OF WNU Service “A DOG!” wolf, part dog old Baree Synopsis. —Part when two months has his first meeting with enemy, Papayuchisew (young owl) Fighting hard, the antag onists are suddenly plunged into a swollen creek Badly buffeted and half drowned, Baree final ly flung on the the water has destroyed his direction and he and hungry For n life is one of fear He meets various creatures the wil and throug! thunderstorm. more and more the trapping groul and Nepeese an in hank, in any and goes He He ds is stray of Chapter [l—Continued cn “Something Is killing off beavers,” he explained. to speaking to her in French Iynx or a wolf. Tomorrow shrugged his thin smiled at her. “We will go on | Nepeese happily, in her so When Pierrot that, and began tlways meant the templating. the Nepeese, “It young is a He shoul smiled a with "tom hat she mich thant. she mig him on adventure he Still another day later, at the the afternoon, Loon on a had wedged heyond the was a small of this Baree inst of the setting motionless and tail drooping low, his ears alert sharp-pointed nose sniffing the country to north, there was of Baree crossed Garay that Just there vdge the bridge of between Two driftwood and paused to trees, bridge open an en Joy As listening sun he <t ood his his new the not a | in a voice that was soft and plaintive | and amazingly comforting to his terri fied little heart, cried: Uchimoo i SUchimoo Uchimoo ! | And and this volce, ible than many sounds tened to in the forests, “We cannot voice heard another was far then he jess had {O0, fer he 1is- find him, Nepeese" saying “He It Is too bad Baree wis lias off to die, Where had in f the open Pierrot paused and point that had been Willow's | bullet The sapling, no Come.” stood the edgy ' g feegr arn! or o a birch sapling off by 1 Nepoeese understood cut cle the an larger than her thumb, had turned trifle nd Instant turned “Uchimoo and | saved Baree death shot a | from She and called: Lehimoo Her eyes were no longer filled i of slaughter will die “Ayetun nt Baree He vas Led through The yes, he had no idea of dyh tough a o {OO youngster to Le sho to death by a bullet flesh of had happened, the soft his fore leg was what have taken him for a young wolf behind a clump of hundred Nepeese had the driftwood not From |AINE, A young bal yards away, Pierro! and watched hin fe aver Now the time. and Plerrot leveled his rifle not until then that his arm softly Her little excitedly she bridge. was It was tonched ame n as whis peered: let “Nootawe, shoot him" me to her dead For distance, conld send a inch square nine And Nepeese, Baree, pressed steadily with her brown forefinger upon As the Willow pullec rifle, Baree the gun nlready at that into an of ten carefully Nepeese, bullet times out aiming tr thie er ra 2 ] tl et her He felt lve heard jifted into the bullet sprang force of report of the off his feet, and before It sont the gun him then struck a hideous blow with a For a flash he did not feel pain been ub Li of fire him out a rose above wild he the wolf, outery of and puppyish yap- zround. Pierrot and Nepeese had wautiful the she eyes shining with accuracy of her shot. catight her breath. fingers clutched at the pride at Her barrel of her rifle Pierrot's lips as Baree's pain filled the forest “Uchi Moosis!” her Cree. on cries gasped Nepeese, in from her puppy” Pierrot caught the rifle “Diable! A cried, He started on a run for Baree in thélr amazement they had lost a few seconds and Baree's dazed senses were returning. He saw them clearly as they came across the open—a new kind of monster of the forests! With a final wail he darted back into the deep shadows of the trees. He had shivered at sight of the hear and the moose, but for the first time he now sensed the real meaning “of danger. And it was close after him. He could hear the crashing of the two-legged beasts in pursuit; strange cries were almost at his heels—and then sud. denly he plunged without warning into a hole, It was a shock to have the earth go out from under his feet like that, but Baree did not yelp. The wolf was dominant in him again, It urged him to remain where he was, making no move, no sound--scarcely breathing. The voices were over him; the strange feet almost stumbled in the hole where he lay. Looking out of Lis dark hid: ing place, he could see one of his enemies. It was Nepeese, the Willow. She was standing so that a last glow of the day fell upon her face. Baree did not take his eyes from her. Above his pain there rose In him a strange and theflling fascination. The girl put her two hands to her mouth, and dog—a he He Was Gritting His Bill in His Bad Temper When He Heard Baree Ap. proaching. { leg was torn to the bone, but bone itself was untouched mit the unti the moon had risen hefore he crawled out of his hole stiff then: it whole pain traveil His leg had grown but terrib th had body in stopped bleeding, his Wis i racked by a ie stinctively he felt hy from from danger This th him, for a nt AWRY the hole he would get away was the best thing at could have to happened inter a porcupine along, chattering foolish, good-humored little wandering in its way, and fell | hole came Itself Had Baree remained, he would been so full of quills that he surely have died i have must The exercise of travel was good for Baree, It gave his wound oppor tunity to “set.” as Plerrot would have gald, for in reality painful than hundred vards hobbled three and that that he could use his fourth by humor ing it a great He followed the | creek for a half mile. Whenever a | bit of brush touched his wound, he would snap at it viciously, and instead of whimpering when he felt one of the | sharp twinges shooting through an angry little growl gathered in his throat, and his teeth clicked. Now that he was out of the hole, the effect the Willow's shot was every drop of wolf-blood In his body. In him there was a growing animosity a feeling of rage not against any thing In particular, but against all things, It was not the feeling with which he had fought Papayuchisew, the young owl, On this night the dog in him had disappeared. An accump- jation of misfortunes had descended upon him. and out of these misfor- tunes-—und his present hurt-<the wolf had risen savage and vengeful, This was the first night Baree had traveled, He was, for the time, un afraid of anything that might creep up on him out of the darkness. The blackest shadows had lost their theill, It was the first big fight between the two natures that were horn In hime the wolf and the dog-and the dog was vanquished, Now and then he stopped to lick his wound, and as he licked it he growled, as though for the hurt itself he held a personal antag. onism. If Plerrot could have seen and heard, he would have understood very quickly, and he would have sald: “Tet him die. The club will never take that devil out of him." In this humor Baree came, an hour no his hurt For Was more first on gorions the he nlong legs, after hie deal him, of one later, out of the heavy timber of the creek bottom into the open spaces of a small plain that ran along the foot of a ridge. It was in this plain that Oohoomisew hunted, Oohoomisew was a huge snow-owl, He was the patriarch among all the owls of Plerrot's trapping domain. He wns so old that he was almost blind, and therefore he never hunted as other owls hunted. He did not hide himself in the black cover of spruce and balsam tops, or float softly through the night, ready in an instant to swoop down upon his prey. His eyesight was so poor that from a spruce top he could not have seen a rabbit at all, and he might have mis- taken a fox for a mouse No old Oohoomisew, dom from experience, ambush. He would squat on the ground, and for hours at a time he would remain there without making more wis- from learning hunted a sound and scarcely moving a feather, waiting with the patience of Job for something to eat to his way. Now and then he had made mistakes, had mistaken a lynx for a rabbit, and in the second attack he had lost a foot, so that when he slum come his claw, old that he tufts of feathers still a glant in perch with one nearly blind, and long ago the his ears, he strength, Crippled, sO Jost wus and he when Wis Angry one yards For lucky, away. had been tonight he had unfortunate, Two and he from three nights he and been par. rabbits had come his had of had left that way, them his cover. The he the sec had and vy hungry, { bill In juree Eve r the i first missed entirely; him a mouthful was nll, He was raver and he was gritting hi fre i ond with fur i ousl his when he bad temper approaciung if Barve dark bush ahead, and had dis could have seen un covered Oohoomisew ready i s from his t ambush, it he would have His too, was read own fighting th little watching He feathers ruffled ball of fire stopped for a whic was His like a laree and leked hig wound open | squatted down until he feet moment Lup was { Ten nway oho misew waited cautiously Again within swift i { | Baree foot advanced, passing With a | and a sudden thunder of his powerful | wings the great owl was upon him | This time Baree | pain or of fright BX of the bush hop fet out The wolf is Kipichi Indians say. No hunter trapped wolf whine for no cry of mao, the ne {| ever heard =n y at He dies with Tonight It { heat of a club ! bared was a wolf-whelp that Oochoomisew was not A i The { keeled Baree over, attacking dog pup owl's first rush and for a moment | he was smothered under the -huge, i outspread wings, while Oohoomisew pinioning him down hopped i i § ’ $ struck fiercely with his beak One of that beak about would have settied for a rabbit, but at the discovered blow the head first that thrust it Oaohoo ! misew was | A blood-curdling snarl ! blow. and Oohoomisew the iynx, his lost foot, and Lis row escape with his life The pirate might have beaten a retreat, but answered oa 3g 1311 ree ' nree was no longer 3 that hour in which } young Papayuchisew. F and hia fist ip had strengthened him: his passed quickly f the mt of ¥ | fought Lx pert ence aged jaws bone and had from the to the bone-cracking age before Oohoomisew could thinking of flight at all, Baree's fangs i good leg | misew's furious blows {on grimly, and as But he hung his teeth met | { rate’s leg, his angry snarl carried de lance to Oochoomisew's ears. Rare on the leg. and Baree knew that tri | umph or defeat depended his ability to hold it. The old owl no other elaw to sink into him, and it wns impossible—caught as he was for him tear at Baree with his beak. So he continued to beat that thunder of blows with his four-foot wings. on to Baree's acquaintance with man begins unfortunately. What next? (TO RE CONTINUED.) Great English Sailor fir Francis Drake, famous naviga- tor of the time of Queen Elizabeth, galled from Falmouth December 18, 1577. sailed around the globe and re turned to England after suffering many hardships, on November 3, 1580, The queen visited Drake on his ship at Deptford April 4, 15681, and con- ferred upon him the honor of knight hood. He died at Panama January 28, 1508, while engaged In an expe dition against the Spaniards, and was buried at sea, S———————— That Did It Outside the storm raged. The thun der was deafening, the lightning flashed almost continuously. Present ly a bolt struck some part of the ‘house and knocked the owner come pletely out of bed. He rose, rubbed his eyes, yawned, and sald, “All right, dear, I'll get up.” Corsets Supplied for Every Figure Combination Brassiere and Girdle Makes Its Bid for Approval Corset styles are largely influenced my the demands of fashion, and since fashion is insisting upon curves in op position the straight silhouette of the last few years, corsetry Is now of vital Interest to woman, The urved lines of necessity need more attention, observes a fashion author ity in York Times, for this type of figure requires greater control than the straight silhouette. To meet this problem, and in fact to solve it, the combination brassiere and girdle has been introduced in new variations here are also garter belts, little ban deaux, all-flexible step-ins lightly boned and boneless, as well as the back and clasp-front girdles the new type of laced-back cor with self-reducing lines. Mate include knitted or woven silks and ravons, poplins and, for the large figure, For to every the New closed and set rials bhrocades the slim girl who prefers the brassiere there ig a stepin and wide elastic Double garters Then mude material sections are the mly other feature there the ‘Charleston’ girdle along the of the same front panel section which + straps that fasten to the lower slge of the girdle in back. This model out garters Another combination fl 1 gure lines and sane having the an equipped extra has eles is made with for the slender of Xk long lines and is made nitted It hi is entirely very rayon is silk elastic gores at the narrow elastic strap sides A 1eross the holds the brassiere basque brassiere is made brassiere top gores, two ghort 1 unusually along front an long i the figure Chubby bination gtyle of com Knitted used for have a own silks and meshes figures all their or are these models, with, of course, the usu The gir the hips of nl elastic the ' le gores at in these models is but the brassiere part hooks back assuring variety, or at the sides, fit in the thereby perfect Elastic For what is the medium-sized woman, or hnically known as the “full is a combin the in te figure there with the brassiere hooking at Three in the that is abdomen iy in which give greater short bones front appearance geross the ations usually materials, throughout figures sure fat 80 ae the combi come ontrol have combina- variety, Large size too, and, to hold the in place and to con girdle section af the hips Hat of Brown Straw Is Liked by Young Matron This smart hat for the young ma. tron is of brown straw with a facing of satin. The fancy pompon on the side is of red gold. It is regarded as a chic chapeau for spring. New Names for Colors for Spring Wearables The same old pastel colors con- tinue to dominate the field of fash. fon for spring, but most of them have new names. Among the red may be found tintoret, azalea, grape and cor rida, but they are all allied with rose red. In the blue scale are renais- sance, lavender, anemone and janges, The greens Include turquolse, meadow, catskill, alligator and citrenne, The yellow-orange ranges comprises champagne, apricot and melisande Pay your money and take your choice. Platinum Gray New Shade Gold and silver have had their day and now are being forced to share fashion popularity with the other met. ale, One of the most popular shades for coats and dresses today Is plath num gray, since gloves, shoes, stock- ings and hat of a matching shade may be worn with it. The reddish copper hues are being exploited for coats In lame and copper dyed furs. Bronze is being taken up In similar fashion. Ensemble Returns With Coming of New Season hae - LE ie This charming street frock is fash de chine. The one.piece dress is a foot The row of hemstitching about 2a from the bottom of the frock. of darker green crepe de chine and the same material forms the collar. Good Season to Shop This Is the season of the year when shopping for though she has pur- hat, her pure be be not clever AROCOERGTIS ] A new pring gown or there will be many when the inte fall day #® len in the And look attention winter clot ones she nust or chased still worn En give yet these clothes will shabby if she does fo fo dainty and color and new things ’ which give life smart- ness to her It bag, a chic ms chief flower general appearance new hand handker or a wilk for that that the ix surprising what a arf, a bright new sports stockings cont touch of midseason for her will do freshness wardrobe demand The fine «1 newest thi handbags Is if leather are medi in their atiractive 1 They may be as « ful as 8 woman's whims Most covered subdued shades these hags have metal or They most rea off 8 fur coat or to great leather frames are will far sonable and and advantage a cloth combination Attractive Trimmings from different YaArious ways with nee Interesting models milliners lustrate in hat that ix ornamented diework, with motifs appliqued with hand painting flowers are made of fancy braid or of ribhon or one ¢ut out of some ma- terigd and appl forse {ine of the new finted gued singly or in woes too, flowers formed metal bor in dainty shaded ribbons siriped or flower feather patterns and ro flowers, and centers, bows glazed gilded and showy, and jeweled pins In count continue be worn and Lacquered ormaments, to jess designs Hand painting is being much shown and Is done most successfully on horsehair Larger Flowers Used for Dress Garniture garniture are larger than ever and the boutonniere is mammoth. The latest novelty the floweg made of smooth feathers to resemble single roses, lillies, passion Flowers for dress is The flowers, of in size and are not too intricate. course, are exaggerated the feathers are dyed in the natural metal threads, Some are tipped with jewels. Among these wired flowers of silk tissue and vel vet, with petals outiined with small rhinestones. These are very effective on evening gowns, Sports Clothes Waterproofed The open weaves of the blanket cont. woolen stockings and woolen gloves are conspicuously absent from the costumes for winter sports now shown In the smart shops. The mate rinle are usually of light, close-woven material which is thoroughly water proofed. The jackets are closely but. toned to the throat and belted while the nether portion of the costume con «lets of long trousers gathered closely about the ankles 80 no SNOW can enter —- Vogue for Good Jewelry The vogue for good jewelry in the finely wrought designs inspired by Etransean gilt and Oriental trinkets ls reflected In the quantity of artistic things now being shown, Wide brace- tots, chains, necklaces, brooches and pendants are among these picturesque things. Most of them are chased in delicate patterns or In open filigree. (The Kitchen Cabinet (©, 1926, Western Newspaper Union. ¥ If you were busy being kind, Before you knew it you would find You'd soon forget think ‘twas true That someone to was unkind te you SEASONABLE DISHES When be small using canned fruit there will amounts of different left over: use desserts as follows: Frult Dessert.—Take na package of strawberry flavored gelatin—there are various kinds on the murket—add cupftul of boiling water and one | cupful of any canned | fruit julce: cool, put into | a large mold and when it begins to | thicken slightly add one and one-half | cupfuls of fruit | peaches, pears, | any i Chill may cinds these in one out into prunes that Individual pleces— apricots or ifs at hand molds combination until firm. be used and the - ¢ i 1 i fruit added in designs Hot Potato Salad diced Take art that bolled One ine side one q i of potatoes have been I un table spoonful of and the and bacon for minced parsley Dice of | same of until move green pepper fry two bacon brown slices le the and use a garnish salad. To of flour, when half of water and vinegar, one teaspoonful of salt, a of over the on top of the the fat add fn tablespoonful and well blended a cupful each teaspoonful of and = if dash cayenne: pour hot potato Serve h Spareribs With Potatoes and Ap- | ples.—FPlace seasoned baking dish and in a Place and spareribs cook one hour quartered potatoes under the ribs quartered sh ' 3 i —— thie poial - ; . i done ang orown Searon with pepper while cooking The apples il brown and have & better flavor If spris Many sugar to al ikled very lightly with sugar good cooks add a very Httle { and un meats “at sauces Fritters left Parsnip | parsnips meal cooked former through & ricer, add to a cupful of the parsnip one-fourth each and egg and a of cayenne Mix thoroughly and fry in small cakes in a hot on both Add = NEY PR Take over from =a Press ten spoonful of salt pepper, a beaten dash well-buttered pan Brown sides dash of salt and to most fruits; It out flavor, Bird's Nest Pudding. Slice good fla vored apples into a deep pie dist with a rather | der biscult batter { oven and when ready to serve turn sugar brings the and cover rich baking pow derate up But with add Cut and serve pip lake In a nw side down on to a serving plate ter generously it. cover the right amount sugar and | either grated nptmeg or cibnamon inte i Ing hot while he of ple-shaped pleces Dishes for Dinner. most | often served food of y, is In homes limited to a half dozen ways of serving Potatoes Cooked in Broth.—Cut the potatoes into balls, or they may be The potato, the commonest and any, most m cent into cubes © the waste bits be in creamed or mashed pota may used toes {Cook the potato in bolling salted water for five minutes, then drain and finish cooking in well-seasoned broth When tender, drain and sprinkle with | salt and finely minced parsley. This | is a good dish to serve for those who cannot eat meat | Hamburg Steak With Brussels | Sprouts.—Chop one pound of steak | from the top of the round, add one | half cupful of cold water and a tea | spoonful of salt. Mix thoroughly and | shape Into small cakes. Grease & hot | frying pan lightly with a bit of suet i and lay in the cakes, turn to cook on | both Have ready a smooth brown sauce to which has been added ! a fow tablespoonfuls of chopped mush | rooms and a little chopped ham. Have | the brussels sprouts cooked uatil ten der, drain, season well with salt, pep | per and butter, shake over the fire | until the sprouts have absorbed all the seasonings. Place the sprouts in the | center of a hot platter and arrange the steak around them, pour the sauce around the steak, Escalioped Cabbage.-—Shred cook cabbage as for hot slaw. Prepare a white sauce. Butter a baking dish and put in a layer of bolled cabbage, then a layer of white sauce, sprinkle with grated cheese and continue until all the cabbage and sance are used KReason each layer with salt and pepper and bake twenty minutes, Hot Apple Dessert Peel, quarter and slice six apples. Put these into a serving dish sultable for the oven, in layers with seeded raisins and a cup ful of sugar: cover and bake until the apples are soft. Remove the cover and set marshmallows over the top of the apples; return the dish to the oven for browning and serve hot, with or without cream, Spoon Corn Bread.—Take one cup ful of corn meal scalded, add one pint of sweet milk, one-half eupful of flour, two tablespoonfule each of melted butter and sugar, two well beaten eggs, one teaspoonful of hak. Ing powder, one-half teaspoonful of salt. Bake one-half hour | Nerd Magma balls sides and
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