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Port Perry Star, 20 May 1914, p. 7

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my ac. "London 3 who care a year: curious , arrassed look face, I ye, embar her as Ihe the A Bu dden_ fear | sald; "she AT'm She received such a tation to spend a few days oolfeliow---a highly connected + Ha most delightful AT eston- | . super-Mare, that, as h has been lookine Just a little wee Hh tired pate lately. throunn overapplication to 'her studies, I thought I might venture to permit her to Boosnt the invitation. I expect her. back gas yy in : hous uriy: but, most unluckily, I have mislaid the address, and therefore 'cannot give it ou. However, en next you are com- ng ito Bristol. hi ou. il be BO very as to let me ou are coming, y ana. id arrange at nether Lil- 5 be ill or way but 'here to i al as we should wish to Congratulating 'you on your bril« © Mant artistic uccess-- picture 'Down to the Sea in Ships' in in iin ace Academy was superb--one. sctusity be iE ray on one's lips--I the salt s I dear Mr, Hervey, very Sincerely yours," & orland." "Katherine Stanhope The Jotter Jaftled me, Tt left me, alternative put to return. to and Londen in ihe to my. 1fking re) London' in the and her mother Hom- Madge had in Certain ¥ not | of Heredity and yet with cam e bar- are too pretty to walk 'heard one cad murmur a flushed and angry di "the Was no than five feet or even a little while retaining lender a 'a lovely woman under their curled- had lost none of shade, nor any are was just old, but into it some dash of co- feminity, Which attraeti muslin, in bodice" quetry, of rendered them Her dress®of That is called es and about the Falling in round a a of Shaped arms d been ld 1y Mrs, much ° and Stied; at Sisht of her. stopped quite with dilated, "trigniened eyes, front which all lovely. rose- ed. me, as oe Bind' to fear, and read every line altered; wi Ni pale ,, You were li sea i a a ht ago Jrom PROS! trip. hanged ran: up to London for a glancing nervously as as "I onl cuitton EN an hour ny ioe looked at by turss, me she. gave a little i Mey se 1 buy some of m on uy some of them say You » were my dear, -and nearly as nice a8 it was ; Bn a fou she fact Sat: the Insusagie Act was '? and when she deplored im i ory askin in reality, for know the Premier's hold well to resent its lib fries of «Tt is, all through, 3 it woul > keep its if it kept silence. Even of fits youngest member has learned to express self, and "on i words, | a very few arm, "here are want. Do come me, dear Mr. Her- want and I will iE ke VAR 1 a measured for , what n the 'world have you Been our shoes at the sea- side?" Yi hey are absolutely in holes! throw them away and have Sona oh pis " " v bad." woe her small, felt moist j rainy weather. Re SB walted in "silence while she was fit- ted for the shoes and the dancing-slip- 80 "Mrs. Moria "to allow hy She has'altogether neglected her trust." "Oh, she didn't know." Lilith vrotest- ed." "You don't know what I'm like for eating out shoes. And then I've been staying away: i our shoes in that condition! My dear child, why didnt you buy more out of your pocket-mi "I've spent Ee faltered "Lititn, hang- ing her head like-a child discovered in some act a naughtin "Still, Mrs. Morlan yanced you some mor "But I'm always having money ad- vanced. And you mustn't blame Mrs. Morland. You don't know how extrava- gant I am and how tiresome." "Then you are fond of Mrs. Morland?" "Oh, very, very fond of her," she an- swered enthusiastically; "and = you mustn't blame her for anything. Every- thing that is wrong is my fault. here's' an umbrella shop, and next to it a hat-shop. I should love to have dn umbrella--I don't think I have ever had one in my life. Only I Should chiefly want it to take care of my best hat, and I haven't got a best at, " she added, looking archly I burs oid "You insatiab! de tile wheedler!" I ex- claimed. "Doe: Mrs, Morland -buy u nice cloth vo ose. be F ohiinued. ) re teem ey MISS VIOLET ASQ UITH. The British Prime} Minister's Right- 'Hand Daughter. Miss Violet Agquith is always in the precincts of the House of Com- mons. Not only when she accom- panies her father to some such func- tion as the luncheon given to the newly-appointed Colonial = Gover- nors, but in the daily exercise of fot duties as her father's compan- best friend, does she live in the Parliamentary ' atmosphere. It is a ary and companionship so close that there is probably no grave question on which the father and daughter disagree. The girl's opinions are formed while she is at her father's side rather than during her lonely excursions into the midst of social problems. Her enthusiasms are Liberal ; she is with the Cabinet. On the face of it, such professions would be natur- al 'enough, if it were not the ten- dency of the young le of the modern world to in question "against would have ad- 0"! his fa~ ther listen to a small on aeroplanes 'and If subservience is, what is ealled for in a Premier's 'womenkind, Miss Asquith has been set the worst ex! ample in the world. Her step- mother knows not the meaning of word. Mrs. Asquith had always had the courage of her own opin- 4 Miss Violet Asquith. ions; and, even as the wife of the Prime Minister, she preserves that virtue. Her mots, when such things were fashionable, were fa- mous for destructive brilliance ; and when she wrote reviews for the Pall Mall Gazette, or 'when in the Times she. instructs the Bighops on Kiku- yu, it is because she has the inde- pendence that sets the professional, whether he be politician, or author, op ecclesiastic, at naught. Miss Violet Asquith is not unlike her step-mother, either physically or mentally. The notable differences between them are differences of a slightly different period; the younger woman takes life the more seriously. 4 --r POINTED PARAGRAPHS. The man who hesitates may find it to late to act. = It's easy to be happy ; all you have to do is to be foolish. Ignorance of the law excuses no man--unless he has a pull. Turkeys are innocent birds; al- moet any woman can stuff them. The world will forgive a man al- are sure of getting the genuine . , Canada's finest sugar, pure and clean as when it left the Refinery. 'and 5 Pound Sealed Cartons The 'maid-of-all-work in the ser- vice of a family, the members whereof are not on the most amic- able of terms, recently tendered her resignation, much to the distress of the lady of the house. "So you are going to leave us?' asked the mis. tress, sadly. © "What's the matter, Mary? Haven' t we always treated you like one of the family ¥"' "Yis, It's worth while to insist on the Original Packages. CANADA SUGAR REFINING CO., LIMITED, . . ' MONTREAL. mum,'"' said Mary; '"'an' I've stood it as Tong as I'm goin' to!" A man never. looks better than when he is looking for another man who owes him money. The most, successful men are said to be those who can sell what they do not possess to others who have no wish to purchase. WORMS death," 'but ¥ unequaled. drugyists. SPOHN To expel stomach and Intestinal worms from colts, as wel} as older horses, use a remedy that will not "physic them to ill act as a tonic. ull instructions in booklet with every bottle. Al) In: thia respect SPOHN'S ig MEDICAL CO, Coshen,.Ind,, U. 8. A. quality of the milk. money, most any old thing except a failure. Increase Your Dairy Profits 9" by giving your dairy herd Gio the most comfortable quarters that can be built. own dairy inspector and insure the absolute purity of your dairy products by building your stable and spring house of a material that insures sanitary conditions, and which, at the same time, is economical. Build with Concrete Be your It is the most economical material for every kind of farm building, for it requires no repairs, never wears out and never Besde painting. Dairy stables of concrete are clean and sanitary. 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