Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 13 Feb 1914, p. 13

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$ OALIPOTNIA, FLORIDA and THE :~SUNNY SOUTH. Fast tralis leave Jingston dally, making direct con- at Detroit and Buffalo for Florida and southern points. and at Chicago for California and western points. We can make ali arrangements to bring your family and friends from the Old Country. Special attention will be given them, For full particulars apply to J. P, HANLEY, Railroad and Steamship Agent Cor. Johuson and Ontario Sta. CANADIAN PAacCirticC Winter : Tours wT California and the South RETURN TICKEPS AT LOW FARES THE "LOGICAL ROUTE" WESTERN CANADA For Winnipeg-and Van- couver Leave Toronto 10.20 pon, Dally Compartme ut Library Observation CO Standard Sleeping Cars, Tourist Sleeping Cars, Dining Car, First Class Coaches and Colonist Cars, Particulars regarding RAIL or OC EAN tickets from F. CONWAY, C.P, A., City Ticket Office, Cor. Princess and Wellington Sts, Phone 1197. ------------------------ LI I--" | OCEAN STEAMSHIP AGENCY CQ, B KIRKPATRICK 43 Clarence St, Phone B69 DANADIA] oY 0 From Southampton From Portland, Me Feb, 26 ASCANTA Mar. 14 ALAUNIA Mar. 2) AUSONIA April 4 eamers will call Siymonth at Rates--Cabin Ay 46.2 a class. Sh aatboun 30.25 ww THE ROBERT Rironn CO. Limited General Agent, 50 King St. E., Toronte 'CRUISE of 1915 By large Cruising 64 CLEVELAND " From } New York, Jan. 31, 1915 Vighing famous cities and countries on a pelstia steamship which serves as your otel. 'Every lusury and comfort assured. 135 days--$900 and up including Shore Trips and all heceasary oxpenses. Also Cruises to the West Indies, Pan- ama Canal, and Mediterranean trips. Send for booki-t, sicting cruise HAMBURG-AMERICAN Hambore American Lan o, eaticmmsation Bldg. Corner Notye Dame ond Francis Xavier § . treal, Conada, or Local Agents. ifn Thomas Copley Telephone 987 Drop a card to 13 Pine street when wanting @nvthing done ln the cArpen- tery line. Estimates given on all kinds of repairs and new work; alse h wood floors of aM kinds. All will receive nrompt attention, 80 Queen Street, Products Factory Bas cement blocks on hang and lintels SlwATs rik hand x reasonable in cement Elo, to Auyihing Corner of Charles and Patriek Phone 1304. For Sale Must be sold by Febreary 1, 1914. Three brick houses In the best of location, near Queen's AY at Plumbing Al a a rovements, bringing a rental of 8 3580, 00 per year for $6, io ouse on Queen street, near Clorgy, $3,950.00, splendid. fr 1 Peps are. yd as Sep reanknon) stamp for Dupont oronto, 1.25. to you, cut out it name and date of this paper, and mail it with lc. ostage to Tem Co., With sfaring eyes that missed no Getail, she saw that the, brute had | been shot in the head and shoulder thige times and that he was appar ntly dead.® The revulsion that came over her was bewildering; she swayed again, this time not from the thrust of the water, but with sick faintness. The tension suddenly taken off, un- strung, the 'loose bow of her spirit | quivered helplessly; the arrow of her | life almost fell into the stream. We will rae IE Your drugg sells Boys at b0¢. box; 3 for) Remember the name "Peps" and take ¥ And then a new and more appalling terror swept over her. Some man had fired that shof. Actaeon 'had spied upon, Diana. With this sudden revela- tion of her shame, the red blood beat chill water. The anguish of that me- ment was greater than before, She could be killed, torn to pieces, de- voured, that she should be so oytraged in her the hunter had not come. lower in the water for a moment fain ized as she did how frightfully cold she was. Yel, although she froze where she was and perished with cold she could not go ont om the bank to dress, she saw swiftly, since the huge mon- ster had fallen a dead heap on her clothes. Now all this, although it takes min- nites to tell, few seconds. clude hours, even a lite: time, in their brief | composition. SKe thought it would be just as well for her to sink down and die in the wafer, when a sudden splashing below her caused her fo look down the stream. Kingston Business College (Limited) Head of Queen Street. in bookkeeping, typewriting, service, general improvement, and all commercial subjects. Informa- Courses shorthand, Rates moderate. tion fred: . civil She was so agitated that she could make out little except that there was a man crossing below her and making | directly foward the body of the bear. not bestow a glance upom her. She could have cried aloud in thanksgiving for his apparent obliviousness to her as she crouched now neck deep in the benumbing cold. The man stepped on the bank, shook himself like a great dog. might have done and 'marched over to the bear. He uprooted a small nearby pine, with the ease of a Her- The Dye hat colors ANY. KIND of Cloth Perfectly, with the DYE. Chaigest fruitsetc. ,~petfectly balanced--ready to use. Sayes endless labour. COMPLETELY CURED OF DYSPEPSIA ; By Ha-Dru-Co Dyspepsia Tablets We are Soutinially grateful people who enc of Fal oo to express my efit 1 reced on received beard of Tablets . trial, 1 iw Na. DfuCo Dy apeps heating ve had experi- like that of Miss Alice K. Cooper, , Onts, who writes : titode 0 from yous H a without the slightest relief, 1 Na-DruCo I spepsia ht T would retiet from bhearl- ive the i ra, futolehe o §1it% of the storhech Ihiopsmese, «hi li isso mich needed, and but if taken vegulari week Win Tor soc, you con get 8 for a few days or completely curs Sure the most worble. ae hens "u fram ve them completely cured of dyspepsia. Twill be only too pleased to advise any one troubled with dyspepsia to give then a fair trialy) fableta not only cules--and she had time to mark and marvel at it ia spite of everything-- and. then with that as a lever he un- concernedly and easily heaved the body of the monster from off her elothing. She was to learn later what a feat of strength it was to move that inert carcass weighing much more than half a ton. Thereafter he dropped the pine tree by the side of the dead grizzly and without a backward look tramped swiftly and- steadily up the , canon through the trees, turning at the point of it and was fustantly lost to sight. His gentle and generous purpose were obvious even to the frightened, agh tated, excited girl. The woman watched him untill he disappeared, & few seconds longer, and then she hurled herself through the water and Btepped out upon the shore. Her sweater which the bear had dragged forward in its advance, lay on top of the rest of her clothes, covered with blood. She threw it aside and with nervous, frantic energy, wet, cold, though she was, she jerked on in some fashion enough clothes to cover her nakedness and then with more leisurely order and with neces. sary care she got the rest of her ap- parel in its accustomed place upon her she sank down prone and prostrate upon the grass hy-the carcass of the now harmless monster which had sé nearly caused her undoing, and shiv- ered, cried and sobbed as If her heart would break. . She was chilled to the bone hy her motionless sojourn, albeit it had been for scarcely more than a minute in that icy water, and yet the blood rushed to her brow and face, to every hidden part of her in waves as she thought of it.. It was a good thing that she cried; she was not a weep- ing 'woman, her tears came slowly as a rule and them came hard. She rath- er 'prided herself upon her stoicism, but in this instance the great depths and the fountains thereo! were fain to-break forth. How long she lay there, warmth coming gradually to her under the di. and 2 rim of frightfu 8 clouds bad suddenly blotted out the sun. The clouds were lined with gold Jand silver and the long rays shot {from behind the somber blind over the yet uncovered portions of the heaven, but the clouds moved with the irresistible swiftness and stead ness of a great deluge. The wall of them lowered above her head while they extended steadily and rapidly across the sky toward the other side of the canon and the mountain wall. A storm' was brewing such as she had never seen, such as she bad no etperience to enable her to realize its to the white surface in spite of the | that wes a small, thing, but | modesty was unendurable, She wished | She sunk | to, hide In its crystal clarity and real- | and it would avail her little,' had happened in but a | Seconds sometimes in- | He was a tall black bearded man, she | gaw he carried a rifle, he looked neith- | er to the right nor to the left, he did | body, and then when it was all over |: of her mature had been undermined "| come sluggish an rand wakes, | | but unconscious of all the menage of the hour, her thoughts flew down the | canon to the camp. She must hasten | there. She looked for . her. watch | which she had lifted from the grass and which she had mot yet put om. The grizzly had stepped upon it, it was irretrievably ruined. She judged | from her last glimpse of the sun that { It must now be early aftertioon. She | rose to her feet amd staggered with | weakness; she had eaten nothing since morning, and the nervous shoek | and strain through which she had gone had reduced. her. to a pitiable condition, Her luncheon had fortunately es. caped unharmed. In a big pocket of her short skirt there was a small flask of whiskey, which her Uncle Robert had required her to take with her. She felt sick and faint, but she knew that she must eat if she was to make the journey, difficult as it might prove, back to the camp. She forced herself to take the first, mouthful of bread and meat she had brought with her, but when she' nad, tasted she needed no further incentive, she ate to the last crumb; she thought this was the time she needed stimulants, 100, and mingling the cold water from. the brook with a little of the ardent spirit from the flask, she drank. Some | of the chill had worn off, some of the fatigue had goné. She rose to her fec. and started down the canon; her bloody sweater still Jay on the ground with other things of which she was heedless. It had grown colder, but. she realized that the climb down the canon would Nerves Are Sorel': and Painful Neuritis. or inflammation of the perves, is the most painful of nerv- ous ailments. You may feel the soreness or tenderness throughout the body, or it may be confined to certain nerves. In the head it is called neuralgia; in the hips and legs, sciatica; in -the face, tiecdolor- eux, and in the chest, intercostal neuralgia. The application of dry heat affords relief from the lance-like pains. but the essential thing is to build up the exhausted nervous system by the persistent use of such a restorative jas Dr. Chase's Nerve Food. You will | have other symptoms to warn you {of the depleted condition f the { nervy ous system, and. this is your op- | portunity to restore go the body the energy and vigor of health. While this great food cure is instilling new vitality into the starved nerve cells it is also forming new, firm flesh and tisshie, and, by noting your increase in weight, you cap prove beyond doubt the benefit being obtained by its use. This is nature's way of cure ing diseases of the nerves, and it is the only way to obtain lasting bene- fit. TO INSURE SUCCESS IN YOUR BAKING | Use only Couper's Baking Powder The Best. that money 'can buy. D. COUPER Phons 76 Prompt Delivery COAST SEALED OYSTERS URIC_AGID IN ERT CLOGS THE KIDNEYS Take a Glass of Salt: Salts if your Back Hurts or Bladder Bothery, 2 If you must have your meat every day, eat it, but flush your kidneys with salts occasionally, says a noted authority who tells us that mwat forms pe acid + which almost! lyzes the kidneys in their efforts to expel it from the blood. They be- then. vou suffer 'w Au in She kid- ney region, 8 in the hack, x sick headache, Sines your so mach, sours, tongue is coated, Shen the weather 3s.vmd You Bri twinges, s bias gy 0 of sediment, the i. Eu nels often get sore and irrited, ob- liging you to seek relief two or three times. the night. To neutralize Hoo irritating acids, to cleanse the kidoevs and flush of the body's urinous waste, get four ounces of Jad Salts from any "phay- macy here; take a tablespoonful in 'a glass of water before fast - for a few days snd vour k s will This fama salts js ied wif Yifhis. ms to put her stagnant. "blood. In circulation | and .all would be well " . Before'she began the descent or the pass, she cast one long glance not ward ; whither 'the man' had: gone. Whence came he, who. was he, what had he seen, where was he now? She thanked God for his Interference in one breath snd hated Rim for his presence in the other, The whole sky was now black with drifting clouds, lightning flashed above her head, muttered peals. of thund ferrifically ominous, rocked . throu the silent hills. The noise was low and. subdued, but almost continuous. With a singular and uneasy feeling that she was being observed, she started down. the canon, plunging des- perately through the trees, leaping the brook from side to side where it nar- rowed, seeking ever the easiest way. She struggled om, panting den inexplicable terror almost as bad as that which had 'overwhelnied. her an héur before--and growing more intense every moment, to such a tragic pass had the day and its happenings brought her, Poor girl, awful experience really was. to be hers that day. The fates sported with her--bodily fear, out- raged modesty, mental anguish and now the :terror of the storm. The clouds seemed to sink lower, uniil they almost closed about her. Long gray ghostly arms reached out toward her. It grew darker and dark- er in the depths of the canon. She screamed aloud--in vain. . Suddenly the. rolling thunder peals concentrated, balls of fire leaped out of the heavens and struck the moun- tains where she could actually see them. There were not words to de- scribe the tremendous crasbings which seemed to splinter the hills, to be succeeded by brief periods of si- lence, to be followéd -by louder and more terrific detonations. In one of those appalling alierna- tipns from sound to silence she heard 8 human cry---an answering cry to Ber own? It came from the hills be- find her. Jt must proceed, she thought, from the man. She coulo not meet that man.' although, she eraved human companionship as never before, she did not want his. She could not bear it. Befter the wrath of God, the fury of the tempest Heedless of the sharp note of warn- ing, of appeal, in the voice ere it was drowned by another roll of thunder, she plunged on in the darkness. The canon narrowed here; she made her way down the ledges, leaping reck- lessly from rock to rock, slipping, falling, grazipg now one side, now the other, hurling herself forward with white face and bruised body and torn hapds and throbbing heart that would fain burst ite bonds, There was once an ancient legend, 2 human creature, menaced by all the furies, pitilessly pursued by every malefic spirit of earth and air; like him this sweet young girl; innocent, lovely, erstwhile happy, fled before the storm. Then the heavens burst, and the fountains of the greal -deeps were broken open and with absolute Iit- teralness the floods descended. The bursting clouds, torn asunder by the wild winds, driven by the pent-up lightning within their black andl turgid breasts, disburdened themséives. The water came down, as it did of oid when God washed the face of the world, in a flood. The narrow of the capon was filled ten, twenty, thirty feet in a momen( by the cloud burst. The black water rdlled and foamed, surging like fhe rapids at Niagara, The body of the girl, utterly unpre- pared, was caught up in a moment and flung like a bolt from a catapult down the seething sea filled with the trunks of the trees and the debris of the mountains, tossing about humanly in the wild confusion. She struck out strongly swimming more because of ithe instinct of life than for any other reason. A helpless atom in the boil ing flood, growing every minute greai- er and greater as the angry skies dis- gorged themselves of their pent-up torrents upon her devoted head. a Death, Life and the Resurrection, The man was coming back from one { of his rare visits to the settlements. Ahead of bim he drove a traln of burros who, well broken to their work, followed with docility the wise eld leader in the advance. The burros Were laden with his gipplies for the approaching winter. ® Beason Was late, the mountains would soon be im- passable on account of the soows, in: deed he chose the late season always for his buying in order that he might not 'be followed, and it was his hab" it to buy in different places at different !years that his repeated and. expected Ipresence at one spot might not arouse {suspicton. (To Be Continued.) CHAPTER Vi. i | Labor-Saving in Varying Occupation With increased scarcity and cost of labor, mechanical devices for aid- ing the worker in small industries are growing in importance as well as the highly specialized tools for great factories, One simple method of of aading to productiveness consists in grouping tools often needed, them | sS0 a toot be nna qu toa ne engine. ida dd all gaoline ample - Nn combination was shown at a recent agricultural exhi- bition. A timber frame, seven by four or six and a half feet in size, was provided for the whole, and on this were conveniently mounted a hack saw, circular saw, lathe, drill, set of emery wheels, ~corn-grindér, feed-chopper, pumps, chaff cutter, harness and leather-ewing attach- ment, and horse-clipping ' and sheep-shearing attachment. ~Biéy- and {ele pedals, 'with free wheen action and ball-bearings, give easily-worked and effective foot-power. paver mother thinks she bas the with sud-| Lo ltisa pathetic mistake to eccopt drugs or aloobolis mixtures when nature craves nourishment to repair * the wasted body and restore the vigor of health. ~~ = | For fosty years the best physicians have relied on the wholesome predigested nourishment in SCOTT'S: EMULSION which is totally frée from alcohol or opiates. : Scott's Emulsion sharpens the appetite--Tenews - blood-- nourishes nerves--strengthens bones and restores the courage of health to make life bright. 4 2 Scott's Emulsion sets in action . the very forces that promote health. Its purity, richness and strength has stood the test of fort} years: . E The very best for use in ill-health and convalescence 3 =4F Awarded - Medal and Highest Points in America I at World's Fair, 1893 PURE~--SOUND--WHOLESOME JOHN LABATT, LIMITED, LONDON, CANADA Samos McParland, Agent, § 339-341 King Street East : -------------- ------------ LADIES and MEN'S, BOYS" and GIRL'S Hockey Shoes AT VERY LOW PRICES. BUY YOUR SKATING SHOES Treadgold Cycle and Sporting Goods Ce. 88 Princess er the various and stzangily It helps with scores of dishes Inside a packet of Edwards' Soup cook has the secret of scores of successful dishes. It is Edwards' Soup which imparts that distinctive flavour to her stews, Idwards' Soup that puts such savouriness into her gravies, Edwards' Soup that gives such nourishment, such colour and such substance to aups, Edwards' Soup that forms the basis for her hashes, Edwards' Soup that sends down the bills and sends up cook's reputa- tion. Cook always gives Edwards' Soup half-an-hour or more on the stove--she says it's worth the time twice over, ; EDWARDS ==SOUPS But you MUST boil them for half-an-hour -- worth it, Se packer a io Lier ov T iwards' Soup is good 3s a soup by itself, it is good as a strength ener of other soups § good asa thickeger of gravies 5 3 good for hashes, good for stews---- too good to be oiled by insufficient boiling, Thrae varieties Brown, Tomato and White. not 'Of all wholesale and retail Grocer, ets, reat a W. G. PATRICK & CO., LIMITED, TORONTO, "Representativ es for the Province of Ontario WILSON S = VA LI Nm X= he FA em BEd oD "Of all drink wane is the wast profitable, of medicine most pleasant, and of dainty viends mort harming" PLUTARCH, (A.D, 26 Good Health To All Such: ailments as General Debility, Joss of appetite, Sleeplessness, Extreme Nervousness, Bad Colds, Jeaintax; Anicwsia, Chlorosis, La Grippe, Dyspepsia, Lassitude, Fx. haustion, Etc, , can be rapidly dispelled by a few genesous glasses of Wilson's Invalids' Port (A 1a Quina du Péron). Dr. BR. Lawrence, the eminent Physician, says: "I hi recent occasion to prescribe Wilsen's Invalids' Fort lo a patient © who had been suffering from a severe attack of La Grippe. with great satis. faction to myself and to the patient wh made 8 rapid recacery.

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