Daily British Whig (1850), 5 Feb 1914, p. 12

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

PAGE TWELVE _ "FLOUR Our Robin Hood brand of flour tafe rT © "ANDREW MACLEAN {[] TRUNK iT Winter Tours oALIFoRNIA, FLORIDA and THE SUNNY SOUTH. Fast tralus leave daily, making direct con- ea at Detroit and Buffalo for da and southern points, and at Guage for California and western Talia can make all arrangements to bring your family and friends from Old Country. Special attention will be given them, For. full particulars apply. to J. P. HANLEY, Rallroad and Steamship Agent Cor, Johnson and Ontario Sta. (_ANADIAN ACIFiIC * Train No, 7, formerly leaving Tor- onto' 2.30 p.m. arriving Winnipeg $ om. has been temporarily with- rawn, rain No, 8, formerly leaving finnipeg 1.30 p.m., arriving Toron- has been temporarily . 27 has been resumed tween Toronto and Sudbury, leav- Toronto 8. 45 bP m. daily, arriving Subir y ain fo' 3 28 ian been Fesums a between Sudbury and Toronto, le ing Sudbury 10.45 p.m. daily, a ing Toronto § a.m. tgndard Sleeping Cars Toronto to Sudbury and Toronto to Sault Ste Marlo are carried on train No. 27, these cars returning on train No. Vor WINNIPEG AND VANCOUVER ave Toron 10.20° p.m. Daily Compartment Library Observa- tion Car, Standard Sle ceping Cars To- ronto to Winnipeg and Toronto to (Vancouver, Tourist Sleeping Cars, Dining Car," First Class Coaches, Colonist Cars. Particulars from ¥. Conway, C Tleket Office, Cor, and Wellington Sts, Pho OCEAN STEAMSHIP AGENCY C. 8, KIRKPATRICK 42 Clarence St. Phone 54% {Selected from the choicest coffees in the world -- "roasted, blended and packed in the most modern plant in Canada, eal Brand Coffee is the recognized standard in thousands of homes. Chase & Sanborn, - Montreal. 146 FOR SALE Earl St, near Division, brick veneer .......... $1,900.00 Ear] St, near Division, brick veneer $2,000.00 4 Division St. 1 rl, brick [ veneer . $2,000.00 3 Division St. near Earl, brick 4 veneer $2,150.00 €- Dominion cleaners $10.50 Stationary Vacuum Estimates cheerfully vacuum cleaners. given. H. 8. CRUMLEY RI i CANADIAN SERVICE. From Southampton From Portland, Me. | Jan, 22 ASCANIA ASCANIA ALAUNIA Bteamers will call Plymouth east. 4. Raseo---Cabin (11) $46.25 u HE British astbound, $30.35 u thound $30 ROBERT OND ©0, LA Soveeats Agent, 50 King St. Eo Janitee, 4 to BERMUDA S58, "HBEMUDIAN" (twin screw, 10.51% tons displacement, sails from New York 19 a.m, 11, 18, 25 February, 4, 11, 18, 25 March. Submarine signals wireless; or 'ehestra, Wecord trip 39 utes. Fastest, newest, and only steam- or landing passengers at thefock in 'Bermuda without transfer. West Indies--New S88, "GUIANA and 'other steamers from Now York at "pm. T, 21 February, 7, 21 March, for Bt. Thomas, St. Croix, St Kitts, Anti: Hua, Guadaloupe, Dominicia, Martin ique, St. Lucia, Barbadoes and Demer- ara. Feb, 7 'Mar. 14 Mar, 21 or full information apply HANLEY, or C. 8S. Ticket Agents, STEAMSHIP CO, to J. P KIRKPATRICK Kingston; QUEBE C LTD, Quebec, tis the m- tentive regard for the comfort and pleanure of each Passenger expressed in luxurious Weeommodation ~~ splendid meals -- Modern safety equipment that have © made the R.M.S.5, Royal Edward and Royal Goarge deservedly fam. AMORY ocean travriers. New York Frit Store Sweet ot Oranges, 15e, 20¢ and 80¢ a dozen. Malaga Grapes, 20c a Ib. 16¢ and 20¢c a 3 i Studebaker GENT ours, 20 miu. . "PHONE ire Kingston Automobile Co. Queen and Bagot Streets. Storage, Repairing, Reseg- pories. We Guarantees Satisfaction. ttc Frinee Génrge #iotel = TORONTO In Centre of Shopping : and Business Distriot. 250 ROOMS 100 with Private Baths EUROPEAN AND AMERICAN PLAN A la Carte Restaurant 4 SAM. H. THOMPSON, Prop, WOMAN IN TERRIBLE STATE Finds Help in Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound. --iy Bellevue, Ohio. --"'} was in a terrible state before I took I ia E. Pinkhain's nVegetable Com- pound. My back acheduntil I thought t would break, 1 had pains all. over me, nervous feelings and periodic troubles. | Was very weak and run down and was losing hope of ever being well and strong. After tak ing Lydia E. Pink- rapidly and today am a well woman. | Sok tall you how. happy I feel and I cannot say too much for your Compound. 'Would not be without it in the house if it cost three times the amount. *'- Mrs, | Chas. CaPMAN, R. F. D. No. 7, Delis. vue, Ohio. Because your' case is a difficult one, doctors having done you no good, do not continue to suffer without giving Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound 2 trial. It surely has remedied many cases of female ills, such as' inflamma- tion, ulceration, displacements, tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, and it may be exactly what you need. The Pinkham record is a proud and peerless one. It isa record of constant victory over the obstinate ills of woman ills that deal out despair. Tt i= anon Mabilistied fact that Lydia E. Pinklhan's Compound has resto: * 3 he to anda of such sufferin dich» dine] oy ein ham's Vegetable Compound I improved CHAPTER I. The Young Lady From Philadelphia, | Miss Enid Maitland was a ign | specialized product of the far east. say far, viewing Colorado as a on | of departure, not as identifying her | with the orient. The classic shades | of Bryn Mawr had been the "Groves of Academus where with old Plate! she had walked." Incidentally during | her completion of the exhaustive cur- i riculum of that justly famous instity- i tion she had acquired at least a bow- | ing acquaintance with other masters | of the mind Nor had the physical in her educa- tion been sacrificed to the rhental. In her at least the mens sana and the corpore sano were alike In evidence. She had ridden to hounds many times | on the anise-scented trail of the West | Chester Hunt! Exciting tennis and | leisurely goif had. engaged her atten- tion on the courts and greens of the | Merion C "Old Ocean's gray and melancholy waste" on the beach at Cape May and at Atlantic City, Spiritually she was a.devoted mem- ber of the Episcopal church, of the variety that abhors the word "Protes- ant" in connection therewith, Alto- | gether ghe reflected great credit upon her pastors and masters spiritual and temporal and her upbringing in the three departments of life left little to be desired. Upon her graduation she had been at once received and acclaimed by the "Assembly Set" of Philadelphia, to which indeed she belonged unques- tioned by right of birth and position-- and there was no other power under heaven by which she could have ef- fected entrance therein, at least that is what the. outs thought of that most exclusive circle. The old home of the Maitlands over looking + Rittenhouse Square had been ' the scene of her debut. In all the refined and decorous gaities of Philadelphia's ultra-fastidious soclety she had participated. She had even looked upon money standardized New York in its delirium of extravagance, at least in go far as a sedate and well- born Philadelphia family could coun- tenance such golden madness. . During the year she had ranged like a con- querer--pardon the masculine appella- tion--between Palm Beach in the south and Bar Harbor in the north. Philadelphia was proud of her, and she was not unknown 'in those un- fortunate parts of the United States which lay without In all this she had re mained a frank, free, unspoiled young woman. Life was full of zest for her, and she en Joyed it with the most un-Pennsylva- ricket club. She had buffeted | ! nian enthusiasm, The second summer after her com- | Ing out found her in Colorado. Robert Maitland was one of the big men of | the west. le had departed from Phil adelphia at &n early age and had set- tled in Colorado while it was still in the formative period. There he had grown up with the state. The Phil- adelphia Maitlands could never under- stand it or explain it. Bob Maitland must have been, they argued, a rever- sion to an ancient type, a throwback to some robber baron long antecedent | to William Penn. And the speculation Was true. The blood of some.lawless | adventurer of the past, discreetly for- got by the conservative section of the family, bubbled in his veins unchecked by, the repressive atmosphere of his home apd immediate environment. He had thoroughly identified him- sell with his new surroundings. and had plunged into all the activities of the west. During one period of his life he had actually served as sheriff of one of the bonder counties, and it was a"rapld "bad man" indeed, who | enjoved any adyantage over him when it came to drawing his "gun." skill and daring had been unques- tioned, he had made & name for him- sell which still abides, especially in the mountains where things vet re- mained almost as primitive as they bad been from the beginning. His fame had been accompanied by fortune, too; the cattle upon a thou- sand hills were his, the treasures of mines of fabulous richness were at his command. He lived in Denver in one of the greatest of the bonanza palaces on the hills of that eity, con- fronting the snow-capped mountain range. For the rest he held stock in all sorts of corporations, was a di- rector in numerous concerns and so on--the reader can supply the usual catalogue, they are all alike. Haq had married late in life and was the father of two little girls and ¥ boy, the old- est sixteen and the youngest ten. Going east, which he did not love, on an infrequent basiness trip, he had renewed his acquaintance with his brother and the one ewe lamb of his brother's flock, to-wit, the afore- mentioned Enid. He had been struck. a8 everybody was, by the splendid personality of the girl and had striven earnestly to disabuse her mind of the prevalent idea that there was nothing much worth while on the continent beyond the Allegheny except scenery. "What you need, Enid, is a ride acrvss the plains, a sight of real moun tains, beside which these little foot- hills In Pennsylvania hat people back here make so muct®, wouldn't be You want to get some of the His noticed, spirited, glorious freedom of the west |' into your conservative straight-laced HAVE A PLACE IN There 1s nothing mors satisfactory, especially at this time of the year and a MNttle iater, than a plain dress of serge, ratine or other dark, durable} material. By way of trimming, a bit of contrasting material, a few colored buttons or .a frill of net or chiffon is all that is needed, In No. 76I8 a'duli blue hard finish serge is smartly relieved by trimming bands of dark green cotton duvetynm. 'This 'cotton duvetyn is a velvety look- ing fabric. somewhat higher priced than most cotlons. but rich appearing, and one gels the impression that it will Wear very well. ¢ To copy this dress in sizé 36 It ve- quires §% yards of 36 inch serge or A SMART FROCK 'OF SERGE SHOULD EVERY WARDROBE other fabric. Serge may be purchased in good quality from 76 cents to $1.50 a yard an silk poplin makes 5p very at: ectively, charmingly relieved by a Medio collat 'of white organdy. The color is an olive gresn bordering on the yellow, A feature of this frock is the collar; - the 'wired Medici effect in back extends into a broad, softly drap- ed fichu in front, which is graceful and becoming. may be copled in size 36 'nurtured would have coveted." 80 greatly," a Httle body." : - In my day, Robert," reprovingly re. marked his brother, BEnid's father, 'freedom was the last thing a young lady gently bom and delicately "Your day is passed, Steve," turned the younger Maitland with shocking carelessness. "Freedom 1s what every woman desires now, espe- cially when she is married. You are not in Jove with anybody, are you, Enid?" "With not a soul" frankly replied the girl, greatly amused at the col- loquy between the two men, who, though mothered by the same woman, were as dissimilar as--what shall I say, the east is from the west? Let it go at that. eh "That's all right" said her uncle, relieved apparently. "I will take you out west and introduce you to some real men and--" "If I thought it possible," interposed Mr. Stephen Maitland in: his most austere and dignified manner, "that my daughter," with a perceptible em- phasis on the "my," as if he and not the daughter were the principal belug under consideration, "should ever. so re. in life and her family as to allow her affections to become engaged by any- one who, from his birth and upbring- ing in the er--oh--unlicensed atmos- phere of the western country would he persona non grata to dignified so- ciety of this ancient city apnd--" "Nonsense," interrupted the young- er brother bluntly. "You have lived hers wrapped up in yourselves and your dinky fittle town so long that mental asphyxiation is threatening you." "I will thank you, Robert, " said his brother with something approaching the manner in which he wonld bave repelled a blasphemy, "not to refer to Philadelphia as--er--what was your most extraordinary word?" " 'Dinky,' if my recollection serves." "Ah, precisely. I am not sure as tf the meaning of the term, but I conceive it to be something opprobri- ous. You can say what you like about me and mine, but of Philadelphia, no." "Oh, the town's right enough," re- turned his brother, not at all im- pressed. "I'm talking about people now. There are just as fine men and women in the west as in New York or Philadelphia." "lI am sure you don't mean to be offensive, Robert, but really the asso- "Your Day Has Passed, Steve," Re turned the Younger Maitland. ciation of ideas in your mention of us with that common and vulgar New York is er--un--pleasant," fairly shud. dered the elder Maitland. "I'm only urging you to recognize fhe quality of the western people. I dare say they are of a finer type than the average here." "From your standpoint, no doubt," continued his brother severely and somewhat wearily as if the matter were not worth all this argument. "All that I wanu of them is that they stay in the west where they belong and not strive to mingle with the east; there is a barrier between us and them which it is not well to cross. To per mit any intermixtures of er--race or--" "The people out there are whits, Steve," interrupted his brother sar- donically. "I wasn't contemplating in- troducing Enid here to Chinese, or negroes, or Indians, or" "Don't you see," sald Mr. Stephen Maitland, stubbornly waving aside this sarcastic and irrelevent com- ment, "from your very. conversation the vast gulf that there is between you and me? Although you had every advantage in life that birth can give You, we are--I mean you have changed he had quickly added, loathe to offend. But he mistook brother's eyes; it was a. twinkle, not a flash Robert Maitland. laughed, laughed with what his hrother con- ceived to be indecorous boisterous ness. " "How little you know of the bone and sinew of this country, Steve," he exclaimed presently. Robert Maitland could not comprehend how it irritated his stately brother to be called "Steve." Nobody ever spoke of him but as Stephen Maitland. "But Lord, I don't blame you," continued the westerner. "Any man whose vision is. barred 'by a foothifl couldn't ue er pected to know much of the main range and what's beyond. - : "There isn't any danger of my fail ing in love with anybody," said Enid at last, with all the confidence of two triumphant social seasons. "I think 1 must be immune even to dukes," she said gaily. ; "I referred to worthy young Amer fcans of--" began her father who, to do him justice, was so satisfied with his own position that no foreign title dazzled him in the-least degree. » (To Be Continued.) ------ Sooner or later insincerity gets shows up in ts true light. far forget what belongs to her station } the light in his IN TOMATO this delicious fish, 3! inches wide, 1} ounces of fish. the cut. The tins 15¢. a tin-- SOLE DIS? NORWAY Where The Good Fish Come From HE ice cold waters of this north- ern land produce the finest, sweetest and soundest fish. Herrings from Norway have a mild. ness of flavor that make them the most delicious and the most populdr all over Europe and America. The finest young Herrings are selected to be packed for us. specially. Every fish that goes into our tins. is a perfect fish. The packing house is remarkably clean and sanitary. and from the smoking. packing and sealing to bak- ing and labelling. cleanliness is the motto of the management. The Order a tin of ACME B RAND YOUNG HERRINGS You will be glad of the day you started eating Each tin is 6 inches long. inchesdeep and contains full arc oval with label like 2 tins for 2c. Ask your Grocer for the Acme Brand If he does not have them. write us and we will sec that you are supplied. W. G. PATRICK & CO., LIMITED, 51 Wellington St. West, TORONTO TRIBUTORS FOR CANADA Ants like a charm in allays irritation of the wrervous uo bad eficcts : INSIST ON HAVING Dr. J. COLLIS BROWNE'S CHLORODYNE. The immense success of this Remedy has given rise (0 many imitations. | N.B.--Every bottle of Gengin . Chlorodyae Bears on the stamp the name of the investor, Dr, J, Collis Rrawae. AAAs i] Most-men would, if they could, pre; ian tad partners. -+ sometimes bas ing but ¢ 6 to give, | hat' to any hn -. THE ORIGINAL AND ONLY GENUINE, The Most Valuable Medicine ever discovered. The best known Rem=dy for CoucHs, CoLps, ASTHMA, BRONCHITIS. DIARRHOEA, DYSENTERY & CHOLERA. Effectually cuts short al' sttacks of STASMS. Checks and arrests those too often fatal diseases--FEVER, CROUP asd AGUE. The only palliative ia NEURALGIA, GOUT, RHEUMATISM, Chlorodyne is a liquid taken'in drops, graduated according fo the malady. It invariably relieves pain 0] whatever kind : creates a calm refreshing sloeh : s¥stem when all other vemgpdies fuil. and can be taken when no other medicine can be tolevaled, leaves CONVINCING MEDICAL TESTIMONY WITH EACH BOTTLE, Sold by all Chemists Prices in England; Vii, 2/9, 4/8 Sole Manufactorers: J. T. DAVENPORT LONDON, 4 SE. 5 Our + Annual RED LETTER SHOE SALE Is Now in Full Swag 20% DISCOUNT OFF 1 Shes Also 12 Tables of Special Bargains J. H. SUTHERLAND & BRO. THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES a w,

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy