Chapter XIlI—Continued wa Yo It was a wonderfully after the storm—cold and brilliant, with the shadows standing out as clearly as living things. The third idea came to Baree now. He was, like nll animals, largely of one ldea at a time—a creature with whom all lesser impulses were governed by a single leading impulse. And this Im pulse, in the glow of the starlit night, was to reach as quickly as possible the first of Plerrot's two cabins on the trap-line. There he would find Nepeese ! clear night We won't call the process by which Baree came to this conclusion a® proc- ess of reasoning; Instinct or reason- ing, whatever it was, a fixed and posi tive faith came to Baree just the same. He began to miss the traps in his haste to cover distance—to reach the cabin, It was twenty-five miles from Pler- rot's burned home to the first trap- cabin, and‘ Baree had made ten of these by nightfall teen were the most difficult. In open spaces the snow was belly-deep and soft: frequently he plunged through drifts in which for a few mo- ments he was burled. Three times during the of the night Baree heard dirge of the wolves, early the it part savage Once was a pulled down their kill less than a mile away In the deep forest. the voice no longer called to him, It Each time that it he stopped In his tracks and snarled, while his spine stiffened. of treachery. At midnight Baree came to the tiny amphitheater In the forest Pierrot had ent the logs for the of his trap-line cabins. For at a minute Baree stood at the edge of the his ears very i eyes with hope and expecta tion, sniffed the air, Was no sound, no light clearing, alert, his bright while he smoke, no the one window of the log shack fell on again disappointment him even he he of sensed the stood there; fact of ness of his quest, There was a heartened to his body made his way through the snow to the eabin door. He had five miles, and he was tired his aloneness, dis slouch as 1} The snow was drifted the wn ans deep at 1 doorway, and here Baree sat d« whined. It was no longer the anxl questing whine of a few hou: u Now it volced hopelessness and a war he the wilderness, For half an he sat his hack the despair with to door to still ering his if hope face fleeting after there ren that Nepeese ight follow him over the trall. Then he burrowed snowdrift tha himself a hole the and passed the remainder of in uneasy slumber, sumed the trail. He was not so this morning. There was the solate droop to his tall which the In. dians call the Akoosewin-——the sign of the sick dog. And Baree was sick not of hody but of soul. The keenness of his hope had dled, and he no longer find the Willow The second eabin at the far of the trap-line drew him on, but it Inspired in of the with which he had hurried to the first He traveled slowly and spasmodically, his expected to end him none enthusiasm suspicions of the forests again replac- excitement of his of Plerrot's and deadfalls cautiously, and twice he at a that snapped at him from under a root it had dragged the trap it was caught, and the second at a snowy owl that had to bait and was now a prisoner at the ena JI a steel Jt may be that Baree thought Oohoomizew and that he still vividly the battle of that ing the quest approached each traps showed his fangs-—once marten where which time big come steal it was remem bered treacherous assault and ix a and tery he did n He There Plerrot's hungry line flerce night when, his sore the mys he was dragging body through of the big timber to puppy. wounded and fear yore than show his tore of Baree rabbits did were plenty traps, and He late In the ten hours of ling He no very great disappointment here, for he had not anticipated very much, The snow had banked this cabin even higher than the other. It lay three foot against the door, and the window wns white with a thick coat- ing of frost, At this place, which was close to the edge of a big barren, and unsheltered by the thick forests far. ther hack, Plerrot had built a shelter for his firewood, and In this shelter Baree made his temporary home. All not go reached HEC) the nd trap eabin afternoon, trave met with deep near the end of the trap-line, skirting the edge of the barren and investigat ing the short line of a dozen traps which Plerrot and Nepeese had strung through a swamp in which there had been many signs of lynx. It was the third day before he set out on his return to the Gray Loon. He did not travel very fast, spend: Ing two days In covering the twenty. five miles between the first and the second trap-line cabins, At the sec- ond cabin he remained for three days, and it was on the ninth day that he reached the Gray Loon. There was no change. There were no tracks In the snow but his own, made nine days ago. Barce's quest for Nepeese became now rthore or less Involuntary, a sort of dally routine. For a week he made glide By JAMES OLIVER CURWOOD (@: Doubleday, Page & Co.) WNU Service his burrow In the dog-corral, and at least twice between dawn and dark. ness he would go to the birch-bark tepee and the chasm. His trail, heaten hard in the snow, fixed as Plerrot's trap-line. And then, of a sudden, Baree a change. He spent a night tepee, sOoon became made in the always slept In the tepee. The blankets were his bed a part of Nepeese. And there, through the long winter, he walted. The winter passed, and spring came, old tralls, over the old first of the two were rusted and sprung now; thawing snow disclosed bones feathers between thelr jaws: under the deadfalls were remnants of fur, and out on the ice of the lakes were plcked skeletons of foxes and wolves and then as the traps even going now trap-line as far cabins, The snow went, The swollen sang in the forests and canyons. grass turned green, and the first flow Ciime, All these the things birds had were mated happening and And broke inside of last something Baree, his last hope, perhaps, his last one day he bade good Loon one can say what it cost him to no can say how fought things that were hol to the the old pool, the familiar paths In the forest, | two that and lonely now under the tall spruce. lle to the Gray No gO: he one the ding him topes, swimming the graves were not so ' And Into the North He Went. went He It Master whose had no reason imply went may be that there @ hand guides the beast ns well as the n just enough of this guldance to call it For, in dragging hin faced the Adven and that we know an, ’ tr . instinet 180i! awny jaree ture, It was for him went % - * * 3 » - . Great there, in the north, into the north he walting and It was early left in August when Baree Gray Loon. He had no ohjee view But there was still left mind, like the im. of light and shadow on a the memories of his earlier Things an. happenings that he had almost forgotten recurred to him, ns his trall led him farther and far- ther away from the Gray Loon: and earlier experiences real again, pletures thrown afresh his mind the in five upon his delicate negative days, became his out in of these Impressions and new of slowly these met happenings, build up came to leh Nepeese they elped to interesta for blind canyon Pierrot the and chased him, day, He entered the little and stood beside the great rock i Willow's body; znd then bered where Wakayoo, his big friend, had died under Plerrot's rifle— them. And now, for the first time in many weeks, a bit of the old-time eagerness put speed Into Barce's feet, Memories had been hazy and indistinct through among to the Gray Loon Ing home, he returned to the old beav er-pond, All through the month of August Baree made the beaver-pond his head quarters, At times his excursions at a time. These journeys were al ways into the north, sometimes a little east and sometimes a little but never into the south. nt September, he the west, And left again early In beaver pond for good It wos Le “nw December when Lac Baln, freshly fallen little Inter caught a flash almost halfhreed fon and a from Baree's snow, tprints in “Mon Dieu, 1 tell you his feet are as blg as my hand, and he Is as black as a raven's wing with the sun on it!" in dain, “A fox? ns big And blac x MeTn heard wtore He Is oral! he exclaimed at Lac half the Company's Non! bear. A as the devil, M'sieus.” ns a wolf was one of those who putting his signature in Ink to he had written pany Lerue's words ’ } r 0 him : piped 80 sydd that a sD i113 rod I Hnro 4 Him Here ran shiver as he looked halfhreed Just then Marie McTaggart tribe Her had brought her { 3 sick look wild beauty With scarcely hen 11 i glimpse ’ i » fis i pale fa and lived In the one piness knowing that Marie under stood, and there Hzht one else that into her eyes came for an different No lay between them and kept saying and that was instant a thelr glances met and patiently walted watched Lerue “Some day,” he » himself—"Some day” Leruve was thinking of this when McTaggart returned at the end of the The Factor straight to where the half dozen of them were pen ted ¥ our “5k IY n ' tH caine up about the big box stove, and the fall y + ; s » ' fallen snow from his shoulders the to of with a grunt satisfaction shook freshly “Plerre has and map-making party Barrens this winter,” he an “You know, Lerue-—he has fifty traps and dead. falls set, and a big polson-bait coun. fry. A good line, eh? And 1 have leased it of him for the season. It will give me the outdoor work 1 need three days the trall, three days Eh, what do you say to the bar. Eustach offer, accepted going up into government's in guide the the nounced, on here gain ?™ “It I= good,” sald Lerue “Yes, it “A wide Roule “And easy lence In a a woman's, (TO is good” sald Roget, fox country,” sald Mons to travel,” murmured Va- voice that was almost like BE CONTINUED.) If, during a country stroll, you come to a clear-running stream or river, and notice at the bottom of broken crockery, kettles, pans, and RO you camp Is near, died there, On that on, and that a gypsy has day after the funeral | longings of the dead person. Then all and solemnly thrown into the near est running water, Behind this queer custom lies “ghost-fear.” It Is belleved that, so long as any of the possessions of a dead gypsy remain intact, his ghost will “walk,” and ill-luck and misfor- tune will dog the camp. Sometimes, so strong is this superstition, even the horse of a dead gypsy Is de stroyed, Gypsies never utter the names of the dead, and for a long time after a death will not eat or drink anything that was a favorite with the departed, This Is “ghost-fear” again. Rarely, if ever, are flowers placed on a gypsy's grave. Some little pos session that they loved In life—a toy for a child, or a blackened teapot, broken first, for an old woman, and 80 on--ls the usual cholce, Hot Bowlders Make Bath The Currier Indians along the Thompson rivér, In British Columbia, They roll into a blazing bonfire until they are very hot, and then they roll them back Into thelr homes, shut the doors and after divesting them. the large heated stones, The effect is that of a Turkish bath. To top off the bath the “bathers” take a quick and brief plunge Into the river for what corresponds to the cold shower of civilization, Why It Is “1 eannot understand,” mused Pro- fessor Pate, "how It Is that women are almost Invariably regarded as supe. rior to men" “Because they say they are, of course I" promptly replied old Gaunton Grimm.~Kansas City Star, Garments — Winsome Accessories Shown. Coats and capes for beach are more colorful this season than ever hefore. Coats Include all lengths and styles from the short mil- itary Jocket to the three-quarter- length tuxedos, Capes are very fancy and are cut with uneven hemlliges, overcapes, flared godets and In smart military styles. Both capes and coats of the dressier type are being shown with deep collar, cuffs apd bandings of clipped ostrich, which is very flat- tering. The ostrich ls waterproof and does not come out of curl or fall off when wet. The materials used in these outer beach wraps are varied, Including Jersey weaves, cretonnes, crepes, both silk and cotton, and the very fastidious lace. All are rubber ized and hang with the same supple ness as the material before treated, Bathing brassleres of woven mesh and lace are two new items which will be welcomed. They are copied from models made up In brocade lace, silk and mesh and have strong shoulder straps and hooks In back. Lace bras- gleres which have a rubber backing come In natural, white and pink, while heavier ones in in pink only. Faney bathing bags which may be used for carrying the or, while promenading, other accessories, come In several styles and materials One of white @ has a of pink finished a fringe and lace, has through which is run a and woven mesh come suit for bac Kgro wi ine and Is the rubber a drawstring silk novel bag for tain it 4) cord. A more practical suit after the made somewhat drum tery t rimmair iE ornament has been flowers, like are all the rage Polka Dot Hats Among Fashions for Summer Hats with large pcika dots paintea on them are extremely fashionable. This felt one worn by Claire Windsor, “movie” star, is the new casguette shape and has a scarf to match. conspicuous favor and appears, both in the day and evening mode, In many variations of length, and treatment. Worth shows several straight gath. ered capes In printed chiffon with plain chiffon linings and fur collars Capes and cape-effects as In the evening in day models Capes also Premet., They are nearly always shaped, with- width, fitting the shoulders, which oe casionally makes the shoulders look square and not always becoming The capes are either quite long, semi long or short and are worn with Jumper sults or frocks, are quent favored by are out ‘much however, and close at is Fashion to Have Shoes and Dresses to Match No dress looks right if the shoes are wrong, and it is the fashion more than ever to have shoes to match the dress, be it bine, gray, green, or brown, With a black dress and shoes very thin black silk stockings may be They are so thin that they look Gloves are exquisitely worked, are chosen to match either the dress or the hat and shoes, which Paste Jewels Popular There are enough rhinestones worn surance adjuster almost Imperative, For the paste Jewels are among the most popular decorations for the black winging across front or back. Most of the evening frocks are short and tight from bust to hips. Stylish and Becoming Chic and quite becoming to the young miss is this georgette dress of pale green with lace collar and cuffs The belt is of green and silver leather. Lined With Summer Fur notable fashion is the twee lined with summer fur, says & Times London pock In brown, these coats r Hight sum dresses tweed INH mer ’ A gray coat ver a wide floun we worn « plum-cal dress with sash waist, gieeoves and cuffs Many dresses |} touch of lingerie Cream taffeta dress Linen Sport Blazers Feature Mannish Cut of |} ] the have =a man- They are re man’s gtrap acer the back for adjustment and are longer in front, The ns well as the armholes and neck, which is collariess, are bound linen, little Jackets worn withont Yeutoes, too, fo Sport bright nish semble a blazers colors 3 cut sleeveless, vest, having a ®4 edges, with white to be or These a white sicoves are over costume with flow the trend which marks this season's blazers—the man- nish note Peter Pan turnover affairs, are geargett tans blend {abrics, collars, straight the of silk, volle, White and soft these materials summer dress convertible seen in e and linen and rose tones in well with the Petticoats Hang Below Short Costume Skirt We all had thought that petticoats had to come to an end. Knickers and short skirts seemed to have doomed them. But no. The latest (and among the most attractive) ideas from France include the very lightest of such gar are of the same as the blouse under the coat drape from the with lace like that which hangs below the skirt It is as necessary now that woman who wears any petticoat at They invariably blouse sleeves wrist below the coat the all it used to be that she should make sure that it was hidden. Correct Tailored Mode Is Anything but Simple The simplicity of the correct tail ored mode to obtain, The sults now being worn by the most smartly dressed women are straight and plain and yet each fa given a lot of originality. Some acquire this by having the skirt and Jacket of a different material and color. Others find a note of distine- tion In a white or fancy waistcoat Still others are combined with blouses ——— Frock of Many Hues the old-time crazy quilt can hope to equal the arrangements seen In some of the new frocks Imported from Paris, These are entirely constricted of gros grain ribbons of different are of different widths and lend them selves to an Infinite variety of inter pretation, — ‘The Kitchen Cabinet Ww estern Newspaper Union.) Never give up! There are chances and changes ing the hopeful, to one; through the chaos, dom arranges Ever success, if you'll only hold on. Hels a hundred And, high wise FOR TODAY Cream puffs made very small and filled with creamed are clous accompaniments to a salad The onion of our most valuable vegetables, should be used freely all through the year. Prepare der new for a salad by slicing and sea- soning well, then with sweet eream and serve. A sprig of parsley eaten after onions will re- move the FOOD cheese dell- being one ten- onlons cover objectionable Onions Stuffed With Nuts.— nok even-sized onions in boiling salted wa- ter until tender, Remove the centers, chop them and mix Har " : chopped nuts and bread crumbs odor. with butter, the onions with this mixture and around them a thin cream or rich or any broth; bake as usual Strawberry Bouches.—{ over molds with rich bake in } wen, Fill with ries, in a ane 4 ternt biscuit i sweetened strawher- brown “A ¥¥y with neringue and ven. serve well Vienna Steak. —T of 1 anda with veal season well Crean ver the aver i Marmalade ausea, kot suffering wenkest stom Foods for Occasions. fow looking for somethin el we wish to ry It Squab Mira- beau. . - Prepare Klit them down the back the brea move without son with egg crumbs and cook minutes wi and potatoes browned Braised Tongue.—{Cook slowly for two | ) ntil skin it and put Meit three tabiespoonfuls butter, three of flour and cook until add a pint of broth in which was cooked and a pint of tomatoes Cook chopped onion ced, half nful of wWOorces breaking sthone, sea- salt and pepper, cover with in butter fifteen th small onlons in butter. Garnish tongue tender, casserole of add smooth ; the tor stewed until thick, adding one and a half a carrot finely min n ta Rauce the 1« hours sue and strained blespo tershire ¥ few dashes of red pepper and mgue, Cover and simmer for two Serve from the casserole. Raspberries a 1a Astor—Take two cupfuls of raspberries, little lemon Jjulce and powdered sugar and a pinch of nutmeg. Mix thoroughly with whipped cream and flavor with maraschino. Sprinkle with pistachio nuts finely minced; place on ice to chill for two hours before serving. Peach Pudding~—FPour a cupful of hot milk over a cupful of dry bread crumbs and let stand five minutes: add a half cupful of sugar, the well beaten yolks of three eggs and the stiffly beaten white of one. Mix weil and bake in a moderate oven until firm. Heap thinly sliced peaches well sweetened over the top and cover with a meringue made of two egg whites and three tablespoonfuls of sugar. Cover the pudding with the meringue and bake a delicate brown, Cake 3 : add a | Another nice peach dessert is bird's | nest pudding. Make a biscuit batter and pour over sliced peaches. Bake and Invert the pan. Add sugar and | butter and serve. Scalloped Potatoes With Sausages. | «Arrange scalloped potatoes in a | baking dish and over the top place Bake until all are Serve fro mthe baking | small sausages. done, | dish,