a 'come from blood that's not just right. | 1 went to get rid of facial blemishes trv 5 Syrup. Any drug store. A ---------- AND DYERS Olean anything that ean be cleaned . 0. C0E & P. Office: 56 Arch Street. 'hone 1335w iE Cull snd dgliver. isee. OWNERS - ATTENTION is the tfme to insure with an {WILD GEESE] HALL RISK POLICY" * Protects you ror . PROPERTY DAMAGE, SION, FIRE AND THEFT and cheapest: policy on the et. Let me quote you rates. diy a CRUE OF UIE PEST Y Olive Roberts Bartor. Snitcher Snatch Has to Run. * Mister Tingaling and thé Twins| Jeft the hive of the honey bees and | 'all the friendly bees buzzed a good- ibye. "Good-bye !" called the Queen Bee, "I hope that Mrs. Tingaling will like the honey. And tell her she can eat all she wants, and it won't make her fat." Away started Mister Tingaling and the Twins, pulling the square honey- comb along like a little wagon. "Let's sing & song," said the little fairyman. "I'm feeling happier than I have for six weeks. [I feel just like singing." "What shall we sing ?"" sald the Twins. ° 'But before anybody could answer {there was a loud buzzing, and look- {ing back they beheld a large wasp {settle himself right on the honey and istart to eat it. ' "Get out !"" shouted Mister Tinga- ling. "1 won't," sald the wasp. "I lke honey and I'm going to have some. If you put me off, I'll sting you." "Oh, then just help yourself ™m {sald the fairyman. "I guess you can't ledt smuch anyway. Come on, chil- {dren. Don't pay any attention to the {cross old thing. Let's sing." { "What'll we sing ?" said the Twins again. | "Why, lets sing, let's sing--Ilet's Why we'll sing--" { But just them there was another buzzing. | And looking back quietly the rent {collectors saw a big hornet settling {himself on the hopay. "Get out!" shouted Mister Tinga- {Hng. "That's my honey." "I don't care," said the hornet. "I {like honey and I'm going to have Move over, wasp! Gimme ANN room! Um, yum! That's good | sweet honey ! Don't worry! There will be lots left for you, Mister Fairy- man." "| guess you won't eat much," sald Mister Tingaling. 'Come on, let's sing, children !" But before they could decide what to sing, there was another buzzing and this time it was a dragon-fly. Then next came a yellow-jacket, and after that came a June bug. And pretty soon the entire top of the honey-comb was covered with pas-| sengers helping themselves to the | honey and getting a free ride. { "My goodness! You'd think I ran | a bus line !" cried Mister Tingaling. | "1'd call it a dining car--meals at all hours !"' laughed Nancy. | Mister Tingaling had forgotien all | about singing by this time. He was | looking pretty blue. How am 1 ever | going to get all those creatures off | my honey when I get home ?"". he | kept thinking. Suddenly they heard a dreadful volce--Snitcher Snatch's voice -say- | ing, "Here, give me that homey ! ¥| like honey and if you don't give me | that honey, I'll grab it and run off | with it." | "Help yourself!" Tingaling quickly. | Out of the woods hopped the bad | little goblin, and he grabbed the | honey with both hands. But the wasp and the hornet and said Mister | the yellow-jacket began to buzz an- |, grily around h'm and he ran away | yelling at the top of his lungs. i "One good turn deserves anoth- er," they buzzed. 'Thank you very | much. We're full now and we're go- | ing. Good-bye!" » | "Now let's sing," said the fairy- | man. But I don't know what they | sang so I can't tell you (To Be Continued.) i A Sr AAA AA | By Martha Ostenso. Jocation was not a bad one, - and that Martin would be able to work again in two or three weeks. Caleb | paid the fee, and because he thought | it a little high he did not speak to Martin on the way home. That evening he told Judith to be ready to take Martin's place on the stacks to-morrow. He resented the tact thet an accident should have definitely set the course of events for Mm, even though he had decided previously that that was the course to take. Lind did not get & chance to talk to Judith until they had both' gone to the loft. As Bllen had not yet come upstairs, Lind slipped into the girls' curtain-partitioned bedroom. and whispered with her for a mo- ment, "Don't do anything reckless, Jude. Remember he spied on you once and he'll do it again,' she cautioned her. "If I were 'you I would wait until T though he had forgotten this, and then simply tell them all outright that you want to marry Svea." Judith looked away, Her eyes were obstinate, with something of Caleb's own evasiveness when he wished to avold an issue. Hot color came into her cheeks. "1 can't wait--longer than after the haying,'" she said shortly, then began to undress, turning her back half way ¢o Lind. Lind tried to fathom her expres- sion. "Why not, Judie?" "1 have my own reasons.' Her underclothing slipped down ool The doctor discovered that the dis- snatched #t up to cover herself. (A |they defiant look came into her eyes as | she met Lind's. Jamp and crawled between the covers | of her bed, leaving Lind standing in | the dimness from the light that ehome throngh from her owm side of the curtain. Chapter XVII, Martin's accident seemed to Amelia to be a direct move on the part of fate to hasten what was in store. Judith would have broken away eventually, but 'her release from 'the house now with the In-; dignities she had suffered stil fresh in her mind would surely be followed by an immediate effort to escape. On 'the night before Jude was to go to the fleld. Amelia put |. her mind to the problem and re- solved to make clear to her the folly that would lie in further re- ibellion. y The morning broke heavy and gray. but there was sufficient wind {0 prevent rain. Judith came down {before the others, washed at 'the sink, and then began to set the table for breakfast. Caleb was already outside, Amelia busy over the stove. Before he had gone out Caleb had said to Amelia, "You'll tell her it's fhe city If.ehe tries any more tricks." Amelia had understood that. Judith would have to be kept on the farm at any cost. "You know, Judith, you'll be avorse off if you cross him in any- thing, now. The ax is-still stuck in the barn wall,' Amela said while {hey were alone together in the kitchen. "He'Hl send you to the off her breast and ehe quickly "25. She blew ont tha | thing foolish, ¢hild. | THE DAILY BRITISH _WHIG | CROSS.WORDPUZZLE | 1 fu * " Ss | 2 8 9 . ww " " 5s 4 ™N Horizontal. A 1. Thin biscuit. 5. Wan, 8. Part of verb 0 be. 10. Constellation. . Pitcher, 13. Short letter, 15. Point of compass. 16. To affirm. 17. Naked. 18. To make 19. Crippled. 21. At any time, 22. Portion o? medicine 23. Italian river Irish. Block of glazed clay. Point of compass. To care of At no time. Opening. A pointed missle. 44. To fly. . Canvas house. . Within. food. 49. Net. . Soft level, 27. 29. 31. 33. 35. 37. sting. scale. . Turned about. 5. By. 6. Measure ; yore. . Lair ofa beast. 8. . To secure} 9. . To heat on 3 fire as. . To color slighily. mineral for face powder. . Cogwheel. 3. To let fall. . To make a mistake. Vertical, . Insect with a sharp 2. Part of verb 'to he. 3. Fourth note in the S-as 7. Painted. Myself. Small skin tumor. Native metal, To prevent. Shallow | receptacle for holding water used for washing. Night. Quantity. Violent stream. Attractive, Captivated. Testimony. Dined. Vision. Occurrence. Cooking utensil. Sailor. Membranous bag. Sesame (plant). International battle. To rap lightly. Toward. Correlative of eith- er. 12. 14. 18. 17. portable 18. 19. 20. 24. 286. 28. 30. 12. 4, 36. 38. 44. 45. 47. completely ' 48. 160. 51. used of area. A A. Sn wity--you're of an age now when an keep you there for years Don't do any- It'll be worse He'll catch, you for for you if you do. anywhere you go." Judith made no reply but her face grew hard. She knew what ghe had vo do. She took the coffee pot in wo the other room and set it on the fable. Then she called upstairs to «he others, After breakfast lind stood out near the fence of the sheep pasture and watch them ledving for the thaytield: Judith, Ellen, Oharlie, and Caleb. Caleb was riding in the cart while the othets, on foat, drove the morses ahead of them. Lind thought ot prisoners befng escorted to stone quarries by armed guards. Amelia went about her work that day as if she were holding Judith mentally in leash. 'She kept remind. ing herself of the thing at stake, and strengthening her will against Judith's. AW the possibilities of evil befalling Mark Jordan now re- sided in Judith. ' Amelia's mind reeled under the weight of this knowledge. But she must maintain control. Judith must be broken. Judith was Caleb's child. Caleb remained in the field all "that day, casually watching the stacking from his seat in the cart. He had turned the mare loose, and the cart stood in the shade at the southern end of the bush. Once in a while he whlked across the field to see how the girls and Charlie were faring. His mood was genial, his comments on their work en- couraging. Judith, pitching and pounding the hay tirelessly, refused either to hear or see him, She permitted nothing to enter her mind but one thought, that after the hay was stacked she would leave, no matter what the consequences. She knew now that there was no other thing to do. Somehow she would bave to see Sven and tell him what had happened to wait a few days. She red eyes, and would have struck her RESENTIMBIONT HIE IB) MIOIP[E JIMA LIN INERT] IRRIVIT IRIE VIPIICRIATERISINSIO! [ABIMOLP] 1 INE IRSIAP) STAN LAL IRSL ALLIES SAL ITIATIL ION SIP INSIRTIRNAID] IR CINE IF | [E IEMIAIDIE \ [OISISHME IONS SIL IE 1D) EL MMA MWINIE [D) [AID OE MAID IE IEMIVITIAITIE | EDL TIO YIEIOTIE IN Answer to Friday's Crossword Puzzle: would have new glasses. There would be a hired man or two. Amelia would have a new set of teeth. The neighbors would stop in on the way to and from Yellow Post. She her- self would be taken away some- where----there wouldn't be anything any more. Sver would marry some- one e'se. Limi would marry Mark Jordan. Everything would go om, but not for her. Again she found |" herself growing cold at the thought of her own violence. It was a thing Lind would never have done, a thing no one else would do. That's why they wouldn't understand it--those people in' the city before whom Caleb would take her. No---ghe could never face them. She could fiever make them understand. There would be no one to plead for her. Contain only those woods that are noted for their heating and lasting qualities § Le S. ANGLIN CO. LIMITED LUMBER YARDS, WOODWORKING FACTORY, COAL BINS, BAY AND WELLINGTON STREETS, KINGSTON, Private Branch Exchange "Phone. 1671, : Sa + Devoured. . Custom MORE COMFORT--MORE. JOHNSTON'S SHOE ST. CORNER BROCK AND MONTREAL T.J. The whole family would be against her, they were all afraid of Caleb, NEW LOW P! She would be closed in, forever, in a tiny space, no sky, no wind, noth- ing but her own thoughts, and that hot flood of fesking that came upon RADIO her sometimes when she thought of Sven, and always when she vas with In the listless heat that hung over the hayfields, Judith shivered. She caught Bien looking at her, and tgok a firmer hold on the fork in| her hand. She hated Hilen and her for that. curious look. But she con- tained herself and went on work- ing. (To Be Continued). Bronze memorial to the memory of the late Sir Adem Beck will be unveiled in Gait on June & ix J orial church. church, byterian church. arch. church. ohureh. As § p.m.--Seaside hotel ensemble. SUNDAY, MAY 20. OFCA, Toronto, Canada, (856). 11 a.m. --Timothy Baton Mem- 7 pm.--Walmer Road Baptist WGR, Buffalo, N.X., (319). 10.45 a.m.--~Westminster. Pres- 745 p.m.--Central Presbyterian Atlantic City, NJ. (275). 10.45 a.m. --4 Chelsea Baptist 2.15 p.m.--Seaside hotel trio. 7.30 pm. --- Chelsea Baptist WHN, New York, NX. (36 7.30 p.m. --~--Calvary : 10.45 p.m.--Janssen's Hofbrau or- t--Sophis Tucker's play] A] : 1). ser- J%, New York, N.Y. "sey. 1 pm.--Hotel Pennsylvania ¢ Arden, RL