Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.
\ I 14 Arzan * ka OV CRAVURAES OX? TANKS FUMIE b Olive Roberts Barton WHAT HAPPENED IN BOBBY’S ROOM BURROUGHS ~ BRGIN HERP TODAY < 4 zl long journey home pleted In a ¥ t i arch of Lady Jame? . NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY All the > ant to be 1! J — All the litt es id be afraid ° L ut t t t \ ™ i bs ut muK ' . ? great t ephar er a - Vell that funr to vt hants are ve mB Sort . 1 t care.” grow ttle |r 4 om pe a hury on tige I i of The t e ant he auent . fe of we a1 t to w ne t « id -_ ¥ ; 5 ke @ real Us N t t ‘ ov i re ) . t tt od 1 ‘ tecla th t That mak aot Jifter ‘ be : " H a ge I heartily paid the } a5-Y ‘ asked th ¥ Que ° w 5 frie n 1 ¥ At first es ap su W . * wishes |§ . 4 , 2a 4) * What i ye asked the ‘ t aid Palry Queen tu t Twh a wir « . k Perhaps they have another wis ~ . . n book ™ could grant,” said Nat 1 t Mave mu aked the Fairy g (You & I fore queer | female B wi a a orde The animals put Uy eads to ~ j curs that wether and whispered eS sete. mn) no N aid th e | direct of e f We have ‘dec a he he A so Bol? better than nyone ols to Umanga e fat ma a * world, and ell stay Just arce urtostt t ure, Bwana, witheut pay- a es 3 i being aroused by the unusual “replied th ef. She nodde ' queen But I should like to see the big 1 ornamentation of theae ed two day's since and last 5 . know sighed the camel, | They saw them almost as naked as| ber pups wer ten from Jangerous g. and I leve #o should I,” sighed the ; } s and armed similarly ex at, doubtle A great snake. 4 t a like He v ua,” nald o * unger Man, car-|if you will accept them. I will give | sor ® naked suddenly abe. } All three wore the trap- |) tead a8 many younger and Yea," shouted all the lit on I | Pal-ul prim! and | fatter dogs as you Wiah, for 1am sure | animals just like that ahe und entirely strange to the| that this one would prove poor} “I just thought » e 1 like ay no simple blacks. on But if I 1 xnetly 4 i ur chief?’ asked Tar p h to eat her.” replied mals t « ing to 4 q f > the village | take her € ald fier rm Be Continued) } t ‘i milk fer th and that 1 wa E. A. tervice hearts - Som t x anima! | here bot 7 Among the f ee 1 ‘i t 1 « . ° ent of the je £ e nme m be war ij " f for ds ‘ e ad ¢ . efense e ny my ¢ ea a nade ang y 1am y sight of you. It has or looked at him fn wide amaze, and then broke into a/ its head. seco! m the trail ah “And sor: ND #0 1 Never neglect lame muscles \ | | Jane C! after them ame and w Going around half-crippled by lame muscles is needless — when it’s 20 easy to fet limbered up with this world-famous lini- ment. Pat on gently a little Sloan's. It needs no rubbing. The liniment itself does the whole job. In it are stimulating ingredients that start the blood circulating swiftly through the stiff, painful muscles, and this increased supply of fresh, pure blood washes out fatigue poisons and rebuilds broken-down tisene. Marvellously—your lame ness is gone. Millions know and uve Sloan’s. All druggists have it cents. a oe Kills Sloan’s Liniment “pain Kedah camera "a \ gle onto the edg: CHAPTER U The Training of Jad-bal-ja A Definite Promise Bring in your films developing, printing and enlarging of the supe- rior sort. equipment always in stock, Eastman Kodak Co. Photo Supply Co.) utts that might And or would to too, that his ma to the home of Pi nin ; oT | the cub ted awaited hin | jleave of Umangu and his people and | nave mourned an den | dog still upon & leash. tret~| returned is beyond be 4 y set off Once! snati ba the refo } | | ye young | Wasir £ : | cuddle of one of T shall trembl if i zan’h art rr Rigi: across his et i The al-ja, et | whic pithe }eanth 5 the ; | bone: seg Ps Pahoa lo And in truth, great indeed was the BY} a @ay he became more nccus.|'#0lcing In the huts of the Wasiri. | ef tomed to them and to his foster | 48d » boo night alow, but for j inet ho finally came to accept | M25¥ nights did the dancing and the at hii ae flesh: Of her fled dog | M0lcing continue until Tarzan was | if ee ee on ‘The | COmMpelied to put m stop to the fen- | i ed. Gay the Uviles that he and his family might | @ few hours of unbroken slum- | The spe-man found that not only bad his faithful Waziri, under the equally faithful guidance of his foreman, Jervis, completely d his stables, corrals, and as the native he interior of approached when break from the jun. the roiling plain noment huts, but had resto ? their home had been, the throe 1 filled with suppressed excite. | ¢ bungalow, so t in all outward | |ment, tho none uttered a syllable of |*PPearances the place was procisely | } ihe’ Hobe as hat was ag it had been before the raid of the! i heart of would they 7 | Germans 4 What could they find other than the| Jervis was at Nairobi on the bust- | i ame tangled mass of vegetation that | nets of the estate, and it was some) yy the ape-man had cleared away to| days after their arrival that he re-| SAY ‘‘BAYER ASPIRIN’’ — Gonluine | sulld his home when first he had |trned to the ranch. His surprise ome there with hig bride? jand happiness were no less genuine At last they stepped from the con | than those of the Wasirl. With the | Unless you see the “Bayer Cross” on tablets you are} eating verdure of tho forest to look peop ge Nip pills atti os 2 ; i e) : ue the plain where, the & ne Big Bwana, tister not getting the genuine Bayer Aspirin proved safe | ee ee ee Othe bungas ing to 9 account of the strangs land tt C - rete’ . A < De onee on d 21 bt & ~ bn. and the adventures that by millions and prescribed by physicians 24 years for |'ov had once been clearly diacernitie, aq etaiion the three during Lady i nei a narra rd Greystoke’ capt! ere, and ¥ i : oehyrapeapeicvor oii Rmmaiges (4000 O50 he mar Gt the que i Colds Headache ] sont eae tg: ey eta £ pets the ap nh had brought back es Lok ; virgin! Jane, “It W/ with him, That Tarzan might have { < 4 A there— nere fancied a mongrel native cur was i Pain Neuralgia “But whe aro thowe other things! strange enough, but that he should | bayond |t?” asked Korak. | have adopted a cub of his hereditary | ; are the huts of natives,” re !enemies, Nums and Sabor, seemed | i Toothache Lumbago | plied Tarzan | beyond all belief. And equally sur-| : , e | “The fields are being cultivated-" | prising to them all was the manner Neuritis Rheumatism | exclaimed the woman, \of Tarzan’s education of the oub. © of the outbuildings have; Phe golden lion and hin foster! jbeen rebuilt,"" said Tarzan, “It can| ; | # . J mother occupied a corner of the ape- | Accept only “Bayer” package |mean but one phing—the | Waaltl man's bedroom, many waa the | which contains proven directions. | eye ene io ne orn | HOE each day that he spent in train-| faithful Waz hey have restored and c he m Handy “Bayer” boxes of 12 tablete, the Hun destroyed and are | yng fo ; bth ph ay spotted, | i Also bottles of 24 and 100—Draggints, | watching over our home until walfectiog mow, bur ane tee ee | Aspirin is the trade mark of Dayer Manufacture of Mononceticacidester of Salltyiicactt eturn. apn but one day to grow into a great, ravage beast of prey. As the days passed and the golden | lion grew, Tarzan taught st many | can, ang | ttieks—to fetch and carry, to lie mo- Fara of the Aper, ond /tionieen in hiding at his almost in- |audible word of command, to move |from point to point as ho indicated, to hunt for hidden things by scent jand to retrieve them, and when meat was added to its diet he fed it always in @ Way that brought grim smiles to the savage lips of the Waaiti war. | \riors, for Tarzan had built for him | dummy in the semblance of man and {the meat that the lion was to cat was fastened always at the throat of the! ; dummy ‘ever did the manner of! layton, an¢ a long absence and with Jad-bal-ja, the golden e’ll bring out all . . 1 y. ? 4 e there is in the expo- jfeeding vary, At a word from the, Tarzan of the Apes, reared by be: I] ae. Ps apeman the golden ion would|among beasts, could have overcom ways ea ime sures. That’s a definite grouch, belly to the ground, and then |the savage blood-lust of the carn{Vore | —emgensensesjsteneeengersteeneeteen eer ‘ Tarzan would point at the dummy jand rendered his natural instinct sub: | on our part. | Pees , Pare ‘and whisper the single word “Kill.” | servient to the will of his master. It where * s1: is store specializes in ff) However hungry he might be, the|took weeks and months of patient Try this never-failing treatment ; fatec ta" suuve: toward | endeavor te y |lion learned never to move toward} |his meat until that single word had/ been uttered by fis master; and then with a rush and @ savage grow! it |dove straight for the flesh, While it| was little it had difficulty at first in | {elambering up the dummy to the! [savory morsel fastened at the figure’s | throat, but as tt grew older and} larger it gained the objective more | casily, and finally a single leap would carry it to its goal and down would | xo the dummiy upon its back with the young lion tearing at its throat Th a8 that, of all | te ethers, was most difficult to learn ' + Brownie and Graflex as of every style and (Northwestern 1415 Fourth Ave, fas thoughtful of her unless there is| éerton said that the hundred dollars a} from my son if it has to be dictated ~ ills Bros Coffee-' ‘ the pride of the West producing world. Blended with rare skill, roasted to a turn, ground HAT a treat to the senses awaits the visitor to this great empire of the West—the sight of with special machinery.and packed | our scenic glories; the touch of a ina special way. In all'truth, The western handshake; the taste of our Recognized Standard. Hills Bros, marvelous western coffee, and, yes, Coffee is economical to use, ' even hearing what the West thinks ee | of Hills Bros.! No wonder this great country is 1 known as the home of wonderful coffee. It is! Break the vacuum seal of a tin of Hills Bros. Coffee and inhale that rare aroma. Brew a cup and Lift it to'your lips! In all : the world, no coffee like this! Because—there is no finer coffee to be had. It is the cream of the : crop—not of one plantation, but of : the plantations of the entire coffee- ©1925, Hille Bros, The most popular boudelt of the moment is of 4 |satin edged with maribou oF of exactly the same sheds << BLACK PAJAMAS A most attractive pair of 1 }in New York for a few weeks. Said jshe knew of a quiet place where wo might go, and that I would probably have @ good time at the theaters, IT told her that I did not e for the modern theater at all, that I had} been brought up to feel that the sight of half-dressed women and | more or less drunken men was noth-|are made of biagk satin wil jing that a decent woman should put/of pleated white chiffon ave | herself In the way of seeing. jneck and wrists. i (An Intimate story of innermost emotions revealed by private letters) LETTER FROM MARY ALDEN Walter Burke and even moving pic-| I would like very much to come| PRESCOTT '*) JOHN ALDEN — |ture actrossgs while sho leaves her |over to Pittsburg, I think that Les JEWEL TRIMMING PRESCOT), CONTINUED }own husband's mother completely lie should consult me about arrang-| Rhinestones and pearls ‘The more I see of modern young) Ut of her life. ing her house. She know that Ij Small designs are & women, John, the more I am con-| I expect, of course, that she feels/have been a housekeeper for many | Method of trimming strained to say that I am glad my/| that she has done her duty when she | years, and sho has always admired | of chiffon or crepe. life is nearly over. 1 do not think| Provided for me a nurse, but I some: jmy beautiful old colonial furniture. | > that I can bear to live much longer | times fecl that Miss Anderson |s|Had sho been really a daughter to} PLAID KASHA in a world tiated by these girls; ™More of of a keepor than a friend.|me I had intended to give it all to} A coat of plaid — and thetr p Of course, I know | She seems to thwart mo on every oc-| her, But not knowing whether my | often worn over @ dress ae that you Are very much In love with | caslon, and if I do not give in to her| cherished family heirlooms would| kasha, the plain note Leslie, ‘The reason I know this ia/#he threatens to leave. “She knows 1) look well in her acheme of household | Color with the dominant Re THE because «ince you have been married | Could not get along without her. | decoration, 1 of course cannot really | Plaid, = to her you hi paid no more atten-| 1 am rather curious to know if you | feel that she would care for them. tion to me than you did before. A/|Treally dictated that letter to me. Jf! You may tell Mrs. Atherton for me mother does not expect her son to be | YOu did, you will know that Mrs. Ath-| that I would rather not have a letter | “ask tor Horlicks some woman about who can tell him| week was in addition to the salary/to her or to any other stenographer, what a mother’s heart needs and de.| that was paid to Miss Anderson andjand I shail insist, John, upon your aires. the rent of my rooms at the hotel. | taking the time to write mo in long I have been greatly disappointed In I do not think I will stay at the! hand in the future. Leslie. 1 cannot understand why she, #otcl much longer, Affectionately your mother, makes friends of such women as Mra,| Miss Anderson seemed to think the | MARY ALDEN PRESCOTT. jother day that I might enjoy being! (Copyright, 1925, NEA 2. : on iM and it is doubtful that any other than endeavor to accomplish this single | item of the lion's education, which | consisted in teaching him that at the | wor fetch” he must find any indi- ted object and return with {l to his master, oven the dummy with ram meat tied at its throat, must not touch the m the dummy nor any oth: he was fetching, but place them care: | fully at the ape-man’s feet. After- | ward he learned always to be sure of | his reward, which usdaly consisted in a double portion of the meat that) he loved best (Continued in Our Next Issue) "SALAD A” TEA. H4ai is used. Have you tried it? CHOICEST INDIA, CEYLON ana JAVA TEAS He & 1, C, COOK, MA In-0869, EL 1ot-0350, DISTRINUTORS article that | i GASOL!*