INDIGESTION GOES QUICKLY, PLEASANTLY When you suffer from heartburn, gas or Indigestion, iCs usually too much acid in your stomach. The quickest way to stop your trouble Is with Mi illlps" Milk of Magnesia. A spoonful in- water neutralises many times its volume in stomach acids Instantly. The symptoms disappear In five minutes. Try Phillips' Milk of Magnesia, and you will never allow yourself to suffer from over-aeldlty again. It is the standard antl-add with doctors. Your drugstore has Phillips Milk of Magnesia, with directions for use, to generous 25c and 50c bottles. IIULTNOMAH HOTEL 4th ui Pi Portland, Ore. A Bole I mcmem mr trrlrmm Fireproof Room-bath $2.00 up rhoasantlg of Dollars l"uid fur Joke. Sent H tor list of buyers and our wonderful eo snerallv H'llln plan. Soutrn-ru Press Syndicate, Box 1161. Atlanta, Ga. BEWARE KNIFE jneini or snjiensive onerttton imnKMMry.tsapp'IC'tionCAn' BOIL prompttysttiwpsKV. ripen and heaia worst bo often ever mjht. Get CarboM today frees drujeist. Grod K torts. bHw, Sourlock-rlsal Ce Nssrnille, PARKER'S HAIR BALSAM Ai tiaooTH Dudro Stops Hair railing Beauty to Gray and Faded Haiti TTH-nx Vijrm W l . I'at.-rvcrii.S T FLUKES TON SHAMPOO IriesU for uu in oonrctioa with Park er aHair Balaam. M akr tha hair toft and fluffy. 60 tents by mail or at drug gist iliaccx CtwmicaJ Worka Fatchoiru N.X Stair About as Good as Mountain Climbing "Only optimism can succeed In the motion-picture business," declares Ce cil De Mille. "The pessimist is fore doomed to failure. In my last pic ture I had a young extra girl who, 1 think, will some day become a star. She has an amazingly buoyant out look on life. "I was talking to her for a mo ment between scenes. In one breath be confided that her favorite sport was mountain climbing and in the next that she adored Hollywood. "'But don't you miss the moun tain climbing?' I asked. 'There are no real mountains within thirty or forty miles of Hollywood.' " 'But I don't need them here,' she replied with a happy smile. 'You tee, I live on the fifth floor of an apartment that has no elevator, so ( get all the climbing I need and the mountains are never missed.' " Those Title! Professor Ellen, we will go to the theater today. There is a play for mathematicians. Wife Keally. What Is called? Professor "The Eternal Triangle." Deutsche Illustrlerte, Berlin. Hit Schooling -Joe, am 1 the first girl you ever kissed?" "Yes, dear, I got my tech nlque at the movies." Dr. Pierce' Pleasint Pellets are the orit inal little liver pills pat up 60 years ago. They regulate liver and bowels. Adv. Men remember when l bey are for gotten. When remembered, they, themselves, forget. Austin. A man cannot have an Idea of per fectlon In another, which he was nev er sensible of in himself. Steele. -,." ...i Lucky Find When we find some slight help makes a marvelous improvement In t child, we wonder why we hadn't thought of doing it long ago. Here's a good example: "My lit tle girl was doing fairly well," says Hrs. M. Soltenbach, 5005 Eralle Street, Omaha, Neb., "but I noticed ihe didn't eat right and didn't have much energy, "Our doctor had recommended California Fig Syrup, so I gave her tome. .She improved so much I wonder I didn't do something for her stomach and bowels before. She has a good appetite und digestion and plenty of energy, now." To point up a child's appetite, Increase energy and gtrength, assist digestion and regulate the bowels there's nothing like California Tig Syrup. Doctors advise It to open bowels In colds or children's dis eases; or whenever bad breath, coated tongue, etc., warn of con etlpatlon. Emphasize the name California when buying, to get the genuine. tftXATiVE-TOHICor CHILDREN AT mm -.in "U I ! il r, m . t,' .. .: j The Plai br Doubladay Porta Co., Ino. THE STORY Wltft hit English wit. Cthr. Ina, and ton, Jm, lUnry llu I'.ln. Frtnch ttttltr In Caaada In 174J, culttvau a (arm adjaoant to th TontaUr teljnaurla. A th ttory optn th Bulalnt r r tumltif from a visit to th Ton tturs. Catherlna'i wandarlng brothar, Hapslbah, mtthra with prsntt for th family. To Jaania h fivi a platol, blddtnf him ptrftct himself In marksman ahlp. Iltpslbah fear for th safety of th BuUIn In their Isolated position. Jeem flahts with Paul Ttche, cousin of ToU nett Tonteur. whom thy both Jor. Next day Jtemt culls at th Tonteur horn and apologlict for brawling in front of Tolnette. Th Tonteur ko to Quebec Four year past. Vr between Brit ain and Krnno flames. Jrems re turn! from a hunt to find his horn barrifd and his father and mother slain. II g-oea- to th n'lneurle and flnds th manor destroyed and Tonteur and hi servant dead. CHAP.TER V Continued 11 Against this clouding of hU senses he felt himself struggling as if swim ming in an empty space. He picked np his hatchet and his bow and rose to his feet He had not lost sound of the mill wheel even when Tolnette's sobbing had seemed to be at his side. It was crying at him now, but before he turned toward It his eyes rested on Tonteur's wooden peg. It was half cut off. a mark of grim humor on the part of a butcher. The mill wheel was forcing his attention to that fact, "Look look look" It said, and then repeated the old song, calling him an English beast. He faced it in a flash of resentment, not because of the wheel alone but on account of what lay at his feet and what he knew he would find nearer to the walls of the manor. His mind was hurling anathema at the wheel. He wanted to tell it that it lied. In this hush of death he wanted to cry out that he was not of the murderous breed who had sent the killers. Troof was over there, in the valley which at last was well named. His mother. His father. His Cncle nepsibah. Not one of them were dead by Its hand. He hal been left alive by chance. That was proof. The wheel was wrong. It lied. He looked at Tonteur again, strengthening himself to go a little farther and find Tolnette He knew bow !t would be. Tolnette's young body, even more pitiful than his moth er's. He forced himself to turn toward the smoldering walls. Tolnette dead! His father might die, and Tonteur, and ali the rest of the world but these two, his mother and Tolnette, insep arable In his soul forever, the vital sparks which had kept his own heart beating how could they die while be lived? He advanced, pausing over one of the slaves, a woman almost un clothed. Inky black except the top of her head, which was red where her scalp was gone. In the crook of her arm was her scalplfss Infant. White, black, women, babies the loveliness of girlhood it made no difference. Jeems scanned the earth beyond her, and where the smoke lay in a white shroud he saw a small, slim figure which he knew was Tolnette. Another young body might have lain in the same way, Us slenderness crumpled In the same manner, a naked arm re vealed dimly under its winding sheet of smoke. But he knew this was Tolnette, The dizzying haze wavered before his eyes again, and he put out his hand to hold it back. Tolnette. Only a few steps from him. Dead, like bis mother. Odd went ahead of him halfway to the still form and stopped. He sensed something Jeems could not see or feel through the smoke mist which un dulated before their eyes. Warning of Impending danger confronted the dog, and he tried to pass it to his master. In that moment, a shot came from the mill, and a flash of pain darted through Jeems' arm. He was flung backward and caught himself to hear echoes of the explosion beating against the forested hills and the wheel at the top of the mill screaming at him. He answered the shot by dropping his bow and dashing toward Jhe mill. Death might easily have met him at the threshold, but nothing moved in the vuultlike chamber ho had entered, and there wus no sound in it except that of his own breath and his racing heart. Odd went to the flight of nar row steps which led to the tower room and told Jeems that what they sought wag there. Jeems ran up, his hatchet raised to strjke. He must have been an unforgettable and terrifying object as he appeared above the floor into the light which forced its way through the dusty glass of three round windows over his head. There must even have been a little of the monster about him. Ho ha4 left some of his garments with his mother and father, and his arms and shoulders were bare. Char and smoke and the stain of earth had disfigured him. His face appeared to be painted for slaughter and a greenish fire glit tered In the eyes that were soekUig for an enemy. Blood dripped to the A S ms o By JAMES OLIVER CURWOOD oaken planks from his wounded arm. He was a Frankenstein irmly to kill, dlshevelment and fury concealing his youth, hli stature tnndo appalling by his eagerness to leap at something with the upraised hatchet. If the hatchet had found a brain, it would have been Tolnette's. She faced him as he came, holding the musket which she had fired through a sltt in the wall as If she still pos sessed faith In Its power to defend her. Her eyes had in them a touch of madness. Yet she was so straight and tense, waiting for death, that she did not seem to be wholly possessed by fear or terror. Something unconquer able was with her, the soul of Tonteur himself struggling In her fragile breast to make her unafraid to die and giving to her an aspect of defiance. This courage could not hide the marks of her torture. Death hud miraculously left her flesh untouched In passing, yet she stood crucified In the mill room. Expecting a savage, she recognized Jeems. The musket fell from her hands to the floor with a dull crash, and she drew back as If retreating from one whoso presence she dreaded more than that of a Mohawk, until her form pressed against the plled-up bags of grain, and she wus like one at bay. The cry for vengeance which was on Jeems lips broko In a sobbing breath when he saw her. He spoke 7 . I J SaTJL? ' She Had Tried to Kill Him. And He had Gone Away Leaving Her Aliv.I her name, and Tolnette made no re sponse except that she drew herself more closely to the sacks. Odd's toe nails clicked on the wooden floor as he went to her. This did not take her eyes from Jeems. They were twin fires flaming at him through a twilight gloom. The deg touched her hand with his warm tongue, and she snatched it away. She seemed to grow taller against the gray dusk of the wall of grain. "You English beast !" It was not the mill wheel this time, but Tolnette's voice, filled with the madness and passion which blazed from her eyes. With a sudden movement she picked up the musket and struck at him. It It had been loaded, she would have killed him. She continued to strike, but Jeems was conscious only of the words which came from her brokenly as she spent her strength on him. He had come with the English Indians to destroy her people! He and his mother had plotted It, and they were alive while every one who belonged to her was dead 1 The barrel of the gun struck him across the eyes. It fell against his wounded arm. It bruised his body, Sobblngly, she kept repeat ing that she wanted to kill him, and cried out wildly for the power with which to accomplish the act as he stood before her like a man of stone. An English benst her people's mur derera fiend more terrible than the painted savages . . , She struck until the weight of the musket exhausted her and she dropped it. Then she snatched weakly at the hatchet in Jeems' hands, and his iln- Specialists Seeking to Ancient literature, telling of the adaptions of honey to suit the vary ing tastes and needs of past centuries, provides clues which scientists are now following to revive old uses and to develop the present possibilities of the product The early Itonwins In their writings often mentioned the honeybee and honey. Among the products they mentioned frequently are water honey, salt-water honey, water mead, rose honey, honey foam, and honey vine gar. The United States Department of Agriculture Is studying the chemical properties of honey and methods of in ducing chemical changes In It that will open the field for new honey prod ucts. Specialists are perfecting meth mm 1SSBBS oraoarr. WNU 8ervtca, gers relaxed about the helve. With a cry of triumph, she raised it, but before the blow could descend she sank In a crumpled heap upon the floor. Even then her almost uncou selous lips were whispering their de nunciation. He knelt beside her and supported her bead In his unwounded arm. Foi a moment It lay against his breast Her eyes were closed, her lips wers still. And Jeems, sick from her blows remembered his mother's Ood and breathed a prayer of gratitude because, of her deliverance. Then he bent and kissed the uioutti that had cursed him. CHAPTER VI Tolnette was alone when she awoke from the unconsciousness which had come to easo the anguish of her mind and body. It seemed to her sho win coming out of sleep and that tho walls which dimly met her eyes were those of her bedroom in the manor. That n truth whose evidence lay $o horribly about her could be reality and not a dream broke on her sense dully at first and then with a swift understand. log. She sat up expecting to see Jeems. But he was gone. She was no longer where she had fallen at her enemy's feet. But Jeems had made a resting place for her of empty bags and must have carried her to It She shivered when she looked at the mus ket and the stain of blood on the floor. She had tried to kill him. And he bad gone away, leaving her alive) As had happened to Jeems, some thing was burned out of her now. It had gone In the sea of darkness which had swept over her, and she rose with an unemotional calmness, as If the tower room with Its dust and cobwebs and store of ripened grain had become her cloister. Passion had worn Itself away. If a thought could have slain, she would still have wreaked her ven geance oo Jeems, but she would not have touched the musket again that lay on the floor. She went to the head of the stairs and looked down. The son of the Eng lish woman had left no sin except the drip of blood that made a trail on the step and out of the door. Exultation possessed her as she thought how nearly she had brought to the Bulalns the same shadow of death which they and their kind had brought to her. The thrill was gone In a moment. The red drops fascinated her. painted brightly by the sun. Jeems Bulnln out there with her dead! The boy her mother bud tried to make her regard with bltterneis and dislike from childhood a man grown into an English moniter! She struggled to bring back her power to bate and her desire to kill, but the effort she made was futile. She fol lowed the crimson stains. AH about her was the haze of smoke, soft and si HI In the air. In the dis tance, obscured by the fog which rati from the smoldering ruins, he s.iw a form bent grotesquely under a bur den. It wus a shnpeloxs thing, dis torted by the sun and tho smoky spindrifts dancing before her eyes, but living because it was moving away from her. Behind It was a smaller object, and she knew the two were Jeems and his dog. She watched until they were blotted from her vision, and minutes passed before she followed where they hnd gone. Jeems must have seen her, for he re appeared with the dog like a were wolf at his heels. lie had found a coat somewhere and did not look so savage, though his face was disfig ured and bleeding where she had struck hlra with the barrel of the musket. She tried to speak when be stopped before her. Accusation and a bit of ferocity remained In her soul, but they were Impotent in the silence between them. Ills eyes meeting hers steadily from under the lurid brand of her blow, seemed less like a mur derer's and held more the gaze of one who regarded her with a cold and ter rible pity. He did not put out a help ing hand though she felt herself sway ing. He was no longer youth. He was not even Jeems Bulaln. But bis voice was the same. "I am sorry, Tolnette." (TO HE CONTINUED,) Extend Use of Honey ods of making honey candy, and some manufacturers already have secret processes for making this confection. Many housekeepers now use honey to sweeten beverages, cereals, and cakes and generally In cooking. It Is also used as a sirup on waffles and hot cakes. Eminent physicians proclaim that honey contains the most benefi cial of the sugars. Chinese L'psticW In 1730 Among tho Chinese paintings on glass recently shown in a London gal lery was that of a Chinese young woman at her toilet in a well-to-do home. Although the date of this pic ture Is about 17:i0, the miss wus usllig a lipstick with ali the skill of a mod ern flauuer. ' Daddy 5 Mveiiis, raiiy Tale aWf GI-WIAM DQNNER CUmlatMlf ft VlltIM NTVUtH HVtnw i-n.i-n THE SQUIRRELS Some squirrels heard a great many sparrows fighting about some crumbs. They came along and blinked theti eyes and waved their bushy tails. "It's a good fight," said one squir rel. ''Let's rush In ami rescue th crumbs while they ur fighting. "They won't see half the pieces they have dropped. We will be nbl to get It all away from them or least almost all and they will never notice It at all. "Ah, let's do that.'1 "All right," said a second squirrel, and all the squirrels said it would b quite tho finest idea In the world to get the crumbs from the naughty sparrows. They were absolutely sure that tht sparrows wonld not notice them, for by the way they were quarreling th(j showed that they were tremendous!) ! pn ii n u,i in in mil ii mnniij'niii; ii Th Squirrel Hurried Off. Interenied In their fight ami were no ticing nothing el He. "This way This way!" railed the squirrels who were leading the oth ers. "This way, this way," they all an swered, and followed along. And with their eyes blinking, their tails raise 1 high In the air, they start ed to grab the crumbs. But oh me, oh my, that was only the beginning of a far blcger fight. The sparrows will fight all day gainst Mich other. They will quar rel and grab each other's food, but the moment another bird or any other rreature comes Into the fight they will all Join together against the out sider. There will be no taking sides then Enrh sparrow is for all the rest of the sparrows. When they saw that the squirrel were trying to enter the fluht and get the bread crumbs they paid all tin-It attention to getting the squirrels away. And with so few squirrels and so many sparrows the squirrels hurried off. The sparrows were far too strong fighters for a few squirrel to stand, anil there were such a lot of spar rows. Oh, there were so many of them. And when the sparrows bad all won the fight, and when each one had stood by the other, they began onc more to fight over the crumbs, against each other! But tho crumbs were pretty well scattered by this time, and the spar rows-had had enough fighting, even for them, In one day, so they all ! gan nibbling at the crumbs lying all about the ground. And as for the squirrels well they went back to their trees and found a good feast awaiting them. In fact it had been ready for them when they had gone off to tight th sparrows t RIDDLES Vhlch Is the oldest tree? The elder, What tune mukes everybody glad) Fortune. What ship does everyono like) Friendship. What Is that which has a mouth, but never speaks? A river. , Why are some boys like wool? Be cause they shrink from washing. You can hang me on the wall, but If you take me down, you cannot hang me up again. Wall paper. Why should ladles squeezing wet linen remind us of going to church 1 Because the "belles are wringing," Why are washerwomen Uie greatest travelers? They are continually crossing the lino and going from pole to pole. What Is the difference between an honest and a dishonest laundress) One irons your linen and the other steals It. Why are washerwomen the silliest of women? Because they put out their tubs to catch soft water when it rains hard. How many bushels of enrth can you take out of a holo that is thrct feet square und three feet deepl None, II hud all beeu taken out. 0 -Y . : V j V i lt ' Run-Down,Weak, Nervous? To have plenty of Arm flush and tni ilillity to do a big day's work and (eel "like a two-your-old" at night, you must relish your food and properly di gest it. If you can't eut, can't sleep, can't work, just give Titulaa tho chance to do for you what It lias dona (or millions, Mrs. Fred Weetin, of 387 K. 57th St. North, Portland, Ore., says: "Tan laa cured my stomach trouble com pletely after three years suffering. It built mo up to perfect heullh, with a tain of 27 lbs." Tanlao Is wonderful for Indigestion gas pains, nausea, diulmw ami headaches. It brings back lost ap tite, helps you digest food, and gain strength and weight. No mineral drugs; only roots, barks and herbs, nature's own medicines. Less than 2 tents a doao. (Jot a bottle from your druggist. Your money back If it doesn't help. ft- -'nn m ft h ASSURED TREATMENT Willi today fin FKI K b dwriMim the III. C J. llrun turnout nin-uilkal ii)ihiJiil Irml- Inil I lies and mhrf KciUI and Loin ailments, khkh uu ,t ilulwl. AlHiHfidlIUnf our kh II m aiusm r. TO KI.IMINAI K I' I U.S. o null if hnw irvfi. (lit r r- a iiMri .mi i ,m ir .M n 11 r. RtUCKPT RECTAL COLON CLINIC MIHTI AN TV r A T T I ,. aunsii J" "J ,f " ' '"'' CHICKS Attuning new ,iw Pti. e on WorMs' Itacnri! W, L, tie! nil hravy tirrcilt. IW'i live OVIetery (unratileod. 10 years reputation your auf,guuril. Agem wanted. Ql HIT Ht HY...Jar TM frCO Ursl Avnu Seattle. Wash. Caught tb Raider When sinus and other warnings failed to halt raids on bis henhouse, Milton Strevlg, farmer near York, Pa., planned a trap for tho Intruder. Warned by the trap of the presence if the visitor, Strevlg armed himself with a shotgun and culled on the alder to come out of the chicken coop, Uecelvlng no answer, Strevlg ;atitlously opened the door, expecting desperate rush. Instead large ipossum scurried out. Strevlg $lwt It Its hhlo liiensured 40 Inches to 'ength and 21 Inches In width. mil Rats Without Poison A tVotv Etitirmlnaiorthat Won't Httl Uvemtocb, Poultry, Oog; Catat or even BUtby Chick K R Ocanhe Hard shout ttie tinrrve m or poul rr yard with abwluta Si.lrlr as It contains B leaifly polio. K K Ota mail of S-iulll. as rtconv Iwmlrd by U.a Drpt.oi Afrk ullurt.oven (trie sndnthe Connahle irorra which Inturrt ma a Imum strength. Use j by County Aer-nt ire mnil al-sllllng campalgne. ttoaey-Sadl Cuarsnte. Insist neon K K I), the original Squill ester tilnator, All ilruKitiats.r-miltrysuftily and seed bours, 7V, II 7 Z in. Illri-.t l( ilr.lrr caliuol 'upply you K K O Co., &irlngftc!d, Ohio. KILLS-RATS-ONLY Charge the Motorists a Fa Jaywalker So many people are truck by autos while ullghtlng from street cars. Htreot Cur Official -Yes, but those peon I c have paid their fares. It's Mils running over people who are waiting to get on that makes me 'iiud. Pathfinder Miiga.llii', Our Unknown Relative Not one person In ten can tell you the names of their grandparents and where they were born, American Magazine, None but the guilty know the with ering pains of repentance. Ilosva Gallon. DON'T WITH COLDS Sluggish Intestinal aystcms lower re. slutance to colds. Cleanse them with Fccn-a-mJnt, the modern chewing gum laxative. Gentle, safe, noa-habll-forming. More effective because you ;icic it Feenmint sna n VQR CONSTIPATION i :X "r . . tVJ'JMh u r- I 1 mil iiMeja 2 .- many om tAiJu. Itlr me ctNiiiNf TTT fFcetfa:mint 1 I Tht Chewing Cum LAXATIVE j J, I'vr Adulti and ChiUien j j Sfy No Taste Jpfl mrmmwmn am in mm iimm