The Wingham Times, 1914-08-13, Page 7r
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WINGIJAAT 131ES, AuGusr 13# 1914
PA MICE
ETURN
ZA
By Edgar Rice Burroughs
04.4.
)trated its heart, and it lunged forward
•upon its knees, rolling to the ground
swithouta struggle. '
*The other, badly wounded, charged
tin the direction of Bustin, whom he
;Was, overtaking so rapidly that It wee
;as though the black were standing still
instead of racing at full speed to es. ,
;cape the certain death which pursued
;him. Tarzan SAW that only a miracle ,
. •-could save Busuli. I
He still grasped his spear, and while
Mentor was yet six or eight paces be.
bind his prey a sinewy white warrior
Alropped as from the heavens almost di-
rectly' in his path. With a violet*
,lunge the elephant swerved to the
' right to dispose of this temerarious
toeman who dared intervene between
himself and his intended victim. But
ke had not reckoned on the lightning
guickneas that could galvanize those
isteel muscles into action So marvelous-
"isys swift as to baffle dven a keener eye-
igight than Tenter's.
! And so it happened that before the
elephant realized that his new enemy
Iliad leaped from his path Tarzan had
• itiriven his iron shod spear from behind
tthe massive shoulder straight into the
erce heart, and the colossal pachy-
derm had toppled to his death at the
if eet of the ape -man.
, Busull had not beheld the manner of
this deliverance, but Waziri, the old
••• ief, bad seen and several of the oth-
r warriors, and they hailed Tarzan
I delight as they swarmed about
tim and his great kill. When he
• deaped upon the mighty carcass and
igave voice to the weird challenge with
'which he announced a great victory
e blacks shrank back in fear, for to
.them it marked the brutal Bolgani,
• ;whom they feared fully as much as
rthey feared Numa, the lion, but svith.
:a, fear with which was mixed a certain
;uncanny awe of the man -like .thing to
(which they attributed supernatural
.4). ewers.
-""'sBut when Tarzan lowered his raised
ead and smiled upon thein'they were
Ie
eassured, though they did not under -
and. Nor did they ever fully under-
. 'tend this strange creature who ran
hrough the trees as quickly as Menu,
et was even more at home upon the
round than themselves, who was as
fo color like unto themselves, yet as
powerful as tea of them and single
'seeded a match for the fiercest deni-
izeris of the fierce jungle.
I When the remainder of the warriors
had gathered the hunt was again token
up and the stalhing of the retreating
herd once( gore begun, but they had
covered a \....re 100, yards when from
1/23ehind them' at a great distance sound-
ed faintly a strange popping. For an
) intent they stood like a group or
-statuary, intently listening. Then Tar -
,Zan spoke.
; "Guns!" he said. "The village is be -
lag attacked."
' "Come!" cried Waziri. "The Arab
rraiders have returned with their can-
slnibal slaves for our ivory and our
.`woment"
1
CHAPTER XVIII.
The Ivory Raiders.
AMPS warriors marched at
a rapid trot through the
jungle in the direction of the
village. For n few minutes
e sharp cracking of guns ahead
arned them to haste, but finally the
ixeports dwindled to an occasional shot,
imesently ceasing altogether. Nor was
is less ominous than the rattle of
usketry, for it suggested but a single
olistion to the little band of rescuers—
at the illy garrisoned village had al-
ready succumbed to the onslaught of
superior force.
The returning hunters had covered a
ttle moftrthan three miles of the five
at had separated them from the vii
-
age when they met the first of the
tigitives who had escaped the bullets
d the clutches of the foe. There
ere a dozen women, youths and girls
the party, and so exeited Were they
at they could scarce Make them-
ves understood as they tried to re -
ate te Waztri the ealamity that bad
efallen his people.
"They are as many as the leaves of
phe forest," cried one of the women, in
attempting to explain the enemy's
force. "There are many Arabs and
Otintleas Manyuema, and they all have
iguhs. They crept close to the village
before we kneW that they were about,
!and then, with many ahoute, they
' fentahed in upon us, Shodtiag down men
• land women and children. Those of uS
Mho could led in all directions inth the
•trgle, but more Welt killed. I do not
OW whether they took any prisoners
•ler not --the Y seemed only bent upon
Wiling es all"
resumed
• Vt more slowly and With
!The march toward the Village WAS
eater stealth, for Washi knew that it
SS toe late to rescue; their only mils.
en could 1* One of roVenge. Iniside
Ile htindred mere fugitives
PletWrAMEM
nare met. There were Many- men
among these, and so the fighting
strength of the party was augmented.
Now a dozen warriors were sent
ereeping ahead to reconnoiter. Waziri
remained with the main body, which
'advanced in a thin line that spread in
a great crescent through the forest.
By the chief's side walked Tarzan.
Presently one of the mints returned.
'He had come within sight of the vil-
lage.
"They are all within the palisade."
he whispered.
"Good!" said Wash.!. "We shall
rush in upon them and play thetis all."
"Wait!" cautioned Tarzan. "If there
are even fifty guns within the palisade
we shall be repulsed and slaughtered.
Let me go alone through the trees, so
'that I may look down upon them from
above and see just bow many there
be and what chance we might have
were we to charge. Will you wait,
Waziri?"
"Yes," said the oid chief. "Gel"
So Tarzan sprang into the trees and
disappeared in the direction of the vit.
lege. He moved more cautiously than
was his wont, for he knew that men
with guns could reach him quite as
'easily in the treetops as on the ground.
In five minutes he bad wormed his
,way to the great tree that overhung
dhe palisade at one end of the village,
and from his point of vantage looked
down upon the savage horde beneath.
He counted fifty Arabs and estimated
that there were five times as many
cannibal Manyuema.
The ape -man saw that to charge that
wild horde, armed aa they ,were with
guns, and barricaded behind the locked
gatesof the village, would be a fntile
fates. and so he returned to Waziri and
advised him to wait; that she. Tamil,
had a better plan. but a tnoment before
one of the fugitives had related to Wa-
ziri the story of the atrocious murder
of the old chief's wife, and so crazed
with rage was the old man that be cast
discretion to the winds. Calling his
• warriors about him, be commanded
them to charge, and with brandishing
spears and savage yells the little force
of scarcely more than a hundred dash-
ed madly toward the village gates. Be-
fore the clearing had been half crossed
the Arabs opened up a :withering fire
from behind the palisade.
With the first volley Wazirl fell.
The speed of the chargers slackened.
Another volley broeght down a half
dozen more. A few reached the bar-
red gates only to be shot -in their
tracks without the ghost of a chance
to gain the inside of the palisade, and
then tbe whole attack crumpled, and
the remaining warriors scampered
back into the forest.
As they ran the raiders opened the
gates, rushing after them to complete
the day's work with the utter exter-
mination of the tribe. Taman had
been among the last to turn back to-
ward the forest, and now as he ran
slowly he turned from time to time to
speed a well aimed arrow into the
body of a pursuer.
Once within the jungle he found a
little knot of determined blacks wait-
ing to give battle to the oncoming
horde, but Tarzan cried to them to
scatter, keeping out of harm's way un-
til they could gather in force after
dark
"Do as I tell you," he urged, "and I
will lend you to victory over these ene-
mies of yours. Scatter through the
forest, picking up as many stragglers
as you ean find and at night, If you
think that yen have been followed,
come by roundabout ways to the spot
where we killed the elephants today.
Thee I will explain my plan, and you
will find that it is goad."
They had barely time to hasten away
farther into the forest before the first
of the raiders had dossed the clearing
and entered it in pursuit of them,
Tarzan ran a short distance along the
ground before he took to the trees.
Then he raced quickly to the upper ter-
race, there doubling on his tracks and
Making his way -rapidly back toward
the village. Here he found that every
Arab and Manyuema had joined in the
pursuit,- leasving the 'village deserted
except for the chained prisoners and ft
eines:, guard,
The sentry stood at the open gate
!bolting in the direction of the forest
so that he did not See the agile giant
that dropped te the ground at the far
end of the village street. With drawn
boW the ape -man crept stealthily to-
ward his unsuspecting victim. The
prisoners had already discovered him,
and with wide eyes filled with wonder
and with hope they watched their
woUld be rescuer. Now he halted net
ten pace S from the uncohscious Man -
Musa. The Shaft Wes drasert back ita
full length at the height Of the keen,
gray eye that Sighted along its polished
surfate. There wag a sudden twang
ns_the brOwit finger :4 released their,.
hold, and witboUf a Sound The raider I
sank torward upon his face, a wooden
shaft transfixing his heart and prte
truding t foot from his black cheat.
Then Tarzan turned his attention to
the fifty women and youths stained
neck to neck on the long slave chain.
There was no releasing of the ancieut
Padlocks in the, time that WAS left bius,
so the ape-raan celled to them to fol-
low him as they were• arid, suatchlug
the gun and cartridge. belt from the
dead sentry, he led the now haelPY
band oet through the village gate and
!i.ttn.1.1,1111!;.flirt'St mem the far side of the
li
1 1 11%1.4 11 Nlim end arduous march,
le) the slave chafe ems new to these
meet., and there V% ere autuy delays as
one of their number would stumble
and fall, dregging others down with
her. Then, too, Tarzan had been forced
to make a wide detour to avoid any
possibility of !sleeting with returning
raiders. He was partially guided by
occasional sbots, which indicated that
tbe Arn b horde were still in touch with
the villagers, but he knew that if they
Would but follow his advice there
would be hat few casualties other than
on the side of the marauders.
Toward dusk the tiring ceased entire-
ly, and Tarzan kuew that the Arabs
had all returned to the village.
It was after midnight when Taman,
with his slow moving caravan, ap-
proached the spot where the elephants
lay. Long before tbey reached it they
had been guided by the huge fire the
natives had -built in the center of a
hastily improvised bonne partially for
warmth and partially to keep off
chance house
It was a joyous reception the littla.
party received when the blacks within
the bone) .811,NV tbe long file of fettered
friends and relatives enter the Orelight
These bad all been given up as lost for-
ever, as bad Tarzan as well. Sleep
was no easy matter that night, for the
women who had lost their men or
their children in the days massacre
and battle made night hideous with
their continued wailing and howling.
Finally, however, Taman succeeded hi
sileueIng them on the plea that their
noise would attract the Arabs to their
hiding place, when all would be slaugh-
tered. .
When dawn eame Taman explained
bis plan of battle to the warriors.
First the women and children with a
guard of some twenty old warriors
and youths were started southward to
be entirely out of the zone of danger.
Two hours after daylight a thin cir-
cle of black warriors surrounded the
village. At intervals one was perched
high in the branches of a tree which
Need overlook the palisade. Presently
a Manyeema within the village fell,
pierced by a single arrow, mi silent mes-
senger ot death from out of tbe silent
ferest.
°Plus Arebs and their followers were
thrown into a fine rage at this unprec-
edented occurrence. They ran for the
gates to wreak dire vengeance upon
the foolhardy perpetrator of the out-
rage, but they suddenly realized that
they did not know which way to turn
to.find the foe. As they stood debut -
Ing, with many angry shouts and much
gesticulating, one of the Arabs sank
ailentiy to the ground in their very
midst --a thin arrow protruding from
his heart.
Tarzan had placed the finest marks-
men of the tribe in the surrounding
trees, with directions never to reveal
themselves while the enemy was faced
in their direction. As a black released,
his messenger of death he would slink
back behind the sheltering stem of the
tree he had selected, nor would he again
aim until a watchful eye told him that
none was looking toward his tree.
Three times the Arabs started across
the clearing in the direction from whith
they thought the arrows came, but
each time another arrow would come
from behind to take its toll from araong
their number. Then they would turn
and charge in a new direction. Final-
ly they set out upon a determined
Search of the forest, but the blacks
meltedbefore them so that they saw
no sign of an enemy.
But above them lurked a grim figure
In the dense foliage of tbe mighty trees
—it was Tarzan of the Apes, hovering
over them as 11 he had been the shad -
‘,1 /
AC:It
tive
"R.
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such a paper is possible at
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But do you get all out or
the paper that you CATI get—
all that you are entitled to?
You do not unless you read
the advertising columns.
Besides the news of the day
and the happenings of the
world, there are advertise-
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posted on business affairs,
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andrivithdreel 0 mile ta the eorith to
rest and eat.
An inspection et his force elloWed
• not a single casualty—eot even a trti-
nor wound, while rough estimates or
tbe enetnies' loss conviriced the blacks
that no fewer then twenty had fallen
before their arrows. They were wild
with elation and svere for finishing the
day in one glorious rush ripen the vil-
lage, during which they would slaugle
ter the last of their foerneu.
"You are crazy!" Tarzan cried. "I
have shown yen the only way to tight
these people. You will light just as I
ten you to fight 01. I shall leave you
and go back to my own country,"
They were frightened when be
threatened this mid promised to obey
him sertmulously if be wored but
promise not to desert them.
"Very well," he said. "We shall re-
tinal to the elephant borne for the
night. 1 have a plan to give the Arabs
g little taste of what they may expect
it they remain in our country, but I
shall need no ftelp,"
$(.) they [numbed baek to their camp
• of the previous eight and, lighting
great Ores, ate and recounted the ad-
ventures of the day until long after
dark. Tarzan Wept until midnight,
then be arose and crept into the Cim-
merian blackness of the forest. An
hour later be came to the edge of the
clearing before the village.. There was
a camp tire burning within the palis-
ade. The ape -man crept across the
clearing until he stood before the bar-
red gates. Through the interstices he
saw a lone sentry sitting before the
fire.
Quietly Tarzan went to the tree at
tbe end oE the village street He
climbed softly to his place and fitted
au arrow to his bow. For severaL
minutes he tried to sight fairly upon
l' the sentry, but the waving branches
and flickering firelight convinced him
that the danger of a miss was too
great. He must touch the heart full
, in the center to bring the quiet and
sudden death his plan required.
He had brought beside his bow, £11`-
—)
rows and rope the gun he had taken
death came. a 1.1-trtIt
50 it (Minty, tbe previous day from tbe other sentry
and a moment later those liellind sturn- he had killed. Caching all these in a
bled over the deed body of their cons- convenient crotch of the tree, be drop-
rade—the inevitable arrow piercing the ped ligbtly to tbe ground within the
still heart. palisade. armed only with his long
It does not take a great deal of this ' knife. The sentry's back was toward
manner oE warfare to get upon the him. Like a cat Tarzan crept -upon
nerves of white men, and so it is little the dozing man.
to be wondered at that the Manyuema Tarzan crouched for a spring, for
were soon panic stricken. Did one that is ever the quiekest and surest at -
forge aheadan arrow fouud his heart; tack of the jungle beast, when the
did one lag behind he never again was man, warned by 'some subtle sense,
seen alive; did one stumble to One side sprang to his feet and faced the ape --
even for a bare naoment from the sight
of his fellows be did not return, and
always when they came upon the bod-
ies of their dead they found those ter-
rible arrows driven with the accuracy
of superhuman power straigbt through
the victim's heart. But worse than all
else was the hideous fact that not once
during the morning bad they seen or
heard the slightest sign of an enemy,
other than the pitiless arrows.
When Dually they returned to the
village it was no better. Every now
and then at varying intervals that were
maddening in the terrible suspense they
caused, a man would plunge forward
dead. The blacks besought their white
masters to leave this terrible place, but
the Arabs feared to take up the march
through the grim and hostile forest be-
set by this new and terrible enemy
while laden with the great store of
ivory they had found within the vil-
lage; but, worse yet, they hated .to
leave the ivory behind.
Finally the entire expedition took
refuge within the thatched huts.
Here, at least, they would be free
from the arrows. Taman, from the
tree above the village, had marked the
'hut into which the chief Arabs had
gone, and, balancing himself upon an
overhanging limb, he drove his heavy
spear with all the force of hes giant
muscles through the thatched. roof. A
'howl of pain told hire that It had
found a mark.. Thee Taman returned
te the_ fsgeet, colleeted 124.a...,Lcatri9m
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CHAPTER XIX.
Victory For the Waziri.
HEN the eyes of the black
Manyuensit savage fell upon
the strange apparition that
confronted him with menac-
ing knife they went wide in horror.
He forgot the gun within his bands.
He even forgot to cry out. His one
thought was to escape this fearsome
looking white savage, this giant of a
man upon whose massive rolling mus-
cles and mighty chest the flickering
firelight played.
But before he could turn Tarzan was
upon him, and then the sentry thought
to scream for aid, but it was too late.
A great hand was upon lele windpipe,
and he was being borne to the earth.
He battled furiously, but futilely.
With the grim tenacity of a bulldog
those awful fingers were clinging to
his throat. Swiftly and surely life was
being choked from him. His eyes
bulged, his tougue protruded, bis face
turned to a ghastly, purplish hue.
There was a convulsive tremor of the
stiffening muscles, and the Manyuema
sentry lay quite still.
The ape -man threw the body across
one of his broad shoulders and, -slither-
ing up the fellow's gun, trottedbsilent-
ly up the sleeping village street to-
ward the tree that gave Isim such easy
ingress to the palisaded village. He
bore the dead sentry into the midst of
the leafy maze above.
First he stripped tbe body of car-
tridge belt and such ornaments as he
craved, wedging it into a convenient
crotch while his nimble fingers ran
over it in sesame of the loot he could
not plainly see In the dark. When he
had finished he took the gun that had
belonged to the man and walked far
out upon a limb, from the end of which
he could obtain a better view of the
but. Drawing a careful bead on the
beehive structure in which he knew
the Arabs to be, he pulled the trigger.
Almost instantly there was an answer-
ing groan—Tarzan smiled; he had made
another lucky hit.
Following the shot there was a mo-
ment's silence in the camp, and then
Manyuema and Arab came pouring
from the huts like 8 swarm of angry
hornets; but, if the truth were known,
they were even more frightened than
they were angry.
When they dtscovered that their sen-
try had disappeared their fears were
in no way all:lied, and as though to
bolster their courage by Warlike ac-
tions they began to fire rapidly at the
barred gates of the village, although
no enemy was in sight. Tarzan took
advantage of the deafeelng roar of
this fusillade to fire into the mob be-
neath him.
No one heard his shot above the din
of rattling musketry in the street, but
some, who Were standing close, saw
one of their nuraber crumple suddenly
to the earth. When they leaned ever
him he was dead. They were panic
Stritken, and it took all the brutal an-
thority of the Arabs to keep the Man.
yuenatt front rushing bolter skelter into
the jungle—anywhere to escape frets
this terrible village.
After a time they cOmme.need to
,quiet down, and as no further myt-
tering_ deaths_occurred einem them
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they 60 tc heart again. But it was a
short lived respite. for just as they had
concluded that they would nut be dis-
turbed again Tarzan gave roice to a
weird moan, and as the raiders looked
up in the direction from which the
sound seemed to come, the apeenan.
who stood swinging the dead body of
the sentry gently to and fro. suddenly
shot the corpse far out above their
heads.
Wet!) bowls of alarm the throng
broke in all direetiuns to eseepe this
new and terrible ereature who seemed
to be springing teem them. To their
fear distorted imemmitious the body of
the sentry, falling with wide sprawled
arms and legs. assumecl the likeness
of a great beast of prey. In their aux-
iety to eseape • many of the 'Necks
scaled the palisade. while others tore
down the bars from the gates and
rushed madly across the clearing to-
wardtlse jungle.
For a eltne no one turned Niels to-
ward the thing that had frightened
them, but Tarzan knew that they
would In a moment, and when they
discovered that it was but the dead
body of their seutry, while they would
doubtless be still further terrified, he
had a rattler definite idea as to what
they would do. So he faded silently
away toward tbe south, taking the
moonlit upper terrace back toward the
camp of the Wazirl.
Presently one of the Arabs turned
and saw that the thing that had leaped
from the tree upon them lay still and
quiet where it had fallen in the center
of the village street. Cautiously he
crept back toward it until be saw that
it was but a man. A moment later he
was beside the 'figure and in another
had recognized it a$ the corpse of the
Manyuema who had stood on guard at
the village gate.
His cotnpanions rapidly gathered
around at his call, and after a mo-
ment's excited conversation they did
precisely wbat Tarzan had reasoned
they would, Raising their guns to
their shoulders. they poured volley
after volley iuto the tree from which
the corpse had been thrown. Had
Tarzan remained there he would have
been riddled by a hundred bullets.
When the Arabs and Manyuema dis-
covered that the only marks of vio-
lence upon the body of their dead com- •
rade were giant finger prints upon his, '
swollen throat they were again thrown '
into deeper apprehension and despair.
That they were not even safe within
a pplisacled villages at night came as a
dieeinct shock to -them. -That gait
my could enter the midst oe their camp
and kill their sentry with bare hands
seemed outside the bonds of reason,
and so the superstitious Manyuema
commenced to attribute their 111 Inch
to supernatural causes, nor were the
whites able to offer any better expla-
iati
With at least fifty of their number
flying through the black jungle, and
without the sligbtest knowledge of
when their uncanny foetnen might re-
sume the cold blooded slaughter. they
bad commenced, it was a desperate
bend of cutthroats that waited sleep-
lessly for the dawn. Only on the prom-
ise of the Arabs that they -would leaver
the village at daybreak, and hasten on-
ward toward their own land, would
the retnaining Manyuema consent to
stay at the village a moment longer.
Not even fear of their cruel masters
was sufficient to overcome this new
terr
idor.
Al
so it was tint when Taman and
his warriors returned to the attack the
next morning they found the raiders
prepared to mural out ot the village.
The Manyuenm were laden with sto-
len ivory. As Tarzan saw it he grin-
ned, for be knew that they would not
carry it far. Then he saw something
evhich caused lelna anxiety—a number
of the Manyuema were lighting torch-
es in tbe remnant of the camp fire.
They were about to fire the village.
Tarzan was perched' in a tall tree
some hundred yards from the palisade.
Making a trumpet of his hands, he
called loudly in the Arab tongue: "Do
not fire the huts or we shall kill you
all! Do not fire the huts, or we shall
kill you all!"
A dozen times be repeated it. The
Manyuerna hesitated; then one of them
flung his torch into the camp fire. The
others were about to do the same when
an Arab sprang upon them with a
stick, beating them toward the huts.
Tarzan could see that he was com-
manding them to fire the little thatch-
ed dwellings. Then he stood erect upon
the swaying blench a hundred feet
above tbe ground, and, raising one of
the Arab guns to his shoulder, took
careful eim end fired, Wieheeheempeese
Good Health is Impossible
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On the first evidence of the approach
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My kidneys were to bad. I was helpless
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found relief, and teen . enesfiss,
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een
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or ailed
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When ordering d*.e„,.,4
(To be continued)
$11 es s le s a a I s ei It 4 dligh le I le
Your Liver
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That's Why You're Tired—Oet of
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%senorita aunt bear Signature
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