Daily British Whig (1850), 17 Nov 1917, p. 10

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

HOUSKE OF SAU Sa In Flavour, in Purity, and in real money value, H.P. Sauce has no serious rival, Try a bottle of H.P. to-day. FRENCH REMEDY. « N No. 1. cures CISCHARGES. A i No. 2, cure A } N Mu. 3. cunes VITAL WEAKNFS LEADING CHEMISTS. PRICE IN ENGLAND 2% p address envelope, age & sytiptons or FR on suitability in your cise. No follow up' circulars LLB CLERC Med. Co. HAVERSTOCK RD. N. W., LONDON THAT TRADE MARKED WORD 'THERAPION' 15 OW ls GOVT, STAMP AFVIXED TO ALL GENUINE PACYETS == | Gordon and Mrs. GRAY HAIR By, Tremalw's Natural Hair Restora- tive, used as directed, is guaranteed to | restore gray halr to its natural color or money refunded. Positively not a dye and non-injurdous. Price $1.00! Write Tremain Supply Co. Ont. On sale in Kingston at T. H, Sargent's Drug Store, Cor. Prin. | cess and Montreal Streets, | Friends Tell Friends ZUTOO Stops Headache ZUTOO was practically unknown oo Danads. To-day, thousands and thousands of men and women depend on these little harm- less tablets for quick relief from Head- Their fame has gone from friend to friend--from town to town--from coast Wherever there are headaches, there should be ZUTOO Tablets--they cure in 20 minutes. 25¢ a box--at all dealers or by mail B. N. Robinson & Co. To Stop a Persistent, Hacking Cough Thousands of people normally healthy in every. other t; are annoyed with & persistent banging-on bronehial couglt after year, disturbing their sleep making life disagreeable. It's so I ere's an old home-made yem- edy that will end such a cough easily and quickly. Get from any druggist "215 ounces Pinex" (50 cents worth), pour it a _iGon. Buttle end fill the bottle with n Sugar A - win taking Te at once, Gradually but will notice the phlegm thin ppear altogether, thus a h thet You never thought end. It also promptly loosens stops the troubled soothes the irritated ine the throat and ubes, and relief comes almost a day's use, will usually k up an ordinary throat or chest ang for bronchitis, croup, whoop cough and bronchial asthma there nothing better, It tastes pleasant keeps perfectly. ex is a most valuable concentrated of genuine Norway pine ex« and is used by millions of people year for th and chest col resu chial iatel THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1917. la THE CONFESSIONS OF ROXANE (By Frances Walter) J A RESOLUTION (Copyright, 1916, by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate), Mr. Gordon's business in Enville was over but he did not depart. 1 was fearful at first that his stay meant that he was involved in somé ather transaction which would af- fect Mr. Higginbotham or Kenneth, but when 1 saw him motoring with Mrs. Palmer my fears subsided. 1 knew that the subtle widow was the cause of his stay and I hoped that she would capture him. I said as much to Kénneth and he turned to me in surprise. "Why your sentiments with regard to Mrs. Palmer have undergone a change, then? Not many days ago you told me that you hoped he would be able tolresist her charms." "Did 1?" I asked with what in- difference I could assume. "I had forgotten, but if I did it proves that I have lost interest in Mr, Gordon or in Mrs, Palmer or in both. When one is willing to see one's friends married off it is a sure sign that one's attachment is waning." Kenneth laughed. "One would think that both Mr. Palmer were old friends of yours." "I certainly am not their enemies," I returned. "Mrs. Palmer is going | about the question of matrimony if' a very business like manner, and she deserves to succeed. As for Mr. Gordon, he did us a very good turn by abandoning his efforts to buy the C. P. and Y,, and for that if for no other reason I could find it in my heart to hope 'that he will win a handsome and dutiful wife." "She is handsome," admitted Ken- neth, with an emphasis on the sec- ond word which intimated that he considered that her only good quality I roused myself suddenly. "We are getting to be two old cats," I exclaimed. "Let us do some- thing besides tear our acquaintances to pieces. But a few days later when learned that Mr. Gordon had quietly taken his departure and that Hardwick and Mrs, Pahner were pre- paring to leave town, our catty pro- pensities reasserted themselves. "I bet twenty-five cents they are going to New York," declared Ken- neth, "If Mahomet wiil not come to the mountain, then the mountain will go to Mahomet, or was it the reverse?" "It signifies the same thing in the present case," I smiled. "We are agreed that Mrs. Palmer is determin- ed to marry Mr. Gordon." "They were both in the office to- day," Kenneth went on." "I mean Mrs. Palmer and Mrs. Hardwick. They wanted to sell some of their stock, and dropped in for that pur- pose, but Mrs. Hardwick confided to me quite incidentally that Mr. Gordon had made rather extensive arrangements for their entertain- ment while they were. in the little old city. The prospect of. having him in the family has quite gone to their heads. I shouldn't wonder if Mrs, Palmer was secretly addressing herself now as Mrs. Gordon." "It would be @ very advantageous match for her," I admitted. "Mrs, Hardwick could lose as much as she wanted to at bridge and still be able 40 borrow from her niece without the pafmful thought of having to pay back, while Mrs. Palmer could dec- orate all the fashionable places to her heart's content." "All of which reminds me that we are again criticizing our acquain- tances," said Kenneth. "I for one am ashamed of myself and am now in the act of swearing off. Will you join me?" "Yes, on one condition." "What is it?" "When Mrs. Palmer becomes Mrs. Gordon I want to be able to say, 'I told you so." "The condition is granted. Now for a more optimistic view of life." (To be continued) (Continued trom page 7.) The marriage of Capt. George Chip- man Drury, son of the late Major- 1 General C. B. Drury and Mrs, Drury, Halifax, N.S, to Miss Annie N. Ful- ler, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William W. Fuller, New York, is announced to take place on Saturday, September 24th, at "Haymount," Briar Chiff, N.Y., the country residence of the bride's parents. * . * Mrs. Leighton Guess, 381 Brock street, will receive next Wednesday, November 21st, and not again till the new year. Mrs. James Baxter will receive with her. * * . Mrs. Warren F. Lockett, Hamilton, received for the first time since her marriage on Wednesday. Mrs. B. N. Steacy has returned to Kingston after spending a short time in Montreal, the guest of Miss Irene Metayer. Lady Beck and Miss Marion Beck, Londony are in. New York for the horse show. Major W. Hagarty, D.S.0., and Mrs. Hagarty, who have been guests of Ma- jor Hagarty's parents on Chestnut Park Road, Toronto, are now in Kingston, » * The Rev. Lawrence Skey, Toronto, is to spend the week-end in Kings- ton, The Dean of Ontario is the guest of Sir Henry and Lady Pellatt at "Casa Loma," Toronto. Lieut.-Col, and Mrs. + J. N. 8. Stuart Leslie have returned after spending a short time in Montreal, guests at the Windsor, Mrs. John Nicolle, Barrie street, has returned from a ten days' visit in Perth. Miss Aileen Hughes, daughter of Sir Sam Hughes, will leave for France, where she will drive a motor ambulance. The Duchess of Devonshire and Lady Blanche Cavendish leave im about ten days for the south. Capt. Kenyon-Slaney, who accompanies them, will return after ten days, to Ottawa. J. J. Behan and sister are in New York visiting friends. John McKelvey will leave early in December for California to spend the winter months. Dr. Hooper has teturned to Ot- tawa from Kingston and is the guest of his mother, Mrs. A. Hooper, Cop- lan Court Apartments. * . * Miss Edna Chown has returned to Toronto after spending a few days this week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. G. Y. Chown, "Sunnyside." Mrs. James Rigney, George street, left this week for Ottawa to be the guest of Mrs. C. W. Belton, Miss Mildred Horsey, Ottawa, ar. rived in town on Thursday from Picton, and is the guest of her grandmother, Mrs. Cooke, The Rec- tory, Barriefield. . Miss Dorothy Chown, Macdonald Oollege, Guelph, is visiting her par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. G. Y. Chown, "Sunnyside." Lieut. Henry F. Richardson and Lieut. McCarter are leaving to-mor- row for England. BOFS IN 1918 - 1915 class was called from the fok lowing' April to. June, between August and November of that year the 1916 class was also called. Ger. many was then one class ahead of the normal schedule. The year 1916 again saw two classes called, that of the 1917 in the spring and of the 1918 in the autumn. In May of this year the 1919 class was called, and has already. furnish. ed Jrisogers. The calling of the 1920 class began last month. Ger many therefore now has anticipated fer normal requirements by three years. If she has resources to the Same measures next year we shall have boys of fifteen against us by Christmas a year hence or a little after. To us here this fact ei ma strength on this the accumulating evidence of grow. seems the of the war---namely, bY | ing ditfieaity in finding men to keep strength. the divisions up to wel® Mrs. Se a persistent wearing down of Ger- iF. Wrinkles Disappear have writes beauty > are Mas- 11 and i In the removal © kles, T discarded cosmetics e : { Mme. an, ! )» slow a method ve never seen wonders as a NR ANY Woman car t home without t t trou- A half pint of witc 1 and an ounce of good pawdered ss ite are all you'll need. Mix the two and apply this refreshing solution to yo face daily. The effect is marvelous -- in- stantaneous., Tne skin becumes firmer, 'tighter~--every wrinkle and sag {is affected You feel so refreshed after using the wash; you look refreshed, 100; 80 You whl look ten years younger." work harmless prepare, and le, ble SANZ SANZ. 2S I WAS wedged in LIKE A sardine on my WAY HOME last night BUT THE woman just ahead OF ME was well groomed, AND THE very sight of her HAIR RESTED my tired nerves. SHE HAD a little girl BESIDE HER and when the L. G. CALLED HER "Grandma" ! ALMOST fainted. I BELIEVE YET that it was A PET name because she LOOKED SO young. IF SHE does not use NEWBRO'S HERPICIDE | AM a poor guesser. Yours for heautiful hair, Lemons Whiten the Skin Beautifully! | Make Cheap Lotion i "Ae IE By Wiagic" } THE ACTIVITIES ------------------------------------------------------ OF WOMEN Wedding rings were first worn by Egyptian wives. Women retain their vitality spirits longer than men do. Seattle, Wash., has a housemaids' anion with over 2,000 members. Princess Mary of England is plant- ing her own vegetable gatden. United States womer have already given $36,400,000 for Red Cross work. Mrs. George Q. Horwitz, mayor of Moore Haven, Fla, is not a suffra- gist. There are over 10,000. unorganized women and girl workers in Seattle, Washington. Wages of women bookbinders in Philadelphia have been increased 20 per cent. Women are employed to sort scrap iron in the Sacramento shops of the Southern Pacific railroad. Out of every 1,000 wage earners em- ployed in the industries of New Jer- sey, 274 are women. Mrs. Martha J. Suitt, of Dutham, N.C., who is now past 90 years of age, has 112 descendants. More women are employed in gov- ernment positions in England than in any other place in the world. Miss Bessie Lipsitz is official cow tester of the Avoca Cow Testing As- sociation of Wisconsin, Women doing men's work are now admitted to full membership in the Brotherhood of Railway Carmen. The Women's Education and In- dustrial Union of Boston is teaching women the proper way to make sur- gical dressings. ) Women are entering practically ev- ery industry in the United States, and, what is more, they are making good everywhere. Ruth Law, who is working at a United States aviation recruiting sta- tion, claims to have enlisted over 1,- 500 recruits already. Mrs. Samuel Haight, a former Min- nesotan, is the first woman to hold a seat in the provincial legislature of Saskatchewan, Miss Eva Thackera is known as the champion farerette in England, having recently defeated 340 other women in a competition test. The former Dowager Empress Ma- rie, mother of the deposed Czar of Russia, is now engaged in tilling the soil on her farm near Yalta. In the automobile industry women are beginning to do much of the light- er work and in many places have re placed men as chauffeurs. Between April, 1914, and April, 1917, there has been an increase of 44,500 in the number of women who have taken up agriculture in Eng- land. Mrs, William G. McAdoo, wife of the United States secretary of the | treasury, plans to enlist every woman in America in the sécond Liberty Loan campaign. Mrs. Robert Lansing, wife of the United States secretary of state, has and The juice of two fresh lemons strained into a bottle containing three ounces of orchard white makes a whole quarter pint of the most re- markable lemon skin beautifier at about the cost one must pay for a small jar of the ordinary cold creams. Care should be taken to strain the lemon juice through a fine cloth so no lemon pulp gets in, then this lo- tion will keep fresh for months. Every woman knows that lemon juice is used to bleach and remove such blemishes as freckles, sallowness and tan, and is the ideal skin softener, smoothener and beautifier. Just try it! Make up a quarter pint of this sweetly fragrant lemon lotion and massage it daily into the face, neck, arms 'and hands. It should naturally help to whiten, sof- ten, freshen and bring out the hid- den roses and beputy of any skin. It is wonderful for rough, red hands. * Your druggist will sell three oun- ces of orchard white at little cost, and any grocer' will supply the lem- ons. accepted the secretaryship of the Na- {tional Association Opposed to Wo- | man Suffrage. So prevalent has become the cigar- ette smoking habit among young girls in England that a movement has heen started to curb the habit by legisla- Owing to the shortage of male help thirty women have started work as lumber pilers and machine tenders in a large woodworking plant in Spo- kane, Wash, Congressman Jeanette Rankin has introduced a resolution in the United States Congress which authorizes fhe President to take over and operate all the metal mines in the United States. Queen Victoria of Sweden is a daughter of the late Grand Duke of Baden, granddaughter of ithe ate em- peror of Germany, and full cousin of the present emperor . For the sixteenth successive year Mrs. Ella Walker has again been elected president of the Berwick, Pa. Widows' Association, the only organi- zation 'of its kind in the United States. A free aviation school for women desiring to help Uncle Sam win the war has been opened in St. Louis by Captain John Perry, the balloonist. Already over 500 women have been enrolled, Mrs.Laura Starcher, mayor of Uma- talla, Ore., the first city in the coun- try to have a municipal administra- tion composed entirely of women, has resigned and Mrs. Helen T. Duncan appointed in her place. The English training school for wo- men welders, which was started in 1915 by the Women's Service Bureau, has gone on and prospered until unow it is admittedly the best school of its kind in Great Britain. Great Britain has over 950 women editors, authors and journalists, and of these five have an income of $20,- a year. In the United States there are over 12,000 women e in literary work as apart from jour- nalistic work, . Twenty women clad in overalls and umpers have been put to work in the 1. foseph Mo., shops of the Chicago, Burlington & Quincy railroad, where they are engaged in wiping locomo- tives and acting as mechanics' help- ers. ¥ Thirty-seven out of 42 women who took the physical examina po- tions on the sani i leveland were fou sical condition, Only 2 total of 72 men out of were successful in pass- the same examination, Don't Stop To Count Them There are 250 cups of strong, rich tea--all from a pound package of Red Rose. That seems a very large number, but then you must remember that Red Rose Tea is composed chiefly of the strong, rich Assam teas from Northern India, which yield an astonishing amount of tea essence. Why! You can brew five generous cups from about one cent's worth of Red Rose. Doesn't it seem a real war-time economy to use Red Rose Tea, which tastes better and goes further ? T. H. Estabrooks Co.; Limited St. John, Toronto, Montreal, Winnipeg, Calgary; Edmonton Sad Feet Glad Feet . Which are yours? Seams are not merely un- sightly. They irritate the feet. Until you've worn of Mercury Fashioned Hose, you a pair Seamless Full cannot realize how glad your feet can feel. They are knitted on new machines, too--the only ma- chines that fashion the hose at the sides, giving the neat, sightly ankle. They fit with. out a wrinkle. Made in black cashmere, black lisle and white lisle-- from the finest, highly fin. ished and durable materials. There's class in every pair, ladies! . The Japanese Government prohibits @"herstion sed a I hn Japan Tea produces in 'the drawing, an infusion of a bright amber which is pleasing to the eye. ® It possesses wonderful "strength and body, a delightful flavor and aroma never found in other teas, i Grown, cured, packed and exported under the direct control of the Japan Tea Grow- 'en' Ansaciation, Japan Tea _ all its natural purity and wholesomeness, ON SALE AT ALL" GROCE

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy