Daily British Whig (1850), 24 Apr 1926, p. 5

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¥ «+ KR . * Ip wh THE DAILY BRITISH 'WHIG: Saturday, April 24, 1926. Eczema Was So Bad Could Hardly Sleep Mrs. G. "Jones, Kitscoty, Alta, writes: '1 had eczema on my left hand, and my first was so swol- | len, wore snd itchy could hardly i doetor, WI ®he came into the kitchen, ' her hands hanging before her and cover- ed with yellow salve where the rope | with which she had rescued the cal? 1 i After I had taken three bottles I was relieved of my eczema, and : ' any one suffe from, suy disease of the blood to use B.B.B,, as it's worth its price many times over." This valuable preparation has been * on the market for the past 47 years; up only by The T. Milburn Cog Toronto, Ont. . THOMAS COPLEY f Carpenter :: Phone 887 See' ms fof all kinds of Carpentry work, Estimates given on mew floors laid. Have your hardwood floors clean. ed with our mew floor cleaning ma. chine, DR. J. C.W. BROOM Dental Surgeon 50 Wellington Street. Phone 679. Evenings by appointment. KINGSTON TRANSFER (0 158 WELLINGTON STREET Moves Freight, Steel, Building Equip ment, Machinery, Safes, Planos, etc. MONEY LOANKD AGAINST MORTGAGES 'Phones 377, Evenings 2281. CAR OWNERS "ATTENTION Protects you for LIABILITY, PROPERTY DAMAGE, COLLISION, FIRE AND THEFT Best and cheapest policy on the market, Let me quote you rates. H. Waddell 66 BROCK STREET Telephunes 826 and 896. |For Spencer Furnaces "Fresh mined EY skawanna Coal ; $9.00 per ton W. A. MITCHELL & C0. ©." Telephone 67. _ Vincent A.Martin . DENTIST} tment. ap P-- by appoin 00 DR. RESPARKS) Street, 8 rooms, $4,000--Dfviston 4 bedrooms, 3 pl bath, electric and ee aan: $4,000--6 roomed brick, 8 piece bath, .{ shiver. had burned into the flesh. She re- garded Caleb coldly, "Well?" she asked. Caleb approached her, his head jutting forward from his shoulders. "Don't you 'well' me! What have you done with the mare? What have you done with her, I say?" His voice rose from a sort of husky whisper to a thin peal. "I wasn't riding the mare!" "Then who had her? Who had her but yow--tell me that." "Charlie rode the mare, Caleb! 1 told him him before he took her out to be easy with her," Amelia put in hurriedly. Caleb threw back his head with a Jerk. He laughed. "You did! Well, well!" Laughing softly, he shuffled into the other room and sat down to the table. Presently the others came in and quietly took their places. When Lind entered and threw her wide lacy hat upon the hair sofa, Amelia winced at the incongruity of her pesence in the room. The Teacher smiled at them all and sat down in her chair. "It's the most beautiful day we have had yet this spring," she re- marked. "I have never séen the sky so blue or the trees so green. The rain last night seems to have cleared the whole world. It must have been fine for the crops, Mr. Gare?" "Hm---yes, yes indeed. So she threw you, eh, Charlie?" Cabel ask- ed the boy, scarcely glancing at Lind in reply to her question. He winked at Charlie and Charlie grin- ned broadly. The youngest of the Gares had an habitual snuffle which Amelia had tried In vain to correct. He was an anaemic looking boy, and cared little for anything except that which was forbidden. This trait ap- pealed to Caleb, and he chose to humor it, to the annoyance and in- dignation of the others, especially Judith. Charlie had always taken advantage of his father's leniency. "Nix," sald Charlie. "She smelt a bear. The Klovacgs shot at two last night--one got away with a pig." "Bears, eh? That means trouble," Caleb observed, to switch the sub- ject. "Have to look out on tha way to Nykerk to-morrow, Martin. Keep Ellen under cover. She's nice and plump. Eh, Ellen?' He leaned over and playfully tweaked Bllen's arm. She smiled, dutifully. Judith made a grimace which she did not try to hide, To the end of the meal Caleb was genial, jovial, in fact. No further mention was made of the mare. Ju- dith had not ridden her, after all. . For the rest of that day, Judith's hands were of no use to her, so sh slipped away with her dog, Pets, through the bush to a little ravine where a pool had gathered below the thread of a spring. Pete caught a scent and was off, and Judith was left alone. ' It was clingingly warm, as befora rain, Not knowing fully what she Check Your Nose Cold Relief in 5 Minutes If a friend told you of a simple remedy that would clear away your sniffling cold quickly---you would go to the nearest druggist for that refm- edy--sure you would. The quickest, remedy for a cold is CATARRHOZONE. You get instant effect from Catarthosdne, because you breathe it. 'ery breath you draw through the little inhaler car- ries a healing, vapor that can't fail to clear the nose, throat and breathing organs. By using Catarrhozone several times each day you ward off Tonsili- tis, Catarrh, Influenza -- you keep clear of Sore Throat, Hoarseness and other winter ills. No medicine to take-just a sooth-| ing vapor to b - You can use Catarrhozone at 'in bed, use it in church, in the movie ~use it with the first sneeze Complete outfit $1.00; Sze 50 cents, at all dealers in | cine. 4 RY meti- D GEES ------ \ By Martha Ostenso. . i vlPee. wag doing, Judith took off all clothing and lay flat on the damp sunless vegetation under her. She thing---she knew not what. . . Ellen. .the farm, hot reek of manure in: the when it was close as to-day. was smothering, overwhelming her, like a pillow pressed. against face, ltke a feather tick pinning down her body. the Al- the day had it not been for Amelia. ways pity stood in the way of from her. Pity for Amelia, would get what Caled did not dare mete out to her, Judith, Oh, how knowing the bare earth was, as if it might have a heart and a mind hidden here in the woods. The fields that Caleb had tilled had no tenderness, she knew. But here was something forbiddenly beauti- ful, secret as one's own body. And there was something beyond + thia, She could feel it in the freeness of the air, in the depth of the earth. Under her body there were, she had been taught, eight. thousand miles of earth. On the other side, what? Aabove her body there were leagues and leagues of air, leading like wings--to what? The marvelous confusion and complexity of all the world had singled her out from the rest of the Gares. She was no long- er one of them. Lind Archer had come and her delicate fingers had sprung a secret lock in Jude's be- ing. She had openéd like a tight bud. There was no going back now into the darkness. Sven Sandbo, he would be home in May, so they sald. Was it Sven she wanted, now that she was . so strangely free? Judith looked straight above her through the net work of white birch and saw the bulbous white country that a cloud made against the blue. Something beyond Sven, perhaps. .Free- dom, freedom. She dipped « her blistered hands down into the clear topaz of the pool, lifted them and dipped them and lifted them, letting the drops slip off the tips of her fingers each time like tiny cups of light. She thought of the Teacher, of her dainty hands and her soft, laughing eyes. . she came from another life, another world, She would go back there again. Her hands would never he maps of blist- ers as Jude's were now, from tug- ging a calf out of a mudhole. Jude hid her hands behind her and press- ed "her breast against the : cold ground. Hard, senseless sobs rose in her throat, and her eyes smarted with tears. She was ugly beyind all bearing, and all her life was ugly. Suddenly she was bursting with hatred of Caleb. Her large, strong body lay rigid on the ground, and was suddenly unnatural. in that earthy place. Then.she relaxed and wept like a woman, . .'. . * * Judith dressed, whistled to Pete, and when he came bounding joyous- ly toward her, walked slowly back home. On the way she passed the nerth cow-pasture where Caleb kept a few bull-calves among the milen cows. She leaned against the fence and looked in at two of the plump young bulls who were dancing about and playtully skulling each other, having apparently just discovered their sprouting horns. She saw how they had developed since she had last observed them. Their grizzled, stupid faces had become more surly, their flanks Leavief; their dewlapa "smoother and whiter and thicker Caleb would soon be ringing their noses, and they would become spirit- lesaly ugly, with all this madcap frenzy suppressed. They were beautiful bulls, and would bring a nice sum from one of the Ieelanders, perhaps. Judith felt an inner ex- citement in watching them. She turned to go, feeling dismayed that she should be so attracted by the young beasts. But a curiosity over which she had no control held her here for many minutes Ah, how violent they were becoming in their We nh . Judith heard Charlie crashing through the timber on his horse, calling the cattle. With the dog at her heels she fled home. Ellen was examining her foot when Jude came into the house. "I can take the cattle with Martin to-morrow, Ellen," jude said sym- pathetically. '"'Your foot looks like it's spavined." "It'Nl be all right in the morning, I hope," Ellen' replied. "Father Fever, Caleb the stable. Judith to mention to Ellen { Ingnesas to go in to Judith and said, "You can use the new harrow on the east garden to- | morrow, Jude." "Ellen can't go with Martin the {| way her foot is," Judith observed. n | He laughed heartily, her ground with the waxy feeling of new, | needed to escape, to fly from some- | Caleb | stable | Life | "You mean, Jude, not if Sve Sdndbo is coming up from Nykerk. Hah! Hah! Caught you that time!" passing his hand across his mustache. His eyes gleamed with open-hearted .mis- chief. How he loved to have sport with the giris' on the subject - of beaux! "You're too young to be moonin', Judes' I notice it in you lately. Haven't you, Miss Archer?" Lind smiled at Judith, who sprang up, furious. Caleb regarded her with amusement. < "Mother, I'm afraid Jude is for- getting herself." He turned and her) chuckling almost inaudibly went out °T | once more on one of his mysterious | inspections about the place. | She would have struck Caled tu- | { Lind should not hear. tide of violence she felt could break who | "Oh, Jude, yop.know what that always means!" Ellen whispered so "Why on earth can't you control yourself?" But Judith was sitting dumb and sober at the window, leoking out into the twilight. In a few minutes she got up and began to ' help | Amelia with the supper. | | "I wish we could stop eating once in a while," Amelia sighed. "It gets tiresome." Caleb dfd not come in at all supper. Everyone, even Lind, knew the significance of that. After the children had gone to bed he would 'be heard talking in a low tone 'to Amelia, and In the morning her eyes would be ringed with shadows. During the meal, Ellen looked across the table at *udith with the rebuke that the younger girl had come to hate. Judith bolted her food and went upstairs. When Caleb returned indoors ft was to announce bed time. He did 80 pleasantly, but Amelia saw below his pleasantness. The children and lind went to the loft. Caleb was the clock by which the family slept, woke, ate and moved. ' "Five in the morning, everybody. for ! PRINCES OF CHORCH 'T0 ATTEND CONFERENCE 'Papal Secretary and Ton Oar | dinals Will Participate in Great Gathering. { | International Bucharistic Congress { will be held in the United States. In 1910 the Congress was held in Mont- real, but with this one exception all former congresses have been held in the capitals of Europe. For the first time in "history, the | Chicago will | {be the scene of this vast cosmopoli- | | tan assemblage, June 20th to 24th, | and the proximity of Toronto, and | the | through * Toronto practically whole of Outario, to this city will en- able many thousands of Canadians {to participate in the inspiring cere- jones and witness what will be the | greatest religious demonstration fn! | the history of the continent. | { Organisation of ths prospective | vl sitors to the Congress from the dls- | trict of Ontario is in the hands ot | | the officers of the Holy Name Socle- ity. | Arch {already circularized the sooibties of | the diocese Inviting them to attend | Congress .and arranged with the | Canadian Pacific Railway for spec- {ial train accommodation. Special {trains originating in Toronto will {leave onthe night of June 19th, ar- |riving in Chicago in time for the {opening. Through the same agency {arrangements have also been made for suitable accommodation for the Ontario visitors of ample train and hotel accommodation, tke Ontario party will mumber many hundreds. Featuring the opening of Congress will be the reception of Cardinal Gasparri, Secretary of State for the. Vatican, who will attend, with ten cardinals and a retinue of the most important ecclesiastics of the church, as the official delegate of His Holi- ness Pope Pius XI. Cardinal Gas- | the 13-16 Clear Birch Flooring An Ontario product milled on the best machines obtainable. Smooth easily laid. and clean and Approved by Architects and Carpenters. This makes a good, heavy, solid, hand- some FLOOR that will not warp. =. Cheaper than §" Oak, and very much more durable. S. ANGLIN CO. LIMITED LUMBER YARDS, WOODWORKING FACTORY, COAL BINS, BAY AND WELLINGTON STREETS, KINGSTON, ONTARIO Private Branch Exchange Phone 1571. BEAVERBROOK SPEAKS |. ON POWER OF PRESS i i | He Throws Light on the Kitch= ener=Northcliffe War= time Controversy. London, April 23.--Lord Beaver-| brook, in a lecture ' at Liverpool, ; maintained that the press today Is more powerful than ever it has been, | but its actual Influence depends upon the ability with which fit is | directed. He gave an interesting | story of Lord Northcliffe's attack | ery Camden East, April 22.--The past few the day, with the ladies. a poor season. Mr. and Mrs. Tipson "returned home' last week from Kingston, where they spent two weeks. M. and Mrs. James Yeoman's are visiting their daughter, Mrs. B. Saundercook, Collins Bay. The late ter is in the hospital having undes gone an operation. The death of Mrs. R. J. Brethrin, days have been much warmer and house cleaning is the order of Ellen and Martin are going to take the steers in to Nykerk, remember," he called after them. . - | parrl will' carry the message of His | Holiness. Special services will be held this day in all churches of. the . city with a million confessions and upon Lord Kitchener (mainly over, Of Switzerville, was deeply regretted the shortage of shells at the front) | PY her many friends in this com- in the early stage of the war. Lord, munity. Miss Marjory Riley left on Beaverbrook was in Lord Rother-| Monday to resume her studies in the Art School at Toronto. Mrs. BB. Everyone, including Lind, to whom the tyranny was rather novel, was at breakfast at half past five. There was this to be said about the enforced early rising: you saw the unbelievable dawn whether you wished to or not. It umfolded like a vast flower over the edge of the horizon. The earth was clear and dark under it, as if seen through blue glass. One was aware for the firat time of standing on & sphere that moved rhythmically through space. It was an hour of crystal- clear perceptions. y But breakfast was a bleak affalr. Ellen was pale from the pain in her foot, and Amelia torn betweem mo- ther solicitude and the submission she had learned through her trying witehood. = Caleb,and Martin talked about the sale: of the cattle; no mention was made of Judith's steer, although Martin resolved to see that shé'was given one in its place. = Judith sullenly hurried out after she had had a cup of coffee, and be- gan to pitch manure into the cart. Her hands were still swollen and sore, but pride kept her from com. plaining. If Ellen could stand {t for Amelia's sake, she could. Ellen and Martin drove away with the steers before the Teacher could say good-by to them. She ran out and watch them dis- appear down the road, Martin stoop- ed over on the wagon seat like an old, tired man, Ellen sitting rather too stiff to be matural. And Caleb Gare left to attend a business meeting of the church at Yellow Post. Although it took time from his own affairs, it pleased him to be one of the trustees of the church, as he was of the school. The pleasure came mainly from seeing that none of the other guardians of the church funds abused the trust placed in them. It was because he had a little suspicion concerning Bjorn Aronson, who was treasurer of the church funds, that he went to the meeting that particular day. He watched the younger brother of Fusi Aronson narrowly through- out the meeting, In which It was taken for granted that the money Bjorn was entrusted with lay safe- ly In the strong box at the Aronson farm. Caleb saw no reason why Bjorn, at this time of the year, should have been able to buy three head of pure bred Jersey cattle from that infidel, Klovacz, who did not éven belong to the church. Caleb had singled out the new cattle in the herd, and had recognized them at once. (To Be Continued). communions as a spiritual bouquet to His Holiness the Pope. General and sectional meetings will be held on Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday and will be addressed by prominent church men and laymen from 'for- eigh capitals. "In the case of the sec- tional meetings the audiences will be addressed in their native tongues Fifty-thousand school children will sing the Mass of the Angels at the general meeting on Monday. The twenty-eighth International Eucharistic Congress will be brought to an end by a Eucharistic Proces- sion at Mundelein, twenty-six miles from Chicago. For full information apply to Canadian Pacific Agent, 180 Welling- ton street, Kingston. SEVEN NEGROES LOSE LIVES IN BIG FIRE Which Swept a Four Tenement in Philadel | phia, Pa. Philadelphia, Pa., April 23--Sev- en negroes lost their lives here to- day when fire swept through a four- storey tenement house Six, includ- ing four children, were burned to death while a 46-year-ald woman was killed when she jumped from the fourth storey window. Four chil- dren, their mother, and a man ten= ant, were trapped eon the fourth floor by the flames which spread through the structure. The blaze is believed to have been incendiary. mere's room at the Ritz Hotel, when Lord Northcliffe came in. | "Lord Rothermers shared Lord Northcliffe's opinions, and, encour- | aged him to make the attack," Lord | Beaverbrook told his Liverpool au-| dience. "Finally Northcliffe turned to me and said: 'Cannot "you do sbmething to persuade the Daily! Express to support me?' Northcliffe! was aware that, although I had no journalistic connection with the! Daily Express, I had lent money to it." He must have known this, be- cause had taken his advice in the matter--and Le had at the time vig- orously dissuaded me from buying | the newspaper. I replied that I did/ not see so clearly or feel so strongly as he did on the necessity for remov- ing Lord Kitchener from the War Of- tice. He then said: 'Well, could you not suggest that he should be sent to Ireland as Lord Lieutenant?' This was ultimately done by the Dally Express. Whereupon, the Evening | News proclaimed that even Mr. Bonar Law's Dally Express was in favor of the dismissal of Lord Kitch. ener--a method of interpretation which caused a quarrel between' Northcliffe and myself. Without go-| ing into the Kitchener-Northclitte controversy-----which must be painful when both the distinguished pro- tagonists are dead---it must be said that, roughly, Lord Northcliffe was right. He did a great public service in setting himself to fight the most tremendous legend of the twentieth of patriotism he was no popularity hunter." * On April 15th, by Rev. E. B. Wyllie, Reba Myrtle, only daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas G. Deach- man, Clyde Forks, and Robert H., son of Mr. and Mrs. J, A. Holbrook, Ottawa, were married. SENSATION AT CIRCUS. Performer Made Heroic Attempt to "Ia circle. Save Wife. Lexington, Ky. 'April. 23.With grim face, James Franklin, circus performer, late yesterday took a chance against death to save his wife, as she plunged through space from the top of the tent. Franklin does not know whether he has won or not, for Mrs. June Franklin, 22, is in a serious condition. Mrs. Frank- lin, a Tope performer, had gone to the top of the swinging platform for her act, when suddenly she sway- ed and lost her balance. The hus- band, watching from below, sensed what was happening. Mrs. Frank- lin fell head-first and plunged to- ward the ground like a flash. The other performers stopped, " spectators wondered if it were a her fall. With one last desperate burst of speed, Franklin reached the spot, halted, formed his arms in The woman struck him A young tree grows faster than an old one. Switzer is spending this week with her daughter, Mrs. John Bell and family, of Moscow. Mrs. EB. Good- win, Toronto, returned home on Tuesday having 'spent several days with her parents, ' Mr. James Skinner, Mrs. T. Allore is im- proving in health, and is gxpected home from the hospital this week. Several attended the auction sale at John Madden's, Newbugh. The W. M. 8. monthly meeting was held at Mrs. W. Perry's on Tuesday afters noon. Rev. T. Anderson and Mrs. derson Newburgh, were entertained by Mr. and Mrs. George Black, on {"Wednesday. & ha Lower Tax Rate in Cobourg, April uth goers. surprise greeted the ratep the Town of Cobourg ste when it became known that, at special meeting of the Town Coun- cil the rate for the year was struck at 45 1-2 mills. This is a mill and a half lower than last year. The lowering of the rate was quite une expected, as, on account of industries closing last year and loss of reven therefrom, many thought a higher rate would be necessary. D paring of estimates, however, was effected. a -------------- More Riots in Calcutta. = Calcutta, April 23. Notwith- standing police precautions, further Leentury, and proved that in matters | Soting took aise. todag street area. The police eventually restored order. Casualties thus reported were two men who removed to hospital. All shops fn the neighborhood closed during the disturbance and business was at a standstill, Being sorry for yourself ) enlist the sympathy of your he a Maple syrup is scarce, this being

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