Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 14 Apr 1917, p. 14

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PAGE EIGHTEEN v3 THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, APRIL 14, 1917. ! : ig > . ) 1 r " cs Was a. ed sounc--a CUurivus, men.ions oe] 4 Doctors Stand Amazed at Power || -- | LE a a HEE THE GHIEF CHARM d 7) Loa f Milk of Bon-Opto to Make Weak Eyes | |E|" 1 he |S] [£5 mre sun HL Ul One Quart o e | i eter's spirits rose as he realiz | Strong---According to Dr. Lewis ot In Tee Cheat waz. wie (fF LOVELY WOMAN day's work at the excavations. | But it would be a good half-hour | ; before Napier awo arrive; that he | Soft, Clear, Smooth Skin Comes With knew. The natives' voices carried far | The Use Of "FRUIT-A-TIVES". through the still atmosplere, and the | = A = track through the forest was bad, and | the men had to surmount many a hill | and hummock with their living freight. | . Peter got up from his canvas chair and walked across the clearing to the edge of the forpst. He was weak, and --_--_-: walked slowly. He was very pale, and m-- his high cheek-bone: showed painfully ' through the tightly-stretched skin They had found the ruins even mo ASK YOUR GROCER FOR Twonderful than Major Carlton's photod! : graphs had shown them to be. He i " " ' x was indeed remnant of some civiliza-' § x tion of which archsclogists had as yet! J 3 3 : a is equal in food value to three-fourths of a pound of Beef Steak, eight eggs, fifteen pounds of oysters, two pounds of fish, six pounds of tomatoes. And the milk is more easily digested and far more economical than any of the other foods. Phone 845 - Price's Guaranteed to Strengthen Eyesight 50% : In One Week's Time in Many Instances Dog Star ---- BY -- Coralie Stanton ¢ ss AND Heath Hosken. NEAT I, -- ption for 15 days everything seems| the above article was submitted, said: "Yes, ing the Lovse, as they were going vation would be impossible until they clear, can read even fine print with-| the Bon-Opto prescription is truly a Wonderful ro 9, aost immediately. had returned to England ahd brought eye remedy. [ts constituent ingredients are weil Philadelphia, Pa. Victims of eye strain |SPared the trouble and expense of ever is ghere is real hope by. the use of this prescription. Go to any in a fourth of a glass of water and let rays, after using it: "I was almost blind. Jotice Jour eyes clear up perceptibly let i it i knowlédge. 'They had begun ex- my eyes do not burt any more. At night] bother You even a liggle it is your duty to ae 2 : IN PACKAGES. fine ull the time. It was like afp, 00% 0h their sight if they had cared thut they we to London, not | steps to protect the more perishable without glasses, 'but after using this pre-| Note: Another - ' , GEO. ROBERTSON & SON, Limited. out glasses." Another who used it says: known to eminent eye specialists and widely Just b re she left a note was out men with them to carry-on the 3 0 i mee : A Free Prescription You Can Have|able time and multitudes more will be Filled and Use at Home able to strengthen their'eyes so as to be a th re i getting glasses. Eye troubles. of many nd o a, will rad ad liove Xho descriptions may be.wonderfully benefited active drug store and get a bottle of Bon- I hose Opto tablets. Drop one Bon-Opto tablet % it dissolve. With this liquid bathe the them away. Onk.rian eyes two to four times daily. You should Could not t IL start and inflammation and read ever: Se 30 fund at all Now 1 an ness will quickly disappear. If your eyed 8 J take steps to save them now before it Still, she zave orders Tor her pack-|{ cavating here and there;s they had they would pain dreadfully. Now they| °C SI 00 Many hopelessly blind might ing .to be dor i told wher maid made rough plans; they had taken Bl k. G d Mix i. P } li Ki miracle to me." A lady who used it says: 3 oS ack, « «. F8 m 8 " atmosphere seemed" hazy with or for their eyes in time. Sait to Hamilton Place, bul to an hotel, remains. ston b -, nent Physician to whom because it was not worth while open But scientific and systematic exca- 9» y ------ Y EEE y overworled, tired eyes which induced | cesstuily in'uy own practice on patients whose with 'an ex; ression on her face that and hed promised protection, but he 86 Drayton Ave., Toronto, B b a and without them 1 could not read my | esk. watety, aching, smarting, itching, burn- ten it. Nov. 10th, 1915. d y arriages, " 3 oe " t 1 was bothered with eye strain caused | prescribed by them. | have- used fit very suc- brought te She read it through work. The local chief was amiable NORAH WATSON fierce headaches. I have worn glasses for | eyes were 'strained through overwork or misfit i several years both for distance and work, | lasses. I can highly recommend it in case of boded ill (or the percon who had writ-| obviously did not understand what | in 1 lids, b isi + was wanted of him, although he had | 3 YOY. own name on an envelope or the type-| gif C¥es ted as. barred I In | It was in Frenel. , Translated, it| been liberally "dashed" with whisky | A beautifulcomplexion isxhandsome in on the Jaachine Before Boh rind lone of the ery, few preparations 3 ran' as follows and bright beads. : woman's chief glory and the envy of hef - do now an ave disearde long | feel s id be kept on hand for regular use in Lady: & ™ 1 y y . Peter and Napier on . : & Fo v A Sassen together. } can count 3 ot fray to: referred to 1 ¢cossary or a ren Ms ee another woe or - less fortunate yivals, Yet aseft, clear 0- d S u [A eo i s on the trees above, is not a patent medicine or a secret YX : v al i. vs a a in i it wi i the SUtSHAE Jeavis OF 05 'Teed serous remiedy. It is,an ethical preparation, the for- .{0 tell wid, the good Sir in Africa, to complete their plans, and skin --glowing with health isonly Zhe } sbout our respective hedge and cover In the whole area of natural result of pure Blood. - I cannot express my joy at what it 2-30 per cent in one week's time in many instances ird to the B..R.C. the ruins, and then to go home to "J was troubled for a considerable done for me, or refund the money. It can be obtained from the company is ber make preparations for taking back a time with a very unpleasant, disfiguring It is believed that thousands who wear! any good druggist and is sold in this city by oe " i sole , . 5 ition. . dius i " y ioched inte. Very completely SIEaulN ety Rio going Rash, which covered my face and for the street now, which for®scveral years A 4 he ant mula béing printed on the package. The man- have looked like a dim greed blur to me. | yr turers guarantee it to strengthen eyesight 1917 Advance Styles y w discard them in eason-{ (ieo. W. Manuod, and ! . glasses caa no ard t in a reason-( Sooo A cry Knit to "Nature's" Last Ordinary hosiery is stretched into shape over™ a form while the hosiery is damp. It loses this shape when washed. Mercury Hosiery retains its shape, because it is knitted to "Nature's Last" on new machines. These machines knit the full fashioned calf --the narrow ankle, fashioned at the sides--perfectly turned toe--wider; more comfort able, fashioned top. The finish of this new Mercury Hosiery is even superior to the high-class foreign lines formerly imported. = The wear is better. Try a pair and you'll be con- vinced that Mercury is unequalled for style, fit and wear. Made in Black Cashmere, Black Lisle, and White Lisle. Mercury Mills, Limited, HAMILTON, CANADA, Makers of Ladies' and Men's [ere {her adorinz husband. That had to be t 1y price. It will be avoided now hat Sir Glaré knows how largely you are interested in the company. It was the omly way to save you. If you think you have any- thing to forgive your faithful Van Ost, remember that he only acted in your} ' best interests. | { "1 am leaving for the Lobanzo on | i Friday. My -presence is absolutely | necessary out there. If you want any- | | thing, communicate with your humble | | servant, Van Ost." | | Theodora crumpled the letter into | ia ball. She was shaking with rage. ! There was a fire in the large square | hall at Dur y, and she threw the | | offending pu; er into the glaring heart | of it "Infameus creature," she said to herself, w theart. "I would forgive | thing he has said and | would only punish him $42 og IY 5 his deserts. She drove away, adrift 2gain on] the sea of life. Her feelings were | too complicated for, description, but | she.could not think that she had done | for "ever with the man who had been And at the same time a cable from Moriarty was handed to Monk in his room at Pole Street. "Fear the worst," it ran. after be- ing decoded. "Am starting imme- diately for the camps where man will be, but have three days' march. Silente from Boone means most like- ly that everything is over. Intensely sorry, but obeyed instructions .to the letter. Change of orders eame too late." 3 And Monk, alone, disillusioned, weary, for the first time in his life, of all the world could offer him, buried his face in his hands, fearing that he was the jnurderer of the man e had loved best oa the whole earth CHAPTER XXVIL In the Wilderness Peter Monk sat outside his hut in (the clearing on the borders of the great Bonzo Forest, north of the Lo-| banzo-Protectorate, smoking his pipe. It was evening. The sunset dyed the sky with the hue-of blood. The air was clear and comparatively egol. It was a peculiar atmosphere; it | seemed to be charged with = life of {its own. Myriads of little .golden ~~~ | particles seemed to dance in it, giv- {ing it a wonderful radiance that the | young man had not seen in any other { part of the world. | Peter was just convalescent, not | from fever, but from a badly sprained jarm. He had slipped and fallen {heavily on some giant boulders, while | helping to superintend the excava- { tions about & week ago; now he was {only 'just able to make use of the injured limb again. , That was why he was sitting in front of his hut, with hie left arm in a sling, while Napier was away direct- ing the men who were working in the excavations of the wonderful ruins that the two men had come out to 'investigate. | Napler would be back in a few {moments now for certain, because the 'tropical darkness would draw in sud- ydenly as soon as the san had set. | Peter felt very hungry; he -had had | tever for a day or two with his bad {arm, and had been starved, but now ats appetite was apparently "ssming back. He felt remarkably. fit, absolutely forbidden Napier to end a runner through with a cable | to his father mbout his mishap. "Great Scott! he'd probably have a fit, the poor old governor," he had ex. med. "And 'he'd never let m "» ETL fsiis 5 4 Heater fi fe Bi i i hothe, as he walked slowly across the clearing, wishing that his head did not feel quite so light and his arm quite so heavy. He had found West Africa full of fascination; but when an Englishman is seedy he longs for home. . At the edge of the forest was a great stillness. The blood hue of the sky had given place fo an angry | purple; there was promise of a storm | during the night. | There were wonderful color effects | about him. Against the dense green | of the forest a strange creeper reared | itself, above him; not the hot, heavy-| scented yellow bloom like the Japan-| ese lily, whose odor blotted out the | prevailing rotten straw odor of the | Lobanzo, but an enormous scarlet flower that grew in clusters. It had] no seent at all. - Somehow it reminded | him of a soldier in Hyde Park, and the smaller, dun-colored, orchid:like | plant that twiped itself around the| bigger stem, might that not represent | the admiring brown-haired girl who clung to the arm of the gallant son of Mars? Peter smiled at the concéit. Sud- denly he saw a most' vivid vision of Knightsbridge Barracks, and from this his mind was translated to Ox. ford. » | And then from Oxford his thoughts | wandered on {bo Biackport--a far ery| --and he remembered the nice brown- haired grey-tyéd girl who had been staying at Dunbury when he was last there--the girl who was engaged to Lorion. - "And he remembered that Lorion, whom she was going to marry --lucky dog!-+was™ knocking about somewhere in West Africa, and that his father, for some unearthly reason, had decreed that he was not to meet Lorion, and that, in defiance of the paternal decree, he had brought out a letter from the girl that he had promised to deliver to Lorion, should they. ever be in touch of one another. He simply could not have helped un- dertaking that commission. He felt that letter to be a sacred charge. He could understand how glad a man would be to receive it in this wilder- ness, a letier from! the girl he loved. The monotonous chant of the ham- mock-men came nearer. Peters, whose ears had become strangely sharpened ina very short time, as do the ears of all those who sojourn away from the familiar sounds of civilization-- from the ompibuses and - tram-way cars, the street noises, the trains and motors, even the familiar bird notes of home, the barking of dogs and the lowing of cattlé--noticed almost at once that the song that was growing momentarily louder was slightly dif- ferent from that sung by the ham- mock-men of 'their own party. The nearer they came the more certain! which I used applications and remedies Large line just received. without relief. After using "¥Fruit-a- tives" for one week, the rash is com- | Make Your Choice Now. $16.00 to $40.00. pletely gotie. I am deeply thankful for | the relief and in the future, I will not be | without " Fruit-a-tives®'. NORAH WATSON. 500. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size, 25c. At dealers or sent postpaid on receipt of price by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Otuwa. | Leading Undertaker tat Aart & R. J. REID, SOMETIMES you buy a box of ; sodas 'that doesn't open up just right. Not so with McCor- mick's. Our special air tight sealing keeps the contentscrackling crisp. Sold fresh everywhere in different sized packages. Ask your grocer. wv - SYRUP oF TAR Cop Liver Oil Stops CoucH Sold in gererous size Bottles by ll dealers. . THE 1 L. MATHIEU CO, Props, SHERBROOKE, P.Q. Makers also of Mathie" {aap hiei's Nervine Powders the best N and - ny . Telephone 577 Pure Clover Honey 20c a Section At Thompson's Grocery 294 Princess Street, Phone 387. on -~ IMPERIAL LIFE The Government Deposit of The Imperial Life Is almost five times that required by the Dom. inion Insurance Aet.. The am- ount called for hy the Act Is £50,000.00; whereas The Imperial hus voluntarily deposited over £230,000.00 for the protection of its policyholders. J.B. Cooke, Dis. Mgr. 832 King St, , Phone 503; Residence S42. Peter grew that they were not a pier's bearers. And, as they finally hove in sight, his assumption was verified. For a long caravan defiled through the thickness of the forest and made its way bit hy bit Into the open space | of the clearing. There were two hammocks, borne each by four men, who looked tired to death, and'down whose black faces a heavy perspiration was pouring. Then there were quite two score of that interests you keenly! CHEMICALLY SELF-EXTINGUISHING What do' these words mean to you? They mean greater safety fn the Home -- Surely something Perhaps you have noticed these words and the notation *No fire loft when blown out" on our new "Silent Parl boxes. The Splits or sticks of all matches contained in these or" match SAFETY FIRST AND ALWAYS -- USE EDDY'S SILENT 500s 285 King Street. - Opposite Custom House Phone 749 Boat, Train and All City Calls Promptly Attended to. All modern five and seven passen- McLaughlin GARAGE We have recently installed the "Delco Light" plant on our premises and in comnection have one of the most up-to-date Battery ~ Charging + ~ Qutht in the city. A battery should have a freshening charge before being placed in a car for the summer, . Give us a trial, 3 ROBT. J. FURSEY, 34-38 Princess St. Prop.

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