Once your bowels become consti: pated you are in for a lot of trouble, fs constipation is one of the most prolife Sources of disease that the uman raee is addicted to, therefore a free motion of the bowels every should + By Martha Ostenso. t haslth. h . wrence, erdale Fa, NB. rts was troubled . with ¢ e constipation, and became «80 bad I was almost afraid to eat an One G I saw your advertisement Milburn's @ Now 1s the time to insure with an "ALL RISK POLICY" Protects you for LIABILITY, PROPERTY DAMAGE, COLLISION, FIRE AND THEFT Best and cheapest policy on the market. Let me quote you rates. R. H. Waddell 8¢ BROCK STREET Telephones 326 and 8V0. 'DR RUPERT P. MILLAN 'Phone 1850 OPEN EVENINGS BY : EVENL APPOINTMENT Buckwheat Coal For Spencer Furnaces Fresh mined Lackawanna Coal $9.00 per ton W. A. MITCHELL & Co. Telephone 67. | First Quality Season- " ed Lumber, all Pine. Large quantities. : Also Roofing Iron and Sheot- After the meetiiig he stepped up behind Bjorn, who was untying his horses from the hitching post. | "See you have some Jerseys." he | said, tappigs fhe young man on the | shoulder. Bjorn started. Caleb 'smiled. ""Ya-a, sure," said Bjorn. "Get. 'em at the Siding?" "Nag-ow. Bought from Klovacz. { He needed the money, before he | Boes avay," Bjorn said. His eyes 2 | traveled down the road. Caleb 00 1 got threo vials, and after takin smiled again, balancing back on his them I have never been troubl { heels thoughtfully. Bjorn got into "mines with constipation.' { his wagon and drove down toward ; Py by The T. Milburn | Yellow Post proper, giving his horses ~Co., , Toronto, Ont. | the whip. i a I ms Bjorn was not the man his bro- 5 r | ther was, but because Fusi was hon- Er . o [est Oeland took it that geod blood "aa " | ran all the way through the family. me . Dental Surgeon There they made their little mis- a =g. | take, Caleb thought, congratulat- 150 Wellington Street. 'Phome 079. Ing himself upon having discovered 2 by appointment. | @ stain upon the Aronson escytcheon y 1 \ of pressuse on the heart? | which he might with ease lay his EET HL ulle-lre finger on. No, he had long known % that Bjorn was not the boy his bro- Br ph std | ther was. Bjorn had not. evén KINGSTON TRANSFER Co | troubled to learn English with the 188 WELLINGTON STnkRT | plc (US Tus had siven to it Moves Freight, Steel, Building Equi | pus on the way home, he decided. ment, » Bafes, Planos, etv. | There was another little matter | that Caleb thought it would be ad- | vantageous to attend to. He got {Into his cart, clucked to fhe horse {and headed him in the direction of | the Klovacz homestead. The day was pleasant and Caleb was in an exceedingly good humor. By turn- ing his head westward he could look upon his own fields, already green and promising. On the east lay the | straggling, stony land of Anton Klovacz, with his few acres of mis- erable timothy. He laughed at. the irony that lay in Mark Jordan's coming to this morose patch of land, all that Anton Kilovaecz, with rarest good luck pending -upon the grant- ips of the government title, would leave in his will a few short months hence! Caled turned into the narrow, in- frequently-used wood road that led past Anton Klovacz's outbuildings. He drove slowly, and let the wheels run on the grass alongside, so that there should be as Httle sound as possible from them. He cramed his neck to see all that he could of the Klovacz place. It was months since he had talked with Anton, but he had hesrd at Yellow Post that the man was fail- ing fast and was leaving very soon for the city where a great specialist was to examine him. But that news only corroborrted the statement of Bart Nugent, who in his last letter had told Caleb that Mark Jordan Was leaving at once to tend to Klovacz's homestead 'during his ab. sence. Bart was a clever man, and he had done Caleb a lte-long ger- vice, never suspecting to what pur Dose. Bart had fondly thought that Caleb had Mark's interest at heart because of Amelia. A . veterinary surgeon and a keeper of stables, Bart had managed to continue his acqdaintance with Mark Jordan in a friendly fashion even after the war, and had faithfully reported every move that the young man is of everyone Adel y made. Caleb- chuckled to himself | when he reviewed the . situation | Bart had been a good sort. But | now ry | Caleb removed his last letter from his vest poéket, together with the warded it to him. He shook his head, and a. look came Into his eves that was seldom seen there. It was the look of the old when they hear of the passing of the old. Amelia must never learn that Bart Nugent was gone. For it was Bart and his assiduous reporting on Mark tha: she feared. Bart was Caleb's only connection with fhe outer world. Even if Amelia 'did learn of Mark's presence on the Klovacz farm, she must never know that Bart Nugent was dead. Mark Jordan would re- turn to the city, and Caleb would lose all trace of him, but that Amelia must riever know. For that would mean an end to Amelia's fear. Caleb skulked along in the cart, close to the alder bushes that were flowering like creamy curds be- tween the road and the Klovacs farm. He heard the voices of two men who were approaching on the opposite side of the fence, One voice was reedy and high as a child's, al- most with the thin wail of wind in a chimney; the other was'rich and controlled, full of another kind of youth. Caleb at once hated the deen assurance in the second voice. He knew by instinct that it was Mark Jordan's. The other was that of Anton Klovacz, dying of consump- tion with his feet on government soll Through the thick weave of the bushes, Caleb caught a glimpse of the two men. Jordan was tall and broad, Anton Klovacz were scoop- shaped, his face all gone to cheek bones and hollows. "God, how he looks!" sald Caleb to himself. Di. sease--destruction--things that he feared--things out of man's con- tol, As the men passed, Caleb turned his head and followed the form of Mark Jordan until his eyes ached from the strain. Pah, how like Jtte father he was---walking like h as God Almighty! The furious 1- ousy of Caleb's earlier years came into his heart again like a ravag- Ing disease long checked and now broken out more violently than ever. Bareheaded, he sat in the cart with his long arms stretched rigid down bptween his knees, his hands clasped' together. The reins hung loose, the horse pawed impatiently at the ground. A cat-bird in the near. IIE KIDNEY Apply: 1. Cohen & Co. 'ONTARIO STREET 'PHONKS 886 ana 837. J CROSS-WORD PUZZLE] > | PN A, Set sta HANLEY'S ; _ = (Established 1871) Steamship passages booked to all rts of i ; 0 the world. Pase- | eg ick issued 11 Th tickets over al Atlantic, Trans-Pacific, Alaska, Bermuda, West Indies, Mediterran- ean, Round the World Steamship passages arranged for if Ves or to or + C.N. ational 1. 10. Male child, 11: To annoy. 12. Father, {14. Tatter. 18. You. 17. Exclamation of dis- t. i 1 Bus 4 18.-Cut into' small Digit of the foot. 20. Fa depart. To perform. 38. Old wagon track. 19. Fright. © A 10. Money of account in one from the hospital which had for-| est alder-bush a sound. But § AT ER Shim son, not his son, that handsome lad! The son of Amelia and big Del Jordan, who was gored by a bull. Caled's sons-- | Caleb's children, what were they? | Well born, it was true, and. not out { of wedlock. But twisted and gnarl- ed and stunted as thé growtn on the bush 1and he owned, and barren as had been his acres before he had | put his own life's blood into them | for a meager yield. Caleb's head { slipped down until his chin touched his chest. The soft wind moved { In his scrag of hair, and in the in- visible touch was a gesture of | Unite pity. i { Caleb turned into the farmyard of | Fusi Aronson. His face was lined | with hard mirth. He had come upon {a-cholce errand. The great lee lander strode down fo meet him, and |" him a stiff good day. "I hear Bjorn has bought some j cattle from Klovacs," Caleb began smoothly, dismounting from the jcart. "He must be well off this | spring." "It was in settlement of a debt Kilovacz owed him," Fusi replied shortly. Caleb laughed. "Oh, no, it was- n't, Fusi. Klovacz got good money in return for those same Jerseys." Fus! started. "What do you mean, Mr. Gare?" Caled stepped closer to the Yce- lander and . lifted his eyebrows meaningly. "Of course he'll put the money back fn the strong box, Fusl. Tha church needs it, you know," he sald gently, laying his finger on the bid of the big man's overalls. He turned to go. "Of course," he added, "you need- n't fear that I'm goin' to squeal." Fusi, in his heavy way, was look- ing at him uncertainly, not quite grasping the thing, Then the slow red surged up into his face. He knotted his huge fists and plunged toward Caleb. "Take your time, Fusi, take your time," Caleb mocked. "Look in the strong box first. And by the way, when you are ready to deal with me about that timber down there bé- tween my hayfields, let me know. The sooner the better for me." He mounted the car and drove away. Chapter IV. The three black-eyed Klovacz chil- dren no longer brought crocuses and violets to Lind on the May morn- ings. Their father, Anton Klovaes, was seriously ill, Lind was told. And because there was no mother in the family, all the children left with him in the covered wagon for the city in the south, where a great physician would be called into at- tendance. Anton's savings would g0, of course. He had hired a man to look dfter his live-stock during his absence, the children informed Lind on their last day at school. He was a very nice, strong man, they said, who had brought them candy from the city and bad let. them search his {pockets and keep all the silver they ound there. On the very first day they had got so well acquainted with him that the younger of them had scrambled all over him in a free-for-all tumble, until they final ly got him on his back on the ground, where he lay laughing heartily. A few days later he had gone to Yellow Post and had brought bac! a box that sang and made music. It had heen sent to him from the city from which he had come. A num- ber of . books with shiny leather covers had come, too, but the chil- dren. couldn't make out a word of them, or at least not a whole line anywhére. Whoever the man was, it was plain that the children had been won over by him completely. The evenings were now so mar- velously tender that Lind could not Jolerate the imprisoned feeling on the Gare farm. She made a habit of going on long cross-country tramps alone, after school, return- ing barely in time for supper. She rarely met anyone, either driving or on foot, to detract from the lonely charm of her jaunts. Wondering a little about the man from the city who had come to the Klovacz place, she had several times been tempted to walk ovér that way. Of course he would be only a laborer, and would doubtless not be bothered with talking to her, but merely a glimpses of him would restore her confidence that the world she kad come from was still in existence, One day the Bandbo children left their pony for her to ride, The eve- ning set in with a fine gray web of rain, and Lind id in rough clothes, moutited the pony and rode southeast, toward the Glovacz home- stead. She took the narrow, winding trail that Caleb had driven on not long before. She passed the alder bushes and came to a stretch where the chokecherry trees on side bowed toward each other and al most shut out the sky. in- querying eb sat on, oblivious| Meds La Canes $10 Down and it's ours - pay balance E. a month, t Actors Authors Bakers Butchers Dentists Doctors Druggists Grocers Hardwaremen lawyers Merchants Ministers Teachers get yourself a Remington Portable. Send your cheque or money order for $10 (if you.send cash, ' register the envelope) and leave the rest of the details to us. REMINGTON TYPEWRITER CO. OF CANADA LIMITED 187 Charlotte Street, Peterboro J. A. Wright, Provincial Manager 8. J. Black, Peterboro Manager DEATH AT ATHENS, Miss Edith Chamberlain Was Beloved By Large Circle of Friends. Athens, April 21.--The death oc- curred on April 15th of Miss Edith Chamberlain, Main Street East. De- ceased lived alone, and had assisted at a reception on Wednesday alter- noon, following which she complain ed of a pain, which she refused to consider serious, not allowing friends to inconvenience themselves by re- maining with her. By Friday morn- Vv, w, VAY, He Policy. "Rp, sure that their comfort should be taken from tors North American "Whole Life" 3 man , through tection for his fatally at low cost ; You should be interested in the of this unusual policy. Write for 3-16 Clear Birch - Flooring An Ontario product milled on the best machines obtainable. easily laid. Smooth and clean and Approved by Architects and Carpenters. This makes a good, heavy, solid, hand- some FLOOR that will not warp. Cheaper than 3" 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 {ing, the condition of her heart was such that a physician was hastily summoned, Lut the end came despite all that couwid be done. Bereaved of their mother in childhood, she and her sister, the late Mrs. Richard Henderson, a former Athenian, had been carefully reared by their father, the late Mr. John Chamberlain, Lake Eloida, who passed away several years ago. With the passing of her sister, Miss Chamberlain was left without near relatives, but, by her optimistic spirit, and kindly dispo- sition, -she made many friends, who will greatly miss her. Her home was crowded on Sabbath Iast, for. the ob- sequies, which were conducted by her pastor, Rev, H. EH. Warren. Rev. Dr. C. J. Curtis, of this place, paying & tender tribute to the sterling quali ties of the deceased. The remains were interred in the local cemetery. Entertained Class, Inverary, April 23 --A number from here attended the Aid at Mrs, Kent's, Latimer, Jesterday. William Duff, Kingston, has taken over Mrs. Joanna Gummer's farm. Wilson Knapp, Sydenham, is visiting at W. 8. Aykroyd's. Mrs. Irene Tolls is with her daughter, Mrs. Fred Por. ter, Elginburg. John Lindsay, Syd- enham, spent one day last week Phone 1871. COPLEY Carpenter it Phone See ua for all Kins of work. Eatlmates given on new Farm Tile Price quotations gladly given. Shipped anywhere, GEORGE E. BAKER ARNPRIOR with his brother, William Lindsay at her home last night. 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