappearance afterward. "Yes, Ned Cathney was to receive a million dollars itâ€"" WW you‘re . ï¬i.’f(‘ug." This & is what Mrs. M. Atâ€" ki 41 Dundurn § it Aamion, Oaty sds opm es w esc & me. h:bo to stimulate the ’:ppcme and relieves Favorite Prescription is a good tonic. It h:l;o to uh::hu the ’:p:cme and .t:hfln one of that tired, nervous condition. It is "The Cathney Powder Companyâ€" the follow began *You, you rat!" Jack shook him roughly. "Where did you get the paâ€" pers and the explosives? Answer beâ€" fore I break that window and toss you out after your bags. Answer!‘" "Cathney Powder Company!" Jack and Elinor exclaimed simultaneousâ€" Finally, he got the man away, forced him into the corner and held him firm. He was choking Elinor, pounding her head against the wall Jack tugged at him, kicked his shins, pried at his fingers. "*Those exrlosives â€" the papers â€" they mean life to my country. Life or extinetiont" NERVOUS WOMEN As Valdmirz sprang at her, Elinor southt vainly to elude his clutching fingers. They closed about her throat, The hoarse muttering of the man was in her ears. is discovered followinn them through a heavy fog and storm. Elinor watckes, fascinated, as a human figâ€" ure creeps out on the wing of the silâ€" ver plane, now flying beside them, fiv again until she has seen her. Elinor,. however, leaves on her reguâ€" lar flight. A foreigner, Vaidmirz, is aboard. He carefully guards two small green bags and goes into a frenzy ~* anxiety when a silver ~‘ne Clinor Ames tries to escape the heartbreak of her postponed marriage to Dr. Norman Rogers by becoming an a‘r stewardess. Dr. Rogers‘ mother approves an alliance between Norman and wealthy Francine Bayless. Norâ€" man is jealous of Jack Newton, the pilot who helped Elinor get her job. Leola Rogers, Norman‘s sister, is in love with Jack, but they have quarâ€" re‘ed. Leola disappears, but wires Flinor a mysterious message not to Of Special Interest to Women Readers ed. l‘ never tell that 10 11 never tell that." The man did cringe or whimper now. "My try faces a great war. They noed explosive. They won‘t have a ce unless"â€"he wrung his hands e formula and explosives reach . And I‘ve failed!" o onâ€"tell your story," Jack Canada‘s Favourite T ea 6 KV GIR L moistened his lips, rocked forth. "It‘s a formula beâ€" your government. We had and Cathney offered to sell Spies Watching CHAPTER X perfected, 1 was By NELL!IE GRAF T 2 A time they can cause great discomâ€" fort. The ordinary hiccough can usually be stopped by holding the breath, but if this does not have efâ€" fect try a long drink of cold water. Another way to stop an obstinate atâ€" tack is to pull the tongue out and hold it out for about a minute. Eating too quickly or swallowing food that is too hot are the commonâ€" est causes of hiccoughs, which follow spasms of the muscle separating the chest from the stomach. This muscle acts as a kind of bellows when you breathe. As a rule, hiccoughs are not seriâ€" ous, but if they persist for a long At the hospital, Valdmirz came back to consciousness slowly. Elinor sat by his side, tense and alert, the paâ€" per and pencil in her hand. ‘"Hey, was the fellow in the silver ship your sweetie? Is that guy Valdâ€" mirz dying? Did he confess? Has he croaked yet?" They pounced upon Jack, got Grimes in a corner and held him bodâ€" ily. _ Following the halfâ€"distracted Elinor to the ambulance, one fellow, more daring than the others, managed to climb on top of the car and shoutâ€" ed questions down at her as they moved toward the hospital. Heroine stewardess, _ Pilots real heroes. Spies, adventure! intrigue! A government‘s betrayal, A great millionaire caught in the web of his villainy. A mystery plane that warnâ€" ed and sped away after a girl had fallen from it. And did someone say the pilot of the mystery ship was the sweetheartâ€"no, no, the former sweetâ€" heart of the stewardess. Romance! Oh, this story had everything. As if they had dropped from the skies, a mob of reporters appeared, milled about. They lost their usual boredom in a flash, came to avid atâ€" tention. Here was a story! Jack gave crisp directions. "Get an ambulance. Sick man." Everyone was talking at once. Passâ€" engers climbed out. They flocked about Jack and Elinor and Grimes, praisin@ them. "Why didn‘t you signal? We thought you were lost, or worse, Chicago‘s frantic." It was a dramatic landing. Comâ€" pany officials and pilots rushed out to meet them. Elinor wrote hurriedly and held the paper before the man to sign, but he slumped forward, unconscious. Dramatic Landing The plane was now circling over the Bellefonte airport: Elinor forced an antidote down the man‘s throat. They‘d have to rush him to the hosâ€" pital when they landed. He must live to sign the paper! For a while his words were an inâ€" distinct jabber and then, "The white pellets. I took them. The white pelâ€" lets will beat them. And," he snarled at Elinor, "I‘ll be dead before 1 sign your paper." "There‘s no more," groaned Valdâ€" mirz. "You," he turned to Elinor in resentment, ‘"threw the bags away. But they would have exploded, we were so high and the lightning . . . the lightning . . . a glorious death â€" but this, this is failure . . ." "We won‘t let them near you if you‘l! tell us what we want to know." As she rejoined Jack, Valdmirz was jabbering, "They‘ll kill me. I‘ve failâ€" ed. They‘ll torture me to death," "He‘ll be up in just a minute," Elinor replied. "The most important thing just now is the story we‘re getâ€" ting from Valdmirz." As Elinor got paper and pencil, she noticed the coâ€"pilot was signaling. She ans wered. *They‘re radioizg all over about us," he exclaimed. "Tell Jack to get up here and send a message." Cure for Hiccoughs "For a million," Valdmirz said scornfully, " a man will do anything." "Get a pencil, Elinor," Jack said, "and paper, Write out the man‘s story. We‘ll have him sign it. When this scandal comes out, it‘s going to take more corporation lawyers than Chicago holds to clear the Cathneys." selves to a thing like this. Betray their own government." (TO BE CONTINUED) wi oo mss rae W oi ons \ikngitieatie 2 C Ee eeeeeeeneeeeneeeoraeanednenpilnd The Gourmets called it an "interâ€" national dinner." ‘The food and wines were selected from the best offered by all the nations on earth, There were Russian hors d‘ceuvres, French An "International" Meal Mrs. Post declaimed against hostâ€" esses who have themselves served first, cocktails before dinner, smokâ€" ing. between courses, and the recent innovation, attributed to the experiâ€" ence of having watched Frenchmen eat, of tucking the napkin under the sion. A waiter said "Jeez!" Mrs. Post came through it all right. She laughed it off, gently, and when she got up later, after the dessert of Spanish Rinosa cheese and Japanese toasted crackers, to deliver a little lecture on "Table Manners" you would have thought that nothing mad hapâ€" pened. It was a heartâ€"stopping moment. Ninetyâ€"two members of the Gourmet Society of New York, pretended not to notice. They went right along eatâ€" ing, crunching their Chinese celery a little more nolsily to cover the confuâ€" sion. A waiter said "Jeez!" Emily Post, who lives in a glass house of etiquette, spilled a spoonful of berries on the tablecloth at a forâ€" mal luncheon last week. Gourmets at Formal Luncheon Where Emily Post Spilled Berâ€" They Ate Noisily For Emily‘s Sake There‘s sprightiy charm in this apron with its appliqued pocket and gay binding. _ Pattern 1683 contains a transfer pattern of the apron, the motif (10% x 14% inches) correctly placed and applique pattern pieces; illustraâ€" tions of all stitches used, material requirements. Send 20 cents in coins (stamps cannot be accepted) for this pattern to Wilson Neediecraft Dept., 73 West Adelaide Street, Toronto. Write plainly Pattern Number, your Name and Address. The girls put spinach second to corn, which topped 30 per cent. of the lists. Colorful Laura Wheeler Apron Fun to Makeâ€"Fun to Wear Comes the day of disillusionment to those who have pictured youngâ€" sters turning in disdain from a dish of spinach. The news today is: They like it. A survey of 22,416 children beâ€" tween the ages of six and 16 showed that spinach, with 24 per cent. of all the votes, led the list of favorite vegetables on the boys‘ side of the table. Spinach Is Liked By Most Children "‘We‘d been planning to get married for several months." Brantley said, "but we never could get up courage to the point of going through with it. But Hazelâ€"that‘s my wife nowâ€"said she‘d read somewhere that the surest way to get over being scared of someâ€" thing was to do something more danâ€" gerous,. ries Covered Up Her Error. A Sixâ€"Foot Brute The bride wore street clothes, and for a neckpiece a sixâ€"foot Indigo snake. The groom used a deâ€"fanged rattlesnake about his collar. The scene was a snake farm on the outskirts of Tampa. Rev. John R. Branscamb, pastor of the First Methâ€" odist Church, performed the cereâ€" mony. With snakes entwined about their necks, Hazel E. Carpenter of West Palm Beach and Joseph 8. Brantley, of Arcadia, Fla., were married last week in what they called a "modern Garden of Eden ceremony." Bride Has Snake Modern "Garden of Eden! of Cereâ€" mony Held Near Tauma:’l’la. "So we picked out this way,." .APRON For a ONTARIO ARCHIVES TORONTO Don‘t leave your medic‘ne chest open. . Don‘t smoke in bed. Don‘t use a rocking chair for a ladder. Don‘t leave toys on the staircase. Don‘t open cans with a knife. Don‘t turn on the light from the bathtub. The Red Cross Lists a Number of Things You Shouldn‘t Do ragout, English pheasant, Belgian saverkraut, American wild rice, Swiss alligator pear, Danish persimmon, Italian salad, Indoâ€"China lichee nuts, Norwezian chocolate checse, and Swedish lingerberrics. Miss Post spilled the lingenberries. 1 cup cornmeal 1 teaspoon salt 2 tablespoons sugar 1 cup boiling water 14 cup sifted flour 2% teaspoons baking powder 1â€"3 cup milk Place cornmeal, salt and butter in bowl!, add boiling water slowly and beat until smooth. Add milk, eggs and baking powder. Mix well. Turn into a greased casserole or pan, 8 x 8 x 2 inches, and bake in moderate oven (350 degrees F.) 40 to 50 minutes, Peter Pan Ears of Corn Household Don‘ts However, you don‘t have to live in or even visit the South to develop a taste for their food. Even in these Northern climes, corn bread with a real Southern accent is popular in many homes. Here are a few selected recipes which helped to build the reâ€" putation of the South but which any housewife can use to build up her own reputation as a hostess. % cup cornmeal 1 teaspoon salt 3 tablespoons butter, melted 1 cup boiling water 1 cup milk 2 eggs, well beaten 2 teaspcons baking powder When we think of the South, we think first of all of the hospitality for which it has been famed. And hospiâ€" tality means food before anything else. _ Even the thought of Southern specialtics makes one‘s mouth water â€" fried chicken, candied sweet potaâ€" toes, baked ham and corn breads. These are the proud cookery tradiâ€" tions which have given the South a unique place in song, story and the hearts of those who love good food. 1 egg, well beaten Issue No. 6â€"‘38 Accent on the SQOUTHERN PATTERN 1683 Womenâ€"at least some of them â€" primp because they feel the need of a pickâ€"meâ€"up after "blue spells" or spats with their boy friends. thera put on fancy frills to punish their husbands by making them pay the bills, one of three psychologists said. Another viewâ€"and this from a woman â€"Misg Agnes Sharp, chief psycholoâ€" gist of the Psychiatric Institute of the Municipal Court, at Chicago, was Psychologists Say It Is For Other Women, for Tllen:‘u’ Why Women Go The length of the silk thread used in one pair of women‘s hose is about $% miles. ut liiats detsreiisctsntedificitiliy cescï¬ c ccc s td Before knitting and weaving were invented leg coverings or stockings were made of leather. Stockings made from the inner tubes of automobile tires are sold in Turkey, Syr{a and the Balisan States. Once Wore Leather Artificial silk used in ladies‘ silk stockings is made from the same chemical as gun powder. Incidentally some stockings for summer wear have been chemically treated to repel mosquitocs. Cobwebs were used man in 1740 to make spider‘s web consis strands. On the sidewalks of London is conâ€" ducted the business of mending ns in ladies‘ hosiery. ‘The lady whose stocking is being mended rests her foot on a footrest provided by the woman who does the mending. A muscum for stockings is to be established in Apolda, Germany, where stockings have been made for three and a half centuries, Intcresting Facts Disclosed About An Esc:ntial Feature 1%4, cups sifted flour 2 teaspoons baking powder 1 teaspoon salt % teaspoon soda 2 tablespoons sugar 1 cup yellow corn meal 14 cups sour milk or buttermilk 2 eggs, well beaten 3 tablespoons melted shortening Sift flour once, measure, add baking powder, salt, soda and sugar, and sift again. Add corn meal. Combine milk and egge. Add to dry ingredients, mixâ€" ing well. Add shortening, Bake in a greased pan, 8x8x2 inches, in hot oven (425 degrees F.) 40 minutes, or until done. Immerse ham in a kettle of bboiling water or water and cider, Reduce the temperature immediately and add seaâ€" sonings, as bay leaf, cloves and pepâ€" percorns, also onions and carrots, Simmer gently for several hours, or until tender. Do not allow water to bubble. When ham is cooked, rub with brown sugar, insert whole cloves about 1 inch apart, and bake in slow oven (300 degrees F.) long enough to brown (usually 45 minutes to 1 hour). Crumbs may be mixed with the brown sugar. No list of Southern dishes is comâ€" plete without Johnny Cake, While on the subject of Southern dishes, and in case you haven‘t had it for a long time, try a baked ham soon. There is nothing to equal the delicate, flavoursome tenderness of a home baked ham., Scrub ham with stif brush and, if necessary, wash in a solution of % teaspoon soda to 1 quart water. ing, melted Sift flour once, measure, add baking powder, soda, salt, and sugar, and sift again. Pour boiling water over cornâ€" meal and stir until smooth, Let stand 15 minutes, Add milk and egg. Stir only until smooth. Combine with flour. Add shortening. Bake on hot, wellâ€"greased griddle. Serve hot with syrup. Makes 18 cakes. If you have never made CORN GRIDDLE CAKES, these will delight you. 1 cup sifted flour % teaspoon baking powder 14 teaspoon soda 14 teaspoon salt 14 tablespoon sugar 1 cup boiling water 14 cup cornmeal 2â€"3 cup buttermilk or thick sour 4& cup butter or other shortening, melted Combine cornmeal, salt and sugar. Stir in boiling water and set aside to soll slightly. Sift flour once, measure, add baking powder, and sift again. Add milk, egg, and shortening to hot meal, then add flour, beating only enough to dampen all flour, Bake in a greased cornâ€"ear muflin pans in hot oven (425 degrees F.) 20 minutes. It makes 12 ears of corn. 1 egz, well beaten 1 tablespoon butter or other shortenâ€" s were used by a Frenchâ€" 1740 to make stockings. A web consists of silken Stockings In For oys "acdat do its work. TIRED or NERVOUS? Is bile doing its work? Leaves change color in autumn due to the decaying chlorophyll, or green coloring matter, undergoing chemical changes, and to the exposâ€" ure of pigment cells formerly coverâ€" ed. W, H. Howard, third year: "I apâ€" proach the subject with an open mindâ€"and open arms. Necking is a petty aspect of love, but a gripping question." G. J. Aldridge, fourthâ€"year stuâ€" dent: "Loving and losing fulfils the highesg_fu_r‘nct. ons of the university," "It is better to have loved and lost than never to have loved at all." The vote was 80 to 37 and here‘s some of the reasons: More than 50 per cent. of the stuâ€" dents at Victoria College, University of Toronto, favorea losing at love raâ€" ther than being loveless in their vote last week after a debate on the subâ€" ject: Lost Love Better T han None But Mrs. Evelyn Mills Duvail, psyâ€" chologist, asserted women wear skyâ€" secraper hats and keep up on the latest styles because "way down deep every woman dresses to satisfy herself." The psychologists came out of sepâ€" arate mental huddles on the question of why women go in for selfâ€"adornâ€" ment on a big scale, after Prof, Josâ€" eph T. Casey, of the philosophy deâ€" partment of De Paul University, had said that women primp because of other women, ‘‘Woman," said the professor, is far more concerned about reactions from members of her own sex." EVERY FRIDAY NIGHT On a National Cosst to Coast Network Limited, of Windsor, Ontario. Look for the name Bayer in the form of a cross on every tablet, ©@ "Aspirin‘ tablets ac made in (:.n.d. s« Lk "i.t + I | !ude-mutsthe Baver Comnany. is the il;yr;;n; doctors -gw approve. You take "Aspirin‘" for relief â€"then if you are not improved promptly, you call the family doctor. of water. Then repeat, if necessary, according to directiou. in each package. Rebel comes rapidly. _ ‘The "Aspirin‘ method of relief Here is what to do: Take two ;Al;pirin" tablets when you feel a cold coming onâ€"with a full glass No family need neglect even minor â€"_ REelEvEs B THROAT PAIN RAWNESS COLDS 2 74 /\ this regard, the Federation ==~l noting 200 radio receiving scts i: Canadian schools, compared with !! 500 in city schools of the Uniw States and 6,500 “liltgnin‘ sechoo‘s‘ in the United Kingdom. The Federation proposed the C! and the provincial education depart ments should set up a central counci !3' school broadcasting, similar to t« A series of regular radio broadâ€" casts by the Canadian Broadcasins Corporation suitable for school p= poses was recommended by the | a nadian ‘Teachers‘ Federation be‘or> the Rowell Commission at Ottawa. Canada is far behind the Unie‘ Kingdom and the United States Sey Canada Far Behind | Method of Lize:®®> Teachers Advoca‘ School Broadcasis , . That you put on an indif( for the man you‘ve been pra want to see you again, your friends. Unless they ads to do what you wanted to do : That you made yourself i idea of a "perfect wife", Yo bore yourse}if. That you started pursuin: looking man who stopned you, You‘ll end t» without h without your pride. That you listened to the That you ever protended to thing you aren‘t. It‘s such }; That you rearranged the suit your own convenience. are you‘ll be embarrassed t found out. That you "ran down" anoth« when a young man mention~ name. The disinterested way h« your criticism ought to show yo you made a big mistake in voi« That you gave anyone a "picc your mind." It‘s a piece you x want to reclaim when your anse: wore itself down. That you told anyone anything for "her own good". That you told your husband some of the weaknesses and faults of momâ€" bers of your own family. Ho‘ll remind you of them. Greater use of motion pictures als: That you passed a bit of dam»sing gossip along its way. For you don‘t really want to cause another‘s downâ€" fall. That you told three of your bes friends about the fight you had |« night with your husband. Tomorrow when the quarrel is made up, thow} still remember, You‘ll be sorry Jaterâ€"that you ad vised Mary not to marry Dick. For she will, And you will lose a friend. Here Are Some Things Yoâ€" Will Unruly Tongue Many Have Depengents Some 3170 reports were receiyeg from teachers, nurses, Mbraries, soci~} workerse, Y.W.C.A. secretaries, diouy. ans, lawyers, physicians, clorks in business offices and private soor«» ies, salesgh‘"~ hairâ€"dressers, industria) workers, waitresses, domestics and charwomen. It was found that 22 por cent, are the sole support of dopon. dents, 15 per cent. have only them «* “P,‘ selves to support, 63 per cont. hn{‘ Fp financial responsibilities othor than their own maintenance, and 27 per cent, contribute to the support of others outside their own houscho!d. You‘ll be u')rryâ€"-but. oh, so 1 The average wage for mon is set for the supnort of a family of five, byt women‘s salaries permit their owp maintenance only, a serious hondicap since it has been determined that the majority of working women suppor others outside their own *suschold, the report continued. The purcha: ing power and tax contribution of wase. earning women is of much importanco, it was pointed out. In remord to in. come tax exemptions, women are off. en in a false position, as the law yo. quires dependents to live in the same household, and many women n forced to live apart from thoso they support. These facts were brought out in the report of a committee reprosentatiye of 13 organizations of women wa>, earners organized under the chy. monship of Mrs, Harvey Amnew hy the national coupcil of the Younsr Woy. en‘s Christian Association of Canady Permit Own Maintenance Oniy The survey was vmdertaken by q special subâ€"committee of the Leasue of Nations, at the request of 15 roy. ernments and international womeys organizations. In Canada there has been no large» scale attempt to deprive wome» of tha right to earn a living, although thore is a strong prejudice against married women in waseâ€"carning oo0y. pations,. ‘The number of married wome en employed has doubled in the past tem years, says a story from Toronq in the Christian Science Monito, Doubled In Last 10 Years he This ‘The Pharisees wore the hered not only to the la rabbinical interproetation which gradually formed ©code by the side of the « ‘Their scribes, therefore, rabbis of the party that lieved in the rabbis. "W that he was eating wit and the publicans, said ciples, How is it that 1 drinketh with publicans In the Orient, if ty untarily broke bread wit dividing, say, a loaf b then they became, as it wne with another, in fri on( jng and had did. HMe i and nob! croated s t dr 11 fishi man honest y he live« w anea wore levied . daea, and paid dir ment, the officials the provincials the cans were chosen 1 ulation because th ways of the peop position they had iors a certain su else they could s# people would go i: "And as he passo the son of Alphaous tainly to be identifi which is the name 1 Gospel in referring | number of men in 1 had two name pr cultural pi and duty « and on all bridgeâ€"mot «dues, town to the sow. is no pale library to i tude resort tausht thon hew was a 1 city through deal of trafti the rich good Jesus of Nazareth, t son, knew Matthew the well, Perhaps only too citen been in Mathew‘s his another‘s taxes al m on« ed h one « Time Place verse 1 place a n er to used in s» Christ fouwr thoir life @ of Christ, ‘SBitting at town lad Go‘den Tout â€" *4 the rightsous, but Mark 2: 17. yY n ) th m onl ypf the CHA! LN oRDCR d To Mattl t} The Lesson in i Quest A Foliower of h Ster thoi d t e 4#