i io 2 VENTORS *Neéded Inventions” and blank form "R REE. Send postcard to-day. . pears “HASKETT, 16 ELGIN STREET, OTTAWA, Canada. PEE, SON OF KAZAN James Oliver Curwad A LOVE EDIC OF THE FAR NORTH Opyright, 1917, by Doubleday, Page & Co, OF KAZAN,” a Vitagraph Picture, With Wolf, to War Dog. fs an Adaptation of This Story people. So Pierrot had whispered, and he was right. In the golden night trapper, and Nepeese,! ine w: y Was wa ane Wig round of their re Willow was waiting, for it was she s hatnis hail: beens” ho had gambled most, and it was she srrot never Jeft the girl| Who must lose or win, She uttered e ished Ms apt of MeTag-jno sound, replied not to the low voice earey ber. tDla) naj Ot Pierrot, but held her breath and (lways ‘accompanied them watched Baree as he slowly faded gades @ pet of the dog, but | Way, step by step, in the Shadows. In casignally struck the dog.|a few moments more he was. gone. It Was then that she stood straight, and hate me, he will hate! cS ined. 5 3 7 xplained The father flung back her head, with eyes that glowed Jn riyalry with the stars. Into the future—for Ne- bed ered. “Baree! “Baree! she Baree! Barce-” XV 11.—Continued the | onic-flled days and cold, gtits ‘of the Red Moon brought. hange in Baree. It was lefrot ‘knew that it nd the first night that back on his haunches at the Red Moon, Pier- red Nepeese for it. dog, ma Nepeese,” he He is half wolf, and fieome to him strong. He forests. He will dis- i. But we must not fie will come bask. Ka, fie back!” © And he rubbed | a the moon-glow until his ed. came to Baree like a be slowly and cautiously iden place. He did not vat first, It made him unéasy, so restless frequently heard him in his sleep. He was muething. Ww, and smiled in his in-jas the wolf runs on the night trail.” nay. Mhenit came It was a night, ous might filled ith moon and the forest, for she had drawn a slow, Which the earth was whit-| waiting bi & Glm of frost, when they | back at her side, But he had come ien during the summer, WW into her face. ‘onic Mie lone wolf-howl, hands to his hand fas the tonguing of ihe pack; “You are right, mon pere,” floated through the vasf sil-| “He will go to the wolves, but he wii mystery of the night, a song, come back. that had come with each for long.” | down through unending | Baree’s head, she pointed ot knew that at last had) other into the pit-like blackness for which Garee bad been| the forest. “Go to them, Barce! r whispered. “But you must You must. Cheanao!” back. CHAPTER XVIII. the mystery and thrill the darkness of the forests & Dhey could hear him fear for Baree. This night his hunt He must have been near the edge ot! ears were attuned to catch the slight- th or two before he was! first Yunt-call of the wolves. | SUvalght as an arrow, and he whined | 1¢ lured them on, Nepeése put ler) adyenture into_the white mystery Of 7 Was coughing all day, dawn, owas) not 1 take him Wunt fer foad. | It was cold, and dt seemed colder} when the glow of the moon and stats j died out, Under his padded feet, es- pecialy in the open spaces, was a thick white frost in which he left clearly at | times the imprint of his and | jclaws. He had travelled steadily for | | hours, a great many miles in all, and | jhe was tired when the first light of the | j day came. } At last it had come—the meeting | | wir that for which he had been seek: | ing. 1t was in an open, lighted by | {the cold dawn—a tiny amphiiheatre e oe ER eS | that lay on the side of a ridge, facing Find Historic Coin the east. With her head-toward him, | and waiting for him as he came out of| PUEGVaL Veo heuetcr e aterest la Mane, the shadows, his scent’ strong in her} betel dh ehh keen nose, stood Maheegim, the young Tha ‘low water level In the castern olf. | Teaches of the St. Lawrénce River has } There was not @ fortnight’s difer- resulted in a discovery of historic in- }ence in thelr age and yet Maheegun Fereehs {was much the smallor of the two; her and’: formerly /pubmergerato,the | body was as long, but she was slim- | depth of six feet now forms the beach jmer; she stood on slender legs that) Prison Island. SORE DS ee aO nay | were almest like the legs of a fox, and| Walking there on earth which, it is be- jthe curve of Ler back was that of a| Hened, was Hever touched ibefore, by | Slightly bent bow, a sign of swifines ad-a British silver'coin {almost equal to the wind. When the sun rose, half an hq Hater, it found them still in the smi open on the side of the ridge,” witif |deep fringe’ of forest under them, andy mich. , so far as it beyond that a wide. timbered plain] steads: “God: XV. | which looked like a ghostly shroud in ,0G va m The reverse side {its tmantlé of frost. | Las oat of arms and the in- | Mubeggun, 100, had. sought the | Seriptidny sic Nomen Domini Bene- jhunt-pack, and like Barée had failed | Uicti.”" ‘The metal is in a fine state }fo catch it. They were tired, a lit- jot preservation. /tle discouraged for the time, and hun-| ‘The fslands in that ‘part of the river | gry—but still allve with the fine.thril) | 2T¢ associated with the early history | of anticipation, and restlessly sensitive | 0f NorthgAmerica and were occupied ness of companionship. | garrisons. | To the flesh-eating wild things of | a eee ¢ it Big Snow was the beginning of the HEALTH BROKE DOWN winter carnival of slaughter and) }long nights, of merciless warfare! After Going to Bed lon the frozen trails: The days of) “Il fs not natural for me to sit down) lof the sky caine the wakening of tis Pecans ate tani \to- tle new and mysterious consclous- jat various times by English and French |the forests, c:awed and winged, tie| | feasting, of wild adventure in the | Could Not Get Sleep for Hours) | of spring and summer—were over; out and write a letter in pralse of a pro-| } HAMILT PILLS FOR-— HEADACHE, BILIOUSNESS| CONSTIPATION, INDIGESTION. KIDNEYS, LIVER, BOWELS. toes size Of an American! it has a profile fign bordered by Th lereatures to the long hunt, and in the | Sask., who further say: first thrill of {t Hving things were | ¥°4rs 180 Lopened a gen: in Storthoaks and placed on Among these, | were Dr. Williams’ Pink » It all new to Baree and Mahee- | Naturally, swiftly: their} Pills. }tomers who were obtaining good re- | sults from taking the pills, and as I mad {gun; their blood ran est sofnds. In this first of the Big Snow they | to try them myself. .\telt-the ‘exiting pulse of a new Mfe.) -“! had been sufferiag: from catarch eee Peoain eeleee ae years, and my inside work had f It invited them to! completely broker ‘the silent storm; and inspired by that indigestion, and could i three or four hours after retiring. I | Northland, the call of all flesh-eating ; writes Mr. Arthur Seguin, Storthoaks, | ‘But three }Itus H. Callaghan, ‘al store here | Maritime was in need of a medicine I decide | Preservation Of Totem Poles Dominion Government Takes Steps to Preserve Indian Relics During the p&st summer consider- able work was accomplished by the Dominion Government through Mr. Harlan I. Smith, of the Victoria Mem- orial Museujn, Ottawa, in connection with the preservation of the totem poles at Kitwanga and. vicinity, along the Jasper-Prince Rupert line of the Canadian National Raflways, where considerable improvement in the ap- pearance of these poles and other In- dian totems was effected, which will result in their lasting for many years. It is the intention of the government to continue the work of preservation of Indian totem poles and other relics next year in the Kitwanga district, and no dotibt this policy will be ex- tended to other districts concerned. Drives Out Rheumatism Subdues Lumbago Brings Ease and Comfort to the Sufferer at Once NERVILINE A King Over Pain Those who seek permanent relief from the grinding pain of Rheumatism and Lumbago should read the letter of F. E. Norinand, from Georgetown, who writes: “I owas fairly erlppled with aching joints and Rheumatism. Nerviline must haye been what I needed, be- cause it cleared up my trouble quick- = “Tf you need a reliable, strong, pene- trating pain remedy, one you can de- pend on, get a 350 bottle of Nerviline to-day; it will make you well quickly. To Save Old Sailing Vessel © Last of the Clippers to Become a ; Floating Museum > The Benjamin F. Packard, last of the clipper ships, has been sayed from the ignominy of the junk plle and Is to be s aad WAYS heen | converted into a floating museum. Announcement was made by Corne- secretary of the Shipping Exchange, New . Far “Slinking low under the bushes, his|moving but little this night, and that! sheiyes a few lines of the best ps a York, that thirty members of the ex- What was it?) taii drooping, his ear aslant—the wolf ‘watchfully and with suspicion. Youth! proprietary medicines, change had decided to’ buy the old three-master from its present owners. As there were three ofemy cus-|He sald the vessel will be stored with marine trophies and anchored off the | Battery. Useful in Camp.—Explorers, sur- yeyors, prospectors and hunters will down my health.| find Dr. Thomas’ Eclectrie Oil very suffered from yuseful in camp. not sleep until jegs are wet and cold it Is well to’ rub When the feet and ‘them freely with the Oll and -the re- He-will never leave me} With one hand still on} she|the misery with welcome relfef, come she said: restlessness of youth and its desires, | they went on | (To be continued) with the} Asthma Brings Misery, but Dr. J. D. them for |haled as smoke or |} chiel passag well how this tremedy would help you as do thous- started the pills, not with any great!sult will be the prevention of pains in | confidence, but by the time I had fin~| the muscles, and should a cut, or con- jdshed the second box I marked much | tusion, or sprain be sustained, nothing Improvement. At the fourth box 1) could be better as a dressing or lotion. felt quite recovered, but continued | some further time. My of | Kellogg's Asthma Rentedy will replace) oongh has left me, the Indigestion has \London’s Lord Mayor : In- | disappeared and I now fall asleep al-| apor it reaches the) ost as soon as I am in. bed. |very innermost recesses of the bron~) ctore now 1 do not hesitate to recom-| + and soothes them. Re-| jend Dr, Williams’ Pink Pills to any|But Sinks Into Obscurity After Term s and easy breathing re- } In my Important Personage who are feeling run-down or without; energy, as I think they are a blessing | to mankind.” | Of Office Is Over The Lord Mayor of London may be No lonegr, as in the days of old, did hold ‘a ands of gra7eful users, there would be} }a package in your home to-night. Try give Dr. Willidms’ Pink Pills a fair it. | trial they will be convinced as was Mr. If others who may-feel skeptical will | justly described as one of the most tconspicudus personages of the realm. In fact, in the eyes ofthe people on ram: Buk SAVES ! ‘< POISONED LIMBS : Tt was jost a bad ankle that mig3t happen anyone.. But it serves to show how quickly blood-poison develops un- less broken tissues have tho protection of antiseptic Zami-Buk. Mrs A. Harrison, Place-de-Armes, Kingston, Ont., writes :-"‘During house hold duties my left ankle was injured by a sharp projection, Stocking dye got into the’ wound and ifs poisoned condition alarmed me. My ankle took a turn for the better, almost as soon as I began with Zam-Buk, This powerful healer dispelled all pain, sappuration and in- flammation. It healed perfectly. Use Zam-Buk also for eczema. rashes. piam- , boils, abscesses. cuts burs, scalds, eve Tom Of Jonah At’ Moml Prophet is Venerated as Saint by Inhabitants of Arab City The Minor Prophet Jonah who haa been the centre of much theological discussion, is supposed to be buried at Mosul and his traditional tomb still stands, on the opposite bank of the Tigris. Mosul is an ancient Arab city, bullt hot on the actual site, as com- monly stat2>4, but on some outlying suburb of Scriptural Nineveh. It was once a very prosperous place, famous for thé manufecture of muslins, which probably got thelr name from this city; but commercial ruin, begun by the rlse.of Bushire, culminated in the opening of the Suez Canal. Mosul possesses a population of curiously mixed religions, whose theological views seem broad enough to satisfy any “Modernist.” Christians and Mohammedans equally venerate the: two local saints, St. George and Jonah. URNS Mix Minard’s with sweet ofl and apply at once, Quick Rellef. MINARD'S LINIMENT| *“T would give anything for your con- sent to marry your daughter, sir.” “You would?” “Yes, sir.” “Yes, sir.” “You're the man next door, are you not?” a 8, ‘sir.’ “Give me your trombone- Genuine Aspirin Proved Safe Take without Fear as Told ly; aod Plerrot, bending ery had risen to the stars and the Hehe caught the Hight oy moon, and in that ery he had, for the | Bevroperty, could: see “hins) first time, sent forth his defiance of night and space, his warning to all the he said in a whis- wild, and his acceptance of the creditors 1 always cross to the opposite |side of the street to { him.” | a apatentinba Brotherhood, hay he call of ithe bloo 5 i es i He ran straight into the darkness z wenn ae “yun aree’s middle of the street. uemewet” in Bare to#the ‘north and west, slinking low }Seguin. You can-get the pills from your druggist, or by mail at 50 cents a \box from The Dr. Williams Medicine !Co., Brockville, Ont. Rub.— “Whenever I see one of m. ayoid’ meeting Quite a Family Affair Two twin brother solicitors, Mr. G. as arrested for walking down the H. Young and Mr, C. V. Young, ap- | |peared in a recent case at Thames Dub.—'T tried that plan once and) {alone the eall of his spect under the bushes, his tail drooping, his = /Police Court, London, one for sforbears for generations) 5) tho night trail. The pack had prosecution ond the other for the de- The two prosecutors were = It was the voice of lis) éwung due north, and was travelling | faster than he, so that at the end of | half an hour he could no longer hear} it. But the lone wolf-how] io the} west was neuer, and three times Baree gave answer to it. At the end.of an hour he heard the| pack again, swicging southward. Pier- | rot would easily have pf ‘ | I | understood. | F A is i } Sit Taking Lydia E. |*fbeir quarry had found safety beyont : cham’s Vegetable water, or in a lake, and the muhekuns/ : Com were on a fresh trail. By this time} pound not more than a quarter of & mile at “4 the forest separated Baree from the} ‘Sask.—“For two or three | lone wol!, but the lone wolf was nlso} Fy 80 Often I would have such }an old wolf, snd with the direct: aig ie and-sides that I could ness and precision of long experience, Berane oone not exen Te in the direction of the| and my head ached, too. atte a 2 at Way about three years, but | hunters, compassing his trai} so that} fismots b married. 1 was he was leading for a point half or} Een mot a house nearer than) 11, r29 quatte fa mile in advance of there.was not a person to | Fee quarters of a a my folks live in AS | the pack. | Flawtold meabout Lydia Eb.) This was a trick of Ux Brother-} pee Toor pon and hood which LUaree liad yet to learn; tool her advice ane) |g the resuli of bis ignorance, aud n mkful for it ever since. hate ig the medicine for three | lack of skill, was that twice witht : can sa) panes Helped me a lot the next half-hour he found ‘hin a Vecnk am glad torec-} 7a; to ihe pack without beir he Vegetable Compound to} "8" ‘0 te "Saat a ney, publish my testi- | to join it. long and ELEN BALANOFF.Fus final silence?! Tv an down its kill, and in thelr feasting plight trouble will cause a e the system. Suc Nervousness, painful times, ity, backache and headache mé form of female weakness. '8o bothered should give Lydia 8 Vegetable Compound a A dable medicine has ds of women and it is ‘expect that it will help Your druggist sells : Cc ty he. swerved Phen came e pack had pulled they made 10 sound, Baree had not forgotten N A dozep times he turned his head back and whined, and always lie picked out direction In which the But he did not turn back. accurately th cabin Jay As the night lengtheaed, his search for that m~7sterious something which he had not found continued. His hur- ger, even with the fading-out of the =| noon, apd the coming of the grayj i of Kazan anda Gray Wolt! 5 . : piss) z x 5 ears aslant—the wolf as the wolf runs Forty Years’ Experience pet Se | {also brothers, as were the three pris- loners who figured in the case. | Rub the scalp with Minard’s Liniment | High School Education | Seto | | Education Provides Pavement For Royal Road to Success There will come a time in the his- |tory of this country (and it is ap- | proaching rapidly nowadays) when a | Young person without a high schoo} | diploma is soing to find things pretty | hard in this life. \the stepping stone to success and in- | dependence, and without it all is slav- lish labor and interminable discourage- !ment. Those who entered upon high | school life this fall are to be congratu- lated. They are marching over 4 y —"I have much: pleas- ; , pe RIEL pe ure in'testilying to the ¢ fiicacy of peas Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery | To safeguard which I have used in my ily of | that worms ca nine children fc have no hes to be the bes’ of which I have any building up the be lhighway so that progress will be {smooth and sure.—Montreal Herald. e Miller's Worm par excellence for child clear the will regu em entirely nd stimulate the organs in good order. If taken according to | will encourage healthful operation of} he directions, together with Dr. | the digestive processes. As a vermi- Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative. Pellets, | fuge it can be relied on for its effec- 1 am conyjnced that there is no bet- | tiveness. fer tonic. & have been treated also | by the Medical Staft at Dr. Pierce's Invalids’ Hotel and I have had no re- furn of the trouble since that date (1910) which proves the thorough- ness of their treatment, _—H. F. Bick more. All dealers. Couldn't {never folded up his clothes when he went to bed?” ‘Tommy Adam!” | Pres. Invalids’ Write Dr. Pierce, Pres. Tnvalids oe Hotel, Buffalo, N. ¥., for tree: me Prevent Gripps with Minard’s Lini- cal advice, mont For education is| royal road and paying their own life’s | ulld from damage | powders will} of worms, | injpriously affected by the worms, and} Nurse: “I wonder who it was who} |the contineut, especially on the occa- sion of his state visits to foreign | capitals, he appears aq far greater per- !sonage than the prime minister or the |lord high chancellor. He is ex-officio !a general, an admiral, a supreme court {judge with powers of life and death leven if he has no legal training, and a member of the privy council, entitled to wear the robes of an earl, with a precedence pertaining to that rank. He has his chaplain, his chamberlain, his sword bearer, his gentleman-in- | waiting, his marshals and, even his own official exeeutioner, whose office in these modern times is, however, 4 sinecure. And then after the twelve months of office are over he s{nks back into‘ obscurity and few outside the body of aldermen, from which he is chosen, and the in “Bayer” Package Unless you see thé “Bayer Cross” o1 package or on tablets you are not get- ting the genuine Bayer Tablets of As- pirin proved safe by millions and pre- members of the} scribed by physicians over twenty-five ancient Plumbers Guild, of which he is} years for ri now the master, will recall even his Colds Headache name. Neuritis Lumbago ‘ ‘Toothache Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain Mrs.: This lifeguard saved your life Fach unbroken “Bayer” package dear. contains proven directions; Handy Shall I glye him a dollar? Mr.: I was just half dead when he [pulled me out, Giye him fifty cents. boxes of twelve tablets cost few cents. Druggists atso sell bottles of 24 and 100. i (Heft -it