J. Doubleday, Page & Co) WNU Service Chapter VI—Continued —t splendid fol have It wag a night that lowed. Perhaps Baree would through it his nest on top of the dam if the bacon smell had not the hunger in him Since adventure in the canyon the deeper forest had held a dread for at night But was like a pale, golden day: It but distant slept in stirred new 1S him, especially night the stars shone flooding of was moonless like a billion the world in a light. A gentle whisper of wind made pleasant sounds In the treetops vond that it wag very quiet, for it the Moulting Moon hunting Inmps, soft and billowy sean ies 5 VUs Puskowenesim ISKOWepesim ind the wolves were not wis had fost their volece, the foxes 1k with the silence of sha beavers had The the deer and the und OWS even the begun to cease heir labors, horns of the moose aribon ten ler velvet, and and fought not at a Moulting Moon Silenee for ti July, oon of 8 throat died next the pnntomim moment through | os, who was For keep vire having the lif weance » him, | Boeree © 0 not from dane ter nl about his neck Furiously that moments Me nhout, grew tigl 1d tighter he drugnied I fine wire held more it wus a miracle In a broken few must have bt had up Taggart heard him! caught his blanket stick, as he hurried not a rabbit making he knew that. fishereat--u lynx, a wolf It was the wolf he thought of first when he saw the end of He dropped blanket and the club If had been clouds overhead, or the stars had been less brilliant, Baree would have us surely as Wapoos had died the elub raised his head Taggart saw in time the white the whitetipped ear und the black of Baree's cont, With u swift movement he changed the club for the blanket, In that hour, could MeTuggart have looked ahead to the days that were to come, he would have used the club Could he have foreseen the great tragedy in which Baree was to play a vital part, weecking LIN hopes and de stroying his world, he would have beaten him tg a pulp there under the light of the siars. And Baree, could he have foreseen what was to happen between this brate with a white skin nnd the most heautiful thing In the and a heavy toward the snare, It was those sounds fox, a young Baree at the wire the raised there With Me star, Jet over eX bitterly before he surrendered himself ! to the smothering embrace of the Face tor's blanket, On this night Fate had played a strange hand for them both, | and that Fate, and perhaps the held knowledge of what only ubove, Half McTag again In the glow of it up | like an Indian papoose, tied into a bal- | ball alone showing an hour later Bush Baree lay trussed with bahiche thong, head had cut a He was imprisoned his hole for blanket 1 hopelessly thie nove in could scarcely A few art of body, McTa ing hand his feet him was bat! in basin of wat streak « McTag: s bu “You tt : Miree “You He reache vas also a red f 111 Of isi Baree's hen a the vengeful in The burning owl, wolf outlaw of Sew, the Wis savage cour age of the dog did MeTaggart aree take his from smoked . the latter the bare ground He listened, still man-monster s eves He not he when ns watched man stretehed out on to sleep later heinous snoring the never that night In the thick, folds of ti and body would orget terrible blanket focated still in wine, hat Were blood almost Y et the teeth ad sunk an troubled look in th July—a b From his kit he wound deep washing i It was got turned a wound, | into and Hquor on as it burned whisky the his | Baree's half-shut eyes were fixed on | He knew that Inst | the deadliest of all his | Aud yet he was not afraid. | in Bush McTuggart's hand | | i | steadily had nt he met club It had killed his fear. It had roused in him a ha- fred such as he had never known-—not even when he was fighting Oohoomi Great Voices Called "Great volees are rare and undoubt. | their wonderful purity of accidental combination of physical characteristics which lend to the production of song The buman musical Instrument, though built of Hving tissues, resembles in structure the reed organ pipe fitted with a vox humana stop. In both cases the note depends on the vibra. owe fo an those the organ by a reed and in the volee by the vocal cords. The human alr chamber corresponding to the organ pipe 1s composed of the larynx and the bronchial system beneath it The throat, mouth and nasal eavi- ties form the resonators which, by alternation in shape and size, are able to pick out and emphasize cer N epee vas ont i McTaggart's red ultation cried joy she i= Baree!"” took the She hurried into the cabin. MeTag jooked after her, stunned and amazed, Then looked at Plerrot A man half blind could have seen that as amazed as he Ne not spoken to him the lL.ac Bain! She had not looked at him! And she had taken the dog from him with as little con. cern as though he had been a wooden man, The red in his face deepened as he stared from Plerrot to the through which she had gone, which she had closed behind her (TO BE CONTINUED) gaart he Plerrot was peese had Factor of und Accidents of Nature mental tones produced in the larynx The lungs form the bellows which produce the upward biast of air, and upon their quality depends the loud: ness of the voice London Dally Mall Milk Products Old Butter was known for at least 2, years before the Christian ern. It was not used as food, however, hut mostly as a medicine and ointment, and in some parts was employed as wn iHumi. nant for lamps, The butter was churned crudely In skin bags or pouches, and was a very inferior article. Cheese has been known since the earliest times, the oldest mention of it occurring In 1400 B. CC. It was used as an article of food before but ter. ay i = # > 4 SO Wine troops which 1—James Waterman mier Au f/f Cruise in ssolinl reviewing cathoats, from NEWS REVIEW OF URRENT EVENTS Goes Into Action Against Country’s Lawbreakers. By EDWARD W, PICKARD ficient numb of I begged the newspape is Mit to suppress ori hey re They Was rime committed they would print it The result of this pul 2000 extra policemen and ra Judges” National Crime commission, It may some of the country's and women, form Ambassador Richard Washburn Child, Newton DD. Baker, Herbert 8S. Hadley Mre Richard Derby (daughter of Colopel Roosevelt), James A Drain, Trubee FF. Davison, Charles E Hughes, Mrs, Carrie Chapman Catt, Senator Charles 8, Deneen, Franklin D. Roosevelt, Charles 8. Whitman, | Governor Winant of New Hampshire, and Judge Marcus Kavanagh and Henry Barrett Chamberlin of Chica- go. The commission has been inves- tigating for nine months and has con most eminent men including Gen but that application of remedies rests with individual states and citizens, Administration of justice, it finds, Is the most pressing question. V yHILE Mayor Dever of Chieago and District Attorney were still quarreling about the respon sibility for crime conditions In and about the city, the criminals demon- strated thelr contempt for the law and its officers by assassinating an active assistant state's attorney and two other men with whom he was sit. ting in an automobile, one being a member of a liquor gang. ‘I'he mur derers used a Thompson machine gun, a new weapon that seems likely to supplant the sawed.off shotgun, As , has been the case each time the gang. sters have murdered a policeman in — who | nated Tripoli 3 learn much Rabbi Wise, Midshipmen of as the of pavigation. veryone KNows beginning £30 O00 0 first two years num begin of } ant,” £ G27 .- bm 8 oft last r the to ations nierest ove tear period amounts an thn } 5g a and Czechoslovakia ratified by the debt Presi- unding the mer and the passed the previous week, From London story that leading international bankers are con. ate, dent signed Italian COmes n of the reparations and dation In one ensemble of great probieins German the war debt—in other words, the question of the intergovern- indebtedness left to the world as one of the aftermaths of the World war.” The plan Is somewhat but it is based on the idea that whole menial figured according to the settlements being made, would be not far from £2.750,000000 ; that the securities to be issued by the German railroads under the Dawes plan for about that amount could be marketed for more than $2.000000000 if the various na- and that over to the the yield could be allies entitled to taxes, in settlement of all debts, Thus all reparations arrange. ments and debt-funding agreements would be wiped out, ERMANY and Russia have signed a treaty of amity and neutrality that will have a far-reaching effect on European affairs. The two nations pledge mutual neatrality, both mill. tary and economic, should a third power declare war on either, actuated by motives of unprovoked aggression. Germany promises to participate in no action against Russia directed by representative In the league decides there are no proper grounds for Gers many'’s participation, All disputes Jewish religion starting the academy at Annapolis on the two present ir dispatches, an German-Russian partite treaty be snd Litho be the ar be COOLIDGE Is worried of $21.- 1 warned CONZress must He He is on proposes work out ills of the of prepar- 8 meeting «oon gis and labor last week In Geneva three Americans, A David Harvard During Stef; De Houston repeat,” "ey ie London adopted laration | Dawes That | that the when essential con- the is of peo new era of peace iiberty of movement and products.” The Ja fou it to he anese delegate, Sugimura, declaring there should any country hed be digserimination racial imperative equality that by ships or products or for- no against the Fernando G. Roa of Mexico, members of the Mexico-American spe claims commission, announced they had decided against the States In the Santa Ysabel care involving the massacre of Amer. fean mining engineers hy Villa's band in 1016, Judge E. B. Perry, the this eomstituted a legal decision and Perry insinuated that the case had been prearranged behind his back, and the Mexicans were enraged by this, J CRECLOSURE and sale of the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Pant railroad was ordered by Federal Judge Wilkerson in Chicago The sale will take place In Butte, Mont. the date and upset price to be an nounced later. The wording of the decree gives all sides a chance to be heard in the bidding and the reor. ganization. The railroad Is a $750. 000,000 corporation. IZA KHAN, one time private sol dier. was formally crowned as Shah Pehlevi of Persla—