__ PAGE TEN ' THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, TUESDAY, JULY 30, 1918. en -- TE ---------- In the a OULD YOU risk a postage stamp to learn more about coffee? SEAL BRAND COFFEE and how to make it? How to equal America's most famous chefs? Our booklet "Perfect Coffee -- Perfectly | Made", you. It's free. Write for it. & SANBORN tells mn MONTREAL For Women's Ailments and Builder W. R. BILLENNESS aN daitis Bolidings of Al Dr, Martel's Female Pills have been grdered by physicians and sold by reliable Druggists everywhere TES for over a quarter of a century, ress, 3 Halve any Arnon don't accept a substitute, \ _y " anand C) a AAA, VAY CRTARRH of | SN CAPSULES YY We are Ready tor . the Summer Season With &» Great Assortment of : White Footwear, Discharges In 24 HOURS | Fach anpeule bears the § name 07 fon) 4 Beware of (MIDY) 4 counterfeits, \__/ Sold hy all drugeins. 4 A A A AAA NN Go To Robinson and Wiltshire's Garage For Repalr Work of All Kinds. Vauleanizing = Cars Washed We sell gasoline, olls, tires and accensori Open Day and Night. 239% Bagot Street Phone 242. Tennis Shoes for Men, Women and Also nice assortment of Canvas Pumps and Oxfords Prices from $1.50 and up. 'Always something on our bare gain tables that may suit you. The Model WHEN USING WILSON'S \ RINE 3 READ DIRECTIONS \\ Ra dada: daha dod oh Add A a a a hdd CAREFULLY AND ~.. FOLLOW THEM , \ SVS IRY Shoe Store 184 rn ie. dh dha Far more effective than Sticky Fly Catchers. Clean to handle. Sold by Druggists and Grocers everywhere. Quit Laxatives, . Purges; ° Try NR " Tonight -- Tomorrow Feel Right * It is a mistake to continually dose yourself with so-called laxative pills, calomel, oll, p i and force bowel action. the bowels Sha ver and makes con- stant dosing ssary. Why don-t-you begin Hight k a0. overcome your constipation and get v. va BLP . "¥*1 your system in such shape that dally Golng East. purging will be unnecessary?y ¥Y Live. City A : Nature's Remedy i Mall . (i. ...140am, : fo each 1 Ahk SLT UR ENE IR Au LOCAL BRANCH TIME TABLS IN EFFECT JUNE JUNE 28RD, 1018 TH aa arrive at City Street, Tenve. amit ht for & week or so. '12. ¥ NR Tablets do much more than sia) 3s . mn, y t easy bowel ac- a 4 is RAE am. 1 18 i4, 4 ", a. 'trains promt xian youl Poute to ronto, Petérboro, | 3 ..rty appetite, strengthens the liver, lo, London, Detroit, overcame bil liousness, regulates kidney and bowel action and gives the Shots body a cleant out. ® This en Ach you will not have to take medicine every day. An Daca ional NR tablet will keep your n condl« tion and you can always feel Bs best. 3 Try Nature's Remedy (NR abiata) and prove this. It is the best bowel medicine that you can use and costs only 25¢ per box, ontalhing enough to Jast twenty-five & Nature's Rem- edy (NR Tablets) teed and recommended £, H. sargent, Druggist, Kingston, Ont. Jletuics lin wy socommodadt! tickets and information, apply to J. P. ent, Agency: for all ocean 'lines. Open day and night. SAGE Pils | pL ealm of Woman --- Some Intoresting Features he Woman WhoiChanged By JANE PHELPS HELEN GIVES HER HOSTESS PLEASURE CHAPTER CXXXiV We had a delightful trip home George wag so pleased at the success of his business deal, so pleased that Mr. and Mrs. Babcoek had seemed at- tracted to me, that he was good na- ture itself, And 1 was perfectly happy. For once, I had really done something which met with his un- gunalified approval. I had not spoken of his going to the aid of Julia Collins, after that night. When we had reached our room, I hdd remarked: "I think you made yourself and me unnecessarily conspicuous by inter- fering with Mrs. Collins gnd her es- cort. 1 was terribly embarrassed." "Not as much so as was poor Ju- lia! How she happened to go out with that. man is beyond me. 1 ex- pect she did not know his fondness for rum---champagne, rather." "Well, I felt it was unnecessary for us to get mixed up in it." "Had you been in such a position, and any friend of mine had not done the same, I should have been very much annoyed with him," he had re- plied, still good naturedly. "How did she happen to be in Chi- cago when we were?" I asked, un- able to say any more about the res- taurant affair because of what George had said, 'She went a coyple of days be- fore we did, I believe, She is to re main some time longer, so she told me." \ RAEN One Cause of Unhappiness Removed. I was delighted that she was to be out of town for a while, It would be one less cause of unhappiness for me. 1 had told no one but Evelyn about the faux pas in the restaurant, { and she surprised me by saying: "I'mi sorry for Mrs. Collins, or, ra- ither, I should have been had I seen her." "Well I wasn't sorry! . 1 was real- ly glad," 1 confessed, acknowledging for the first time that I had been pleased at the situation * in which Mrs. Collins had ply ed herself by al- lowing that 1 14 act as her escort. "Why, Helen! think how mortified she must have been." "She was! 1 never saw anyone more confused in my life. I was so angry with George fo. going pear her.' Sats "1 should have been glad, had I been you. They have known each other always, have been in the same set, and your husband realized, that, knowingly, Julia Collins would never go where she would be placed in such 2 position by anyone." We said no more about the occur- rence, but 4 confess I could not see Evelyn's view-point, and am afraid 1 rather gloated over the fact that, for once, Julia Collins had been em- barrassed. She had made me feel so, many times, and 1 was not in a for- giving mood toward her. It seemed that nothing could shake George's good nature. He beamed upon me when he told me how pleas- ed the rest of the company were that Mr. Babcock had joined them in the affair. y "We must ask them to Moreland soon. Babcock will want to meet the directors, and we'll invite Mrs. Bab- cock, and entertain them at the house." A Compliment "Do you think I am capable? know they have such perfect vice," You | ser- | "Certainly you are capable. All} you need now is a little more con-} fidence in yourself. If they accept, | ask Mrs. Sexton to assist you, if you | like; she could come and stay while! they remain. But I really see no ne-| cessity for amy such thing. Mrs. | Babcock knows you are young; she! cannot expect you to be as experi-| enced as she is.- I imagine she was| keeping house when you were born. wl Would wohders never cease? il could scarcely believe it was George talking. If he were to be like this-- like he had been ever since we came! home---Iit would make life delightful, | I must try harder than ever to please him---to be the perfect hostess, the well-poised woman he would he proud | to call, and introduce as, his wife, "Thank you for the complinient, George. 1 shall try to deserve it," 1 sald quietly. | i i | "You deserve a lot more than you | get," he sajd rather brusquely. "But I am mighty proud of you, at times.' "| With that he left the house without | even saying good bye. He did not) come in until nearly eleven o'clock. | But I had been as happy as could | me, all the evening, and had kept! busy planning just how I should en- tertain Mre. Babcock if she decided | to visit us. I hoped she would, 1} wanted the chance to show George | that his growing confidence in me was not misplaced. i (To be continued) AREA Lm A TALKING With Lorna Moon IT OVER Honi Soit Qui "Did YOU bow to that woman?" "1 did. She is a friend of mine. Why?" "Oh, nothing, I'm surprised, that's al!" " "Will you kind- ly come out of am- bush and tell me JUST WHAT you. mean?" There if was more than a i$ hint of asperity in % the Comfy Lady's voice as she said it. § "Oh 1 don't 4 want to talk gos- i sip. Let's change the subject," fenc- ed the Better- Than- They - Lady in an effort to get on safer ground. She hated to have to back up her insinuations, and the Comfy Lady had a knack of making one substantiate one's remarks. "You don't neéd to TALK gossip, my dear, Just one shrug of your shoulder, and a slight elevation of your left eyebrow is enough to ruin the reputation of a female Anthony Comstock. But I can't think what little Mrs. Hammond can have done to mexit this lifted eyebrow attitude." "Why, she---she's not respectable. At least--Diolly Westmore said some- thing to that effect, And I KNOW that she isn't invited anywhere, "Well now, ou and I will just go and have a little conversation with Dolly Westmorg. JI. have known Mra. Hammond all my life; in fact she and I were school mates. I haven't seen her much lately, but when she first moved to the city, just after her beys went to the front, I helped her to fit up her little shop. She thought that there would be more companionship in the city than out on the farm, so she rented it, and moved in here. She said she felt she MUST have some- thing to occupy her mind while the boys were away." "Oh, has she got boys at te front? She looks very young," said the Bet- NOT A VILLAGE OR A HOUSE ESCAPED There is No Sentiment in the Latest gle Against . With the American Army on the Alsne-Marne Front, July 27.--A Seagate shell-torn waste and burn- ing moéuses and towns mark the zone evacuated by the Germans, and to day the indications dre that should the salient of Soissons-Rheims be recovered, there probably will not be a millage within it or house standing with its walls intact. At Oulchy-en-<Chateau, for possession. of which fom, Cowl AE Tike ome, or ug Mal Y Pense. ter-Than-They-Lady with a hint repentance in her voice. "Yes, she does look young. She was only sixteen when she was mar- ried. She has had enough trouble in life. { hope Dolly Westmore isn't brewing a little more for her." "Well, Dolly didn't say anything DEFINITE, you know. I don't think she really knew quite what it was; but it seemed that Mrs. Best had said something about the shop not being Mrs. Hammond's only means of sup- port, apd hinting that it was only a blind---<but 1 really didn't pay much attention." "Here is Mrs. Best now. just get to the root of this." How It Started. "Yes, T admit I DID tell Dolly that Mrs, Hammond didn't run her fancy work shop for the money that there was in it--but what of that? Mrs. Wise told me that you had said those very words to her. I didn't at the time understand QUITE what she meant, but I have heard other things since." "What a lot of evil-minded cats wp women are," said the Comfy Lady. *'l can see now how this ridi- culous story started. When Mrs. Hammond opened her shop, I/beaght some of her stuff. I happened to show it to Mre. Wise, and she re- marked that there was a great deal of work on it for the money it had cost me; and added that Mrs. Ham- mond would never make a fortune at that rate. I said that Mrs. Hammond didn't need to make a fortune selling fancy work; but that she liked it and really ran the shop to occupy her mind while the boys were away. She no doubt repeated part of my remark to you, and you in turn repeated it to Dolly;"while ghe in her hare-brain- ed manner would at once scent a scandal and make the most of it. 1 wonder if we women are EVER going of We'll we wil ALWAYS condemn the vie- tim without a trial if the victim hap- pens to be a female." often fortified, every village farm- house, using them to the last, and the Allies have not hesitated to re- duce them. . The grain fields and vineyards have escaped, although it is expeect- ed that thousands of over-ripe wheat will be lost through a lack of harvesters, The grain fields were saved owing to the rapid re- treat of the Germans, wha in only a few instances set fire to them, A slower retreat would have resulted in Jreater destruction. |which the crew had taken, they were started by t ee the shells of a to develop a sense of fair-play--or if) CHANGE OF WATER CAUSED DIARRHOEA. | People moving trom one place to] another are very much subject to] diarrhoea on account of the change of water, change of climate, chanve! of diet, etc., and what at first ap-| pears to he but a slight looseness} of the bowels, should never he ne-| glected, or some serious bowel com-| plaint will be sure to follow.' The safest and quickest cure for! diarrhoea, dysentry, colic, cholera! infantum, cholera morbus, pains in| the ' stomach, seasickness and all | looseness of the bowels is Dr. Fow-| ler's Extract of Wild Strawberry. Mr, T. T. Allard, Parry Sound,| Ont., writes: "In thé fall of 1914 I] was working on the new 'Chiclet| Gum' factory, on Carlaw Ave. in| Toronto, when I had a vollent at-| tack of diarrhoea, owing, I think, to | the change of water, .One of the foremen advised me to get a bottle of Dr. Fowler's Extract of Wild Strawberry, which 1 did, with the result that I hadn't taken it all be- fore I was completely cured." Dr. Fowler's Extract of _Wild Strawberry has been a national rem: edy for the past 72 years, and is sold by medicine dealers everywhere at| 36¢ a bottle, Don't let anyone palm ! off a substitute on you. When you pay your money for the genuine, you've a right to get it. Put up only by The T. Milburn Co., Limited, To- ranto, Ont. A CZECK-SLOVAK ? WOMAN LEADER hp gt dau; ughter s of po grvk, ach: oy fr atay cscaped from. Aus. and the doa is wife was an Ame "con, ~H MURDER CREW. Steamer Lydion Torpedoed in Spans ish Water. Santander, Spain, July 30.--The ch eargo steamer Lydicn has been torpedoed off Zumpa, tweniy~ lope miles west of San Sebastian. Of © the erew of 46 only six reached shore alive, the remainder having been murdered by the submarine ramming the raft and boats al thas Siieavering, 48 in the case of the 8, to destroy all evidence of strviv- ship was torpedoed territorial Waters. British armored cruiser Mar torpedoed sunk hy a aecording to an By the British » members of the crew of the vessel are m ig: and it is presumed they were k tHe former Russian A Positive Luxury in Infusion Pure Tea, without admixture . . . . of Any:Kind, foreign to its growth. "SAL AD A" has the reputation of nearly a quarter of a century behind every packet sold 8437 A at rt ---- ssa ¥ Garbage Pails Our galvanized garbage pails are sani- tary and durable. The cover is tight and cannot be knocked off by dogs. We have them in all sizes and at right prices. Lemmon& Sons 187 Princess Street. The SAFEST MATCHES in the WORLD Also the Cheapest! -- are EDDY'S "SILENT 500'S" Safest because they are impregnated with a chemical solu tion which renders the stick "dead" immediately the match is extinguished Cheapest, because there are more perfect matches to the sized box than tn any other box on the market. War time economy and your own good sense, will urge the. necessity of buying none but EDDY'S MATCHES, Now Is the Time To Purchase That New Lawn Mower You Hove Long Promised Yourself. , We have the best machines in all sizes at the lowest possible prices. Stevenson & Hunter Phone 53 | 85-87 Princess St. a trip to the intended. Ey Si Gis Sk SE ha