{ bgt: ey ¥ » " . i Rheumatic Poiso Torturing Pains and Swollen Joints Vanish When Rheuma Is Used or Money Back. If you want quick gratifying relief take one teaspoexl ~ = night and morning. Almost from the first day you should realize that when Rheuma goes in Rheumatism goes out. It acts on the blood, stomach and liver forcing the dangerous pois- on to leave the system in the natural way--that's the secret' of Rheuma's success, 4 It matters not whether you are tor- tured with pain, crippled with swol- len joints: or distressed with occa- sional twinges, Rheuma is guaran- teed by James B. McLeod of Kings- ton and Wallace's Drug Store of Na- Panee, and all ' druggists, to end Thuematic suffering or money back. Rheumatism is a dangerous dis- ease. It often affects the heart and causes death. If you have it in the slightest degree gst a bottle of Rheu- ma to-day and drive it from your sys= tem right now. ' Moves Freight, Steel, Building Equip ment, Machinery, § Planos, etc. AGAINST "Phones 377. Evenings 2231, Bless Dr. Leonhardt, the Physician Who Discovered This Common Sense Remedy It you think that the surgeon's knife is the only remedy of escape from the misery of piles, it's because you haven't heard of the new treat- ment known as Dr. Leonhardt"s HEM- ROID, s" This Doctor's treatment is internal. By experimenting for years he discov. ered the exact.cause of piles and then went further and compounded a rem- edy that would remove the cause, . Leonhardt wants every sufferer to benefit by his discovery and so that there will be no doubting or de- lay, Jas. B. McLeod, Kingston, and Wallace's Drug Store, of : Napanee, and all druggists are authorized to sell HEM-ROID with guarantge that it will do as stated or money back. On that honorable basis every suf- ferer should secure a package of Dr. Leonhardt's - OID to-day. General Insurance Marcella rose, with dignity. This 'Rheuma | was goii§ adéh too far. 'You forget yourself, I should be glad if you would go." , Leonie gave an angry titter lk an infuriated bantam. . !" "I won't go, until I've sald my say. Treman was mighty fond of you, though what he saw in you I'm blessed if I know-----except that you were sharp enough to play fast- and-loose with him, and he wasn't accustomed to that in women. They mostly spoilt him. But--"--lower- ing her voice, and coming a step nearer the other---'"what I want to know is, why did yon let the en. gagement continpe right up to the very day before the wedding? What was fhe idea, pray?" ] Matrcella was 80 agtounded st ths gir's insolence that she could not find her voice for .a reply, The other went on, rapidly: "You may say it's no business of. mine, but I intend to make ft ny business. Sly little cats like you ought to be exposed. Confess, now, Treman had some sort of hold on you? Isn't that so?' Marcella started. This abomin- able girl was getting near the truth. The other saw that her snot had told. "Treman had a hold on you," she continued triumphantly. "You first of all played him, to get all you could out of him. No, don't inter- rapt. That isn't the important part. But what is important, comes later. Tell me--"--her eyes narrowed like a cat's-- "tell me where you were at the time of the murder?" "I will tell you nothing. You have no right to come here, like a deteetive--"" Leonie gave a jeering laugh, "All. right; but don't forget I know a thing or two. I'm fond of Miles Holden, soft and silly as he is. And I don't intend that he shall go to the 'electric chair for this, it I can help it." > €he stood. for a mombdnt "uncer- tainly, then she said, in a different tone of voiée: "Why not own up? It's bound. to: come out at the inquest, anyhow." "I don't understand yon." "Yes, you do. It's bound to come out, where you werd." With sudden recollection, Mar- cella thought of the queer rustling in 'the bushes late last night, when Miles and she had had their lovers* rendezvous! Had Leonie Day spied on them? Had she hidden herself in the undergrowth in the little wood, and watched, and listened? Little did she really guess what was occuring in the other's mind. . - * The coroner's court was crowded. Long. queues of people waited out- side for Rdmission. Marcella, seated in the body of the court with Lady Warrington, felt as in some dreadful dream. At a desk on a platform that headed the room sat the coroner, facing the assembly. To the left was the jury, on long benches. There Was a table out in front, with some men sitting at it. Marcella had no notion who they were. She felt desperate with hension. How would it go? And yet--underlying her fear for Miles--thegs was queer excit>ment appre- that buoyed her up, The coroner was speaking. Mar. cella could . scarcely comprehend the meaning of the words. "Deceas- ed. . ,."tragedy". .. . "shocking discovery." The police evidence and the doc. tor's came first" All the :gruesome details were unfolded. 'rnen Graves, the butler, in the witness box, tell- ing all he knew, and greatly flust- ered. Across the court, the sharp eyes of Leonie Day were watching Mar- cella. There was no getting away from The Floating Powders. The magic teapot poured out four vanilla ice cream sodas into the four empty glasses and the Twins and Daddy Gander and the peddier drank them all up to the last drop, And then something very 'queer happened. 2 Nancy felt as though she had swal- lowed 8 wind-bag, and Nick felt as though he had swallowed a balloon and Daddy Gander felt as though] he'd swallowed--I don't know what. They felt so queer and so light they couldn't keep their feet on the ground, Their feet began to dangle and then they knew that they had left the earth and were moving right up through the air. "Ha, ha, ha!" laughed the old peddier. "I put some floating pow- ders into your soda water so you'd go away and never come back to Yum Yum Land. If you had stayed, no doubt you'd be wanting my magic teapot and as it is all I have left, I'd Hke'to keep it. Good-bye! Give my love to the Man-in-the-Moon." "Oh, dear!" cried Nancy. "I won- der where we are going now!" "Oh, dear!" said Daddy Gander. "It's dreadful to be up in the air without the magic dust-pan to sit on. One never knows how long the magic Powders will last. . If they give out we'll go down like sky-rocket sticks." "I'm not afraid," said Nick, "The cook's up here somewhere in the sky, too. Perhaps we'll find the fork and the dust-pan." * "Why, I never thought of that" d Nancy suddenly. "He'll let the House-That-Jack-Built and we can take it back to Pippin Hill and give it to Jack and Jill and Mrs.. John. Won't they be happy?" "Yes," sald Daddy Gander dismal- ly. "But who is going to let the air out of us? You can't stick us with a fork, If' something doesn't happen 'We'll be sailing around up here in the air until we turn into stars," But, my dears, we shall have to leave Nancy and Nick and Daddy Gander sailing around in the air, talking to each other. | They weren't a bit uncomfortable so it. didn't hurt them a bit to be there. ; Down in Yum Yum Land the king was back on his throne, and it wasn't 80 bad to be king again because the Lord High Counsellor and the Prime Minister, and the Keeper of the Bird- Cages, had all learned to cook a little, and when it came dinner time, the king's meals were served in the din- ing room at the palace the same as usual, One ean always get along without cooks if one has to. And the peddier was very happy as he went down the road to Yum Yum Is Your Child Cod Liver Extract In Sugar Coated Tablets Puts On Flesh and Buflds Them Up ' - = In just a few days--quicker than you ever dreamed of--these wonderful health building, flesh creating tab- to help any thin, andesswight little ones yer: ros ; sickness and where rickets ar Juspected they are especially val- usable. Most people know that from the livers of the lowly codfish vitamines of the first class are extracted--the kind that help all feeble under- weight men, women and children. Try these wonderful tablets for 30 days and if your frail, puny child don't greatly benefit -- get your money back. v A very sickly child, 'age 9, gained 12 pounds in 7 months. Ask Jas, B. McLeod, Mahood's Drug Store, Branigan's Drug Store, or any druggists for MeCoy's Cod Liver Exiract Tablets--as easy to ets, 60 take as candy and 60 tabl cents. ~~ rns nanan those curious, condemning "eyes. Were they condemning? What did the odd light in them express? But Mdreella did not care. Tha girl hated her, of course. What did she matter? ; Miles! How would it fare with him? That ghastly chain * of evi- dence. . ._. She could think of nothing, see nothing properly, unt! Miles was in the box. The ruthless questioning! He had been the last person known to have visited the dead man. At what hour? He gave it. What had been the reason of his visit? AR! what answer would he make to that? Quixotic to a point, Miles had de- termined not to drag the name 'of Marcella into the inquiry. His ans- wer was distressingly. vague. Busi- ness! What business? Of a private nature! There had been a quarrel, had- n't there? Well, not exactly, A small dis- pute (Graves' evidence had born that out.) 'Quite a quarrel, wasnt it? Miles hesitated, This was his revolver, 'wasn't it? "Yes, he admitted that it was, These were -his-inttials: But he hadn't brought it to the house. Oh no! No! How had it come to be lying in the long grass near the open. win- dow? Miles didn't know. Had no idea. He had'lost the revolver, some time back. . .couldn't quite remember where. Oh yes, he first discovered its loss the last time he was in the States. . . or maybe on boarasyp + s+ ~he wasn't certain, ,. , Marcella could see the bad im- pression deepen on the Jury's faces. Miles' nervousness lest her, name should be dragged to the light ot day--their midnight rendezvous the woods---that any possible asper- sion should be cast upon the girl he loved--these fears made him hesitate, ana weigh his woras wan- duly, so that his natural frankness and honesty of manner seemed at a discount. He admitted leaving the house by the window, which was open. Re- lated in the cold light of the ecoro- ner's court, 'with hostile eyes. upon him, there seemed no adequate ex- planation of that Proceecing. "I wanted to get away at once. Land in his old duds, because he hai 8 new idea. With his magic teapot he would start a lemonade-pop-soda- water stand and spake a fortune, But the cook! Yeu haven't any idea what had happened to him, after he disappeared in the clouds like a speck of dust, have you? He had spied the House-That-Jack- Built up on a cloud and was going straight toward it on the magic dust- pan. (To Be Continued). T out of the bread-sponge in the (Copyright; 1924, NEA Service, Inc.) Tard ili "ene 18 fenic Hams ....o...... 940 i: | > You' imei s It was a short cut," he repeal ad famely, ' A little sigh, as of disbelief, went round the crowded room. "And you admit that this is your revolver?" "Yes." "You did not drop it in the grass near the window?" "No. No. I tell 'yeu TY had mo Weapon of any sort when I went to the house. I haven't seen that re- volver in months." "Then. fsn't it rather a strange coincidence that you should have passed within a few feet of the very Place where, later, it was found lying?" (To Be Continued.) , fe sure of showy Thin and Wek [vetaiy: inl 8--Hercules Zenopoulos, * Hawal- fan Guitar. * & 8.30--Westminster Orchestra. . 9--Musical programme, WBAI (828) Cin 0. 8.30 p.m.--The Bicycle sextet. ' 9.30--Musical programme. -- WLW (422.3) 'Clucinnati, 0. |! 7 P-m.~~Organ concert. . 7.30--Sekatary Hawkins Club. 8--Organ concert. 8.30--Week-end Serenaders, ee SCRE Hae E HU 1o : 6-7 i) Chin Trio. S. 4 AI NGLII N CO. 8-10--All American Pioneers. By . ODAL, LUMBER AND Sel om 12-2--Midnight Frolic, BAY; AND WELLINGTON STREETS, KINGSTON, ONTARIO -- KYW (586) Chi ay 3 Phong 17, § p.m.--The Bedtime story, . 5 . 5.30--Congress dinner concert. 6--American family hour. 7---Congress musical programme. 8.30-9.30---Edison classical con. cert. ---- Heat Your Home Comfortably -- WBAL (248) Baltimore, Ma, 6-68.30 P.m.--Sandman circle, 6.30-7.30--Dinner orchestra, 7.30-8--Jubilee Singers. 8-9--Musica] programme. 9-10--~WBAL ensemble. Your furnace must be suited to the - hpuss ey Cur -- ors Complete radio programmes sold neers 3 5 2 at Canada Radio Stores. Do a hethet : Hamer He tr : = ------ able for your home. All Banner Fur- NEWS FROM OMPAHN. naces give heat less fuel, © are stro constructed the fin- | A Young People's Society Has Been est materials and are easy to operate. ined. Ask our about the "Bannsr" or write us Ompab, Sept. 15.--Mr. and Mrs. ey for Sustriving Purnases. M. Hermer, Mrs, and Mr. William Kingston on Friday for a trip. Miss Gladys Webbs -and Mr. Wallace Cramm, of Montreal, spent the week- end at James Woods'. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Prosser and family, of La- chine are at present visiting in this School has reopened with Miss Catharine Lauber filling posi- tion as teacher, A young people's society has heen organized by Mr. McIntosh. The officers were elected on Thursday night and preparations are being made for a successfy] society. 'Miss Greta Dunham returned on Saturday from Detroit, Mich., where she has been visiting friends. Edward © Watson The Galt Stove & Furnace Co, Ltd | Cox motored to ; Ont. £ BANNE x COAL #9 Kingwton E. Lawrengon, PLEASE TRY THESE NICE Perrin's Biscuits Malto Creams An ¥njoyable time was spent at We Sve ww king - E. Watson's on Monday evening P each Creams Sorbated and. A when Mrs. Watson entertained : Fost Sut pe' a 4 few of her friends. Miss Myrtle Cherry Ripe Hard. Our Coal Is all weighed Johnston, of Renfrew spent. a few the city scules. You got hus days at her home here. Miss Belle nny Doon fred of coal for a tom, Lot. your order for your winter ws | AVLESHORTH Cunningham has again returned to take charge of Mud Lake school. Mr. and Mrs. E. Massey from Detroit are visiting the parental home here. Miss Irene Harmer, Ardoch, spent C. A, SMART, Agent. Phones 1525 and 1788.J. a week with her cousin stance Hermer. Wich Sees Hard Service Gon DYEAR I