DAKOTA COUNTY HERALD; DAKOTA CITY, NEBRASKA. B!E HOT WiOTl MM IDF TOW MWmiWif Says glass of hot water with phosphato before breakfast washes out poisons. If you wako up with a bad tasto, bad breath and tonguo Is coatod; It your head Is dull or aching; If what you cat sours and forms gas and acid In stom ach, or you aro bilious, conBtlpatcd, nervous, sallow and can't got fooling Just right, bogln drinking phosphated hot water. Drink boforo breakfast, a glass of real hot wator with a tea spoonful of llmostono phosphato In it. This will flush tho poisons and toxins from stomach, livor, kidneys and bow els and clcanso, Bweoten and purify tho entlro alimentary tract, f Do your insldo bathing Immediately upon aris ing In tho morning to wash out of tho system all tho previous day's poison ous waste, gases and sour bllo boforo puttiug moro food Into tho stomach. To fool Hko young folks feel; like you felt boforo your blood, nerves and musclos bocamo loaded with body im purities, got from your druggist or storekeeper a quarter pound of llmo stono phosphato which Is inexpensive and almost tastoloss, oxcopt for a sourish tlngo which lo not unpleasant. Just as soap and hot wator act on thd skin, cleansing, sweetening and freshening, bo hot wator and llmo stono phosphato net on tho stomach, llvor, kldnoyo and bowels. Men and women who aro usually constipated, bilious, headachy or havo any stomach disorder should begin this lnstdo bath ing boforo breakfast. They aro as sured thoy will becomo roal cranks on tho subject shortly. Adv. A Stranger, "Tomorrow will bo tho first Sunday of tho year, and I proposo to com mence the now year by going to church," announced Mr. Glbbs, rever ently. "You'd bettor tnke mo with ycu," calmly rejoined Mrs. Glbbs. "What for?" "You may ncod somebody t Identify you." Judgt:. "CASCnf IS" KI I No sick headache, biliousness, bad taste or constipation . by morning. Get a 10-cont box. Aro you keeping your bowels, liver, and stomach cloan, puro and fresh with Cascarcts, or merely forcing a passagoway every fow days with Salts, Cathartic PHls, Castor Oil or Purgatlvo Waters? Stop having a bowol wash-day. Lot Cascarota thoroughly cloanso and reg ulato tho 'stomach, romovo tho sout and tormenting food and foul gases, tako tho oxcesn bllo from tho llvct and carry out of tho systom all the constipated wasto matter and poisons in the bowels. A Cascaret to-night will make you feel groat by morning. They work whllo yoy sloop never grlpo, sicken or causo any liiconvonlonco, nnd cost only 10 conta ,tu-box from your store Millions of men, and women tako a Cascarot now and thon and novor havo Jloadoho', Biliousness, Coated Tonguo, IndlguBtlon, Sour Stomach or Constipation, Adv. Inculoatlnn Morals, Mr. Johnson I'll teach du young varmint t6"'ifor"""ll5'"5ald a fish got away from him In do.Eilllpond today dat was as big as do fish dat got away from mo down dar,last weok. Mr. Jackson Wnl, p'raps dat's de -trufel -, Mr. Johnson Nonsonso! Dar ain't no soch Blzo-fl'sh ao dal In dat mill pond, an' dar uovahjuzl QUIT MEAT IF KIDNEYS ' BOTHER AND USE SALTS Take a Glass of Salts Beforo Break fast If Your Back U Hurting or Bladder-Is Irritated. If you must havo your moat every day, oat it, but flush your kidneys with salts occaalpnally.oaysanotod author ity who tolls us that moat forms uric acid which almost paralyzes tho kid noya In tholr efforts to expel it from the blood, Thoy bocomo sluggish and weaken, thon you suffer with a dull misery In the kidney roglon, sharp pains In the back or sick hoadacho, dizziness, your Btomach sours, tonguo ia rnatnii'tnd when the woathor is bad you have rhoumatlo twingos. Tho urine gota cloudy, full of eodlmcnt, tho channels often get soro and irritated, obliging you to sook rollot two or throe times during tho night. To neutralize those Irritating acids, to cleanse the kidneys and flush oft the body's urlnouB waste got four nea of Jad SaltB from any phar- xaacy horo; tako a tablespoonful In a glass or wator boforo breakfast for a few days nnd your kldnoya will then act fine. This famous Baits Is made from tho acids of Grapes and lemon juice, combined with llthla, and has hon used for generations to flush and stimulate sluggish kidneys, also to -..,oiiTo thn aclda in urlno, so It no longer IrrltateB, thus ending bladdor Jad Salta Ib Inexpensive; cannot In jure, and akea a delightful offerves at nthla.water drink. Adv. Extreme Pacifism. 'Soldier In Europe are fighting with gas iwmba and llquJdflro. "What are we coralaK to i "I doa't kaew. hut o Iop tliora ara iriace 1 the world whoro a man SaVllwe hlliir. I know I'm not com ing to that." The now loaf powlbly needs to be fattened down ' tooHtool ceiucnt. 0I THE HEART NIGHT Wl A STORY OF THE GREAT NOTffflWESr 6y vingie e. Roe JJlM- ILLUSTRATIONS 6y fry 0)Airs&k copypqvf oy dodo, mead SYNOPSIS. -7-Sllctz of Daily's lumber Pimp direct1 a. stranser to tho camp. Walter Sundry Introduces hlmiiolf to John Dally, fore man, as "tho Dllllntnvortli Lumber Co.. or most of It." Ho makes acquaintance with tho camp and tho work. Ho gives Sllctz permission to ride Ulack Bolt, his saddle horso. In on emergency lio proves to the foreman thnt ho docs not lack Judgment. Sllctz tells him of tho Treach er. Ho discovers that SHots bears the sign of tho Blletz trlbo of Indians and wonders what her surname is. In tho flush nf a tender moment ho calls her "tho Night Wind In tho PIneB." nnd kisses her. I'oppy Ordwny, a magazine writer from New York, comes to Daily's to get material for a romance of the lumber region. Hampden of tho Yellow I'lnes Co wants Sandry to keep off a tract of stumpago he claims tltlo to nnd Bandry thinks ho has bought ns tho Vam Uelt. Hampden sets up u cabin on tho East 15clt nnd warni trespassers off. Sandry can find no written evldenco of tltlo to the tract. His men pull down tho cubln. Sandry compares Hlletz and I'oppy. San dry s nnd Hampden's men fight over tho disputed tract. Tho Treacher stops tho fight. Sandry finds that tho deed to tho Iuist Belt has never been recorded. Ho decides to get out Ills contrnct first nnd fight for tho stumpago afterward. Poppy scents trickery nnd flirts with Hampden to gain his confidence. Sho tells Sandrv that Hampden Is crooked and thnt slio'il get him. Poppy goes to Ralcm In search of evldenco against Hampden. Sundry nnd Sllctz rldo to tho seashore and Sllotz sees tho ocean for tho first time. CHAPTER XIII Continued. Even as hqjspoko sho lost her footing and wont headlong down tho cliff, roll ing over nnd over In tho sliding sand; to bring up flftcon foot below whoro tho path turned sldowlso on a llttlo sholf. Without heed sho gathered her solf, throw back hor braids and rUBhed on, leaping downward Hko a deer. Whon Sandry reached hor sho was anklo doop in tho surf, gazing with all hor starved naturo in her oyes, that yet shone with a martial firo. Thon, suddonly, through somo rent In tho soddon sky, a beam of light shot through tho mist, transllgurlng it. Sandry saw tho look of intoxication creop Into her oyes, tho drunkonness of emotion that dulled them drowsily. Lines drow in her oval cheoks and slowly her faco broke Into a look of anguish. Sho put up an arm and cov ered It, turning toward tho beach. Sandry caught her in his arms and hold hor, weoplng hard, against hlB breast. "I cannot bear It!" crlod Sllotz from this shelter, "oh, I hurt! I hurt!" "S'ht SJh!" whispered Sandry husk ily, "It is too groat too great for tho Night Wind to behold." The rldo homo was sllont, with San dry in tho load, his spirit still stirred and shaken by what ho had bohold. Thoy did not speak again until tho camp lay boforo thoni at tho big bend. "S'letz," said Sandry then. "Black Bolt Is yours. Nona other shall over rldo him ngaln." Sho said nothing, but hor Angora tightened In tho gallant crest tossing before her. When thoy r&do up ncross tho small brldgo that spanned tho slough bolow tho foot-log tho foreman was Btandlng besldo tho hammer-block. Ho rcachod up hugo, baro arms and swung tho girl lightly down, Bonding a glanco across hor shoulder that arrested tho owner's nttontlon Instantly. "Mr. Sandry," ho said simply. "Hampden's got us. Thoro hain't a jacic in tno camp but Collins. Ho'b- bought tho mill at Toledo an' offered i iHu-uuuur-u-uny rniso to every tun borjack an' rlvorhog In tho county. Even Harris," Daily's big voice deep ened with bitterness, "that wo was payln' seven dollars a day an' ho was worth It, for thoro hain't a liter like him this sldo o' 'Frisco has gono for nlno! Hampdon como to tho very gato up thoro on tho road an' gath ered 'em out for a talk an' they come back an' packed Hko sheop! Damn their hides! Ho had contrncks for two years at them wageB an' thoy signed like fools scrambled fer the chance! An' some of 'em's ben fight In' him a couplo o' years! He had wagons waltln' In a string at tho bend o' tha road ready to movo 'em that had cablnst Burson an' Click an' McMastors thoy all loaded tholr dufflo an hlkodi An' 1 don't know of anothor bunch o' loggers this side o' Portland!" Sandry, his faco gono whtto as sand under his hat brim, stared at tho blauk windows o! tho cabins. "Eat, son," aald Ma Dally tlrmly whon ho entered tho Jong room, "eat first an' think after. A empty stora inlck's a poor bollor for workln' titoam." And Sandry, looking Into hor kindly old faco, saw tho sanity of her ad vice. Ho took her fat hand and a spoon and tho nnd of a dish towel TRAVELS ON LAND OR WATER "Amphibious" Motor Boat, Invention of Austrian, Seems to Have Been Proved a Succo&s. A numbor of people have been work ing of lato years to colvo the problem of constructing a vehlclo capable of traveling upon both land and water. More than ono has had somo degrco of success, but nono Is hotter, porhnps, than that Invented by a Vlcnucso engi neer named L. 'elner. This "land motor boat" resembles an ordinary touring car In appcaranco ex cept that the body Is rather higher But besides its wheels, It Is provided with a propellor placed at tho rear. Tho power of tho motor can be switched from tho running gear to tho propeller screw and vlco versa. It Is built bo as to tako quite steep grades with case. Hence ono may ride down tho sloping bank of a rlvor, plungo Into the current, switch tho power to tho propoller and cross the stream In a practicable motor boat. Arriving at the other sldo, tho englno ia switched o put the wbools In commission once ACJP COMPANY also holding It tight in his own for a moment. "Right you arc. ma," ho answered, and sat him down. CHAPTER XIV. The Call of the Wind. Tho night lay thick over the SHetz country. High above, tho plno tops sang with a roar, soft-voiced but far reaching ns thilndor. Mystery and loneliness pressed upon tho wilder ness Hko a finger. It quivered tho sharp cars of Dlack Holt, pricked tor ward, listening, it padded tho feet of Coosnah running ahead In tho trail, but upon Sllctz its touch was lost. Sho, too, was of tho forest on a night Hko this; she, too, was freo of its hid den paths. Hour aftor hour thoy threaded tho familiar way, and pres ently tho forest lightened, fell away, left them at tho stoop shoro of tho Sllctz river, gurgling along in tho darkness, swift nnd shallow. Fields and pastures lay hero upon right and left und cabins stood squnt In the shadows. This was tho headquar ters of tho reservation. Through tho small settlement, up a lano and across a woods-lot wont tho trio, and pres ently Slletz drow rein where a sorry shack crouched forlornly beneath a mammoth fir. The sound brought to Its door a bent figure that camo and stood at Ulack 13 oil's head like a shadow. Sllotz spoko in Jargon, slid down, trailed tho reins on tho earth and en tered tho llttlo house. An hour later she stood against its closed door, facing a dusky circle of squatting figures, her trim form straight In tho lamplight, hor shirt open a bit at tho throat, her slim hands eloquent in quiet gestures. Near tho pino tablo that held tho fitful light stood old Kolawmlo, a splendid illustration of tho white man's ways. Ho might have been fifty years of age, ho might have been a hundred. Pure blood of chiefs ran In his volns, nnd ho had memories of tho timo whon tho Oregon country reached from tho northern sound to tho valley of the Sacramonto. About him gathered a sllont circle, young men who could speak good English and write essays on tho evolution of man, older ones who accepted tho modern modos with reservations, and a tow Hko himself of tho nnclent timo. To them Sllctz was speaking. "Trouble has fallen upon tho Night Wind," she said sweetly, "and sho comes to hor friends for holp. Sandry at tho camp Is deserted by his mon. Tho camp falls, tho work Is stopped, tho engines aro sllont at tholr posts, and a big contract that means much is ready to bo lost and Hampden of tho yellow Pine's laughs In gleo, for he has dono this thing. Mon thoro aro not In tho country and to go to Port land menriB loss of timo on the groat contrnct. Thcreforo Sandry sits with his head In his hands, thus" With swift art sho bent her dark head forward upon hor palms, drooped her slim shoulders, and instantly De spair loomed beforo tho dUBky clrclo. "For which tho honrt of S'letz sick ens, for sho lo Sandry's woman." Thoro was sllcnco for a spaco. Tho girl was an artiut. "Sho would help him. Therefore sho comes to her friends, whoso hearts aro largo with friendship, though their hands are soft with lolsuro. Tho Sl lctz need not work. Will thoy glvo tho freo gift of labor for tho Night Wind's man?" It was n heart-spooch, It ivas In Jar gon and It was successful, for with tho early dawn, bluo-gray with mist nnd sun shot with crimson, Sandry, who had not slept, standing with fur rowod brows on tho olllco stop, heard sounds of hoofs at tho valioy's head. Ho looked and bohold a cavalcado of horsemen, riding with ease on tholr ragged ponies, and led by Slletz upon Ulack Dolt, who still stopped proudly nftor his day-and-nlght'a Journoy, whllo Cobsnnh rolled with swinging ours at his sldo. "Horo," said tho girl as sho rodo up, "they will work for tho big contract." And sho slid down with a llttlo sigh of woarlness boforo Sandry could of fer his arms. "Cosh!" said Dally to himself In tho shadow of tho ofllco, "tho StwashoBl" "Mr. Sandry," ho said to tho owner when tho long tables wcro filled In every place with tho best of tho van ishing trlbo that Sllotz could pick. "I'm klckln' raysolf that I didn't think of tho Indians mysolf, though Lord more, the bank Is easily climbed, nnd tho journoy continued without more ado. Tho vehlclo has mado good under practical tcBts and Is expected to bo particularly valuablo for military uso. It is so built as to go well in awnmpy and muddy country. In shallow water wheels and propeller may bo used si multaneously; this Is a particular ad vantage whon a sand bank Is acciden tally encountered In a stream, since It removes tho danger of "gottlng stuck," Tho power is supplied by a lC-horso power, four-cyllndor motor which gives u speed on land of 4G miles por hour, This speed is diminished In wator to about twelvo miles por hour. Literary Digest. Queer Lack. "Wouldn't you Illto to vlalt'tho great desert V "Indeed J would, but I haven't got the sand. ' Exchnngo. An International exposition of eloc trical appliances nnd a general Span ish exposition will bo held in Barce lona In 2917. knows If wo can whip 'em Ir. Hno. lor It would tako tho devil himself to tnako a Slwash work." Hut 11 did not tako his majesty. It took only tho word of Kolawmlc. who had given a command which a quiet half-breed who scorned tho leader of (ho crow nrtlessly repcatod to Sandry "Wo will work till tho contract's saved," ho said; "in giving to you wo glvo to S'letz, who Is your woman." And Sandry, astounded boyond meas ure, opened his mouth and closed it without speech. And it was work indeed for all. San dry hlmsolf, ns ho had grimly threat ened once, "learned how" nnd tonded hook. Collins took Hastings' placo at tho roadlng donkey, selecting a slim, brown boy as fireman, whllo tho fore man proved his worth a dozen times over, by being ovcrywhero nt once, by filing things down to tho most rigid system, by planning, executing, finishing, with the hand and mind of an artist. It would havo boon contrary to hu man naturo if Sandry bad not felt a thrill of triumph whon ho next ran across Hampden at Toledo. Tho Yellow Pines owner grinned. "Slwashcs?" ho said Insolently. "SI washes!" "Yes," llamed tho younger man, "Si washes but I havo Ave million foot of logs at the mouth of my Blough! I'll float my contract on timo, Mr. Hampden and then I'll look Into the llttlo matter of my East Belt." That day ho got his first letter from Poppy Ordway. It wns heavy and satiny and it breathed an Insidious porfumo. Also It was brilliant with excitement and hinted at great things. "I'm certain Hampden's crooked," Bho wrote; "J'vo found a man who knows him and ho's In tho commis sioner's office. Ho's young and ho's susceptible and ho thinks I'm ono of tho 'ring!' Oh, but It's exciting. I 'passed him a tip' Isn't that tho way you men would say it? that I had a 'snap' in view, but that I already had a homestead in Arizona and the thing progresses. Tho mention of Hampden and 'snap' did for him and I'm all but over tho brink of a fraudu lent entry oven now! Ho's offered In" my case, spoclally to como down on tho prlco of my 'patent' two hun dred dollars iof course clandestinely; I'm to say nothing about It to the 'ring!' Yo gods! I'm wild with tho luck. Moro later." February was passing. Tho days of lltful sunlight wero becoming moro frequont. Tho camp was hpmmlng with business. Silent, bent on tho thing in hand, tho Indians worked without need of encouragement. Tho Blough was bank-full and Its surface waB covered from dawn to dark with a floor of logs slowly drift ing on every tldo downward to tho backwater. At tho slough's mouth a hugo cradle was slowly forming in its braces. Horo the little loading donkey puffed and tooted, grappling many-ton tim bers with Its two drag-hooks, placing them here and there. Tho mass of chains covered tho bottom of tho crndlo a fow foct apart. Twelve men worked continually at tho great marlno monster, packing the logs Insldo tho cradle, carrying tho BHHBw HhHh IHlllW Mystery and Loneliness Pressed Upon the Wilderness. giant chains up and over as tho snug floor reached the top, lacing tho whole together and at last lifting tho center gently, thus giving to tho thing Its likeness to a vast cigar. A timber-sealer, sent down by the Portland Arm, was constantly In at tendance A shack had been thrown up at tho head of tho raft and a watch was kept by day and night. "Wo can t trust Hampden a mlnuto, John," said Sandry; "I'm learning sus picion." Indeed bo was learning many things. Only John Dally In tho snnltv of his Just naturo-wntchod this Johnny Easteni tako his rough knocks and como up with his teeth set. Theso two wero growing together In PARISIANS IN SOBER MOOD War Has Wrought an Immense Chance In the Life of tho "Gay Capital." "Many of the leading French artists." says a writer In Cartoons Magazine, "aro nt tho front, painting War as It Is. Othors havo remained at hpmo to por tray llttlo Incidents of Paris. Among tho latter Is L. Sabattlor, for many years cartoonist of Lo Figaro, nnd who Is remembered for his broad, sweeping stylo in crayon. "Perhaps tho most notablo of his recent drawings Is 'Los Matlnalcs' the early morning wanderers of tho Paris streets In war times. In the small hours of tha long night thoy pass by, these women, as unnoticed ns tho good angels that guard us against evil. Under tho vcllB that shroud tholr faces somewhat drawn by the long vigil ono perceives the white hair of a mother, or tho blonde or brown locks of a young girl. Some aro returning from n night's watch at tho bedside of a wounded soldier; others are on their j way lo duty as nurses in oue of the a slow affection. Tho big room had. In a scn80, becomo home to Sandry and tho evenings when Ma sot In her llttlo rocker nnd Slletz braided her mats with Coosnnh beside hor filled his toll-worn soul with peaco. Tho Preacher had slipped away as silently nnd mysteriously ns ho had come, with a blessing upon nil nnd a promise to return "when you shall need me, my children.' V CHAPTER XV. "There Is No Law for a Genius." March came In Hko a lamb with delicate' weather, crystal clear and opal bright, and with It camo Miss Ordway. Sandry was glad to sco her, but tho critical point was at hand and ho scarco took timo to cat or sleep from tho great work of tho contract. Tho mammoth raft was ready, tho largest, according to Dally, that tho camp had over sent out in nil Its life, and a special boat from tho Portland Mills company would lay. off Yaquinn to rccoivo It on tho sixteenth. On tho night of tho second, Dally caught a glimmer of whlto on tho lin tel. It was a paper, stuck In with a thumb-tack. "Watch your raft," It said, "for pow der." Thnt was all, and It was "unsigned. Daily told Sandry of thd Incident nnd showed the warning. So for the remaining nights tho great raft was lighted from end to end and four of tho Indians patrolled it in shifts, armed with rifles and un der orders to shoot at the flrst sign of trouble. Tho work went forward rapidly. Tho Slwashes. born and raised in the tim ber country, know all tho work of the camp and they needed no driving. They wero a godsend to Sandry In tho pressing days and ho camo to look upon thom with a wldo tolerance. ' 'In serving you wo servo S'letz,' " ho quoted to hlmsolf, " 'for she's your woman.' " And an odd sensation prickled hta skin, tingled at tho roots of his hair. Some way, somehow, these wero Slletz' people thoso sllont, shiftless, well-taught creatures, who mado no uso of their talents, yet who did hard, unnecessary labor at tho call of tho blood. That night, with tho raft and oven tho two engines under guard nnd all tho length of track patrolled, ho camo In tired, worn to a thin edgo with sleeplessness, tense and taut as a sing ing wire, to meet Mies Ordway. Sho slipped her band into his arm with a llttlo, 'familiar gesturo and turned him about. "Como along and relax," sho said, "you're almost hysterical." "I bcllovo I am," said Sandry wea rily, though as ho stepped out Into the night, soft already with tho breath of spring as Is tho way with the coast country, where tho seasons shoulder oach other suddonly for placo, ho looked uneasily for Sllctz. "Let'B go up to tho old rollway. It's deserted and I have things to tell you oh, many things!" She laughed, her little rippling laugh that wns so soft and rich, and it soothed the man's strained nerves Hko a narcotic. Miss Ordway sat down, or rather climbed up. on a log that lay beside tho rollway and drew her gray broad cloth aside. Sandry settled himself besldo hor and took oft his hat. The soft, changed breath of tho night nir was grateful to him. "Whe-ew! I'll bo thankful when this strain is over, that raft headed out to sea and my contract fulfilled! I never know business wus so strenuous." Miss Ordway looked nt him through tho dusk with admiring eyes. "But look how you're succeeding! Why. It's great!" "Yes but for how much of It can I thank raysolf? Hampden has me In a bad holo about my great East Belt j tho best timber In tho region and tho I base, practically, of tho Dlllingworth's future and but for these Indians I ' would bo now well, I hato to think j whoro I'd havo been." I "S'h!" said Miss Ordwny; "not so fast about that bad holo. Instead, Mr. Walter Sandry. wo'vo got. your friend Hampden In tho deepest holo he was over In in all his lifo. In fact, whon we say tho word, ho'll turn over tho East Bolt with both hands." Sandry held out a hand and Miss Ordway took It. not after her usual maimer of hall-fellow, but with a gentle, proprietary motion. Sho tapped tho breast other princess gown. "I have right hero copies of filings on sixteen claims, all duly put through by 'cash entry' by as many different men and 1 know that Hampden owns all theso numbers, that ho furnished tho money for building tho cabins, for filing fce3, for advertising, for Ana) proofs at tho land ofllco and for tho government prlco of tho land. In re turn tor all this theso bogus entry men your drifting gentry of tho spiked boots and tho 'turkey' in most cases received four hundred dollars each for tho breaking of their faith with tho governmenL No ' wonder Hampden is rich!" For a long momont Sandry Rat In a silence so deep that ho ceased to many hotels and clinics now convorted Into Red Cros3 hospitals. All traverse Paris at tho hour when not so long ago thoy used to return from tho ball or tho theator. No moro of tho gay night flaneurs in evening dross, who hailed a tnxl whllo they finished a cigar. Tho morning wanderers pars In sllenco, nlono with tholr thoughts, tholrs tho satisfaction of duty accomplished." Shot Squirrel With 410 Bill. around squirrels wero damaging grain left in a field by Wlntlold Scott, manager of tho San Fernando hotel in tho town of that namo, says tho Los Angoles Times. A guest had loft a loadod shotgun at tho houso a few days boforo. Manngcr Scott decided to put an end to tho squirrels nnd started on a still hunt, Anally drawing a bead on ono of tho marauders. Ho shot it, and, having scared tho others away, re turned homo. Tho guest arrived and asked for thp gun. When ho discovered it had boon discharged he wilted. "I stuck a $10 bill In tho barrel for safe keeplug," be said. v,,,. brcalho. Hu was grasping tho magnl Hide of tho man's daring tbo gigantic risk ho ran with his safety In the un certain hands of Blxteen men. And also he was beginning to com prebend, wonderlngly, the during ol this woman, her finesse, her clever ness and hor success, "Wonderful!" ho said nt last; "It Ir past bollofl And how, for tho love of heaven, did you over wind up that commissioner t, put his own head lo tho nooso by giving you thoso proofs?" Miss Ordwny looked away down the fast darkening slough, and thoro was that in hor narrowed, smiling oye? which, had Sandry seen, would havo shocked him from her. "Ho didn't give," sho said oddly; "1 took." And something In tho speech si lenced the man. "Sometimes," went on this clovor woman, "ono will take providing n pw i jhim iiwi'iiiwimm i ji iiii H iTTrTfTTpf'M'jyflrnftiryi Under Orders to Shoot at the First Sign of Trouble. thero Is a great enough incentive. 1 had a great Incentive" She ceased, waiting, nnd against his Will ,Sandry supplied tho question. "What?" "You," said MI33 Ordway in a whis per. With her pretty, inimitable gesture of daring sho put up a hand, laid It against his cheek and drow h's face toward her. "Boy," sho said in a ctriously choked tone, us it emotion dominated her, "oh, boy! With your youth and your eagorness, your inherent strength and your losing battlo! Did you not know that you wero as Are to me?" She slipped off tho log nnd stood bo fore him, her hands clasped across hor breast and all hor magnificent beauty a luro In the spring dusk. "Ah!" she laughed recklessly, "you have set mo flaming, Hko a lino of fir at night! And I caro nothing that I tell you there is no law for a gon ius!" And, turning swiftly, sho went down tho slope, away from him, leaving him as sho had done once before with his head whirling under tho spell of hot beauty and her daring. "But tills tlmn sho had left far moro, for within him there surged and rioted emotions that dofled control Joy and triumph and savage desire to even scores with thn mun who had so cruelly pressed him. relief at tho prospect of saving so oas ily his East Belt and his future; and bursting through the rest, tho tlnglb of her wordB, U amazed comprehct slon of thenv Tho days that followca "wbTC hare ones for tho young owner of the DII lingworth. Ho did not seo that he hao tnken tho silent little girl of the hill and, that the dominant, clever womac of the world had taken him. Yet snel were tho fact? In tho vaguo. half formed shape that affairs had a sumed. With a splendid tact Miss Ordwni kept away from him, presenting at such times as thoy- chanced to meel a sercno poise that was as charnilnc ns her abandon bad been that night by the roUway. On tho other hand Slletz watched him with troubled eyen Thero was that in features and volet that frightened her, as a loving woman Is ever frightened when trouble rido tho shoulder of tho beloved. Therefore ono night soon after Sa:i dry's talk with Miss Ordway, SlletJ followed bim as ho went to tho ollicfc after supper. It was a black night and Sandry was not aware of hor pros onco until a touch fell on his shoul dcr, almost as light and soft as that of the mist upon his faco. "Sandry," said Sllotz. Ho turned swiftly and all the vox atloup acho of his heart seomed to cul rainnto suddenly in a dcslro to tako her In his arms. "Yes?" ho said, yielding to tho in fluence of tho misty darkness and the nenrness of this girl who typified the wild so alluringly, "tho Night Wind breathes upon my heart Why is it. Littlo S'letz?" (to nn CONTINUED.) American Meat Products In China. Tho Chinese people very rnroly eat beef, anil Its use Is practically con fined to tho foreign residents of the empire. Tho Chinese aro extremely fond of pork, but it would bo imposslblo for American firms to ship barreled pork to China and meet tho competition of tho native-grown article. Oood Chi nese pork sells at retail at a far cheap er rate than It can possibly bo put on tho market In the United States, to say nothing of tho freight cost bult way around tho world. Tho now trade In Chinese pork which has sprung up between southern China porta and England Is a profitable one, owing to the cheap prlco of the nog. Pork grown In South China is said to be a very good article, comparing favorably with American pork. Consul General Sam uel S. Knabcnshue, How Geese Are Fattened. Geoso aro fattened for market In somo parts ot Europo by confining them in dark rooms, to which light Is ndmlttod at Intervals, causing them J. to eat seven or eight meats a day. WONDERFUL PRG0S1ESS CANADA It Is Over the Hill Splendid Bank Clearings, and the Crop Returns Reveal Vast Possi- bilities for the Future! "Thero aro opportunities for Invest ment In Canada now that may provo attractlvo to American capital. Land prices In tho west aro low and wages less than on this sldo of tho lino, and whatevor tho outcomo of tho war, tho future of tho Dominion is assured as ono of prosperity In tho development of Its vast resources." Chicago Tribune. A short timo ago tho Canadian gov ernment asked for prlvato subscrip tions to a loan of fifty million dollars. Loss than a month was given for com pletion of tho subscription. On No vombor 30th, tho day upon which sub scriptions were to conso, It wa3 found that 110 million of dollars had been subscribed or CO million dollars moro than tho amount nsked. .It thoro wero any so pessimistic as to lranglno that Canada was passing through a period of hard times tho wonderful showing of this subscription should put nBidn all doubts of Canada's rapidly Increas ing prosperity. Tho bank clearings of Winnipeg for 1915 woro a billion and a half of dollars.- Think of it. Then, in addition, there wcro tho bank clearings of tho other cities throughout Western Can ada. Ileglna, Saskatoon and Moose Jaw also show big incrcaso in clear ings. Tho Winnipeg statistics show that tho city has dono tho biggest financial, commercial and industrial business in its history in 1915. A, billion and a half aro big clearings, representing business on a per cap ita basis of over ?7,000 per head for every man, woman and child in tho city, and has gono ahead of big man ufacturing cities Hko Buffalo, and runs a closo second to Detroit. It has shown bigger bank clearings than the middle west cities ct Minneapolis and Duluth, and has exceeded Los Angolos, Seattle and other noted ship ping centers. It is now Bldo by sldo with tho ten biggest cities In North America in amount of bank clearings. But because the war helped Canada recover quickly from a natural eco nomic depression It doe3 not follow thnt, at tho end of tho war, tho coun try must suffer a relapse, and straight way return to a state of inactivity and hard times. A Winnipeg paper, with a well known reputation for conservatism in economic mattors says: Canada's undeveloped fields should provo a mighty factor after tho war in adjusting tho country's business from ono period to another. The Btaggerlng figures of this year's crop, showing in creases in production of 50 por cent over last year, give a slight idea of tho futuro wealth stored In vast stretches of prairio plain yet untouched by the plow. Tho Northwest GralrDealors' As sociation on September 1 estimated that tho wheat crop of the three Prairio Provinces would amount to 250,800,000 bushels. On November 10 that esti mate was increased to 307,230,000 bushels. Tho Dominion government on Septembor 13 estimated tho West ern wheat crop at 275,772,200 bushels, but on October 15 thoso figures wero changed to 304,200,000 bushels. Monetary Returns for the Western Crop. And tho amount of money which tho west is receiving for its grain has not yet been wholly appreciated. Up to tho 10th of December tho Canadian west had received somo 170 million .dollars for 182 million bushels of Us grain crop, of which 149 million bush els was wheat. The averago price ot No. 1 Northern wheat for Soptomber wa3 93 cents; for October 98 cents, and for tho flrst three weok3 of November $1.03. On tho 10th ot December thoro was fully 120 million bushels of wheat to bo marketed. This would lcavo about 30 million bushels, for local consumption in the Prairio Provinces. Bradstreot says: "Confldenco seems to havo returned In Canada; grain crops aro exception ally large, prices pay tho farmer, and the war-order lines provido work and aid In circulating much money. Credit Is moro freely granted, and interior merchants axe disposed to buy rathor liberally." Advertisement. Naturally. Noah (Just bofore tho Btonn)- -All tho animals on board? Shem All but tho leopards, but I'll soon spot them. OLD PRESCRIPTION FOR WEAK KIDNEYS 'A medicinal preparation like Dr. Kil mer's Swamp-Root, that has real curative valuo almost sells itself. Like an endleM chain system the remedy is recommended by those who have been benefited to those who ore in need of it, Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root Ib n physi cian's prescription. It has been tested for years and has brought results to count less numbers who havo Buffered. The success of Dr. Kilmer's Swamp-Root ia due to the fact that it Infills almost ev ery wish in overcoming kidney, liver and bladder diseases, corrects urinary troubles and neutralizes the uric acid which causes rheumatism. Do not suffer. Get a bottle of Swamp Root from any druggist now. Start treat ment today. However, if you wish first to test this Rrcat preparation send ten cents to Dr. Kilmer &. Co., Binghamton, N. Y., for a sample bottle. When writing be sure and mention this paper. Adv. This is tho glad season ot tho year when tho plumber gets squaro with tho ico man. PREPAREDNESS! To Fortify Tho System Against drip when Grip Is prevalent LAXATIVE DROMO QUININE should be taken, as this combination ot Qulnlns with other Ingredients, destroy! rtrms, acta as a Tonla and Laxative and thus keeps the sritem In condition to withstand Colds, Grip and Influerua. There Is only one "DROMO QUININE." E. W. GROVE'S sir nature on box. tjo. A minister says the right path !a often left. I Ji i