in Dae a a wen go and Nor ay p March 3rd, and every other hr Zeon AN AND AMERICAN PLAN thereafter until October 2 low fares. Tickets good iT ih Ns. vor tap Apr 1 and Steamship Agen! 4nd Ontario Sts HOMES] EX CUR SIONS MANITOBA, ALBERTA | SASKATCHEWAN Bach Tuesday March 8 to October 27, inclusive Winnipeg and Return - $35.00 Edmonton and Return - 43.00 to, and Satie Stations ¥ 'West and 7 t tionate fares a Of Noro of Toronto, e Limit two months, REDU SETTLERS' FARES (ONE-WAY SECOND CLASS) BACH ¥, MARCH AND APRIL : Ar) gi with lve otqck and Toruoto ei ach and fo p.m. train from Toronto to Winn and CARS ON ALL 5. charge : Thi rom Canadian Paclfic Agents or M G.} (urgby, DPA. Toronto, Particulai from F. C. P. A, eity ticket rincess Conway, office. Cor,, and Wellington streets. 'Phone, 1197. | Bots Lasy It For 0, 8. KIRKPATRICK 43 Clarence St. Phone S¢v CANADIAN SERVICE Pr da, utham From ortiahd, Ms 7 AUNIA. ' Arr ea mers wi} oat Pym 4 palit 46. ag clam" sh Top Te 28 i Rwonn CO, Limited St. HB, Torviite os BER MUDA ss. D via {twin screw, 105 tans disp'adement, sails from New Yor - 10am. 4711, 18, 25 Mar, 1, 8, April, Submarine signals wireless; brs chestra, Reécord trip 39 hours, 20 miv. utes. Fastest, newest, and only steam. er landing passengers at the dock in Bermuda without transfer. Went Indles--New © 8.5. "GUIANA and other steamers from New York at 2: p.m., 73 21 March, 4, 18 April, for St. Thomas, 8% 3Jrclx, Bt. Kitts, Anti- gua, Guaaladupe Dominfela, Martin. 1qe, 8t. Lucila, Barbadoes and Demer- ara. § : , 205 Mar. § THREE WOMEN TESTIFY Sow Yor! ---- To the Merit of Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Com- pound during Change of. Life, Stentor, Th. = 'I shall always praise Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound wherever I 20. "480 much good at #4 Change of Life, and Jit has alsohelped my daughter. It isone of the grandest medicines for wo- men that can be Hf bought. ' I shall try Ito induce others to try it." --Mrs. J. H. 'CAMPBELL, 206 N. Second St, VW, 8., Streator, Illinois. Philadelphia, Pa, -- "It was at the 'Change of Life" that I turned to Lydia Fa. Pinkham' 8 Vegetable Compound, 1sing it as a tonic to build up my sys- lem, with beneficial results."' -- Mrs, 3arA HAYWARD, 1825 W. Venango St., (Tioga) Phila., Pa. San Francisco, Cal.--*T have taken Lydia EB. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- ogund for many years whenever I wottld feel bad, I have gone through the Change of Life without any troubles and thank the Compound for it, I rec- smn end it to young girls nd to women of all ages." --Mrs. C. BARRIE, 3062 th SL, San Francisco, Cal. The success of Lydia E. Pinkham's' Vegetalile Campound, made from roots - herbs, is unparalelled. yon want special ipa E. Pinkham Medicine Co. (confl- dential) Lynn, Mass. Your letter will bo opeued, read and answered by a woriaw aud leld In strict confidence. wh For full information apply to J. P HANLEY, ori C. 8. KIRKPATRICK Ticket Agents, Kingston; QUEBEC STEAMBHIF CO, LTD, Quebec. fentive regard for the comfort and pleasure of each' Passenger "expressed in luxurious weesimodiion "4 iplendit mesly «= modern wifety equipment that bave made the K.0.5.5. Royal Edward and Réyal George deservedly fame nel Aon ocean travalers Jd : GROUND COF. FEE AR 40c. CAN'T BE BEAT Try, order It has done me IH 1 advice write to | Es bor mek Hastations by Hietarh oang {Copyrighu Ra et ¥ sae kl A A | CHAPTER 1 Teh ie free and RI we rl, is taken to the Bolomas mountains y her uncle, Robert Maitland. James Armstrong, Maltland's protege, falls in love with her, CHAPTER I1L-Hilg t wooln thrills the girl, "but & hesitates, ns Armstrong goes east on business with- out a definite answer. CHAPTER III. Enfd heats the story of a mining ont ineer, Newbold, whose Wife fell off a cliff and was so seriously hint that he was compelled to shoot her prevent her being eaten on wolves wh le he went far lieip. CHAPTE 1V, elphia Kirikhy, the old guide who tells tha story, gives Enid a package of letters which he says were found on the dead woman's body. Bhe rgads the tiers and at Kirkby's requ keeps them, --~While Enid is bathing I rin fancied solitude, a big bear appears oh the bank and Is about to plunge fhto the water to attack the girl wi n shi it rings out and the ani- lled by a strange man. ¥ VI.-Enid 1s caught in a torm \ aich wipes out her party's camp. he is dashed upon the rocks and in ured, The strange man who shot the ar finds ler unconscious and carries ber to shelter. : CHAPTER VII-Members of the camp- fog party realizing that Enid ts lost in the storm institute a frantic search for the missing girl CHAPTER VII -No trace of her is found and word is telagriphod ta her father. Jam: Armstro ug is asking the father for Enid's hand when the telegram expreasing the belle! that the rl is dead. Armstrong says he will find er, and Maitland agrees to thelr mare riage if he succeeds. CHAPTER IX.--Enid regains conselous- mess In the hut of the man who had! resc ved her from the 'bear, and he | Eanes. her foot which ha d been severely { } CHAPTER X.--The girl spends a fairly il jcomfortable night, but her host in the next room a restless one as he lives over Boxt that are gone, He has some secret in 'his life, CHAPTER XI. Morning finds Enid re- freshed and remdy for the substantial breakfast the man has prepared for her, I! | { CH APTE R XTIL-Her rescuer goes in search of Enid's p&fhy, but returns at nightfall alone and unsutcessful. In his | absence she discovers bogks which show | him to be a man of education. CHAPTER X411.-Enid finds that she | | { must remaln in the mountains until her | foot is better and the mountain trails assable, or permit her gompanion to fH eave her alone for a week while he goes | In search of help. Bhe decides to have {| him remain with her. "It must be thought 61," urged the man. "You don't understand. It is | either that or spend the winter here { with me." The woman looked at him steadily. Aud what have I to fear from you?" : she asked. "Nothing, nothing, as 'God is my | witness," protested the other; "but the world?" "The world," said the woman reflec tively. "I don't mean to say that it means nothing to me, but it has cause enough for what it would fdin say now." She®ame to her decision swift: ly. "There is no help for it," she continued, word of tropic island and southern sea--""together. You have shown me that you are a man and a gentleman. In God and you I put my trust. When tn walk on snow shoes and it is pos- ble to get through the passes, we will try to get back; if not, we must wait." "The decision 18 yours," sald the man, "and yet I féel that I ought to point out to You how--" "I see all that you see," she inter rupted. "I know what is in your mind. It is entirely clear to me. We can do nothing else." "S80 be it. You rieed have no appre hension as to your material comfort; I have lived in these mountaing for a long time. I am prepared for any emergency, I pass my time in the summer getting ready for the winter. There 18 a cave, or recess rather, be hind the house which, as you see, is LIVERPOOL . VIRGIN Gon Halifax 3t. Johu HESPERIAN 14 Mar. VICTORIA Lh GLAS a TAN 14 Mar. Son #1 M For full 1n- - apply local "And Who Is James Armstrong? built against the rock wall, and it is filled with wood enough to keep us warm fof two or three winters; 1 have an ample supply of provision and clothing for my own needs. You will need something warmer than' that a. wear," be continned. "Harepy needle, diredd aad war -| should be expert needlewomen "we are marooned"--she » smiled faintly as she used the old : my foot gets well, If you dan teach me : "Everything," was the prompt sn: swer. "Then I shall not suffer." "Are you that wonder of wonders," asked the man, smiling lightly, "an educated woman who knows how to sew?" "Itie'a answered gition in Philadelphia," girl, "that her daughters "Oh, you are from Phi ladelphia." "Yes, and you?" She threw the question' at him so deftly and so quickly that she caught him unaware and off his guard a sec- ond time within the hour. "Baltimore," he answered before he thought, and then bit his Hip. He had determined to vouchsafe her no infor: mation regarding himself, and here she i had surprised him into an admission in the first blush of their acquaint ance, and she knew that she had tri umphed for she.smiled in recognition of it. She tried another tack. "Mr. Newbold," she began at a ven- ture, and as it was five years since he bad heard that mame, his surprise at her knowledge, whigh after all was very simple, betrayed him a thied time. "We are like stories | have read, people who have been cast away on desert islands and--" "Yes," said the man, "but no cast- aways that [ have ever read of have been so bountifully provided with ev- erything necessary to the comfort of life as we are. I told you 1 lacked uothing for your material welfare, and even your mind need not stagnate." "I have looked at your books al- ready," said the woman, answering his glance. This was where she had found his name, he realized. "You will have this room for your own use and I will take the other for mine," he continued. "l am loath to dispossess you." "I shall be quite comfortable there, and this shell be your room exclusive ly except when you bid me enter, as when 1 bring you your meals. 1 shall hold 1t inviolate." "But," sald the woman, "'there must be an equal division of labor. 1 must do my share." "There Isn't much to do in the win ter except to take care of the burres keep up the fire and prepare what we have to'cat." "I am afraid I should be unequal tc outdoor work, but in the rest I must do my part." He recognized at once that idlenes: would be irksome. "So you shall," he assented heartily "shen your feot is well enough tc make you an eflicient member of owt little society." "Thank you, and now--" "Is there anything else before I je! supper?" "You think there is no hope of t:2ix searching for me here?" The man shook his head, "If James Armstrong had been {ir thé party," she said reflectively, "I ar sure he weuld never have given up. "And who is James Armstrong, ma; I ask?" burst forth the other bluwtly "Why he~l=he is a friend of m3 uncle and an---acquaintance of m) own." "Oh," sald the man shortly anc gloomily, as he turned away. Enid Maitland had been very brave in his presence, but when he went out she put her head down on her arms on the table and cried softly to her self. Was ever po woman in such & predicament, thrown into the arms oi a man who had established every con ceivable claim upon her gratitude forced to live with him shut up in two-room log cabin upon a lone mountain range, surrounded by' lofty and inaccessible peaks, pierced by ter rific gorges soon to be impassable 'from the snows? She had read many stories of castaways, from Charles Reade's famous "Foul Play" down to more modern instances, but in those cases there had always been an island comparatively large over which to {reign with privacy, seclusion, opportu: nity for withdrawal; bright heavens, balmy breezes, idyllic conditions. | Here were two uplifted from the earth upon a sky-piercing mountdin. They would have had more range of action and mere liberty of motion if they had been upon a derelict in the océan And she realized at the same time hat in all thode stories the two cast ways always loved each other. Would t be so with them? Was it so? Anc gain the het Lame within outvied the re of tie hearth as the blocd rushec ) the smooth zwrface of her chee: * father say Mf be loa, what woulce , &nd shove all what F. It cinnot Be ats wee terr: veowhelmingly dismayed Nervous Energy 15 Limited There is only so much in the human body. A few people have an abundance, but more have no! enough, Hence the necessity of con serving vitality. If wasted by mode of living, dis ease or worry there must be a reck- oning, and trouble is sure to come. it may be headaches and weak, aph- ing eyes; it may be nervous indi- gestion, or it may be merely lack of energy and ambition, and feelings of ue or helplessness. Of course, sooner or later exhaustion of the aerves leads to prostration, paralysis Lor locomotor ataxia, but there is no need to let the trouble develop that far. By usiig Dr. Chase's Nerve Food you can vestore to the feeble, wasi- on nerve cells the energy they have lost. It will take some effort on your part to give up worry and anx- fety, but you should realize your sar- lous condition. Rest and' use this great food cure and on are bound and yet that despair was net without a certain réliel. No man had ever so interested her ak this one. What was the mystery of his life, why was he there, what had he meant when he had blessed the idie impilse that had sent her into his arms? Her hegrt throbbed again. She lift. €d her face from her hands and dried rer tears, a warm glow stole over her and once again not altogether from 'the fire. Who and what was this man? Who was thal womap whose picture he had taken from her? Well, she would have time to find out. And meantime the world outside could think and do what it pleased. She £at staring into the fire light, seeing pictures there, dreaming dreams. She was as lovely as an angel to the man when he came back into the room. CHAPTER XIV. The Woman's Heart. That upper earth on which they lived was covered with a thick blank- et of snow. The lakes and pools were frozen from shore to -shore. The mountain brooks, if they flowed at all, ran under thick arches of ice. The deepest canons were well nigh impas- sible from huge drifts that sometimes almost rose level with the tops of the walls. In every sheltered spot. great banks of white were massed. The spreading branches of the tall pine trees in the valleys drooped under heavy burdens of snow. Only here and there sharp gaunt peaks were swept clean by the flerce winter winds and thrust themselves upward in icy afr, naked and bare. The cold was polar in its bitter intensity. The little shelf or plateau jutting out from the mountain side upon which the lonely cabin stood was shel- tered from the prevailing winds, but the house itself was almost covered with the drifts. The constant fire roaring up the huge stone chimney had melted some of the snow at the top and it had run down the slanting roof and formed huge icicles on what laa been the eaves of the house. The man had cut away the drifts from doors and windows for light and iib- erty. At first every stormy night would fill his laborious clearings with drifting snow, but as it became pack- ed down and frozen solld he was able to keep his various ways open without a great deal of difficulty. A little work every morning and evening suf- ficed. Every day he had to go down the mountain stairway to the bottom of the pocket to feed and water the bur- |i ros. What was a quick and simple task in milder, warmer seasons some- times took him a half a day under the present rigorous conditions. And the woman never saw him start out in the storm without a sinking heart and grave apprehension. On his return to the cabin half frozen, almost spent and exhausted, she ever welcomed him with eager gratitude and satisfaction which would shine in her eyes, throb in her heart and tremble upon her lips, control it as she might. And he thought it was well worth all the trou- ble and hardships of his task to be so greeted when he came back to her, Winter had set in unusually early and with unprecedented severity. Any kind of winter in the mountains would have amazed the girl, but even the man with his larger experience declared he had never before known such sharp and sudden cold, or such deep and lasting snows. His daily records had never shown such low temperatures nor had his observation ever noted such wild and furious storms as raged then and there. It seemed as if Nature were in a con- spiracy to seal up the mountains and all they contained, to make ingress and egress alike impossible. * A month had elapsed and FEnid's foot was now quite well. The man bad managed to sew up her boot where the knife had cut it and al- though the job wag a clumsy one the result was a usable shoe. It is as- tonishing the comfort she took when she first put it on and 'discarded for good the shapeless woolen stocking Which had covered the clumsy band- 'age bappily no longer necessary. Al: though the torn and braised member had healed and she could use it with care, her foot was still very tender and capable of sustaining no violent or long continued strain, Of neces- sity she had been largely confined to the house, but whenever it had been possible he bad wrapped her in his great bear skin coat and had helped her out to the edge of the cliff for & breath of fresh air, Sometimes he would leave her there alone, would perhaps have left her alone there always had she not | imperiously required his company. ¢ Insensibly she had acquired the hab- it--not a difficult one for a woman to fall into--of taking the lead in the small affairs of their circumscribed existence, and he had acquiesced in her dominance without hesitation or remonstrance. It was she who or dered their daily walk and conversa tion. Her wishes were consulted about everything; to be sure no great range of choice was allowed them, of liberty of action or freedom in the constraints with which nature bound them, but whenever there was any selection she made it. (To be continued.) Patient Tommy "Tommy," said a young lady visit- or at his home, "why not come to our Sabbath school? Several of your Fttle friends have joined us lately." Tommy hesitated a moment. Then suddenly exclaimed: "Does a red- headed kid by the name of Jimmy Brown go to your school?" 'Yes, indeed," replied the teacher. Well, thén," said Tommy, with an air of interest, "I'll be there next Sunday, you bet. I've been lyin' for that kid for three weeks, and to poe 4 hasty ang vigor, never knew where to find him," Chocolate ae For Cooking M0 Teinking: Sse far Cok. Jing md kis Vote "Finest Motoreycle in the World. Treadgold Cycle and Sporting Goods Co. EE ass RRA ods PUT YOUR ORDER IN NOW: A -------- iin RRR NOTICE Anyone wishing 5 exchange Shoes, bought at our Red Letter Sale, must do so before March 1st We cannot exchange Sale Shoes after inventory is taken. J. H. SUTHERLAND & BRO. THE HOME OF GOOD SHOES JAN KUBELIK WIZARD OF THE VIOLIN The eminent Bohemian Violinist who has used the NEW SCALE WILLIAMS PIANC during his Ig#t two Canadian concert tours, writds as follows: Seal s Williams Piano Co. Gentlemer 1 very much Willi me to my machanism were areal pleasure, Nov., 12, 13. f te the splendid New Haye iYiano se kindly sent hotel its tone mod simple The piano used at my concert was entirely satisfactory and blended peste ctly with the violin. With best wishes T ami, Yours sincerely. ' J : New Seale Williams Piano Ageney: 35-37 MONTREAL ST. KINGSTON, Makers, The Williams Piano Company Limited, We sell direct from factory where sot SE ARSARSataitatsanartiag sae tf 14 8S aE EES RE