__ PAGE FOURTEEN --_--_ rr T_T ear... ~ THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29,1917. Le n Without Wrinkles ||" Now Easy To Have | Ski | wi THE CONFESSIONS OF ROXANE | (By Frances Walter) iS, HARDWICK, to Lmmed and wrinkle smooth and firm The proportio Mite (po hazel, Ing every drug Te i be used as a wash effective in disposi cheek and neck Hard sugh when | Kenneth just e al wa loubtful fam impatient] font be mi veryhe be ves on vour dressing rable, and every morn- ing take a glass from this bubbling foun- tain of health, ' jing your bac Nice rosy cheeks and { it? 1 prot a clear complexion [confused in spite of myself will surely reward the |: | "well daily use of ABBEY 3 i | Hardwick NONE BETTER FOR : ["And a # CHILDREN ' been nice things vou, SOLD EVERYWHERE either. You are too good looking for {the old cats. They can't forgive you Ito young and and above all, they can't fof having a handsome husband It them think of the time when = hing {cam that they have t you behind No, I don't know they have." declared Mr with diabolical persisten good many them haven't of aying about ABBEY'S VITA TABLETS ~~for pale, people--50 Cents a Box were young, but not handsome, The Time to Save when they had husbands who \ Your Hair is Now " re just plain, ordinary looking hu- man There things even n of a that woman, being handsome forgive you | make: {they are some that 10 GONE (11 ! GOING | tain stripe can't forgive, and 4 ; oO the superiority of another «© & 4 | Did you ever notice that?' | "Possibly 1 have noticed | ase { > an ald wialn om { phases of the phenomenor | "Well, there are NEWBRO'S HERPICIDE is the | phases of it I sit one 'remedy on your druggist's | shelves which may always be de- pended upon, Instead of complaining to your friends and mourning over your loss of hair, call upon your local frags and purchase a bottle of NEWBRO'S HERPICIDE. It is the first and original germ remedy for dandruff, stops itching and checks falling hair. You can save the hair you have women WOme GQING 1 tot 18 certain great many here and watch tr THE ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN Russia has enfranchised all her women much easier than you can grow new. Wonien voters in the world number | . e : | 15,136,236 | The time to save your hair is now. The remedy for doing it is NEW- PRO'S HERPICIDE, Applications may be obtained at the best barber shops and hair "dressing tis guaranteed by The Herpicide C guarante erpicide Co. Sold everywhere Every woman in Cologne many, is forced to work. Over 3,000 Breton women their living as sailors. Women are fast replacing the printing trade. The National City bank of New| York city employs nearly 400 women. | Miss Elizabeth Markland only woman surgeon in the army Twenty-four lumber yards in Wis- consin now employ women as lumber | handlers. English girls will be used as gard-| eners in, the military cemeteries in| France | In Denmark large numbers | women are employed by the state az! steamship pilots. | Crews of women sailors are fre- quently shipped on tramp coasting | steamers in Japan Mizs Helen Barnum, nie men in Women will be employed in the Carney's Point plant of the duPont Powder company, It is purposed to employ at first 200 women who will be placed at the cutting houses, where the work is light, A bloomer uttform will be used by the women The company will erect two large houses With spacious quarters so the women may live in comfort, The first woman's paper to be os tablished in this country for the def inite purpose of spreading abroad news of the new whman's rights was in 1849 and edited by Mrs. Amelia Bloomer of Seneca Falls, N.Y. + is the British; of | | e of the, t the public health nursing field. Your Grocer sells it." Costs no more than the ordinary kinds. E. W.GILLETT CO. LTD. TORONTO, CANADA "cynical old Ge "| eirn| | to be a member of the labor control | position. { an to held the position of dean at the | land, Ore., are women. { nesota inj good day mder the I can't yena whack for me and esounding Providence turned * to nly one thing about this | is at all useful," nd that is that they help tel going If it weren' I k of she wolves here the id go broke, and then would you and I live?" gave another short cackle tled several the 'she rred to and they cast in our direction See them?" asked Mrs. Hardwick look at them Aren't they y make you want Os urself? Yet I don't, and when you are old as | we are sort to the mundane Our existence can't be xipained any other hypothesis." But haven't these women children and grandchildren who are dear to | them 1 asked innocently enough | Suppose they have," retorted the woman, "What good | they children and grandchil dren? And what good do the child [ re n, and grandchildren do them? If | they cared anything for each other wouldn't they be living together?" I replied that I-hadn't thought of that of you hadn't," said the old woman brusquely, "but I have I've thought a great deal about the women in this place, and the more | think about them the less I think of them." She let out another hard laugh and slapped her fan more against her knee "Well, I'm tired, and I'm going to bed, even if it is only 8 o'clock I hope 1 shall have another interesting conversation with you before long, but if.any of these old women get to talking to you first, don't believe any- thing they say about me. And, above all things, don't believe any of their insinuations about your husband." She turned and hobbled away, leav- ing me staring at her with eyes wide with astonishment What did she mean? she de thi v here of a x | glance to as 1ppose a of necessary on do 0 the course, once (To be continued.) famous { BUR, 18 past Phineas T. Bar- 100 years of age. Over 7,004 busnels of wheat harvested this year by Mrs. Long, of Neodosha, Kan. For the first time in its history the London stock exchange has elecied a woman member, More than 1,000 girls are wanted to work in the Sparrows Point plant of the Bethlehem Steel company. A Two Rivers (Wis.) factory has replaced men with-women on all the light machines in the plant, Mrs. Florence Kelley has been ap- pointed by Secretary of War Baker showman, was Dora { | | 'board. | The big stockyards in Chicago are advertising for women workers to replace the men called to the front. Shell filling 4s carried on extenzive- ly by women in various munition plants in Great Britain. Mrs. Chu Pinghsja, director of the Pekin Normal School for Girls, is the first woman in China to hold sueh a Dr, Munn-Recht, a'graduate of Bryn Mawr college, is the first wom- New York university, Only 75 per cent. of the students at the western branch of the Western Union Telegraph company in Pore Of (Me 200,000 graduate nurses in this country, there are only. 6,000 in The others are engaged private ser vied in --- A Girl Scout fellowship has been established at Teachers' college, Co- lumbia university, for the academic year 1917-18, by the National Head- quarters Girl Scouts. Miss Catherine J. Webster of Ten- nesee, gave up a lucrative position as architeet to accept an appointment as a chief yeoman in the United States navy. attende | ehort | eral ) gradu Heavy motor trucks being used in, the devasted regions of Northern France to transport children and old | persons from the areas where misery | reigns are being driven by Smith col-| lege girls. The Massachusetts minimum wage commission has recommended a minis mum wage of $9 a week for exper- fenced women employees in{men's | clothing and raincoat factories in that state. 3 As a resuit of work dome by agents of the home economics bureau of the depggfment of agriculture, thousands of southern women are now practical! and successful farmers in many of the southern states. t Dr. Yamei Kin, the only Chinese woman graduste of an American medical college, has sailed for the Orient to gather for the United States department of agriculture data on the soy bean and upon its value as a nutritive food. Mrs, Alys McKay Bryant. widow of Johnny Bryant, the American avia- tor. who was killed at Vancouver in 1913, is training aviation students in Sandusky, O.; where she is furn'ng out from six to twelve finished avia- After attempts by others failed, Mies Jeanette Rankin, congresswom- RRRCA lamar lin FR 51 6 ra from Montana, has been success- tor: each week. 3 'hall'mail you a sample box free. Full Sa] 8 of German to join the the front seven out of the 51 rust companies New been. exclusively parentage, Red Cross banks York their n in ge audience of the recent of . t women who commencement i he University of Min-| school of agriculture, was | 1 a lecture and practical demon-| washing dishes Mis » Cunningham a graduate of the exercises )y Interestin T'wilight wtih SE b bd bbb db hbi i be | (Cqutinued from Page 7.) Mis. Sharp presided at tea Monday allernoon, when the Misses Sharp, Miss Ethelwyn MacGowan, Miss | Henrietta Wood, Miss Marjorie Wil- | Hams, Miss Beth Small and Miss Mur- Humis t noted attorney in New York « campaign to 1 | ,000 for the purpose of ¢ ndow-| | { Grace ton, most will I launch, a i a nation-wide organization for pr womanhood. Sev- wealthy women United the tection of of the | States have promised support, 'Mrs. Henry Atwater, a Chicago so-| ciety. woinan, has opened a dyeing es- tablishment in that city, to be "doing something worth while." She ted in chemistry and it is now possible f her to make up dyes that | do not ust fade, | guest iel Brooks were the guests of tue | officers of the Depot Battalion, Bar riefield Camp . = Mary White "Fettercairn" ' | Miss spent Sunday | last at and on Wed-| nesday afternoon left for Toronto. { Mrs. L. E. Staples, Woodstock, fs] spending a few weeks in Kingston. |! Miss Nora Goodfriend, Howe Is- | land, hus arrived in town to attend | Queen's University, Dean Starr, is the guest of Dr. and | Mrs, Thomas Gibson, Ottawa Miss Alice Hague, daughter of George Hague, manager of the Mer- chants' Bank and Mrs. Hague, is ex-| pected 'in Ottawa and will be the | for a few days of the Misses | Wickstead Miss Hague is spending | i her year's furlough with her parents | | been vis | Parsonage, Bowmanville. | guest | street, after several years' work as mission- | ary of the Anglican church in Kan- | gra, India. | « v=» { Miss Jean Taylor, Kingston, has isiting her grandparents, Rev, and Mrs. S. Sellery at the Methodist | was the | Bagot | Miss Leavitt, of Mrs, for a few Creegan, Brockville, H. Hubbell, days i Hamilton, the | Mrs. and | Misses Leila Simmons and Kathleen | Parrott, week with Mr Wilton, are spending the | and Mrs. R. K. Ovens, { 416 Johnson street. | | ! luncheon 'was tendered by the mem- } | { | | Sunday. | J. Gothard, Trenton, | S. | | EDNA mat- | | Grand Sept, 20th, Pte. Lawrence Cuarles Devine, Royal Ottawa Battalion, and former-| ly of the Leeds and Grenville Bat-| talion, was killed in action on Sept. | 16th. Pte. Devine's parents, Mr. and | Mrs. Edward Devine, left Brockville| a few weeks ago to reside in Regina. | Three boys are under arrest at Arnprior for stealing about $200 from the creamery. Some $90 was recovered, Ernest Carter, son of W, J. Car- ter, Picton, after recovering from an operation in London Hospital, re-| verted to the rank of Captain so as to enable him to get to the firing line in France . IF YOU WANT | EVIDENCE That Hemorrhoids, or Piles, Can Be | Completely Cured, Read These | Letters--Both Are Sworn State | ments, Toronto, Ont., Sept. 29 Next to] personal experience the sworn state- | ments of reliable people is the strong- | est evidence obtainable. If you have | any doubt that Dr. Chase's Ointment! will positively and completely cure piles, these letters should convince you. | Mr. Samuel Parker, fruit grower, | Grimsby, Ont,, has 'made the follow- | ing declaration before Mr. W. W.! Kidd, Notary Public of the same | place: "1 do solemnly declare that 1! was troubled with hleeding piles and was advised to go to the hospital to! have an operation performed. My wife said 'No, get a box of Dr. Chase's Ointment," I did so and have used it according to directions while living | in Manitoba and obtained a complete cure, for 1 have never been troubled | with piles since, 1 am now seventy! years of age and want to recommend | Dr. Chase's Ointment to all sufferers from piles. My wife has used it for] itching skin and obtained complete ! care." i Mr. Donald M. Campbell, Camp- bell's Mountain, N.8., writes: "I have | used Dr. Chase's Ointment with great | success for hemorrhoils or piles of | fiftean vears' standing. After trying all kinds of so-called pile cures' three! boxes of Dr. Chase's Ointment gave me a complete cure. I have also used wr. Chase's Kidney-Liver Pills, and there are no others so good. You! may use this letter, if you wish, for the benefit of others who may suffer | as I did." Sworn before me, Murdoch Gordon Campbell, J.P. in the County and for Inverness County, If you would like to try Dr. Chase's | Ointment at our expense, send a two- cent stamp to pay postage and we size box 60 cents, at all dealers, or Edmanson, Bates & Co., Limited, To- ful in securing passports for two Fonto. EVISTON |' gary, announce the engagement . » Senator and Mrs. McLaren, Perth, are guests of their daughter, Mrs. C I.. Benedict, Toronto. Mrs. Charles Hopewell has return- ed to Ottawa from Kingston where rhe visited her daughter, Mrs. Charles Askwith and Lieut. Askwith, Prof. Clark stopped at the Uni- versity Club while in Ottawa, A bers of the Ottawa University man's Club on Friday. « eo = Wo- Miss Milloy, Kingston, was the guest of Mrs. Fraser Westcott and Mr. and Mrs. Cleveland H. Metcalfe, Ouellette avenue, Windsor, Ont., over Miss Mabel Montgomery, Kingston, spent a few days with Mr. and Mrs. Mr. and Mrs, 8S. Woodrow, Pic- ton, are visiting their daughter, Mrs 3. D. Collier, Princess street. Mrs, F. J. Raymond and Miss Nor- cen Raymond, Mile Roches, were in the city for a few days accompany- ing Bland Raymond, who has entered Queen's University. - - Capt. Percy Brocklebank has re- turned to Cornwall, A banquet will )o tendered him. Mrs. 'C. W. Lane, Gore street, left on Thursday for New York, accom- panied by her mother, Mrs, W. Y. Boyd, Toronto, -Mr. and Mrs. T. McKean Robert son, Lower Union street, returned home to-day after visiting Mr. and Mrs. Hilliard Stewart -and Mr. and Mrs. Edward Low in Ottawa. Miss Violet Britton, Gananoque, spent Wednesday in town. Mrs. Alexander Laird and Miss Hilda Laird, who have been in Halifax for some time, returned to town this week. » - » Mr. and Mrs. James Clint, Cal- of their daughter, Nellie Georgina, to W. C. Beck, Montreal, son of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Beck, Almonte, The mar- riage will take place on October 3rd, - - - Mr. and 'Mrs. D. A. Story announce the engagement of their daughter, Sifreda Muriel, to Capt. John Nelson Gibson, Canadian Ordnance Corps, son of Mr, and Mme. T. W. Gibson. Kingston, -The wedding is to take place in St. George's Church, Momc- ton, N.B., on October 2nd. * * * The marriage of Anuie, davghthr of the late Rev. John Abbott, St. Luke's, Halifax, to the Aschbishop of Nova Sco:la, will take plage very quietly on St. Luke's Day, in Hali- fax. The day is the anniversary of the 'consecration of the Rt. Rey. Dr. Worrell to the bishopric of Nova Scotia. WAR MENUS How to Save Wheat, Beef and Bacon for the men at the front. Issued from the office of the Food Controllér for Canada, MENU FOR MONDAY. Breakfast Relled Oats Sugar Stewed Prunes Butter Tea or Coffee Milk Toast Luncheon Scalloped Tematoes, Baked Potatoes Brown Bread Butter Plum Preserve Tea Sugar Milk DI Pie Meat Mashed Baked Mil nner Baked Squash Potatoes Rice With Raisins k 5 Sugar * The recipes for Scalloped Toma- obs and Baked Squash are as fol- ws: Raked S Cit squash in halves, remove Rods and stringy portion, place in Sipping pan, cover and 'bake un- lwo in a slow oven Remove from shell, mash, and season with butter, sait and pepper. - Senlloped Tomatoes Take equal quantities of tomato and buttered bread crumbs. Put al- ternate layers in a baking dish with the buttered crumbs on top. Bake until the crumb are brown. Fither fresh ripe tomatoes or canned to- matoes can be used. (Wheat and meat saving recipes by Domestic Science Ex 4 of the Canadian Food Controller's Office) \ J Feat NA 'My! TLis certainly IS good Tea The woman on the left bought some "cheap" tea. - You can see she's not pleased. She's sorry now she tried to save a few cents by buying the "cheap" tea. . H different with the woman on the rightf, - The fragrance of her tea tells her how good) it is. She paid a few cents more for Red Rose Tea than the other woman paid for her "cheap" tea--and besides Red Rose will prove more economical in the end ! I wonder what's wrong with my Tea? Because of the rich flavor and vigorous strength of the Assam teas of which Red Rose chiefly consists, it will make 250 cups to the pound, or about a fifth of a cent a cup. So cheap that the very poorest can afford it, so good that the rich can find nothing better. Kept Good by the Sealed Package T; H. Estabrooks Co., Limited St. John, Toronto, Montreal, Winnipeg, Calgary, Edmonton -y PASTEURIZED MILK AND CREAM, Visit This Dairy and Decide for Yourself. -- Satisfaction Guaranteed. Oficial Teat by IL. B. Smith. Milk test. ed 3.2 Butter Fat. 24 JOUNSON STREET Phone 2083 A A lt Alt Pl PPP Pr "The Sweetheart of the Corn" This picture and slogan has been familiar to Canadians for over eleven years. It tells the story _ of the corn used in Hellogs? TOASTED CORN FLAKES Only the finest corn'is used and our secret process converts it into a light, appetizing and sustaining food. MADE IN CANADA. The Battle Creek Toasted Corn Flake: Co, Limited : Head Office and Factory: London, Ont. Ferner a anim, JAPAN TEA Japan Tea, the social liquor of the Flowery King whiere gather those to whom the hux- rics of life are necessities. Grown, cwed and packed under the control of the Japan Tea Ge~wers. Association, Japan Tea, natural and pure, possesses strength, flavor and aroma not found in other teas. ON SALE AT ALL GROCERS Pa 7