? THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. ee WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 6. 1920, In the Realm of Women---Some Interesting Features Dye It Right! "Diamond Dyes" 5 BY JAMES OL THE COURAGE OF $ MARGE O'DOONE ' IVER CURWOOD Don't Risk Material in Poor Dyes that Fade or Run "We are only five miles from the Nest, Sakewawin, but they will not '| hunt for us here. They will think we Each package of "Diamond Dyes" have gone farther--or over thé moun- contains directions so simple that any Ta : : woman can diamond-dye a new, She was putting cold water to his rich, fadeless color into worn, shabby garments, draperies, coverings, whe- ther wool, silk, linen, cotton or mixed er the rolling motion under him he was not quite so dizzy. She had un- rolled the bundle and had spread out 'a blanket, and when he stretched himself out on this a sense of vast re- lief came over him. In his confused consciousness two or three things stood out with rather odd clearness before he closed his eyes, and the last was a vision of the Girl's face bending over him, and of her starry eyes look- {ing down at him, and of her voice urging him" gently: "Try to £ rey Sakewawin--try to sleep... It was many, hours later when he awoke. Hands seemed to be dragging him foreibly out of a place in which he was very comfortable, and which gllayille, became | he did not want to leave, and a voice Hornsby, Hart-' was accompanying the hands with an annoying insistency--a voice which --~-- rn ------_------_---- Buy "Diamond Dyes--no other kind--then perfect results are guar- anteed even if you have never dyed before. Druggist has color card. A -------------------- tt nt AAA After a lingeripz illness borne with Christian" fortitude the death occurred on Sunday, at Brockville, of Mrs. James 8. Dunham, a well- known and highly respected resi- dent. A quiat but impressive ceremony was performed in Bridge street Met- Todiat church, Belleville, on Oct. 2nd, | by the Rev. Dr. Cleaver, when Misa Anna 'M. Gawley, the bride of W. F ford, Conn. That honey-touched flavor * and crunchy freshness of The-Genuine Original | itlogs? ASTED CORN FLAKES is produced by our special process of flaking, sweetening and toasting the tender hearts of choicest com. face, and now that there was no long- | | was growing more and more familiar {to him as his sleeping senses were | roused. He opened his eyes. It was { day, and Marge was on her knees at | his side, tugging at his breast with {her hands and staring wildly into his | face. "Wake, Sakewawin--wake, wake!" he heard her crying. "Oh, my God, you must wake! Sakewawin--Sake- wawin--they have found, our trail-- I can see them comi up the valley!" Chapter XXVI Scarcely had David sensed the Girl's words of warning than he was on his feet. And now, when he saw her, he thanked God that his head was clear, and that he could fight. Even yesterday, when she had stood before the fighting bears, and he had fought Brokaw, she had not been whiter than she was now. Her face told him of their danger before he had seen it with his own eyes. It told him that their peril was a pallinely near and there was no chance of escaping it. He saw for the first time that his bed on the ground Lad been close to the wall of an old cabin which was in a little dip in the sloping face of the mountain. Before he could take in more, or discover a visible sign of their enemies, Marge had caught his hand and was drawing him to the end of the shack. She did not speak as she pointed downward. In the edge of the valley, ascent, were eight or ten men. He {could not determine their exact | number for as he looked they were al- | ready disappearing under the face of the lower dip in the mountain. They wére not more than four or five hun- dred yards away. It would take them a matter of twenty minutes to make the ascent to the cabin. He looked at Marge. Despairingly she pointed to the mountain behind them. For a quarter of a mile it was a sheer wall of red sandstone. Tyeir fone way of fight lay downward, practically into the faces of their en- emies. "I was going to rouse you before it was light, Sakewawin," she explained ;in a voice that was dead with hope- |lessness. "I kept awake for hours, | and then I fell asleep. Baree awaken- | ed me, and now--it is too late." | "Yes, too late to run!" said David. | A flash of fire leaped into her eyes. "Youmean . . >» "We can fight!" he cried. "Good ! God, Marge--if only I had my own | rifle now!" He thrust a hand into his | pocket and drew forth the cartridges { she had given him. "Thirty-twos! And | only eleven of them! It's got to be a | short range for us. We can't put up a running fight for they'd keep out of | range of this little pea-shooter and | fill me as full of holes as a sieve!" | She was tugging at his arm. | "The cabin, ewawin!" she ex- claimed with sudden inspiration. "It has a strong bar at the door, and the clay has fallen in places from between {the logs leaving openings through | which you can shoot!" He was examining Nisikoos' rifle. "At 150 yards it should be good for a man," he said. "You get Tara and nt F ] Codfish Croquettes, Zhe EASIFIRST nay ADAINTY, satisfying and economical dish--when properly cooked! Use. the recipe given here--just a wee bit of skill --and EASIFIRST. Your Codfish Cro- quettes will be light and delicious indeed. Why? Because in deep fryi g EASI- FIRST may be brought to an intense heat Jithont busing. i means that foods in it have a quickly-formed, protect ing crust which prevents the fat from soak- ing in. The interior cooking is done by heat alone, as it should be. - The EASIFIRST left over may be used again. It will not carry any flavor. Here is a Good Recipe Every package of EASIFIRST bears the Government's stamp of approval. Your grocer will supply you. Sold in cartons and tins. Fein todos foro O03, of GUNNS LIMITED WEST TORONTO just beginning the | | the pack inside, Marge. I'm golng to try to get two or three of our friends {as they come up over the knoll down there. They won't be looking for | bullets this early in the game and I'll | {have them at a disadvantage. If I'm lucky enough to get Hauck and Bro- |haw .i. 2 | His eyes had selected a big rock {twenty yards from the cabin from which 'he could overlook the slope to the first dip below them, and as { Marge darted from him to get Tara inte the cabin he crouched behind the | boulder and 'waited. He figured that {it was not more than 150 yards to the | point where their pursuers would first | appear, and he made up his mind that | he would wait until they were nearer than that before he opened fire. Not | one of those eleven precious ecart- | ridges must be wasted, for he could {count on Hauck's revolver only at {close quarters. It was no longer a | time for doubt or indecision. Brokaw ot Freel were deliberately pushing [ the fight to a finish, and not to bea! { them meant death for himself and a fate for the Girl which made him gri {his rifle more tightly as he waited. | He looked behind him and saw Marge | leading Tara into the cabin. Baree had crept up beside him and lay flat {on the ground close to the rock. A | moment or two later the Girl re- appeared and ran across the narrow open space to David, and crouched down close to him. "You must go Marge," he remonstrated. "Thev probably begin shooting . a "I'm geing to stay with you, Sake- | wawin." _ Her face was no longer white. A !flush had risen into her cheeks, her eves shone as she looked at him--and | she smiled. A child! His heart rose | chokingly in his throat. Her face was close to his. and she whispered, "Last night I kissed you, Sakewa- win. I thought you were dying. Be- fore you, I have kissed Nisikoos. Never any one else." | with that into the cabin, will Why did she say that, wonderful glow in her eyes? Couldn't | be that she saw death climbing v- the mountain? Was it because she want- led him to know-- before that? A { child! She whispered again: . "And you--have never kissed me, Sakewawin. Why?" : Slowly he drew her to him, until her head lay against his breast, her | shining eyes and parted lips turned {up to him, and he kissed her on the | mouth. A wild flood of colour rushed {into her face and her arms crept up | about his shoulders. The glory of her | radiant hair covered his breast. He | buried his face in it, and for a mo- ment crushed her so close that she did not breathe. kissed her mouth, not once but a dozen times, and then held her back from him and looked into her face that was no longer the face of a child, but of a woman. "Because . « stopped. S ppd, was growling. David peered down the slope. ; "They are coming!" he said. "Marge, you must creep back to the cabin!" "I am going to stay with you, Sake- wawin. ey will flatten myself out like this--with Baree." J» he began, and She snuggled herself down aginst the rock and again David peered from his ambush. Their pursuers were well over the crest of the dip, and he counted nine. They were advancing in a group and he saw that both Hauck and Brokaw were in the rear and that they were using staffs in theif toil upward, and did not carry rifles. The remaining seven were armed, and were headed by Langdon, who was fifteen or twenty yards in advance of his companions. David made up his mind quickly to take Langdon first, and to follow un with others who carried rifles. Hauck and Brokaw, unarmed with guns, were least dangerous just at present. He would get Brokaw with his fifth shot --the sixth if he made a miss with the fifth, A thin strip of shale marked his 100-yard dead-line, and the instant Langdon set his foot on this David fir He was scarcely conscious of the yell of defiance that rang from his fips as Langdon whirled in his tracks and pitched down among the He rose up boldly from behind the rock fired avain. In that huddled and astonished mass he could not miss. A shriek came up to him. He fired a third time, ard he heard a joyous cry of triumph beside him as their enemies rushed for safety toward the dip from which the just climbed. A fourth shot, oa: Bala Twice he missed! His gun wag 'empty when . n thrust the remaining five cartridges the chamber of Nisikoos' rifle, David looked about the cabin. In one of the farther corners zly sat on his quarters as if In the ; : g : £ ths i g§.8 i i £ nll " t § f A § #§ ii: i gga: dag § 5iE HE Ed : i i f £5 HH Hi F EE | months' absence in Peterboro And then again he | " Told in Twilight (Continued From Page 3.) Mrs. D. A. Cays, Barrie street, is entertaining the Wometry Association of Sydenham Street Methodist church at tea this afternoon. There will also be a shower of pretty and useful articles to be disposed of at a sale later in the season, Misses Crisp, Pembroke street, are entertaining at tea this afternoon, when their guests will have the plea- sure of a chat with the Rev. J. O. and Mrs. Crisp, who are leaving shortly for Halifax en route for Eng- iand. . * * Mrs. Robert Farries, Ottawa, is the guest of Mr; and Mrs. W. B. ton-Smythe wedding to-day. Mrs. A. H. Fair and Miss Lilian Fair, who have been in England for several months, will return to Can- ada shortly. Mrs. C. C. Abbott, Peterboro, will come down to Kingston on Friday to join Mr. Abbott at "Glen Law- rence," Barriefield. Miss Mildred Horsey has gone on to Ottawa and Mr. Horsey, who mo- tored up to Cressy, will go down later. MF. and Mrs. Harold J. Clark are now at 138 King street. Miss Helen Shearer has come up from Delta and is with Miss Emma Pense, West street. *« + Harry Tandy, Toronto, is in town for the Dalton-Smythe wedding. Miss Elspeth McLaren and Miss Althea Haen, St. John's, N.B., are the guests of Col. and Mrs. G. Hunt- er Ogilvie, Earl street. Roger Bidwell, R.N., who came out from England last week to spend his leave at Bishop's Court with his parents, the Bishop of Ontario and Mrs. E. J. Bidwell, is being warmly welcomed * by his young friends who were much disappointed when this smart young sub-lierten- ant In the Royal Navy, was kept in England so much longer than he had expected. Mr. and Mrs. W. V. Webster, Kingston, are spending a few days in Trenton with friends. Mrs, W. H. Graham, street, has returned Johnson after four A and Winnipeg. Mrs. J. E. Hopkirk, Frontenac street, is returning to-morrow after | a visit to relatives in Ottawa. Mrs. Frank Phillips, Johnson street, has gone to Toronto to visit Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Kirby. Miss Marjorie Hopkirk, Fronte- nac street, has gone to Montreal on a month's visit, * * . Major and Mrs. Philip Earnshaw, Kingston, are spending a few weeks in Ottawa. . Mrs. George Cody and daughter, Margaret, Cape Vincent, N.Y., are vi- siting relatives in Kingston. Miss Mollie Cartwright is in town this week at 37 Union street. Dr. and Mrs, E. S. Bissell, Mallory-. town, spent a few days [ist week with Mr. and Mrs. H. H. Cook, AYert | street. Mr.'and Mrs. Philip B. Toller, Ot- | | The F ragrance of 8 Anticipates its exquisite flavour. Send us a postal for a free sample. Please state the priceyou now pay and whether Black, Green or Mixed Address Salada, [oronto. mm tawa, who are in town for the Dalton- Smythe wedding, are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. W, H. Craig, Gore street. Prof. Roy, who is one of the pro- fessors in English literature, is the guest of Principal and Mrs. Bruce Taylor, Queen's University. - LJ Miss Macauley, King street, will leave on Friday for Winnipeg to be present at the Annual Meeting of the Dominion Board of the Woman's Au- xiliary, Miss Havelock Price, who! has been visiting her daughter, Mrs. C. H. Boyd, in Saskatoon, will also represent Kingston at the meeting. Col, and" Mrs. G. Hunter Ogilvie and Miss Marion Ogilvie, Earl street, have returned from. their summer home at Collins' Bay Arthur Stratford, Toronto, was a visitor in town for the week-end. Major and Mrs. Lafferty and the party who have been at Petawawa WILSONS LE Kill fom oll, and he germs too. a e at Druggists A acket and neral Stores. 'or a few days shooting, have re turned to town. Now that she uses Lantic the reci- pe always comes out just as she wants «it. The soft velvety texture that pro- claims, in most cakes and candies, a perfect blend of ingredients, is an ever-welcome delight in homes where Lantic is used. It imparts fineness-- bec ' s use To do with as you please-- HAT is your health. Health cannot stand undue strain. It is such a, personal thing that one's own self must dictate its care. The modein dwelling puts undue strain on the woman of the home. The many furnishings createdangerous dustand dirt. Myriads of germs are put into circulation by hand sweeping and dusting. Theonly permanent cure is the frequent use of the Northern Electric Vacuum Cleaner--the machine that leaves health in its wake. Ask your dealer to demonstrate the Northern Electric. Northern Electric Company Montreal Halifax Siw Taranto Hamilton London Winnipeg Cley Vancouver nel: ATLANTIE SUGAR KErNTRiEY, UMITED