THE AURORA OBSERVER, AURORA, OREGON
The Handsome Ma
bg M argaret Turaba!!
Illustrations h y
Irwin Myers
T H E STO R Y
To be a
Healthy Woman
watch your Bowels!
What should women do to keep
their bowels moving freely? A doc
tor should know the answer. That
is why pure Syrup Pepsin is so
good for women. It just suits their
delicate organism. It is the pre
scription of an old family doctor
who has treated thousands of wom
en patients, and who made a spe
cial study of bowel troubles.
Dr. Caldwell’s Syrup Pepsin is
made from fresh, laxative herbs,
pure pepsin and other harmless in-,
gredients. It doesn’t sicken or
weaken you. No restrictions of
habit or diet are necessary while
taking it. But, its action is thor
ough. It carries off the sour bile
and poisonous waste. It does every
thing you want it to do. It is fine
for children, too. They love its
taste. Let them have it every time
their tongues are coated or their
skin is sallow.
When you’ve a sick headache, can’t
eat, are bilious or sluggish; and at
the times when you are most apt to
be constipated, take a little of this
famous prescription (all druggists
keep it ready in big bottles), and
you’ll know why Dr. Caldwell’s
Syrup Pepsin is the favorite lax
ative of over a million women!
Dft.W. B.
C
a l d w e l l ' s
SYRUP PEPSIN
A Doctor's Fam ily Laxative
ttouÏS
Ease
M uscular-Rheum atic
Aches and Pains
RAW them out with a ucounter-
irritant»* *9 Distressing muscular
D
lumbago, soreness and stiffness—gener
ally respond pleasantly to good old Mus-
teiple. Doctors call it a “ counter-irri
tant,** because it gets action and is not
just a salve. Musterole helps bring sore
ness and pain to the surface, and thus
gives naturalrelief. You can feel how its
warming action penetrates and stimu
lates blood circulation. But do not stop
with one application.^ Apply this sooth
ing, cooling, healing ointment generously
to the affected area once every hour
fo r five hours» Used by millions for
over 20 years. Recommended by many
doctors and nurses.
Keep Musterole handy; jars and tubes.
To Mothers—Musterole is also
made in milder* form for babies
and sm all children» Ask fo r Chil
dren’s Musterole.
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C u e Your Own Meats
Compiled by Butcher of 40 Years Experience
Indispensable to Country
Butchers and Farmers
This book contains following condensed information:
Fair prices to pay for meats.
Helpful hints in determining quality.
Receipts for curing meats and sausages of
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Why m eats spoil in curing process, and
I many other filings confronting country
I people who wish to cure their own meats.
1 W hat every person killing and curing their
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JT. V .M A N N
704 Lewis Building - Portland, Oregon
R e tu rn in g to L ondon, p ra c tic a l
ly penniless, a f te r a n u n su c c essfu l
b u sin e ss trip , S ir G eorge Sandison
ta k e s d in n e r w ith h is w idowed
ste p m o th e r, h is old nurSe, '“ A ggy.”
H e did n o t a p p ro v e of h e r m a r
ria g e to h is fa th e r, b u t h e r e x
p lan a tio n satisfies him .
L ittle is
le f t o f th e e s ta te , a n d L ad y S an
dison proposes t h a t th e y go to th e
U n ited S ta te s to v isit h e r b ro th
er, R o b e rt M acB eth, w e alth y con
tra c to r. S ir G eorge a g rees. M ac
B e th lives on a n islan d e s ta te w ith
Ills d a u g h te r, R o b e rta , w ho longs
fo r c ity life. M acB eth is a victim
of a r th r itis a n d a lm o st helpless.
M acB eth is glad* to see h is s is te r
a n d a s k s th e tw o to sta y . R o b e rta
is k eeping a d a te w ith J a c k N a
v a rro , a b o u t w hom sh e know s lit
tle. M acB eth a rra n g e s fo r h is sis
te r to ta k e c h a rg e of th e h ouse
hold a n d G eorge to a c t a s secre
ta ry . R o b e rta does n o t approve of
th e a rra n g e m e n t. She tells h e r f a
th e r sh e is n o t in te re ste d in
G eorge, w hile th e y o ung m an ta k e s
a n a ir of indifference to her.
CHAPTER IV—Continued
—9—
“Quite a watchdog,” observed Rob
erta scornfully, but she swung to her
feet and went to the doorway and
looked out. Yes, it was Jack. What
was he doing here? She had written
him that she could not meet him until
next Monday.
“Want to send him a message? It
can be done.”
“No,” said Roberta, feeling instantly
that he thought she was afraid her
father might see her and ask ques
tions. “I can manage my own affairs,
thanks.”
“Absolutely,” agreed Sir George and
moved away.
To her astonishment he went
through the doorway and toward the
house. Roberta was so amazed that
she could not make even the faintest
move to stop him. She was annoyed.
She was quite unused to such treat
ment. Here was she, the only girl he
knew, apparently, this side of the
Atlantic, any way the only girl he
knew in this place, and instead of im
proving the shining hour, he came to
her and delivered his message as
casually as though they were two
schoolboys and then walked off and
left her!
Roberta walked slowly toward the
beach and the bridge. Jack had seen
her now. He moved toward her. He
looked worried. Was he afraid of her
father? Why hadn’t he come directly
to the Island and asked for her, like
any other boy she knew? The sun
light struck across his face, and showed
her lines she had never seen before.
Why, he was much older than she
had thought. He was not a boy, he
was a man.
Jack stood his ground near a tall
sycamore and a thicket of sumac
which screened him. He beckoned to
her eagerly. Why couldn’t he meet
her in the open?
*
*
*
*
*
♦
*
Robert MacBeth was frowning when
Sir George joined him. He looked up
quickly as the younger man came
toward him.
“Wouldn’t you like to try a bit of
exercise?” Sir George asked. “Sup
pose you take my arm.”
“Maybe I’d better,” MacBeth agreed
reluctantly, “though I’m dashed un
willing to stir. Well, once ¿round, If
you’re bent for exercise.” -
“Once around it is,” Sir George told
him encouragingly. “We’ll have you
dancing in no time.”
It would give the girl a chance, Sir
George thought to himself, his eyes
seeking the path to the bridge. Yes,
there she went. It might be that the
wisest course would be to warn the
father, but he could not bring himself
to do it. The girl was plucky. She
had not asked him to keep quiet or
anything of that kind. He could.either
keep his mouth shut, or go to. blazes
for all of her. Well, he would keep
his mouth shut.
Slowly and painfully, leaning heavily
on the strong young arm that sup
ported him, Robert MacBeth made his
way along the terrace. When they
reached his chaise longue agjfco, he
relaxed gratefully as the youngfr.man
helped him to a comfortable^ position,
«nd arrui^ed J iis pillows.
There /was a short silence. Sir
George lit a , cigarette and leaned
against the wicker chair he intended
to slide into in a moment. He could
not see the girl now, and the car had
disappeared.
. Robert MacBeth had taken up a
letter he had laid down just before
his promenade. He handed it to his
secretary.
“What do you think of that?”
It was a typewritten letter addressed
to “Rob’t MacBeth” and said:
“Dear Sir: Do you know the man
your daughter is meeting at different
resorts on the Lincoln highway? Many
facts in your life are known to the
writer of this, which you would not
like to find public property. If you
want to know all the writer knows
send letter to the P. O. Box given be
low and wait for telegram appointing
meeting place. All will be told you.”
It was unsigned, merely the number
of the post office box, 0111 , in a small
Pennsylvania city, being given.
Sir George handed it back. “I’d
throw It in the fire.”
Robert MacBeth grasped the letter
firmly. “That’s where you would be
wrong. Such letters should be kept
and used to trap the writer or writers.
L’P s*nrf it to 9 detective agency. It
watch the bronze blur until it took
shape and outline and began to look
like Roberta MacBeth. Then he started,
Copyright by M argaret Turnbull.
aware that the silence had been long.
W, N. U. Service.
“You were saying?”
“That I’ll tell Roberta what I want
isn’t scandal I’m afraid of. I’ve never as soon as she crosses the river. Or
done anything to be blackmailed for will you meet her and tell her I want
and neither has Roberta.”
to see her? And take yourself off for
“Then why should you bother?”
a time.”
MacBeth turned an honestly worried
“Absolutely.”
face to the younger man. “I’m pretty
Sir George sauntered toward the
sure that the writer of this letter has river and met the flushed and exultant
some connection with the difficulty looking girl.
I’ve been having with my payroll, but
“Spying?”
I can’t convince the police.”
His look was enough to make her
“Payroll !” Sir George looked at him feel ashamed of herself.
in astonishment. “Do you mean the
“Oh, I say,” she said. “That was
payroll for your employees in the city?” unfair and I didn’t really mean it.”
Robert MacBeth shook his head.
Sir George did not stop. “It doesn’t
“Not the office. A much bigger thing. matter,” he said stiffly. “Your father
The money for the men on the con is waiting to see you.”
struction job. You will likely laugh at
The girl angrily kicked a rock off
the idea that this has anything to do the towpath into the canal. “Well, If
with it, but though I’ve tried to, some you want to be hateful, be hateful.”
how I can’t succeed in laughix?^ very
"He turned. “If you would only get
hard. I have a feeling these letters it Into your extraordinarily pretty
have some connection with a gang of little head,” he told her not unkindly,
men who mean to have a try for that “that I’m here because I have to earn
payroll again, if they can’t get at me my living and your father has been
and my money this way.” He shook good enough to give me a post—that’s
the letter.-
that. As for you and your friends, at
“But surely you’ve taken precau the risk of being thought rude, I tell
tions? Why not pay the men by you that I don’t give a tinker’s d—n
check?”
whom you meet or where you meet
Robert MacBeth made a wholly con him, and that’s all of that.”
temptuous gesture with his hand,
There had been a quickly drawn
which still held the letter. “Use your breath and then silence and he had
head. I can’t pay laborers by check. walked on over the canal bridge to the
Lots of the foreigners don’t know what highway, feeling completely ashamed
to do with checks. No, we’ve got to of himself. Why. had he lost his
make and keep things safe ourselves.” temper? His rShiorse gaining on him,
He looked at Sir George, and, lean he was about to turn once more when
ing toward him and in a low tone, the sound of flying footsteps came to
said: “It’s all right in New York. I him. He turned to confront an . angry
can get protection, armored cars If and flame-cheeked girl, who told him
need be, but I’ve a hunch there’s vehemently: “You’ve just got to know
trouble brewing for me and I’ve got a this. You don’t hate me one decree
great many thousands of dollars to less or more than I hate you.”
pay out on the big piece of construc
“Well, since we know it’s mutual,”
tion work being done up the river.
said Sir George evenly, “suppose we
It’s how to get the money there safely go on hating each other as much as
that is puzzling me now.”
we like in private, and keep a friendly
He paused a moment and said quiet smile to face the world.” He smiled
ly: “I don’t mind telling you that I
at her now.
have the sum deposited in the nearest
“Oh, you’re hateful!” the girl cried.
local bank. I’m going to send some
one down to collect it from the bank “Just when I meant to be decent to
later and that some one may be you.” you for father’s sake, you make it
He looked at Sir George questioningly. impossible. I promise you I’ll do
“Yes, of course, but when and anything I can to speed your return
to bonnie Scotland.”
how?”
“Ah,” returned the homesick Sir
“That’s what I want you to tell me.
George,
his heart in his voice, “if you
Fd like you to go down with Roberta
today and look over the lay of the only could.”
The girl looked at him speechless a
land.”
“Can’t your man take me?” Sir moment and yet she did not go. He
George asked. “Might find out more wondered why, but almost before lie
fca& qone pondering he suddenly saw
that w a/.’r
“I don’t want the servants to know the answer lo his question'. The blue
or suspect anything about it, nor the car was some little way ahead of him,
people in the village. In fact, I don’t on the tree-shaded cross road to the
want anybody to know anything about highway, and its owner was struggling
frantically to start it.
it, except possibly Roberta.”
That was why she thought he was
“Must she know? Why drag a girl
spying; that was why she would not,
into this?”
“Roberta won’t be dragged in,” her if she could' help it, leave him alone.
He continued to walk toward the
father promised him. “But I want
her to take you down the river to thè car and to speak so that the man,
bank and up the river to show you whoever he was, might hear. “Surely
you don’t want to annoy your father
where the money is to be taken.”
and have him question you, do you?
“By motor?”
As for the blue car and its owner,” he
“Yes.”
“But you surely wouldn’t let the continued, “it is hardly my affair.”
The man at the car jerked his head
girl drive if there was likelihood of
up and nodded to the girl and then
danger.”
“No, but you could drive yourself*; quickly turned his back and busied
himself with the car again.
once you knew the way.”
“Oh, yes.”
Sir George waited for a moment.
“Well, go with her to the village Surely any decent sort would be likely
and to the bank, where she will ;cash to come over and speak—make it easy
a check and introduce you to the* for the girl to introduce him. The
cashier. Then tomorrow she’ll tasfe man, however, after that one look hur
you up the riyer.”
ried back to work at the car, his face
“Have you told her this?”
resolutely turned from Sir George.
“A>t yet. Why?”
The girl, looking first at one and then
“It’s barely possible she may have at the other, slowly turned and went
made arrangements of her own.”
toward her father’s house.
“She’ll change that if I ask her,”
~ Sir George walked away past the
her father said easily.
car. What sort of cheap and awful
“Ah—”
person that little devil had elected as
Sir George was not aware himself hero of her secret romance, he now
of how much he put in that “Ah.” It had a pretty fair idea. The man’s
was sufficient to make Robert- Mac face, though good-looking in its way,
Beth turn his head quickly and. survey was an open book to Sir George.
the young man. Having turned Lit he
Sir George wondered why the fellow
saw that the young man’s eyes - were had been so asinine as to try to hide
fixed on a spot of blue. MacBeth was: his face, so anxious to avoid any
presently able to observe that this speech with him. He stopped dead in
was a car on the high road over on the middle of the road for a moment
the mainland and that, opposite that as_ the solution occurred to him. It
car was a dim blur that had a bronze must have been that he was afraid,
color. He remembered the^ ^jolor , of s S kcq he had seen Sir George first, of
the dress his daughter had beén wear recognition. Then the fellow • must
ing that morning and turned his head be'some one whom he himself would
so that the younger man might not recognize. He walked on thoughtfully.
see his face. Sir George continued to
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
Thursday, November 13, 1930
Should Have Known
W hat He Would Do
The hero of this one is not exactly
as meek as Moses, but yields often to
the wishes of a somewhat domineer
ing wife, with mental reservations.
The two went north not so long
ago and, when the husband’s two
weeks of vacation were over, he
yielded to her entreaty that she be
allowed to stay on the lake for the
remainder of the month and assured
her everything would be all right at
home. Of course, he would take his
meals out, but he would sleep at
home and take care of everything
just as she would were she right
there.
The woman came home Sunday to
find the grass out of bounds, every
window shade awry, and ashes, ciga
rette stubs, newspapers and whatnot
scattered everywhere. But greater
than her dismay at the disorder was
the shock she received at friend hus
band’s attitude toward her displeas
ure at the state of affairs.
There was no apology, no remorse
on the part of the culprit.
“What is the meaning of this?” she
asked, falling into the time-worn
question that wives save up for just
such a situation.
‘Tt’s just my idea of ‘Revolt in the
Desert’,” he answered calmly, and
stood his ground right there.—Kan
sas City Star.
The first accredited" mention of salt was first steeped in brine and then
appears in the first books of Moses, sun-dried. They must have been ex
where it is referred to as an essential actly like the Gloucester salt fish of
part in many of the sacrifices of the today, or the Provineetown scull-joes.
Jews. The most familiar Bible refer The Egyptians also ate raw duck and
ence to salt is in Genesis ix, 26, in quail, salted In similar fashion.—Bos
which Lot’s wife was turned into a ton Globe.
pillar of that valuable commodity—
C hildish Speech
probably to the great enjoyment of
the goats, sheep and cattle of j:hat
Elizabeth’' Cleveland says that the
district..
child begins to use single words at
The next most familiar Bible réfer from ten months to a year old. At
twenty-three months lie shouii he us
ence to salt is that in Matthew v, |3 ^
“If the salt has lost his savor, where ing simple phrases. By the time he is
with shall it be salted?” Other ref three he has a large vocabulary (500
erences in the New Testament jare to 1,500 words), and can converse well
Mark ix, 49-50, and Colossians iv, 6 . enough for his own practical purposes.
Homer, 800 years before Christ,
N eeds to P a u s e
speaks of salt in the Greek sacrificial
Sometimes, a 3-mimite ey^ is a guj
rites; no sacrifice was complete with
out it. Herodotus, who- was born in who needs that much time to think
484 B. C., says the Egyptians ate of a snappy comeback.—Des Moines
salted food» including raw fish that Tribune Capital
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HER CLEANING
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A Real Knife
In a large advertisement in another
column of this paper the Remington
Arms Company, manufacturers of the
famous Remington arms and ammu
nition, announce a new one dollar
knife. Your local dealer probably This Medicine Is Sold in Both
carries i t If not, send his name and
Liquid and Tablet Form
one dollar to Remington Cutlery
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port, Connecticut, and knife will be
forwarded to you. A perfect Christ
mas present for a husband or son.—
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••Have your parents given their 2 9 7 8 - 5 M D ic R h ig
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M ore S ta tic
“Not y e t Father hasn’t expressed
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“What do. you do when you get
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something ending with *R. S. V. P .’?”
“Don’t let them fool you. There's
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All artificial laughs are loud.
fcf Contents l5FltttfI
Castoria... for
a m
ALCOHOL-3 PERCENT.
A c t a b l e PreparrioaforM-1
the Food by
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tin<MheStomartis6ndBo^»gJ
C H ILD R E N ’S
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perhaps tonight? Castoria is a
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There is nothing like it in emergen
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Ki
Castoria. a I t is harmless to the
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You can tell from the formula on
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I
F a ir A n tiq u a ria n
The Great Eastern, originally
Alice—“Can you do any of the old-
called the Leviathan, launched in fashioned dances?” Virginia—“I thlnK
1858, was nearly 700 feet long, and I remember the charleston.”
was for many years the largest ship
----- —------------ —
In the world.
1 Fast men are slow pay.
WARNING
, .- v
.
e r
when buying Aspirin
be sure it is genuine
Bayer Aspirin
.
Know what you are taking to relieve that pain, cold,
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always safe.
| -
Sali Important Part in Rites of Sacrifice
FOR CONSTIPATION
effective in sm aller doses
'
The tablet stamped with the Bayer cross is reliable/
always the same— brings prompt relief safely— does not
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Don’t take chances; get the genuine product identified
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Baÿer-Tablets
A s p ir in
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