Daily British Whig (1850), 17 Mar 1914, p. 11

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Angeles, Callf, "Diego, Calit, And to other points in British lam ' Alberta and Western States at rates in proportion. ; HOMESERKERS' EXCURSIONS A914----Round trip tickets to Wes- térn Capada, via Chicago and North Bay, on sale March 3rd and every other Tuesday thereafter until Oc- 'tober 27th, at very low fares, Tick- ots good for two months, ¥or tull particulars apply te J. P. HANLEY Rafiroad and Steamship Agent Cor. Johnson snd Ontario Sts CANADIAN PACT COLONIST FARES (ONEWAY SECOND CLASS) From stations In Ontario to!cer- tad i ; Arizona Idaho, ete, Dally Until April 15 REDUCED SETTLERS FARES (ONE-WAY SECOND CLASS) EACH TUESDAY, MARCH AND APRIL Through trains Toronto to Winnipeg and West, COLONIST CARS ON ALL TRAINS. No charge for Berths. Full particulars from PF, CONWAY, City Ticket Office, Cor. Princess and Wellington §ts. Phone 1197. IR A A TE SN A RA allot te OCEAN STRAMSHIF AGENCY 0, 8. KIBKPATRICK 48 Clarence St Phone SO April 4 A Apr. 11 Plymouth Jost: Ly 46.25 up boun: 80.26 up Steamers will nd Rates--Cabin class British eas estbound $30 up. $8 BERMUDA £8, "BEMUDIAN," (twin screw, 10.51% tons disp'acement, sails from New York 20 & m.; . 25 March, 1, 8, 15 22, 29 April, Submarine signals wireless; or- chestra, Record trip 89 hours, 20 min. sien. Fastest, nowest, and only steam« er landing passengers at the dock in Bermuda without transfer. West Indies--New 8.8, "GUIANA" and, other steamers from New York at pm, 27 Maroh, 10, 24 April, for t. Thomas, 8* 3Ir:iix, Bt. Kitts, Antl- gus, Gaalaoupe, Dominicla, Martin: fais, 8t. Lucia, Barbadoes and Demer- Ara. call For full information apply to J. P HANLEY, or C. 8B KIRKPATRICK Tieket Agents, Kingston; QUEBEC STEAMSHIP CO. LTD, Quebec BE ROBERT REFORD 00. Limited eneral Agent, 50 King St. €. Torouts Mar. 25 RMS. R. Edward Apr. 8 pr. 3 RMS. R. George Apr. 2 Apr, 22 RMB R. Edward May 6 *aithirawn for ann'l inspection Suites of apartmiénts with private baths. (exon ously ited public cabing treated after histories! Periods, elub-ike comforts and service provide complete rest and pleasure on the Atlantic Royal, For heamifully illustrated book lets, wie 10. 52 King Su Bas | Toroma, Ostatio. TT eos Tire Kingston Automobile Co. Queen snd Bagot Streets Storage, Repairing, Acces sorfes. We guaranteo satisfaction FOR SALE rep ter: The 'Best Hand Vacuum : Cleaner on the market. +The Giant, = $10.00. Ball #h attachment a0. Dominion Queen, $12.00. o Op REFUSE SUBSTITUTES Our Robin Hood braad of flow: ass & guarantee in every bag for good quality, Ontario Suess. COAL"! The kind you are looking is the kind we sell Scranton Coal Is good coal and we guarantee prompt delivery Booth & Co. Foot of West Street A bite of this and a tasts of thet, ofl day long, dulls the appetite and weakens the digestion. Restore your stomach to healthy viger by taking a Na-Dru-Co Dyspepsia Tablet The Dye that colors ANY KIND! of Cloth Perfectly, with the SAME DYE. WHEN YOUR SICK YOUR WAGES STOP You know what that means--misery ~worry=-big bills--debt ! You know you can't afiord. to get sick.. Keeping in good health means food and clothing for you and your family. It is up to you to take care of yourself. It is up to you, whenever ou don't feel right, to tals somet to make you right, to strengthen you, build you up, ward off worse sick: otect you and your family. . That thing , we have in Rexall Olive Oil Emulsion. In offeting it to you, we protect you against money-risk, by personally pr ng youdthat, if it does not restore your hitalth, we will give back your momey without word -or question. We believe it is the best i of health, energy = and strength you can get. It is helping many of your hbors. Ii it don't help you, we will give back your y. Rexall Olive Oil Em sod Ii po principally of and the Hypophosphites. Each has long been endorsed by successful phy- sicians: Here they are for the first time combined. The result is a remarkable nerve, blood and strength. building remedy that is both food {and medicine. For all who are ner vous, run-down and debilitated--no matter what the cause; for old peo- ple; for convalescents; for 'puny | chi , we know of nothing that will give health and strength as quickly as Rexall Olive Oil Emulsion. It is a real builder i , nad dose strong quickly, "T should go mad. New- bold, your wife was as pure as now; that she loved me I eannot will not deny, she married you fit of jealousy and anger after a rel between us in which 1 was blame, and whesi 1 came back to camp i your absence, 1 strove make it up and used every argument that I possessed to get her to leave you and to live with me. Although she had no love for you abe was too good and too true a woman for that. Now you've got the truth, damn you, believe it or not as you like. Miss Maitland," he added swiftly. "If I had met you sooner, 1 might have been a better man, . Good bye." He turned suddenly aud none pre- venting, indeed it was not possible, he ran to the outer dbor; as he did so his hand snatched something that lay on the chest of drawers, There was & flash of light as Ye drew in his arm but none saw what It wis, In a few seconds he was outside the door. The table was between old Kirkby and the exit; Maitland and Newbold were nearest. The old man came to his senses first, "After him," he cried, "he means" But before anybody could stir the dull 'report of a pistol come through the open door! They found Armstrong lying on his back in the snowy path, his face as white as the drift that pillowed his head, Newhold's heavy revolver still clutched in his right band and a bloody welling smudge on his left breast over his heart. It was the wo- man who broke the silefice. "Oh." she sobbed, "it can't be--" "Dead," said Maitland solemnly. "And it might have heen by my hand," muttered Newbold to himself in horror. "He'll never cause no mare trouble to nobody in this world, Miss Enid an' gents," sald old Kirkby gravely. "Well, he was a damned fool sn' a damned J villain in some ways," continued the old frontiersman reflectively in the si lence 'broken otherwise ouly' by: the woman's sobbing breaths, "but he lad some of the qualities that go to make a man, an' I aint doubtin' but what them last words of hisn was mighty near true. Ef be had met a girl like you earlier in his life, he mought have been a different man." CHAPTER XXIV. / San The Draught of Joy. The great library was the prettiest room in Robert Maitland's magnificent mansion in Denver's most favored res- idence section. It was a long, low: studded room with a heavy beamed ceiling. The low book cases, about five feet high, ran between all the windows and doors on all sides of the room. At one end there was a huge open fire place built of rough stone and as it was winter a cheerful fire OF logs blaged on the hearth. It was & man's room preemineutly. The drawing-room across the hall was Mrs Maitland"s domain, but the Itbrary re flected her husband's pleturesque If somewhat erratic taste. On the walls there were pictures of the west by Remington, March apd, Dunton, Dixon and, others, and to set them off, finely mount ed heads of bear and deer and buffalo. Swords and other arms stood here and fhere. The writing table was massive and the chairs easy, comfortable and inviting. The floor was strewn 'with robles and rugs. facing westward, since the house' was Set on a high hill," one could see the Steat rampart of thé range. There were three men in the room on that brilliant morning early in Jan. uary something like a month after these adventures in the mountains which have been so -veraciously set forth. Two «of them were the brothers Maitland; the third was New- bold. The shock produced upon Enid Mait- {land by the death of Armstrong to gether with the tremendous episodes strated her. . They had spent the night at the hut in the mounthins and had decided that the woman must be taken back to the settlements some way at all hazards. The wit of old Kirkby had effected a solution of the problem, using a means certainly as old as Napoleon and the passage of his cannon over the Great St. Bernard--and perhaps as old as Hannibal! They had made a rude sled from the trunk of a pine which they hollowed out and provided with a back and ruppers. There was no lack of fur robes and blankets for her comfort. 'Wherever it was practicable the three men hitched themselves to the sled with ropes and dragged it and Enid over the smow. Of course for miles down the canon it was Impossi- ble to use the sled. When the way was comparatively easy the woman, supported by the two men, Newbold and Maitland, made shift to get along afoot. When it became too dificult for her, Newbold picked her up as he before and assisted by Malt: RR cay £1 l From the windows | that had preceded it had utterly pros. | { iE fil - iti Hil: | FEE ie itl The wonder was, sald the physician, not that she did it then but that she had not done it before. For a short time It appeared as if her illness might be serious, but youth, vigor, a strong body and a good constitution, a heart now free from care and apprehension and a great desire to live and love and be loved, worked wonders. Newbold had enjoyed no opportunity for private conversation with the wo- man he loved, which was perhaps just as well. He had the task of readjust. ing Himself to changed conditions; not only to a different environment, but to strange and unusual departures from his long cherished View points. He could no longer doubt Arm- strong's final testimony to the purity of his wife, although He had burned the letters unread, and by the same token he could no longer cherish the dream that she had loved him and him alone, Those words that had pre ceded that pistol shot had made it possible for him to take Enid Mait- land as his wife without doing violence to his sense of honor or his self-re- spect. Armstrong had made that much reparation. And Newbold could not doubt that the other had known what would be the result of his speech and had chosen his words deliberately; score that last action to his credit. He was a sensitive man, however; he realized the brutal atid beastlike pat he and Armstrong had both played be- fore this woman they both loved, how they had battled like savage animals and how but for a lucky interposition he would have added murder to his other disabilities, He was honést énough to say to him- self that he would have done the same thing over under the same circums stances; but that did not absolve his conscience. He did not know how the woman 'looked at the transaction or looked at him, and he had not enjoyed oné moment alone with her. In all that had transpired siice that miorn- ing in the hut, the four had naturally and inevitably remained inseparably together. They had buried Armstrong in the snow, Robert Maitland saying over bim a brief but fervent petition In which even Newbdld joined. Enid Maitland herself had repeated elo- quently to her uncle and old Kirkby that night before the fire the story of her rescue from the flood by this man, how he had carrfed her in the storm to the hut and how he had treated her since; and Maitland had afterwards repeated her &ccount to his brother in Denver. 7 - (To be Contiaued) New Ice Breaker for St. Lawrence Ottawa, March 17-"The Canadian Vickers company has been given the contract for a powerfal ice breaker for the St. Lawrence. It will cost $908 - 000 and will be one of the Jargest in the world. Plan to Buy Field of Waterloo London, March 17.--A committee which includes the Duke of Wellington, Lord Roberts and the lord mayor of London has been formed to raise a wblic fund of $50,000 to purchase the Waterloo battlefield in order {io pre sékve it from a speculative builder. AREN'T ACHING OR TIRED NOW--."Tz" "TIZ" is wondérful for sore, burn. ing, swollen, sweaty, calloused feet and corns. swollen feet, sweaty feet, smelling feet, tired feet. bye corns, callouses, bunions and raw spots. No more shoe tight- ness, no more limping with pain drawing up your face in agony. "TIZ" is magical. acts right off, draws out all the poisonous exuds tions which puff up the feet. Use "TZ" and wear smaller shoes. Use "TIZ" and forget your foot misery. Ab! how comfortable your feet feel. Get a 25 cent box of "TIZ" now at any druggist or f 5 Don't suffer. Have good fept, feet that never swell, never burt, never get tired. A year's foot comfort guaranteed money re-| Fa ry progress for some time. Prince William, who. is now shoot- ing in Uganda, is not ex to ™ Ol turn to Sweden 'before. the end April. : Ibe grand duchess has been in St. Petersburg for some time. She is a daughter of the Grand Duke Paul Al lexandrovitch and a cousin of the Bm: peror of Russia. She is now in her twenty-fourth year: Her husband is in his thirtieth year and the marriags took place in 1908, They have one son, Prince Lennart, horn' in 1909, Witnesses are to be heard by the court of assizes, and the suit will be tried in the usual way. It was at one time thought possible to arrange a di- vorce without the formalities, but the Swedish law makes no exception in the case of royalty. The date of the hearing has not yét been fixed. WANT TO JAIL FELIX DIAZ Ask Seventeem-Year Semtence for ! Havana Fracas Havana, March 17.--A sentence of seventeen years is demanded for Gen. Felix Diaz, and one of four years and two months for his friend, Cecilio Ocon, in the brief of the private pro. secutor in the case growing out of the attack upon Gen. Diaz on Havana's fashionable promenade, the Malecon, last year. The case will soon come up for trialy and the private prosecutor will at- tempt to get a higher court to reverse the lower court's action in fusing Diaz and Ocon from custody. If if does, a demand for the extradition of Diaz and Ocon will be made 'the brief asserts that Diaz fired a shot, wounding Pedro Guerrero. DRIVEN OUT OF CHURCH Priest Had Policeman in Edifice. Fearing Trouble. Berlin. March 17.-The police were compelled to clear St. Paul's Catholic church on Sunday of the members of the congregation at the morning ser vice. There have heen long-standing differences between the German. and Polish members of the parish and _d Pole arose in the midst of the sernitm aud began an argument with the itteat. The pastor, anticipating trou- le, had appealed to the ice for protection, and a detachment of them was scattered among ° the congrega- tion when the service began. When the disturbance arose the officiating priest gave a signal to 'the ice, who ordered every one to leave the church. The order was obeyed with but slight resistance. CURING WOMEN SMOKERS Chicago League ; Claims... Successful Fight Against Cigarette Chicago, March 17.--A dlini¢ for wo: men smokers was established by the Anti-Cigarette which has been su I in breaking - the cigarette habit in boys who have appeared in the juvenile court: The treatment is simply spraying the shroat with a so: lution of nitrate of silver. "Fifteen women have . already been treated by us," geserted Lucy P Gaston, president of the league. "In every instance the desired aversion lor cigarettes was the result. 'We 'are opening the clinic because we believe there are thousands of girls and women in Chicago who would rid themielves of the vice if they had the opportunity." ---- HONORED BY: BRITAIN Appointed Homorary ' Member of Toyal Astromomical Society Boston, Mass., March 17.--Fhe sélec- tion of Miss Annie J. Cannon, curator of photographs at the Harvard ' Uni versity observatory, as an honorary member of the English Royal As tronomical Society, has brought to Harvard another signal honor for one of its few women servants. Miss Cannon succeeded the late Wil hemina Patton Fleming, nearly three years ago, and since then her work in preparing a catalogue of star ra, declared by astronomers to » the most complete ever made, has made her famous. throughout the astronpe miecal world. t COLORED WIG CRAZE White Dresses to Offset the Colored Headdresses St. P , March 17.--The col |a ball, the tthe most exclusive and most ewvalted | circles of St. Polersbucg apg}; ent store. | feet, glad ored wig craze has attacked Russian society. The Countess: Schuvsloff gave guests at. which were court society. wore a salmon = wigs, which were the most favored shades. Others were brilliant orange with dia monds, bright green . with emeralds and also silver and gold. Edmonton, Alta.. Macch 1%.+Brit- ish capitalists, mted by Albin = ; Good-bye sore feet, burning feet.|where oedlitio Picton, Out., who retired this week as a director Dominion - : of the If you have any sere place--uwicer, eczema, bura, cut or cold sore, be well advised! Try. Druggists sell more Zam-Buk than any other salve, Their profit on it is ne greater than on others-- is less than on many. Do you think Zam-Buk would be 30 much more widely used than any ether salve if it were not so much better? Sentiment and advertising might make first sales, but only QUALITY can produce repeat orders More and more Zam-Buk is being sold every month, because the quality is there. How about the children's sores and skin troubles ? Don't you think they deserve the best remedy you can get? . That's Zam-Buk, . SOc. all druggists and stores, Write Zam-Buk Co., Torente, for free sample, and send this advertisement. S 8; O20 S Pd or po or Fever, this Health~--Strength. vy OUR DOC TOR Na! EU of 4 "a point to bu ags or barre on every bag ~ and barrel 'you buy It is almost impossible to keep your feet dry at this seoson of ear without a pair of good rubbers. me in and let us fit your shoes correctly witha pair.

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