Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 26 Nov 1926, p. 5

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ENTED BY AGUTE NEURITIS Crippling aches quickly relieved bysimple home remedy PjeL.E i ul H ! E E il ¥ i i i . F i. i f3 DR. RUPERT P. MILLAN DENTIST 4 Princess Street. . "Phone 1850 Gas for Falniess Extraction OPEN EVENINGS BY APPOINTHENT "THE GIRL IN THE | -- SECOND CABIN"... By E J. RATH " Author of "The Nervous ete, i : *" Spencer Trumbull, in order to be mear his girl in the Adiron- dacks instead of taking a health trip, hires his old col- lege and war-days chum, Billy Trask, to 'make the sea trip in' his place and promises him $1,000 and expenses if he takes his place under the eye ahd care of Keeler, a male nurse, who is a stranger to both, and thus fulfill the orders of Trum- bull's father's physician. Trask starts aboard the Gulf Stream in a wheel chair, and no sooner is pushed on deck by Keeler than he beliolds a girl = at the rall--the " he dubs her. She is Miss Kent, a society girl with a mania for nursing, who takes at once to the inter- ested invalid, despite her dragon of an aunt, Miss Grimm. + Meanwhile, Keeler makes hime self a hero to Sidney Sands, a girl in the second cabin, con- cealing his identity. Trask breaks bounds and meets Sid- ney, daughter of an absent. minded professor, who hag missed the boat, leaving her to continue his scientific observa- tions of the weather. His achievement leads to an expos ing of Trask, which Keeler makes worse by stating to the captain that the invalid is really a mental case. The captain threatens to put them off when the vessel reaches Key West, Trask determines to defeat the captain's purpose .and stay aboard, in which Miss Sands alds him. In a spirit of adven- ture they go out to a derelict on a brecches-buoy and are stranded there, F "But #'ll be the Mid time," pro tetsed Trask. "And every George Clark Wright Civil Engineer and Contractor, Office 81 Brock St, cor. Wellington and Brock Street. "Phone 826. a fresh story. You remember the first one--dhe one thal was picked up by a HNsherman off Florida? Why, they bad a Coast Guard cutter out for three days be- fore they woke up to the faot that # had been writteh for you, and that you were safe home." -- -------- R.J. C.W.BROO Dental Surgeon 150 Wellington Street. "Phone 879. Evenings by appointment. | a uticura Loveliness! A Clear Healthy Skin Insured by Everyday Jobbing Work a Specialty Btone, Plastering and Tile Setting Douglas & Mcllqubam CUNTRACTORS 400 ALBERT STREET Phones 2207F---028W Sidney smilad rewminiscently, "It did make a lot Bf trouoie for them," she confessed. "And thea the second ome," he went on. "The one with all that etuff about how I'd been saved from the jaws of a dragon, only to be cast away on a sont of a Flying Dutch man. Why, Sidney, we never heard the Jaot of that for over a week!" "Well, weren't you gad %0 be saved from the dragon?" "1 didn't need any saving." "Well, then, from the goddess?' "If you say that agwmn 1'fl span} you---Nrs. Trask." i "I'H be good," she promised in a gmail voice. "I refuse to see any more report. ers," Te declared. "After this the bottle department is im your sole charge. Every time they come for | interviews, I'm going to duck. An) | ---- i i i i USE THE SAVING SIZES OF | | LACKAWANNA COAL We recommend for furnaces Egg and Buckwheat Coal -- to be kept separately. help burn the larger, and give much better fire with a saving of Fuel. Nothing as PURE as LACKA. WANNA. Sold only by: W. A. MITCHELL & <0. 185 ONTARIO STREEN Telephone Farmers and Builders, ATTENTION! Brick, Lumber, Roofing FOR SALE at Attractive Prices. Cohn SC 'Phone 3000. Dominion Meat Store Opp. YMCA. T 's Speci omorrow's Specials Lard (810. pail), /o......33e Beet Oven Roast ........18¢ Large, Sweet Pickles .... 45c Pu k Sausages .....coeeee | Teg of Lamb ........00 Lam Proms exsrernavasd The smaller sizes will' DEAL promptly with the first sign of hoarseness, - soreness or inflammation-- it might be the forerunner of laryngitis, influenzaorserious 'bronchial trouble. The quickest, safest and most soothing remedy is Peps. As a Peps tablet dis- solves in the mouth it gives off medicinal fumes that are breathed into the innermost recesses of throat and chest. » bottle | 1 refuse #4. be photographed aay "I dom"t think you're properly en- 'thusiastic," she said, wuwusag In ber gueintly individual way. *"l am---over you, But think of| | spending the rest of your life wait- | ing for boules to turn up!" he said | | tragically. : | Siduoey chuckled and stroked his joni fondly. . | { "Why, the first thing you know, | | the rag and bottle men'lli be regu- | | dr callers at the house," he went | lon. | "Well, 1 don't see how we're go- | {ing to stop i," she mused. "'Unles { we hire a ship and go hunting for | {them. And some af them may be | more than half-way round the world | by now, Wé wouldnt know whers to look. And----" i She gasped and looked at him in alarm. "Billy!" she cried. "Weill, dear?" * "There's just oge--oniy one bottle that I'd die if they ever] found! I'd forgotien untd just | now." "What did it say?" Sidney pared at him speculative ly and shook her head i "l dom't think I'M tell you--mnot now, ai any rate. But, oh, Billy! It simply mustn't be found!" "ls-----4ds It any worse one?" he asked, pointing { paragraph in the paper She hid her face against his shoul der for a minute. Then she murmur. | |ed in a muffled voice: "It was addressed to our grand. | children." | Trask pulled her down into his lap and hugged her 3 There was a sudden tinkiing of a doorbell. "Reporters," he said. "I'm ge! ting to know the ring Run along and see them. If you will cast bread | upon the waters, the least you can | do #s to take it in at the front door | when they come to deliver it." "Coward!" she exclaimed, strug | sting out of his arms. "I won't lt you squirm out of it. Come! . This jsn't a very terrible bottle. And they'sl want to see the Kitten, wo {| Where is ft?" In most stories this would be the | logical end, for when, young people are married and happy there is noth- | ing more to be said. They are just | happy, that's all: and happiness Is | everything. But in the case of this | story, the real end cannot be writtem for years and years--perhaps cen {.turies. There are s0 many bdottles, | you seo--bottles that are afiodt in | almost every part of the world. { bottles stranded on sandy beaches | in faraway lands, bottles waiting to be picked up amid the flotsam of "ange seas. And, until the last bsttle fs recovered, why, there never can be an end to Sikiney Sands' Ad- | venture. A farseelng ' young person, You may well say. for how many of us oan provide an annuity of adven- ture for our old age? When you vead in your paper the very last bottle has been | | tound, then, and thea only, will this | bee, | i { | | i | than this | i ! i 1 to the | | | that THE END. | the was the first president 11813. Mr. j ter at | Moscow, THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG | Irresistibly Delicious! 5M So rich in flavour and goodness that it never fails to satisfy. Brown Label 75¢ Orange Pekoe Blend 85¢ A VETERAN LADY'S DEATH She Had Long Been a Resident of | Colebrooke, i There passed to rest, at the home| j of her daughter, on Nov. 15th, 1928, } Nancy Irish Ward, who was born near Odessa, Oct. 6th, 1838. Mrs | Ward had been a great sufferer for] many years but always kept her! keen interest in all branches of] i church work and community wel-| fare. She was a much loved member | of the Colebrooke Lgdies' Ald, which | she helped to organize snd of which She was| also a member of the Moscow W.M 8. and, in earlier years, a valued tea- cher in the' Colebrook Sunday! School. | In 1863 she was married to Chas {| Ward and together they celebrated! their golden wedding, March 29th, | Ward passed away Jan. 6th, 1914, and since then she epe most of her time with her daug Moscow. She was the last] member of a large family and leaves| her only child, Mrs. C. A. Baker,| and two grandchildren] BP AN ga | to all she met { law, C. A. Baker, Moscow Ward and Kathryn Baker. i | Lumber RETNA She was a most patient sufferer! and a very kind and cheerful friend real welcome each time they came to visit her and it was one of her grea- | Her many friends al-| ways found a cheery smile and a test pleasures that her friends came | often to: see her, her last few years She was a member cof the United | Church at Colebr8oke and her per- fect confidence in a help to all flowers, the many bes especially during | her Saviour was| Always a lover of! ptifu? floral | tributes seemed a well chosen way | of expressing the esteem she was held The funeral services were ducted at the home of her son-in- on Thurs Nov. 18th. by her pastor, Rev McKebzle, and burial took ple t Wilton cemetery. in which con- day Mr a ------------------ The first mention of petroleum in America ogcurs in writings of a Franciscan missionary dn 1632 though Joag before t the Indians had usad it medic a ~~ he | Thursday articles were stolen. Mr "arch By ae otor To all parts of the surrounding country, wherever the good roads system extends. S. ANGLIN CO. LIMITED - COAL, LUMBER AND WOODWORK. : BAY AND WELLINGTON STREETS, KINGSTON, ONTARIO, Private Branch Exchange 'Phone 1571. Deliveries § Ea \ i at RADIO! RADIO! RADIO! | See our window for Special Prices on Radio Sets. Your chance to buy your set at a bargain ! Come Quick and Avoid Disappointment. The Saunders Electric Co. 167 PRINCESS STREZT. ------ ---- TELEPHONE 441. Tamworth Tidings. Tamworth, Nov. 25.--The from the Roman Catholic churct was entered on a gold watch Sunday and several ------ death occurred here Tuesday of Mrs. Mar. | garet Quinn. The funeral was held The hbuse of Mrs. Carro! night and other Walker of | Toronto has entered the service of the Tamworth branch of the 8 ard Rank. Work is proceeding on new mine which was opened Enterprise lately. Several ° ffom Tamworth attended the ing in Camden Bast held by Mr | F. Nickle Wednesday night. > 5 An acid stomach caused by indigestion often creates rheumatic symptoms. Set your 2 right with Seigel's Syrup. Any drug store. a ~~ Credenza $385 --is just what you sense at once on hearing the Orthophonic Victrola play | for the first time. AN INSTRUMENT playing with such lifelike tones that it seems to be alive. sparkles with The music life. Fritz Kreisler, John McCormack, Paul Whiteman play and -sing 'as you never before have heard them-- except in life. The bass and treble notes are astonishingly clear. The self. This The % tone is the tone of the music it- has been attained through the net Orthoph use of a scientific principle -- exclusively Victor's--technically known as * 'matched ime pedance", or "smooth flow of sound", A versatile entertainer for the home. Fox trots--operatic selections--popular songs-- all performed with the same trueness of tone and fulness of volume by the foremost artists. Drop in at any "His Master's Voice" dealer and enjoy a half hour of this music . venient terms. onic Trade Mark Reg'd Victrola Victor Talking Machine Company Made only by Victor of We leave the rest to .Orthophonic Victrola is obtainabl Prices $115 to $430. "new life in I Any e on cone Canada, Limited Look for this trademark

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