Daily British Whig (1850), 12 Aug 1916, p. 13

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~s a. -- l Sensitive Skins ~ TER : exercise of any kind, & A whether sport or work, you will find the soothing, cooling, re-_ ) r ft been. r? He had ' Als secret to me in no un- br, . That he loved me 'be no possibility of Was his affection merely 1 mean it? hi infatuation to remain permanefilly with me, or was it merely the result of my own consciousness of Arthur's cruelty? Was I willing to deliberately can- cel my martial obligations and go with this new-found companion? Could. he take the place that Arthur formerly filled? "What would be in store for me if 1 took such a step? And if I did not, what would hap- pen to the friendship which had eprung up between this marvelously aghatie man and me? Would he on 1 ns ang Jorge me, and if he , would I get him, or would his absence become more and more & source of bitterness as the days wore on and my woman's heart failed to find the comfort with which his presence had filled me? These and a thousand other ques- tions virtually pertinent to my pres- ent and future crowded upon me as we walked through the deep rich grass. 1 could not answer them. So many conflicting emotions were tossing me about that I had lost my I could not see my 4 r relation one to the ether until I was alone and away from the influences which had led me to such lengths. J 1 glanced up to Mr. Gordon' face, but I could read nothing. What were his thoughts? Did he think less of me because of the weakness which had betrayed me, or had we been drawn closer together by that very weakness? Had he momentar- ily been willing to disregard the can- ons of conventionality and take me from Arthur? If so, had he med to the shrine of convention- or was he still willing to be- an of the central figures in a My feelings as I write these words is very different from what it was that day, I have known several wo- men who went away with other men - before the divorce court had granted them a legal right to marry, and I have yet to know of happiness com- ing out of such a step. It is a very different matter after the is granted, even if, sometimes, there is little difference in the mortality involved, and sec- ond marriages after divorce often prove as happy as any marriage could be. Nor is this wonderful. Tt is largely a matter of self-control, of strength of character, or regard for the decencies of life. Take the case of two imaginary women. Both | are married. Both realize they are not properly mated, and both deter-| + mine upon separation from their hus- bands because they have found oth- ars with whom they know they were destined to be mated. One woman leaves her home secretely and flees with her lover. The other quietly another domicile and files suit for divorce. ov watch what hap- Be aman who has fed with the an of her choice soon realizes that she is bound hand and foot. She is tied to her husband by every legal bond, yet she is living with another man. Her social status has become # minus quantity. She takes rank with the woman of the street. She dare not show her head among re- spectable peaple for fear of the treat- NS OF ROXANE By Frances Walter. 4 VOPR 1 glanced at Mr. Gordon's face, hu ment she would receive She hides herself in her own home, chafing over the restraints which - are thrown about her until she becomes morose or reckless. In either event she endangers the affection of -the man with whom she has fled and to whom alone she may look for reha- bilitation.. If she loses his affection there -is nothing left for her. Her only chance is that hér husband quickly obtain her to marry before her loyer"s pas- sion. cools. This happens in rare cases, tunate creature is deserted by the man who has been her companion in flight, and she ends it all with sul cide, or else ekes out a pitiable exist- | ence apart from those things which | make life worth living -- an exist- ence which proves a living death. In the other woman's case, she has | had the courage to set deliberately | about remedying an error, She has found herself mismated and geeks a release in the only legal way possible, It is granted her, and she (Continued from page 7.) Mrs. ©. E. Taylor, street, entertained at luncheon a divorce, enabling | More frequently the unfor-| she | t 1 éould rend nothing. weds the man who, she is convinced, | will make the remainder of her life | happy. She may lose a few friends, | but others will remain. She may | regret the past, but she still has her | self-respect. The worst that can be | said is that she made a mistake in | marrying her first husband. Above | all, she is sure of the affection of the { man who wed her under such circum- { stances. But none of these thoughts came to me as Mr. Gordon and I | went to rejoin Mariam. My mind | was too confused, too much occupied by the incidents which had just oc- curred, to dwell upon matters of pure speculation, to reason from cause to effect, or to generalize from the earlier observations of my life. 1 was taken up wholly by the emo tions which swept upon me and which had all but carried me out into that sea of uncertainty and despair which I have just descyibed It is | while one is in such .a Thental chaos that a slight incident sometimes oc- | curs to affect one's whole after life (To be Cintinued.) | Mrs. George Pettit and her small Johnson | son, who have been the guests of on' | Mrs. Bernard Browne, "Kensipgton Thursday in honor of Miss Gladys! Place," have returned to Montseal. Burton. « + eo = Inyitations have been received in town for a dance at the Country Club in Brockville on Monday even- ing. | Mrs. E. H. Pense has returned | home after a.delightful visit at St. | Andrews-by-the-Sea. | Miss Mabel Day, University aven- ue, left town this week to be the {guest of Mrs. Joseph L. Haycock, | Sr. Adolphustown, Miss Elizabeth Sutherland, Brock | street, is the guest of her sister, Mrs. R. Abbott, at Amherstburg. | Miss E. Johnston, Sydney, who {has been Miss Edith Fraser's guest, | is spending the week-end in Brock- | ville. } »* * - Mr. and Mrs. D. G. street, have qua Laké. Mrs. W. H. Martin, Bowman- ville, is the guest of her sister, Mrs. D. E. Mundell, Brock street Miss Julia Horsey is spending a few days with Mrs. Richmond at f Der summer home on Bostwick Is- lan : * Mrs. White and Miss Ethel White, Laidlaw, Earl returned from Chatau- day and are at the Y. W. C. A, v -" Menu for Sunday BREAKFAST Hueckieberries or Melons Cereal of Cholce Poached Eggs on Toawt Raisin Hread Coffee or Cocon COLD DINNER Grape Juice Cold nt Veal Vegetable Salad Layer Cake Fruit Iced Toffee or Coron HOT SUNDAY DINNER enl Broth Reheat Veal or Serve Cold with Gravy Creamed Potatoes Lima or String Heaus Stuffed Pepper Saind Layer Cake Lemon Sherbet Coffee SUPPER Bread and Milk Berries Deviled Egg aad Sandwichés Fruit and Cake Milk or Ten Ns ------------------ Vegetable Chowder Materials--One cup of diced pota- toes, 1 cup diced onions, 1 cup diced carrots, 1 cup cut cabbage, 1° cup corn, 1 cup tomfitoes, 1 cup lima beans, peas, or string beans, shin bone, 4 cups rice stock, 2 table- spoons salt, a little pepper, 2-table- spoons finely cut parsley. Utensils--Saucepan, knife, measg- uring cup, teaspoon, tablespoon. Directions-----Wash the shin bone; put on with enough cold water to cover; boil one hour, then add the vegetables and rice stock; boil slowly one hour, then add salt, pepper and parsley and the meat from the shin bone cut in small dice. - Cheese, Jelly | wt of Living" Mem: Pi Menu for Monday BREAKFAST Hucklebercies Cereal of Choice Creamed Dried Beef on Toast Whole Weath Mafling Jam or Brult Batter Coffee or Cocon LUNCHEON OR SUPPER Vegetable Chowder Tomato Salnd Stale Sponge Cake with Frat Sauce Baotterindlk or feed Tea DINNER » "a Grape Juice Egg Cutlet with fomnate Sauce Stewed Potatoes Cabbage Salad Sliced Peaches feed Tea or Coffee "-- Egg Cutiet With) Tomato Sauce Materials--Four eggs, 1 cup milk, 1 tablespoon butter, 2 tablespoons flour, % teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon on- ion juice or 14 teaspoon nutmeg, dash white pepper, dash paprika, 1 table- spoon chopped parsley. Utensils--Small saucepan, uring cup,' teaspoon, knife, two small bowls, deep frypan Directions--Boll the. eggs thirty minutes, lay in cold) water and shell. Chop the whites fine and add to the cream sauce; add the salt, pepper paprika, parsley and the mashed yolks of eggs; spread on platter and set aside until cold. When firm take one tablespoonful up in floured handg and shape into oblongs three inches long, two inches wide, oné inch thick, making the ends rounded. Dip in egg (1 egg beaten with 1 tablespon cold milk) being sure the cutlet is well covered, and then in breadcrumbs; fry in very hot fat. Serve with tomato sauce around. meas- | tablespoon, | i [TX | Peel Off Your F reckles] npn] To remove freckles, blotches or any | complexion difficulty, the best thing to do is to remove the skin itself. This is easily and harmlessly done by the application of ordinary mercolized | wax. The wax pedis off the defective outer skin, a little each day, gradual- ly bringing the second layer of skin to view. The mew skin is beautifully | soft, clear, White and young look- ing. Just procure an ounce of mer- | colized wax at any drug store and use| like cold cream. | California has 671,386 women eli-{ gible to vote. 0 | 4 ( wh > Miss Audreta Griswold and Miss Emily Hammus, of New York, have been chosen from a great number of applicants to spend a month in-the Adirondacks living the primitive life to prove that women as well as men can live in the woods by their own devices and with what nature offers. Mrs. Seth Barton French, promi- nent in New York society, who has just returned from a 7,000smile trip on which she started in behalf of the allied hospital work and Serpian re- lief fund, has applied to Secvetary of War Baker for the organization of] hospitals there. Russia has several neers and architects, woman engi- - a Especially During Summer Months The health 'growth and even the life of the bottle-fed Baby depend on his food. If it cannot actually be mother's milk, it should duplicate it in composition and in germ-free purity. Cow's 'milk, particularly in hot weather, is seldom free from dirt and harmful germs and so is usually dangerous to Baby's delicate constitution. In happy contrast, the* Aletbuys Foods ide a dictary thas 1s absolutely safe. Milk Foods, Nos. | and 2, are prepared from clean, fresh cow's milk, modified to the position of mother's milk, and entirely free from germs. 'Allenburys' Malted Food No. 3, is equally pure and sale, a suited to babies from 6 months old upward. With. I " ¥ . { Milk Food Ne, 1- - Milk Food No. 2 Malted Food No. 3 From birth to thres From three to six From six months months months on the juices of oranges and grapes, and fresh meat juice so beneficial to Baby, can be given with good results. "Infant Feeding and Management' is the title of a valuable sixty-page Booklet which we will be glad to send you free. "It's FREE Running" Never refuses to flow from the shaker, never cakes or hardens however damp the weather. SIFTO SALT is "free-running". It's something a little bit different und better for table use. Tryit: At the better grocers. TRUST the children to know what is good to eat. Kellogg's is a warm favorite with them because they like the delicious crispness of the delicatel toasted flakes. Mother knows that Kel- logg's Toasted Corn Flakes are good by - the way the youngsters thrive on them. They contain much of the nourishment | that little bodies need,and their extreme J pri are mins ratty, gles them kind to fil '" w J - 994% England, by Capt. Moore, chaplain : tummiés,"' : of 83rd Battalion, Q. 0. R., of} 1 Zz \ N . a Johnson street. freshing Ivory Soap bath most : ility : Miss Mabel Nesbitt h turned grateful. Its ability to cleanse a ! Borie athe or Se, a : : | Miss Essie Kirkpatrick at Woodhull sensitive skin thoroughly without Lakes Michigan, irritation makes 'Ivory Soap-~ valuable. 1 Ottawa, arrived in town on Thurs- » . . The marriage of Miss Gwendolen Stanley Bagg, daughter of the lite R. Stanley Bagg, to Frederick Mur- ray Smith, son of the late John Murray Smith, took place quietly on Wednesday at the residence of Mrs. R. Stanley Bagg, Montreal. e880) 'BCENTS ; (=) roars IVORY SOAP = Gladys Yehater, eldest dauginter of The only product made in Canada by = . an s. Arch . estis, : - : . or ny ow Ce a The Battle Creek Toasted Corn Flake Co., Limited® : Fellowes, 83rd Battalion, Q. 0. R., London, Ont. V C. BE. P., eldest son of - the late Rockclifte Fellows and Mks. Fel- lowes, Ottawa. Procter & Gamble Pactories in Hamilton, Canada

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