fej Queslionr A v . ? V -- ' Asp!*ed by :< ? r.o t ? ? ( : h.:. :: . - ~ ~ m s-i > :j . " " " "I was run-down? "... l.,,k?d pal.: k. .I a k? ? n appetite . . . f' It tired . . . unrJerv>< ight.'' "W hat ?Ji<l I <wr* V "AI : : ? ' ^ . . ??[ J 'J . s*. V 4 I ?: ' v. >.h *:.? *SMI aic tip the ?jpe- ? ' t/c . . ? ?i: r?. t.'jret < ' rt'l-. . > a i - r vj'I *j< ^BCTBagnJJfijmTTu?IMI'.I?inrawjaruite tin yvif c>l ei f : irjn by i-u.-.insr the t , fair.' . > .S S T *rr.*;.'it. tv re- .. build your : J'xxi y.'.renjrth. . . r? .tore "| rv.r --itj: ' it. - ." better use '' of the : /A . J ? .t. S - S. Tonie 1. < i:y designed a; to ! . /I h- * ri. ...* > remark- ^ able and v .- nHl eally by it makes H yo j feel ; , :r >eif n_; :.:i. A-- liable t*? #it nr :? re. ? S. Co. ti ' til Doubt and Fear tr He who has conquer ed doubt so and fear has conquered failure.? b? James Allen. ! iy " | tr For Watery at Head Colds J%T / TRY THIS of ( 2 DROP l^W"! ;v I >5 I putrsj Vtreatment/ a I : j v y tss?i , ^2 5..ToT'-i rfPENETROh si t, ru w OLD VIOLINS WANTED-Any Make IQC.UUi for a Htradi varum. more t >.ari 9UU other fa- W moun makuimojl for SI.ijiAi up to &> I^aro the f| value of yourold violin before liny It Mrndl?e In WjIq for chart, namri and prior*. If you own IE an old violin thin may ho worth a fortune to jou. ?J( FEDERAL VIOLIN BUREAU - HACERSTOWN. MO. . Ici =: .... = m U1 it ic POULTRY ii I t>l v-?v CHICKS So U*. All Varletlc* Lay- W V . > Inir and Meat Ntrains. Heard i'ulhas and llniller (>M'krrrln?Also I/mcV- o (\yrr jf\ llnsa and baby Tnrfcryn. llat'-hinir i ,, M?kf? Nhlpord Anywhere. Ouxtom l? UaPahin* 1> a r.iHn Wanted Kvturwnitua ,, KDCL HATCHERIES, 3S40 N. Market. St. Louis, M*. LOOK QUICK! $35.00 s"alar* i sl To MAI Of WOMAN-wild Aato, Mil RIKl ] " PBODuCkR to r armors. HI * Months Contract. I i. wmmmn* hps. cc, d*h. ?, im< st. lmk, m. { ^ The Cherokee S I I none ; Moun CHAPTER IX?Continued ?20? . -i - -- * - vr- and oer te go e la alwa - pen * I . - : :,e a * ':> : * , e1 ? rr. " ?I . T -If l ib *r a'. - .- .-J 'a ; F r; * j oke: n<rl\ at Pilar "J ;:3 Br.-:. . 1 f. ,r r- -1. - is \ j a i>*a;j : .a* MH ..?f :' M ; y. "A re j'l 'J : * r.V I re-i * or ;.- ;. : J I I ; ?\.y. you Kf." .V-r 1 l!* !* .li-h. "I m IW *...ik . t at v. i. >*;i i;'o sO'v'-'y wit? have B fee sre f her. if- ur i?. It. *::>;'? ? a ifr?*-:*. . ;'i off ruy :. ir. ! ha ve - - - - - _ li.-JIT:. - a. way- .j n a Clear." !Mar freed at or. re. "I 'J r. t know v ..at I . .. i ever e ?: ne without Bryn," ie t on. "For y- r-. r. ho has pen my mil heat con rade. No mat r In wr.at if-culty I f mi i:.;' iere ahv;iy? ISrjn, ar.l ho brought r v . - tr ' s and : >s a- well, del i:.y heart to know that he happy." B-.oorah did not move. Or ir.-Im-.ther f'?-i her ? ;. <v? and 1 at I'.lar ankly. ' V- u moo . ..-iris are so jmost and open,'* she sail. "In my iv a girl would never hove dared to ake such a sT a lenient about a man. 1in would have been afraid of being isunderstood." "Mi-under.-tood?" Pilar murruur'-! ckir.g op?n the lighter. "In my day." Grandmother explained, here were few young men such as tr clear Bryn, so handsome, so elible In every way, so line. If a girl id been his friend always, us you ive been, my child, then she would ive been expected to marry him, and, deed, she would herself have expectI to marry him. I do not quite un rstand the new camaraderie which lows of such close friendships withit any-thought of marriage or roman; love. In my day, so queerly unconolled was human nature then, the rt of friendship you mention would ive been potentially dangerous if ther the girl or the man?particularthe xnan?married elsewhere.** Fllar's eyes narrowed the faintest ille against the light as she looked Grandmother. Grandmother was sitae u;> a little stralghter than Debah had seen her sit for some time, id there was a little pink in her iceks. I-ut her eyes as they met Hal's were calm and kind, and Deb ah pushed away the thought that randmotlier suspected something and as taking her own way to combat le hint of danger. Pilar rose and stood for a moment, dl and lissome and full of grace, bode the door. She was smiling. "Cusims nre very different now." she murmured, and begged to lie excused, and ent out through the door. There was a little silence when Pilar as gone. Deborah looked up from ?e puppy to find Grandmother stitchig away placidly again, her eyes on i*r material, and Sally and Madeline >oking at each other with steady leaning. Sally and Madeline didn't aderstand. They didn't know what must have been like for Pilar to ?ve Bryn, to have loved him for years, nd then to have him suddenly marry nether girl. They didn't know what meant to love Bryn. Simon and ubby were all right, of course, and erfect darlings, but they weren't ryn. Deborah's eyes burned, and the ud lump came back in her throat There was a knock at the door. It as one of the maids, wanting Debrah. The cook would like her orders, ie maid said respectfully. Deborah ent out and shut the door behind her. Deborah stumbled down the hall toard the kitchen. Ia her mind's eye lie could see herself sitting on the all the other night, with Bryn lean)g close beside her. She remembered rbat she had wanted to do. Bryn's :out, Murphy, N. C., Thurt ymoon Fr, itain... ? . ?*. sr.: ; - -xait-; * -.a fa;- i ---n :-r t*-> ; i 1 -~v2 j t - w'- od her b -- b nst b!s ' - . >.. % 'i s =: ?lo?r i: : It? me ... at all? B it ? >w - :*-!? - . .... : :f t ~ : :l * ' *- - i r. i - f? A:.: ' ? : ! p;;.ir * . learlv. : t' r. - a ver;. . i ' '! : :? - a:. : > : fr. * r.~r, : .* : " " : ->' * || Ar . Br;, r. ? J heart mas: i be, now, to ibinfc that bet .* : *- ! : !'. IT most be suffering -Ireiifuli.r. t 1 - - " is : in *:: I' , . aack stair? t : . h. :.z -r.e a 11 '<< ner r - rn. " ' r: - t:-.e .. . - Bryn But It was Instead. Pilar; ! nr.': s; v .5 search of Deborah, for '-' .'.j .* 1 (jr:;r.dir.o*'.**r"* S.ie g.'i*. ti - og . the c pen door. I a 'Ah. there yon are. sweetie." she j I w-r. :?-red if \ 011'd run aw. iy. ere've you been?" | p J v.in the kitchen." D-b- , f - . ? >.; praying that her voh-e I . - . : Th-n I C.lfx'.e lip to get > < : roidery. I fxr. 1 myself ^ with no Aork at ail to do these days." J lh ar water :.g her "You are , refr-2,' she sighed. But really. f I you must begin to make S"me , changes in your life, or you will be 1 n.; >t?\y bewildered by Bryn's gay world; Brvn travels pretty fast. dear. a Deborah sat down slowly, with the Dalian embroidery in her hand. She T :.r ,"-re l it absently. "Hasn t Bryn ex- c ir.- l it all to you. Pilar?" she asked at last, lifting her dark eyes. "Explained what?" Pilar asked, after a moment a "I know he . . . hasn't told the v others. Sally, or Madeline. I don't w think evea Tubby knows. I'm not c quite sure why he hasn't. For a while 11 I thought it was on his own account. e 1 it now I think he has been doing it i r me, so that I wouldn't feel so 1 queer and left out." "I don't know what you mean." " Deborah looked at her. "You know that Bryn couldn't be In love with me," she said. b Pilar did not move. Not by a flick- b er did her expression change. Her eyes a were black and fathomless. "Not In love with you?" she re- n pea ted. "Surely you knew. Pilar?" "Even if I did." Pilar said softly, "you wouldn't expect me to . . . mention It, Deborah?" s "No," Deborah said after a moment. | .\ l 1'iwir .s worus ner neart had fallen J like? lead. So Pilar did know. Brvn j s had told her. Questionnaire Reveals V Live to Be Moi The following Is an excerpt from d Germany's recent questionnaire, ac- t cording to a Hamburg correspondent: 'Are you more than one hundred v years old? If so, why? s It is not an oifielal Inquiry conducted t by the Nazi government, however. A retired ship's surgeon, tired of reading conflicting accounts of how to stretch a lifetime, decided to collect his Information with German thorough- 11 ness. p So he began several years ago send- t ing out a questionnaire to all the real- p ly old people of Germany. Ills list of s questions Included all that a one hun- f dred-year-old person usually is asked. t and some more. v Since then he has received replies c from 124 men and women past the b 100 mark, and has begun to classify c them, with the following result: * Not one out of the whole list turned * out to be a vegetarian. Many of the a old-timers, however, named among 1 their favorite dishes cucumber salad, sauerkraut, onions, radishes. Most of them also liked smoked meats. All admitted moderate use of alcoholic bev- ^ erages, and among the men there waa J only one non-smoker. ^ Only 43 out of the 124, however, tl were men; indicating that, at least d in Germany, It is three times as easy a for a woman to hit the 100 mark as It it Is for a man. Of the 81 women, all had c been married and only two were child- (J less. One of them had had 14 chll- li iday, November 5, 1936 By ? . UJr . i < ances Shelley Wees | ... - 77 i.- -b; ra.- :* jitiley , 1 vr?."V5%r-. r . "i of - rse. :? a lentletnan.*" -I 5 r. : Lei. s.t.j more I- 5-.! 'train. ^En: i - Pi ir. I in eq Kin to -i - . . . j r.? y :i Wf;: 1." ~I - ' "tr.- > into detail. .* . I n jo . a It w,.- :.ke thin. . v mj twenty-Hrs* ' . n.-" rr-r :: o'her'* -' " * "2 * San Francisco I * irry. He v r. " r ?. :t marr*. ' ? a! rag by acd" * r wa? frirh'ened. I I at ut it, cr.-l he offered marr me InsteaL Thnfn alL> ' "I see." sk* said : ' " ' T o . o I canto. Tubby " ' - a-vay and threatened me ~ If I c : - I Bryn Y>? atr: T m tn yon were o :? r GraramV -v.- Y - rrrar. Jr.. -her thinks Bryn Is he mar.?"' "Yes." ' Ar. I ; a;-per.y next?** T.ere v. as a qteer r. :e in her?colce, r * I'* -"ih : -oked up quickly. But ir < : :i n ?. chanzed. and D^hr s eyes fell n:p.:n. "Nothing." she 1. " We h -.ve to co on until the en 1 * *'.e year. or I do r. * get the money. marri :ze nv:~* last for r year, ind it rr;?t co on for Grandmother's :':o. ar.y-.vay. for that lone. After : it . . . r don't know what we shall o to explain to Grandmother, hnt here will b*? something. Bryn will be ree. then, of course." "Von cannot z^t the money within year?** "If r:.e marriaze is not successful o that extent." Deborah explained arefully, "I do not pet it at all." "Your grandmother seems very fond f Bryn." ".She loves him," Deborah said, wlrh little catch in her breath. "He Is .onderful to her. Even If the estate rere not so tied. I don't see how we ould be . . . divorced . . . before fiat time without breaking Grandmothr's heart." Pilar turned the Ivory holder oeween her long browned fingers. ' It eerns rather a long time out of Bryn's Ife," she said. "A year." "I know." "I should think there mlzht have eon somebody else. Deborah. Someody you might have paid for his name nd his lost year." Deborah looked up a gait*, but did ot speak. Pilar was watching her. ifter a moment she said, "Of course, t's all very romantic, and you are eally quite pretty. Any man would ke to he the prince who awakens the leeping beauty." Deborah's eyes flew to the long oval f PUar's face. Her own cheeks crimoned furiously, and her eyes flashed. (TO BE COXTIM ED) diy Germans e Than One Hundred ren, three had 12, and four boasted hey had been "good mothers" to 10. The great majority of both men and roinen lived the whole century outide of cities, and usually in the disrict where they were born. The Wedding Cake The wedding cake is an institution., lating back at least as far as ancient tome. The patrician families of Rome rovlded especially baked cakes for he marriages of their daughters. In ater times in Europe great heaps of mall cakes were baked for a wedding east. A French baker in traveling hrough England noticed the inconenience of preparing so many little akes. He put all the dough in one ig pan?thus inventing the wedding ake as it is known today. It Is the raditlonal right of the bride to cut he first slice of the cake. Prosperity nd happiness are believed to go witb hat first piece of the cake. Only Park of Its Kind Skansen, the outdoor section of the lordiska museum in Stockholm, la he only park of Its kind la the world, is 70 acres reproduce In miniature he salient physical features of Sween, and contain typical flora, fauna nd characteristic dwellings lnhab:ed by peasants in the picturesque ostumes of the various districts.? ilenn D. McCoy, Washington, D. CL i Collier's Week)" To? Much for {fx 2.:, csssui;?. ; 19 ~~ = i f. . ' ~-xi |R 1 fa.-" - -?;a? Fit Ouaract?*5 tr.e a he.He = :rer ' . : _V . s.re rcuad - . ? : Ju>t For?*t Me -e.-.a y:. - - - " -e - " 55:i -r -.er.d me a five. I don't care a i- ' * speak : j rr.e a:: ' " Our Les:c-$ srr.s he rr.sv "'* float on the river a=??: : : 5 r." To Ease a Headache Fast Get Real Quick-Acting, _____ Quick-Dissolving Ba yer Aspirin See How f7) Genuine Bayer < Tablets Work ? O n \ In 2 seconds by stop f^T W~^ "?tf h, a genuine ! I , BAYER Aspirin tablet - -g. starts to dhuntcgru* P and go to work. Drop a Bayer Aspirin tablet ir- ' to a glass of water. By the time it hits the hot. ? torn of the glass it is disintegrating. What [ l! happens in this glaas . . . happen* in your ."\j stomach.. Virtually lea Tablet Sow If you suffer from he. ... :.:i wast you want ii quick I'-. Genuine Bayer A .rh tablets give quick relief, for one rt n, because they dissolve or 'cerate almost instantly they t . .. atatsturc. (Note illustrati a ve.) Hence ? when you t : a real Bayer Aspirin tablet starts to dissolve almost as q k!y s you swallow it. And tht. :v to start working almost . y . . . headaches, neuralgia :ritis pains start casing ulmos ace. That's why millions : r asi for aspirin by the n: . ina alone when tinsv buv. :t always say "BAYER ASPIRIN" and see that they get it. Try it. You'll say it's marvelous. oeeLY 15C FOM12 NOW for a B QUARTER >S^NS^ -^7 P Hi LOOK FOR THE BAYER C-fOSS I A Bit of Self-Esteem An inferiority complex ..ould bt H drilled out of a boy early in life. ft ^EMETR^^^ I r .^PIMPLES I >0 from surface conditions^ RJ Jr VJF need not be enoured. ^B Bj Make your skin clearer JKK K ^Brand smoother with V rResiinol^ | Stl ^ *7 keaf'bhxk 'SIS {* ""*> v iuimHjm ?? ' ?2?2 I 4? W??r 3 5TH *'???!. I I frtw roa k ciTT^j jfl

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