Daily British Whig (1850), 4 Mar 1914, p. 12

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| Batukitier. Has Now Cle to Canada Sufferers : . Tome bago, Sciatica, raigia, Headaches, Nenritis and kinfired agonizing all- ments may now Mad speedy, welcogme rellef and certalry cure. At last the victfims of these tortur ing complaints--~men and waynen whose lives are Jong-drawn-out/ ag- ony--may look with hope--gonfi- dence--certainty~-to pain's most Nad departure. In Kephaldol | is now offered to Cinadians, for tine first time, 4 rem- ealy which not only has med! sal en- do rsement for its efficacy, but, is also to ba a perfectly safe contaiming nothi ag to i- jure the heert or amy oth er bodily organ. For colds, influenza, catarrh and similar complaints, Kepbaldol is un- 'dequalled. A tablet or two taken a: § | & - olonist Rates PACIFIC COAST § JY, March 15th to April 15th, In- 50. 39 R Aussi ti | 1 9249 "And to other Ed in Riritish Co- smbia, Alberta and Westi'tn States in proportion. SEF KER' EXCURSIONS 1914--Round trip tickets" to Wes- : Canada, via Chicago and Rarth Bay, on gale March 3rd awl ever other ay thergafter until Oc- tober 27th, ativery low fares. Tick- ia Sood to for two months. ur fun. yasuctiars spely J Rallroad 'and Steamship Agent Cor. Johnson and Ontarlo Ste. iver, 2 C, Wash. d, Ore. Francisco, Calif. "A FTO » ih VEE SEERaRS XC RSION 5 MANITOBA, A BERTA SASKATCHEW. ach Tuewday March CHEWAN 27, Inclusive | and Return Return - pn and urn Limit two months. "REDUCED SETTLERS' FARES ONE-WAY SECOND CLASS) SDAY, MARCH AND APRIL . i ote SETTLERS live stock and ects sho §' SPECIAL RAIN leaves West pr Toro each during MARCH aud APRIL 1 0.20 p.m. train from ot particulars from I. CONWAY 3 fice, cor. Princess and Phone 1187; R, H. Depot, Ontario St, STRAMSHIP ASEnoY 0, 8. KIRKPATRI Clarence A " Piym hia, OT Hi up. i ©0., Limited, St. E., Toroate. bc] CTORIA LUI LUISE" the first indication of 'trouble will unfailingly check its ' development, and restore health. Get a tube of Kaophaldol tablets from your druggist, or write Yor thet to Kephaldol Idmited, 31 La- '| tour Street, Montreal. Watch the feet that now trip lightly. All of + them had corns. But the owners learned of Blue-jay. They applied it in a minute. There was no more pain. The coin was forgotten, And in two days the corn came out. Soon or late you will treat your corns in that'way. You will 'stop the paring, stop the old-time treat- ments. ou will deal with corns in a scientific way. You will take them out, with yo soreness, no pain, no inconvenience, Nearly half' the corns in the country are now ended by Blue«jay-- ° a million corns a month, Why wait? Other ways, as you well know, don't really end a corn. Why don't yout try this easy, painless, ' miost effective avay ? Why don't you try it now? ~ Blue-jay For Corns | 15'and 25 centd--at Druggists Bauer & Black, Chicago and New York Makers of Physicians' Supplies Easiest Shoe Made of extra fine Vici Kid with heavy urn or welt sole, on special, well fitting lasts manufactured by Utz & Pum Co., Rochester, N. ol a The Sawyer Shoe Store {Coprrighy, 1911, by W. 6. Chapman.) After a long and painful effort the woman had completed the winter suit slie bad made for herself. He had ad- vised her and had helped her. It was a belted tunic that fell to her knees; the ved and black stripes ran around it, edged the broad collar, cuffed the warm sleeves and marked the grace- Dil waist line. It was excessively be- coming to her. He had been down in- to the valley, or the pocket, for a final inspection of the burros before the Right, which promised to be severe, fell, and she had taken advantage of the opportunity to put it on. She knew that she was beautiful; her determination to make this even- ing count had brought an unusual color to her cheeks, an unwonted sparkle {o her eye. She stood up as she heard him enter the other room, shq was standing erect as he came through the door and faced her. He $ad only seen her in the now some what shabby blue of her ordinary camp dress bgfore, and her beauty fairly smote him in his face. He stood before her, wrapped in his fur it, entranced. The woman smiled at the effect she produced. "Take off your coat," she said gent- ly approaching him. "Here, let me help you. Do you realize that I have been here over a month now? I want to have a little talk with you, I want You to tell me something. { CHAPTER XVI ¢ The Kiss on the Hand. i "Did it ever occur to you," began 'Enid Maitland gravely enough, for she quite realized the serious nature of the impending conversation, "did it ever occur to you that you know prac- tically all about me, while I know. practically nothing about you?" The man bowed his head. "You may have fancied that I was not aware of it, but in one way or another you have possessed yourself of pretty all of my short and, until I met you, most uneventful life," she continued. Newbold might have answered that there was one subject which had been casually #atroduced by her upon one occasion and to which she had never again referred, but which was to him the most important of all subjects con- nected with her; and that was the na- ture of her relationship to one James Armstrong whose name, although he had heard it but once, he had not forgotten. The girl had been frank- ness itself in following his deft leads when he talked with her about her- self, but she had shown the same re- ticence in recurring to Armstrong that he had displayed in questioning her about him. The statement she had just made as to his acquaintance with her history was therefore suffi- ciently near the truth to pass un- challenged, and once again he gravely bowed in acquiescence. "I have withheld nothing from you," went on the girl, "whatever you want- ed to know, I have told you. I had nothing to conceal, as you have found out. Why you wanted to know about me, I am not quite sure." "It was because--" burst out the man impetuously, and then he stopped abruptly and just in time. Bold Maitland smiled at him fn a way that indicated she knew what Was behind the sudden check he had imposed upon himself. "Whatever your reason, your curi- osity-- "Don't call it that, please." "Your desire then has been grat- ifled. Now it is my turn. I am not even sure about your mame. I have seen it in these books and naturally I have imagined that it is yours." "It 1s mine." "Well, that is really all that I know about you. - And now I shall be quite frank. I want to know more. You evidently have something to conceal or you would not be living here in this way. I have never asked you about yourself, or manifested the least curiosity to solve the problem you present, to find the solution of the mystary of your life." "Perhaps," said the man, "you didn't care enough about it to take "that is not true. I have been con- sumed with desire to know." "A woman's curiosity?" "Not "that," was the soft answer that turned away his wrath. said the girl, exanding ber hand to Hy "we are alone here to- Tr. We must help each other. You have helped me, you have been great coat, snow and ice clinging to] a FALLING ASHES ano: He Stood--Entranced. gentle tones did not at ali' accord with the boldness and courage of the speech. "You mean?" asked the man, star. ing at her, his face aflame. "I mean," answered the girl swift. ly, wilfully misinterpreting and turn- ing his half spoken question another way, "I mean that 1 am = sure - that trouble has: brought you here. I do not wish to force your confidence, I have no right to do so, yet I should like to enjoy it; can't you give it to me? I want to help you, I want to do my. best to make some return for what you have been to me and have done for me." "I ask but one thing," he said quick- ly. "And whgt is that?" But again he checked himself. No," he said, "I am not free to ask anything of you." And that answer .to Enid Maitland was like a knife thrust in the heart, The two had been standing confront ing each other Her - heart grew faint within her. She stretched out her hand vaguely as if for support He stepped toward her, but before he reached her, she caught the back of the chair and sank down weakly. That he should be hound and not free had never once occurred to her; she had quite misinterpreted the meaning of his remark. The man did not help her, he could not help her. He just stood and looked at her. She fought valiantly for self-control a monient or two and then, utterly oblivious tothe betrayal of her feelings involved in the ques- tion--the moments were too great for consideration of such trivial matters ~she falterad "You mean there is some other wo- man?" He shook his head in negation. "I don't understand. There was some other woman?" "Yes" "Where is she now?" "Dead." "Buf you said xou were not free." It All Depends on the Liver So important is the liver and so so great is its influence on the other vital organs of the body that it may] be said you have little to fear from | the ordinary ills of life so long as the Tye is in healthful working or- er. digestive processes are so dependent on free ation of the liver that any ment of this organ soon hrings trouble, i Blliousness and gonstipation fol- ow, with "and spirits. Additional work is thrown on the kidneys, and soon the whoie eliminating system is deranged and the blood carries through body. Careful a help towards keeping the. liver t, but when it does get wrong is no- thing like Dr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills to restore the Yver to healthful action. ° HOW JAPANESE NURSES F ROTECTED THEIR FACES FROM THE ROM group of Japanese nurses belonging who are helping to take care of the many s seen with their faces muffled against the NT I------ SAKURAJIM. to the Red Cross. Seciety ufferers in the disaster, are falling ashes from the vol- He nodaed. "Did you care so much for her that now--that ar "Enid," he cried desperately. lieve I never knew what was until I met you." The secret was out mow; it. had been known to Her long since, but ngw it we publicly proclaimed. Even a man as blind, as obsessed, as he could not mistake the joy that il- luminated her face at this announce- ment. That very joy and satisfaction produced. upon him, however, a very different efiect than might have been nov "Be- me, love s anticipated. Had he been free, . in- deed, he would have swept her to his breast and covered her sweet face with kisses broken by whispered words of passionate endearment. In- stead of that he shrank back from her and it was she who was forced to take up the burden of the conversa- tion. "You say that she is dead." she be- 'and that you care so much for me and yet you--" "l am"a murderer," harshly. "There is blood upon my hands, the blood of a woman who loved me: and whom, boy as 1 was, I thought that I loved. She was my wife, 1 killed her." "Great God," cried the girl amazed heyond measure or expectation by this sudden avowal which she had once suspected, and her hand. instinet- ively: went to the bosom of her dress where she kept that sofled,: water stained packet of letters, "are you that man?" { "I am the man that did. that thing, but what do you know?" he asked quickly, amazed in his turn. "OW Kirkby, my uncle Robert Mait- land, told me your story; 'they said that you had disappeared from the haunts of men--" "And they were right. was there for me to do? nocent of erime, [ was mad he broke out What else Although in- I was blood guilty. No punishment could be visited upon me like that imposed by he stern, awful, appalling faet. I swore to prison myself, to have noth. ver to do with mankind d with whom 1 was un- worthy ic ciate, to live alone until God took me. To cherish 'my make such expiation as I could, to pray daily for forgiveness, [ came bere to the wildest, the most maccessible, the loneliest, spot in the range. No one ever would come here I fancied, no 'one ever did come but you. I was happy after a fashion, or at least content, I had chosen the better 3 1 had work, 1 could read, write, remember and dream. But you came and since. that time life has been heaven and hell. Heaven be- cause I love you, hell because to love you means disloyalty to the past, to a woman who loved me. Heaven be. cause.you are here; [ can hear your voice, I can see you, your soul is spread out before me in its sweetness, in its purity; hell because I am false to my determination, to my vow, to the love of the past." "And did you love her so much, then?" asked the girl, now fiercely jealous and forgetful of other things for the moment. seein (To be Continued) ing m or 'wom u £0 ABC InMmorie TRAGEDY ON ON OCEAN LINER Woman Found _ Sho Shot Outside Bx. Minister's. Cabin Nantds, France, March {The La Navarre, from Havana to this port, was marked by an. incident which may prove a tragedy.. Mme. Marie Caufleu, a friend of Rodoifo Reyes, former minister of justice in the cabinet of President Huerta by shooting. All on board. vessel were aroused by the De the shots, and the woman was found 'outside a Reyes® cabin with oe bullets in he breast. = A quarrel between the cause for her act. When the steamer arrived the con- nounced very grave. members of the chamber of gan in sweet appealing bewilderment, | | | | | Yoyage ol the" French line steamer of Mexico, attempted to commit suicide dition of Mme. Caufleu was pro- Rodolfo Reyes was among the the {and the woman is said to have' been = nga First 1 Yorog Bonds PARTICULARS ON REQUEST Cawthra a Mulock & Co. Finest Motorcycle in the World. Treadgold Cycle - and Sporting Goods (Co. ra mm. v-- mR 4 r SPECIAL ATTENTION... We are now taking stock and have a large quan- tity of Men's Suits, Boys' Suits, Men's Pants, which we will sell for 25 per cent. off for cash. Also a : assortment of Ladies' Skirts, which we will sell at same discount. Men's, Boys' and Ladies' Boots and Rubbers. These will also be sold at 25 per cent. discount. Call in and take advantage of this January Sale, JOS. B. ABRAMSON'S 257 Princess St. Phone 1437 F.o.h,, Toronto. Hudson Six Hudson Six Rides Like Constant Coasting Get That New Car E YOU have a car that you have said you will keep until prices come down, or until you can get a better allowance for your old car, consider these facts: Values now are greater than ever, as you will realize when you examine the Hudson Six 54. You never will get a better allowance for than you can get now, because no greater a be made by than can be. ve on 5500. 4 a ae ot! ! Jot used car lowance will anyone with whom you can afford te deal, gt for that car. you 3800 for your used car when another will whink that tthe une can get $300 more for that used It mere! 4 thas he adds $300 cost 10 the new car. at 'the car ha he i cling you was priced high ih order that he Jape he take care of jxs1 suck a transaction. " ' Sd, you see==you pay for what you think is your bargain, Mtisuotneel A Car Not Built for Trades "THE HUDSON Six 54 ja ot. built for wades. It ie priced ata Dealor sve are Fives Stnotdinar fits to be used in cur io the bare is 6d to tink Feeia barges i cop arate, fa Joalitys ins in Bi Aeuing a Hideo ot Sia 54 can be OO ianr vou pay 3000 & 84 pring its price. would. not many, it he if we followed deer eo ls 't ans BL Shan h Appear attractive to the man *ho -- he Streamline Hudson Sis Sam this most beautiful car true, streamline ok + ever designed. ; amine. 114 tru, aml body, Learn the advantage of the siz<y! the car at speed, over of roids, with the ns ng ar of rain. Na With the secretion of bile by the liver, constipation © bill are cured, and the cretory systems are Is wonderful t he a few doses of Dr. Liver Pills service to me. 1 can't arrested by President Huerta's ord- ers October "11 last, charged . with being' conspirators. He was Teloasy by led from the penitentiary February. 3, - and sailed for Havana. R No see this car. compare it with what you Bet whes exceanive allowances ave for your used can. W. P. PETERS, 117 Brock and Bagot Sts. 2 i FEA sob: Que Ste ue Kington Auto, Go's express tral wanted equipments lacking. Come, see this ar. The comonse

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