i work and worry haye got - of you and you are Teel ng wt Bath , follow the recom: of more thi proved in ouall thé daratn strength ii he Sete buildi ced. mery is to be on bol ined, vigorous health. _ For those who are run-down suffer from Tagged ne ‘anaemia or debility, W marvelous tonic. Cet V cart . Haraudfiteuie «Go, Lud By EDNA ROBB WEBSTI | Author of “Joretta,” “1 Girl" Etc. pstick Peter’s dear und earnest face, the Brave eyes sparkling with that smile she loved, ard she reached cut and clasped his hand, no longer afrain, She was realy to leap into life—with Peter, Wi) CCH as Peter was tsodelling with intense interest, striving for a new effect be- fore the {dea should become lost in the ethereal contusion of escaped In- spirations that their originaters had failed to capture quickly enough. His hands were gray with plastic clay and his mind was projected into the realm of creative fancy, A kiock on the door suldenly interrupted the | Summer moraing stillness and drew |him back to reality, | His forehead wrinkled with annoy-| | ance, for he had no wish to be dls-} turbed. Then the reminder that it! might be Camilla who had come to) see him, made him call quickly, | | Come In,” He always wanted to} }See Camilla, no matter how disturb-| \ing she might be. | There was an instant’s hesttation, | jthen the knob turned and the door! | Opened to disclose a strange girl. A| | very beautiful stranger, she was, so | beautiful that Peter stared at her stupidly for a moment. The girl just! smiled friendly and said, “May I come jin?” < me A 3 Camilla Hoyt, young and _ art student, and Peter struggling sculptor, fall in SYNOPSIS on, himself. Camilla, the adopted ter of wealthy parents, is na herit money when she come: She is preparing herself for daugh- to in- age. with utiful | See, That is what I told you to do,” he said. “Find a chair, please. As you T am—er—busy.” Somehow, he felt defensive toward her at once, and fidential voice, fe and his voice reflected his attitude. | “Thanks,” she said, crossing the| |room with casual, lissom movements | | and sinking {nto the one armchair | which graced the room “You are 5 ovr | @ course in commercial art, hoping Peter Anson, aren't you?” she in-| to get a job to enable her to mpport | quired, raising her very blue eyes that herself. She has been makitg the| were deeply shadowed with rounds of agencies, (Now Go On With The Sti ) CHAPTER XIX. ‘Returning home, Camilla v Prised to discover how tired with the day's efforts. Studj “classes at school had been tory, but there was a vast diff between preparation for wo: work itself, or even obtaining if, _ already had discovered. W) "dressed for dinner, she revicwe her mind some of the truths had made themselves evident it day. She always had s ‘that if you were willing to work, _ there was a place for you. was ‘obvious that not only was that sup- position wrong, but that not @n ir ‘You were capable of doing thewerk chose, you were given th op- portunity. | Gazing around at the furniiiings, of the big luxurious rooms tha 4 is hheltered her for so long. and rapid calculations with the val + her possessions, she was astoundal at | the time she estimated it woulf re- re her to earn the money they F resented, y oa Even if she were given the @por- tunity to work for pay, how ong "would it take her to earn wha sur- was and femp- enc hich bh osed ikin; 5 | ar | bs twenty-five} her | stockings and lingerie anothe - enty-five. Her wardrobe and dn rh table drawers were filled with costly garments. Of course, she knew that Fay jev- | Ds ich en | Id | she earned her own living, she “no longer patronize exclusive and wear hand embroidered 1i But she wondered how many d women who wore such gar@ents _ could earn the money for even ery Poor substitutes, if they were ollie _ to. With sudden panic, she wonle If she could. Sitting before the triple 2 ss of her dressing table. Camijia | not see her glowing beauty She! is gazing into the vast aud cl | leh | he was about to leap. Aprroad ing she had been so conficent and ure; standing now at the id gazing into its abysmal de; e drew back with horror. suddenly, there appeared before nD | r jv @ause poisons to accumulate in the n and bring on persistent Backade umbago, Rheumatism, or Sciati ‘ake Gin Pills to restore the kidneys healthy condition and eliminate in from your system. | t jt i | \" | In | and scoop out centres. Mash thor- ective?” he inquired. | Tn Milwaukee fines ranging from! oughly. Add prepared cheese, salt and Hang it in “If I were," she laughed, “I might five to twenty-five dollars are imposed | Pepper. Beat until Ught and creamy your kit- fAbiberoubiotieve ric’ | |on) owners of dogs which howl at| Refill potato shell and bake in hot chen. Pull “I don't know," Peter observed. | |Pight and disturb neighbors, and that| oven (450 dogrees Fahrenheit) ten out one The depression has hit everything.” ' ~ k : | seems. fair enough. No one has Any | minutes or until brown, Seryesimme- | sheet of “Don't I know it? Models in par- Just rub on ¢ business keeping a pet which becomes) diately. . | Waxed icular, Say, listen, Big Boy, when Yicks @ nuisance to others. ee a Cc | Paper at | there's work enough to go half way} VAPORS = = Horatio, truck horse, ts a victim of | § atime. round, this baby has more than she \ * figure on the turn stand. “I'm ‘d can't afford one.” ward the immigrant group. | possession.”” but none of them suited me, quite, y nd I’m not sure now that I want to| the jam and confectionery industry in */ enter the exhibit.” | girl friend?” | Pale gold of her hair was startling} and effective. | ‘I can't deny that,” Peter replied. | ‘I'm Sylvia Todd,” she offered. | | inclined his head slightly. “Wha |1 do for you?" | “Give me some work,” she came to. seventy-fifth, so I could: use my last - the point quickly. “I'm a model, ani dime for a sandwich to have strength and’ desperate for work." She took a cig- | to work on.” |arette from her purse and fired it in| With a lighter from the table beside} nj | Peter daubed tentatively at the clay you have com | that” | “You e to the wrong place for 4 have a model now?" - ec “Well, you're a sculptor, aren't you? Two and two make four.” Exactly. ten—that's two days for a model. I ye id “And where do you expect to get without one?” “I manage. I did that without on He indicated the group in tae win- dow alcove which he had made for Camilla. {I | ni Miss Todd glanced at it p) |casually. “Not bad. But neither will m: that kind of stuff get you anywhere.” A “You mean nudes.”” “Sure. Symbolic stuff. That's what my figure?” | “I noticed it when you walked oO} across the room," diffidently. | She laughed shortly. “You would, | of course. Well, how about using it |tor inspiration, Big Boy? Gee, you're| banged little since the dark ages is te an inspiration yourself.” | shown by a mantle found by peat dig-| Ute acu Ree : |gers in a bog near R PS! smiled for the first time, “but I don't Sse eal oa ee re oa no | haven. a is es | be doing anythi | happen to be doing anything PEE polit ToD lyestennutithatrareetercak ea “No doubt you could be that,” he needs it.” - “Now is as good a time to begin as any. What about the National exhibit °°! T heaid youlwerereoitertaedtn ioe «| Iv well esperved as ‘aro-obiécte 1a ope all the land, that a i ete to.” . i | general that have lain in peat for cen- ‘ ries “With what—that 2" she nodded to- | “Ob, no—that is just a personal “Well, you wouldn't ever look-in with that,’ "What then?” “Why, I’ve had get a) Po she shrugged. | Sta several hunches! | | “Afraid you might lose the schol- arship?” long, | and touched that responsive chord in| dark lashes, Their contrast with the him that denied no creature his pity. anxiously. when she looked up again the blue “Miss Todd, how do you do," Peter eves glistened with tears, like dew on t may blue violets. But she smiled wanly. the exhibit, and had no model yet.| afraid Mon't you think I would do?” | he said thoughtfully, as if he we-e y And five and five make’ jt over again. If I decide that I need |let you know tomorrow. That's the best I can do now.” was your first idea. Don't | than none,” died January 3, 1931, has been taken| |clover, alfalfa, and peas are most im- a England are under 20 years of age, The only ship that comes in for th “More afraid I might win, if you) man who waits is receivership. Largest Swimming Pool Building Planned For Wembley Will Cover Over Two Acres Details of the proposed Empire swimming pool at Wembley have been outlined ahd it 1s stated that the building will be nearly half aa large again as Albert Hall. It will be 420 feet long and 240 feet in width, and will cover an area of more than two acres. Its roof span will be 240 feet — 80 feet wider than the Main Hall at Olympia. The arena will be 300 feet by 88 feet, and the pool itself 200 feet long and 60 feet wide, with a maximum depth of 16 feet. From the! level of the arena to the apex of the roof will be approximately 90 feet. Wembley Stadium, Ltd., is provid- ing the whole of the money, estimated at $750,000, for this new enterprise. It is intended to open the pool for the em. A selive IN at | “But that isn't now.” She tossed the stub of her cigarette into a tray| and walked across the room to stand aquatic events of the British Empire beside Peter. A heavy fragrance en-| Games in August next year. veloped him, and some latent mem-| There will be accommodation for ory stirred. Unconsciously, he won-| more than 8,000 spectators, cach of dered where he had been surrounded | whom will have an upholstered tip-up by that same perfume before. Its/ seat. Wave-making machinery, which pungent sweetness denied a cheap) Will cause the water to break on slop- variety and seemed incongruous on| ing “beaches” at either side of the a girl who was desperate for work. | pool, and under-water illumination, Of course, a girl like Sylvia Todd| will aid in the lure to the bathers, spent money extravagantly when she| Who will also have a dance floor and did have it and therefore was the| fully licensed buffets Provided for more desperate when she did not, he) them. concluded. She was saying in a .on- , “Tell you what I'll do, Mr, Anson. I'll work for half the| regular pay, everything being on the Work down and down as it is. And if I were not hungry—you being on the} Erect Sub-Arctic Mission Of Two Priests At Repulse Bay Nearing Completion Finishing touches are being given How to Stop a Cold Quick as You Caught It If throat is sore, crush and dissolve 3 Aspirin Tablets in a half gtass of water and gargle according to directions in box. Almost Instant Relief in This Way The simple method pictured above is the way doctors throughout the world now treat colds. Take 2 Aspirin Tablets. Drink full glass of water epeat treatment in 2 hours, is the trademark of The Bayer Company, Limited, and the name Bayer in the form of a cross is on each tablet. They dissolve almost instantly. And thus work almost instantly when you take them. And for a gargle, Aspirin Tablets dissolve so completely, they leave no irritating parti- cles. Get a box of 12 tablets or bottle of 24 or100atanydrugstore. Tt is recognized as the QUICK- EST, safest, surest way to treat a cold. For it will check an ordi- nary cold almost as fast as you caught it, Ask your doctor about this. And when you buy, see that you get As- Pirin Tablets. Aspirin ASPININ TABLETS ARE IADE IM CANADA Does Not Harm the Heart Poe ora Sy auraell Re OP MOM AEnU een at rie the Roman Cath- for nothing," she added softly. olie Church at Repulse Bay, lonely | The word “hungry’ startled Peter northern outpost, high up in the bar-| | Little Helos For This Week | Colony For “Mentally Se ren lands. Its construction is the Work of Father Armande Chabeaut “Is it as bad as that?" he demanded and Rey. Father Pierre Henry. She nodded, her head lowered, and), | Churchill, 800 miles to the south. The| mission will be a welcome addition to this small settlement situated at the southern tip of Melville Island. | Priests will minister principally to fur traders and nomadic bands of Eski- mos who make frequent visits, Repulse Bay nestles just south of the Height of Land. It was crossed and recrossed during the thrilling | ‘I walked out here all the way from | | “But what made you think I weuld re you?” “I heard you were going to enter wist-| 1929, and has been known to explor-| ers since 1619. “outside” are not numerous, uly. “You might—if I needed a model,” onsidering something. Finally “Tel | ou what I'll do—let me give you lollar for some dinner and I'll taink | we THE RHYMING OPTIMIST —— By Aline Michaelis ou and can afford to pay you, I'll and “That's awfully sweet of you, But! think you would he positively goofy | ‘ot to try for the scholarship, if that | UPLAND PICTURE lease, and if you can use me, I'll! ake the price as low as possible.) vine, Each rocky hill stood drenched in ar- lent heat fter all, one meal a day is better L , Stumbling, saw a drowsy snake le wins (To Be Continued.) Its mottled coil and slither past ay t. feet. | Half heard and half surmised, an clfin ou! Peat Bog Good Preservative At 8 Of sheep bells tinkled all the after- oon, Id Coat Found In England Still In! ang while the sun went blazia; Fair Condition |__ his round, That fashions in men’s cloaks have| From heaven there peered the wan ghost of the moon. There was s0 little breeze it scarcely | stirred Zon they dust-coversd, | 1934, will » on the |G iq! i feathery grace; re came no breath of flow: song of bird uch different from that of an offi- that place. rs mantle today. It is astonishing-| Far, far below the tawny river lay Cla Joffre’s Body Taken Home The bedy of Marshal Joffre, who | from Legumes, such as red clover, alsike |from the invalides, at Paris, | Where the widow, a daughter and the ty | Servants joined the funeral: party attended a religious ceremony. er © change my plans,” She watched him with a calculat- ng expression for a moment. “A “You aren't by any chance, a de-| n do.” "I don't doubt It." | | farmer's oni "That would be all right," the farm-| Cut er replied, “if the blue sky was the | Pieces. overhead.” pollens ; | baked Pets As Nuisances After all, there are some advan: | : habit. He bolted and ran away until, § Qppt JAPER PRODU ‘PROVED BY? GENERATIONS | tages in being a monkey, Nobody! he reached an intersection, then stop-| =! ploford paren a tries to make one out of him, {pea obediently for the red trafic light, “Trust in the Lord and do good; so| |shalt thou dwell in the land, and Lumbe~ and material for the build-| Verily thou shalt be fed.’ ig were taken in this summer from | 37:3. Build a little fence of trust | Fill the space with loving work, Look not through the sheltering bars God will Let us lift up our hearts and ask| hunt for the lost MacAlpine party in| 1'™ what wilt Thou have me to Visitors. from':.the| heaven will stream on our daily task, revealing the grains of gold in what yesterday seemed all dust, a hand shall sustain us and our daily burden, so that smiling at yesterday's fears light.” Every lion in the way as we come up to it shall be seen chained, shall be open, and to us, feeble and give it up, That summer day the air was amber | Spirits of just men made perfect fluctuating as we are, ministries shaly| Wake up your Liver Bile be assigned and through our hands APS Calomel needed blessings shall be conveyed in which) getzez feel Mus, deprewad, sour on the ily two pounds of laud bile into phon Engels / might delight,"—Hllzabeth Charles. | qp fet in aesumeatnnte att Sune. slowed : you and making you Veal wretched. Eine bewal-mevecy like pale oil, mineral : " water, lnzative candy or chewing “gona Flights Across Atlantic seotn Hie Ctissest” Carvers Lite Liver Fills ia the best one. Sale. Purel To Be Made With Regularity Of Ratl-| style, Site Ask, for, them by name, Refuse flyers, aeroplane designers and manu- facturers | American and European airlines dis-| Nearly Six Hundred Killed By cussed details of schedules for trans- Atlantic travel by air. On one point T, ©O/ across the Atlantic break the strange enchantment of | !tY of railroad trains. | Atlantic flyer, acted as chairman, On these points too they agreed:/ shore when the vessel bringing them That in two years at the most John| from Spain to America foundered off jCitizen may fly with perfect safety) the Virginia coast over two | for $350, That he may send a letter from to his/the United States to EB e bills just as freight pays bills for and | the railroad, TWICE BAKED CHE | tary egg beater until smooth. ‘Million Dollar Building For Defectives Opened In England Sir E. Hilton Young, British Minis- —Psalm ter of Health, in opening a colony for | mental defectives which was institut- ed by the Hertfordshire county coun- cil, at a cost of $1,250,000, said the People of the United Kingdom should not be content with the existence of a mental deficiency to the degree that Pon tomorrow, |{s the case in this country. Cope comes, or that reason,” he continued, —Mary Frances Butts| “we shall press ahead and search out Peas Possible means of social and | scientific work by which we can re- | duce mental deficiency.” He added, “I | put in the forefront of the work of the state and the local authorities the Prevention of this evil and the neces- | sity of finding the means whereby it | may be diminished.” vs) YOUR LIVER’S MAKING - YOU FEEL OUT OF sonTs Around today; And there!n stay; Then light from the opened shall say “This is easy, thi the gates of the Palace Beautiful road Trains In Near Futuro a meeting in New York a dozen Wild Ponies Wiped Out and representatives of Tropical Storm In Virginia After surviving winds and storms all agreed—that by the end of} for generations, the 500 or 600 wild or 1935 at the latest, seaplanes/ ponies of Virginia were practica'ly be making scheduled flights| wiped out by the tropical storm ith the regular-| wich recently swept the region Only three of their number are left, The Ponies were descendants of the Arab | stock that contrived to reach the rence D, Chamberlain, trans- enturles New York to Paris in 20 hours}| ago. The best way to keep a body from intestine : ‘urope by air| becoming a busybody is to keep a a tant crops){njairot=ton, fromithe | ae ee tn Louveciennes for burial, at a maximum cost of 50 cents an hentai hes andpoint of maintaining the sup- Xs a ly busy. ! ? as he wished, under his own chestnut | ounce | ply of nitrogen in the soil. | 3 : 3 2 - - trees. General Gouraud, one-armed} ‘That air freight, including a long war hero, and other soldier friends) jj “ i “Ss Nearly hal? the women workers in pa 5 jlist of articles ranging trom sales--| accompanied the casket to the home,| men's samples to race horses, will pay = CIGARETTE PAPERS Larce FLAT. soox THE SAME PAPERS AS IM AUTOMATIQUE BOOK “REFUSE SUBSTITUTES nm | Not The Only Overhead POTATOES vi y conceit.” = —= = d mil pardon ATES ; | | The good-looking summer boarder == ——— she stare at him in surprise. <| Was enraptured about farm life Half. pound package _pimiento| “We rn you crazy, 1s) m i e: C1 "a ates i 6 4 A ale esau Y, or al Nees ¢ @ S t “Oh, T'd just love to be a farmer,” cuesse) 1 cup evaporated milk; 6) cuckoo? ay eae xe |Jarge baked potatoes; 2 teaspoons | “Neither, I hope, It just happens! she purred, “and live with the blue 5 Be Ps lekyiovernedd always, salt; 44 teaspoon pepper. hat affairs have developed recently 3 t Pimiento cheese into small Heat milk in top of double Add cheese and beat with ro-| Cut! potatoes in halves lengthwise! yo