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About The Forest Grove express. (Forest Grove, Or.) 1916-1918 | View Entire Issue (Nov. 8, 1917)
SAGETEA BEAUTIFIES c JA tael ^ íim O l iv e r : C V R W Q D D ^ fe L L KAZAN BECOMES THE FATHER OF THREE WOLF DOG PUPPIES. AND IN TRYING TO DEFEND THEM AND GRAY WOLF HAS A DEADLY FIGHT Kazan. a vicious Alaskan sledge dog. tme-qusrter wolf, save* the life of Thorpe, his master, and Is tHken along when the muster goes to civilization to meet his bride nnd return with her to the froxen country. Isobel, Kazan's new mistress, wins his Instant ulTectlon by her kindness. Hack in the wilderness. MoCready. a gulyie, heats Thorpe Insensible nud attacks the bride. Kazan kills the assailant, tices to the woods, joins a wolf pack, whips the leader, tnkes a young mate, tí ray Wolf, and a few nights later drives off the pack which had attacked Pierre, a sick man. his dnughter Joan, and her baby. Then, held by Joan's kindness, Kazan stays with her. Pierre dies. Joan nnd Kazan start with the sledge to the settlement nnd Joan falls exhausted. The dog saves her nud the baby, and with Gray Wolf, establishes a luir near Joan's home. lean, until at lust U io man noticed the f The cut's clawe ripped through Ma ' Arab, culling open Ida aide a llille ehangu in him. "1 believe ho known,” he Mild to Joan too high to kill. Another atroke ami ono eveuiug, ” 1 belloie lie knows we re they would have cill In Ilia vitals Itut preparing to leave." Then lie added: they had sn uggled eloa# to the edge of "The riser wits rising uguiu today. It Hie rock wiill, nud suddenly, without a Will be another sscek before wo cau snarl or a cry, they rolled over. II » « • fifty or alxly feet to the rock« of the eiurt, perhaps longer." It Darken« That same night (lie moon flooded ledge below, ami even ns they pitched Don’t Stay (¡niy! (lie lop of the Sun Rock with u golden over and over III the full, Kuian'a teeth So Naturally that No light, and out Intu the gloss of it cuiue sank deeper. They struck with ter body ran Tell. Gruy Wolf, with tier tinea little ss hell's rific force, Kazan uppermoat. The toddling behind her. There ssus much shock sent III in half a dozen feel from You can turn gray, faded hair beau ubout these soft little bulls that his enemy, lie was up like a flnali, tifully dark and luatroua almost over tumbled ubout him und snuggled In illzxy, •nailing, on the defensive. The night If you'll get a bo cent h o ld « of Ida tusvny cout that reminded Kazan lynx lay limp uml motionless where II W yeth'« Hugo and Hiilplmr Com o f (he buby. At times they made the had fallen. Katun came nearer, still pound" at any drug store Millions of saiue queer, soft llitle sounds, uud they prepared, and sniffed cautiously. Borne- j bottles of Gila old faiuoua Hugo Tea staggered about oti their four llitle thing told him thut (he fight was over. Recipe, Improved by the addition of legs Just as helplessly ns baby Joan He turned and dragged hlmaulf «lowly other Ingredients, am aoid annually, made her svuy about on tsso. lie did along the ledge (o (he (rail, ami re says a well known druggist here. )><• cauHo It darkens the hair an naturally not fondle them, ss Gray W olf did. turned (o Gray Wolf. and evenly that no one enu tell It haa hut the touch of them, and their baby been applied. ish ss hlmperlng*. filled him sslili a kind Those whoa« hair la turning gray of pleasure Mint lie had never experi or becoming failed have a surprise enced before. awaiting them, t>ecnuse after nnn or The moon was straight above them, two applications the gray hoi? van ami the night was utmost as bright us ishes ami your locks become luxuriant day. when lie went down again to hunt ly dark and beautiful. for Gray Wolf. At the foot of the rock Thla la the age of youth. Gray- a big white rabldt popped up ahead of haired, unattractive folks aren't want ed around, so get busy with W yeth'« him, und ho guse chase. Tor half a ( T u UK C O N T IN U B O > Sage and Hulphur Compound tonight mile he pursued, until (he wolf Instinct uml you'll ho delighted with your dark, In him rose over tbo dog. and tie gave handsome hair and your youthful ap- up the futile race. A deer lie might pearanre within a few days. have overtaken, hut hiiiii 11 game the Thla preparation la a toilet requisite svolf must hunt ns the fox limits It, Children W ill Find Their Enjoyment and Is not Intended for the cure, miti In Useful Things Adapted to ami he begun to yllp through the thick gation or prevention of disease. Their Mental Level. ets slowly and as quietly as a shadow. He ssus u mile from the Sun Rock •up dean and healthy l»r. Marla Mouteaaorl of Rowe, Inter svhen two quick leaps put Gray W olfs Piere«’» Pleasant Pelleta. They regu- supper betwecu his Jusss. He trolled nationally fumed authoress nud educa late liver, Ixiwels and atomndi. hack slowly, dropping the big seven- tor, foretold to ?no women (he coming pound snow-shoe Imre uow slid then to of the time when toya will ha unknown and children will find rnjoymsut In rest. When he came to the narrow trail useful things adapted to their mental thut It'd to the top of ttie Sun Hock he level. She was talking at a meeting stopped. In that trail ssus the svurtn arranged by the New Ktigliiltd Montes- scent of strange f. et. The rabbit fell soli association. ■ from his Jaws. Ksery Imlr In his body "Impatience <>n the port of mothers | was suddenly electrified Into life. What materially hinders the progress o f chil | he scouted was not the scent o f u rah* dren," she said. "L et it child take his j bit, a marten or n porcupine. Fnng own time about performing dutlea and I Mad e an Autom ob ile und cluw hud climbed the path uiieud you will And they are done far heller E x p e r t of This Man In Just Seven W e e k *. of him. And then, coming faintly to than the mothers could do them. Rung DO Y O U W A N T T O OH him from the top of the rock, be heard lm> yourself dressing lelauraly, but AN EXPERT A u tom ob ile D n v s r sounds which sent him up with a ter thoroughly, to he suddenly grabbed by A u to m o b ile R s ps lrm a n rible whining cry. When he reached a giant maid, literally thrust Into your A u tom ob ile S jis tt n a n O a t T r a c t o r E ng in eer the summit he saw- In the white moon clothes and hustled Into a motorcar. S t a tio n e ry Engin eer light n scene that stopped him for a and earn fro m |IOO to |%00 "Sometimes we adults go part way per m onth? If you have single moment. Close to the edge of the through life us If In rhnoa until wa tw o hands and a com mon sheer fall to the r»»ck*. fifty feet below, Sense •'duration, I ran find something that Interest* us. Then tiiuk« you an r s p e r t In Gray W olf was engaged in s death- n phenomenon takes place. Why not fro m els to eight w<<-k" struggle with a huge gray lynx. She I p ro v e It hy my " t re* give the child the ■umr chance? We T rln l W r i t « tndsy for was down— ami under, slid from her »•an ba compared to an alrplnn*. Wa bixiklet and a letter fro m there came a sudden sharp terrible cry . me thut will first must have o motor, then wa run m e n d o f m ine fro m the start m ake you « of pain. over the ground a short distance, and ADCOX A U T O A N D ( U S E N G IN E Kazan flew across the rock. Ills at SCHOOL. fluidly we rise lu flight. A child must * 1HS Ournside Street, Portland. Ora. tack was the swift silent usiault of the he developed along those sum« lines." wolf, combined with the greater conr- — Boston Boat. CHAPTER X— Continued. i back his lips. Stiff-legged, prepared to — 10— ’ spring, his neck nnd head reaching out, “Good old Kaznn.” she cried softly, he approached the two rocks between putting her face down close to hltn. which Gray Wolf had crept the night “ We’re glad you catue. Kazan, for before. She was still there. And with we're going to be alone tonight—baby her was something else. After a nio- and L Paddy's gone to the post, and ment the tenseness left Kazan's body. Ills bristling crest dropped until It lay you must care for us while he's away. She tickled his nose with the end of flat. His ears snot forward, und he her long shining braid. This always put his head and shoulders between delighted the baby, for iti spite of his the two rocks, und whint'd softly. And stoicism Kazan had to sniff and some Gray W olf whined. Slowly Kazan times to sneeze, and twig his ears. And backed out, and faced the rising sun. it pleased him. too. He loved the sweet Then he lay down, so that his body shielded the entrance to the chumber scent of Joan's hair. "And you'd fight for us. if you had between the rocks. Gray W olf w as a mother. to, wouldn't you?" she went on. Then she rose quietly. " I mi’^t close the C H APTE R XI. door,” she said. " I don't want you to go away again today, Kazan. You The Tragedy on Sun Rock. must stay with ns.” All that day Kazan guarded the top Kazan went off to his corner, and lay down. Just as there had been some o f the Sun Itock. Fute. and the fear strange thing at the top of the Sun and brutality of masters, had hereto Rock to disturb him that day, so now fore kept him from fatherhood, nnd he there was a mystery that disturbed was puzzled. Something told him now him In the cabin. He sniffed the air, that he belt nged to the Sun Rock, and trying to fathom Its secret. Whntever not to the cnbin. The call that came it was. It seemed to make his mistress to him from over the plain was not so different, too. And she was digging strong. At dusk Gray W olf came out ont all sorts of odds and ends o f things from her retreat, ami slunk to his side, about the cabin, and doing them up in whimpering, and nipped gently at his packages. Late that night, before she shaggy neck It was the old instinct of went to bed, Joan came and snuggled his futhers that made him respond by her hand close down beside him for a caressing Gruy Wolf's face with his tongue. Then Gruy W olfs Jaws opened few moments. and she laughed in short panting “ W ere going away,” she whispered, breaths, as If she had t een hard run. and there was a curious tremble that She was happy, and ss »hey heard a was almost a sob in her voice. "W e're little snuffling sound from between the going home. Kazan. W e’re going away rooks, Kazan wagged his tall, and Gray down where his people live— where W olf darted back to her young. they have churches, and cities, and mu The babyish cry and It« effect upon sic, and ail the beuutlful things in the w-orld. And we're going to take you, Gray W olf taught Kazan his first les son In fatherhood. Instinct again told Kazan l" him that Gray W olf could not go down Kazan didn't undervjmd. But he to the hunt with him now— that she was happy at having the woman so must stay at the top of the Sun Rock. near to him. and talking to him. At So when the moon rose he went dowt) these times he forgot Gray Wolf. The alone, and toward dawn returned with dog that was In him surged over his a big white rabbit between his Jaws It quarter-strain of wildness, and the was the wild In him that made him do woman and the baby alone filled his . this, and Gray W olf ate ravenously world. But after Joan hud gone to her Then he knew Giat each night here bed, and all was quiet in the cabin, his after he must hunt for Gray W olf— old uneasiness returned. He rose to and the little whimpering creatures his feet nnd moved stealthily about the hidden between the two rocks. cabin, sniffing at the walls, the door The next day, and still the next, he Kazan’s Teeth bank Oeepar. and the things his mistress bad done did not go to the cabin, though he into packages. A low whine rose In i age, the fur} un»l the strategy o f the his throat. Joan, half asleep, heard It, heard the voices of both the rnhn and husky. Another husky would have died the woman calling him. On the fifth and murmured: I that first uttui k. But the lynx vvus "Be quiet, Kazan. Go to sloep— go he went down, and Joan and the baby not u d»»g or u wolf. It wus “ Mow-lee, were bo glad that the woman hugged to sleep— ” the swift,” ss the Harcees had named Long after that, Kazan gtood rigid him, and the baby kicked and laughed It— the quirk»-«’ ‘ feature In the wilder in the center of the room, listening, and screamed at him, while the man ness. Kazan's inch-long fangs should trembling. And faintly he heurd, far stood by cautiously, watching their have sunk deep in Its Jugular. But In away, the wailing cry of Gray Wolf. demonstrations with a gleam of dlaap- a fractions! part o f u second the lynx But tonight it was not the cry of lone- , probation In his eyes. had thrown Itself back like s huge soft liness. It sent a thrill through him. j "I'm afraid o f him," he told Joan for ball, snd Kazan's teeth burled them He ran to the door, and whined, but the hundredth time. "That’s the wolf- selves In the flesh of Its rie»-k Instead Joan was deep in slumber and did not gleam in his ey< s. H e’s of a trencher- | of the Jugular. Arid Kazan was not hour him. On»:e more he heard the ,,us breed. Sometimes I wish we’d now fighting the fangs of a wolf In the cry. and only once. Then the night never brought him home.” ps»k, or of soothe* husky. He was grew stiII. He crouched down near " I f we hadn't— where would the baby fighting daws daw s that ripped like the door. —have gone?" Joan reminded him, a twenty razor-edged knives, and which Joan found him there, still watchful, little catch In her voice. even a Jugular hold could not stop. still listening, when she awoke In the Once he had fought a lyriz In a trap, " I had almost forgotten that," said enrly morning. She came to open the her husband. "Kazan, you old devil, I ari»l he had not forgotten the lesson the door for him, an»] In a moment he W hs gueas I love you, too.’’ He laid Ids buttle had taught him. We fought to gone. Ills feet seemed scarcely to hand caressingly on Kazan's head. pull the lynx down, Inetea»! of forcing touch the earth as he sped In the di "Wonder how he'll fake to life down It on Its bark, ns he would have »lone rection of the Sun Rock. Across the there?" he asked. “H * has always with another <l»«g or s wolf. He knew plain he could see the cap of It already been used to tha forest*. It'll seem that when on Its hack the fierce cat painted with a golden glow. wav moat dangerous. One rip o f Its mighty strange.” He cam« to the narrow winding trail, powerful hind feet could disembowel "And no—-have I— always been noed nnd wormed his way up It swiftly. him. Gray W olf wa* not at the top to to the forests,” whispered Joan. ” 1 Behind him he heard Gray W olf sob greet him. But he could smell her, and guess that's why I love Kazan— next to bing snd crying and he knew that she the scent of that other thing was strong you and the baby. Kazan—dear old was terribly hurt. He was filled with In the air. Ills muscles tightened; his Kazan l” the rag* arid strength o f two dogs, and legs grew tense. Deep down In his This time Kaznn felt and scented fils teeth met through the flesh and chest there began the low rumble o f a more of that mysterious change In the hide o f the cat’« throat. But the big growl. He knew now what that strange cabin. Joan and her husband talked ly m escaped death by half sn Inch. It thing was that had haunted him, and Incessantly o f their plans when they would take a fr»-ali grip to reach the tnnde him uneasy. It was life. Some were together; nnd when the man was jugular, and aud'Ienly Kazan mn»le the thing that lived and breathed had In away Joan talked to the baby, and to deadly lunge. There was sn Instant’s vaded the home which he and Gray him. And each time that he came freedom for the lynz, snd In that mo W olf had chosen. He hared his long | down to the cabin during the week that ment It flung Itself hack, and Kazan fangs, tod « snarl o f defiance drew j followed, he grew more and more reap gripped at Its throat— on top. SAYS TOYS WILL BE UNKNOWN SALES IF BACKACHY Our Humorists. All we enn any la that »v# hope any given humorist o f out* will live out the greatest tengt • of days uud not stop Joking before lie dies. We uced every moment o f his three score years und ten to keep us san* and kind, a id Slop ralinjf meat for il while i f we cannot he sntUfl.d with s a i n t e d your j 8 t r o u b lin g measure o f time for you begins utisurp'issably to delight the world, our nstlonnl pride as well ns " ’hen you wake up with backache our human need la bmiud up In his continuance. 1'oaslbly we are going and dull misery In the kMncy region from had I " worse ns we have always It generally means you have Ix’on eat- . . . . » . # ! lnK too much meat, says a well known ..... n. hut we think w# have been kept i dUtht>rlty Meat ljrlc arM from the worst hy the humorist s smile. whlrh overworks the kidneys In their not by the satirist s frown, «»«her effort to filter It from the blood and rsc»-.s. other lunds abound In songs und they become sort of puralyzed and sermons, hut we have sent our luiigli- loggy. When your kidneys g»*t slug 1er over tin* world to save It nlive more glsh and clog you must relieve them, than unythlng else »•<> ul»1. -W . I). llow-1 *lko you relieve your bowels; remov ing nil the body's urinous waste, else •Us, In Hurper’a Magazine. ________________ you have backache, sick headache, ! dizzy spells; your stomach sours, When Novel* Were Really Long. tongue Is coated, and when the woo- Though William de Morgan wrote thcr Is had you have rheumatic some of the longeât novel* o f recent twinge*. The urine la cloudy, full of times, his eff»iris were conciseness It- sediment, channels often get sore, wa ne If compared with the works of soma tof scalds and you are obliged to seek two or *brco Rmea during the of the seventeenth century romancers, j relief rt' .e ^ *w0 night. Mlle, de Scudery’s once famous story, Either consult a good, reliable phy "i.e Grand t'yrus,” for Instance, fills sician at once or get from your phar five folio volumes of MXJ pages egdi In macist about four ounces of Jnd Halts; the English translation, and her con take a tahlespoonful In a glass of temporary, I<a Calpreuede, was even ■ water before breakfast for a few days more diffuse, his "lie o p s tre " running and your kidneys will then art fine. into '¿*1 volumes. The leisurely method This famous salts Is made from the »»f the early novelists Is well lllustint-| ac|»l o f grapes and lemon Juice, com bined with llthla, and has been used ed In "Farther,Isa»." by Roger Ib.yle, for generat!oni to c ,oan and stlmi.late Karl of Orrery, In which tha right hun- sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize «Iredth page finds the two chief char- acids In the urine so it no longer Irrl- nrters still engaged In the process o f tales, thus ending bladder weakness. Introducing themselves t«i each other, Jad Salta Is a life saver for regular begun on page one.— London Observer. eaters. It la Inexpensive, can not Injure and makes a delightful, e f fervescent llthla water drink. Carrier Pigeons In Warfare. The vulue of nlrplunes In tha war / Is piirtly due to tlio speed o f tha car rier pigeons taken aloft nnd released The most eminent physicians recognize with inessnges. Should thu airplane tlmt uric add stored up In the system 1« he shot down the bird may accomplish the cause of gout ami rheumatism, Hint the task the mini set out to do. In this uric add p»ilson la present In the the French army alone It Is said up Joints, muscles, or nerves. Ity experi ward of IS,(XX) carrier pigeons ar* menting and analysis at the Invalids’ Hotel and Hurgh-nl Institute In Buffalo, used dally. N. V., i»r. Pierce discovered a combina tion of native remedies that he called Sliver In Early Timas. An u-rlc, which drives out the uric odd In very early times silver wsa usad drom the system, and In this way the for ornaments. Spain appear» to hava pnln, swelling nn»l Inflammation subside. been the chief source from which sliver If you are a sufferer from rheumatism, backache, pains here or there, you can ob« was obtained by the ancients. It la tnln Anurlc, double strength, nt any drug thought the hills of Palestine may hava store and get relief from the pains and Ills brought shout by uric add; or send furnished some supply of this metal. Hr Pierce 10c for trial pkg Anurlc which you will find many times mnra potent On tha Stand. than llthla and eliminates uric acid as Lawyer— 1 supposa, »Ir, after the threats muda against yon, you lived In continual trepidation? Witness— No, sirt I lived la tha sub Insurance and llfe- Wh« s L f.ll„ bl* m *“ 1 ea ter» and those urbs. who deposit llma-aalta In tbelr JolnU. \CN) POISONING! SMSS'ET SSr-. Lliffi 'T y’.S! KXV’JSki'"--' *»• " «" *?«KS