Big Chris 143cm. Alulm mnnery human. seek'mg boat conmtlom {or the ouuide world in I launch. in Myenrbyr n sorm ing) a_ small cgve. 1! had met the Remittance Mun thnt evening Ind star-1h on the storm- mpt beach, ponderinï¬eupon the lat» ter’: hard drinking. w n he observes I distress signal {m I ship It was. He is about to board his hunt! to answer the can. when the Remittance Mun joins him. They join the launch crew and start to the res'cus despite the storm. NOW GO ON WITH THE STORY. . Biz Chris turned toward the door. Captain Jim smiled dimly when the Remittance Mun got up. too. “You are no milor," ha commented. “Nope! That pan. of my education was 11-:3lected. But any one who has done as much fancy balancing w keep his feet as I have in the last year will be a smdy man in the tops! 1'“ go out and be in that big Norweginn'a why." The mdlow. easy voiee some way heartened the man at the wheel. Hi3 pale blue eyes frankly studied the handsome, cleanâ€"cut {M9, now plainly revealed in the light of the pilot house. This southerner had wasted the birthright o! a powerful physique. He was a tall man. extremely broad of shoulder and big of bone, and a cox-em glance might have attributed to him even such physical power as that of Big Chris, whom he resembled greatly in build. But there was no iron in those big. loose muscles. There was still, in his face, the lingering image of what had unquesâ€" tionably been a general allowance of real, manly good looks. The captain's gaze was quick and penetrative to- night, and he could see back into the man's past: he amid m the mn of which this hallâ€"drunken, dissipated creature was the image. Far away, and not long ago, he had been a youth at the gluten personal charm; well- bmd, perfectly mannered, affectionate and goodinatured; amiably weak yet chin-Imus. quick to sympathy, kind And friendly to interiors but recogniz- no superiors; a certain well-loved type of southern gentleman a! an old school. Curiously enough the man was clean-Shawn; and the only explana- tion was that the lingering image 01 â€ll-WC that kept him from crossâ€" jng his blood with the Aleuts also kept him personally well-groomed. His beard, however, would have been deâ€" cidedly brown; his shock of curly hair is: light brown. . “All righ ." Captain Jim pro- no’ynced at last. â€Go out and help Big Chris all you can." .,A__A.I l- â€-0 â€"»7 . The Remittance Man turned in‘ 'obdience, and the tilting, wavowashed deck brought him to sobriety quickly. The danger. the night and the stars, wt of all the eternity of plunging: waves on whichrthe ship was borne' wakenod an odd, dark mood, stranger to him in all the reckless, happy years of hi. youth. Some way he saw this North of his in a new light. For the ï¬n: time since he had come here, he no sober enough to catch the real Inc. '0 feel the spirit of the†deno- When You Can Buy Why he content with Infoflor ten. BEGIN HERE TODAY Kuavl “"3 7“"- lO'RANG-E " PEKOE l‘ GLEND‘ Into an and an oath. uqu, rock- bound Oh)!“ they waited. He had novcr thought about than in puma» hr before. He bu! dumly lived In I [nighunm world of m, we .11 a» "torn magic of lib land had ptud Ihim by. But he wu mcpdvo '6 It Iblmighl. ltmmbnmooducouldâ€"dly hurl him into Ulric regret: I! he had let hinnel! pâ€"H Mhndnotlongcgo lorrwom Ill menu. In the flat place than was no pnrflculu not of hipâ€"not oven the truck: mm of the bunch ride on the Savmnlh tamâ€"w which he could dlncï¬y Lame his downhll: 1: m mny been a combination of drew, many 0! which had been beyond Ma dime controL He had been wank, true enoughâ€"9 drinking rather too much than wu good for him, but no mom than other men of his chm. md not one-myth uhardnsiwwumâ€"lnkinsmln lorgedulnes; He hnd been jab!)- with little came; but this Who duo a human trait 1t wnn ninply dueâ€"â€" 10!‘ all 11is auspic'wurbegimdng. his care-free youth and the wonder of those ï¬rst ineflnble months with Dor- othyâ€"tho cards of {lb hnd been stpcked against him. So it was neither wise nor ï¬tting that he aimld yield iimsel! to regret. There was no me ï¬ghting when than was nothing to win. He could never go hom Ho must always be a fugitive from thn world of men. He muat stay hm will he éied. L It seemed to him now that this mu: mam end was nearer than he had ever dreamed. There was a strung» sense of ï¬nality about this voyage. The wind was ï¬lm a whiplash out of the northwest, stinï¬ng his eydida. bufleting him as he braced hints†on the tilting deck, seeking every link entrance through sleeve and collu- into his Vitals. In the lonelinea o! bk it ma not occur to him At once that hit fellow watchman might be likewise snfleflng. He only knew the truth when Big Chris paused health him. cursing. ' â€77601.7’T'E'ish I had my coat,†he said. "Like dam' {001 I He! (1 in dat I'gghagkâ€"e" , . 1 remittance Man gazed at him in quick amazement. It was true: Chris' heavy madxinaw shirt Alone saved him from the lash ol the cold. "Good Lord, I wish you'd take mine," the Remittance Man answered promptly. “I’m sweating like a horse." He saw the look of immciulous amazement in Larson's facet “Yul, you areâ€"" he began in derision. 'tl am, no fooling. I guess it’s the liq orâ€"bes‘idm. I've got a caribou shirt underneath." He quickly threw off his heavy seamn's coat and held it out. "Wear it a while. anyhowâ€"â€" we're about the same build and it will ï¬t you to a T. I’ll holler {or it back as soon an I feel chilly." Big Chris muttered, but slipped the garment on. He could not doubt those ringing words; otherwise wild hm could ndt have forced the coat across his brawny shudders. Presently he turned away, leaving this man of civic! almost unprotected in the blast of the wind. ‘ Why he had acted as he dld, he could not have told you. The dying liquor had chilled Mm. rather than warmed him. nor was them any shirt 0! cold-defying caribou hide under‘hla outer garment of heavy flannel. He could not cum 10min such cold at this. The front learned to pom mm his v‘ltnh The dawn wu break- ing over the m incredible um this night'of storm and darkness; but it brought no mercy from the cow. Either ha must have hln watch and Ink sheer below, or else pariah on an deck. ‘ He turned, at last. (award bhe pilot house: but R van the 5W9. thing In All his dram life the ho Ind uuhnddsdnwgo. Itwumt M In wu vitally needed on an Oak num,,u wu um outgmwth BEST FOR ALL YOUR BAKING â€" Pics. Cukcs. Buns and Bread â€" DOES ALL YOUR BAKING BEST 'URI‘IZYFIIDU ’ dual-Inï¬lhrkmdzbhdlm th- and towud which h. In driflhu \ll I00 pifln. At Ind 0n" would In lam. alumna. d My in push . «M I). m Bk]... by tho 00591:: N- hopincol NI Wllth flul tho W In now:- mcbd the plum door. Than wu on. “an... him, bllnd~ crud can ï¬nd. caught. tun-ha it quick, cracking, upladw mound flu: hrdlyh-dumnbmchbhar drums, nnd chm the swift mlludon. "he I Iveht'l flue. of W din-tar. The nth naked, mt. th- cnnl eup- rlppod, auxin. buried I! over; Ind an hi wnvu, foun~ M. loud, phnpd, Ind nothâ€" Eié i‘ (n b v rhu- In us ilk-ant: The man‘s Hp- °m dew-Mn: cw; no II «My» hurled mo IN) N"! m Downâ€. me Dorothy Nowlun‘l (“crib chi:- when om uh. an ave-lulu! like I “not, II» could look through 2w emu-«u: of I can“; part. 01 but fluttnlflnyom-hohtdoomoinb Lbs Macy an! Ibo preferred this View 90 that from the whb [lug space- 01 thus an pcrlor, the M a! duk pines. deep in shadow. and mo. nokh Iurrvnderlng to the udtrr of the Georgi- uun. Domuay'n tuber- bylaw had mï¬ved the lu'n parlor for his own delight, and in his “to- ï¬rm had been rather Wet-Int of the stream of motor vehicles {hat flow- ed ml! up Augustin mod hp shimmble street; but they man all put of Domhy'c life. My in nw the ookmsd mt beg, path)“ inc «may up the grade. More am he Ind past! the great, mhmbh Wathdalondnhowolunhm. She had plenty of time to watch Mm. Ind nothing better to do. Since by gedy ind mflahn this Whirl. aomath‘lmovu aymrbdwnahohnd had full came 00 watch fur W A swift pnmmidon hold her tint 0:0 boy wu heading straw toward hr Sho N no great sense of sum-prim when the boy turned into her own beautifully curving (hivewny, circled to the wide veram'hh, Hamly mp- peduphlswheel, andpuaedbvyond the mngaofhrvisivqnshemmd “7-... The next momem was n blank for- ever in her Ufa. She had no memory of that ï¬rst reading yet when am- sc'lousnesn streamed back to her, a moment later, she lay Milli-sprawled over the great setteo in the alcove just of? (he hall, and she knew the burden, 1! not the exact wording, of the mea- tï¬e mndah shape to her door. Dw- othy got up slowly from her chair. She walked freely through the debt. took time to glance once at a great bouquet a! “aware. and her hand was steady as she sbg'ncd hr the memage. Then her fluttering ï¬ngers km 1t â€an. The yellow sHp still] lay in her hand. She did not look at it at ome. Instead she lay with closed eyes, and the world wept through space. and tlvme moved as in the grammes of half- aleep. She raised her hand sbwly, and the message game _with It; and .n. v.... my, It had flied In tho wireless afflca at Plnte Cove, in Alaskaâ€"n place of which she had never heart)â€" alnd had \mqueotlombly come by wireâ€" less (3) Seattle. w’henco it WM mt by wire acmu the continent. It did not Joycaâ€"â€"'chk didn‘t blow hln bmlns out when you rejected hlm. Ho came round Ind proposed to ma" Joanâ€" "Then ho mun! have an! rm n! them MIn-rd'n Llnlmetn Oor Ohllblnlnu. name other way Farm 0|rlâ€"â€""Thnl pm In vary black, “11'! ha?†Farmerâ€"“Yum wo call hlm ‘luk'f' Farm Girlâ€""Why!" Farm- oFâ€"‘nocamo ho keep: running out of mo pen." The next moment W»: I u kTo be conduuod.) CHAPTER II it Quhl. uh. Mm lull-i In). New Indian Race Found in Mexico Wuhï¬ioï¬.â€"A rm oi "ionl hud- ad" indium who uni-M puma 1,000 yun Micro Columbus and iron Spain hid nu inundation (or the rich Pueblo cullm oi tho Banana-t. it in renal-d by I Smithsonian Imb- Ioololicu “podium: which has rt turned from New Mexico. The ï¬n! complete Villa. at the no. III air covered by me upodiliou in Chico Ccnyon. Bonntun hon-u, sunk nun! (out In the oath and Hood with Ihbl. were In the villus, together with 46 can." [or non" of corn and n kin, or command temple. Tho Inhab air“ the VIII-go I“ I Inc. «mm: from m. Puebla. um Funk H H Reborn. of mo Rama 0! Amorlmn Ethnoloxy. who bonded the expedition. Skeleton- 9! the Inn-Ml- anu worn [mum to ho undotomod um Ion; lauded, while the JIIINOI wore round-headed and nccunmmd to deform the bank 0! (hair chlldron. Archaeologiltp Umnh Vil- las e of Advanced Tribe 2, 500 Year. Old Conununoplu. â€"â€" Turkey counted none I! the beginning of the month for me nm line In history and Con- Itnnunople In e city 0! dud. BeeL um; met It In lmpoulble to count the population when they were run- ning About. the government decreed um everybody must rennin .1 home Ind embody who showed hle- held out a! door- except the 50.00 censu- uherl wu luh’ecl to 1 heavy ï¬ne. All the Ihopl And other plan 0! bullneu Iere cloud, the ubl. mm- wnyl and human wore u a stand- nun. Ind oven the now-unar- were lorblddon to publlah. one o! the may qua-lion- lho census lauds ukod ucb' person was whether he could road. It wu hop9d w complete the con-u- by midnight. when cannons were ï¬red to I“ the people know that way were u llberly u: leave melt home- A DISTINGUISHED FROCK. The frock pictured hero {5' an un- usually smart. style and would be u- oeedï¬n-gly chlc if fushloned of satin or woollen material with a contrasting front over which the jacket is lapped. The bod‘lce is slightly gathered to the skirt having {our plaice-at each side. and the two narrow belts are flniahod with buckles, while brnId makes an eflectlv‘Atl-imrrdng on tho Jacket and tight-ï¬t ng sleeves. No. 167fln in aim 84, 86, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. Size 80 mob-ea 8% yards 39-inch, o 2% yards 54â€"inch material; 56 ya 89-inch continuing for front; 4 yards braid. Price 20 cent: the pntwm. BSuholl' "H Zinc-pea: ~117â€" Qutlh. uh. nu mad lu- ydnfulcdknuu club-t. mull-nudist.â€" HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and nddrm plnln- ly, giving number Ind sin of Inch p-thml II you want. Enclose 200 In lump- or coin (coin preferred; wrap it carefully) for such number and ndd‘real your order to Pnï¬um Dept, Wif-on Publllhlng Co., 78 Wut Ad.- l-ldo 8L. Toronko. 1’1an but by ".2ch am. Mhurd'n LInlmont tor Nturllll‘ Give a snntonca with the word "can she." "My enualxo I- II! and seven alumna." 'urlley Knows- Haw to leo Census 1nd all!!! Mum 1! Wk Indium “mph 10!“ 'ormmonu and but d 1:» anhï¬uhnflu, "Hut-undr- rmvobulknWMJfll Lou-ad Amaridn “-31-†m whkhnflmouof'om any“ “ngmmdb Wry‘ï¬rpdlhotdnlwu’oub named to the Unlusd sm- Day-xv mtolCommrm mtitMMImo‘m wlummt-Wdcw tourryonthomkhm Win-flammmhw- mtiomlmmwupmdn oft-adv, IndsopriH-Jdddm vurdwloodurnduuu‘umt bnnquntn lmmuqmflthldpld snddlveruomotou-nyhï¬u Gold In believed. m. a: bin in occult power 0! M13 In lick. "I“: . popular many In flu mun pharmneopooln," an the Government study. "and medic-inn oonblnlnc gold the hvond {or many din..." THE WORLD'S GOLD SUPPLY. H) I mulmmb ol‘odwr loan it b caution All chl- bu me that s pictur- aqua {more-t. It involves the wob- bm af during the Nation d (In with cold supplyâ€"4 probkln mt hook on new immune when BK the: o! the British. Frank and man central bank: and the Amen-Ian Fodornl Reserve Mm recently fore- guhamd in New York and Wuhim- (on, and with (he manhunt d Fod- crul Reserve reciawnnt nun below Hm European law]. Preciouu Mauls Handed Ind Not Earning C-um "Frozen Wealth" A. the world W from (he ï¬nnndd chm of the w nu! new than lave Mala! buck to, or to ward. A gold IW for their car- mncleu. To establish and maintain Mich standards they must have gold menu. The current! of internatiwL-l 81 trade and other influences have brought to America} oofl'em about‘ half of the world’s monetary'stock of gold. Buttnflmlndqmmroln century Ind-i- hu been quietly ahead)- hg immune quandï¬ea of the yellaw mam]. With a dare now ' bd at about 82.500.000.000. aha W! to hand! I large part of flu new gold pro-thud from year to yeu'. - W from year to year. - Meanwhile. the world's 3016p» dncï¬on has declined sharply from the mlxlmum for this century, machod bdwezn 1910 and 1915. Alï¬nwh mmhebeenamoveryinpu'tdme 1922, this im has been vldated, no fun- as Mary gold fw‘the world is oonoe'med, by the increase a! In- dian absorption. Inwauemptbohnltorltlnd retard this mumuhï¬on., (munch- lngchsngumptvjechedmmelnr dian flmdnl gym. Aduption of I gold bullion basis for Intï¬a‘a cur- rency; â€placement of (ï¬ver nrpeel tn circulation by gold note; establida- ment of a strong central bank; and extension of savings bank militia me now proposed. All IN designed largely to wean the lntlian populabion away from the habit 01 hoarding of gold and silver pieces and bullion bus. If that I: ever accomplished. India's flvo' billions and more of gold and silver in time will cease to be merely so much "from wealth." Gold Keep. V Wh'at disturbs bankers an! econo- mists is not the size of India'a mm of gold. great as “‘15. so nyuch as the way it is treated. GREAT WEALTH UNUSED. India's gold is idle. There 9 lurk- ing even a pretense of making“ add anything to the producï¬vo knees or the comfort: of Ind-3'5 800,000,000 people or their {mowâ€"beings in othnr lands. The exhaustive wort mini-mud ‘0 Washington was prepared by Don C. Bliss. Jr.. Amisbmt Trude Omnmisâ€" sinner at Bombay. under the prosaic title “Th8 Bombay Bullion Mnflmt" Mvr. Blis any: on flu"! point: “th reserves h-ve been accumuâ€" lated In (ho counts of mummâ€" “Vnst reserves have been ammuâ€" hted In the counts _of many?â€â€" meen‘es mimawd an amoun mt to more thn'n ï¬ve billion doll“. (Mr. Bliss hare Includes a 82.500.000.00Q gppmximatlgt} of silver 101611131) but “MinesmaMetals†"Mlnu and Mac-II" I20 Bay 0!. - 'l Send for Sample F‘l‘ â€ï¬nd copy “'Iulll “\oIIhIInnn PROPOSED REMEDIES Keep Potted 0n Mlnlng Held Every Inu- of (Gan-dial Ludlnx Mlnlnu New-paper) Toronto ochlorgnmumon. neuouailunuuj and the still primiï¬n ï¬nancial syn- tan all influence diam to mble my wealth'uwy have in I readily pombb ï¬onn and often to hide it. imam-old.“ 'wultbolflnllk nothing»!!- MW way of imputed IBM“ liv-' MMIMMAIoI-mmi “orthopawcwmnddmnd paws! Mmmmwwlflnm ï¬lo "Hm d1- yua- “humanlyww wthtboW-mm The wealth is matter-d um mflJ Mon- at unorqnlud' holders. sud even 61: like! coins which axzfltuhe Illa metallic my m numbed into Fjvnwimrds by the ryots'or pens- m tux-men Thu problem ol hon-d? ins, Blida Input Me, in d: (B rooto‘lthgpgnnï¬c plightotndflhna 1:! these {mm Hereditary ell-mm. In dmdaya o! tyranny and 0pm.- lion. manifest My was an in: viution to be stripped of one’s per mm Hostile invnsbm also 1‘me great southward migrations of peoplo‘ whqwmve their wealth, Ind toeoh lent it in a highly concentraQed form.’ Thus conditions have left thair infloJ cum to this very day. ‘ OTHER CAUSES OF SAVING The Hindu family, moreover, onï¬) nan'ly hokh all real pmpenx uni “Conseqmtly.†'Mr. Bliss writes, “there is a strong tendency in time: of prosperity to purchase anal] qunn- titles of silver and gold in the form of coins, human or Qmments u a re- nerve against want. "Hinton: of people, parï¬cuhrly in South India uni Em India. noveq‘ havensuffldentmrginhodoem this, as they Inve no am will; over; this is evidenced by the neon!- rlty for famine mlid measure in myaecï¬onsusoonuthemhu crop failure! household goods in common. The in- dividual wishing to save for his own use can segregate his nvings only in' the form of gold and silver. Millions of the native population. too. have no access ho banks. In time of mean they must draw on accumuluzd m- serves or wort to (in money lender â€"at 75 per cent. interest. The Commander-1114mm! of the Gen mu Army arrived In New York this week. «using somewhat less excite- ment than n he hld come between April, 1917. and November. 1918. ‘Enlist Now! With the party of Christmas homegoers leaving Halifax for the Mother Country. Make sure of a‘right royal Christmas and good time with your family and friends on the other side. mgrâ€"J , See a steamship agent to-day. Round Trip from $155 mi Childm half fareâ€"every- thing included. Christmas Sailings Mm HALIFAX “ 'Dec. Sâ€"ANTONIA for Plymouth; ï¬lm 3nd London. Dec. uâ€"lm-nmm for mm. ‘1 leu-pool and 01m. Dec. liâ€"ASCAMA for Hymn Ham and Radon. M “ M81310â€. NJ. WHY GOLD IS HOABDED. mmnmooxmï¬'m eu.kymwmh.mm