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42 wasans ; 3! ) A e, ST REGIN HERE TODAY Bess Gilbert, Ned Cornet and the Iatter's fianeee, Lenare Hardenworth are shipwrecked and they take refuge on an isia and his Indian wife, master of the island, is brutal Lrags to Ned and the girls that means to make them his slaves he prisoners build & cabin their master give Lenore is ton weak to work se ntire hurden falls to Bess and They are driven by Doomsdor( they fall unconseions. After the cabin is fAinished Dooms dorf announces that he hin prisoners do all his winter trap- ping, | protests that they know nothing of the work' but Doomsdors says they will have to learn, Doomsdort, He the Ned until means to hape Y ON WITH THE STORY ‘om are four ¥ lines, and wduny line—that is, they take fonr and Nve duys respectively to get around i eachy one I've built o series of huts, or shacks, all of them with a stove and supplies and food and you put up in them for the night ‘They are a day's march a t, giving you time to jiek up your skins, reset, and o0 on, ay you go “You'll be away from me and this cabin for days at a time, but if you're fAguring on any advantage from that just put it out of your mind, the sooner the hefter, Mayhe you think you can sncak enough time to make & boat, smuggie it dowm to the water, and cast off, “‘Let ‘me assure yon you'll have no' thne'to sneak.. You'd never get more than'a’ few ‘hours' start; and they wouldn’t help yvou all on the ice fields! I try the no need to mention penalties, You already know about that, “And maybe youw wrve s thinking it will be easy enongh' to stack+ not try- ing to catch muvir,'so you wen't have many skins to flesh wird streteh —may- he hiding what you do cateh, Tl Just say this, I have a pretty good idea how this country runs-—just how many skins each line vields with fair trapping. I'm going fo increase that estimate by 20 per centg—and that's to be your minimum. | won't say what that amount is mow. But if at the end of the season vou're short—by one skin—Ilook out! It means that you'll have to he ahdut 20 per cent smarter and more industrious than the average trapper.” “But man—"" Ned protested, not experainced, “You'll learn quick enough. you the dominant race? And I w you again--you'd hetter drop tears every time you find where Aren't wolverine has been along and eaten [ \Were very simpie to follow, an ermine out of a trap The man was not jesting, knew him well enongh by now; the _plercing glitter of his keen, gray cyes, the odd fixation about his pupils that was always manifest when he was most in carnest, was plainly in evi- dence now . Thus it was with the most profound amazement that Le- nore’s companions. suddenly saw her beautiful mouth curling in a smile, For themselves they were lost in despair. All too plainly Doomsdorf had merely hinted at the cruel rigors of the trapper's trail. Yet Lenore was smiling. + Then Ned saw, with a queer tug of his heart, that the smile not meant for him. Lenore was smiling at Doomsdor 8he was looking straight into his gra eyes. Her cheeks were flushed a lovely pink; her eyes were smiling 100;, she presented an image of in- effable heauty. “I'm afraid T wouldn't good to you, as a trapper auietly “I'm afraid I'd only get in the ) and scare the little—ermines, you call them?—out of the country Mr. Doomsdorf, do you know how well I can keep house?" And the wile was not without re- sults. The usual scoffing refusal did not come at once to the hearded lips. It Wi be much way Perhaps the master was flattered that | Lenore was so tamed, perhaps he wished to reward her attitude of friendliness so that Bess might take example, “You want to stay here with Sinly and me, eh?" he commented at last. | ON A PULLMAN WHO put the “sleep” in Sleeping Car? | Nobody! It was a PILL, A pill made it possible to sleep restfully in a Pullman, and leave the train next morning with clear head, bright eyes—fullof enthusi- asm for breakfast and “pep” for the new day. Here’s how: Just before you peel down the sheets, take two Beecham’s Pills. This is the pleasant, sure way to attune the organs of digestion and elimina- tion to normalcy, and thus assure a night of tranquil | repose. At All Druggists—25¢ and 50c she began | her voice of cloying sweetness. | E ISLE OF RETRIBUTI tv O LWLE, BROWN & COMMNY, 422 1 inhabited solely by a man | 't he | and | them an old stove, | We're | v | orde jtter | SWINging back to the home cabin in a|the thicket beside | home cabin, four d; | danger of going astray. | him ON 180N A’.Q..m ——— ol . | “Well, Sindy might H'ie some help. I'm willing=-but, I'll leave it up to| your two friends. They'll have to) work all the harder to make up for especially Hess I was going to have you two girls work together," He watehed Ned's face with keen- est interest The younger man flushed in his earnestness, his ador. ing gaze on Lenore “I'm only too glad ecasier for you,"” he said hoyish smile dim at his lips. the one thing that matters you all 1 can In this cuse, Ress is the ane to say." perceptibly — stiffened as turned to less It didn't flatter her that her lover should even take Hess into his consideration, She had grown accustomed to receiving his every duty Mt it eame about that Lenore and her little jealousies did not even find o make | his crooked, “That's to help though | which to start forth, | | | | T™H SQUAW AND STARTED UP FROM THE MOUTH TOG H BESS RIVER | thought, She re- | her cyes lustrous as if with tears, and she undt-rstnodl wholly the pr that was in his | hear { “Of course she may stay here,” she | said, “We'll make out somehow.” | s trap lines lay in great ling at various points in | to reduce them, and ultimately | a place in Bess' | turned Ned's g Doomsdor cir | They | ex- the the sea. he plained—RBess' line running up They | river to the mouth of a great tribu- | the demon of the snow so far as the tary that flowed from the south, the! camp being known as the Eagle | Creek cabin, thence up the tributary to the forks, known as the Iorks cabin, up the left-hand forks to its mother springs, the Spring cabin, and then straight down the ridge to the Journey in all. | for her guidance a | would remove all drew that Doomsdorf simple map Ned's route was slightly more com- plicated, yet nothing that the veriest | greenhorn conid not follow. Tt took | first to what Doomsdorf called his Twelve-Mile cabin at the . very head of the little stream on . which the home cabin was built, thence fol- lowing a weil-blazed trail along an extensive though narrow strip of timber, a favorable country for mar- ten, to the top of the ridge, around the glacier, and down to the hut that Bess occupied the third night out,| known as the Forks cabin; thence up the right-hand fork to its mother HINPLES ITCHED | AND BURNED | Hard, Large and Red, Lost Sleep. Cuticura Heals, | | —_— “I was troubled with pimples and blackheads. The pimples were . hard, large and red, and were scattered all over my face. I could not sleep in peace on account of the itching and burn. X) ing,and when I scratched | 55" the pimples scaled over. | The trouble lasted for a year and a half. “1 began using Cuticura Soap and Ointment and got relief, and after using one cake of Cuticura Soap and one box of Ointment I was healed.” (Signed) Miss Mar- %{“m C. Barone, 741 Dixwell Ave., lew Haven, Conn., Jan. 16, 1923, Use Cuticura for all toilet purposes. | | i of course it's easy enough' to haul on | the grandest mammals that ever lived, PAIN DAILY HERALD, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15, 1923, IF BACK HURTS BEGIN ON SALTS hsh Your Kidneys Occasionally If You Eat Too Muen Moat, No man or woman who eats lots of meat regularly ean make a mistake by flushing the kidneys occasionally, vayas | a well-known autherity, Toe much meat may form urie aeid, which elogs the kidney pores so that they slug- gishiy Alter or straif only part of the waste and poisons/ from the hlood; then you get sick Rheumatism, headaches, liver trouble, nervousness, constipation, dizziness, sleeplessness, biadder disorders often come from | sluggish kidneys, The moment you feel a dull ache in | the kidneys or your back hurts or if | the urine is cloudy, offensive, full of sediment, irregular of passage or at-| tended by a sensation of scalding, get | about four ounces of Jad Salts from any reliable pharmacy and take a ta- | | Blespoonful in a glass of water before | tion of I, J, breakfast for a few days and your kidneys may then act fine, This fa-| mous salts is made from the acld of | Brapes and lemon juice, ecombined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush clogged kidnoeys | and stimulato them to aetivity, also to help neutralize the aclds n urine wo ! It no longer causes frritation, thus often evding bladder disorders, Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot Injure: makes a delightful efferves. cent lithia water drink, which eve one can take now and then to help keep the kidneya clean and the blood pure, thereby often preventing serious kidney complications, | | spring, the Thirty-Mile ecabin: over |_hr ridge and down to the sea, the Sea cabin; and thence, trapping salt- water mink and otter, to the home cabin, five days' journey in all. As if smiling upon thelr venture, nature gave them a clear dawn in The squaw and Bess started up from the river mouth fogether, the former in the role of teacher; Ned and Doomsdorf followed up the little, silvery creck that rippled past the heme cahin, And for the first time since his landing on Hell | Island Ned had a chance really to lcok about him, “Vhere there.’ timber, marten,” Doomsdorf explained. ““Mar- ten, T suppose vou know, are the most valuable furs we take, outside of silver and blue fox-—and one of the easiest taken,"” He took one of the traps from d’s shoulder and showed him how to make' the set, The hait . was placed a few fect above the trap in this case, on the trunk of the tree, so that to reach it the marten would almost ‘certainly spring the trap. They tramped on, and Doomsdorf pointed out where a wolverine had come down the glade and crossed the | creek. “You'll curse at ‘the very| name of wolverine hefore the season's | done,” Doomsdorf told him, as Ned paused to study the imprint. "HP'H‘ there's trapper is concerned. Nevertheless you'l want to take a skin for ynur; own use, Tt's the one fur for the| Lood of a parka——you can wear ft over your mouth in ffty below and it dpesn't get covered with ice from your breath. But you'll have to be a smarter man than 1 think you are to catch him.” Once they puused hefore a great cruel instrument of iron, seemingly much too large to he a trap, that had been left at the set from the previous trapping season. A “LAft it,”” Doomsdorf advised. Ned bent, finding the iron itself heavy in his arms. “No creature's going to walk away with that on his leg, is he?" “No? That's all you know about it. P’Il admit-that vou wouldn't care to walk with it very far. You would see why I didn’t take it into shelter at the close of the season—although a sled, You notice it's attached a chain, and that chain to a toggle.” “Toggle” was a word that Ned had never heard before but which plainly represented a great log, or drag, to which the trap chain was attached. | It took nearly all of Ned's strength | to push down the powerful springs| and set the great jaws. The fact that he didn’t know just how to go about it impeded him, too. And| when he stood erect again, he found | | Doomsdorf watching him with ko(‘n-} est interest, “T didn't think you were man| enough to do it he commented. | “You'll say that's quite a trap, won't you?" o i “It's quite a trap,” Ned agreed | shortly. “What kind of an elephant | do you take in it?” “No kind of elephant, \ | | at that. T don’t trap them much,| hecause T hardly get enough for their skins to pay for handling them—you | can guess they're immensely bulky. | There's a fair price for their skulls, too, but the skull alone is a fair load for a week back. lLast year 1 necded a few hides for the cabin. Did you ever hear of the Kodiac bear?” | He cut a slender whip, abont ha!l“? an inch in diameter, from a near-by | willow, and thrusting both ends into but one of lamples Fres b ot Sold every. . s e, Oine 50, Taleam 25, $ALESMAN $AM the ground in front of the trap, made | an arch. “When the ald hoy comes | along, he'll life his front foot right | (GRERT A0 LEFT T WATER AUNNING FULL FORCE. IN THE TUS WHEN | T00K A BATH THio MORNING: TLL RUIN T WHOLE | HOUSE.' OH SAMIL ouT SET. WATER RUNNING 1N TH' BATH TuB 1IN T LOWA MIKE. (TR SR BEAT T RIGHT TO ™ _HOUE AN F VARFT THE jover that arch, te aveld siepping un' il po omolafayette Male quar- lanything that leoks so unstable, and | tel |then stralght dewn inte the trap”! "§:40 p m~"Dancing” & talk by | Doomadort explatned 1T it was|Ted Shawn and Ruth 8t Deals, word | heavy woad, he'd rest his foat on it | fameus lancers and nstructers. 1“‘ miss the trap, # p mo~Uoneert by the Lafayelte A few minutes later they came to Male quariet | what seemed to Ned a new and in-| 9:18 p. m—Zelda Bears teresting geological formation " ress and playwright, will seemed ta he @ noisy waterfall of | “The Great American Slogan. three or four feet, hehind which the | 8:30 p. m.—lafayetie Male quartet creek was dammed to the proportions | 9:45 p. m.—Recital by Albert Ker- of a small, narrow laks stein, vielinist; » WGl Journalist ak on (Continued in Our Next Issue) | Medford Hillside, Mass.) R (Vorces o THE AIR | 6180 p. m.—Heston poliee reports, Amrad bulletin board, T80 p. mo~Evening program 1==Twenty-third of a series of talks on New England Pusiness Problems by Arthur R, Curniek of the New England Business Magasine, Musieal program arranged by Nupert Edward RBlanohford, composer and tenor soloist satanday, dept, 15, KDKA { (Westinghouse—1ast Pittsburgh) ' | Wasehall scores Dinner concert by the band under the diree- Vaatine. Baseball pcores m.~—Dinner concert vontin. | 6 p.m 6:16 p. My Westinghou B 5 » Ty 7 ued, 7:80 p, m~"Rringing the World to America,” prepared by “Our World," 7:45 p. m~—"The children's period, ~Haseball vcores, . m.~Humor from “Judge, p. m.—Concert by the West- inghouse band under the direction of T, J. Vastine, assisted by Charles Wil- bur Foden, baritone, 10 p. m.—Hageball scores. WBZ (Westinghouse—8pringfield) m,—Baseball scores of the Fastern, Ameriean and National lcagnes, Dinner concert by the Hotel Kimball Trio under the direction of ! Jan Geerts, direct from the Hotel | Kimball dining room. 7:30 p. m.—Bedtime story for the children. “Bringing the World to America,” prepared by "Our World" | magazin T'his Week's Judge." | 8 p. m.~—Concert by Miss I<mhpryni Graveline, planist; Mrs, Carrie } Goodell, soprano; Mrs. Robert Case, accompanist, 9 p. m.—Basehall scores. Bedtime story for.grown-ups by Orison 8. Mar- den. | | 7 p B, Sunday, Sept. 16, 6:45 p. m.—sSunday vespers on the | Springfield Municipal chimes, trans-| mitted direct from the Campanilie, Eriest Newton Bagg, chime ringer. §:30 p. m.—Church services to be announced by radio. WEAF (American Tel, and 1cl. Co, N. Y.) 7:30 'p. m.—Blanche Kraft Fink, dramatic soprano; Sandor Furedi, vi-| olinist, and Jenna M. Blauvelt, pian- ist. Henry White, baritone, former- | ly with *“Blossom Time."” 9 pi m.—Gimbel Brothers’ New York store. Rose Iladoswisky, pian- ist. 10 p. m.—Amarican Tobacco Com- | pany's “lLucky Strike” orchestra. Sunday, Sept. 16, 0 p. m.—Interdenominational | services under the auspices of the New York Federation . of Churches. Address by R Augustus imle, This shows Jak Dempsey on Commission office weighing in for the Firpo fight. Dempsey weighed 192 1-2. | (American Radio and Research Corp, the scales in the State Athletic! from fresh fruit 6 for $2,50, ‘rial size 25c, L "'Mu | Sunday, Sept, 16, 4 p. m~Twilight program 1=="Adventure Hour" by the Youth's Companion, 2-8tories by Arture, §—Concert program by the Edison Laboragory Phonograph, cour- tesy of Vocallon Hall, §:30 p. m.~Evening program: 1-=12th of a werl of talks “Waorld Unit conducted Federation of Churches, 2—Musical concert apranged Miss Allee McLaughlin, prano, on by by ¥o- econducted | Two generations have used . Tl el as a Laxative Unlike other medicines “ Fruit-a-tives” are made juices combined with tonics and have the natural action of fresh fruit— will always correct Constipation, Bilious~ ness and Sick Headaches, 50c, a box, At dealers or Ogdensburg, N.Y. Eng. Eleetrie Co,—8chenect N. YD) sunday, sept. 18, 4% a, m—8ervica of the Em: uel Baptist church, Bchenectady (General Y. 7:30 p, m~—service of the Emman« uel Naptist church, Schenectady, N, Y, Complete radio sets and supplies at Henry Morans’, 365 Main street, op+ posite Myrtle street.—advt, FATHER FOUND TWO-YEAR i | Was Constipated, Thin, No A hardy woodsmangand enthusinstic fisherman of Maine, bas a very Intor- | esting record to report. He writes: “As a bhoy, thirty-seven yewrs ago, 1 began to take Dr. True's Lljxir, The True Family Laxgtive and W' Once after &§ix months (hauling logs, | He was two-year-old boy very sick. swollen thin, had no appetite, | had from constipation for months, { "I had not been in ‘the house an hour when an elderly neighbor—came in and teld my wife [to get a bottle of Dr. True's Elixir, saying she had seen numbers of simi- lar cases which it had rplieved, “My boy was given a half dozen doses of Dr, True's Elixir. when he passed a lot of worms and Bight away began to show improvement,, he began soon to eat with a relish, pliy around and look healthy. He did not have to take a full bottle, and in later years, | whenever he got off his feet, a few | doses would straighten him out quick. “When.1 get copstipated, a' couple of teaspoons of Dr. True's Eliyir, the True Family Laxative and Wotm Ex- ller fix me O. K. “My son is grown up now and¥hasa family of six children, and h¢ has | I rm Expeller. | came out of the woodsiand found my | {lips, pains in stomach, was sufering.| n8y—a good | OLD BOY VERY SICK Appetite, Had Swollen Lip: Stomach Pains | practically ralsed his family on Dr. | True's Elixir, The children go out and get hold of something, not good for them, It's hard to watch all the chil- dren, and so when they eat something they shouldn't and get sick, Dr. True's Elxip 1s given and the family is put in gond shape again, “I have read In the papers you have to take a half a dozen bottles of same remedies but you don't have to do this with Dr. True's Elixir, Simply a’ few déses and then quick relief. The three generations of my family have hecn kept healthy by using it." Symptoms of worm#¥, constipation, offensive breath, swollen upper lip,de- renged stomach, occasional pains: in the howels, pale face, eyes heavy and | dull, short dry cough, grinding of the teeth, red points on the tongue, start- ing during sleep, slow fever. Nearly every child and grown-ups need a laxative sometime. The fond | parents safeguard the health of their | ¢hildren, as well as their own, by | keeping their bowels in condition. The herbs used in Dr, True's Elixiv are fm- ported and of strictly pure quality. No harmful drugs. Kcep the bowels regu- lar by using Dr. True's Elixir, the True Family Laxative and Worm Ex- peiler, 40c—60c¢—31.20, i e eeeiade | i Snapshots. astor, Advent Lutheran church, New ! Radio choir. Music by the 1%ederation Rario choir, Arthur Billings Hunt, baritone and musical director; Charles | Clement Samborn, Vioiinist, and George Vduse; accompanist. 7:20 p. m.—DMusical program direct | from the Capitol theater, New York | city, by the Capitol Grand orchestra, Erno Rapee conducting, and featured artists from the Capitol theater cast| of artists. 9 p. m.—Organ recital direct from the studio of the Skinner Organ com- pany, New York cit WiZ Hall, N. 7:30 pi. m—I"inal baseball gcores, National and American leagues. 7:35 p. m.—Recital by Helen Par! soprano, and Margucrite Baillie, t. 5 p.m. ary minutes. 8 p. m.—Recital by Helen Farker, soprano, and Marguerite Baillie, pi- anist, (Aeolian Y. City) pian -Harper Brothers' ]Ai‘r‘l'-‘ : | DOESN'T CARE IP TWIS 15 THE DAY FOR CHANGING HATS - HE'S GOING TO WEAR HIS STRAW ALL AND =aBILIOUS? 1f you have bad taste in mouth, foul breath, furred tongue, dull headache, drowsiness, disturbed sleep, mental depression yellow- ish skin—then you are bilious, SCHENCKS MANDRAKE PILLS quickly relieve this disorder, which is the result of liver derangement and severe digestive disturbance. GRCUP OF SMALL BOYS < WONDERS 1P T WAS DIRECTED AT HIM CAR HIS Puraly vezatabla, Plain or Sugar Coated, 80 YEARS' CONTINUOUS SALE PROVES THEIR MERIT. Dr. §. B, Schevek & Son, Philadelphia. Guzz Was Right A SLAVE TO FASHION ATELT HAT ON A HOT DAY LIKE THIS CONGPICUCHS 1T HE NONSENSE BEING SWELTERING N 2 X U HEARS SHCUT TROM PEELS WELL BE LESS DECIDES THAT LOOKS AS 1™ HE WERE ASHAMED OF IT- BITTER TO ACT AS IF HE DIDNT CARE WHAT ANVRODY THOUGHT RIES STRAW IN HAND {C) Wheeler Syn In¢ S Rl o[ MoweR ME w6zl San-po ) @ OTT WORANING, 1— GOL CALM HOURSELF-| LOOKS ROUND T SEE HOW MANY OTHERS ARE WEARING STRAWS FINAL SCORE® DERBIEY G- TELTS, 22 - STRAWS, O} 'By GLUYAS WILLIAMS Portrait of a Rebellious Slave of Fashion. =\ BEGINS TO PEEL THAT EVERY EVYE IN STRE 1$ CENTRED ON Hib « STRAW TURING ABRUPTLY AND MAKES POR THE OLD PELT HAT IN THE COAY CLOSET AT HOME GLovas WiLLiatG