25¢. a box at your Druggist's. et Bod Emp 'your child is under weight, list- , liable to get sick easily, . & medicine to build its A strength. For this pur- is nothing else we know that we ean so strongly endorse I: Olive Oil Emulsion. The i able success of this splendid n ine is due to the fact that it Contains ingredients that tome the sierves, enrich the blood and furnish 'to the entire system! the strength, weight and health-building substances gab heeds. And it does all this with- : injuring the stomach. In fact, Rexall Olive Oil Emulsion is not only pleasant to take, but even the most Bestitive Stomach is benefited by it, igestion improved. On the other hand, it contains no alcohol or habit-forming drugs which most 'parents object to giving their 'child- ten. It does its good work by tak- ing hold of the weakmess and builds body up to its natural strength, at the same time making it strong to resist disease. + 1f Rexall Olive Oil Emulsion does- n't build your child up, feed the stunted, puny muscles, and make the little one lively, strong, well, and fall of the animal spirits children are meant by nature to have; come back and tell us and get your money back Wa dan't want you to lose a cent. We think this is no more than fair, and it leaves you no cause to hesi tate. Yor old people also--for con- valescents--for all who are nervous, $ired-out, rundown, no matter what the cause--we offer Rexall Olive Lil Emulsion with the sane yuarantee of 'entire satisfaction or money, back. old only at the 7,000 Rexall Stores and in this town only by us. 81 Mabood's Drug Store, Kingston, Ont. ade ForLadies, Boss, war," "Aa the Sparks Desiations by Elewerth Toung pA ARR "She told you? Why, she's been dead in her grave five years, shot to death by that murderous dog of a hus. band of hers." "A word with you, Mr. Armstrong," said the woman with great spirit. "You can't talk that way about Mr. Newbold; he saved my life twice over, from a bear and then in the cloudburst which caught me in the canon." "That evens up a Mitle," sald Arm- strong. "Perhaps for your sake I will spare him." "You!" laughed-the woman con- temptuously. "Spare him? Be advised, look to yourself, if he ever finds out what I know, I don't believe any power on earth could save you," . "Oh," sald Armstrong carelessly enough, although he was consumed with hate and jezlousy and raging against her clearly evident disdain. "I can take care of myself, I guess. Anyway I only want to talk about you, not about him or her. Your fath- er--" : "Is he well?" "Well enough, but heart-broken, crushed. I happened to be in hie house in Philadelphia when the telegram came from your uncle that you were lost and probably dead. 1 had just asked him for your hand," he added, smiling grimly at the recollection. "You had no right to do that." "I know that." "It was not, it is not, his to give." "Still when I won you I thought it would be pleasant all around if he knew and approved." "And did he?" "Not then, he literally drove me out of the house, but afterwards he said if I could find you I could have you: and, by Heaven, I have found you and I will have you whether you like it or not." "Never," cried the woman decisive 1y. The situation had - got on Arm- strong's nerves, and he must perforce show himself in his true colors. His only resources were his strength, not of mind but of body. He made anoth- er most damaging mistake at this juncture. "We are alone here, and T am mas ter, remember," he said meaningly. "Come, let's make up. Give me a kiss for my pains and--" "I have been alone here for a month with another man," answered Epid Maitland who was strangely unairaié in spite of this threat. "A gentleman he has never so much as offered tc touch my hand without my permis sion; the contrast is quite to your dis advantage." "Are you jealous of Louise Rosser? asked Armstrong suddenly seeing tha: he was losing ground and casting about desperately to 'account for i and to recover what was escaping him "Why, that was nothing, a mere bo: and girl affair," he ran on with a spe cious good humor as if it were all : ®rifle. "The woman was, 1 hate say it, just crazy in love with me, bus I really never cared anything espe cially for ®er; it was just a harmless sort of flirtation anyway. She after ward married this man Newbold 'and that's all there was about it," The truth would not serve him and in his desperation and desire he stak ed everything on this astounding lie The woman he loved looked at him with her face as rigid as a mask. "You won't hold that against me. will you?" pleaded the man. "I told you that I'd been a man among men, Yes, among wamen, too, here in this rough country, and that I wasn'l worthy of you; there are lots of things in my past that I ought to be ashamed of and I am, and the more 1 see you the more ashamed I grow. but as for loving any one else, all that I've ever thought or felt or experienced before now Is just nothing." ' And this indeed was true, and even Enid Maitland with all her prejudice could realizé and understand it. Out of the same mouth, was said of old. proceeded blessing and cursing, and from these same lips came truth and falsehood; but the power of the truth 'to influence this woman was as noth- ing to the power of falsehood. She could never have loved him, she now knew; a better man had won her af- fections, a nobler being claimed her heart; but if he had told the truth re. garding his relationship to Newbold's wife and then had completed it with his passionate avowal of his present | love for her, she would have at least admired him and respected him. "You have not told me the truth she answered directly; "you have de liberately been false." : "Can't you see," prolested the man drawing nearer to her, "how much 1 love you?" "Oh, that; yes I suppose that is true; as far as you can love any one I will admit that you do love me." "So far as I can love any one?" he! repeated after her. "Give me a chance and I'll show you." LY er Vessal; it isnt menlike, it jsn't-- | Armstrong was a bold fighter, quick and prompt in his decisions. He mad. another effort to set hip self right, He staked his all on another throw of the dice, which he began to feel were sotnehow loaded against him. "You are right," he admitted. won: dering anxiously how much the woman really knew. I'm 50° mad with love for you that I scarcely know what | am doing, but 1 will make a clean breast of it now. I loved Louise Rosser after a fashion before ever Newbold came on the scene, We were pledged to each oth- er; a foolish quarrel arose, she was jealous of other girls-- "And had she no-right to be?" "Oh, T suppose so. We broke if off anyway and then she married New- bold, out of pique I suppose, or what you will. I thought I was heart-brok- en at the time, it did hit me pretty hard; it was five or six years ago; | was a youngster then, I am a man now. The woman has been dead long since; there was some cock-and-bull "It wasn't true, it was a cowards act, I am ashamed of it: Diapepsin," Digests grains food, ending all stom- ach misery in minutes. Time it! Pape"s Diapepsin will di- gest anything you eat and overcome 4 Sour, gassy or out-of-order stomach surely within five minutes. If your meals don't fit comfortably or what you eat lies like a lump, of lead in your stomach, or if vou have houtivurn, that is a sign of indiges- ion, Get from your pharmacist a fifty. cent case of Pape's Diapepsin and a dose just as soon as you can. Thers will be no sour risings, no belching of undigested food mixed with acid, mo stomach gas or heartburn,; fullness or heavy feeling in the stomach, nau- sea, debilitating headaches, dizziness or intestinal griping. This will all go and, besides, ere will be no sour food left. over in the stomach to poi- story about her falling off a e¢liff and her husband being compelled to shoot her. I didn't believe it at the time,! and naturally 1 have been 'waiting to get even with him. son your breath with nauseous od- ors. Pupe's Diapepsin is a certain cure for out-of-order stomachs, because . it | takes hold of your food and digests it I have been hat-|just the sume, as if your stomach ing him for five years. but he has wasn't there. been good to you and we will let by- | : : an What do I care 80h misery is waiting for you at any gones be, bygones. for Louise Rosser. or for him, or for what he did to her, now! IT am sorry that 1 sald what I did, but you will have to charge it to my blinding pas- sion for you. I can truthfully say that you are one woman that I have ever craved with all my heart. 1 will do anything, be anything, to win you." It was very brilliantly done; he had not told 'a single untruth; he had ad- mitted much, but he had withheld the essentials after all. He was play- ing against desperate oddsghe had no knowledge of how much she knew, or where she had learned anything. Ev- ery one about the mining camp where she had lived had known of his love for Louise Rosser, but he had not sup- posed there was a single human soul who had been privy to its later devel: opments, and he could not figure out any way by which Enid Maitland could have learned by any possibility any more of the story than he had told her. He had calculated swiftly and with the utmost nicety, just how much he 'should confess. He was a keen witied clever man and he was fighting for what he held most dear, but his eagerness and zeal, as they have oft- en done, overrode his judgment, and he made another mistake at this junec- ture. His evil genius was at his el- bow. "You must remember," he continued, "that you have been alone here in these mountains with a man for over a month; the world-- "What, what do you mean?" ex- claimed the girl, who indeed knew very well what he meant, but who would not admit the possibility. "It's not every man," he added, blindly rushing to his doom, "that would care for you or want you--aft- or that" He received a sudden and terrible enlightenment. "You coward," she cried, with up- raised hand, whether in protest or to strike him neither ever knew, for at that moment the door opened the sec- ond time that mgroing to admit an- other man. ( CHAPTER XXII The Last Resort of Kings and Men. The sudden entrant upon a quarrel between others is invariably at a dis- advantage. Usually he is unaware of the cause of difference and general- ly he has no idea of the stage of de- velopment of the affair that has been reached. Newbold suffered from this lack of knowledge and to these dis- advantages were added others. For instance, he had not the faintest idea as to who or what was the stranger. The room was not very light in the day time. Armstrong happened to be standing with his back to it at some distance from the window by the side of which Enid stodd. Six years nat- urally and inevitably makes some dif- ference in a man's appearance, and if is not to be wondered that at first Newbold did not recognize the man be. fore him as the original of the face in his wife's locket, although he had stud. "But you haven't told the trath| USE "TZ" IF FEET ACHE, BURN, PUFF UP "Ah! Nothing like 'TIZ for sore, tired, sweaty, calloused feet and corns--It's grand!" Relief in five minufes from all stom- drug store. Those large fifty-cent cases sontain enough "Pape's Di in" to keep the entire i op. from stomach disorders and indigestion for many mcnths: It belongs in your home. 6 (Nal lace over and over again. A carer rernting, a Janger study, would wave enlightened lim of course, but or the present he saw nothing but a stranger visibly pertutbed on one side and tbe woman he loved apparently fiercely resentful, stormily indignant, rorfronting the other with an up- raised hand: The 1 fronted 1 ioever he was, had af- vw} aroused her indigna- tion, perbaps had insulted her, that was pl Ho went swiftly to her side nterposed himself between Ber 2nd the man, (To be Continued.) THE SPORT | REVIEW CABBAGES AND POTATOES HURL- ED BY SPECTATORS re At the Sydenham<Cataraqui Hockey Game for the Edwards Trophy-- Other News About Hockey Despite the high cost of living, rofatoes and cabbage. went to waste at the final hockey game for the J. W. Edwards' challenge trophy for the county-championship at the cov- ered rink on Thursday afternoon. Although -Cataraqui won ' the game by a score of 5 to 4, the Sydenham seniors are winners of the Edwards' trophy by a score of 11 to 6 on the round. Sydenham defeated Cata- raqui in the first of the home and home games at Sydenham last week by a score of Tto 1. The game was one that will re- main long in the minds of all those who witnessed the exhibition. While the players were busy on the ice, a number of spectators amused them- selves by throwing potatoes and cab- boges at others viewing the game. On one occasion a whole cabbage was Iurled at one of the players. The referee stopped the game to remove the large vegetable. : The screams. of a number of fé- male supporters of the teams could be heard a block away. The game was a fairly good exhibi- tion of hockey, considering that the teams were not used to playing on a large rink. The Cataraqui boys ap- peared to have the better of the game from the start. Their combi. nation work was superior to that of the Sydenham outfit. Had the play- ers on the Sydenham team bored in on the nets a little oftener, they might have scoréd more -goals. At half time the score was stand- ing 2 to 1 in favor of Cataraqui. Mec- Conville and "Pudge" Barry did the scoring for Cataraqui, while Dier made the "hunk" for Sydenham. The score made by Barry redulted from a rebound off the back of the nets. Dier scored his goal on a pass from Smith, the wing man. When the second half opened both teams strove hard to win, but the luck appeared to be with Cataraqui. At one time it looked as though Cat- araqui would be able to pull down the score of the. first game of the round as it made the tally 4 to 1. 'With fifteen minutes left to play, Sydenham got going and shoved the puck into the nets three times. The scoring in the last period was done by "Jack" Riley, Cooke and Kaiser for Cataraqui, and Dier and Verrett for Sydenhem. Cooke scored on a pass fsgm Kaiser, directly in front of the nets. Dier scored two of the goals. The first he scored on a pass . [from Blakslie. happy-footed just like me. Use "TIZ" and never suffer with tender, raw, burning. blistered swollen, tired, smelly feet. "TTZ"" and only "TIZ" takes the pain and soreness out of corns, callouses and bunions. AS S00n. as you put your feet in a "TI2" bath, you just feel the hap- piness soaking In. about Ass. Newbold. You bave calum- The Sydenham outfit was without the services of Dr. Sargent, who was unable to come, to the city. Horne, who is the regular goal-tender, todk his place on the defence, while Chis- holm replaced Horne in goal. This vas the first game that Horne had played in two years. Kaiser was by far the West man on the ice. His back-checking was real good. Dier, as rover for the Sydenham boys, put up a fine game. The teams lined up as follows: -- ; Sydenham--Goal, Chisholm; de- fence, Verrett. and. Horne;. rover, Dier; centre, Blakslie; wings, Lacey and Smith. Cataraqui--Goal, Simpson; de- fence, Cooke and McConville: rover, Kaiser; centre, Barry; wings, A. Riley aud J. Riley. Referee---Edward Blakey. Stanley Cup Games Torontos, champions of the Nation- take {Ontario Hockey assqeiation. roto since last Saturday and is in the best of condition. : : | , but as the Torontos were electéd the lot will take place on the arema's artificial ice. The dates are Saturday, March 14; Tues- day, March 17; Thursday, March 19; the late dete conditional on a Afth game being necessary. "Ottawa to Encourage Juniors The Ottawas have decided to en- courag? junior hockey with a view to keeping their club well stocked with material, and will finance a city league in the capital next year, If possible it will afliliate with the The In- terprovincial has fallen in at Ottawa, and a new league is needed to en- courage the amateurs. There is talk of a semi-professional league, but it would hardly be a success. ~ Seen Allan Cup Games Regina beat Edmonton 5 to 2 and will meet Mcnarchs of Winnipeg for the Allan cup. Regina represented the Saskatchewan association and Edmonton the Alberta league. ------ No Such Statement Ever Made Toronto Globe. The officials of the Kingston Fron- tenac O.H.A. junior team desire to state that they have no connection whatever with the report emanating rom Kingston that Frontenacs claim the O.H.A. junior honors because of the refusal of Orillia to play them an exhibition game. Collegiate Hockeyists Seven of the eight boys who have figured on the Kingston Collegiate hockey team this season were borh and educajed in Kingston. Allan Singleton, "the strong defence man, game from Smith's Falls about fif- teen months ago. "Jimmie'* Stewart, "Charlie" Stew- art and "Harry" Cooke have played together for the past = eight years. They started their hockey career by playing on some of the junior cily league hockey teams. Four years ago, "Jimmie Stewart and "Harry" Cooke were selected as members of the junior intercollegiate team. "Charlie" Stewart joined the team as a regular player -the following year. These three players will grad- vate from the institute next fall. 'Bob' Ferguson, aged sixteen, the youngest member of the outfit, made his debut into intercollegiate hockey this winter. Last winter he played on the second team. This is his sec- ond year at the collegiate institute. Singleton, who is nineteen years of age, has been playing on the team for the past two seasons. He joined it last winter when Brownfield was put out of the game as a result of a bad injury to his knee. Hugh and "Cam" Toland, the two wing men, have played a splendid game all season. Hugh Toland has been playing junior intercollegiate ana O.H.A. hockey for two seasons "Cam," the younger of the two, jumped into intercollegiate hockey this winter. Hugh Toland is in the fifth form; while his younger brother is in the fourth. Clarence Young, who has played spare man for the team, has the "ear marks" of a coming player. He is also in his final year at the K.C.IL Out of the eight players seven of the boys were members of the King- ston coilegiate rugby team which won the junior intercollegiate rugby union last fall. TRIPLE ALLIANCE RUMOR dignificant Meeting of King Em- manuel and Kaiser Venice, Italy, March 13.--King Victor Emmanuel and Emperor Wil- liam will mect here March 24, when the emperor passes through Venice on his way to his villa on the island of Corfu. If Empress Augusta Vie- toria accompanies Emperor William on the trip Queen Helena will come to Venice to greet her. Importance is being attached to the meeting of the two sovereigns in view of the activity of the Triple Al- liance in the Balkan states, especial- ly Adbania, and the belief that fur- ther concerted influence will be ex- ergised by the Triple Alliance both in Balkans and the Mediterran- ean. a» u C When Col. Roos t was a boy one of his favorite stories\in the old mag- azine for children, Our Young Folks, was "Afloat in the Forest; or A Voy- age Among the Tree-Tops," by Mayne Reid. This was probably the begin- ning of his desire to penetrate the wil- derness of South America, the reman. tic journey upon which he is now én- gaged, the narrative of which begins in the April Seribuer, What is called a legitimate business results. ' Kephaldol COMES TO CANADA Originated by Dr. Stohr, a famous physician of Vienna, Austria, Kephal. dol is known and used throughout Europe and Great Britain. ) Now, backed by the endorsements of hundreds of physicians, and hos pitals, it comes to Canada to relieve pain and cure tism, Sciatica, Lumbago, Neuralgia, Neuritis, Head: ache, La Grippe, Fevers and similar troubles. has received the high: est commendation frovh the medioal profession because of its direct siren. gthening action on the nerves, with. out injury to the heart, and its lasting regulative and curative effect upon the whole system. Unlike other pain-killing remedies, Kephaldol is absolutely harmless. It causes no intestinal irritation, and "Rephaidd pais: wral Canadians the untold bless ings which it has already conferred in the Old Country--joy of perfect life again to those who, perhaps for through a may be the forerunner of illegitimate | The finest "first aid" is Zao-Buk for many feasons. It is antiseptic any wound, or skin fojury, oe disease poisofgermsin air which are al- ways ready to enter a sore lace and set up ac " § veh e. Immed- : Buk they are instantly Killed. | nM, Halliday. of Wrosster, Ont: mysic While etal ingredientsin | vriol fe, ted 1b for oul Tad ga are thus protecting case. I would not the ti healin al dangers a tic g essen- ces in the balm penetrate the tissue stimulate the cells, and about ect healing. Refioe rr Watch % wort . 8, : ind yoy weree ik It the eczema nd for all skin injuries and , 500, druggists and stores Co., Toreato, PS eke. Canada Bread Co. - 6% First Mortgage Bonds G¥3ITkei% | PARTICULARS ON REQUEST Cawthra Mulock & Co. 22 King Street East - - . Toronto J | 133 I Isn't this the Salt you have always wanted ~--a Salt that stays dry and free running, all the year round--and especially in damp, rainy weather? "Regal" Salt is the finest grain of Windsor Salt prepared by a new process under perfectly hygienic methods making a pure and perfect free running Table Salt. 126 Fe Great Saving In 3 Women's Shoes AN tr a rn) In order to clear pur shelves hefore the spring shoes arrive, we have decided to put a price on the following lines, They are our regular stock and the prices mean a big saving-to you. Women's Tan Queen Quality and E. P. Reid, $5.50 and $6.00 shtes a Women's $4.50 and $5.00 Shoes, black and tan, lace AEDUOD ..... ....oviiiieiivaninils $825 A Bargain for Men With ~~ Small Feet If you can wear sizes 4, 4 1-2 or 5, you can have J your choice of a large assortment of black and tan shoes in button or lace. : 'Stamped Price $5:00. Now $3.00 seve un hv