- OWES HER LIFETO "FRUI-A-TIVES" Redd 2 After Years of Suffering with Pepeia, this Fruit Medicine Gave MILE ANTOINETTE BOUCHER 917 Dorion St., Meatreal. *T an writing to tell you that 7 owe my life to *Fruit-a-tives' for this remedy relieved me when I had abandoned ali hope of ever recovering my health, I ibly with ia. I had it for years and all the medicines I took did not do me any good. I read something about 'Fruit-a- tives' being good fog, all Stomach Troubles and Disorders of Digestion 80 I tried them. After finishing a few boxes, I was entirely relieved of the Dyspepsia and my general health Was restored. I thank the 'Frhit-a-tives', relief." . Mlle ANTOINETTE BOUCHER. 50c. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial sise 250. At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruita tives Limited, Ottawa, Ont. ny [ GET IT REPAIRED great frult medicine," for this wonderful Sewing Machines, Guns, Rifles repafred Parts supplied, Saws led, knives, Scissors and edge tools ground. Locks repaired. Keys fitted to all kinds of locks. All makes of Lawn Mowers sharpened and re- paired. We can repair anything that is repairable. J. M. PATRICK 149 Syden Street, Kingston Phose 2056J - The adhesion of cemefit to iron that gives strength to reinférced con- 'crete, is found by an expert to be un- like the gluing effect of mortar on bricks. The cement does not stick to the iron firmly, if at all, but the adhesion is given by gripping a por- tion of enclosed iron as th: concrete contracts in setting. By Harold Sinclaire : | Jimmy 'had come early It | regular lesson night, but the Shark | Wouldn't appear for perhaps half an | hour, Plenty otf time tor*Jimmy fn { which to learn bis fate and€ well, he | hadn't decided just what he would do after that; that is, in cise she PWewldw't marry Rim. So h& sat in the little parlor of { Louise's home and waited Present- | ly she would come mn briskly, her | brown eyes demure, her lips smiling. | she always made vou think of a | sturdy little wildflower in the woods | In springtime. And Jimmy, young Fawyer though he was, knew that his | heart would skip a beat _and lis { ruddy face take on a still deeper hue | 88 he faced ber. He tried to be pat- {lent, and as the minutes passed memories came--sweet and bitter-- | In their turn, Around that library table in the | centre of the room he had sat three | nights a week with Louise and--yes | --Terry Gerard, the { was the particular fly in Jim | ointment, | ness didn't require it. Jimmy's did; | at least, so he had represented to | | Louise when he had begged her to teach him the art of shorthand. So around this table the three had sat--Louise and her two mismated | pupils, for they hated each other as | much as they loved their teasher. Both had invented their need of a | | knowledge of shorthand in order te be near the object of their affections, | The only difference in their methods | was that while Jimmy didn't try to | learn, concealing! his indifference to | ithe best of his ability, Terry made { the most | quently was able to read whole pages | of curlicues without a break. "Red headed shark," growled Jim- { He smoothed | | his own glossy dark nalr and scowl- f That shark was to be reckoned { my, gritting his teeth. | ed, | with, he was bright 'ana, yes, good looking, and Louise seemed to like him. Of late he had imagined that she preferred him. Only yesterday was near. Well, the suspense would soon be over. down the stairs, and his heart skip- ped that beat according to prophecy, as Louise entered in anticipated fash- fon. While he was holding her hand, which had been extended in welcome, hé looked at it idiotically, as if he had never seen it before. ing at him in surprise: Jimmy gulped. "You promised to write my ans- wer today." "And so I have." "Didn't get it," grasped Jimmy. "Mail service punk. Was it yes or Fair exchange religion is the kind that ought to grow in popularity, no?" "8illy," she answered, diving into ma, was | Shark--who | my's | Why did he need a com- | | mercial education, anyway--his busi- | of his lessons and conse- | "Why, Jimmy," said Louise, look- | THE DAILY BRI er -------- | her pocket. "I didn't'say I'd mail it 0 you. Weren't you wo come this evening to take your lesson? Well!" She handed him a notebook, open, pointing to a neat array of pothooks and hangers that adorned the page. "That is my answer," she told him sweetly. He looked at- it helplessly, *'Je- hoshaphat!" he. exclaimed. For the first time he envied 'that shark.: He fcould have read those marks. Poor Jimmy couldn't, and he didn't know whether to sink with, despair or take "his teacher In his arms' It was at "recess" the night be- fore that it happened. The Shark had left early, Louise had told him good night in what seemed to Jimmy 24 most unnecessarily interested fash- fon, and Jimmy had forthwith laid his heart arid fortune at his teacher's feet, | ner she had promised to write him | her answer. And there it'was in his hand and | he couldn't read it! "That is your answer," repeated | Louise. | "Yes," Jimmy floundered miser- ably. She was"looking out of the i window now. Jimmy set his teeth i . N For Quick asserts | . ' | Oliver's concentrated | eZ Jelly Crystals | | Made of i | bined wit | | Foot Jelly. | Far superior to the average Powder, | | Each packet makes one pint of | | delicious jelly. Six flavors. ure fruit extracts com- the very finest Calf's Jehy A trial will convince you. Al your grocers WEIR SPECIALTY CoO. LTD TORONTO CANADA "Beware of imitations." he had come upon them talking con- | fidentially in low tones when ho one | He heard her coming | Many a Canadian Beauty owes her exquisite complexion { to the use of | 'Baby's Own Soap' Cleansing --Healing-- Fragrant | "Is Best for Baby and Best for You" Albert Soaps Limited, Mfrs., Montreal. "0 Trade-Marked Circulation * YOU KNOW THE VALUE OF ESTAR, LISHED, TRADE -MARKED BRANDS, YOU BUY SUCH MERCHANDISE IN PREFERENCE TO ANY THING ELSE BECAUSE YOU KNOW FROM EXPERI ENCE THAT YOU CAN DEPEND ON THE TRADE-MARKED PRODUCT, ITS QUALITY, PURITY, WEIGHT, ETC.. ETC. AB.C. REPRESENTS TRADE . MARKED | CIRCULATION -- CIRCULATION THAT IS CORRECT AS TO QUANTITY. COR. RECT AS TO DISTRIBUTION AND COR. RECT AS TO SALES METHODS. IN CIRCULATION NOTHING CAN EQUAL THE VALUE OF AN A.B.C. REPORT: AND AUDIT. 'Why Accept Less?, * THE BRITISH WHIG IS THE ONLY AB.C. PAPER IN KINGSTON { In a sweetly businesslike man- | TISH WH [and began 10 stds those awful | marks with a vengeance. | - A gasp escaped him. Ther was a 1c. { 1 f familiar chicken track in that first | | line, {learned very early in It was the one phrase he had i thfjcourse, thinking some time to use it craftily. | He recognized that It was there! He Yes, it was there, but "I love, you!" when he saw it looked closer. what was that silly Tittie mark pre- | ceding the word love? It didn't be- long! He tried with his finger to re- move jt--it might -beran-erelash-tald = len there. But it stayed, and Jim- my's brow grew moist with the dawn- ing of an awful thougit that little fool curved line should be the negative to that sweet phrase! { Did she or didn't she? - That was the | question. 'It was time to use some of that craftiness. . | Pushing back his damp hair and calling to his aid a sickly smile, he pointed to the disturbing curlicue, "Teacher,'" he said in a wheedling [tone which he sometimes used teas. ingly, "teacher, you made this char- | acter a little lame. I can't quite make it out." He held his breath, "That," answered Louise, turning to him - patiently and spelling the word phonetically, "is 'd-0-n-"t'-- half length, you know, to add 't'." Suppose | Spearmint In the green box rmint In the yellow box Tutti Frutti In the pink box Jimmy stiffened and the notebook | fell to the floor. | it there and turned away again he {exploded. Black despair reigned, but rage gained mastery of his ton- gue "1 hope you're satisfied." he said thickly. "You've made all kinds of a fool of me--deliberately, too." Louise raised her finger warning- ly and .listened. "I think Terry's coming," she said, "He's early." Jimmy. swallowed and looked for his hat. [Shark had won. Louise's smile show- |ed- that. It was radiant and her face was shining with a glory that | only love can bring |. "Can't stay for lesson," he mumbl- ed, cramming the letter into his pocket and making for the door. | "It was a false alarm," said Louise When Louise left | He was certain now--the | Your Best Investment |after a moment of looking toward {the door. "That shark--" | grily. { "Isn't he a wonder?" asked Louise, | | her sparkling eyes upon him. "He | can read shorthand like print." Her Wace was glowing still and Jimmy | could stand it no unger "Goodnight," he saic thickly, | "But," said Louise, innocently. | "Have you read all the letter, Jim- | my? There are some good phrases there and you should stutly--" "I know one of them," thundered | Jimmy, "and that's enough. {don't love you'--in the first line-- |that's enough. I can read that." The doorbell rang jarringly. Jimmy gave a farewell backward | look, saw her brandishing another | paper before his eyes, felt her hand [upon his arm. But he jerked away {loved to touch, *accidentally, of | course, at their tasks. "I'll read no more foo! marks," he | said. "But this is a typed iranscript of | the fool 'marks, Jimmy," she ex- | Plained. "I knew you "ere a fraud and prepares this for you," and sud- denly her arm went about his stub- born neck, tightened, and. brought his eyes down within range of ths | typewritten words: "I don't love you half as much as I'm going to--" "Jehoshaphat!" Jimmy waited to read no more, but blinking at the heavenly light that enveloped him, he kissed his teacher, and together they went to the door to let in the Shark. THE MAN ON WATCH Is it- so that a Kingston church board is talking about engaging a practical nurse to take care of noisy babies, whose mothers insist on bringing them to Sunday services? Shall old Glenburnie burn, shall old Glenburnie burn? : Well not so long as Kingston h some hose to on it turn, Who is my neighbor, asked the lawyer of New Testament story. Kingston's mayor does not have to query his pastor on this matter when fires rage and threaten property miles outside the limits of the muni- cipality of which he is chief magis- trate. They say the Irish will combihe to fight no matter what settlement is made. It is suggested by the Lamp- man that special fighting days for various districts be regularly an- nownced, but that the weapons be restricted to Ireland's favorite shil- lelah. The Kingston club of Irish Belf-Determination might also ar- range their little scrap, and permit interested 'clerical brethren to par- ticipate. They say that corns result when women insist upon encasing their feet in shoes that are not construc- ted to fit them. It is just like try- ing to put a family of eight into a flat built for four--you have to do some squeezing. With regard to a complaint about retired farmers taking jobs away from those' who need.them more ur- gently, the view of the Lampman is this: That most farmers who retire and come te the cities to reside have no idea of what it costs to live away For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years began Jimmy an- «ey CASTORIA| wl Cetin, times the the only method of combining sa protection. | ~anAdams product, particularly prepared SATURDAY, JULY 23 1021. ~ Fresh, fragrant Spearmint ; refreshing, tingling Peppermint: 'Tascious Tutti Frutti, They -allay thirst and aid Life Insurance offers the best form for sav- ing money. It is an investment for small sums, and affords "protection" digestion: & Tr for many annual deposit or premium. It is vings and | It is also Che sure way of leaving an estate. | Fifty per cent. of all estates at death consist | ad of life insurance--many persons are unable For these reasons the A to leave anything else to their families. | angrily from those fingers he had 80 | people of Canada are buying twice as much life insurance in these days of retrenchmeiit as they did even two years ago. £™\ NN y Life Insurance is your best investment. X Life Insurance Service 7 pe == {from the farm. They find that their | income of $1,200 is only half suffici- {ent for their needs, and because they | seek Jobs to augment an income that | twenty-five years ago would have | kept them in ease. Effeminate young men singing in choirs without coats and with their shirt sleeves rolled up above their elbows are a sight fof the gods. The (but thank heavens not in Kingston) and the sight was engugh to cause a stomach upheaval, It is only willie- boys who will revert to sport costume in a house of divine worship. The girls know them as sissies. The Lampman has mos pleasant memories of the late Thomas Ronan, who departed this life a week ago. Mr. Ronan was one of nature's gentlemen, always refined and cour- teous to everyone. He was a remark- who knew him in the old days will miss his happy countenance. Some parents have strange ways of showing love for their children. In Kingston a distracted mother pois- ons her three girls, #hile out in North Frontenac two fathers shoot at their daughters, Human life is too valuable just now to dispose of it by these violent methods. : THE TOWN WATCHMAN ---------- | DEATH OF KE. WARREN. | He was Greatly Respected by all 1 & i aret Clendeaning, Montreal, is visit- ing her daughter, Mrs. John Bradley. {Mr. and Mrs. Condie and niece, { Brockville, were recent visitors at Thomas Steacy's. Miss Campbell, Los Angeles, C i, tt es ft A dr | "CONSERVE THE 1 | STABILIZE THE Wr Lampman has viewed some of them | ably active man for his years. Those |: WLansdowne, July 20.--Mrs. Marg: al, who has been visiting | OME AND NATION " her brother, Dr. J. D. BE. L. Campbell, has returned home. Mr. apd Mrs. D. F. Warren, Fort Frances, Ont.; are guests of Mr. and Mrs. J, H. War ren: The movie show has ceased opera- tions for the present, here owing to the extreme heat. George Shurtliffe, . Hamilton, is visiting here." Mrs. {Charles Lappan is a patient in Hote! i Dieu, Kingston. Mr. Kidd, Ontario {government judge of standing field Crops, is working here now on en-: {tries for Lansdowne fair. Mrs. Delbert McClary, N.Y., are visitors here. Mrs. James Wallace has returned from Sydenham where she was the Buest of "Rae. Thomas dnd Mrs. Leech. On"Tuesday evening, Erastus Warren passed a ---- Mr. and Rochester, July 19th, way to nis long rest after only a few days' ill. ness with Bright's disease. Deceased was well known, being one of our most successful farmers and a life long resident of the community. He Was in his sixty-ninth year and was working up to his illness. He is sure vived by his widow, formerly Chare lotte Sliter, and one son, Urban J. B. Warren; five brothers, Omar, Nias gara Falls, N.Y.; Reo George, Neb. raska; Rev. William, Nebraska; Dels bert, Fort Frances, Ont.: J. Hilliard, Lansdowne; and two sisters Mrs. Ellis, Iroquois; and Mrs. Cooey, To- ronto. The funeral will take, place Thursday afternoon to the Methodist church, thence to 'the inion cemot- ery., The late Mr. Warren was a-pro- nounced Orangeman, a Methodist and a Conservative. i nom md) [[o-- ge Cool Thought for a Hot Day PosT TOASTIE i S