By G., Chapman “I'M JOYCE PELLY!” SYNOPSIS. —Les Anderson, Roy- al Canadian Mounted Police ser- geant, is sent to Stony Range to arrest a man named Pelly for murder. He is also instructed to look after Jim Rathway, reputed head of the “Free Traders,” tilicit liquor runners. At Little Falls he finds Pelly is credited with having found a gold mine, and is missing. At the hotel appears a girl, obviously out of place in the rough surroundings. A half- breed, Plerre, and a companion, “Shorty,” annoy the girl An- derson interferes in her behalf. The girl sets out for Siston Lake, which is also Anderson's objec- tive. He overtakes her and the two men with whom he had trou- ble the night before. She is sus- picious of him and the two men are hostile. Pierre and Shorty ride on, Anderson and the girl following. In the hills the road is blown up, before and behind the two. Anderson, with his horse, is hurled down the moun- tain side, senseless Recovering consciousness, Anderson finds the girl has disappeared, but he concludes she is alive and ably in the power of Plerr¢ Shorty On foot he way to Siston Lake There he finds his companion of the day before, and Rathway, with a girl, former sweetheart o who had abused } and almost wreck Rathway strikes Estel a fight Anderson, with help, escapes with the Anderson's companions clouded and she is ith a dizlo sets prob- and makes his Estelle, a Anderson's, confidence his life the girl as con ris He has a broken The two plan to make their way Moravian mission, of which Father McGrath has charge ™ Their acquaintance into love the f s possible + Oa ripens CHAPTER IX—Continued w—T — lee did not push his inquiries. On the felt it able memory whole he would that her to her while she was at the mission be prefer » should snow was frozen hard, and banks of heavy snow the north. The girl's knee had troubled her, and they faster Early in the he prospects of a storm became wreatening that Lee proposed they uld encamp on a ridge of f a mile in front of them. “We can find a safe nook in there, he suggested, “Oh, no,” log house beyond that, and we'll be much more comfortable there.” As Lee looked at her, he that she had been speaking realizing what she had been Suddenly she realized it too. “Now what made me asked. “But I'm sure there is a cabin there. 1 know place quite well, only it's as seen it in a dream. Oh, Lee, what If I should remember? I don’t want to— never, never! 1 want our new life and our love!” He put his arm about her and tried to comfort her, but the look of sad- ness lingered on her face, and every now and then, covertly watching her, would see that same perplexed knitting of her brows, They passed the ridge, the trail ran around the bend of the lake—and sud- denly they saw the log building in front of them. Lee looked at the house In surprise, for it was bullt In the most substan. tial way, and contained apparently five or six rooms. The settier who had constructed it must have meant to make it his permanent home, for the ground around it had been cleared for an acre or more; but it seemed to have been unecared for for several years, for the land was overgrown with brambles and spindly birch, into the thick of which serried cohorts of young spruce trees were advancing In ranks, fike the vanguard of an army. The door was unbolted, and when they went in they were startled at the aspect of the interior. The rooms were filled with furniture, nearly all of It made by the settler, but extraordinar- fly well done. There were mildewed and faded but substantial carpets on the floors. There were fungous growths on the walls; but in spite of all the evidences of decay, the interior looked the habitation of a prosperous settler, They went from room to room, The contents of the kitchen had been scrupulously respected, In accordance with trappers’ law. There were por- celain plates, cups and saucers, cook. ing utensils, a large sheet-iron stove tialf full of charred logs. Lee went all over the place, calling to ithe girl with the enthusiasm of a boy. “It's just the place for us!” he cried. “We'll find out who owns It and made progress. after land some about an large without saying. say that?” she somehow that lee he falled that had s In his exuberance to per ttied They had only just arrived in the for down right,” already the storm, whirling outside, “Well, you were sald us tonight, Look, here's fire here!” The girl did answer him. She with and not the Lee her of bewilderment, saw “Dearest, let will musn't “All you he things said. ' “It me afraid, Lee,” she an tone. “Oh, Lee, 1-1 makes low There ought to be , and woman with tnble here here sewing, a sometimes to smile at man-—a tall man, several 3 1y hair, who smiled, but always kind to And mile at il F ing beside hen ook f this was your home, " Ch \ 1 3 est, vi hould be happy here” I wish now that the ridge. 1 don’t know, Lee, «1 on I've the feel the end.” “It's She began not just the this hut not place, iated with It iooked out at SHOW, It was still that? was hysterical, and itgelf to fee, for he had had the confused im- usness communicated ners had glided i through the shadow across the room beyond, pen door he darted after it, but Instantly They Passed the Ridge, the Trail Ran Around the Bend of the Lake—and Suddenly They Saw the Log Build- ing in Front of Them, there was nothing to be seen. He came back. “It wasn't anything. nervous.” “I'm sure there was-—was something, Lee” She clung to him. “Stay here, and I'll place.” “No, don't leave me! with sou!” They went together, looking Into all the rooms and about the house, but there was no sign of anyone. Lee went to the back door to look for foot: prints, but if any had been made, they would have been obliterated in a mo- ment by the wind that was driving the dry snow about the doorsill In little whirling clouds, “It was Imagination,” sald Lee, She assented, and, going into the kitchen, began to make the prepara- tions for their meal, while Lee took the kettle down to the stream and filled it with water, Put when he returned she We're getting search the I#t me go had ceased to work and was sitting on 0 chair, her head bent Hown, her hands clasped on her knees, staring deso Intely In front of her, Lee stood beside her, “Dearest, if I could do anything to help you—' “You can't help me, I--1 don't know what to do.” Her was strained, hard, al most unrecognizable. Lee knelt at her feet conscious of a sense of utter help He took her hands in his, and found that they cold as ice. Her body was into un natural rigidity. It was as if she were a prisoner on table, her though hracing unendurable pain, volee lessness, were us strained almost torture muscles, some is #0 set were all she were herself agninst “Yes, you The words and, him a strange, penetrating look. you frank with some can help me! came quickly from head, he gave “You me, Hips, raising her haven't been Lee, there ig to know do 1 k love “You know all that bout me, You love ut what now abou you? you me love, that of you 80 y ity the name my less woman; and you have my weeks' life story in You is of me—aoh, little two sion. know everything you know not me, to think that there mately, ‘an you S00 own at no life that is “Dearest- But do I know of you? Anderson? have your life, your past, women not yours?’ Who That's only a are you? How many has it contained, think of regretfully, even with ' have told came, I thought 1 did. some tenderness that one “I'd tim ime you when loved She was—well, 1 that's all love, There is only you “How do 1 the truth, Lee “You don’t mean know you are telling Anderson?” that, dear It's and past just the loneliness fear of that makes the the remem dread ing the sworvthineg 4 everything, L you doub see If you can doubt them." The hardness of her trust men gon.” Lee felt stupefied Bat deeper than { her, f her own might “l think the best for you" sesthineg tii poling ii love just to say passed.” “No, Lee, there is a bette much better Let me share 3 Lee Ar Tell me why and hos lerson? That's only a name to the me range, to tell becanse ossible to speak f their } made bad her Putt ¢ had said before—after the fall, he saved ~0 8 and woods He it appear that ’ the omitted much, but he distorted nothing “What were you doing In the range? What you here for? Her was breathless, her seemed to burn into his face. “I~think-l-—know, me the truth. You came here to fi someone, You are a police. Whom have you come to find?” And as remalned continued : “It wasn't a man named Pelly, was it? An old man, an old friendiess man, who had been betrayed, sold by some- one he trusted? A man who had done no wrong to anyone, but who, a whole generation before, had killed the scoun- drel who tried to ruin his wife? Hadn't he atoned for that by a lifetime of exile? “What do you know of him?" cried Lee, “He is my father! This is our home! Yes, I'm Joyce Pelly, his daughter, as you have always suspected. And 1 suspected you from the beginning. And you-~you forced your presence upon me under the guise of protecting me from my friends” “That is not so!" “To gain your wretched ends by win. ning a woman's confidence and then betraying her. And you dared-—yes, you dared—" “1 never dreamed who you were. Won't you believe my word of honor that I am incapable—1" But she went on, still implacable: “You dared to pretend you loved me, you traitor, in order to discover my father's hiding place when I—1 was coming up to him—but why—why? I can't remember all. I only know that { remember I'm his daughter. And I tell you I hate you with a hate ten times as great as the love I thought I felt for youl” fee stood up before her. “I only ask you to believe me,” he began, “when I say that I didn’t know, guess, dream who you were. How should I have known he had a daughter—this man I'd never seen? I knew noth Ing" But suddenly her ley coldness seemed to dissolve In helpless misery. “Oh, leave me! Leave me for a little while, or I shall go mad!” she cried, And she put her hands over her face and began weeping wildly, CHAPTER X The Tunnel Under the Rock Lee stumbled out of the cabin, dazed, stupefled by Joyee's revelation, The man he sought stood, an invin are volce eyes You must tell ine member of the she Lee silent, ‘ible 1 rrier, between himself and the woman he loved. Never, If he had any power to rend the human heart, could Joyce Pelly look on him again with anything but hate and horror, Beneath her gentle nature there lay, he knew, a soul of steel, calm and re hop lived His little happiness was ended forever, And he binsts whirling snow Then to the fiercer father spell eroaned as he strode through the there came man temp than any he had perceived the one way out, the vies only essary to find warn hi wer, to return to Manistree, that Pelly was dead to Ww Jovee, taking itude, her love her away ¢r her grat she appiness Put waonld love him he hnsed on that dishonor? Pert ning a Woman's Confidence and Then Betraying Mer, and You Dared Yes, You Dared—" Joye it In the even that fonscience Those dauntiess taw had endured the aw 1 naured the And Lee weigh through o¢1 these possibil ti the storn strode his shoulders resolut arden. He woul Moravian mi hand squared threw off the bt sxion Jovee to the had planned, her there task. the apprehension of her father The wns growing flercer. dwakening to the realization of storm clearing far behind him: he could no longer discern the cabin In the tance through the whirling snow. He had been traveling across the ridges of the broken ground, apparently making unconsciously for the shelter of the friendly forest behind it, with the instinet of a wounded beast to take cover. Well, he must go back, and they two must face that night together, and the next day. There was no help for it. As he strode on, suddenly instinct pulled him up sharply. He had been trampling through a mass of withered undergrowth and bramble; and now, directly in front of him, he perceived a great gorge, so concealed In this growth that he had all but stepped over the edge. He advanced cautiously and peered down Into it. It was an extraordinary formation. He had seen such before, in that and other regions, where the limestone, pushed up through molten granite by volcanic action at some pre- historic time, and then abraded by rain or torrent, left strange hollows and gullies, But he had never seen one on such a scale as this He was looking Into a natural fis gure in the ground, a long, irregular, winding chasm, extending indefinitely into the distance, but so narrow as to be merely a lip or crack in the rugged surface of the ground. It had not been worn by rains or water; it was too deep for that. Prob- ably the limestone, thrust up originally from the earth's Inner core, had been sucked down again in some final con- vulsion, while the granite was still half molten, leaving the granite shell about the chasm. And in spite of its depth the chasm wag go narrow that it almost looked as if a man could have leaped across it, This wns undoubtedly Incorrect, the distance between cliff and cliff being only apparently reduced hy the dense underbrush that fringed the orifice; the distance between the walls, which inclined inward toward the sum- mit was less than half that of the base It was just such a chasm as a man might step Into In a storm, to certain death, On the floor of this gorge Lee could few scrub birches standing erect, seeming to be hardly than seedlings In a hortl- nursery. extended Lee began to see A tree Inrger The the of his until place termi nated suddenly in a pile of great rocks flesure dingonally cabin retrace came to on where [it nite Two of side of outerop these rocks stood up, one on hasn monolitl 1 WAS A had been as a rocking stone, and probably largest In the world. touch started it, the east Bi» was It poised, but a team have shifted it from position As the h Le#'s touch uge, {ited irrow open thought underneath gh at it heen I g 1 hands inti descending very carefully he hiz way downward Wa he h € ciung wl knees as he descended ww minutes a dim ligl filter upward from below rock. The Flakes 3 emerged himself clinging to the interior the like a fly fourths of the way whirling about whirled In of snow 1 into daylight, to ‘hen he i great of asm, wall, three The snow was by the precipitous walls of the chasm Then Lee understood. He had found entrance, probably the only one, the gorge: but someone had pre assisting nature into steps of that rocky ladder, which had been eroded, during the of millenniums, by the action dried-up waterfall. Only water could have hollowed out that course by the play of the leaping torrent on the projections of the granite, Looking down from Ww here he clung, Lee saw that a thin stream trickled over a sandy bed in the middie of the gorge below, issuing from one end, where It burst out of the granite, carrying with it the debris of the al luvial land above—mud, gravel, and sand. And suddenly the idea occurred to him that in all probability he had stumbled upon old Peliy's goid mine. In which event, what more natural than that Pelly was hiding in that in- accessible spot, where he would be ab- solutely secure against discovery-—un- jess he had incautiously permitted some one to share his secret? And perhaps Joyce knew, and had come up in order to be with him and to procure food supplies for him. Lee gnashed his teeth at the thought of it Fortune had played into his hands, course of & now The course of true love never did run smooth. Is the break past mending? hiss —— (TO BR CONTINUED) —————————————— “Supplice” The meaning of the word supplice ls “punishment ; torture; pain and tor ment.” As far back as 1656 the word wns used by Blount to express the sume meaning. There Is also a pas gnge in one of Mrs. Oliphant’s works which reads: “It Is easier to play the victim under the supplice inflicted by a pretty girl, than by two mature ma- trons, "—Literary Digest. HOW TO KEEP DR. FREDERICK R. GREEN Editor of “HEALTH” DO0000C {0 by Western Newspaper Union.) MAKING MILK SAFE ) ILK N for the also igs a perfect food, Unfort which perfec $ : 2B the young. very qualities make it a which to COW, disease through n grow ger either bility or and breeding, Is unus: atural centuries domestication to a pumber of human dl lly tuberculosis; also dia diphtheria, ty the SO the when it | The whole prot tion Ig how milk, that may » his own when he sells it to others, then thorities, either city, county demand that that will not Customers, he must sell only cause disease There are two kinds of milk raw milk and pasteurized milk is to be pure, it mu 80] If raw be taken by Arne, clean milkmen, put into « les or cans and delivered to without any danger of taminated on that the cows must ed, that clean, that the to rule uman ca the manner of 1} the consumer con becoming the way. This means $y elt t amt tuberculin test- be the surroundings must be be tested that milkers mus out 1 ardl ng ¢ - © ! EnGiing we milk at stage must be free of infec alled certified mil Such milk Is certified to nditions insure gs to ity is mad by } 1 it is heated to 1 ods. 1 % perature less than han thirty 0 destroy disease germs without the COORD autor rd MzZins m ies in dsiries requires 1 CEsiiy can Actshil : louble Althe these conditions ugh large cities, towns and country is still ont generally used This tnbercu the neck, country « this condit BOIL0 of are common among t 1 has prac city chil disappeared among Raw milk is dangerous, uniess given by tuberculin-tested co supervised conditions All uld be ws under care milk for children, sh pas- teurized before using VENTILATION VERY one must have air to breathe in order to We live without food for from twenty 1o forty days, without water from seven to eight days, but we cannot live three minutes without air live. can In order to be well, we must not only have alr but it must be reason- ably pure, sufficiently moist and cool. Under ordinary conditions, we get all these things outdoors and don’t have to bother about them. It's when we go indoors that the trouble begins. So long as primitive man lived out- doors he had no ventilation problem. As soon as he builit his first house, he had to think about ventilation. Al though the first houses were probably go loosely and imperfectly built that it wasn't much of a problem But we live today in weather-tight, water-tight and almost airtight houses. As soon as we go into a house, be it residence, store, office or work- shop, we find ourselves in a limited supply of air, which we at once begin to pollute by our own breathing. With each breath we are taking oxygen out of the alr and putting carbon dioxide into it. The smaller the space and the more people, the faster the process goes on, Oxygen Is one-fifth of the air. With each breath we draw into our lungs we absorb one-half the oxygen In each lung full and breathe out the other half. A man weighing 1680 pounds needs 2.400 cubic feet of fresh alr every hour it he Is resting, 3.200 an hour If he is doing light work and 6,100 an hous it doing heavy work. A woman weigh- ing 120 pounds needs fivesixths ns much and a child weighing 80 pounrts peeds seven-twelfths as much. Although many costly and elaborate ventilating devices have been made, the easiest, simplest and best way get fresh air into a room is to open a window, A screen or a glass nw wooden strip In front of the opening will prevent direct draft and throw tke cold alr up to the ceiling, Have plenty of fresh air In ror workrooms and llving rooms It doesn’t cost anything and it's the be” tonic you can take.