Daily British Whig (1850), 12 Feb 1914, p. 11

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CALIFORNIA, FLORIDA and THE SUNNY SOUTH. Fast tralus Kingston daily, mak at nection at Detrolt and Butee for Florida and southern points. and at Chicago for California and western points. : : We can make all arrangemenys to bring your, family snd friends from the Old Country. Special attention will be given them. % For tull particulars apply to J. I. HANLEY, ¢ cor Sonatun Seaabin deep: f Winter Tours Eh California 'and the South RETURN TICKETS AT LOW FARES THE "LOGICAL ROUTE" TO WESTERN CANADA For Winnipeg and Van- couver Leave Toronte 10.20 p.m. Dally Compartident Library Observation . Btandard S8leéping Cars, To irist : Dining Car, First and Colonist Cars, ars garding RAIL or OC- kets from: F, CONWAY, Cp. A. City Picket Office, Cor. Pri cess and Wellington Sts, Phone 119 ie SO ete---------------------------- | ocean AGENCY. C. 8. IRA 43 Clarence St. ------ LC] DANADIAN SERVICE. m 8, HY ,fouthampion Eom Portland, Me Mar. § ALA Mar. 14 NIA Mar. 2 Brenmers will 'cans Siymonta Like? Ww ca, mou ong Ry me FEE RUA? Kron co. yume T REFORD C0. Limited General Agent, 50 King St. E. Toronte ater Sailings From Bristo} . R. Edward Mar. 11 * 5 ¥ eR rge Mar, 25 = 25 RMS R. dward Apr. 8 *withdrawn for ann'l inspection Royal Line Steamship combine the fire: featnres club or hort, A ship's matron pefsona'ly mtends women teavelling alone, Handsomely illreffated book letr=wtite to £2 King St Fast. Toronte, Ont to BERMUDA 8.8. "BEMUDIAN," (twin screw, 10.518 tons displacement, sails from New York 10 am, 11, 18, 24 March. Submarine signals wireless; or ' chostrd, Reeord trip 39 hours, 20 min. utes. Fastest, newest, aud only steam. er landing Passengers at the dock in Bermuda without transfer. West Indies--New' S.8, "GUI ANA and other steamers from New York at 2 pm, 21 February, 7, 21 March, for St. Thomas, S¢, Kitts, Anti. gua, Gualaoupe, b. mminicia, Martin. iqae, St. Lucia, aud Demers ara 18, £5 February, 4 Trix, st Barbadoes For full jnformation apply to J HANLEY, or ¢. 8 KIRKPATRICK Ticket Agents, Kingston; QUEBEC STEAMSHIP CO. LTD. @uibee. Products Factory Ras cement sills, bri ays. P bri and lintels always on hand. Teasonable prices. An in cement made to order. Corner of Charles and Patriek Must be sold. by Febroary 1914, Three brick houses if the best 'of "1 nearf ii Queen's open plumbing and the latest im- | provements, bringing a rental}ll of $5640,00 per year for $5, i: 1; "House on Queen street, near Clergy, $3.950.00, , A -------------------------------- y 553 Tr This recipe makes 16 ounces of veifbr cough syrup than you could buy ready made for $2.50. A fow doses usually coms quer the most obiktipate ougli--stops even, whaoping' cough quickly. "Simple as ft is, no betler remedy €an bo any aries, Mix two chs of gr one "up of warm wut and stir fof 2 mirutes, Put 23 oun of Pines ifly cents' worthy In a. 18-ounce Lottie: ther wil the Rugar Syrap. It has a pleasant taste and 1asts a Gunily a Jong shine. Take a Ieaspoonful every one, Twe or three hours, You cah'feel this take Jiold of a cougly moa way ght roenus business Has a good tonic effect, braces up the appetite and is slightly Juxalive, too, which is helpful. A Wawiy fered, vr hiursenows croup, bromehitidy asin Bd all throat and ung troubles The effect of pine on thE membranes is well known. Pleox is the ming valnahle coneentrated compound af white pine extract, apd is teh fn guaiacol and pt the natural healing pine clements, Other preparations forma This Pipes and Sugar Sy rup te « has attoined great popularity thioug the United States and Canada "Tt hax often been imitated; though never ence fylly JA muaranty of absolitte satisfaction. or money promptly refunded, goes with his recipe, Your druggist has Pinex, or will get it for you. If not, send to the Piney Oo, Toronto, Ont had at will pot. work gn this In Centre of Shopping and Business District. 260 ROOMS -- 100 with Private Bathe Evnorean anp American Puan fi a AlaCarte Restaurant 3 SAM. H. THOMPSON, enon, SAGE TEA DARKENS HAIR TO. ANY SHADE, Don't Stay Gray! Here's an Old-time Recipe that Anybody can Apply. The use of Sage and Sulphur for restoring. faded, gray hair to iis batural color dates back to grand mother's time. She used it to keep her hair beautifuly dark, Blossy and abundant. Whenever her fair fell out or took on that dull, faded or streaks ed appearance, this simple mixture was applied with wonderful effect. But brewing at home is mussy and out-of-date. Nowadays, by asking at any drug store for a G0 cent bottle of "Wyeth"s Saga and Sulphur Hair Remedy," you will get this famous old recipe which can be depended upon to restore matunal: color and beauty to the hair and is splendid for dandruff, y, feverish, itchy scalp and Br nobody can tell it and falling hair. A well-kjjlown downtown druggist says it darkens tle hale so naturally and after another application or two, has been applied. You simply dampen a sponge or soft 'brush with it becomes beautifully dark, glossy, taking onejstrand at a time. By morning t gray hair 'disappears, It and drawgthig through your ha'r, foft and abundan{. Agent, George W. Mahood et, a So WOMAN FEELS YOUNGER Since Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Re- - stored Her Health. Ky. <1 take great pleas- n to inform you of w = Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- TT =--d cing, I will advise any woman to consult with 'before going to a doctor."'-- Mrs, Bize WiL- an' nature to two _ 15e, articles 8 nulatod sugar with Norweglan | '} made ready upper side was compar; tively eany and Fnid Maitland wenf alowly and thoughtfully dewn to it until she reached the young torrent. She got her tackle readv, bit aid no casting, as she made her way slowly up the {ever narrowing, -ever sing canon. | 8he was charmed and thrilled by the | wild beanty of the way, - 1s spell of deey. upon her. | the mountains was | Thoughffull¥ she wandered on. until presently she came to another little amphitheater Hke that where the Camp was pitched, only smaller. 'Strange to say, the brook or river bere broadened In a little pool per- haps twenty feet across: a turn" had thrown 'a full force of water against the buge boulder will and in agos of offort a gant cup had bedn hol. lowed out of the native rock. The POO! was perhaps. four or five fest deep, the rocky bottom worn smooth. The clearing was upon the 'opposite side and the banks were heavily wooded boayond the spur of the roek which formed the back of the pool, She could see the trout in it. She to {ry her fortune, but did =o an idea came to her--daring, unconventional, exiraor: dinary, bego! of innpcence and inex. perience, The water of course. was very cold, hut: she had been accustomed all 'her life to taking a bath at the natural temperature of the water at whatever fearon. She knew that the only peo- ple ju that wilderness were the mem- bers of Her own party. three of them Were at tho camp below: the others Were ascending a mountain miles avay. The canon was deep sunk, and | she szatisfied herself by careful obser- | vation thal the poo! was not over- { looked hy any elevations far or near. Her ablutiens in common with those of the rest of the campers had been by piecemeal of mecessity. Here i was an opporfunity for a plunge in a | natural bath tub." She Was as certain { that she. would be under tio observa: tion as ir she. were In the privacy, of her own chamber. Here again impulse determined the end. Ingspite of her Assurance there was some little Ap: prehension in the glance that she cast sabout her; but it soon vanished. There Was no one. She was absolutely alone. The pool and the chance of the plunge had brought her down fo earth ag, the thought of thé en- livening exWilaration of the pure cold walor dashing against her own sweet Warm young body -changed the cur- Tent of her thoughts--the anticipa- tien of it rather, Impulsively. she dropped her rod upon the grass, unpinned her hat, threw the flashing basket from hear shoulder. She was wearing a stout sweater; that, too, joined the rest. Nervous hands manipulated butfons aud the fastenings. Tn a few moments the syweel figure of youth, of beauty, of purity and of innocence brightened the god and shed a white luster upon the green of fhe grass and moss and pines, reflecting light to the gray brown rocks of the range. So Exe may bave looked 'on some bright Eden morning. A few. steps forward. and this nymphiof the woods, this naiad of the mouttaine, plunged fnto the clear, cold waters. of, the pool=--a water sprite and her fountain! before she CHAPTER V, The Baar, the Man and .the Flond. The water ®as deep enough to re- ceive her divé and the pool was long enough to enable her to swith a Tew strokes. The first chill of the fey wa- ter. was soon I08t in the vigorous mo- tions In which 'She indulged, but no wore human form, howgyer hardy and inured, could i6ng endure that frigid bath, Reluctatitly, yet with the knowl edge that she must go, after one more sweeping dive and ® few magnificent strokes, she raised her head from the water lapping het White shoulders and shaking Ber face clear from the drops of ¢ryntal. faced the shore. It was no longer ufitenantéd, she Was no longer alone, °° or ? . What slie saw startled and alarmed her bevond measure. Planted on her clothes, looking straight at her, hav- ing cone upon her In absolute si- lence, nothing having given her the least ing of hix approach, and now shaing at her with red, hungry, evil, vicious eves, the eves of the covetous fi with the cruel lust of desire and carnal possession, and yet with, & git of" #urprise in them, 'too, as if he dif not know quite whal to ake of the viver on the of this = of his neighbor. d ) URSDAY, FEBRUARY 12, 1914. oo. ) ! : anything at once 80 harmless ana so ! whitely inviting as the girl in the peol, A The girl forgot the chill of the water in the horror of that moment. Alone, naked; defenseless, 10st in the moun- tains, with the most powerful, sam- guinary and ferocious, beast of the certinent in front of her, she coutd neither 'fight nor fy; she could only w#it' his pleasidre. ' He sniiffed at her clothing 'a moment and stood with one fore foot advanced for a second or. two, growling deeply, evidently, she thpyght with. almost superhuman keenness of perception, preparing to leap into the pool and seize upon her. The rush of the eurrent as it swiried abcut: her caused her.to sway gently, otherwise 'she stood motionless and apprehensive, awfully expectant. She had made no sound, and save for that low growl the great beast had been equally silent. There 'was an awful fixity.in jhe gaze she turned upon him and he wavered ufider it, ¥, annoyed hitn, Tt bespoke a little of the dom: inance of the human. ' But she was too surprised, 100 unnerved; too des perately: frightened to pnt forth the full power of ind: over matter, There was piteous appeal in her gaze. The | bear realized this and mastered ber suff ciently, he did not know whether she was in the water or in the air: there were but two points .upon whikh her come scloyaness was focussed in the vast ellipse of her imagination. .Anmother moment or two and 'all eoherency of thought would be gone. 'The grizzly still unsettled and ufeasy before her awful glance, but not deterred by it, turned its great head sideways a lit: tle to escape the direct Imtiobile stare brought his sharp clawed foot down heavily and lurched forward, Scarcely 'had a Jninite "élapsed 'in which all this happened, That huge threatening heave of the &reat. body fopnd vpice at last. Althowgh it was absolutely futile, she. realized as she cried, her relenged lips framed the loud appeal. "Help! for God's sake." Althongh she knew Bhe' cried but to: the bleak Wally '81 'Phe CahtE, the drooping pines, the rushing river, the distant heaven, the appeal went forth accompanie¢ by 'the mightiest con- Juration' known to man. toward her relieved the tensjon, She | X # . ™ GREG. GEORGE'S JUMP TO PROS. 'A SURPRISE A -------- Are After OHA, Frontenncs and Weod- Good For Junior O.H.A. Final 'Game. Avrangements are being made for the holding of the anndal boxing and wrestling championships of the collegiate Athletic" Union in Mont- real on February 28th. The armouries of the Victoria Rifles have been se- cured for the occasion and the direc: tors of the M.A.AA. have consented to the use of their fiew portable ring. George With Torontos Greg George's jump to the Toron- tos came as a blow. to the New Edin burghs as, he had from his home in Eganville and join the paddlers on - their trip to Winni- beg, (gorge isa GREG. GEORGE. Ex-Queen's hoekeyist, the Toronto Pro, The who team joins early in the season declined a $1,200 offer from the Ottawas. Gerard and Duford subsequently jumped, where- upon thé Ottawas withdrew their of fer to George. . After O.H.A: Players The N.H.A. managers' are on the still hunt for O.H.A. players, and be fore the season is over quite a few of theni will be gnrufbed in. The Toron tos at the present time hold the -con tract of one defence player in the O.H.A., and if his team gets put out of the running will report to the blue shirts, Canadian League Cup J. C. Leelaire, of Ottawa, has writ ten President J ames Fitzgerald, of the Canadian Baseball League, offering a $300 silver trophy . for the best. all round player in the circuit next sea son. The trophy stands several feet high, and is appropriately designed, surmounted with the silver figure of a pitcher in the act of delivering the ball. . Latest OHA. Ruling "For God's sake, help!" How dare poor humanity so plead, the doubter cries. What is it to God if one suffers, another bleeds, another dies? What answer could come out of | that silent sky? Sometimes the Lord 8peaks with the loud voice of men's The O.H.A . Has forth teams which leave the jce with the score even will both be charged with a loss. That should be an incen- tive to battle it out. There is always the chance of winning and a loss is only a loss at worst ruled that hence Likely Woodstock and Frontenucs Toronto News Woodstock and Berlin and {he Osha | | i | | | § So f "Help! For God's Sake!" fashioning, . instead "of" fn that =till whisper which is His own, and the #ound 'of which we fafl to éatch be- Cause of our own ignodble babble. i The andwer to her prayer came With a'roar in her nervous frightened eat like a clap of thunder. Fre the first echo of it died away, iy was suc- ceeded by another and another and another, echoing, roiling, Teverherat- ing among the rocksin ever diminish: ing but long drawn out: peals. ! On the instant the bear rose to his | feet, swayed slightly and 'struck ARAL ab Imaginary enémy With his weighty | paws, a Poni iv) aertug roar bu from his ved slavering jaws, then he Jurched side oy and. fell forward, fighting. the air wadly for . moment, and lay still; : (Te Be Continued.) Anyway the, Joad lo happiness b. © is : J mg is tified with hi lot because is located too 'near that ays on the level, [ i GA Hox JRE OU A h Als ATRIOS Ws not feach the seat of the. disekse fig Fae odd JLCHENEY & CO. Props. Toiodo, D. ge Taify Fam hk abt 3 i § 1 pd _Lopdon, Feb, 12.1 i elf ie To Ta wa-Kingston games look like the hard ones to gure, but it would not . be surprising if Woodstock and Kingston were returned winner: THE LATE JAMES HANLAN Pm Was a Parmer and Always Generons and Helpful gloom was cast over, the commun when the sad mews of the death of James Hanlan was learhed. His daath came as a great shock to his family as he had only been ailing a- bout four weeks, and his case, was not thought, to be at all 'serious. All that loving hands and medical aid could do was done, but he Passed peacefully away on Wednesday, Jan 28th The late Mr. Hanlon was born in Adolphustown in °° 15852 und resided there until four years previous to his death, when he settled in Seuth Fred- ericksburg, He was possessed of a gracious, kindly disposition, and was alwdys willing fo lend a helping hand. For mapy years he served in munjoi- pal affairs, acting as rgeve and goun- cillor," He was a liberal in politics. He leaves +0 mourn his logs a widow, two daughters and one son : Mrs. Sni- der, Wilton; Edward and Minnie, at home; one sister, Mrs, Alived Doc: tour, and four brothers, Patrick, = of St. Lawrence, N.Y.: John, 'Michael and Peter, in Winpipeg. He was a faithful husband - and Kind, .aflectiSpate father and' will greatly missed in his hofye circles, where he was fiked Jiy- all. The funeral took place on Saturday at 10 a.m., from ite residence, to A a be - St. Patrick's chucch, Nap which deceased wah, ith] mehr : Service 'was conducted by the r » Fr O'Cotinor. 'The _ remains were Place in tim Hotn Cithotic, vailt LA i fA requigm y momibg, fi the the soul. The family have the sympathy of the community in their sad bercave- ment. REEK'S MURDER MYSTERY Black Country Tragedy Will Prob- ably Remain Unsolved dian {of - Was returned of alc] Againsl some' person or pet- k; wh. AN, ow or Wi Liv. by, after arriving a by WAG pol from Jeceaed weak fo the tons "spot in the Wack |. ouRtry whore was found dedd will probably remain an unsolved mystery. 5 promised to cops oler- | { | | } | aug social | [as sung | repose | PAGE ELEVEN experiments "conducted under the direct: control of one of the foremost physi- N ~ olagists.of the day, an amount of Boyril. - * proportionate to the small black. iam: has been proved to producean increase in ff andmusclecorresponding to large out 16d} : ore ts : (RAE of 20 ol showing the body-buflding power "of BOVRIL to be from 10:to, 20.times the amount taken. J Bovril is the concentrated goodness of . 4 best of beef. It is a wonderfully warm. | 4 ing winter beverage | it builds up the weak, eonstitntion and strengthens the strong, one § it guards against the grip iv Ty checks colds 20d chills 3 it is cook's right hand in the kitchen ; it is nurse's first aid in the sick room, For Baking Success --This Qven Test Success on some baking days can be expected no matter what flour you use. Rut con- stant success is rarer. It can be assured in only one way. The miller must select his wheat by oven test. * Sp from 'each shipment _of wheat we take ten pounds. as a sample. We grind this into flour, Bread is baked from a the flour. If this bread is high in quality, large in quantity, we use the shipment from which it came. Otherwise we sell it. z Constant baking success comes as 'a 'matter of course from# . flour bearing this name "More Bread and Better! Bread" and 526 ~ z. "Bettens Qastrye Foo" ~ 4 - ' PURITY . 0 LADIES' and MEN'S, BOYS'| and GIRL'S Hockey AT VERY LOW PRICES. BUY YOUR SKATING SHOES , Treadgoll Cycle and Sporting Goods Co. 88 Princess nym yy 5 i" e Most Valuable, Medicine ever discovered. 5 ASTHMA, Br Tffectunlly cots shart al attacks of SPASM Ne hlorodyns is « liguid a INSIST ON HAVING The beat known Remady for Ats likn.a olavm in A elisa faint disenses- FEVER, and AGUE, ore alla r of V4 pind #9 bad clfects:. and can by 4, Dr. J COLLIS BROWNE'S . GoycHs, CoLps;;. DIAPZHUEA, DYSENTERY & The vais patlistive is NEURALGIA, GOVT, RUENATIAN, CHLORODYNE. ;

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