,-t- t-
FOR COLDS
ALKALINIZE YOUR SYSTEM
3
The P
i
INDISPOSED?
ams or
ranarn
Doctors (tverywhoro nro prescrib
ing tills new treatment for colds:
Hoglii when you fool n cold ruin
ing. Take A tublespoonful o( Phil
Hjih' Milk of Mitgiii'Hlit, morning,
tioon uiul night, tlio llrnt day. Do tlio
utiio second day. Then only tit night
Colds reduce tlio iilkiillnlly (if your
nyHtt'in. That's what make you fool
achy, feverish, wctik, luilf-slck. Phil
Htm' Milk of Magnesia Is alkali In
harmless, ptihitablo form. It cheeks
tlio symptoms of colds by restoring
the alkalinity of your system.
Itelleves Hour stomach, Indigestion,
gns, over-iieldlty. All drugstore.
Er. 1 !
A Clean Sweep
"! take tinplrln to flour my head."
"(ill, 1 see-sort of vacuum clean
r."l.oiidnii Til mm.
Children need not steal
your health
There should be no health penalty
attached to motherhood. There bm't
among really healthy women. Ks
jwetant mothers who think of the
buliy'i health wrll thrlr own,
hould take good vrgrtnble tunic to
protect the two livri-Dr. PlMCt'i
Favorite Prescription. All dealers.
Every package of it contains
Symptom 1 Hank. Fill it out anil mail
it to Dr. IVne'i Clinic. HufTalo, N. Y
for KK'lUC medical advice.
Took a Lot of Chance
Ak'ntlm-That miin hud Ihu ihtvo
to klN mo.
r;nnop-ll rcrlulnly did I
Poschee'iSynipaoothfainitantlv.fndt
miwtion quitniyi uuamhihi.
mS-t 1)8 wl"
rn Ilowhre'il For young
TVI
and old.
Boschee's
Syrtjp
At all
JrvKKlifi
SuitabU Pun
"How do you like cleaning chlm
oeyar "Oh, It aootn inc.'
w
Help Your
Kidnoys
Deal Tromptlf With KiJney
Irrrsruiaritict.
When bladder Irritattonl,
getting up at night and cotv
aunt backache keep you miser
able, don't take chdncesl Help
your kldneyi at the first len
of dliorder.' Use Doun'i Pal.
Successful for more than SO
yeara. Endorsed by hundreda
of thousands of grateiut users.
i Sold by dealera everywnere.
DoaiYs
ills
UGLY GOITRE
"Goes En 4 Weeks"
Avoid Dangerous Operatlonl
"Your four weeki home trentmf nt endf A I my
ollre." Mr. J. M. Spencer, Attica, Ohm.
"My doctor mid operate. Hut by ymir
treatment I ended my goitre in I month.
That wa 3 year tgn. Goitr neter re
turned." Mrt. W, A. I'eeie, Creiton, B. C.
End Coitre Quick at Home
200,000 people hara treated goitres at
torn th it ey, harmlee way. Many yay
oitrei ended in 4 weeke even thoimh other
methods had failed. Jti 44 paii llluitrated
FRE.K IIUOK by IUttle, Creek Go tr
Sperialiat telli how to end foitrs quick.
FREt Send No Money
PlUilclana irmimani an amwi m. . a
ia(J sanpern piui . www .......
Bnnfl m FIIWS lxk nrnr to End Oollr Qulok
at Uom without Dana or or Overatloo.
Namt
A1i1rM . . .
IT
a
I
1 m jr
By JAMES OLIVER CURWOOD
by Doubladay Doran Co., Ino. ' '
i
THE 8TORY
With hi RhtillNh wlfn, Cii)hr
In, and arm, Jiidiim, ilmiry tiu
luln, French settlor In Canada, In
17(. cultivate a farm adjacent
to the Tonteur selatfivurla. An Dir.
atory opens Ilia imlulrti ar rn
turn I MS from a vlult lu the Tn
tnur. Catlierlmi'a wandering
brother, lliiNltinh, meet then:
with iirenenln fur the family. To
Jnem h Klvm plalul, bidding
lilm perfect tiloianlf In roiirkmiiafi
ilitp. Ili.pi.llmh fnr f-;f th
tifety of la llulaln In Umlr
l.-iuUitd tmnlllmi. Ji'i-nm fmht
Willi I'mil Tache, rotiiln of T'd
null Toniniir, whom they both
adore, N.'Xt day Jeem cull at
th 'I'r.ni i-ur home mid aml"Kl'
(or dm wllii In front of Tnlnett.
CHAPTER IVConlinued
Jcriiii did tint K ncaln to Tolitoiir
tnittior, thottuh oci'iiHliiiiiilly h bcurd
Iipws front the m-liiiii'tirle, ICvcry one
wim In hlgli humor IIhth hem mm- of
llir (ii ll lllcx ifiiliii; on In irrpnrittlon
fur Ihu ffl of (ho I'titlro finiitly for
(Jiitbi'e enrly In HfjUi'itilnT. Tnliietti!
whs koIiii; o Niiiool tit the foment of
the Urmillni-s. Jecma Inn! it fi-ellnij of
om. It WMi na If the (Ire of hi
ilreiima hud not only burned linelf out,
but even the null were being cleared
awny,
Autumn enme, and with It ft Erent
Rlnry In the wlldenie, Jeetna loved
(bene nmturer day of golden rlpencm,
t'f (Imt fnthtH, of inlliteil hurduood
f ureal , and of rrlHp, tnncy iilr when
nil Ufa aeeined reju vomited nd Ida
tiwn veins danced lo the thrill of un
ending troiubtes nnd exie.-tntlon. lint
this yer a beitvlnexs of heart wmt In
him with lh rhnnglng of the aenaona.
Tolnell and her ipoidr left for gu-
bee, and out evening, a week later.
Ilepdlbiih gravely announced (hat he
could no lunger delay his departure
for the far front I era of Pennsylvania
and the Ohio, where his obligation, as
trader called htm. Calberlne was
silent for a while, then cried softly to
herxelf. Jeeins drew bt.?k where his
uncle would not see him clearly.
llonrt's cheerfulm-Di died out like a
lighted candle extinguished by a
breath of wind. Ilejinibnli's face was
grimly set, so hnrd was be fU'htlng to
hob! a grip on his emotion. He prom-
Ued that he would never again remain
away long at a time. He would re
turn during the winter. If he fulled to
come, they would know be was dead.
When Henri gt out of his bed to
build the fire the next morning Hep
albnh wns gone. He had stolen off
like a shadow In some still hour of
the night.
More determinedly than when his
uncle had been with him, Jeems con
tinued at his work and at the mental
efforts with which he was struggling
to reach out Into the mountains and
valleys of experience ahead of him.
Through the fall and winter the !!u-
laln cabin was visited by wandering
Indiana who had learned that food,
warmth, and a welcome were always
there. Jeems friendship fur them
was tempered by the things IlepMlhuh
had told him, and while he brought
himself closer Into Intimacy with thexe
uninvited guests, winning; their confi
dence and making himself more effi
cient In their speech, he was also
watching and listening for the signs
of hidden dangers ngnlnst which his
uncle had repeatedly warned him.
Most of the Indiana were from the
Canada tribes, and among them he
found no cause for unrest, but when
occasionally an Onondaga or an
Onolda came, lie detected In their mnn
ner a quiet and aleepless rnutlon
which told him these visitors from
the Six Nations considered themselves
over the dead line which marked the
country of their enemies. And he
made note that they always came
through that part of Forbidden valley
which Hepslbah had predicted would
be a future warpath for the Mohawks,
This winter he went farther In his
adventuring. Captain Pipe, the old
Caughunwnga, had a habit of upend
Ing several of the hardest weeks near
the Rulnlna, and with his two sons,
White KycB and Iilg Cat, Jeems trav'
vied to the ahores of I.nko Cliampliiln
for the first time. Ho was gone a
week and planned with his friends to
make a longer expedition the follow
ing year, as far as Crown Point nnd
a place called Tlconderogn, where the
French were going to build a fort
some day. On this excursion he ex
perienced the real thrill of danger, for
White Kyes and Wg Cat, both of
whom were young braves who hud
won their spurs, moved wllh a caution
which wns eloquent In Its nlgiillleunee.
With Tolnotte nnd her people away
from the sclgncurle, Jeems had no
hesitation In going lo tlio Ilk'helleu,
and iinulo trips thcro with his father
on anowtdioeg; and In March, during a
break in a spell of Intense cold, he
went alone and remained overnight In
the house of the baron's overseer with
whose young people he had become ac
quainted. Tills overseer wus Peter
Lubeck, an old veteran for whom
Tonteur held a warm niTectloti, nnd
through his son, Peter the younger,
Jeems had his first news of Tolnutte.
She was nt tlio Ursullno school, and
hvr parents had taken u fashionable
house In St. Louis street. Peter said
Tonteur wrote In every letter to his
father that he was homcMlck to get
buck to the Itli hetleu.
As another spring and summer fol
lowed those which hud gone before;,
Jeems knew be was lighting nomelliing
Unit bad lo bo einiierod, a yearning
for Toluette which filled him with a
bitter loiielliii-Hs when Its bold was
strongest.
For two years Tolnelte remained In
Quebec without making a visit to the
Itlchelleu. Purlng these years, the
tragedy of his divided birth was forced
upon Jeems. There was no doubt that
the llngllsli In him whs uppermost or
tliuf the urge In his blood wits toward
Iho southern frontiers and the col
onies of IlepHlhah Adams, Vet bo
loved the place where he lived with 8
sincere passion -the I'.'.g forest. For
bidden valley, til! the miles of wilder
ness iiboiit him ns far as he could
look to the horizons. This was New
France. It was bis father's country
nnd not his toother's. Hetwecii bis
father ami hlimelf a cniiiradeshlp bad
grown up which nothing could break,
hut his worship for his mother wus n
different thing, as If something be
sides motherhood bound him to her.
His friends bad Increased In number.
He came to kti"W people along the
Itlchelleu but was always conscious
he was not entirely one of them.
Tolnette's words nnd her hut red for
him persisted in bU memory and kept
recalling this truth.
I .ate In August of the second year
of her iilesence, Tolnetie returned to
Tonteur manor for a month. Jeems'
heart ached with the old j earning, hut
be (Hi) not go to the selgneurle. I'uiil
Tache and his mother were almt at
the boron's and he felt a sense of re
lief when he learned that all of them
were on their way to Quebec, with the
exception of Tonteur, who remained
for the harvesting of crops. A fort
night after they had gone, Peter told
him about Totnette and Paul Tache.
He had scarcely recognized Toinette,
he said. She had grown taller and
more beautiful. Tache was a .full-
grown man and dressed like a young
noble. One with half an eye could
see that he was desperutely In love
wltli Toinette. Peter avowed. Hut if
he were a judge of such affulrs, nnd
he considered himself to be that,
Tache was a long way from a realiza
tion of Ills desires, even taking
Tolnette's tender years Into consider
ation. She granted hi in no favors.
There had actually seemed to be a
coolness In her att.tude toward him.
Peter's words stirred Jeems with a
satisfaction which he did not let the
other see, and not until he was on till
way home did he pull himself from
the folly of his thoughts about Toinette.
Uven If she were not smiling on Tache
as warmly as be had supposed, he
knew she was as far removed from
hi in now as the sun was from the
earth. Vet, as time went on, this fresh
contact with her presence, though he
had not seen her, gave a determined
impetus to his plans for the future.
There were hours in which he saw
himself a splendid enemy where fate
had ordained that he could uot be a
friend With Increasing maturity giv
ing to him a deeper and more under
standing passion for his mother, and
a fuller comprehension of the noble
qualities In his father, he was harassed
by a conflict Ion of emotions which he re
vealed to neither, and confided only
In Hepslbah Adams, who had re
turned from his trip. The diffi
culty of solving the problem which
confronted Jeems whs us great for
Catherine's brother as It would have
been for Catherine herself, for as
early as the spring of 1753, when
Jeems had passed his sixteenth year,
there was no longer a doubt In the
minds of the people of the Colonies
and New France as to the surety of
the struggle which was Impending.
While France and Kngland were offi
cially at peace, the forces of the two
countries In America were on the
verge of open war and were Instigat
ing the Indians to a strife of ex
termination. Everywhere nlong the
unprotected frontiers the Indlntis were
killing and burning and audi vast
Bums were being expended by both
sides for hunmti hair that scores of
ttiHWHHHtHtHHllilt
Simple Strategy That
Picturesque lily pools ornament the
grounds of a famous hostelry In Pasa
dena, Calif. In the lily pools are nu
merous large, decp-throuted bullfrogs,
picturesque enough by day but a thun
dering nuisance nt night with their
loud conversation. Ducks were Intro
duced, but the row they made when
they caught a frog too big to eat but
too nice to let go proved worse tlmu
the hubbub "Ihey were supposed to
cure. Qiiackless Muscovy ducks were
substituted. These uppenred to annoy
;he frogs considerably, but they nte
more flowers and plants than frogs.
A bounty of 3 cents a frog wus then
offered to neighboring children, and
more frogs than hud ever been seen
or heard In the country were speedily
brought In ns having boon extracted
WNU Service.
white men had taken up the lucrative
business of hunting for scalps.
Almost at the door to Jeems' home,
war preparations were In progress,
for every landed baron along the Rich
elieu was training his vassal fanners.
and when the wind won rlxbt the
lliilnltis could bear faintly the twlee-it
week firing of muskets at Tonteur
manor. P.oliig free of the geigiieurlul
protection and laws, Henri did not go
to drill. Nor did Jeemn. Yet lull
teur rode frequently to their home,
especially when HepKlbnh was there
Ho was In better spirits than usual,
nnd It wus all on account of Tolnelte.
Itetuild. Kbo was homesick for the
Richelieu. Her letters to him were
idled with a longing for It, and she
declared that, lu another twelve
months, when her schooling would be
finished, she wanted to live at the
manor and not In Quebec. That was
enough to make him happy, and he
laughed al the thought of danger for
woriier.folk 11I0112 the Itlchelleu III
thfl fortified places. The Kiijilish and j
their savages would not get nearer;
than t lie lower end of .Luke Cham
plain when war came; and they would
be driven from there very shortly,
and also from Luke George, Put on
such an outlying farm as the P.iilain
place, which had no protection what
ever, there was the possible peril of
wandering sculp hunters nnd he never
tired of urging Henri and Catherine
to make their home wiihln the safety
of the. Sclgncurle.
He asked Jeems and Henri to conn
to ills drill, and that they did not re
sond made no difference In his friend
ship. He could understand how hard
It would be for Henri to prepare for
war against bis wife's country. Hnd bis
secret adoration for Catherine was
greater because of her courage and
her faith In both peoples with the
catastrophe so neur. It delighted him
to think that bis own confidence was
a comfort to her, and the eagerness
with which she accepted bis opinions
us a soldier encouraged him to go be
yond what Hepslbah considered In
telllgent bounds In giving easement to
her mind. He did not guess what was
In Jeems' heart, nor did the hoy's fa
ther or mother. Only Hepslbah knew
fully what was there.
F.arly In the autumn, the trader took
Jeems on a Journey to the Knglish fort
en I-ake George, thence traveling Into
the New York country, returning In
November. TJiey found a change In
Catherine. She wus not less confident
or less contented In the paradise she
was helping to build, but something
had come Into her life which she was
accepting bravely and courageously
and even with pride. One evening, she
spoke of the military activities along
the Itlchelleu. Many river youths
were training with their elders, she
paid, and it did not aeem right that
Jeems should not be among them.
While killing was wicked and Inex
cusable, It was a Cod-given privilege
to defend one's home and family. She
quoted Tonteur to substantiate her
belief that war would never reach
them, and she knew that Jeems would
not seek It any more than his father.
P.ut she thought It would do no harm
for Jeems to prepare himself along
with the other young men of the
seigneur) e.
To this suggestion Hepsibah's home
ly philosophy made objection. He told
Catherine the day waa coming when
Jeems would be compelled to fight and
that be would have to choose one side
or the other to chnmplon. When that
day arrived, sentiment would not
stand In the way, for, with a world
In turmoil about them, one could not
be Knglish and French at the same
time. No man could tell on which
aide they would be when forced to It,
and as he despised a traitor more than
anything else. It was his opinion that
Jeems should not be taught the ways
of war under the flag of France and
then, it might be, fight for the Eng
lish. As a frontiersman, he main
talned that the finest fighting man was
the Long Rifle, a free wanderer of the
forests, a leather-stocking trained to
a hundred greater things than the fir
ing of a musket In company with a
score of others. That was what Jeems
Bhould be. Aa a Long Uifie he could
serve where honor and duty called biro
when the net became nocessnry.
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
Ended Frogs' "Talkfest"
from the pools In the hotel grounds.
A sharpshooter was the next expert
ment, hut he woke up more people
titan the frogs. Then the hotel man
nger read up "Frog" In all Its aspects,
and solved the problem. He strung an
electric light over each pool (a good
hurricane lump serves equally well
where electricity Is not available)
and, behold 1 the baffled brutes hence
forth snt silently waiting for the dark'
ness that never cume.
Meaning of Musical Term
The niuslcul term "col legno" (with
the wood), signifies that the notes so
marked are to bo plnyed by striking
the strings wllh the stick of the bow
instead of the usual wuy.
f- '.
-
f
Headaches come at the most
inconvenient times, but there's
one thing that will always save
the day. If you have some
Bayer Aspirin you can noon be
on your way. The sooner you
take it the less time you'll lose
the less you'll suffer.
Shopping frequently bring9
on a headache. Over-exertion
of any kind. Eye-strain. Or
just "nerves." Often it's the
time of month. Regardless of
the cause, you want relief. And
you get relief when you take
Bayer Aspirin. Take promptly!
It will relieve the pain at any
Btage, but why wait until you
are miserable Bayer Aspirin
BAYERftlASPIRIN
Start the Ball Rolling
Dad was discussing the business
depression and Raid: "I don't see
how tilings can Improve until people
let loose of their money and buy."
"Why not start the ball rolling and
Diiy me a fur coat?" chimed in the
rblc high school daughter.
Poor Kind of "Candy"
Chewing torpedoes proved an un
healthy pastime for Charles lloone.
age fifty-seven, of Cherry Hill, Md
George Hooue. a son, found the tor
pedo, of the Fourth of July variety
While walking home with his father
he gave It to him, but the latter bit
Fntful DAYS
Restless NIGHTS
...gVe child Castoria
FuSSY, fretful, can't sleep, won't
eat .... It bat always easy to find
just where the trouble is with
young child. It may be a stomach
upset! it may be sluggish bowels.
" But when little tongues ant
coated and there U even a slight
suspicion of bad breath it's time
for Castorial
Castoria, you know, is a pure
vegetable preparation especially
made for babies and children. When
Baby cries with colic or is fretful
because of constipation, Castoria
brings quick comfort, and, with
relief from pain, soothes him to
restful sleep. For older children
up through all the school yean,
Castoria is equally effective in
helping to right irregularities. Just
give it in larger doses. What ft
Another Alibi
Mamma Marcus, why didn't you
Jnlsli sawing that wood?
Little Marcus I Just couldn't,
jiomma, the poor saw had the tooth
iche. Brooklyn Eagle,
Garfield Tea
Was Your
Grandmother's Remedy
For every stom
ach and Intestinal
111. This good old
fashioned herb
home remedy for
c onstlpation,
l stomach ills and
other derange
ments of the i?s-
tern so prevalent these days la In
mren greater favor as a family med
icine than la your grandmother's
day.
Showing It
"I can't get along with my wife.
ll she does Is ignore me."
"les. And If there's anything I
nte, It's Ignorance." London Tit
Its. Skin Health
Daily
Cuticura
The Soap, pure
HI
i
skin, the Ointment, antiseptic and
healing, to remove
irritations and the
and pure, to impart pleasing
fragrance to the skin.
Sou V. Olnlnwnt c. emIMe. IVOpuro a.
Proprietor i hltar firm Okanlaal 'Vpntta. alaMaa. Ma,
h'r 'l ' '
If . H ,
it
V
iff
k-.v -v.
A
B -
can't harm you, because there
is nothing harmful in it.
Remember this, when you're
tempted to try some product
that costs a few cents less!
Into it, thinking it was candy. The
next thing lie knew he was on the
operating table having a surgeon
sew up a hole In his face.
Dr. Tierce's Pleanmt Pellets are the orlg
inal little liver pills put tip 60 years ago.
They regulate liver and bowels. Adv.
Hit
"I hear you lost your temper yes
terday." "Yes, hut she'll be back tomorrow."
Chicago Post.
The arguments of most men art
sound and that's alL
comfort Castoria is to mothers!
Get the genuine, with Chas. If.
Fletcher's signature on wrapper
and the name Castoria that always
appears like this:
PARKER'S
HAIR BALSAM
H (irai Dwml Mop. Hair raOlacj
Import Color aaal
Batty to Cray and Faded Hail
.v-sn 1
aa am ai.n at urf gut.
FLORESTON SHAMPOO - Ideal for a a la
cnnrMetioawith Harkar'aHairBalaan.alakc the
hair of t and fluffy. 60 cent by mail or at dmjr
futa. Hicox Chemical Work patchot-ua. N. X.
Caneer, Colter. F.te. Palntaa ntw llnlmant.
Work whlla yoa work. Money back guar
antee. Particular rKKK. Samel ISo. Nu-Korm-L
Laboratory, Culver City. Calif.
PLUTOLOGY
Th acti-nc of xpnaloa and contraction
ot th currency, which eauan aood and
hard time; prlc. paper covr. It ceil I.
O. r. BTKVKNSON
Mlramar Hotl. Santa Monica. California.
JI'MI'inK for Oter IS 'ear th Standard
Remedy for Rheumatism. II. 11 per bottl.
3 for U TS. poMnald. HKCK BROTHKHB,
711 Vancouver Ave.. Portland. Orffnu.
WANTKU All Independent Merchant,
even th amallent. to know how not only
met but heat chain tor prli-ea. Addree
B. KAHDAT2 - QnTONVIU.Bi. MINN.
Rrpmientntiv (Woman). 10-year-old dru
product. Kam ateady Incom. Kicluslv
rlshta. Send 0e. (ull-alied oai-kK. Wher
Laboratorbi. SO Fifth Ava, New York.
MULTNOMAQ HOTEL
4th and PI Portland, Ore.
A Umtvl mhmr Boat art arleoaa)
Fireproof ltoom-bath $2.00 up
Derived from
Use of
Preparations
and fragrant, to cleanse the
pimples, rashes and
1 aicnnt, Bmoota
i '
if
I km !
it av-2m
CASIORM
.. . 1. 1. . i,ni .. TH r 1 1
fii
"VTtJWeTS I