Daily British Whig (1850), 29 Sep 1915, p. 10

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(Continued from Page 3.) Mrs. Jamed Minnes, Bagot street, will entertain at tea to-mUkrpw in honour-of Miss Annie Minnes, leav ing for Toronto. Mr. and Mrs. Loughlin and little daughter, Rita, left for Brooklyn, N.Y., after spefiding the summer with Capt. and Mrs. Daly, street. ; Mrs. De Pencier, the wife of thé Bishop of New Westminster, will leave for Vancouver to-morrow. She remained behind her husband to see their son, who goes very soon to Kingston to take the officers' train- ing course, so that the chaplain- bishop will be followed overseas by a soldier, son. Mrs. Charlés Livington, Barrie street, has returned from a short stay in Toronto. Mrs. Valentine S¢huyler, who has been in France, busy with war work, has sailed for New York. » * - Miss Josephine Vrooman, Napanee, spent the week-end -with Miss Mar-| jorie Uglow, Barrie street. Major Arthur MacLaughlin, 8th C.M.R., has returned to Barriefield camp after an absence of a few days at his home in Bowmanville. Mrs. Mellis Ferguson and her baby, St. Thomas, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. Malcolm Sutherland, Earl street. children left on Satutday for Brook- Magical Effect of New Face Peeler To maintain a clear, youthful complexion, there's nothing so simple to use and yet so effective as ordinary mercolized wax, which you can get at any drug-store. Just apply the wax at night as you would cold cream. In the morning sh it off with warm wa- ter. If you've never tried it you can't white imagine the Magical effect of this harmless homd treatment, t old warn-olt scarf skin off in minute particles, It causes to come a little at a time, and soon you have entirely shed | 2 Inan. The fresh ywung | the offensive culjcle n underskin now in evidence is so heal- thy and girlish looking, so free from any appearance of artificiality, you wonder why you had not heard of this marvelous complexion-renewing secret simple wrinkle-removing saxolite in a half pint of witch hazel. Bathing the face in this for two or three minutes immediately affects every line and furrow and improves facial contour wonderfully. Hit 1 4 f R § i ii lift } i Earl | .W. Carswell, Mrs. George Moore and her two| Brockville. The wedd wi | place very quietly in ober. jam saying is a superfluous, for per- { | | been born with hard, or--worse-- 1 ARO. i unity magical in its action is a! lotion made | by dissolving 'an ounce of powdered | | lyn, after spediling the summer with «Mr. and Mrs. E. Moore, Union street. Lieut. Harold Wood, at Niagara camp, spent the week-end in town. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence O. Putnam, Utica, N.Y., with their little daugh- ter are thé guests of Mrs. S. Birch, Bagot street. . - J. M. Compton, with Mrs. William Morgan, Barrie strept, expects to sail for England about the middle of October, with Mrs. W. L. Grant, and her children. Donald M. Mcintyre, Toronto, spent the week-end with the Misses Mcintyre, Johnson street Miss Mary Shearer has returned to town from Smith's Falls. Miss Mary Chalmers, Karl street, left yesterday for Ottawa. » . . . Mrs. S. who is Miss Helena Whiten, Toronto, is | the guest of Miss Isabelle McKellar, O Kill street. Miss Jean Rose and Miss Grace Gilliland have arrived from Smith's Falls, to spend the winter in town. Pripcipal Gordon, Queen's Univer- sity, went to Toronto to-day to at- tend the ceremoniés in connection with the opening of the new Knox College buildings. « ® The engagement is announced of Miss Minnie Isabelle, daughter of the late Alexander and Mrs. Cuthbert. son, to H of 4 | PLAIN GIRL MAY BE VERY ATTRACTIVE Happy, Kindly Spirit Draws To Her | Real Friends and Admirers, {London Free Press. No woman can say, truthfully, that she does not care whether she is pretty or not. Every woman in her heart of hearts does care. The im- mutable laws of her being have made physical attractiveness as much a natural glory to her as strength is to Here I may be told that what I fect beauty has no need of art to en- chance it, and that those who have perfectly uninteresting features do not want to be told that physical at- tractiveness is indispensable to them. But it is especially to the plain and to the generally ill-favored that I ad- dress these words of advise and warning." And should beauty's self find a few useful hints I see no rea- son why she should not avail her- self of them. I know there are peo- ple who look well anywhere and any- how, No vulgarity, no carelessness of speech, dress or attitude seems able to remove them from their pedestals, But these rarely gifted persons are but the exceptions that prove' the rule. An immense number of ill-tem- pered women are ill-tempered be- cause they are ugly, They are not conscious of it. Their friends" do not understand and make no allow- ance. But heavy indeed is the bur- den upon these poor women and per- nicious is*its effect upon their moral characters very. often. Starts In Childhood. n ugly child cares nothing for its' ugliness. But when It grows older and perceives that it lacks something which is prized and honor- ed, is twitted with its deficiency and neglected through it, and is remind- ed of it every time it looks into the mirror, or into another prettier face, the constant disappointment begins to embitter the whole nature and generally creates a melancholy shy- ness. When the desire to attract awak- ens with years, and the young girl finds her fairer friends preferred be- fore her, "the vain endeavors to please by other means disheartens her, and she grows sarcastié, ill-nat- ured and envious. Though half-con- sciously many other faults follow, the "what's the use" feeling comes over her and she becomes unhappy and morose. BN Now it is to those who have this dency that I convey this message of home. Rare is the beauty of face | and form, who is not aware of "the fact, and it is just (his very same You won't need . to resort to the ng parching. scorching curling iron If you Will adopt the simple plan I wily ma - tion. Isn't tha good news? | At night merely apply a little liquid slimerine with a clean -tooth brush, drawing this through the hair from oot to tip. This will impart. a de- htful wavy appearance and a bright tre suggestive of "hidden sunshine." It will prove beneficial ta the hair, in- Stead of makin~ it brittle and dead- looking as the hot iron does. In the morning, instead of your tresses be- he n and contrary, you will find em quite mea, g ¥ to do up in any form, there will be no unpleasant odor, id s for or stickiness about the hair. I nggest that you ask vour drug- t on , mixing a ® guid silmerine--folir or WOR wh and saucer 'eh will require no Jou can pour a littie into when fequired. - You won't need to use th's at frequent intervals the way, because the curliness. taste y days.---Emily Coulson in Hyglenic Review. ~ -| Here is where the girl who is codsid- '| any girl who has enough ambition to | realize wherel li| are divided into two great camps' go in its greatest degree that spoils' the--natural beauty and in do- ing 80 places her plainer sister on the same level with her and sometimes exalts her to a higher plane. How often ase We attracted by a pretty face rising out of dowdy al- tire, run-down heels and altogether .the outcome of general carelessness. ered plain, outdoes Miss Feauty. The first requisite is to be well groomed at all times. Frill? and furbelows should be tabooed, but the plain tail- ored stylish cuts adopted, the sever- ity of which might be relieved by some fluffitess at the neck. A grace- ful carriage counts for much, and carry her head high and her chin drawn in, heér shoulders straight and who glides at an easy gait, cannot help but be attractive, and more than that, is pleading to behold, and as a result, is & after by those who lies true beauty. . Tt Women's Camp Of Life. "In time of war men and women Tanning and Preserving Fruits] are almost done--says the Govern- ment Notice to Hou A ood N v At et eA A -- | THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 20, 1915. a A ES = = = E =o ROYALTY SHARES SORROWS Cl an, pure wholesome, a tea you will like. | |, RedR Tea "is good tea® New York Fruit Store | Crawford Peaches, 11 qt. Baskéts | Crawford Peaches, 6 qt. Baskets | Blue amd White Grapes | Sweet Oranges PLE| 15e¢, 20c, 30c and 40c a dozen 3, 4 and 5 for 25¢ 'eo Abc and 20c a dozen |314 PRINCESS STREET. Phone 1405 Fruits delivered to all parts of the city.' MILK | THESE HOT DAYS VS. You Cannot Be Too Careful HOT WEATHER| With Your Milk. Our Milk i& thoroughly pasteurized, proper- ly cooled, and delivered in sealed bottles. » eo o Price's :: Phone 845 277 PRINCESS STREET. Hair Dressing that Makes Women's Hair Grow Radiant Women of Canada are demanding a perfect hair tonic, one that is daintily | every trace of dandruff, or money back. perfumed, that is not sticky or greasy, | Parisian causes the hair to grow and that will make the hair grow pro- strong, vigorous, and lustrous because fuscly and give it a lustre that attracts | it kills the dandruff germs that infest admiration. > | the hair roots, which is the basis of all Like their clever sisters in Paris, [scalp and hair diseases, and also be- they have learned that a woman with | cause it furnishes natural nourishment scant, dull, lifeless hair grows old all [to the weakened and run-down hair too 9 tubes. Since the introduction of Parisian| Parisian Sage is sold by druggists Sage into Canada druggists in every SVeiFWhere for only 50 cents a large town are recommend risian | bottle. It is fully guaranteed because" they know that it will do TTr------ exactly what the makers say it will do. Besides being a hair grower and | beautifier, ain Sage is rigidly guaranteed to stop itching scalp, to stop hair from jalking, and to banish 24 The Grand Duchess Olga daughters have just been taken at one of the hospitals | the Red Cross. Never has Imperial Russia been more | Class warfare is stilled. The throne is firllly- established in aughters have been unremitting in their exertions in the cause | The Grand Duchess Tatiana The Czarina The above new portraits of the Czarina and her in Petrograd, where they are serving as nurses under united than now in the hour of her tribulation. the hea of the people. The Czarina and her d: ters, poultice teations of theirwounded and suffering subjects. win not blister. Bie. a tuber ) BY bh: writes a woman who is living in the midst of what she writes about. Mrs. E. H. Maynell, in the London Chron- icle. "There is.mo other cleavage so sharp, for the p are in the camp of death and the women in the camp of | life. The men produce war and bear | death; the women bear life and fight death. All life is with them, from the | bearing of children to the nursmg back to existence from wounds and from disease. AnH life, even in the midst of war's worse deeds; is the permanent thing. It is no Crimean general we remember, but Florence Nightingale. In modern so-called "civilized" warefare women and chil- dren do not die--unless they die from grief or from starvation--but | all the great sacrifices of war are . made by women. -"In the countries of conscription their breadwinners are taken from them and not their hreadwinners merely, but the men they love: None of the thrill of comradeship is theirs, the excitement of the battle, the glory of victory. * They are left to.a truel and unceasing suspense, to the struggle with poverty, to tha: ast woman's horror of all--seeing her children, her chubby baby, pine and die. Surély 'the very prospect of such things is enough to rouse wo- men to a niadness before which the madness of opposing armies in the old days of hand-to-hand fights was a puny -and- nerveless, thing. : ; "In spite of the agonizing reasons! that women have for hating and fear-| ing war, they have, nevertheless,! played their part in'it and borne its | burdens very 'heroically through the | ages. The women of Sparta, the ma- trons of Rome, and the great Greek women are famous, though we feel, perhaps, that so great a gulf yawns between . their civilization and ours that we can draw & warmer inspira- tion from women of later times. i "There was a Lady of Pevensey In| Sussex, who was besieged in her cas- tle while her lord was absent fight- ing in the Wars of the Roses, and who wrote to him in this brave and ashion: fi § " 'And, my dear Lord, it it like, you to know my fare; I am here laid | by in manner of a siege with County of Sussex, Surrey and a great parcel of Kent, so that I'may not out nor no victuals | Is Eh ae | THE excellence of Ivory Seap cannot be - exaggerated. Every claim made for it has - been proven times without number. It is claimed that Ivory Soap is mild and pleasant to th v tenderest skin. Its use in nurseries proves it. boi a It is claimed that Ivory Soap is as pure as soap can be. lis use by hespitals and physicians in professional practice pro kt is claimed that Ivory Soap 'lathers freely, rinses easily and "leaves no smart or burn. Its use in millions of the better homes proves it. tf * it. It is daimed that Ivory Soap is the Most inexpensive soap. Its use by the poarest people It is daimed that Ivory Soap is the wealthiest people proves it. Nothing but superlatives can do justice fo Ivory Soap. it, best soap. Its use by » yur and withs the malice of ate ng :

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