HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Wingham Times, 1914-06-11, Page 7, ArTMOTT,^77.77
IINIES„J1NI4 U. 11
Copyright, 1913,
EM. Viifore Ulm oil a &Licit the we -
man lay. Paulvitch's fingers were
gripping the fair throat, while his vic-
tim's hands beat futilely at his face,
The noise of his entrance brought
Paulvitch to his feet, where he stood
glowering menacingly at Tarzan. The
girl rose falteringly to a sitting pos.
,ture upon the couch. One hand wea
at her throat, and her breath came in
Mile gasps. Although disheveled and
;very pale, Tarzan recognized her as
the young woman whom he had caught
staring at him on deck earlier in the
day.
"What is the meaning of this?" said
!Tarsals, turning to Rokoff', whom he
intuitively singled out al the instiga-
tor of the outrage. The man remain -
.ed silent, scowling. "Touch the but -
'ton, please," continued the ape -man.
"We will have one of the ship's att.
oaers, here. This affair has gone •quite
far enough."
• "No, no," cried the girl, coming such,
• denly to her feet; "please do not do
'that! I am sure that there was no
real intention to harm me. I angered
this person, and he lost control of
'• himself; that is all. I would not care
to have the matter go further, please,
•monsieur."
The girl evidently was In fear of
these two. She dared not express her
real desires before them.'
"Then," said Taman, "I shall certain-
ly act on my own responsibility. To
.you," he continued, turning to Rokoft,
by W. G. Chapman
ttzne nettling_ luiiirer ar diirr
of the actors in the Utile drama that
he had caught a fleeting glimpse of
stall late in the afternoon of the last
4'1 hope that you will not suffer for the
kind deed you attempted"
"and this includes your accomplice, I
may say tbat from now on to the end
. of the voyage I shall take it Open my-
self to keep an eye on you, and should
there chance to come to my notice any
act of Oilier one of you that might
even remotely annoy this youug wo-
man you ehell be called to account for
it directly to me, nor shall the calling
.or the accounting be pleasant experi-
ences for either of you.
"Now, get out of here!" And he grab-
bed Rokoff and Paulvitch each by the
scruff of the neck and thrust them
forcibly through the doorway, giving
. each an added impetus down the cor-
ridor with the toe of his boot Then he
turned back to the stateroom and the
girl. She was looking at him in wide
eyed astonishment.
"Ah, nionsieur," she said, "I hope
that you will not suffer for the kind
•deed you attempted. You bave made,
a very wicked and resourceful enemy,
who _will stop at nothing to initial
bis hatred. You most be very careful;
indeed; monsieur"—
• "Pardon, me, madame; my name is
.Tarzan."
"M. Tarzan. And becatise' I would
not consent to notifying the offieere
-do not think that 1 am not sincerely
grateful to you for the brave and chiv-
alrous protection you rendered Me.
•Good night, J. Tarzan. I shall never
fOrget the debt I owe you." And with
a inost wifiaOlne smile that displayed
s row Of ahnost perfect teeth the girl
Courtesied to Tartan, who bade her
good night and made hls way on deck.
It puzzled the Mau considerably that
there should be two on board—this girl
and Count de Cende—wild suffered in
-
-dignities at the hands of Rokoff arid
'his tompaniOn and yet weuld not per -
Mit the offenders to be brought to jus-
tice. It oceurred to him that he had
net learned her IMMO. That he Was
-Married had been eVidenced by the
,narrow 'gola band that • encireled the
..third finger of her left hand InVolung
:tartly he Wondered who the luelcy man
;Veit be.
• "And then ap,ain luta I &Oared my-
self I should nave robleal the wonaail
1 love of the wealth tied Position thnt
'her marriage to Clayton will now In -
$11e to bets 1 cutild not have dowS
that -could I, Paul?
"Nor is tbe mutter of birth of great
importance to me," he went on with-
out waiting for a reply, "Raised as I
bate been, I see no worth in man or
beast that.„is not theirs by virtue of
their oWn mental or physical! prowess,
and so 1 am as happy to think ef Rale
as inx mother as I would be to try and
picture the poor, unhappy littie Eng-
lish girl aim passed away a yenr after
She bore me. Kale was always kind
t to me in her fierce and 'savage way. I
must have nursed at her hairy breast
from the time that my own raother
'died. She fought for we against the
*wild denizens of the forest and against
the savage members of our tribe with
the ferocity of real mother love.
"And 1 on tny part loved her, Paul,
I dicl not realize how much until after
the cruel spear and the poisoued arrow
of Mbonga's black warrior had stolen
her away front me, I was.still a child
.when that °mitred, and I threw my-
self upon hee dead body and wept out
My anguish as a child might for his
own mother. To you, my friend, she
'would Mae appeared a hideous and
'ugly creature, but to me she was beau-
tiful, so gloriously does love transfig-
ure its object. And so I am perfectly
content to remain forever the son of
Kale, the she ape, who reared me after
my own mother died."
"I do not admire you the less for
your loyalty," said D'Arnot, "but the
time will come when you will be glad
to claim your,oWn. You must bear in
mind that Professor Porter and Mr.
• Philander are the only people in the
world who can swenr that the- little
skeleton found in the cabin with those
of your father and mother was that of
an infant anthropoid ape and not the
offspring of Lord and Latly Greystoke.
That evidence is most important. They
are both old men. They may not live
many years longer. And then dlU It
not occur to you that once Miss Por-
ter knew the truth she would break
her engagement with Clayton? You
might easily have your title, your es-
tates and the woman you Jove, Tar-
zan. Had yon not thought of that?"
Tarzan shook his head. "You do not
know her," he said. "Nothing could
bind her closer to her bargain than
' some misfortune to Clayton. She is
from an old southern family in Amer-
ica, and southerners pride themselves
upon their loyalty,"
: Tarzan spent the two following,
weeks renewing bis former brief ac- .
quaintance with Paris. In the daytime
he haunted the libraries and picture
galleries. He learned what he could
by day and threw himself. into a
Search for relaxation and amusement
at night. Nor did he find Paris a
whit less fertile field for his nocturnal
avocation.
' He was sitting in a music hall one
evening sipping his absinth and ad-
miring the art of a certain famous
Russian dancer when he caught a pass-
ing glimpse of a pair of evil black.
eyes upon him. He had had the un-
, cannyfeeling for some time that be
was being watcbed, and it was in re-
sponse to this animal instiect that was
strong within him that he had turned
suddenly and surprised the eyes in the
. very act of watching him.
Before he left the music hall the
matter had been forgotten, nor did he
notice the swarthy individual who
stepped deeper into the shadow e of an
opposite doorway as Tarzan emerged
from the brilliantly lighted amusement
hali.
Ai. he turned In the direction he was
accustomed to taking from this part of
Paris to his apartments the watcher
across the street ran from his hiding
place and hurried on ahead at a rapid
lpace.
Tarzan had been wont to traverse
the Rue Maule on his way 'home at
'night. Because it was very quiet and
very dark it reminded him more of his
beloved African jungle than did the
'noisy and garish streets surrounding it.
If you are familiar with your Paris
you will recall the narrow, forbidding
:precincts of the Rue Maule. If you
are not you need but askthe police
about it to learn that in all Paris there
Is no street to which you should give
a wider berth after dark.
On this night Tarzan had gone two
squares through the dense shadows of
the squalid old tenements which line
this dismal way when he was attract-
ed by screams and cries ror help from
the third door of an opposite building.
The voice was a woman's. Before the
echoes of her first cries had died Tar-
zan was bounding up the stairs and
through the dark corridors to her res -
Ora
At the end of the corridor on the
third landing a door stood slightly ajar,
and from within Tarzan heard again
the same appeal that had lured him
from the street. Another instant found
him in the center of a dimly lighted
room. An oil lamp burned upon a high,
old fashioned matte!, casting its dim
rays over a dozen repulsive figures.
• All but one were men. The other was
a woman of about thirty. Her face,
taarked by low passions and dissipa-
tion might Once have been lovely. She
stood with one hand at her throat,
crottehing against the farther Wall.
"Help, monsietir," she cried in a low
Voice at Tamil entered the vaunt
"they Were killing- me."
: As Terzat Wiled toward the men
about him he Saw the crafty, evil faces
01 habitual criminals. ' Be wenclered
. that they had Made no °Wert to estaptit.
A movement behind caesed him to
; tern. Two thingS hie eyes saw, and
One of theft caused him considerable
' Wonderment. A man wits sneaking
stealthily from the room, and in the
brief glance that
Tarzanbad of him
day et' the voyage. Then he came sud-
denly face to face with the 'young wo-
man as the two approached their deck
chairs from opposite directions. She
greeted him with a pleasant smile,.
speaking almost immediately of the
affair he had witnessed in her cabin
two nigbts before. ,
"My husband feels that he owes you
an immense debt of gratitude," she
said.
Your husband?" repeated Taman
questioningly.
"Yes. 1 tun the Countess de Coude."
"I am already amply repaid, ma-
dame, in knowing that I have rendered
a service to the wife of the Count de
Conde."
Oh his arrival in Paris Taman went
directly to the apartments of his old
friend D'Arnot, where the naval lieu-
tenant scored him roundly for his deci-
sion to renounce the title and estates
that were rightly his from his father,
John Clayton, the late Lord Grey-
stoke.
-"You must he mad, tny friend," said
D'Arnot, "thus lightly to give up not
alone wealth and position, but an op-
portunity to prove beyond doubt to all
the world that in your veins flows the
noble blood of two of England's most
honored houses—instead of the blood
of a savage she ape. It is incredible
that they could have believed you—
'Miss Porter least of all.
"Why, 1 never did believe it, even
beek In the wilds of your African jun-
gle, when you tore the raw meat of
your kills witb mighty jaws, like some
wild beast, and wiped your greasy
hands upon your thighs. Even then,
before there Was the slightest proof to
the contrary, 1 lfnew that you were
mistaken in the belief that Kale was
your mother.•
"And now, with your father's diary
of the terrible life led by him and your
mother on that wild African shore;
with the account of your birth and,
final and inost convincing proof of all,
your own baby finger prints upon the
pages of it, it seems incredible to me
that you are willing to remain a name-
less, penniless vagabond."
"I do not need any better name than
Tarzan," replied the ape -man. "And
as for remaining a penniless vagabond,
1 have no intention of so doing. In
fact, the next, and let us hope the last,
burden that 1 shall be forced to put
upon your unselfish friendship will be
the finding of employment for me."
"Pooh, pooh!" scoffed D'Arnot
"You know that 1 did not mean that
Dave 1 not told you a dozen times that
I have enough for. twenty men and
that half of what 1 have is yours?
Aud if 1 gave it all to you would it
represent even the tenth part of the'
Value 1 place upon your friendship, my
Tarzau? Would it repay the services
you did me in Africa? I do not forget,
r»y friend, that hut for you and your
Woudrous bravery I would have died
at the stake in the village a Mbon-
ga's cannibals. Nor do 1 forget that
to your self sacrificing devotion I owe
the fact that I recovered from the ter-
rible wounds I received at their hands.
I'discovered later something .of what
It meant to you to remain with me in
the amphitheater of the apes while
your heart was urging you on to the
coast. .
"When we finally came there and
found that Miss Porter and her party
bad left I commenced to realize some-
thing of what you bad done for an ut-
ter stranger. Nor am 1 trying to re-
pay you with money, Tarsals. It is
that just at present 'yoU need money.
Were it sacrifice that I might offer you
It were the same—my friendship must
always be yours, because our tastes
are similar, and I admire you. That I
'cannot command, but the money I can
and shall."
CHAPTER III.
What Happened In the Rue Mettle.
U' ELL," latIghed Taman, "We
W
shall not quarrel over the
money. I mist live, and
so I' must have it, but I
shall be More contented with some•
thing to do. You cannot show me
Your friendship in a more convincing
. Manner than to find emplOyMent for
•me. I shall die of inactivity in a short
while. As fOr my birthright, It is in
good bands. Clayton is not guilty of
robbing Me of It. ile truly believes
that Lia is the real Lord Greystoke, and
the chances are that, he will make a
better English lord than a man who
Was born and raised in an African
Jungle. You know that I am but half
civilized even tOw, Let Me see red in
anger but for a moment, and all the in.
atfuets of the savage beast that / real-
ly am submerge what little 1 possesd
Of the mildet Ways of eultiire and re-
lingtuqPtt. . . . .
CASH
DIVIDENDS,
ON GOODS,
YOU BUY
By HOLLAND.
KINDS good, doesn't it?
• And the best of it is it is
true. These cash dividends
are paid on every dollar you
spend, provided you spend
wisely and buy goods that
the maker believes in so
strongly that he advertises
tlaem.
Advertised goods are not
always the cheapest so far as
the amount asked for them
is concerned. But they are
INVARIABLY THE BEST.
And this makes them cheap-
est when all things are con-
sidered.
,When you buy for the same
money a better article than
you have been buying you get
a cash dividend on your pur-
chase. When you pay less for
an article of the same quality
you get a cash dividend.
• Tann DIVIDENDS ARE
PAID -y0 TUE READERS
OF ADVERTISEMENTS IN
, THIS PAPER.
as•WILII
1
. inatittentate gentleman tier cries Mei
lured to what was to have been ele
death had been suddenly metineor-
pls,sed into a demon of reveuge. in. -
sitnet et soft muscles and a Weal; re-
sisfaisq. she was looking npoe a %-erl-
1 i ere I es gone mad.
omiai Moil" she (a.k.a. ls it
1io11141:“ for the strong, white teeth of
lite ape man had found the throat of
-" 11771,
fi
he saw rata Iv witS' ttfmnr.
But the other thiug that he saw was
of more immediate interest. It was a
great brute of a fellow tiptoeing igloo
him from behind with a huge bludgeon
in his hand, and then as the man and
his confederates saw that he was dis-
covered there was a conceited rush
upon Tamen from all sides. Some of
the men drew knives, others pielted up
Omits:, while the fellow with the bludg-
eon raised it high above his head in a
miglity'swing that would have crushed
Tat•zan's head had it ever descended
upon it.
But the brain and the agility and the
muscles that had coped • with the
mist ty strength and cruelcraftiness
of Sabor and Numa in the fastness of
their savage jungle were not to be so
easily subdued as these apaches of
Paris had behoved.
Selecting his most formidable antago-
nist, the fellow with the bludgeon, Tar-
zan charged full upon him, dodging the
failing weapon and catching the man
a terrific blow on the point of the chin
thet felled him in his tracks, Then he
turned upon the others. This was
sport. He was reveling in the joy of
battle and the lust of blood.
At the end of the corridor without
stood Rokoff. waiting the outcome of
the affair. He wished to be vire that
Tarzan was dead before he left, but it
was not a part of his plan to be one of
those within the room when the mur•
der occurred.
Tht woman still stood where she bad
when Taman entered, but her face had
undergone a number 01 elfanges with
the few minutes which had elapsed.
From the semblanee of distress which
It had worn when Tarzan first saw it
It had changed to one of craftiness
as he had wheeled to meet the attack
from behind; but the change Tarzau
had not seen.
Later an expression of surprise and
then one of horror superseded the oth-
ers. Aud who was wonder. For the
erbrad into
Ittn
1? iq1-9
' 11 I S.
Ilowever slight a cold you have, you
!lipoid never neglect it. In all pos-
ibility, if you do not treat it in time it
*111 chsvcios into bronclitis, pneumonia,
ionfe Wen' serious thriset or lung
7 -rouble.
Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup is
?articular!), adapted for all colds, coughs,
)rolchitis, pneumonia, asthma, whoop-
trr congh awl all troubles of the throat
and lants, Three points in favour of
Dr. Wt-thti.s Norway Pine Syrap era:
1. It action is prompt. 2. It invigorates
is veil as heals, and sooqies the throat
and law, 3. It is pleasant, harmless
and agreeable in tasta.
Mrs. Albert Wit, Brockville, Ont.,
writes:—"Just a line to let you know
abesut Dr. Wood's Norway Pine Syrup.
Our eldest little rid is now fix years old.
Vsrhett Ate was four months old she got
a cold Width dt.VOlOpell 1114) Broni....hit14,
and ‘s -o. frt.(' evt.rvthing we could think
of and hd two Zlocti2rs, attending 114r,
but it wa; no good. One day T reasi
le your alman".0 about Dr. Wood's
Norway Pin:. Syrdp, SO t tried it, and
batore vh"..! hed Szni,:hed one 150itie CI its
thz dry ifacYng° cotvdt had rte.:fly alt
'Lt.t' i TY:thing mull to it,
1,:tui IN tire m.A.r whhout it la the house."
Sza that iirt "Dr. Wood's" when
asl,i for it, no there tlre numerous
Latta:Ac ti:e ke t Tha genuine
is Llano/eel by The T. 1.litleim
Co., 1.i•...rited, Tc.rnt•:., Cot.
Za.; family size, 6Ce.
l!
TAO :glad You Itaa Always 13ongitt, mut which has been
iz use for over 30 yes, has borne the signature of
and lias been made under his per..
4161'4( ,stat'siv TIOTT:CrtneVell'etreits i8fauey.e you in tbiii,
.AII CounterfeltS, Imitations aud "Just-as,.good " are but
NaperimentS. that trifle with and endanger the health of
Infants and Children—Experioneo against Experiment,
,tqe'
s
ss
What is CASTOR IA
CaFtoria, 'is a harmless substitute for Castor Oil, Pare.
geric, Drops and Soothing. Syrups. It is pleasant. It
contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other .1klarcOtie
.:rabsianec. Its age is its guarantee.. It destroys Worms
and allays Feverishness. For more than thirty years it
law boon in constant use for the relief of Conatipationo
Flatulency, Wind (Jolic, all Teething Troubles and,
IDLexriroaa. 1f regulatts the Stomach and Bowels,
aminailates the 3Pood, giving healthy and natural sleep..
Tho Citildren's Panacea—The Mother's Friend,
C
ST RIA ALWAYS
Bears the Signature of
t -l -a Was ln a Dozen Places at,Onee.
one or 1)14 Assithants. nor, Terzao
rought ns he too tearoNi to tight \vim
z.:111,iigLretir ttpes ot the tribe ot Ret,
t
Ile wee in a doyen leaves at once,
leaping hillier and thither about.
room in sinuous bounds that reminded
the wetnan of a panther she had 81..1.11
111 t he zoo. Now a wrist bone snapped
In Ills him grip, now it shoulder \vas
wrenched from Its soeket as he forced
11 victiuis arm backward and upward.
With shrieks of pain 1 lisf 111011 escaped
Into the hallway as liniekly as they
(amid, but even liefere the first (1110
staggered, bleeding and broken,' from
the room Itokoff loal RetIll enough to
00111h:tee WM that 'i arzan would not
Lie the one to lie dead in that house
this night, and so the Russien had limo
teneth tO 11 11(1(1 ti (lett find telephoned
the pollee flint a 1(13414 wits vontinitting
murder on ttut third their ut Hue
Maule, 2T.
When the oilieersst Nieto! th tty found
three num groaning oil the hoer, a
frightened winnatt lying upon a filthy
hod, her fare burled 141 her ((1111,4, 11
4111111 (1111)034(4(1 tH 1,111 11 11
young gentleman standing 111 the vets
Id r of the room :malting the ream-
foreements 444111014 no Mitt thought the
tamtsteps of the officers hurry 1 ug 01)
the stairway 1111(1 1(4(1 they
were mistaken in the inst. 11 4444'05 31
444(111 h(nst 1113C Inolitql 1111011 .110,111
through those narrowed lids and steet
gray 0,YOR. \Vitt% I he smell id blood the
latit N'eStige ol el V111414 Hon had desert-
ed Tarzan, mid now he stood at bay.
lIke a lion stirrminiled ny
awaiting the next overt stet and erotica -
Mg to eitarge Its author.
"‘Vhat has liazzietiell here?" asked
one of the pollee
Taman explained briefly, ilIlt whim
he turned to the 0011111 101' et.11i11•11111-
11011 Or 1115 S111 (.011,111 he was 31pp:tilt:a
hy her reply.
'Ile lies!'' she screamed shrilly, ad-
dressing 1110 poilemocn. "lie (14111,' to
my room while i was: Moue, mid foe
no gond purpose \N hen I reptitscil
1)1111 woukt hoe,. 1;1114,1 1131,1 1,,,t
my screams attracted Ines.. gentienteit,
who were 111114511111 (((4' 111/11sQ tlt. He
MOO. lit` 1S 811)4(3. ownstaess, 1,111'
Ilitti nil but Itinett ten men with (I)s
Imre hands and ids (1,1(11
shin•ked was Inman tiy hor In
uratItutle -that tor 0 moment he was
strife!: dumb. Tne peltae were 1w -fitted
to he it little siceptitett. tor they mot
heti othgr dealings %rich this same
intly end her lovely coterie ot gentle-
men friendsilowever. they were pis
apemen. not judges. so they tirwid,•11 411
11111(.1* 1111 1111' 1111181i.S Or 111. runtit 1111
11o1' 1111(.51 111111 11,1 /111.1 111.1% W11114(‘ 11115)
111,513 it 44';18, St.1111111t4 t 11V ihnoveht trhal
the guilty.
liut they foutal that it was one thing
to tell thia well dre-tseti penes mon
that tie was meter nrres(, hut 1)11110
(mother to entorvo It. (1110 et 1111.111
VillICen 10 1113. 11111111 1111401 11(1'
zan's shoulder. An instant later no
1:1y crimpled in 11 corner ot the room,
and then, as his eottwatles rushed 111
non the 21(10.11111 11. 111(.,4' PSI4riell"0t1 11
taste of whot tile apeelies had hot re-
eeritly gone through. S.0 4( 431('i( anti
SO roughly (lid he handle thou that
they hatl net even :IA opportunity to
draW their revolvers,
1)nring the brief fight Tarzan 1)1141
noted the open window and beyond the
stein of a tree or a telegraph pole, he
eould not tell which. AS the hist °Ut-
ter wort down one of his fellows sue-
teeded In drawing his revolter and
tram where he lay on the hoer fired at
Tartan. The gnat Missed, and before
the matt could are again Tartan bad
swept the lamp from the mantel and
plunged the room darkuess.
The next tbey saw Was 0 lithe 'term
speleg to the sill of the open windon,
mai leap penther-like o11 to the pole
neross the walk. When the pollee
1 gathered themselves together and
reaelted the atrect theft' prisoner wag
no w here to be seen.
• They did not handle the woman an41
the men who had not esenped any tee
gently when they took theta to the sta-
• tion. TheY Were a very sore and hu -
Dill You ave Always ought
tise For Over 30 Years
THE CENTAUR COMPANY, 77 MURRAY STREET. NEW YORK 6I11-
140,2,04.1k- Ag.;
n ft ia led dent BUY poll eci:-
The officer who had remained in the
street swore that no one had leaped
from the window or left the building
from the time they entered until they
lind come out. His comrades thought
that be lied, but they could not prove it.
Whin Tarzan found himself clinging
to the pole outside the window he fol-
lowed his jungle instinct and looked
below for enemies before be ventured
down. It was well he did, for just
beneath him stood a policeman. Above
'...'arzau saw no one, so he went up in.
atead of down,
The top of the pole was opposite the
roof of the building, So it was but the
" work of an instant fur the muscles
that had for years sent him burtling
through the treetops or his primeval
forest to carry him across the little
space between the pole and the root
From one building be went to another,
and so on, with raneh climbing, until
at a cross street he discovered another
pole, down which he ran to the ground.
For a square or two be ran swiftly.
Tben he turned into a little all night
cafe and in the lavatory removed the
evidences of his overroof promenade
from hands and clothes. When he
emerged a few moments Aater it was
to saunterslowly on toward his apart-
ments.
Not far from them he came to a well
lighted boulevard which it was neces-
sary to cross. AA he stood directly be-
neath a brilliant arc light, waiting for
a limousine that was approaching to
pass him, he heard his name called in
g sweet feminine voice. Looking up,
he met the smiling eyes of Olga de
Coude as she leaned forward upon the
back seat of the machine. He bowed
very low in response to her friendly
greeting. When he straightened up
the machine had borne her away.
• "Rokoff and the Countess de Conde
both in the same evening," he solilo-
quized; "Paris is not so large, after
all."
CHAPTER V.
The Countess Explains,
OUR Paris is more dangerous
than my savage jungles,
Paul," concluded Taman,
after narrating his adven-
tures to his friend the morning fol-
lowing his encounter with the apaches
and police in the Rue Maule. "Why
did they lure me there? Were they
hungry?"
D'Arnot feigned a horrified shudder,
hut be !fleeted at the qtmint sugges-
Ilad Salt Rheum.
C*Lcile ScarcePy
Do Work,
Shhi. diseases are invariably doe to
bad or impoverished blood, and while ,
net usually attended with fatal reste.i.s '
ate nevcrtheless,vcry distressing to the
avera;;c parson.
Amoug the nto.-,t prevalent are: Slit
Eczema, Tet ter, Ilash,
(101 I1C11: lakin :0,r141tiess.
sat 111.sal itters drives mit ell
! .1 trial blood, and V4t:tite3 it
.1,..
r‘ it..
lfcd 1: :11,4 - if. i40,1 1
z. •,
Its cf doctor's Tr ti It
10 wi:;'4n fri....e! I.!,
1Z.h.ttt
•il hve,
:."tt tuld bc:foi.2 T
• 3 t;,- hand WAS outer " "
libod Bitters 4:ta-
xi:a only by TI:e T.
uitetl, Toronto,. Oat.
tion. —
"wen," said he, "among other things.
It has taught you what I bate been:
unable to impress upon you, that thel
Rue Manle is a good place to avoid
after dark."
"On the contrary," replied Taman,
with a smile, "it has convinced me
that it is the pne worth while street in
all Paris. Never again shall I raise
an opportunity to traverse it, for It has
given nie the first real entertainment
I have had since I left Africa."
"It may give you more than yon -will
relish even without another visit," said
D'Arnot "You are not throogh with
the police yet, remeinber. I know the
Paris pollee well enough to nssure yoU
that they will not soon forget what
SOU did to thein. Sooner or rater they
will get you, my dear Tarzan, and
then they will lock the wild man of
the woods up behind iron bars. How.
will you like that?"
"They will never look Taman of the
Apes behind iron bars," replied he
grimly. There was something in the
man's voice as he said it that caused
D'Arnot to look up sharply at his
friend. What he saw in the set Jaw:
and the cold, gray eyes made the young
Frenchman very apprehensive for this
great child, who could recognize no
law mightier than his own mighty
physical prowess. fie saw that some-
thing must be done to set Tarzan right
with the police before another encoun-
ter was possible.
"You have much to learn, Tarzan,"-
be said gravely. "The law of man
must be respected whether you relish
it or no. Nothing but trouble cad
come to you and your friends should
you persist in defying the police. V
can explain it to them once aor you,
and that 1 shall do this very day, but
hereafter you mot obey the law. If
RS representatives say, 'Cornea you
must come; if they say, 'Go!' you must
go. Now we shall go to my grreat .
friend in the department. and fix up
this !natter of the Rue Maule. Coinel't
Together they entered the office et
the police official it half hour later. Hei
was very cordial. He remembered
Tarzan from the visit the two find
(T) 445 eoni inucd
-
fiagasaaaawkaaihialamiu
Your Liver
is Clogged up
That's Why You're Tired—Out of
Sorts—Have no Appetite.
CARTER'S LITTLE
LIVER PILLS
will put you right
in a fewdays.
They do
their duty.
Cure
Consti.
potion,
BiliezunesOndigestion, ana Sick Headacke.
Small Pill, Small Dose, Small Price.
Genuine must btu Signature
PlIVIIMPIII11011,91WINPOVIOMPIPOI