HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1914-03-19, Page 71
THE V[\( I[ ti `Pm E. H.( 19, 1911
Copyright, 1912, by the Frank A.
Muneey company.
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prey 'sluuk stealthily away, For TQW
there were of all the jungle who sought
for trouble with the great anthropoids.
.A.nd in London another Lord Grey-
stoke was speaking to his kind in the
house of lords, bat none trembled at
the sound of his soft voice.
Saber proved most unsavory eating
-even to Tarzan of the apes, but hunger
serveas a sauce, and ere long the
well fed ape man was ready to sleeP
again. First, however, he must re-
move the hide, for it was as much for
this as for any other purpose that he
had desired to encompass the destruc-
tion of Sabor, the tiger.
Deftly he removed the great pelt, for
•he had practiced often on smaller ani-
' mats, and when the task was finished
he carried his trophy to the fork of a
high tree. There, curling himself se-
curely in a crotch, be fell into deep
• slumber.
What with loss of sleep, arduous es-
• ercise and a hearty meal Tarzan of
the apes slept the sun round, awaken.
Ing about noon of the following day.
He straightway repaired to the car-
cass of Sabor, but was angered to find
the bones picked clean by other hun-
gry denizens of the Jungle.
He hastened on toward the point
where he bad left the tribe and, whdn
he had found them, proudly exhibited
the skin of Sabor, the tiger.
"Look," he cried, "apes of Kerchaki
• See what Tarzan, the killer, has done.
Who else among you has ever killed
• one of Sabor's people? Tarzan is
mightiest among you, for Tarzan is no
ape. Tarzan is"- But here he stop-
' ped, for in the language of the anthro-
poids there was no word for man, and
Tarzan could'only write the word in
English. He could not pronounce it.
The tribe had gathered about to look
upon the proof of his wondrous prow-
ess anti to listen to his words.
Guly Kerr:link hung bock. nnrsIng
his hatred and his rage.
Suddenly something :mapped in the
brain of the anthropoid. With n fright-
ful vontthe „rent heast stilling nulling
ehe assenibInge. Frothing and shriek-
ing in the iniet n it y of his lei 1.y. Ker-
• chak looked about for the objeet of Ids
greatest hateed, find there. neon a
nearby limb. he saw hint sitting.
"Come down. Tarzate grent killer!"
cried Kerelnik. rently for battle.
"Come down and feel t he In ngs (II a
greater: Do inigeity fighters tty to the
trees at danger?"
And he emitted the volleying vital -
lenge of his &incl.'
Quietly Taman dropped to the
ground. Breathlessly the tribe watch-
; ed Kerchak, still roaring, charge the
relatively puny figure.
Nearly „seven feet stood Kerchak on
his short legs. His enormous shout-
-tiers were bunched and rounded with
huge muscles. The back of his short
neck was as a single lump of iron
sinew which bulged beyond the base
of his skull, so that -his bead seemed
like a small ball protruding from a
huge mountain of fiesh.
Hts back drawn, snarling lips expos.
ed his great fighting fangs, and his
bloodshot eyes gleamed in horrid re-
fection of his madness.
Awaiting him stood Taman, himself
mighty muscled anima), but hie six
fret of height and Ms great rolling
sinews seemed pitifully inadequate to
the ordeal which awaited them In thett
struggle with Kerchak.
His bow and arrows lay some dis.
tance away, where he bad dropped
Ahem seleene @towing Saber's hide to
Nerves Were
Urestrureg.
WOULD ALMOST GO OUT OF
flEO MM.
Many women become run down and
worn out by' household cares, and duties
never endine, and soteier or later find
themselves with shattered nerves and
weak hearts.
On the first sign of ony weakness of
the heart or nerves you should avail
yourself of a perfect cure by using Mil -
burn's Heart and Nerve rills.
Mrs. Archie Goodine, Tilley,
writes: -"When I was troubled with my
beset, two years ago, 1 was very had.
My wives were so unstrung, sometimes
1 would almost he out of my mind. I
doctored myeelf with everything 1
cord'. get, until at last I got four boxes
of Milbern's ITeart ea 1 N'erve. Pills, and
they have cured tne. 1 annot speak
tlq hiz;i1y Of flag W011(lerfal remedy,
• and will recommend it to all suffertre."
Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills are
110z. per box, or 3 boxes for $1.25, at nil
or mailed direct on receipt Of
'irk% by The T. Milburn Co., Limited,
Toronto, Ont.
1.1s lemov apes, and he eourromed
e: \Neu: only Ids knife tind ids supe -
tier :owner( to offset 'the feroeluns
sileueth of his enemy.
ltiS untagOnist camtroaring to-
e
11 1(1 11 1 111 1.01'd Gterystoke tore 111A long
knife front the sheathe:ed. %with an an.
NS\ el logclui'lli'elge"Sie tiorriii and Oh:ma-
(wishing us that of the la.ttet he faced,
1 usned swiftly to meet the attack. Ete
was too sarewei to allow those long,
hairy arms to ceicircle him, and just
as their bodies were about to crash to-
gether Tarzan ef the apes grasped one
of the huge wrists of his assailant and,
opringing tightly to one side, drove his
knife to the hilt into l{erchak's body
below the heart.
lierore be could wrench the blade
free agnin lierchak's quick lunge to
grasp him in those awful arms had
torn the hilt from Tarzan's hand.
Kerchak aimed a terrific blow at the
spe man's head with the flat of his
Loud Through the Forest Rang the
Fierce Wild Cry.
• . . .
nand, a blow white) had it Inteled
might easily have eruslied in the side
of Torzan's skull.
The man was too quick and, ducking
the blow, himself delivered a mighty
one with clinched fist in, the pit of
tierehak's stomach.
'rile ape was staggered by the blow
and, what with the mortal wound in
his side, bad almost collapsed, when
with one mighty etTort he rallied for
tin instant, Just long enough to enable
him to wrest his arm free from Tar -
Ian's grasp and close In a terrific clinch
with his wiry opponent.
Straining the ape man close to him,
his great jaws sought Tnrentr's throat,
nut the young lord's sinewy fingers
were at Kerchak's own before the
ernel fangs voted elose on the sleek
brown skin.
The greater strength of the ape was ,
slowly prevailing and the teeth of the
straining beast were motive an inch
from ...Tarzait's throat when, with a
shuddering tremor. the great body
stiffened for an instant and then sank
!Imply to the ground.
Kerchak wns dead and Taman of the
apes the victor.
Withdrawing the knife that hnd so
often rendered illtn master of far
mightier muscles than his own. Tar-
zan of the apes placed his foot upon
the neck of his vanquished enetny, and
once again loud thrOugh tho forest
rang the tierce, wild cry of the con-
queror.
And thus came the young Lord Grey-
stoke into tbe kingship of the apes,
CHAPTER VII.
Man's Reason,
HERE was one of the tribe of
Taman who questioned hie au-
thority, and that Villa Terkose
the son of Tublat, bet he. so
feared the keeti knife and the deathly
arrows of his new lord that he confin-
ed the 'monis:est:Alen of Iihl objections
to petty dieubediences and irrifetitig
mannerisms. Taman knew, however,
that he but waited hie opportunity to
wrest the kingship from him by soind
eniddeti stroke of trenchers' and so he
Was always on_gtitttd furainstsurprise.
For- menthe the Tire of the little band
went on much as It had before, except
that Turzo»s greater Intelligence aml
Iiiq alillIty Its 11 hunter were the 0)0111114
,,t provkling for them more bountifully
thon ever befin.e. Most or them, there -
fere, Were more than content with the
('(:1) 7)01' in rulers.
I bit i hic period Tarzan paid ninny
neetisrnal visits to the villitge, where
he often renewed Ms smell.% arrowe
The Meeks Imel not as yet eome mum
'larvall etilan on the dIstied heneh,
leo the »pe min/ lived in roesInnt
dread flint. o'hIle he wom away with
the trthe, dies would discover lind al'
11 1`. E011S11 Pe. So 1 ell Ille tl,17 tle
14 1;1;10 111011' 11 71,1 11101'e tilito tn 1 he VI•
01 1110' 01 ((Is rattier's met home mut
he. nufl lose with ow oilw.
Pr...wetly the !numbers of his Mile
atilt v. bean a la suffer On ll('('()(lIlt
1;1 Ins negleet. for disputes and gear -
Nes constantly nrose Welt only the
10111.: wield settle peneenhly.
AI lest ,euite, of 111.1• 01(11.1 117/05 91)111<b
45
11: '1.:11'7.1111 101 the enhject, 111111 for a
I:meth HI:weenie. he remained
Stg 01 With 111V t 1'11W.
.1.1117.1111 tirtql a it as lie foiled that
eitesehlpmennt the curtailment of his
ilwrty. Ile longed for the tittle cabin
snit the sun kieserl Sen, FOE the cool In
,erit;r of the well built house and for
lie hovel' eliding wonders of the ninny
swiss.
As lw hall grown older he found
that ite heti grown away front his P00'
ti' Their interests and his were far
removed They had not kept pave with
him, nor could they understand anglit
the tunny strange and wonderful
erezens thitt intesed through the active
hrainnt Mei,. human king.
Mid Kula tired Tarzan would have
eiteriliced 1111 else to reninin near her,
hilt now slm was dead, and, the playful
fremils of his ehildhood grown info
surly brutes, he felt I11;11 110 110011 111'e-
rerl'ed the peaVe :11111 solitude of his
-mien to the irksome duties of leader
siiip mom; 0 horde of wild beasts.
The lietteel lind jealousy of Terkoz,
of Tubiat. did 11,10.11 to eounternet
the effect of T111"e:1We desire to re-
nontwe hie kingship among tles npes,
rote stubborn young Englishman that
he was, he eould not bring himself to
retreat in the Nee of' so innlignnnt an
emptily.
That Terkoz w ou Id he chosen lend.
er In his stead he knew fult well. for
time 11101 again the ferocious brute pad
established his claim to physleal sit•
premney over the few bull apes wbo
lind dared resent his snvage bullying.
Terzan %meld bare Heed to sulente
the beast without reeourse to knife
or arrows. So emelt had his great
strength mid agility increased in the
period following his maturity that he
had come to believe that he ntight
master the redoubtable Terkoz In a
hand to hand fight were it not for
the terrible adrantnge the anthropoid's
huge fighting fangs gave him over the
poorly armed Tarzan.
One day the tribe was feeding gniet-
ly, spread over a considerable area,
when a great screaming rose some
distance east of where Tarzan lay upon
his belly beside a limpid brook, at-
tempting to .catch an elusive flsh In
his quick brown hands.
Witb one accord the tribe swung rap-
idly toward the frightened cries and
there found Terkoz holding an old fe-
male by the hair and beating her un-
mercifully with his great hands,
As Tarzan approached he raised his
hand aloft for Terkoz to desist, for the
female was not bus, but belonged to a
poor old ape whose fighting days were
tong over and who therefore could not
protect his family.
Terkoz knew that It was agaihst the
laws of his kind to strike the woman
of another; but. being n bully, he had
taken advantage of the weakness of
the female's husband to chastise her
became° she had refused to give up to
him a tender young rodent she had
captured.
When Terkoz saw Tarzatt approach,
Ing without his arrows he continued to
belabor the poor wotnan in a studied
effort to affront his hated chieftain.
Tarzan did not repeat his warning
signal, but instead rushed boldly epon
the wafting Terkoz,
Never hod the ape than fought so
terrible a battle sine that long gone
day when the great' king gorilla had
so horribly manhandled him ere the
new found knife had, by accident,
prieked the savage heart.
Tarzan`s knife oh the present oeca-
skin hitt barely offset the gleaming
fangs of Terkoz, and What little ad.
vantage the ape had over the man Itt
brute strength Was altruist balanced by
the latter's wonderful qutekneas and
agility. -
DON'T TAKE
CHANCES.
BUY GOODS
OF KNOWN
QUALITY
By HOLLAND.
11 ISTORY is full of warn-
ings about buying a pig
In a poke. This is only an.
other way of saying that one
should buy articles of known
merit -articles that will bear
Inspection.
The manufacturer who ad-
vertises his goods thereby
shows his confidence in them.
He would not spend money
to tell of their merits unless
they had merits. His adver-
tisement is an invitntion to
you to test his sincerity by
testing bis goods.
Yeu take no chances in pur-
chasing goods advertised in
this paper. The advertise-
roent is a guarantee of qual-
ity. Insist on having the
genuine articles. Something
said to be "just as good" Is
never so good. Get the gen.
uine-the kind that Is adver-
tised.
ADVERTISING
ELIMINATES
RISK,
IMI11.11Moft..1
In 111)' sum 1(111)1 01' their points, how.
ever. the tinthropoiel had a snitcIp the
better of the little, mai had there
h('en 10) Other pen:011:11 tittlibIlle to in-
fluence the final outcome Turzitii
the apes, Me young Lord Greystoke,
would hove flied as he had deed an
unknown 1411Vage 1./0.9St in equatorial
A filen.
lint there was that which had raleed
him flu. ithove Ids fellows of the jungle,
tied little spark which spells the vast
dIrferenee between man and brute -
reason, This it was that saved him
from death beneath the iron museles
and tearing fangs of Terkoz.
Seareety had they fought 11 dozen
second'4 ere they were rolling upon the
ground, striking, tearing and rending -
two great savage beasts battling to the
ilea tit,
Terkoz hnd a dozen icnire wounds on
head and le.east. and Tru.zan wns ture
and bleeding, tits scrim th one pinve
half torn from his head, so thnt a
great pipee hung down over one t.ye,
obstrueting los legion.
But so e'er the young
had been able to keep Me horrible
fangs from his Ingidar. and. :is tiles
fought less fiercety for a moment to re
gain their breath, 'rarest» formed n
cunning pine. Ile %vomit work els wly
to the other's hnee 8101 elinama 111.10
With tooth and fedi. drive• 14t11le
home until leresee wite no wore.
laillieilver was In'ecimPlIslwd
wore ensily than he had hoped tot 0,e
stupid beast, not knowing ivied I ar
zan was ottempting. ninth. 01, hard,
uhir effort to prevent the 8eemuipii.-11
ment of the design
But when tinally he rentized Mat nls
antagonist wns fiesteneo te non 011e7'e
his teeth and fists alike were useless
against him Tertroz 11111sel1
about upon the ground so ‘10,,,,,w
that Tarzan could but cling riespprite
ly to the leaping_ turning, twiettne.
COLD
Developed Into
311011CHITIS.
However slight a cold you have, yoU
houid never neglect it. In all pos.
ibility, if you do not treat it in time it
rill develop into bronchitis, pneumonia,
ir some other serious throat or lung
rouble.
Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup is
larticularly adapted for all colds, coughs,
ronehitis, pneutnonia, asthma., whoops
err cough and all troubles of the throat
Lad lungs. Three points in favour of
Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup are:
I.. Its action is prompt. 2. It invigorates
es well as heals, and soothes the throat
end lungs. 3. It is pleasant, harmless
Ind agreeable in taste.
Mrs. Albert Veit, Brockville, Ont.,
writes: -"Just a line to let you know
thotit Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup.
Our eldest little 1;irl is now six years old.
When site was four months old she got
1. COM With:11 developed into Bronchitis,
eed we tried everything we could think
)1 and had two doctors attending her,
Set it was no good. One day I read
in your almanac about Dr. Wood's
Norway Pine Syrop, so I tried it, and
before she had finiAred one bottle of it,
the dry hacking cottglt had neatly all
rrone. There is nothing equal to it,
an(1 v.,e are never without it in the house."
8..1.1 that you get "Dr. Wood's" when
von ask for it, as there are numerous
imitations oe the market. The gentlitte
is mattufactdred by The T. Milburn
Co., Limited, Toronto, Ont.
Price, 25c.; family size, 50c,
1.414 111111 ..•
Int 1(1110' 14:1s /11Irell rt; /11- /1;;;;..)
I hell% 1'1'1 l'0•1 •I'.('•01.-' •;;
'1 ariah tomtit 111.1,- 0
/111-1711 711,' 1'01'1 Itt!,,
in` Int; wen te‘i 1817,10'.0-.11
11./1N (1.•/,•il 1111'1', 01117 MI' 1-
y an rieeplepta 1 .
1411 ift nee 44)') 1 11 1 114; Vit.!, 1'4 1,11111i111.4
gave him a new bold with Is s right
baud, wheel he stool realized wits ale
:whitely unuesallable.
His arm eels massed benenth 'res.
koz'ir arm from behind, mid hie 1101:0
and forearm enefrcled the baelt of Ter.
koz's twee It WaS the half nelson or
modern wrestling wide!) the untaught
ape matt find stumbled upon, hut ell.
vine reason showed Mtn in an instant
the value of the thing he had diseov-
eree. It was the differenve to hi 111 be
-
tweet] life and denth.
And so he struggled to et:commies
Similar hold with the left hand In a
few moments Terkwe's bull neck wits
creaklug b('Loed!) a ftill nelson.
There was no more lunging about
now. The two lay perfectly still upon
the ground, Taman wain Terkez's
back. Slowly the bulle0 head of th14
ape was heing forced lower and lower
upon his chest.
Tarzan knew what the result would
be. In an instaut the neck would
break. Then there came to Terkoz's
rescue the same thing that had put
him in these sore straits -a ninn's rea-
soning power.
"If 7 kilt him," thought Titrzan.
"what advantage will it be to me?
- Will it not but rob the tribe of a great
fighter? And Terkoz is dead lie will
know nothing of my supremacy, while
iiiivaebsowill be on example to tbe oth-
e
r
ne,,
"Ita-goda?" hissed Tarzan In Ter-
koz's ear, which in ape tongue wean,
freely translated. "Do you surrender?"
For a moment there ryas no reply,
and 1771 17 added a few more ounces
of pressure. which elicited a .horritled
shriek of pale from the great beast.
"Ka.g,odue" repeated Tat.zan.
"Ka-godal" cried Terkoz.
"Listen," said Tarzan, easing up a
trifle, but not releasing his hold. "I
am Tarzan, king of' the apes, mighty
bunter, mighty flghter. In all the jun-
gle there is none so great.
"You have said 'Ka-goda' to me.
MI the tribe have beard. Quarrel no
wore with your king or your people,
for nest time I shall kill you. Do you
understand?"
"Huh," assented Terkoz,
"And you are satsfied?"
"Bub," said the ape.
Taman let him up, and in a few
minutes all were hack at their voca-
tions as though naught had occurred
to mar the tranquillity of their prime-
val forest haunts.
But deep in the minds of the apes
was rooted the convictiou that Tarzan
was a mighty fighter and a strange
ereature-strange because he had had
ft in his power to kill his enemy, but
had allowed him to live, unharmed.
That aftet.noon as the tribe came to-
gether. as 411118 their wont after dark-
ness settled on the jungle, Tarzan, his
wouuds washed in the limpid waters
of the little streatn, called the old ,
males about him.
"You have seen again today that
Tarzan of the apes is the greatest
amoug you." fie said.
"Ellin," they replied with one voice.
"Taman is great." ,
"Taman," he continued, "is not an
ape. Ile is not like his people. His
\vays are not their ways, and so Tarzan
is going back to the lair of his own
kind by the netters of the great lake
e !doh has no fat.ther shore. You must
ehoose another to rule you. Taman
Will not return,"
And thus young Lord Greystoke took
the first step tottered the goal which be
had set himself- the finding of other
Nrhlte men like himself.
The following morning Tarzan, lame
rind sore from the wounds of his bat-
tle with Terkoz, set out toward the
west and the seacoast.
Fie traveled very slowly, sleeptng in
the jungle at night and reaching his
cabin late the following morning.
For several days /.10 moved about but
little, only enough to gather what fruit
and nuts he required to satisfy the de-
mands of hunger.
In ten days he was quite sound
again except for a terrible, half healed
scar which, starting above his left eye,
ran across the top of his bead, ending
at the right ear. It was the mark left
by Terkoz when he bad torn the scalp
away.
During his eon raleseenee Tarzan
tried to fashion a mantle from the
skin of Sabot', the tiger, which had
lath all this time in the cabin. But he
found the hide dried as stiff as a
board, and, as he knew naught of tan-
ning, he wns forced to abandon his
cherished plan.
Then he determined to filch what
few garments he could from one of the
black men of Mbonga's village, for he
bad decided to mark his elevation
from the lower orders in every possi-
ble manner, and nothing seemed to
him a more distinguishing badge of
manhood than ornaments and clothing.
To this end, therefore, he collected
the various arm and leg ornaments he
had taken from the black warriors who
had succumbed to his swift and Silent
noose and donned thee) all.
About his neck hung the golden ebain
from which depended the diamond in -
Crusted loCket of his mother, the Lady
Ake. At his back was a quiver of ar-
rows slung from a leathern shoulder
belt, another piece of loot from some
vanquished nick.
About his waist was n belt of tiny
strips of rawhide fashioned by himself
as a Support for the hotoemade scab-
bard In whiCh hung his father's hunt
Ing knife. The lot bow which had
ketp_IttilongeS hung over big left
nommaimmaimmvimmaimmunri
Children Cry foe Fletcher's
The Rind You Have Always Eought, and which has been.
11,2. use or over tl0 yeals, hal; 'borne the signattzre ot
C2and has been made undeL, his per-
. -a.--.4),,7-127441 sA°.11V;laTeOVIttncle5cilg 1;27. ii-ttilae.
. ,
All Counterfeits, Ifnitatimis awl 46 Just -as -good" are but
Experiments that trifle with and endanger the health. Of
Infants and Children -Experience against Experiment.
iliihat is CASTOR1A
CmItoria is a, harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare-
goric, Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic.
substance. Its age is its guarantee. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. For more than. thirty years it
has been liat constant use for the relief of Constipation,
Flatulency, Wind Colic, all Teething Troubles and
Diarehma. It regulates the gtomach and :Bowels,
assimilates the Food, giving healthy and natural sleep.
The Children's Panacea -The Mother's Friend.
CEMEMME CASTO R IA ALWAYS
Bears the Signature of
The Kind You ave ways Bought
in Use For Over 30 Years
THE CenTAUti compeer, 77 MURRAY STREET. NM/ ItoaK crrif.
•
slionidir. '-
The young Lord Greystoke was in-
deed a strange and warlike dgure, his
mass of black hair falling to bib shoul-
ders behind and cut with hls hunting
knife to a rude bang iipon his fore-
head. thnt it might not fall before his
eyes,
Hair was commencing to grow Oen
his face. MI the apes had hair upon
Theirs, but the black men were entareTy
hairless, with very few exceptions.
True, he had seen pictures' In his
hooks of men vrith great massds of
hair upon hp and cheek and chin; but,
nevertheless, Tarzan was afraid. Al-
most daily he whetted his keen knife
and scraped and whittled at his young
beard to eradicate tbis degrading em-
blem of apehood.
And so he learned to shave, rudely
and painfully, -It is true, but neverthe-
less effectively.
CHAPTER Veil.
His Own Kind.
HEN be felt quite strong
again after his bloody battle
with Terkoz, the mighty
ape, Taman set off one morn-
ing toward Mbonga's village, He was
moving carelessly along a windingjun-
gle trail instead of making his progress
through tbe trees when suddenly be
came face to face with a black war-
rior.
The look of surprise on the savage
face was almost comical, and before
Tarzan could unsling his bow the fel-
low had turned and fled down the path
cryiug out in alarm, as though to oth-
ers before bitn.
Taman took to the trees in pursuit
and in a few motnents came in view of
the fleeing quarry.
There were three of them, and they
were raeing madly in single tile
through the dense iinderp,Towth.
Tarzan easily dietaneed them. nor
did they Pee iliS silent passage above
their heads nor note 111 1-' cronelting fig-
ure squatted upon a iow 11111111q1 8 !WWI
of then) beneath veinal the mil led
them.
Tarzan let the first two pass heneath
him, but as the third catne swiftly on
the quiet noose dropped about the
black throat. A quick jerk drew it
taut.
There was an agonized scream froin
the victim, and his fellows turned to
see his struggling body rise as by
magic slowly into the dense folinr,e of
the trees above.
With shrieks they wheeled once more
and plunged on in their effort to es-
cape.
Tarzan dispatched his prisoner quick-
ly and silently, removed the weapons
and ornaments and -greatest joy of all
-a handsome doeskin breechcloth,
which he quickly transferred to his
own person.
Taking the body across his shoulder,
he moved more slowly through the
trees townrd the little palisaded vil-
lage. fur he again needed arrows.
As he approached quite close to the
invite:tire he elm an exelted group sur-
rounding the two fugitives, who, trent-
bling with fright and exhaustion, were
sen r' aide to reemint the ancanny de-
tails a their adventure.
The villagers were worked up into a
State Or Plink. 1110 wise Mbonga af-
feetiel to feel considerable skepticistil
regarding the tole and attributed the
whole labricatIon to 1.11.4e fright in the
111 seine real t1attel'1%
"Voll 014 stOry," ho
eniti. "twee use you do not dare to speak
the truth. Von do not dere admit that
when the tiger sprang you ran away
and ieft sour comrade. You are cow
-
tills"
Turning and Twisting In the Air Came
the Dead Body.
In the trees above them caused the
Weeks to look up 111 EeneWed terror.
The sight that met their eyes made
even Mbonga shudder.
Turning and twisting in the alr rams
the dead body to sprawl with a islet -
reline limpuess mem the groom) at
their foot.
With one nevem, the blacks took to
their heels, nor dill they stop until the
last of them was lost in the shadows.
of the
(To be Continued)
LIRE
Sick headache and relieve all the troubles 11.14.
dent to a bilious Mato of the system, suet: as
LeIzziness,,Nausea, ProurAnesa, Distrevs aftcr
' eating, Pain in the lcIe &e. While their raost
rematkablesueeess bun been eitownlaeurIng
;E
b thetene of so inn Three that here IS 'Omit
°ure4 HEAD
lichotheywonidbeitimostpricelerstothemewito
natelytheir goodness does notend Itere,tual Most*
' nag 10 00 ‘N ithattt theta, hat afterall sleigh**,
• Beer from Ole distressing complaint; bateau.
able In so many wins that they trill not hewn.
v,reothchreroayrreittat tedrsreyo,,141
We make ouegreat boast. Ourpillseurett %elle
whooneotrythentwillfindtheeelittlepillsrate*
'writing thiq annoying conmlaint,while theyalse
1h --r anti regulate the bowels. IA eta:they only
Headache, yet Carter's Little Liver Ms are
equally valnabloin Constipation,Curingantlpre.
eorreet disorders of thosionmeh, stirmeatethe
IlL°11tile tivet Pills are 'eery *mall 004
SICK
take. ()neer twonillentakA edoge,
14)take.
vegetable arid do not eels or
I pnrge,bat by their ratio action Nemo allytke
ue them.
COM Z 1102na 00.* NW TOM
1 NI aD1U
• Seareely had Nibonga ceased speak. 1
lig when great erashing or brancticet '