Daily British Whig (1850), 9 Aug 1918, p. 10

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FRIDAY, AUGUST 9, 1918. _ BRITISH WHIG, THE DALY ENO'S FRUIT SALT Keeps - the World Refreshed and eed Your Poultry Purina Chicken Chowder, Purina Scratch Feed, bh More Eggs ana Sturdy Chicks, For Sale By 1 p - D. Couper 841-8 Princess Street. Phone 76. Canada Food Bonrd License . Neo. 8.3544, p Add A The Delightful Tonic Aperient FOR S8CALDS, CUTS AND BRUISES. FOR COLDS, COU CHIAL AFFLIC MUSCLES, SPRAINS AND STRAINS * AND NUMEROUS OT AILMENTS COMMON TO MAN AND BEAST, THERE 18 NOTHING 8 RIORTO THAT OLD TRIED AND RELIABLE REMEDY FOR STIFF DR THOMAS' ECLECTRIC & ut bcs, JIT RELA WILSON'S \ FLY PADS | . READ DIRECTIONS 3 CAREFULLY AND IRR ARE] A EXACTLY ~~ AN ) ", ho \ h A Sts ka WE Far more effective than Sticky Fly Catchers, Clean to handle. Sold by Druggists and Grocers everywhere. an aaa Ladies' white kid pumps and Oxfords. Ladies' white reign- skin & canvas pumps. Ladies' Oxfords in brown calf. Ladies' Oxfords in - gun metal calf or kid. Ladies' patent Ox- fords, high heels. The newest of the new outing shoes. The Sawyer Shoe Store Our galvanized garbage pails are sani- tary and durable. Jhe 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. 'Now Is the Time To Purchase That New ~~ Mower Have Long Promised Yourself. e the best machines in all sizes at the lowest possible pri The Woman Who Chan By JANE PHELPS A LONG TALK a walk. He never came home that he didn't bring me something--a magazine, a book, flowers or candy. Evelyn and my little namesake were often with me. And Madge Loring had been really kind and friendly. I should have been most ungrateful, had I refused to respond to her kindness, now Others, too, people whom I had scarcely thought of as friends, were kind. It kept constantly in my mind what Mrs. Sexton so often said about the best coming back to us, if we gave our best. I had proved it true so often, lately. I realized, too, that happiness and success in life did not depend so much upon what we have, as upon what we are, and upon the way we try to fill our place in the world. I no longer thought I would like to be poor and unknown. I loved my beautiful home, and the freedom to do things for others which my hus- band's wealth gave me. I had begun to get "my stride," as Kurts Reeve once said about himself in' business. cret, George," I said to him "Perhaps I have!" he returned. | "But little girls must learn to « urb | their curiosity." { "Really, am I not to know?" I pre- tended to pout "No, really you are not!" "1 don't believe it is much, any~! way," 1 laughted at him, but I was| anxious to know, just the same had confessed there was a And he was not inclined much of nothing. i I was soon to! know. The very| next day after our little talk, I heard the honk-honk of the car, and, run- nig to the window, I was just in| time to see George help a woman; out and then lift out a bag. Who! could it be? I glanced guickly into | the mirror to see if I was present-| able. It was early for George, and I had not yet changed for dinner I gave my hair a pat, then went out on | the landing, and looked over the ban- | isters. I heard voices, but seeing no | one Listening, I heard George say: "You stay heme, T'l1 bring her down." I hurried back into my room, so that George would not know I had | listened. He came in with his face beaming. | "There's a lady waiting to see you | in the library," 1 CHAPTER CXLIIL Sexton was gone for weeks, then away in her sleep. 1 was grieved. During those last f had- come to know her 80 well--to realize, more than ever before, the beauty of her character. I had not been well, and, aside from the time spent with her, had been out but very little. Then, one night, 1 told George that once more God was good to us --that once more he was to bestow his wonder gift on us. My husband teok me into his arms and held me close while he talked to me He told me how happy he was that it was so, and how he was going to take care of me. "And you won't mind if"'-- He would not let me finish "Put that foolish conversation out of your head. 1 imagine you did not hear it all, or perhaps you misunder- stood much that you did hear. They may have been speaking of some par- ticular man, an isolated case. But most men want children, Helen. | But I was yet far from satisfied. I Men who have a home, who love!realized l still had much to learn, if their wives, want children in that]!l were to be the well-rounded wo- home." man Mrs. Sexton had talked to me We talked for an hour. about in those last weeks. finally he put me from him, I felt But when one really tries to learn, nearer my husband than ever be-|nothing can hinder one's progress, It fore; felt there was less danger of |is only when we go at things half- misunderstandings and unhappiness, heartedly, that we do not get along. now. - A Surprise. had noticed a peculiar look on George's face, lately--rather a_ sly sort of look, as if he were doing something he should not. "You look as if you had some se- -- | | | | | She had quietly Mr suffered passed dreadfully weeks, secret. | i to make | | i When, he said," after kiss-}| ing me; and asking how 1 felt "Who is it?" "Come down and see," he replied with a laugh, and I followed him The lady rose from the depths of | an easy chair, as I entered the room. "Mother!" I cried, and, in a mo- ment) I was clasped in her arms and we were both talking at once Busy Days. I The days and weeks that followed were happy, busy ones. - George took such wonderful care of me. Each day he insisted that I take a ride and Arn rans a TALKING IT OVER With Lorna Moon haven't got far sea of matrimony you married You enough out on the to reach the calm of matrimonial friendship and the echoes of thrill. still keep. coming courtship shore You are sailing through the dan- gerous strait which lies between. It should be called the Strait of Di- vorce. Just keep on remembering that your husband is 'perfectly grand' and you will soon be out on the open sea with all its treasures of peace, understanding and ' accom- plishment." ---- The Vanished Thrill. They were unusually frank these she is in a position to flirt with him. | two young wives and amusingly|l've even tried it myself but one} tragic as they deplored tne vanished |can't flirt with a man .in the evening thrill which had left them matrimon-|and*then tell him to stop snoring in ally drab. the night! He's peifectly grand---I "Of course wouldn't change him for all the oth- er med I know put together--but I do wish for the days when my heart would almost stop when I saw him I wish it could always be like that." The Comfy lady laughed heart- fly. "You silly kids," she said. "I wonder how much useful work we would accomplish in this life if the thrill kept at top speed all the time. If everybody who fell in love remain- ed in the first state of delirium the world would be full of near-poets writing vers libre about a lady's eye- brow and moon struck females read- ing same. Who would go out and earn .the soup bone and who would make said soup bone into soup (with Hoover's permission)? "We have got to let down--we can't live for ever on the mountain tops. Think of all the 'spots on the sun' you~ discovered during your honeymoon and think how tragic they appeared : to you then. You found you hadn't'wmarried a god, but just an ordinary human who growled when he lost his cuff links and he was forever losing them! When the thrill was at its height that growl was a tragedy. Now you don't no- tice when he growls, in fact you ra- ther like it. It sounds home like. And you know that it means less than nothing. You are at the critical stage where you are learning to love the man you married and forget the Robert Chamber's hero you thought | -- (FOR ANY SUMMER OCCASION I love my husband," said the wife whose husband f was a little older, "but I don't thrill # any more when he 8 kisses' me. In fact BE his kisses don't § Interest me at all except in so far as they are an indi- cation that. he § still cares for me. Yet I was just wild about him threa years by when we got mdf ried. 1 could hardly live thru the hours until I should see him again. Now it's all S50 stogy and commonplace! I hate to think that I have to go on just making motions and never really feeling for the rest of my life. May- be it is because my husband is older than 1 am he has settled down so!" "It's not that," said the Wife whose husband had a Dana Gibson Face. "My husband is two years younger than I and not a bit 'settled down," but my head doesn't swim when he kisses me. Why 1 often look at his Greek profile and_ think 'heavens! What a glorious affair' I could have with that man if I were- n't married to him.' 1 envy every woman who isn't his wife because The right thing to wear for every oc- ion of .the is often a diffi. cuit prob! When it can be solved by one frock, the happy possessor of that particular dress knows real bliss, One such frock is shown here ready at the Instant for wear at luncheon, a midsummer garden fete or for dining and dancing at any smart country " "-N, "You Just Make Me the | from the; Always Good Alike oe d 'The Tea of Teas "SALADA" | Del Black -- Mixed He| or Natural Green J . iciously Different to the Ordinary. 1 Preserved and Sold only in Sealed Packets-- ---- SALE OF SUMMER FURNITURE Hammo Couches, $1 a |$1.75; Chairs, $2.00, $3.50 and up; Steamer Chairs | Leading Undertaker p WY R AhAAvhirharrhbkakakak A SN 8.00; Complete Lawn Benches Canvas, $1.50, cane $5.50. R. J. Reid Phone 577. yy yy en rn pr ---- Drink Charm Tea To Reduce the High Cost of Living try a package of Charm New Japan Tea at the low price of 28¢ a half pound package. Canada Food Board License No, 6-004, Anhui aaah dh dh A et tt a SAN tit NNN Can't sleep! Can't eat! Can't even digest what little you do eat! One or two doses ARMY & NAVY DYSPEPSIA TABLETS will make you feel ten years younger. Best > known remedy for Constipation, Sour Stomach rl and Dyspepsia. 25 cents a package at all Druggists, or sent to any address postpaid, by the U. S. ARMY & NAVY TABLET CO. 260 West Broadway, N.Y+ N TTR » at 0 OA I Rate] Is YourPanama beginning to fade ? In order to keep a Panama Right it Must Be Cleaned, Bleached and Reblocked at intervals. Bring us your work. We Buarantee satisfaction and will add to the appearance and life of your hat. New York Hat Cleaning Co. 208 Princess St. Phone 805. Five doors below Operas House. clube It Is exquisitely charming with the filmy lace trimming on net. WILLOW WARE FOR TABLE Charming and Decorative, as De. scribed by Authority on the & Home Beautiful. Have you ever seen a table set with willow ware? If you have you know how attractive it can be, notes a writer. More people should realize the charm of this willaw ware, For in using it It is possible to get a re- - Feel Reckless!" This is. what Ruth Hackett said to her husband during his constant fits of jealousy. Ruth was entirely innocent of flirting with another man. But all that she could say in self defense, would not shake Brian Hackett's unreasonable suspicions. . And we all know that 'what's the use?" feeling that comes when we have 'the name without the game' --that feeling that we might just as well have the game! But does Brian actually drive Ruth to a point of recklessness where she is foolish "en to smile upon another man? Or does her strong, fine wo ood stand guard against such folly? You can find out by reading "The Wife" 'which starts Aug. 12th in the ritish Whig. HAA WORTH WHILE! It will be worth the trouble to you to look at our midsummer sale prices on shoes, pumps, and white canvas lines. Lines at $1.49, $1.98, $2.25, $2.98 and SO ae paar Hoes, sm 5s v

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