Daily British Whig (1850), 11 Jun 1918, p. 10

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"Ithe THOMAS COPLEY | Telephone 987 wanting the earpen- tery rei Estimates ridin on all kinds of vepairs and of work) alse wood Soors of all Linde. All orders will receive 5B attention. 0 Queen street, For Women's Ailments _ Dr. Martel's Female Pills have ordered by physicians and sold y reliable Dringets everywhere for over a of a century, don't accept a substitute. gh LEMONS BRING OUT THE HIDDEN BEAUTY Make this lotion for very little cost and just see for yourself. An attractive skin wins admira- tion. In social life and in business the girl or woman whose face and hands show evidence of constant care enjoys a tremendous advantage over those who do not realize the value of a healthy skin and a spotless complexion. At the cost of a "small jar of orc- inary cold cream one can prepare a full quarter pint of the most won- derful lemon skin softener and com- plexion beautifier, by squeezing the juice of two fresh lemons into a bot- tle containing three ounces of or- chard white. Care should be taken to strain 'the juice through a fine cloth so no lemon pulp gets in, then this lotion 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! Get three ounces of orchard white at any pharmacy and two lemons from the grocer and make up a quarter pint of this sweetly fra- grant lemon lotion and massage it daily into the face, neck, arms and hands. It naturally should help to soften, freshen, bleach and bring out the roses and beautify any skin, DIRTY ? Yes Co ---- T------ SUNBURNT ? 0. Your Panama will get dirty in time as usual after having Pan-a-Lac applied, 'but it will never get spnburned. It does neither rot, run or crack and drop off on your clothes. It is' watérproof. Pan-a-lLac is lite insurance to Panamas. Made and. used exclusively by Kingston Hat oSlcaners. Phone 1488. b THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, TUESDAY, By JANE PHELPS JUNE 11, 1918. The Woman Who -- CHAPTER X{1V. days following the incident, 1 constantly seemed to do wrong thing No matter hard I tried, I sald and did that annoyed George. [| was alm discouraged Several times 1 % been on the point of asking him let me go home for the summer, while he In the rest followed out his vacation plans without me, but each time I would remember that I might be giving way to someone else, Julia might be glad to be rid of me. Oc- casionally, as the days went by, joined some picnic or dinner party at which George and I were also guests, and although she seemed to her way to notice me, 1 felt sneer in many things she said To my delight, one day Mr jex ton called. 1 never thought I should be so glad to see anyone I had once hated as I was to see thi } 1 literally fell on her neck d she didn't chide me. Imm sly 1 took it for granted that George sent for her, and 1 was terribly pointed when she unde "I am not well, and with friends." she told "But you will spend me, won't you? If you only how I needed you--knew t things 1 have been sa this past week or two stay with me!" go out of a covert had eived am me ome tin you'd Open Confession. "What have you done terrible?" she asked, smiling, confession, they say, Is gr soul, so I'll invite with you while you i." "Oh, that will be fine!" ed, really delighted AA 'Oper to nyse Roh tell me all about I exclaim will "George yacht} of the; she | that 1 80 | A HARD LESSON TO LEARN uncheon; he has gone didn't you go?" She look- ow | things | reason. It certain- y for others, as well he remarked; then ier about the time on the yacht, 0 I was also tell- my ai like for Julia Col- it had increased, and how sneer at me whenever y day how med to 1 am afraid x these things make "tha t you attach too to them." to. nce try importa "i honestly not But it is hard." "1 know. But, my dear Mrs. How- fashionable life much is said which means absolutely which, if done in the which you were would have a sinister wish you would rid lea of your own in- you sensitive and situations which s amounting to more confidence ard, in and done {noth in had 1 guess wasn't -so Yet I knew poise, hig so I could i to feel differently. had a husband who 3, 1 would do better." proud of him, his t Mrs. Sexton knew it, talk freely to her Merton Gray Calls. « last sitting some days b e, and afterward had seen in Merton Gray, until one I was alone, and my othing o ifternoon he called TALKING With Lorna Moon IT OVER An Angel In "She has become an awful frump! All the men going to the front has certainly demoralized Peggy---and those blue glasses the last "I know. You never wee her at anything now. I truly believe that § that tweed suit is g the only rag she's got." +1 'can't think £ what she does with her time. | never find her at home when 1 call, and she never comes to the Red Cross meetings any more." "Shall I tell you?" said the crisp, cool voice of the Quiet Worker. Magpies gave her an embarrasse glance and prepared to move away." "No, don't go, please. I am sure you would not wish to be unjust to Peg- vy." (this with an engaging smile). "a0 do sit down and let me tell you. Blue Glasses. Of course, yon remember how, at the beginning of the war, Peggy would make more shirts than anyone else at the meetings. Then, after con- stant sewing her health gave way--- the trouble seemed to centre in her eyes--and the doctor said that she must give up the work entirely. But Peggy wouldn't be idle. She knew that I wanted to be able to do more work for the soldier but, with three young children to look after there isn't much time--so she sug- gested that she should take care of the children for two afternoons a week, while I attended the Red Cross meetings. The scheme has worked splendidly. It is a great relief .to get away from one's own children; and to do something different. Any mother, with everything to do for her children, knows that, and the child- ren love it But to come back to Peggy. She bought a second hand car--it takes all her dress allowance to pay for it---but she remarked to me that, as she spends most of her time in the cat, or under it, she doesn't need new clothes--and in this she takes the children out to the , country---not ~~ ---- glad of company. I had been strum- ming the piano in our tiny parlor, and when he was announced I was so pleased to see him, that I showed my pleasure very plainly. "1 thought you had forgotten me,' I said. "No, indeed. 1 have missed you sadly, and 1 have felt, at times, like destroving the portrait so 1 could commenee another one." This foolish sentence affectéd me strangely: someone cared! I felt the blood rise to my face, and a thrill of gladness ran through me. "hat would be silly," I retorted, then added: "I am honestly delighted to see you. I was a little blue. Mr. Howard has gone yachting, and [I dread being alone." "Why didn't you go?" It was the same question Mrs. Sextfn had asked. I gave him the same answer. "Unfortunately, I am not sailor." "That's too bad If you go often, you may overcome it." "No thank vou! 1 prefer to stay on shore. You see, I make a nuis- ance of myself, as well as suffer tor- tures." "1 wish you Merton said, after while. "Certainly!" 1 replied, and for nearly an hour I played and sang for him. "How can you complain of being lonely when you have your music?" he said as 1 arose from the piano. "It is a great help, but I guess I like folks better than most girls. I was brought up with them, you know real people." "1 understand." That was one nice thing about Mer- ton Gray. He always understood. {To be continued) a good would play for me," we had chatted a A AA AAA AA] A AP At only my children, but the children of soldiers, and soldiers' wives. She is busy every day, for, as she remarked quaintly 'this city is ram full of lungs sans oxygen." The soldiers' wi es call her 'The angel in blue glasses' and I think she earns the name, don't you?" oe War Garden Bulletin Practical Daily Guide For Va- cant Lot and Backyard Gare deners Enlisted in Great- er Production Came paign, Issued by the Canada Food Board in collaboration with experts on the staff of the Dominion Experimental Farm. Spray For the Onion Maggott + As onions constitute a valu- able winter erop particular care shonld be taken this year to protect them from the onion maggot. Before they lay their eggs the adult flies may be de- stroyed by feeding upon the fol- lowing poisoned bait spray: Sodium arsenite--one-quarter ounce; cheap molasses--one pint; boiling water--one gal- lon. The sodium arsenite is first dissolved in boiling water and the molasses is then added. When the mixture has cooled it may be applied from an or- dinary watering can with a small rose. The idea is to deposit the poisoned solution on the growing crop in the form of coarse drops. The first appli- cation should be made when the plants are about three or four inches high and four or five farther applications should be made about a week apart. Bright, calm days should be chosen for this work, If pos- sible. hl a iets) Some men celebrate the anniver- sary of their birth as long as they live, but the average woman aban- dons it as goon as she grows up, A Sluggish Liver Causes Lots of Trouble When the liver becomes sluggish it 1s an indication that the bowels are aot Ykking properly. and if they do ve many complica~ tions are lable to set in. tion, sick headache, bil- heartburn of the stomach, ne from & disordered liv er. THE BABITANT COUNTRY. It Is Picturesque and Recalls the Old World. New France! The change from the Marititse Provinces or Ontario comes suddenly. In a moment, as i were, one is surrounded by French Canada, by French faces, French farms, French songs and language. In all America, there is no more picturesque and old-world region of the white man than this Habitant Country beloved of the poet, Drum- mond, and occupied by peasants who form the only important offshoot of the French people to be found, The section has «n isolated, quaint, al- most medieval clyilization, in which gay French chansons echoing from peasant cottages, home-fashioned hay carts and furniture, lofty wayside "calvaries," tumble-down little Nor- man houses with sloping roofs and dormer windows, like those of France 300 years ago, scarlet sashes and bright, knitted hoods, high, two- wheeled carts or caleches, and low- running sleighs or burleaux, speak eloguently of a day long past. So, too, speak the leisurely, old-world cour- tesy and the simple gayety and con tentment of light-hearted '"'Plerre and his people," amid whom hospi- tality reigns supreme and smiles are universal. The villages are long and strag- gling. They often begin with one saint and end with another, as though the parishes, having caught up with each other, had decided io make common cause. Pass out of the long, winding funnel of the irregular main street, past the open-air clay ovens, where peasant women daily bake bread, with a crowd of children tugging at their skirts, pass the litter of lumber mills, and a high cliff or slope, crowned by a lordly monastic establishment, invariably cemes to view. Noble and majestic in its aloof- ness, it casts its loug shadow across some hut into which a habitant and his numerous family have burrowed. Enter this hut, and you will doubt- less find that the main room is do- ing service as parlor, dimmng-room, and kitchen. Im the corner, a clumay staircase leads up to a loft that is a shakedown for members of the fam- ily and a storehouse for lumber, There, in a flash, one has caught something of the pathos of the Habi- tant Country, of the out-at-elbows homes, which straggle along uatil they reach the door of an impressive twin-spired church, It is the old France, the France before the revo- lution, All along the shores of the St. Lawrence, once the only highway, lies the true heart of the Habitant Country, the spot where settled the lineal descendants of those who, cen- turies before, pentrated the 'pays d'en haut" with a sublime courage and inspiration, to lift the veil from the unknown West, Here gre the his- toric farms, measuring their precious river frontage by feet and their depth by miles, their houses ranged, in co- lonial days, in rows that their occupants might the better fend off the attacks of the American indian, J "Jean Courteau" cliags with an almost desperate love to the pictur- esque riparian villages of the St Lawrence, stretehing all the way from the "gates" of the Habitant Country at Riviere du Loup, beyond the core of Drummond's adopted Habitant world at Trols Rivieres to that otter western edge at Bord a Plouffe, which hugs the banks of the beautiful Riviere des Prairies. Here is the haunt of the gladiators of the saw log who, from the square lumber raft, sing their odd ditties, "Trois beaux canards," or "Par derriere chez ma tante." "Bord a Plouffe is on de reever, Bord a Plouffe is on de shore, An' de family of Plouffe dere all aroun'." It was Voltaire who, at the fall of Quebec, coutemptuously remarked that England and France were fight- ing for a few acres of snow, But the Habitant knows better. Happy and contented, his coulitry, for him, is the most precious possession in the world, and many a citizen in less happy lands might envy the spirit which sings: "But I tole you----dat's true--I don't £0 on de city, if you geev de fine house an' beau- coup d'argent--- I rader be stay me, an' spen' de las' day me On farm by de rapide dat's call Cheval Blane." rs. Raph Smith Introduces Bill. One plank In the platform upon which Mrs. Ralph Smith appealed to the Vancouver electorate in January last was nailed into position when Hon. J. W. DeB. Farris, Attorney- General for British Columbia, intro- duced as a Government measure, the Vancouver lady member's bill, "An Act to Provide for a Minimum Wage for Women." First reading was ac- corded the bill and its further pilot- age through the House will be left to Mrs. Smith, Hay Shortage In Cape Breton. Owing 10 the Streit 2 Sov and 'Breton ders woud re ¢ 2a 'share the SPAW cUSHION _ RUBBER HEELS Graceful walking, taught in . childhood, Is an asset all life through. Start the children right with at's Paw" Easy, springy, silent, too. A PAIR. ON 2 BO AR 7 A lesson in dppetiteiappeal | Positively ---- . = "Comparatively e---- . CALIFORNIA "FRUIT, 4 ADAMS i' : CALIFORNIA FRUIT > CHEWING GUM £24 Kandantly With the Yosclous Juipes of prp-- fruits. Keep o packet in, 'your pociet or purse for ready refreshment, Prominently dlapleyed in stores everywhere 7s 7 ve OAS tn crn) TUT! PRT) GU A Pure Chewing Gum Mothers Know That Genuine Castoria aamenaTIon OF FLANDERS. To the Sante Way Raltic Provinces raat he students Have Been "Liberated." versity. He sald: oie with rn 1.+-That Flan-| decision now being won and with the Mie of the Bal-| bu fat the ring of rom | > gue vod "berated" by { he 4 -evens of Germany was stated srankly with tant reo by gon. To pubes por-Gengral of / elgium. in a n - have

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