> THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 8, 1918. PAGE TEN ealm of Wor man . ----- Some Interesting Features TE OPINION The Reon ------------ absolute fact that for old wounds, skin diseases; Zam-Buk is really marvel D. MacLEOD, Harcourt, N.B. . *" Eczema was my trouble; ==and 1 suffered for years. Tried practically everything, in vain ! r Zam-Buk cured .me ; and from the day the Jast sore was healed there has been no trace of return of the disease."--J. E. ARSENAULT, 1.P, Wellington, P.E I. "My 'personal opinion of Zam-Buk is that 1 know of nothing like it! Moving amongst sick people of my charge, | have proved it an eczema, .and * Speaking professionally, apply Zam-Buk to all cases-of 'ec zema, ulcers, abscesses and allied disdases. 1 have proved Zai-Buk able to cure the Worst cases." --NURSE KEITH, Olds, Alta. "Give me Zam Buk {It is the finest ; 0 HER all-round healer known. - It cured me i of. a poisoned band, EE -------- my 3 children of bad busband of & badly crustied finger. ~ No home should be withoutit."--~MRS, VILLIERS, Stadacona St., Montreal, © Zam-Buk is putely pera), and for Biles, Crema, cuts, burms, baby's sores, uicers, A skin. diseases and injuries is the best known and quickest cure. 50c. box, all drugnisis and stores. The opinion of the majority of the mothers in the Dominion is--~ scalp sores, and my I would Ynsiot on Getting CHARM TEA 'In Packages Only Black; Green, 'Mixed. At all Grocers. | Our New Fall Designs in Furniture Are Arriving Daily We lvity everybody whether they wish to purchase or not, as it keeps Jrospective buyers Pomed-in the Jatest designs. w RJ. Reid Undertaker: Mow Ang Horse Equipment PHONE 877 sitting or bedroom with a are economical, odor= EERE % " Wessrathen in plain b black or nicki plate. i i 1 4 iClande Beckly had said, ia lame {time if 1 "The W [ " CLAUDE BECKLY SUCCEEDS IN SPOILING RUTH'S E CHAPTER LV. "The 4 fool say under his breath, then, as a wave ja crimson dyed his face, he said: "Mollie has some business that I {am looking after for her and it saves do it at luncheon instead jof when I might be seeing sonieone { else." He realized that, in view of what that it was had explanation. While it {really been more than an hour since Rev ATF noon. 7 Ruth heard Brian | "1 have to lunch somewhere every day. 1 ean always take an hour--or a little more. When yon have time to go to a really nice place, I wish you would call me up and ask me to meet you." "All right! more freely I will," -he breathed Was she going to be nice about it? He had been afraid of a scene. Yet, knowing Ruth, he should have known she would make no scene in a public place. Perhaps when they got home he'd catch it. ife" By Jane Phelps| NING wasn't the money! he had spent it, every cent, on himself, she would have laughed at him for his boyish foolishness: but te take the money she had earned --how-should she ap-}. proach the subject. She couldn't ask him pointblank if he had done as she suspected. * She tried to chat unconcernedly about some people near them, and Brian was so thankful for her for- bearance that he seconded her: in such a more easily. Tieckly had seen them--althe--aow Ruth wouldn't believe it--yet he had sat over the luncheon all the after- He recalled that he looked at his watch just as they rose from the table and it had been just five-thirty. It was now only a little aftér seven. | 30 Beckly wasn't so far off, Ruth felt stunned. Had things | gone so far that Brian neglected his {office the entire afternoon, remained away from the to be with | business, Mollie King? "Where, did you lunch, Brian?" she asked very quietly. Too quietly Brian thought. Her voice sounded ominous. "At the Brevort.' Suddenly Ruth knew what to do She would not upbraid him. She would not allow him to think she thought him guilty of any wrong --- neither was she at all sure in her own mind that he had wronged her in any way. - "I wish vou had called me up and asked me down there too. 1 should have, enjovad it immensely.' Brian was so taken couldn't: speak for a minute, he said gruffly: ' "How did I know your boss was going to give you the afternoon?" AA Ad aback he then A PA et a A tt tN AE lt ENN How he hated that fool --Beeckly. Meddlesome boob. The - waiter came: with their order, arid while Brian ate what he had ordered he noticed that Ruth scarcely ate & thing, 'And she had told him she was hungry. She asked for coffee with her dinner and drank two strong cups. -Something she never had done before, and conse- quently Brian looked upon it as an added proof that she was trying to hold back the lecture he was to get when they reachgd home; she was bracing up on cfffee, So he express- ed it in his thoughts.: In one way he was right. Ruth trembled so she could scarcely con- trol herself. - To appear indifferent when she was so furiously jealous, was hard. She had asked for the coffee to help steady her nerves. Ruth also could not help but Won- der, as she "pretended to eat, and occasionaly made a remark about someone Near them; if that was the reason Brian had no money; that hie was 'broke' as he had told her before they left home. She had given him ten doltars the night before, perhaps he had not found it, 'He had on the would dal- Their dinner as ordered take about all of the five lars; Including the tip. "1 believe I could eat a baked al- aska," Ruth finally said. She had selected the most expénsive dessert she could think of. Brian flushed again, looked comfortable, then hlurted out: "We haven't money enough! I told you we had better not come to such a place as this with ouly five dollars." 5 "But we didn't!" she almost held her breath, so anxious was she for the result of her little ruse. "What do you mean?" more pleas- antly. 'Ruth perhaps had more than «le had told him. "Why 1 slipped a ten dollar bill in your vest pocket last might! You remember you said you were out of money," the last words dragged. Af- ter one look at Brian's face there was no need to tell her: Ruth knew. "I spent that!" he said. Then, 'Gad, Ruth! let's go home, 1'm sick of this! If I have to give an account of every cent I spend. I'll"- To-morrow----Brian Becomes Angry un- same clothes. She would ask him. It TALKING ~--+~With Lorna Moon IT OVER |. Daddy on the Right Track. They were long legged girls of twelve and fourteen respectively with tumbling massses of lightish brown hair{bleached flaxen in places by an ardent sun, They were hitting the ball with more vigor than science, cutting their "initials" all over the approach with far too energetic and very misguided mashies. The middle aged man who accom- panied them was issuing instruc tions and encour- jg agement in one breath 'Keep vour éye on the ball-- keep your Lands together--not -- as bad as it might have been ---oh § never mind kick back the turf" and so on. "They're gieen at golf," he ox- plained as I. wait- ed for taem to hole out, "but they're great tennis players. Marjory would g6t on better if her clubs were small- er, but she wanted the biggest ones they had, You see' he chuckled and glanced teasingly at his daughter, "Marjory is a suffragette, and she doesn't believe that there is any- thing too big for her too handle' *Not even ner father," flashed back at him. 'And Daddy if you say any more I'll tell, that's all!" Evidently sure that this threat would squelch any further confidences on Marjory the part of "Daddy" she strode off y to the next tee. "They're a couple of great girls" he sald with fatherly pride wate hing them race each other across the turf." "I've brought them up my- self. I lost their mother when the vounger one was born---sometimes I And ]s- Anxious to Go Home. Arann MAROONED ON ISLAND. Terrible Experiences of Two Settlers In Northern Ontario. Marooned on an islet in Lake Rimy, without food, without the means of catching a fish, or shooting | a passing bird, dven without matches, | Joe Pelletier and George Imbau suf- fered the agony of slow starvation for | thirteen days. When rescued by ay search party they were in a state of collapse and unable at first to tell! their story, but the state of the shrub- bery on 'the island wis an eloquent testimony to their sufferings. The leaves were pluéked off, the twigs broken, even the grass on the shallow soil had been torn up for food. A! few days' care partially restored the men, and Pelletier is now on the way to complete recovery. Imbau, unfor- Enormous Food Value of BOVRIL 1d-Famed Scientist at instigation of British Government The great body- -building power of Bovril does not admit of argument. just-as the circulation of the blood is proved, or the law of grav ity. The independent 'experiments carried out by an eminent. physiologist under the most complete scientific notable body - building powers of . Bovril, The experiments were conducted with human subjects, on a standard diet, and the increase in weight was neverless than 10 (and it actually in some cases reached 20) times the amount of Bovril added to the diet. FPovril taken, 1 . Body- building Power of Bovril taken. tested and proved in every possible Bovril a unique place as one of the 'most precious food substances in partion It is proved, control, proved the Thig tremendous fact, way, has given the world, BOVRIL stands alone wonder if I'm on the right track. with me, and gone swimming and fishing to- gether, aver since they were big enough "to do without a nurse. We' re really pals, and sometimes I find Marjory hard to handle on that ac- count. She argues most things with me instead of fakin my word-----but she's a fine girl": then laughing re- minisicently he alan "she tricked me the other evening, that's what she threatened to tell. 'She's been complaining that I'm too one sided, always deciding what we are going to do without letting her make a suggestion. In defense of myself I said that it wasn't so, and that she could propose anything at all and I would be willing to fall in "All right "then, Daddy,' was her answer "We'll knit this evening." 1 wad fairly caught. She has started mo on a pair of socks and' I daren't back out." H¢ followed his two breezy daughters laughing over his shqulder with me at the joke on him- self. 1 think those two girls have a wonderful Daddy. And I don't think he need worry about being on the wrong track. 1 think he's on the right. track and heading for the right station. ip, ten or twelve miles from dere. Pre Jittle daughters of Mr. Mr. nd ; , aged three irs Ti a Filey 38 years, lost their lives | in a fire that ents' home 'with its Simpson was working at land Mis. Simpson had . gone to a . an errand. Phen) eg gred was 100. late to A REAL HERO Poor fellow, d- You had your jl arm and leg shot off. No, | let the doctor use them for splints, I've played all their games with them meat before he was able to endure | or rather they have played all mine such heavy dies, and died from the! for we have played Sannis: | effects. | them got out of the canoe without tunately, ate a big meal -of ioose Lake Rimy is situated about three miles from Moonbeam, a station on! the National Transcontinental Rail. £ way, some 50 milés west of Cochrane. The lake is about 15 miles long and seven or eight miles wide, It teems with fish, and plenty of big game is | round AIONE 'its shores. About a milé from the shore is an unpamed islet' scarcely larger than the backyard of a city home. A great rock rises in the middle of it, and there is a growth of small shrubs, but no trees upon it. This was the scene of an; tht tadn, CUNARD ANCHOR ANCHOR- CAA RO Services MONTREAL, | HALIFAX, NEW YORK, BOSTON TO LONDON LIVERPOOL GLASGOW BRISTOL Money gens by Mall or Cable to Oreat Ireland, Scanding a, Italy, Portugal, witzerland. France, Spain; § For Suritier information apply to local Saputs or THE ROBERT REFORD C0, Limited, (General Agents, Canadian Service.) no Kiag St, East, Teron. an adventure, which, for unmixed horror, ! could scarcely be surpassed, and ex- perietice endured?within four miles of a rallway station. Pelletier and Imbau, who were bachelors living near Moonbeam, French settlers from the Lake St. John country, determined to cele- brate . Dominion - Day by a three days' hunting and fishing trip. They made no secret of 'their intentions and the inhabitants of the village Knew that they intended to cross the lake and go up one of the streams entering it. They loaded fishing tackle, guns, ammunition, three days' food, and ordinary hunting supplies in a canoe and set out dn reasonably goed weather. Little was thought about the fet that they did not return within the time they had set. Bat when four, five, and, at last, six days had passed the men's friends grew anxious and organized a search party. The whole district was combed, with- out result. The island was passed on the way out, but no one dreamed of landing on it. On the thirteenth day the dejected and returning party called at the island, more by impulse than design, and the lost men were found. When Pelletier recovered he said that he and his partner, while pass- ing the island, resolved to go ashore 'for no particular reason. One of trouble, but the other, in stepping upon the roek, slipped. = The canoe were not such as could be easily described, but the overseas, & veteran with two years is Ferien oma "Pte. Walter 8, Brady has returned his Charlottetown bome from 3 ar e3potisnee and two wound at flteen Fears of age. and learn, For Women's Ailments Dr. Martel's Female Pills have been ordered by physicians and sold by reliable Druggists everywhere for over a quarter of a cemtury, don't accept a substitute. ~~ I a tN AN Pt PNG NPN INAN The man who wants to wake his will ean alwayd find a way. LOCAL BRANCH TIME TABLE IN EFFECT SEPT, 20TH, 1018, BE - Trains will leave and arrive at City Station, Foot of Johnson Street. Golng Went e. Clty Arf. Clty No, 19-Mall .. .. .. 12.57 a.m. No. 13 Express 340 a, 27 1 No. 1 Interni Ltd No, 7 Mall, ., . ng a Lve. Clty Arr. City No.18 Mal o .. «ae LAG AM. 217am, Nou 1% Express Fa No, 6 Mail a8 No, 14 Intern'l Ltd. 1,1 No. 28 Local , .. i8 p.m, Nas. 1, 13, 14, 16, 18, 19 run daily, Other trains "daily except Sunday, Direct route. to Torontw FPeterboro, Hamilton, Buffalo, London, : Detroit, "Chicago, Bay City, Bagingw, Montreal, Ottawa, Quebec, Port St. John, Halifax, Boston and- New York. For Pullman accommodation, pikes and all other information, , J. Py Hanley, Agent. gn ply ail ocean rit lines, Say and night, CASTOR For Infants and Children. Mothers iow Tha Know That tr on Thirty Years HE BRNTAUR BOWEANY. HE YORE SV, ERE ARR TE