V FAMOUS Doctor's Way to move the Bowels Do your bowels fall you occasion ally T Are you a chronic sufferer from constipation and Its ills? Then you will be Interested to know of this method which makes the bowels help themselves. Dr. Caldwell specialized on bowel ills. He treated thousands for con stipation. The prescription he wrote so many times which has been tested by 47 years' practice, can be had of any drugstore to day. Its pleasant taste and the way it acts have made it the world's largest selling laxative. Dr. Caldwell' Syrup repsln." as it Is called, is a skillful com pound of laxative herbs, pure pep sin and other mild ingredients. Nothing In it to harm even a baby. Children like Its taste. It acts gen tly, without griping or discomfort. So it Is Meal for women or older people. But even the most robust man will find Its action thorough, satisfying. The quick, certain ben efits millions are securing from Syrup Pepsin proves a doctor knotc$ what U btst for the lovelt. Next time you feel bilious, head achy, bloated, gassy, or constipated take some Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin and see how fine you feel the next day and for days to come I Da.W. I. Caibhiu i SYRUP PEPSIM A Doctor's Family Laxative Japan fakes "to Batekall , Baseball in Japan increas5 con tlnually in popularity. At one gamt InTpkyo nearly 40,000 spectator P80- Wany of the grand standY in the larger cities are oi greater seating "capacity than some In our major league cities. - , -""" " " Who Pay.? - We pay for goods In coin, bat we get our value out of them only In terms of living, health, comfort and satisfaction. Woman's Home Com panion. Juit On Hooker "What do you mean by bated breath 7" That's what you fish with." "Eight years ago before my last baby was born, I started taking Lydia E Tinkhara's Vegetable Compound. I got such good results that I named her Catherine Lydia. I have six older children and five pandchildren, too. I am 44, but people tell me I look much vouncer. I am now takinir the Vegetable Compound again because ot my age. I eat and lrr hftfT an.-l I An ail m housework, and my washing. I win do my best to answer let ters." Mn. H. Dolhonde, 6318 York StNewOrleans, Louisiana. wwmmm Cure Your Own Meats ComfiiUd bj Bulthtr of 40 Yum Ezftrirnc inilptprniahl In Vounlry Hulrhrrm mini M iirmvri TIU kaak cnubi lollwtof caattuad iiiw ulin: Fair pricn to pay for mesa. Heliiful hinti in determining rjua'ity. Receipt fur curing meat and aauzagei of many kindt. Why mean ipoll In curit.fr proems, and mar.y ether thing confronting coumry people who wibh to cure their own mntn. What every person killing and curing their own mean should know. In xrurely bound book. Price $3 by mril prepaid. Money order, bank draft or check. 4. V. 91. 704 Lewis Ba.lding - for lined, Orego K JsJiX Ay Evelyn Campbell I WSf Service j (OopjTlght by Evelyn Campbell.) J CHAPTER IX Continued 15 She answered with effort: "Po not dare to nay that. You told mo yon lied" Her voice was lost. Tlitve was nothing she could say when lie looked at her like that. Her face drooped upon her clasped hands. "I told the lie you wanted me lo tell the thins you wanted to believe." Me shrugged. "In ;he bediming von were no doubt credulous. Hut, nu dear young lady, you were seventeen then and Ignorance Is chnrmlnit a' that ate. You are now twenty-four twenty-rive? A lady who has fra eied far. You must have learned from nil this adventure." Ills calm nes took all the rebellion out of her. and when he went on after one of those devastating pauses she listened with muted face. The personal note was vanishing from hetween them and tils words, lashing as they were, failed to sting her soul with the shame his naked eyes had put upon her. He struck another match to hi Interminable cigarette. "You must have learned." he went on slowly, "that everything has lt price It's give and fake. You must have known that these years have formed tie not to be broken easily a , (. . , . "it Is broken now. "'r He gave her a long, steady loo from which passion had evaporated Then he aid: "You are more selfish than most wonicn, Linda How did you learn Itl You were sweet child once. Hut I don't suppose that you realize what breaking with me means yet. What are yoo going to do?" She shook her head. "1 don't know," She was not thinking of conse flnpi.ee. She was driven by an Ir reslsilhle forte to destroy one by one those ties of which he had spoken. She had to be five of hlra at any cost. It was like cltmhtng a Muck tortimnj mountain to meet n summit lighted by a marvelous secret glow Once this was ever there would he something for her reward for loneli ness for the eoldnesj of her nli'ht. He looked at her a i In and smiled He could bide his II e. She was a little mad lust now ,is women are when they fancy a in. He would have to wnlt a little b.nger. "You will not let fie hoy marry the r!j:ht woman, then." he said. "You are determined to interfere. Well, he's frightfully poor, you know. He can't afford to play around with women like you. and you've got to he careful If ynn want him to get on. You'd ruin him In a week." She smiled as his eyes questioned her. How little he knew. Converses voire took on a note of exasperation. "C.ond (1 d! women can he Idiots when they choose. I be lieve you'd marry the young fool !" She opened her eyes widely and closed them Benin. The room, the world was full of rosy ll'ht. She had sensed that glow a long way off but she had not known It for what It wns Rut now she was at the fop of the mountain and could look over Into the valley beyond and she knew "Yes, 1 am Rolng to marry him," she said. There was the secret between them (n the gay hurry of crowds, across the dinner table where Palsy, prettiest of hostesses, made her futile bid for what never could he hers, their eyes spoke to one another. There wns no opportunity for more than a hand clasp or a swift word without begin nlng or end. but carrying with It the vibration of his heart to hers. They stood upon the brink of this tre meiidous experience, hesitating to grasp whnf was theirs. Sometimes she read doubt In Hrlnn's eyes and this was sweeter than assurance She was jealous of her power only she rould dissipate that doubt make him hanpy. She did nothing to avoid what must come but still she prevented it with that resistless force which women bring to benr upon their nltluuitiims She could not understand her own passivity Happiness lay In her bund but she would not clasp her tinkers and make It her own She was like R sleeper shlei;im her eyes from the flrt rays of the suti Morning was hers the long perfect day was ahead of her. yet she clung fo oblivion. She watched I'.rlan and halsy to gether. Their eiitiip!iiiiitislil seemed Ideal but now she knew and Simon f entress knew that It would never be more than It was "You are a happy woman. ' the mil lionaire said to her one day "And vim have never been happy before What Is It?" "I have learned fo look at life dlf 'erently," she told til rn. He shook his bead "A pity. You sere so perfect as you were Are you ertaln that you can chutigt.'' He had wondered more than ones If there could he anything In the talk that connected her mime with Con verso. Surely not, for If she had been such a woman he could have offered her more than theso other two. And she had not been tempted by his ob vious preference. She had her moments of panic What was she about to do? The step was a tremendous one If ways and means were to he considered. There was money to be thought of, but Linda was In that exalted stale when poverty Is hung with thetparkl of day dreams. She begun to be ambi tious. Her mind, clear and alert, sprang to meet the future and searched excitedly among Us possibilities, sho knew every one. The Haverhill con nection reach far. As Linda Itotn In her self-chosen Isolation they had avoided her with that Icy acknowl edgment of her existence more cutting than actual exclusion. Hut she knew very well that as I'.rlan Anstey's wlfa their lutluence would belong to her. They did not know Hrlau; bis name meant nothing, but It stood for ail that such people bold dour respect ability, solldliy. They would make him. Then she remembered how much he had resented lutluence. He had hated to know that his appointment came through Simon Fentress because ht sensed through It the power of wealth. Hut she dismissed this thought quick ly. I'rlati was not worldly and she loved hint for that. She loved his Ideals with the Indulgence of one who knows thai most Ideals are made of papier macho. No one suspected her secret but Simon Fentress. That small dry per son sighed when ht saw her mi beau tiful, so eager; shy as his own girl was shy. He wondered why things had to be that way. Ilrlan had made this woman love him without lifting his finger, and another man woulj have done far belter for her. Put he knew better than to hint this to his protege. Hrlan had no copied aid with rather bad grace from the first, and of them all he was tlx only one who did not suspect the real reason for the Fentress Interest. Hut Palsy was as good a loser as her father; not by one word did she be tray the blank sense of logs that spoiled her young world. "1'erhaps something will hapten yet." her rather th.mght. watching bet face and watching Linda's, not know ing whk h to pity most. " CHAPTER X - "I Am Linda Roth" Happiness! Linda nefore her m!r ror drvsslnu for s dance, saw s strung face looking hark at her. It had be-o yeors since she had seen that faca, those eyes, that smile. The child. Linda Haverhill, had owned them L It Is not then to many women to step back Info girlhood with all Its fragrant hoe and )"v, but In single hoiii these had been given back to her. Tonight he would ask her to marry t j 1 m ; tonight she woul suv yes. Thers had been no promises and no appoint, mint, but she did not need lids tj know what would happen. It win coming as Inevitably as the hour Nothing could hold It back; no sub terfuge; no hesitation. She wore a long white frock glit tering with crystals that clung to her slender limbs like frost wreathing Illy stems. Her delicate long anus emerged from all this whiteness and sparkle like the sleepy stamens of a flower. Her face behind all Its beauty an) sMI happiness asked for something more. Without knowing It, her eyes asked that this happiness should last. Not long before a hotel maid had fastened her frock and .lone thosit little tasks for her that must he don and had then been sent away. Thli was a precious hour. She leaned hetween the candelabra to.li.k at her retloctli.n critically. Happiness In her eyes; happiness lift ing the corners of her mouth hut her lips were too pale? She touched them lightly with rouge and then saw that this acceniuated the pallor of her cheeks. "Il.iw foolish 1 am. Why, 1 am" trembling !" She steadied herself against tin dressing table. There was a vase of white gardenias clinging heavily to thick green stalks on a taboret close by and she thought that the scent ot these flowers must have overcome her. A moment before she had been radi ant, and now this! (TO HE CONTINUED.) Finest Parchment Made in Small English Town In lluvatit, Hampshire. Kn gland, there flourishes a band of men en gaged In making the finest parchment In the world. They possess a skill that has been passed from father to son for ce..;urleg; In fact, before Nor man tlmeg men were dressing sheep skins ut llaviint. and (heir descenl inns follow the same trade. At pres ent there Is one man who has worked at It for 7.1 years; two other men have 'u! and (lo vears' service behind them, (me it the partners In the linn Is a magic spring. I'arc hiue tit making Is a long process, and waier plays a great part. At Havuni there Is a spring of a special degree of chalklness, and although cheiali!:! experiments have been made, no water has been pro duced that cull rival this spring, which products a peal lltiess to be found Ir no oilier parchment. Antique Furniture The most general definition of an tliiie furniture Is any furn'ture years old and at least W per cent oHdnal. IND A AND ITS PEOPLES By Capt. L. R. Claud Robinson NIGHT IN LAHORE,, OW1N0 to the serious rioting w hich occurred In Lahore, follow ing Mr. (landhl's passive resistance movement of WIS, the city was placed under martial law. Among other reg illations, public meetings were forbid den and (he Inhahlianis required lo be In their homes by eight o'clock Hi night. I was assigned lo the command of a troop of horse which nlghlly patrolled the Indian city. A ride through an Indian walled city al night, under I ho restrictions of iiuirliiil law, la a strangely weird ex perlenee. Our patrol sets out some hours after sunset ; we walk along the Mill in.) through Auarkall to the La bore (late. Only an olllcer on motor cycle and the troops at the lelo graph olllce are seen. IVrhaps a man here and there Is sleeping outside, on an old charpoy or rope bed. snuggled up In a rug and thrusting his head out to see who are these disturbers of the night; and then "Hall I who goes there?" It Is the sentry at the city gate and we pass still further Into the heart of silence and icinl darkness. The streets get narrower, and the atmosphere gives one's olfactory or gans more and more varied unasked and undeslred experiences. Kven the houses, with unfriendly and unwashed expression, frown upon us as we pass under their overshadowing upper stories. Like old hags, worn and decrepit with age and clothed wltb rags, thej seem to resent the appear a nee ef well fed men and horses, wan dering Into their silence and self unlls factlon. One wonders If nil the prod ucts of our universities, who talk glib ly of the Kant Its glamour, Its wis dom and ancient thought have seen the cities of the people and how the coium n Oriental mind expresses llself In material things where Its dally life Is concerned. For, after all. It Is re sults that count, and however super ficial and artificial Western rlvlIlM tlon may lie, Jt has brought about a Sreatef cleanliness. So our solitary patrol marches on sometlt.ies In threec, sometimes In pairs, and sometimes our horses nun: walk In single Hie. Not a soul Is to be seen; only an occasional light looks down Into the dingy street, and I'eeplng Tom appear at the window for a furtive glance. I'ogs show their annoyance In noisy fashion and slink away Into mysterious holes and cor ners. The Journey Is unevenlfut. Winding, Irregular streets are aggres sive In their silence and llfelessnes Only the stars above seem to possess ntiy animation as they glitter over this city of the dead. ELEPHANT HUNTING AT THK termination of the World war I received three months' leave, the first two weeks of which I spent as the guest of Colonel M on a hunting trip In Nepal, that mountainous country which has pro duced a race of fighting men. the Ohurka, unsurpassed among India's martial tribes. This Is the only country In the world where that alngulur sport c:in be obtained of hunting wild elephants with tame ones, and capturing them alive. When I proposed to Colopel M that I should be allowed to make the experiment, he at first refused on the ground that It was too dangerous for a novice. I!ut later he relented, after I had acquitted myself credit ably at a rehearsal, when I was sent among the trees on the bare back of an elephant, with only a rope to hold on by. und made to dodge the brunch es as he rushed through them at full speed. Cut this was nothing coin pared to the actual day of the real hunt, when the elephant I rode formed one ol s band of fifty, tearing at s clumsy rate through the )uni;le after the wild herd, which It finally over took and with which It engaged Id s pitched battle. I shall never forget the uproar of that singular emounter. The trump eting f t'IH elephants the screams of the mahouts the tiring by soldiers of blank cartridges the crashing of the branches, as Hie huge nioiisieis with their trunks curled up, hulled one anothei like rams, and their riders deftly threw lassoes of rope over their unweildy heads all for d a combination of sounds and of nights never to be forgotten. It Is so illill cult to take prisoners under these conditions that tin experienced hunt ers seemed well satlslled In capturing three out of a herd of twelve. I returned home utterly exhausted by the violent exertion which had been necessary to escape being smashed lo p eces by overhanging branches., ot crushed by the moh of jostling elephants, which must have been m fate hi'd I lost my grip of the loop ot rope which was all there was to hung on by. To cling on ihe more reidll I hud removed my shoes, and bleeding hands and feet bore testi mony to the violence of the struggle bad to retain my precarious posi tion Hut ho great was my excitement at Ihe time that I only discovered nfterwards how touch my skin hub Ihe wor.-e for wear. ((c). IflU. Wtbl.in N.wiL.(iT Union.) World's Largest Bells in Russia and China IIuhhIr possesses the largest church bell In the world. Sums authorities declare that this bell, known as the Cxar bell, when cast In the days of Horls (lodunoff, weighed tons. Others claim It weighed 118 tons. Its slue ran bo Imagined It one coiialders thtt state ment by 11. M, Grove In a hook on Moscow that the hell Itself has done aorvlcs ss a chapel. Grove recounts that the bell was recast In the middle of tho Seven teenth century and raised Into Its belfry. It had only been there two years when flro destroyed the belfry and the bell crashed to the ground and was broken. There It lay lint U 1733 when Empress Anna ordered It to be recast on the spot. Two years later tho scaffold for roralslng the bell caught lire, the bell became almost red hid, and tho tremendous amount of water used to extinguish the fire cracked the bell and a largo piece fell out. It was then left on the ground until lH.'ld when Kmpcror Nicholas I had It fnltfcd and placed on a granite ped estal where, for a long time, It was used as a chapel, the broken side serving as the door. According to reference books the world's largest hell ever actually In use Is also In ltussla. It Is said to weigh 1-S tons nearly two and a half times tho weight of the next I urgent bell, In l'clplng. Attention Hunters In snuther column ot this paper the ltemliigton Arms Company an nounce t brand new three shot, shot gun. It Is made especially for quail, grouse, pheasants, snipe, woodcock, ducks, rabbits and all upland game. Head tlx sd and return the coupon today for descriptive folder to Hem tngton Arms Company, lllou, New York. Advertisement Tbsa and Now "Fifteen of my first uctlve years were spent In Kansas," said W. F. Jensen, now residing In Chicago, "and, like all Kansans, I have the fondest feeling's for the dear old i"tat" , -IX'i'rt' ert ac Kn"n was happy but rated poor. It still Is hap T ''."J ! now rutins cantaloupe for breakfast."' . - "I recollect a business trip con nected with the early creamery do vclopmcnt. In the year l'.xx), to a little town In western Kansas, where I stayed at tho best hotel. On en tering the dining room for breakfast I was met by a prim little lady who asked ma where I wanted to sit at the 'J.1cetit table or at tho Wccnt tatde. This aroused my curiosity and I nsked what the difference was, and received the answer thnt, at the .V cetit table I would get nn orange and at the "cent table I would not. I stl.I remember sitting down at the SVcent table and enjoying a break fast of oatmeal, bam and eggs, cakes and coffee Chicago I'ost. Faithful to Duly The devotion of Lenter Lunch, res tnurant chef at Modesto, Calif., to Lis cookery nearly cost him his life when tils kitchen caught fire. Ills stove "backfired," and Lunch called the fire department Ami then, de spite flame and smoke, he dashed tack Into his kitchen to rescue a pork roust that was the cause of the trouble. Firemen found him uncon scious beside his stove. When re rived his first words were: "Was the roast burned?" Msmory of AutUrlits On the Austerlits hfittlctlcld the Czechoslovak government has erect ed to Napoleon a memorial on which U engraved the order of the day Is sued by the great commander on the eve of the battle which gave Auster lltz a niche In military history. Trus to Typs "Who Is that fellow over there Itufllrtg himself" "ih. that's our locol taxidermist I" Wakeful restless CHILD needs Castoria w E can never ! sure just what makes an infant restless, but tha rmedy can always lie the same. Good old Castoria! There's comfort In every drop of this pure vegetable Preparation, and not the slightest arm in its frequent use. As often aa Baby has a fretful spell, is feverish, or cries and can't sleep, let Castoria soothe and quiet him. Sometimes it's a touch of colic. Other times it's constipation. Or diarrhea a condition that should always be checked promptly. lust keep Castoria handy, and cive it promptly. Relief will follow very promptly; if it doesn't you should call a physician. AH through babyhood, Castoria should be a mother's standby; and B wise mother continues it in moro liberal doses as a child grows up. A Her Reward When children are weak and run down, they are easy prey to colds or children's diseases. So It It never wise to neglect those weaken ing and depressing symptoms ot tad breath, coated tongue, fret ful ness, foverlahiicHS, biliousness, lack of energy and appetite, etc, Nine times out of ten theso things point to one trouble constipation and mothers by thousands know this Is easily, safely relieved by California Fig Syrup, Mrs, ('has. J. Council, 1 l.l I Cleary Ave., St. Inils, Mo., says; "I gave Virginia California Fig Syrup for constipation and she was more than rewarded for taking It. It regulated her bowel, helped her digestion, Increased lux appetite, made her Strong and energetic." The genuine, endorsed by doctors for M years, always bears tho word OtWI,ornli. AU drugstores huve It tAXATIVt-TONIC m CHILOHtM Mra-Wamra 10 li.wn la Mil .rod. url. lluvrsnlr ;l wtk nn, rnmmlMlnrt, W rlu llll Viil, lll,l . l,, Amln I L Vol H OW N Hon Earn too J living ttm ..ur own mall lualna. olhra ara a..li. It why . rou? a.varal ttl4 budnwea ol mailt l ala.-l frwm, littta or nn raeoal r-ii4ir4. I'll la Srlra (., K..alh Ja k.unlll. ria. arpnlrr u4 Marhanlra hoi full? am .ayl aati4 riama an.) ai'tr Attraa llva IT. ....I!l..ri. I' . ...1 xnl aul. (HASlit.R ll., WI.M muvir, H. IL y.fl n a, "V ASSURED TREATMENT Writ today FREE bonk atari Ifcfeii tha IV. t- J. ln taoaoua ann-am viral mtojai treat tnf Itlra ami olhrt Kattal aa4 Coaoa ailmcnla. whka aaa xtJuilvrrv A)w ! ilrtalk 4 our UKirttN AtsL'HANC'K TO KLIMINATK PlUtsi miliar ana (frfa. ki.m,m PAiiF.srs rt r. RECTAL Vj COIOft CLINIC W. N. U., Portland, No. 45-1930." Revolutionary Barbarity I'urlng the French revolution's reign of terror, the revolutionary agent, Carrb r of Xat.tes, had prison ers who were bound and placed la boats with movable bottiiuis. These were taken out In the Itlver Udra anil when In midstream the bottom were opened, preelp Hating the con demned person into the water. Th. Id.. I "What was ihe mailer with thnt girl?" asked the boss. "I asked her If she wanted walk Ifilt shoes," replied tho shoe clerk, "and she flared up and told me sh wanted mo to understand Nhe bevel dated lth boys like that." The Mod.m Wy Cynthia Are you engaged to not bertT Itoxana Heavens, no I I've iuers ly cot an option on him. CASTORIA1 ""uii-OL IWI'" AMUfwa" aniaiHaimaa f fcawfoliMW"" lAaiaMW 0?W- li.,a Mlatnl Not S"" ay iwaj. "M waa , aUSa. I id " 52l! 7 mi "- . I Readily obtained at any dniff. store, the genuine easily identified by the Chas. II. Fletcher signature and the name Castoria on tha wrapper like thia: tMik till il a 1 m