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Show Murray Eagle, Thursday, January 30, 1930 he (Crippled! Peirnlb (, WNU Service CHAPTER X Continued In the Are glow gat Carla, combing her long, silky hnir with her Paul watched her as she fingers. smoothed and braided the tresses, employing as great care as though she were In her bedroom at home. This was the third time she had given It such attention In their hours of entombmeut. At thirty-siother times he had held a light for her at thj edge of the water while she bathed her face and hands, and once site had said to him: "It Is wonderful water, almost as soft as that which comes with rain," She spoke as if they might have been camping on one of the streams they loved, with the sky above and flowers about them. It was ber titter acceptance of their fate as a thing of happiness which transformed what would have been a hell for him Into a heaven. She bad sat In the soft sand at bis feet, a few moments before, with her head pillowed against bis knees, and there she had utibralded her hair for him to caress, as she watched and pointed out for him the unusual and beautiful pictures that built themselves In the changing coals and crumbling embers of the fire. Now she was a IK tie distance from him, and no sense of dread or fear oppressed him as he followed the rhythmic movements of her film white fingers braiding ber hair again. If It were madness which possessed him it was a beautiful madness, a sense of Joyous living where there should have been despair. At first the fighting part of him had instinctively struggled against It, but now he accepted It fully, until, seeing Carla as she was, death seemed vague and far away and the glory of life very near. They had made no effort to hide from themselves the coming of the end, and Carla thought of It as a beautiful thing, a little Journey, which they were making gladly together. Never had Paul believed so surely In a Cod. lie bad found himself fund of telling her how he loved her hair more than any other physical thing about her, and she had said: "I am going to spread It out so you may put your face In It when we lie down to sleep." This was the way she spoke of what was to corneas sleep. To drift off like this, his arms about ber, seemed to Paul the fruition of a great privilege and Joy, and not a triumph of fleshly dissolution, lie had told her little stories about his mother and of the hours time they hud spent In the Indian burial plnre at Itrnnt-forwhere the proudest of her forest ancestors were bulled. "I could not understand her then, when she told me bow gladly she would give her life, were It not for me, to live for a slide year the glorified freedom of Molly Iirant.' now. In said Paul. "Hut I d that one year she knew she would find some thing which would more than make up for alt (he other years she might live. Just as every hour here with you Is more to me than ten thousand buck there." As be said these things, and believed and felt tliein, there was In him a will to live which would not utterly extinguish Itself. It was scarcely more tbau a spark, a stnol- x sun-fille- trrrm j r r-- 1 &&?A mm drooped as If to veil the love behind them, and lay In velvet darkness against the whiteness of her cheeks. For a w hile Paul sat close and watched her, aud with each breath the flame in him grew stronger, the demand that something happen, through force of God or man, to break down the walls of death which environed her. Alone, with Carta's unconscious form lending faith and Inspiration to his thoughts, he fixed his attention, as a dozen times before, on the smoke which rose from the burning wood. Where did It go? Hours ago be had asked himself this question, and until he had discovered a thin fog of smoke settling over the water, and drifting away with the rush of it, his blood had run swiftly with a thrill of hope. And now, in spite of the fact that he knew where it went, the question remained, as If a voice Inside his head had been trained to aud could not ask It, parrot-like- , be made to stop. He and Carla had collected a pile of pltchwood. As they hud found each stick they bad acclaimed It a treasure discovered, until the thrill of a game had become part of their endeavor, lie chose a stick heavily weighted with pitch and lighted the end of It In the fire. Then he walked oft Into the gloom where be and Carla had gone many times before. It was like followlug the Inside of a great rock drum which was flat on one side flat where the water thundered and raced through the mountain. When his torch burned short he returned for another. Carla had not moved In her sleep, and he burled himself in blackness agnln. following tne rock so closely that Ills body touched It. trying at every step to pierce with bis vision a little farther Into the styglan pit over bis head. It was Into tills pit that the smoke went mounting in drifting Bplrala, like smoke In an Indian tepee. Up there, he thought. It was taken by a slowly dragging current of ulr made by the suction of the stream, und descended to exit from the mountain with It. There was only one break In the circular wall of gruesomely black rock, against and water-worwhich. In ages past, a subterranean flood bad washed and roared. This was where a small section of it had given way from overhead and luii piled up a muss of broken stone which he had climbed, with Carla watching from below. Here the smoke from bis torch did not go upward but settled ummt bis head and disappeared toward the vent In the mountain through which the river rushed with great force. He went lo this outlet. It w as a hole which bis eyes were unable to measure, choked to within a foot of Its upper Jaw by a seething flood of water, and out of which though the space for sound was small came such a sullen rumbling that bis blood was c hilled as bp listened to It. Alone, be would have plunged Into ibis. To die fighting, pitting bis small strength nualitM nil the forces wu wliieli might oppose t i the urge which was refusing In subline Itself wlihln him. He flung out his lliimlng lurch and saw It swallowed In an Instant. I.Ike Unit be would have gone If Carla bad not been there lo go wllh him. Ili turned back lo Ibe fire and put on a fren slick of resinous wood before he sat In the siiud ttenr enough lo CurU lo touch Iht Doran n gone !" Paul knew the thing be wanted lo say would come lii a moment, ibe thing be had made up bis mind lo s.iy to ber when be tame down from Ibe rocks. It was a fury of emotion, roiling up slowly through hi hlrtlirLiit of htulclMn Into a s'orni of speech n puss!, m of desire brrukfng loose, n bitterness ug:ilns life as it bud been given bint to bve, a ileteritiltiiiiloii to He Wondered If turn it hi own way tit last. will) Ills) bund. Itefoie flio roiiid move Ms arm fear bud begun to soUe upon blot were iiboiit ber. lis be looked at ber tnn'otisciou "I lime livid a bell In f lilt form, foreseeing the torment of bo cried. "Not l.rcuu-- e 1 Impending hour whctl luudncxM j place." wt: it frab! to die. but beenuse In would b' for hint alone, I'lile-- i I knew I Would lose Jolt. Ihey died together, be must outlive !!l'S (n life e;in I have you, nod Carla lo save ber from n real, ra- Iiiiily tion i f Ihiit which he. in bis g: cat- I Wind life boi'H-- e ef lli.il. You my It Is foi, shotting ih a wuy er strength, should bear. nut : It N J ul n true lh.it Coil yon u me here. Th:i world g:iel here CHAPTER XI mentis nothin,--: In tin tip Willi oi In it. It, too, bus knew lie tliusl keep tinnu go, bit n a bell f.ir tne. New I) Al't. rouse r front ber Carta ing. Ing to tnii;e II a lo inen, I won't s ileola-Hot- i nnkeiliie-ttti'l The sleep. let man imnle law and rotiteiitlnn of Btoneiiesa were laming bli.t stand ill the wuy of wb.it U rljit Into n coward. Not a reward who and Intended lo be. Yo'i urn tnltte. Wa afraid of death, but one who and I shall l ave jolt and k'p you. fell Increasing horror In passively one y r Ibe other. We'll faee He l wont II. for the in waiting the World loge'ber, and Mt H so f ngnln. He had no rct or we'll go nut there and l ever let son for thin, no ibousbi, except it know we lle. It f fur joti to llilil It offered him Ibe one thane which It shall be!" Sii 0 do something pbvplcnl besides .Vfendily ber hnnd bn pree,! fumbling bi way over tintnbi end asalnt Mm. and ith tht presa ties a:ind. Ira The for work shifty sure rat'ie sinii a chnticp In ber In wn hi nn ache lo do bdy a fact! Ib.lt the fierrrrirs 'f Paul a well a hi bmln, and be bgan arm relaxed, and be snw an Idol to rlln.b the broken ma, a be rruhrd and broken In ber eve. To He bn bad done once befotv. t!m ee i f it.nl ruin be bad sutik tuK tilwnit thirty or forty feel M bh'Sl of Cfiria. Ili let ber Rttove tii finer ft their llnngenn rtiote from film, end s!id afiy then, but this lime be found f,tot. wliti a print, set f.n-- Infer ber. hoM whhb tarried ,im a Utile Till sorry." be sill. "I know further, until, font Ibe point he jmt nre ibiuti'ng Ifmt I urn ll and rrsrtod, be toli'd look nvrf Ibe unclean." blllfe In Ibe reV wMeh bn, "No H al." s' e po, ijub k't rotirralcd Ibeir fire, and "I Weill I r.l!ler Il it U I fill! the ronl l rlenrly ae Carla In Ibe glow ot e wli" Is tini b nt,." of It. Thnt wn nd tie snhj, and be It" bad Ibe difre In fall It ber. tv.fiv no lo slower ler. lo feel ber tlorbm l.fe a pirn ef Wi-rberarn ftili'e. ten mn. Mri o't'f ii"o azVn. Ibrir it,l, n !in im ke,l n b in. What t,p shrined gLfio fietn Mm, lie be tire!,) ti.ne s il l. j pleading. I i torrh, milking a wrtiirg iswurg of fir In the MarkorM. and bis ;p almot cried brr Hume, lien Al TratS b reoimilted lb e.ilne of b; Is Truth til a a'1 and befflfl Jn'b'a pull hiiro'lf j nen fn rdoin ttt trMT tip lb broken wnll. In c hil l, at ! l awnl-foe, t lc If fnrla bud nti, paiiion, aafe'y W a'). Ill IH lolled brr rjea loaard blm. s!,e t tr f..M..s irt its irxin; b l lb would bate pm n a slranre and biieblest ei'i.itiiihin front (tie Co i ex-re- do-hr- rk In the Fir Clow Sat Carla, Comh-InHer Long, Silky Hair With Htr Flngtrt. bound li dcring ember that ii", for bin rve. hi bmin. anl of ro.ion which be rveiy ) (,,,! t;, r am no 'M' nf finding a way the l which shut thrlil III. A few tuinntoa before, when Curls bad sat H ll knee, wiih lit floret fecb if tne l''t Ibe wannilt and hr hair, this spark had leaped Inlrt fine. It till remained Carla t, and )i'Mi 'l at lst to bl Ho huseif tn t,n te, be h3, ino for ber, wish Ma coat for her Jar-ull- !.,,,. de-na- n pillow. i "Il seem lim: a sin to sleep." she anblj and If shinier were 'f even t ! he entity It, he rotil-f,n, m shadow pf jt n her f "v. Mmi micttl have fiom brr an hour ago, so frrhiy bar and lovely we brr eyes, so fr rln nn y e-- eiii their luirous mnteiit and Weird Ihing. 1 lip a a barpinos wbrn sk looked at him. pltrbwnd Vil after a Hi lie, lT lathes Dame, lllumlnlrg p & Co., m burtiitig piece SpnUt at cf l 'f Jellnw !.!nry limes (be reolr." I de a'i'iiile fii.lih (ITO-1M.",)- ...YOU... , Of ti'"l "He By c. When "HSSTa!! Babies W(Sw'1i1T jTcoffman Dean of All the Enumerator Inc.) Catherine tlie arguments he had built for himself, and for her, crumbled under the tragedy which bad come like a sickness Into her while, beautiful face a tragedy that was filled with appeal, with pain, and for a moment or two with an utter loneliness, as If she had lost something which could never come hack to her. He had seen the same look In her eyes the night her mother died. Then it had filled him with a great pity. Now Its tenderness. Its yearning for a thing gone, shook him to the foundation of his soul. He saw Carla as he had al ' when It ways known she would came to her love for a' J. Only c "Hcset around, and harassed, Wllh doubts und fears of yore, By present ties embarrassed You are what' gone before." If yon believe In reincurnation, Catherine, you can explain to yourself much bet ter the aspirations and de sires Uim surge I I Wmm 'il- - HIrSoTScoT fec- i- Mr .6 I. VI .11 Babies will cry, often for no apparent reason. You may not know what's wrong, but you can always give Castoria. This soon has your little one comforted; if not, you should call a doctor. Don't experiment with medicines intended for the stronger systems of adults I Most of those little upsets are soon soothed away by a little of this pleasant-tastinchildren's remedy gentle-actin- g that children like. It may be the stomach, or may be the little bowels. Or in the case of older children, a sluggish, constipated condition. Castoria is still up wltiiln you. Before you In this world of ours, there have been Ave Kng llsh queens, two Proud Catherine. French queens and two Hus- slan empresses who bore t tie name rTfTTTWli Coiuii(tioii"2" """SJw the thing to give. It is almost certain to clear up any minor ailment, and could by no possibility do the youngest child the of Catherine. Doesn't that In slightest harm. So it's the first trlgue you a little? thing to think of when a child has And then, too, Henry VIII, during a coated tongue; won't. play, can't his lifetime, married three separate sleep, is fretful or out 01 sorts. Catherines, one of whom he be Get the genuine; it always has But that's not nice for headed. this story, and we hope that you Chas. II. Fletcher's signature 00 were not one of these. In former the package. lncaruatlons. Of the twelve Catherines men Mora Time to Remember Matter of Chivalry tloned prominently In history. 1 am "What do you do when It doubt "Brown was married on the twenty sure that none of them bore them thout kissing a girl?" "Give her the ninth of February." selves more proudly, or could carry "How fortunate 1" benefit of the doubt." themselves more finely, thaa you. "Why so?" Now you can use, or misuse, this "He can forget the anniversary only Gain accompanied by 111 report may faculty of pride, nightly used it once In four years." force of charac- he called a loss. Syrus. ter. Wrongly used it becomes ego tism, conceit and arrogance. The reason I am analyzing you In particular, Catherine, is so t lint I can help you to get the best out There Is one of life for yourself. little art In this that may he very helpful, and here Is your for g, t, Weed less mula S 11 fferin ... : humble within, when In the presence of anynody who can teach you some one thing. (AM body can teach you SOMK thing.) The other part of the formula Is to be very strong and vigorous In your nature when you are teaching anyone else, because the more yon appear to know what you are talk log about, the better the other per son can learn It According to the ancients there are syllables In your nnme which Indicate the ability to prr.y effec tively. Other syllables Indicate the Increase of that prayer. Catherine you enn have anything you want If you will study how to bring yourself Into conscious realization of the contact of your soul with the higher sources. I5e very Lighted a Torch, and They Walked Across the Sa.nd Together. Ha that had no scar of ugliness upon It would she take to her breast and bold there. The memory of love. Its burned out ash. a love that was crippled and blind but clean, she would cherish with the sacred faithfulness of on altar nun. P.ut not such a love as be hnd offered her a theft, from another woman. Even as he felt this crushing sense of bis loss of her, another emotion, a freeing of his spirit, a rejoicing with his grief, entered Into him. Carla, as she stood before him. he could worship through all eternity. The Carla he had asked for, yielding to him, would have descended out of heaven to the level of his own debasement Clearly as she had seen his passion and felt the crush of his nrnis. Carla now saw this change In him, and slowly, believing Joyously, a miracle wrought Itself In ber face, and all that Paul had seen broken down built Itself up again. Softness came Into her mouth, and she smiled at him. "Shall we go. Paul?" H bowed his head, then picked up the coat which had been her pillow and shook I he sand from It. "Yes. The cleft In the rock faces west, and 1 think the sun was setting when I found It. If we can Kot out before dark and make a racket, some one may bt near eimimh lo bear us." He lighted a torch, and tliey walked across the sand together. At the pile of rmks be look her band, helping inn) gubllng Iter, tin III Ihey cinie lo Hie beginning of from where he had the led" looked down on ber sleeping form beside the tire. He (old her about It ns they paused for a moment's a love ret. Carl.i looked at the fire In the pit of gloom below tliein. It was (ly The jelhiw pool ef it ing mil. w;n narrow ;ng uud growing dim-ir. -- In ber to ed - A tob runic "We Woli'l get." sti" said. 'No. never.'' "r.- - ji "An ndded I ially- ouP.111I. throat. ou r - the llule - sleeping to for- fire." heebie It." Tb They roni imied upward. fie wn shut nut. The ledge widened and turned so Ihey weri going through it tunnel in the rock, where water lu.d onre made It ,iy lo underground depth. They Mid a short distance when foiio only Paul stopped and smo'bered hi torch In Hie sund iiiilll It flume ma extinguished. Afier that they nw a pale n Ihvilon of light alien I of them. When Ihey reached It Ihey could look up through a bmg. narrow f.ure Ihiit stored siceply, with day al Die top of It. It ti a o or three hundred yard climb, inured wiili broken rods whlitt half rl.otied the nrr,l In place. A ma-- a ilose to thrm bad freshly fallen. "I spoiled my shirt n Cut." said Iho Muff m Paul, '1 r.io.e d.iwn Wil'i It. I io Iheia b n't another pl.ne like II farther bxi-ihi- up." Porf.l Limd-OiiMe- fitH.ia With the New Science of Syllables Oy JAMES OLIVER CURWOOD ghostly figure that bore it, and then floating alone in a limbo of midnight emptiness as if borne by shades that In color and spirit were a part of the gloom. She might have thought, rousing herself from slumber, that hands which were no longer Paul's were bearing It toward the roof of their world. Steadily up into this pit of Acheron It went, and there It disappeared, as If smitten by a mighty breuth that extinguished It In a second. For a time utter darkness lay where the light had been. Then the torch reappeared as suddenly as sable wings had engulfed It, and In another moment It was plunging down through spnee. In a few minutes Paul came where It had fallen sputtering In the sand, and picked It up again. More than ever his face was like that of n ghost. His cheek was marked by a bleeding wound. Ills shirt was In shreds on his breast Ills eyes blazed In a way that would have startled Carla. He went to the edge of the water and bathed his face and hands. Then he returned to the fire and knelt beside Cuiin. lie raised her head gently In his arms, and she did not awaken. He held It against his breast and kissed her hair. "Carla I" he whispered. Her lips moved, her lashes trembled, and opened slowly to unveil her eyes. "You have slept a long time," he said. "At least It seemed long and I took a torch and climbed the pile of rocks again. I went higher than before so high that I came to a ledge, and followed It and then I came lo a great crack In the wall, and there, at the end of It I saw light." "Light I" she breathed. "Yes, light. From the sun. I have found a way out." There was silence then. Almost without effort. It seemed to Paul, Carla crept out of his arms. He knew that something was going with her forever. Her face was whiter than his own. What be bad dreaded to see lay In her eyes a thing fighting back and crushing the glory which had lived In them for a little while. The understanding of what bis discovery meant came quickly to her, and be saw a fabric of assembled dreams going to pieces, like one of the odd Jumble pictures on a screen. When Its hundred disintegrated parts came together again, Ihey formed Claire's face, waiting for him at the end of the trail of light sent (o gub'e them buck to an earthly destiny still unfulfilled, and which, for a lime, had passed centuries away from them. Carta rose to her feet and gazed past him Inlo darkness, and so strangely did ber eyes dwell on empty space that Paul could only look at her and wait for her to speak. "A way out," she said, after ft llttb'. ns though to some one she was seeing beyond their circle of light. "Cod coming to us like this. lo freedom and Inking u bn-life. And this little world ours . Analyzing Laxriiy 1929, Doubleday rffmiil5Hrtlna d HO I'B tcn "Who Is it that Intrigue the effort of man him grow nobla a fat And make a he can? Who la It that gav him uccei he ran. the answer To fulfill hi la Anne." life-wor- rice-frHrs- fila-roet- Or some other ache or pain proven la your keeping an engagement Bayer Aspirin! For any pain it cannot relieve, and relieve promptly. Iicmcmbcr there is scarcely them. They are quite harmless, or the medical profession would not constantly prescribe them. Ai 1 r--- lour very naturally from an ancient word meaning lo answer or yy (', bear witness. Ity shortening The firm Mouth this ancient sjl-eAnr.e. bible lo your two first letters, AN. we have a inclining, similar to 'Ibis may whether, or anywhere. Imply that anj where you go. you are Hie answer, as Inferred In the verse above. Your strong, kindly mouth Indl rates this. mi show you able to go through complicated lacglcs of surmises. 10 find the real inwer. Among the most no' able of those who hae found the rigid answer f if The next time a headache tnakef you slay at home name comes one. Anne, q US These tablets give real relief, or millions would not continue to take Don't bo a martyr to unnecessary pain. To colds that might so easily be checked; to neuritis, to those pains peculiar to For your own protection, buy the genuine. Bayer is tnfe. It's always the same. It never depresses the women; or any euUerir.g for which Bayer Apiria is such an effective but the neu-ralg- ia; antidote. heart, so use it us often as needed; cause of any pain can b treated only by a doctor. 11 might he mouth. nod Anne A more hi an Lindbergh. fill or romantic selling could scarcely do Imagined Or. might iin iiil ui A.ine Mi h nil, bo wrote the SU'iesful phiy "Able Irish lion','" whbii ran for even years mi I'.roadwax. through this play. Anno rose" trout ohicur iiy and comparative poverty to real nd attainment. What Is possible lo Anne Is Idle lo Anne, even If Vur 01 hot Mine Is not Nichols or Motrnw So plunge ahead, and do not n.e he wrong part of jm.r nune, tins' All, which means lo liiiiiiUe year Mif. the best version of join Anne I. nine, tmd the M rouged one. so keep it In (irt that spi lling. I n lull ) Sr (C 1911. Witti-r- 10 life, Morrow te 1 p- - llifkly llumoroui Harry, age four, mine home frmii clnnkllng Sunday si h'i "What did ymi do at Siiniit school?" naked hi Interested ino'h or. "Teacher (old us a funtiv story." giggled I lurry. "A funny story," echoed M ntothei, "What wn It ab"0l "It a about the adventures." wa ibe reply, "of Shudrnch Mesbarlt, and a hillj koiii Stamp Adopted in ISM I'ostn.nMej Ceiieral John M Mb' recommended the ue of sintop In ltd rouiilry In hto stwot litmie In l'i dlalely after ihelr InniL but bl sucienlmi wn A Not tmtil ibiinfniiy fumed n. four yearn Inter wn lie S'l thorlred tlvrn then rent:''" finle no p'lol'lon for printing them. d-- lvie. Him That prs , two or mote rarbon In en Incundosrvht lamp the light ! produce! ht the electric Inenndesi enre of a strip of of rrfrarlory aubslance tenerally carbon. Ai Yon are the answer to the young man's prayer in more ways thau ;a EV.Irit Lighlint. In an arc lamp ibe light dueed by a tultulc ore Ponied Anne 'I C Itrp dirkv-- dusky Irothir tii i;lvina lector" another on le Xn' Is so ilumh." be said l il If jo' brain wa ink an some body d"tie used o' hotp fo' a foiin tain pen. dey couldn't even make a noratir. period." a Aino U tbi trails ovuit 4 Ityw Uuututura The Remarkalila Vocaliit - My wife Is a wonderful vocalist. Why, I have known her lo hold her audience for hours Mlk'-- s - Get out ! After which she would lay Wig..1 k It lo sleep. It ill the Clad'e and Atnerlcun Mutuul M:gir.lne. Yl.;-- ! U MoouutUsSoUour U lMUelksd4 Cot I ef Iniacl of every Insecls destroy tiling raised by Ibe farmer, says C I. Shofrner, tiiiturt' editor of the Farm Journal. And there Joti have the real reason why all slate should have lawa lo protect Inseit destroying bird. Few of lliem have. one-tent- h "Always in Good Humor says Bill and my Folks, too 1 "OVXC, WI.L FKKF.MAN, Jr., 1 of "07 t'oulh Stree t, Key West, Honda, h.ii started in early tellm e the world bis secret of health. "I don't know thut I would have been the raur.e of divorce-.- write Hill, throuch hi mother, "but certainly the f.rst three montha of my l.ie my mother wat a nervous wreck, and so r saw father lioeaur he was 1. 1 diiln't bka my every day it was a f.gbt at our hnu oil or an rnrms, and either 1 was just about ready to quit home. "Finally, they started in givinrfme half tcasjioimful of Nujol nirhland rnornir.fr. I am five month o) J now, and 1 take Nujol every other night, which keep tt.e so will regulated that I am always in good humor, and to are my folks." How simple it Is, aftrr all. Xn no medicines, no irritating raihsrtics. JiHt simjde and natural lubr rat ion which our bodies need a rr'.Kri a any machine. Nujol is not htootbed by the body. It is tt enn form ho habit; it rannot hurt the smallrrt baby. W hat do-sj our bodic intertialiy It is t'ean of tlie (nisor, we all have and which, unlofw tliey ari? saept away a regularly a rlock work, R've us headarbes, make u fe1 sick, low in cur minds, blue, down oil the world. Nujol is a Iwtelesfi and colorless m pure w ate r. Si art thia very nicht end ae how dijercnt you will feci I r u frr . ' " i nc-.e- t - ciw-to- 1 '''tCr'v- - dr-,'-- . k-- William A. Freeman, licks the spoon In preparation tiding the world. fr after a few day. It fo-- but a few rent and it make you feel I ke minion dullats. You can buy it al any drug store In a scaled parkace. With millions nf people ail over the world kocpinf? well with Nujol there U no reason wby )ou, too, should not be joyous, full of pep, with tha health. happiness that comes of Get a bottle today. Ev-o- |