The Centre reporter. (Centre Hall, Pa.) 1871-1940, May 13, 1926, Image 11

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    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—<or rather he
crowned himself-—amid scenes of
oriental pomp and splendor. Those
Persia up to date and will establish
a good government. He comes of
aristocratic stock and has an excel
lent education,