ILLES ttawa Winter Fair ONE WAY FIRST CLASS FARE |: FOR ROUND TRIP Tickets good going Jan, 19th to #2ad, inclusive, bd to return on or before Jan. . @ can make all arrangements to your family and friends from Special attention Old Country. Fill be given them. For full particulars apply to J.P. HANLEY, and Steamship Agent, Cor. Johnston and Ontario Sts. ~ANADIAN RPACiIrtiC | OTTAWA { Winter Fair, Jan. 20 to 23 ONE WAY FIRST CLASS FARE FOR ROOND TRIP 1 $3.70 bhets good going Jan. 19 to Jan. 22 blusive. Good to return on or be- In 2th EAS tuloulara from ¥. Conway, C. P, Office, Cor. Princess and Wellington Stw., "hone 1197. OCEAN STRAMSHIP AGENCY C. 8. KIRKPATRICK 42 Clarence St. Phone 50%; 3 | i (CUNARD LINE 2 CANADIAN SERVICER. _ From Southampton From Portland, Me. Jan. 22 ASCANIA Feb. 7 , 28 ASCANIA Mar. 14 LA ALAUNIA Mar. 21 Bmers will - call Plymouth east. Rates--~Cabin (11) $46.25 up. lass British eastbound, $30.25 up. bound $30 up. IE ROBERT REFORD CO. Limited. i Agent, 50 King St. E., Toronto. £8 BERMUDA ? twin sorew, 10,- $18 tons displacement, sails from New . York, 10 am. 14, 21, 28 January. "4, 11, 18, 25 February. Sub- - marine signals; wireless. orchestra. trip 39 hours, 20 min. Fast- #st, mewest, and only steamer landing . PRasengers at the dock in Bermuds without transfer, WEST INDIES---New 8.8. "GUIANA® and other steamers from New York at 2pm 24 Jan, 7 21 Feb. for St. Thomas, St. Croix St. Kitts, An- igus, Guadaloupe, Dominicia, Mar- tind que, St. Lucia, Barbadoes and erara. For full information apply to J. P, HANLEY,: or C. 8. KIRKPATRICK, QUEBEC Ticket Agents, Kingston; STEAMSHIP CO., LTD., Quebec. To have your winter's coal In now, It can't spoll or go out ot "'stoil." -------- : At 50 Years Of Age THE KIDNEYS NEED HELP Gin Pills. give them the strength of youth, 50 Broad Street House, London, I bought some of yonr GIN PILLS at Victoria B.C. last September, made inquiries in New York on my arrival there bat was unable to obtain any information about them. Your remedy, I find at 6o years of age, to give me perfect relic} and I regret very much that you have not made arrangements to have GIN PILLS on sule in New York and London, as I urgently recom- mend GIN PILLS to friends of my age asbeing the one thing that does me good. E. G. Woonrorn. If your kidneys need help strengthen them and keep them well with GIN PILLS, --the guaranteed cure for Weak Kidneys, Pain in the Back, Bladder Trouble and Rheumatism. soc. a box-- 6 for $2.50--money back if they fail to. relieve. 'Sent on receipt of price if your dealer does not handle them. Sample box free on request. National Drug and Chem. Co., of Canada Lithited, Toronto. National Lazy Liver Pills are a sure cure for Constipation. 2sc. a box. 200 Kingston Business College (Limited) Head_of Queen Street. Courses in bookkeeping, shorthand, typewriting, efvil service, general improvement, and all commercial subjects Rates moderate. tion free, H.F. Metcalf - Principal galeting Pill for Women. $5 a box or threefor $v. dd nt all brug Stores, or mailed to any address on receipt of price. THe SconeL!, DRre Co, Bt, Catharines, Ontario PHOSPHONOL FOR MEN. {nos Vitality: for Nerve snd Brain: incredses "grey matier Tonie--will build yon np. $4 n box, or two jor §5, at drug stores, or by mail ou reecipt ot price. Tug ScobiiL Dave Co. =t. Catharines, Ontario Real Estate Three brick houses In ex- cellent repair on water front, near King street, renting for $45.00 per month. A splen- did ynvestment for $5400.00. ugh-cast dwelling in a do%n-town location, * eight rooms, nice home for $4,000. Informa- A reiia- ble Re- DeVAN'S FRENCH PILLS Hestores HORACE F. NORMAN Real Estate and General insur. ance. 177 WELLINGTON 8%, COMPLICATION OF WOMAN'S ILLS Yields to Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Athens, Texas, --"I had a eomplica- tion of "diseases, some of them of long ; standing. 1 wrote i and took Lydia E. Pinkhfm's Vegeta- ble Compound, and " troubles. My neigh- bors say I look younger now than I did fifteen years ago." -- Mrs. Saran R. WHATLEY, Athens, Texas, R. F.D, No.3. Box 92 We know of no other medicine which has been so successful in relieving the suffering of women, or received so many genuine testimonials, as has Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com: In neatly every community you will find women who have been restored to health by this famous medicine. Almost every woman you meet knows of the great good it has been' doing suffering women for the past 30 years. DAILY BRITISH WHIG, Down he went. Brand and the, girls bauled lustily at the rope. It was no child's play to holst a heavy pulley and several hun- dred feet of stout cordage. More than once they feared the first thin rope would break, but it was good hemp, and soon the block was hooked to the strong iron stanchions of the railing. To make assurance doubly sure, Brand told Enid to take several turns of the spare cord arcuni the hook and the adjacent rails. Meanwhile, Constance and he saw that the rope was moving through the pulley without their assistance. Then through the whirling scud beneath they made out an ascending figure clinging to it. Scon he was close to the gallery. Catching him by arms and collar they lifted him into safety. He was one of the junior officers, and Constance; though she hardly expected it, experienced a momentary feeling Of disappointment that the first man to escape was not the handsome youth to whose cool darigg some at least of the ship's company would owe their Itves. The newcomer was a typical Briton. » "Thanks," he sald. "Close shave. Have you a light? 'after each arrival" Enid brought the small lantern, and the stranger waved it twice. The rope travelled back through the pulley, and i.this time it carried a saflor-man, who {sald not one word but stooped to tie his boot-lace. i "How many are Brand of the officer. {! "About eighty, all told, including | some twenty women and children." * "All wet to the skin?" left?" "Yes: some of them uncomsclous,|' | perhaps dead." |: "Can you hold out " l "Yes; a nip of brandy--" | "I will send some. - We must leave you now. These with me aré my | daughters," ! At last the crust of insular self: possession was broken. The man Gok ed from one to the other of the seem- ing lighthouse-keepers. |! "Well, 'm --" he blurted out in his surprise. "That American young: | A shapeless bundle hove in sight. |g contained two little girls, tied mn. | Side a tarpaulin and lashéd to tI | rope. | for dealing with the helpless ones. |. Brand instantly divided his forces. j Enid he dispatched to make hot coco {in the quickest and most lavish man {mer possible. Constance was to give each new arrival a small quantity of stimulant (the lighthouse pos~essed s | dozen-bottles of brandy and whiskey) and act as escort. The women and {children were to be allotted the two {ibedrooms. Any bad cases of injury lor complete exhaustion could be dis of in the visiting officer's room, {Whilst all the men fit to take care of 'themselves were to be distributed be Iween the entrance, the coal-room, !the workshop and the stairways. The | kitchen, store-room and service-room | were to be kept clear, and the store | room door locked. Eighty! Brand 1iwas already doing problems in simple { | arithmetic. youngster" who had solved the knot: | test" proposition put forward during |'that eventful night. ' He watched the forwarding of the shrieking, shuddering, or inanimate Women. He timed the operation by his watch as the reflected light from the lamp was quite sufficient for the purpose. Then he approached the captain. "Say, skipper," he cried, "how long: do you give the remains of her to hold put?" ' ; i "It is not high-water yet," was the poswer, "Férhaps half an hour. For ty 'minutes at the utmost." { "Fheén - you'll have to boost this! along a good deal faster," said eo cheerful one. "They're going up Without waiting, {: We must signal} inquired}! This, evidently, was the plan|. y caplalii grasped Pyne's | very steep," said Constance, swinging {feet as they climbed down the top :{be thie chief sufferer. ~ Por Hil 'wena Wwe. ne and drink here whilst we talk." CHAPTER VIII, 2 AN INTERLUDE "Please be careful; these stairs are »i {he 'lantern' close to her companion's most flight. © "It 1 fall." he assured her, "you will T, "All the more reason why you should not fall. Wait here a moment. I must Save a look at the hospital." The visiting-officer's room, which also served the purposes of a library and recreation reom in normal times, now held fourteen injured persons; in- cl WO women, one of them a stewardess, and a little girl. The {8 broken arm, the most alarming a m [case of cerebral concussion. } off to lea- ward the hubbub of shouting, came out, fol: They agreed to try, for the spectacle of the captain, standing bareheaded on all that was left of the bridge; moved them te a pitch of frenzy not bften seen in an assemblage of Anglo Saxons, and especially of sailors. Brand turned to procure the rocket, but a loud cry caused him to delay. The expected wave had come, the ves sel was smothered in a vortex of foam, the tall fore-mast tottered and fell, and when the water subsided again all that was visible of the great steam. er was some portion of her hull and the solidly built bow, which was not wrenched from the keel-plate until another hour had passed. The agonized cry of a strong man is a wotul thing. Constance, by reason of the gathering at the-side of the gallery, was unable to see all that was taking place. But the yell which went up from the onlookers told her that something out of the common, even | on this night of thrills, had occurred. "What is it, dad?" she asked, as her Iather came to her. , '"The end of the ship," he said. "The captain has gone with her." ' "Oh dear, why wasn't he saved?" "1 think he refused to desert his 'by collision with' the cornice of (he Brand, brbught from the lantern by the Most of the sufferers had received ir wounds either in the saloon or lighthouse. © The worst accident was Other Injuries consisted, for the most part of cuts and bruises. Unfortunately, when the ship struck Surgeon had gone aft to attend t an engineer whose hand was crusiec as the result of some fraptic Ture caused by the hurricane; Thence the doctor was lost with the first bate' of - victims. Enid discovered thar among the few steefage- passenger. ved was a man who had gained som: perience in a field-hospital during the campaign in Cuba. Aided by the plain directions supplied with the wedicine chest of the lighthouse, ihe ex-hospital orderly had done wonders already. ; "All 1 want, miss," he explained; in Answer 1o <Constance's question, "I§ some water and some linen for ban- dages. The lint outtit in the chest is not half sufficient." Bhe vanighed, to return quickly with B sheet and a pair of scissors. "Now," she sald to Mr. Pyne, "It fou come with me I will sepd you kK with a pall of water" Bhe took him to the kitchen Where Bold, alded by a sailor, pressed into service, was dispensing cocos and bis cults. Pyne, who remained in the stairway, went off with the water and Constance's lantern, The interior of the lighthouse was utterly dark. To move without a light, and with no prior knowledge of its internal ar rangements, was positively danger ous. All told, there were seven' lamps of various sizes available. Brand had one, four were distributed throughout ship. His heart was broken, I expect. Now, Connie, duty first." i i Indeed, she required no telling. As each of the ship-wrecked men entered the lantern, she handed him a glass of spirits, asked if he were injured, | and told him exactly how many flights ' of stairs he had to descend. But cocoa | and biscuits would be brought soon, she explained. Greatly amazed, but speechless for the most part, the men obeyed her directions. | En | Btér wondered what the trouble was."| One of the last to claim her atten- tion was the young American, Mr. ' Pyne. Her face It. up pleasurably when she saw him. ! : "I was wondering what had become pt you," she said. "My sister has ask-| ed me several4imes if you had i and 1 imagined that I must have miss- | ed you by some chance." i Now all this was Greek to him, or Rearly so. Indeed; had it been intelli gible Greek, he might have guessed its purport more easily. Holding the glass In his hand he |. looked at her in frank; open-eyed won- der. To be halled 80 gleefully by a good-looking girl whom he had never to his knowledge set eyes on, was somewhat of a mystery, and,the puz- tle was made 'all the more difficult by the fact that she had discarded the weather-proof accoutrements needed when she first ventured forth on the gallery. : "I'm real glad you're pleased. My name is Charles A. Pyne," he said, slowly. : It was now Constance's turn to be +| bewlldered. Then the exact situation dawned on her. "How stupid of me," she cried. "Ot course you don't regoguize me again. My sister and J happen to be alone with my father on the rock to-night. We were with him om the balcony when you acted so bravely. You see, the light shone clear on your face." "I'm glad it's shining on yours now," he said. : "You must go two floors below this," said she, severely. "I will bring you some cocoa and a biscuit -#8-quickly as possible." "I am.not a bit tired," he comment: ed, still looking at her. "That is lore than I can say," she answered, "but I am so delighted that We managed to save 50 many poor people." "How many?" : "Seventy-eight. But I dare not ask you now how many are lost. It would make me cry, and 1 have no time for tears. Will you really help to carry A tray?" "Just try me." At the top of the stairs Constance called to her father: "Anything you want, dad?" Yes, dear.' Find out the chief offi- \ Here is the Secret . of Long Life While looking forward to health and long life it is possible that you i; i t § | East if | servation of the health and | of the digestive and excretony i 18 of the greatest. impo are unaware of the 'conditions neces- sary to attain healthful old' age. 'Careful eating, and consequent pre- vitality organs rtance. Overeating is the usual cause of torpid, sluggish liver action, and when the liver fails additional work 4s thrown on the kidneys and they break down. Kidney disorders ara the great source of suffering in old age. Rheumatism, bodily pains, ach- ing arms and legs backache and lum. bago are result, By the use of Dr. Liver Pills to regulate the liver, kid- neys and i {At the door. { It seemed no | sprang at the rock. Chase's Kidney- | the apartments tenanted by the sur vivors of the wreck, two were retain. ed for transit purposes, and the men shivering in the entrance passage had no light at all. Constance took Enid's lantern in order to discover the wheregbouts of Mr. Emmett, the first officer, the tray- carrying sallor offering to guide her to him. When Pyne came back he found id in the dark and mistook her for Constance, "They want some more," he cried Some more what?" she demanded. time for elegant diction. Her heart: jumped each time the sen It seemed: to be #0 much worse in the dark. , "Water," said he. "Dear me. I should have thought everybody would be: fully satisfied in that respect." } He held up the lantern. "Well, that's curlous," he cried. I ned. you were, the other young lady. The water is needed in'the hos- pital." "Why didn't you say so?" ped, being in reality very angry with herself for her flippancy. She gave him a full pail and he quitted her. Constance, having _ delivered her father's message to Mr. Emmett, was Sreeted with a' tart question when she re-entered the kitchen: bp "Why on earth. did'nt You tell me that young man was attending to the injured people? Is he a doctor?" "I think not. What happened?" "He came for a second supply of water and nearly bit my head off." "Ob, Enia' i am syre he did not mean anything. Dido't you recognize him? It was he who climbed . the mast-and flung thé rope to us." "There!" sald Enid, "I've gone and; done it. Honestly, you know, it was I who was rude. He will think me a perfect cat." "That isn't what people are saying." exclaimed Mr. Pyne, whose approach was deadened by the outer ise, "There's. a kind of general idea float, ing round that this locality fs ap an- nex of heaven, with ministering angels in attendance." . In the half light of the tiny lamps he could see Enid's scarlet face. There was a moment's silence, and this' very self-possessed youth spoke. again. & "The nice things we all have to. tefl you will keep," he said. "Would you mind letting me know in which rooms you have located the Indies?" nstance, as major-domo, the information asked for: 5% ; "They. are in the two bedrooms overhead. Poor things! I'am a my | wits' end to know how to get thel clothing dried. You see, Mr. Pyne, my | sister and I have no spare _ clothes. here. We only came to the rock this afternoon, by the merest chance." "That is just what was : t ubling, of IS she suap- Pan me,' he answered. "I am sort terested in one of them." "Oh," said Constance, could help. But, indeed; skirts are' Wringing wet." oa "From what 1 can' make nit hen my prospective step-aunt will cateh a very bad cold." , WEL but Comte are a de Be, "ustaucs, rarely for her, jum: at a conclusion. - uped "Your prospective step-aunt. my own You mean, perhaps, your fiance's aunt? | she suggested. i "I don't know the lady. No, ma'am. [was right first time. Mrs. tart is going to marry my keep an eye on her stock to that ex tent." ; i BN "How stupid of me!" she expls whilst a delighted giggle from did not help to mend ary» i] re os Constance very s "f wil ask Mrs. Vausittart to come ut and speak to you--" ' "No, 10!" 1 don't vik hat on might tell her 1am all right, 'he limit. And--may I make a Sugges- don?" LE Let Me Give A Generous Demonstration and the Benefit of 28 I want to prdve to every sufferer from Uric Acid diseases, 'such as Rbeumatism, Kidney Trouble and Bladder Trouble, that I have a medi. cine 'that will give prompt and per manent relief in the most chronic long-standing cases. No ter how long yon have suffered, nor how many other remedies and doctors you have 1 feel sure that I have the method and treatment which will re- lieve you quickly and surely. Tt will not cost you one penny to ve. remarkable medicine "and nt a trial, * ~have to do is to send me and address, together with Vy A cipal Spt ; amd IT will at once send you, all charges paid, a suficient supply to prove t at my. fiedicine is effective, even in the most stubborn and complicated cases. E.are no strings to this libera hen. 1 say Free, 1 y Sehae' of the wor Rentive in be wrapper, with full direc. or taking. It is a gift from me not expect payment for it now or at any future time. : I have had more than twent -eight years' experience in treating Uric Acid diseases their complications. ~My long experience tm this specialty has enabled me to master these diseases an leve that T have conquered of Uric Acid diseases than r physician. ee glft-of 'medicine is not all "for you. When I receive n_addifion to sending ie eficine, 1 am Boing to ; er telling you abou eer to por well. Iam ng. 10 send you a copy of my You My Experience Medicine Free of My Remarkable Medicine 247 Remarlable Ms DR. T. FRANK LYNOTT who will give andadvics ta those whe new, large medical book covering every Jad Fs 1Sendition and many ther ugs of importance an res you. Iam ong to do all these things, absolutely free. If you, dear reader, are siftering from any Urle Acid ailment. this offer is made to you. I am willing to offer you this medicine and the benefit of my 28 years' experience absolutely free and without dost to' you, for the good it will do you and the good you can do me by telling your friends where you obtained the medicine that helped you. In making your request for the free medicine simply check (V) the symp- toms you have on the attached coupon. write your name and address plainly ahd cut It out and mail it-to-me OF, it you prefer, you may write me a let- ter describing Tour Miments, ia Jou own words. Address our letter DR. T. FRANK LYNOTT, 50 Franklin Bldg., Toronto, Ont. 850 Franklin Bl 1'hmve supply of your Free Medici NAME. X checked my Symptoms above. Please send me without any obligation on my part, a ine, a copy of yous Medical Book dg., Toronto, Ont. and any advice you think necessary. Box, R. F. D. or Stree). ® Town "I'do wish 1] uncle, wo I | KEEP YOUR 1 FEET WARM vf We have many cold weather footwear propositions that are fto k h Id and sure to keep out t € cold anc Snow. § . Such articles as felt boots, over- shoes, overgaiters and moccasins will keep your feet warm and comfortable during these cold days. J; H. SUTHERLAND & BRO. THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES HE omer NAL AND be GENUINE, Valuable Medicine ever discovered. The best known Remedy for. - " CoucHs, CoLps, ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS. "DIARRHEA, DYSENTERY & CHOLERA. attacks of SPASMS. RHEUMATISM.