Daily British Whig (1850), 17 Aug 1918, p. 10

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_ THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, AUGUST 17, 1918. TTT In the Realm of Woman --- Some Interesting Features 'How 10 Look and Feel Bright in Hot Weather When depressed by the hemt and you want to freshen up for the after noon or evenipy, just bathe the fac in. lotion made by dissolving an ounce of pure powdered saxolite in a half pint of witch hazel. You wll find this more refreshing than an hours resi. As a wrinkle-remover the saxolite Jotion 1s remarkably successful its action is almost magical. The deepest furrows, as well as the finest Lines Jnather due to age, "liness, weather or, worry--are immediately afoot qa En- larged pores are reduced, flabby skin is "drawn in" facial eontour is im. proved wonderfully, The s.mple In- redients of pourse can be had at any | gatore, and vou need not to try the lotion, as, it Will not harm any skin in the lea GRAY HAIR Tremain's Natural Hair Restora- oo "used as directed, Is guaranteed to restore gray hair to its natural color Positively not a non-injurfous, Tics $1.00. n Kingston by T. H. Sargent, Prindens and Montreal Sta. * For Women's Ailments Dr. Martel's Female Pills bave ts everywhere over a gq of a century, t acsept a substitute, Ss Freckle-F ace Sun and Wind Bring Out Ugly Spota: How to Remove Easily. Here's a chance, Miss Freckle-face, to try a remedy for freckles with the guarantee of a reliable dealer, that it will not cost you a penny unless it removes the freckles; while If it does give you a clear complexion the ex- pense is trifling. Bimply get an ounce of Othine-- double strength---from any druggist and a few applications should show you how dasy it is to rid yourself of the homely freckles and get a beauti- ful complexion. Rarely is mote than one ounce needed for" the worst case. Be sure to ask the druggist for the double strength Othine as this strength is sold under guarantee of money back if it fails to remove freckles. LEMON JUICE TAKES OFF TAN Girls! Make bleaching lotion if skin is sunburned, tanned or freckled rs the juice of 4wg lemons into a bottle containing three ounces of White, shake well, and 3 { have a quarter pint of the best it sunburn and tan lotion, and com on beautifier, at very, very cost. Wop grocer has the lemons and -store or toilet counter will supply he. 3 ounces of Orchard few cents. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion into the face, neck, arms and hands each day and see how frec! , sunburn, windburn, and tan disappear and how clear, .soft and white the skin becomes. Yes! It is harmless. | , |&L breakfast hesitate | "The Wite" By Jane Phelps CHAPTER VIL {| Ruth chattered gayly with her aunt That Mrs. Clayborne was not quite pleased that she was going to marry Brian, she knew. But, so long as that displeasure took ino other form than cutting her off from spending money; Ruth did not worry about it For, one who has always spent money recklessly Knows nothing of its value. 'Mrs. Clayborne had allowed Ruth her own way in regard to their wed- | ding... It was no part of her plan to aleniate her niece. So Ruth wis to be married in the little church she had attended ever since she came to "The Terrace." 1e same old white- haired minister who had patted her on the head, then, and said he hoped she would help her aunt forget ner sorrow because of the death of her hushand, was to marry her to Brian. There were to be no engraved invi- tations. Ruth herself had gone' from house to house and invited the few whom she wished to come to the church, and to the wedding break- fast afterward There were only a few dozen young people, and some old friends "of Mrs. Clayborne's-- perhaps twenty in all. Ruth laugh- ed when she overheard one of the servants say: "Dat Miss Hopkins' Eliza said dat Miss Ruth warn't havin' no kind of weddin' at all. 8he said she warn't invitin" nobobdy and that she was marryin" a pore man." She was marryin a poor man, per- haps, but he wouldn't be poor very long! He had told her he wouldn't, And he couldn't be so very poor; he and his uncle was a lsuth jdressed nicely, prominent man in the town. was clever, in many ways, but in others she was as ignorant as, when a child of ten, she had come to live with her wealthy aunt. GOOD- BYES "What vo all doin'? Rachel ask- ed, "I'se got yo dress and the rest of yo things on the bed lak yo told me. Twelve o'clock comes mighty soon, missy Ruth." (Twelve o'clock' was the hour for the wedding.) The Dear Old House. "I'm saying goodbye to the rooms, Rachel. I'm going a long way and may not get back to visit for some time." "It ain't dem rooms what is gwo's} to miss vo, honey; it am old Rachel and Missy Claiborn, and all the rest of we uns." "1 know, be with me. married when younger than I but yo will soon Aunt Laura got she was + young- am: I am almost twenty-one. She was only eighteen, and she was happy, too," she added, a wistful tone in her voice, "she told me she was--that she was always happy until Uncle Clark died. If I ever have a boy, Rachel. I shall name him 'Clark.' It would please her so much. I haven't told her, but I made up my mind, years azo, that I would." "Yo sho'ly is quare, missy Ruth-- talkin' about namin' a baby," and old Rachel laughed and cried tageth- er as Ruth went into her aunt's room to talk, a few moments, before she put on the shimmering satin dress spread out upon the dainty lace cov- ered bed. Mrs. Clayborn was sitting quietly by the window, the morning paper still unfolded in her lap. Her thoughts were sad, and she did not hear Ruth enter the room. "Guess who it 8?" Ruth said gay- ly, putting her hands over Mrs. Clay- borne's eyes, then leaning over to kiss her before she took a chair be- side her. "Ruth, dear, you haven't time. It is eleven o'clock." Rachel, And much After breakfast she went upstairs and quietly went over the entire bouse, not missing a room. | "1 know, but I wanted to talk a little. I shall be ready in time. Rachel has everything laid out for The Woman Who By JANE PHELPS me. I know you don't like Brian, Aunt Laura,"-- "You are mistaken, like him. I simply do not he is the right man for marry." Ruth, § DO believe you to Strong Ties. "But Auntie, please dort stop lov- ing me because I can't do as you want me fo, will you? |! just could- n't bear it if yo did!" "1 shall never stop loving you dear. You and my dear husband have been all I ever had to love. I shall be very lonely' 'I know, and that is what Jaddens me. You never sald it before, but I have felt that your loneliness wonid be hard to bear, and it has heen the only sad thought I have had, aside from thinking you did not like Brian, I don't care about the money one bit, Auntie. Anyway, it is a man's place to take care of his wife, 7o Rachel gays; and, of course, 1 know that Brian will always take good care of me. And now that I know you love me just the same as ever, | must ran away. A bride must not be late to her own wedding, must she?" Rath' threw her arms around her aunt and kissed her fondly. 'This is our REAL good-bye. The other will be before pepple," For. a few moments longer Mrs. Clayborne sat quietly by the window. The paper had slipped to the floor unnoticed. * Several times she. wiped the tears from her eyes and whisg- pered: "I shall be so lonely." 'Then, she celled her maid, and carefully made herself attractive for the weddiug of the child she was to lose When she joined Ruth for the ride to the church, she was the same calm, dignified woman she always had been. While Ruth, her cheeks flushed, her eyes shining, talking and laughed and cried a little, all the way. To be Continued. Changed CHAPTER CL. What a welcome we received! Both Mr. apd Mrs. Babcock met us at the train, although it arrived at a very early. hour. "You have grown handsomer than ever," Mr. Babcock said, as he kiss- ed me---after asking George's per- mission. 'Hasn't she mother?" he turned to his wife. "Yes, I think she has," she re- turned her head on one side as she inspected me, her eves twinkling. "It must be the babies." "It is," I replied, then launched into a description of them. George had heen cross with me for fretting over them, and 1 laughingly told her so. "1 know dear," she said laying her hand over mine, "but you have such wonderful help, and you really must learn to leave them occasionaly both for your own and your husband's sake. - It isn't fair to either for you to give up everything to them." 1 was glad George was beside Mr, Babcock who was driving the car; 80 he couldn't hear us. "But I never have left them, and am so afraid they will get sick or that something will happen: "Your husband loves them?" she asked, making me look at her in as- tonishment. The question was 80 unexpected, "Of course! he almost worships them, all three." "Then try to forget to worry, and let him enjoy his trip as much as is possible when business is his reason for coming. Believe me we women sometimes make a mistake when we neglect our husbands for our chil-| dren--no matter how much we love them." The Stame Story. "Everyone tells me the same story," 1 laughed just as we reached IN CHICAGO "It is true," she answered soberly. We had a most delightful time. They entertained for us, giving a dinner and musicale, and Mrs. Bab- cock also gave a luncheon. She ask- ed Julia Collins, ds I persisted in call- ing her, and we really had a good time talking things over together. I never would have believed we could be so comfortable together. She told me of her new home, and Mrs. Babcock and I accepted an invitation for tea the following afternoon. Her husband was on the coast, a business trip, she explained. But she told me ghe was ideally happy. "I suppose it sounds foolish to you, but I think no one ever was any happier than Tom and 1." *"That is because you do not curb his freedoth; or require him to lose his individuality," Mrs. Babcock re- turned. 1 at once thought of the night up in Maine when George had said nearly the same thing. That one could not destroy another's in- dividuality and be happy." "Oh, I never. would do that!" Julia laughed. "He might retaliate and that never would do!" That night we went to hear Pader- weski play. I never had heard him, and was overjoyed at the opportun- ity. But when after the concert Mr. Babeock presented him I sald to Mrs. { Babcock: "It was worth leaving the babies for." How she laughed. "1 imagine you are a sort of hero worshipper, aren't you?" "Perhaps," I replied, thinking of Merton Gray ang how at first, and even yet, he had seemed so awfully attractive to me. At Last Perfect Content, We remaified three days. We had a doliehtint time, but most of all I enjoyed the long heart to heart talks the house. -- I had with Mrs, Babcock. 1 told con EE ------ TALKING IT OVER ~----With Lorna Moon * ---- 1 really hadn't taken much notice of him; he doesn't signal for notice: to be taken: everything about him' is quiet, his voice, his clothes and his eves. 1 mistook all this quiet for in- ueiance. Then the other evening 1'saw him in a new light. The hotel veranda was gay with colored organdies and white flan- nels with here and there a sprin-| Kling of navy and fanning gray hair stream- ing over her face, her hat - rakishly nt; she sway. dange eT O28 taxi on the To Gentleman From the South majority tched her with that de- tached air that said plainly tits Hot nothing to do with us." ' Others looked regrétfully and a tow in de- rision, but none thought to lrok if she grossed the street car track safo- ly---that is mone except the Quiet Gentleman from the South and he slipped out 'so quietly that no one Ww him go. i was lifting her out of the gut ter when 1 saw him; asking horli | talk. her of my boys, of how wonderfully happy I was now that I had learned some of the necessary things of life --to be unselfish, and to trust my husband. "That is all there fs to married life---happy married life, - I mean. Unselfishness and trust. Without it no marriage can be happy evem if they- do say marriages are made in heaven. With it, nothing else mat- ters much. 1 have watched you dear, watched 'you change from |a very sweel attractive girl, into.-a well poised beautiful woman. You have a husband of whom you may well be proud; three lovely babies; and one of the most complete homes I have seen. And you also have the love and respect of the man you married. The other day when you were dressing he and 1 had-a- little I was surprised that he open- ed his heart to me as he did. T am going to tell you what he said. had spoken in praise of you, and he replied: "lI am a very fortunate man, 1 have a very perfect married life. Mrs. Howard was but a very young girl when we were married, and she had a great deal to learn. But now there is no one I know who has more poise, more real kindness of heart; who is: a more perfect hostess, or makes her home the restful place she does. When you add to that her accomplishments and her beauty, and that she has given me, three love- ly hoys ¥ou cannot wonder that 1 say my married life is perfect. "My eyes filled with happy tears as I bade my hostess good bye. 1 knew | was changed, but to have George admit that his life with me was perfect gave me such happiness as 1 never, had dreamed of 'possess- ing. THE END. pure joy, for his form of pleasure is one that his conscience can applaud. And what more could one ask of life? We could all have the same joy, but the .trouble Is that most of us tre far too selfish to like doing it! i eee (Continued from Page 8.) Mrs. John Sherman, Brock street, is back from Tamworth, and was accom- 1 jed b is 5 pani i Lb s ames 3 Avigewarth, iy 4 i on. Eo ga wl whete she lived. Bom: son hor ing 7 on ki 's always doing things In Hee HR antioned IF on rave th someone who is out of wor funds, or out of Sask; ing to find all three way homs tr} Fiik. Ww, D, Weaver, Kin ston, is d- 8 ling. a few days with Val of | tmereia) street, Belleville. nee, | : Verha Burgess. Lakefield. is} sity avenue, left Wednesday for a three weeks' trip through the High- lands of Ontario and Suet return- img by way of Torontc - . bec . Mrs. George Birch, after spending the past two months with her mother Mrs, R. Meck, University avenue, left for her home in Fort William on Fri- day- Her two <weet little daughters have charmed ali her friends with their Ld ® M. E. Hospital, holidays Mrs. W. Nursing Sister Queen's Military iy two weeks' parents, Mr. and J. Cairns, Lindsay. : Nirs. LL. Black and Prof. cand Mrs Cicwd, Kingston, are guests of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Black, Devonshire Apart- ments, Brockville, Mrs. Quesnel and children, and Mrs, P. MeCleverty, Kingston, are visiting Mrs. Robert Willey in Lyn. Master R. A. Breckenridge, Peter- bore, 1s the guest of Master Ted Jen- kins on Wolfe Jsland. Cairns; is spend- with her Ansiouncedient is mode gagement of Miss Harriet daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H. C. Whit- ney, Watertown, N.Y. to Lieut: Ro- land M. Glenn, commander of the post at Madison Barracks t'he weddmn will be a military one, place Saturday afternoon at 4 o'clock Lievt. Glenn was in Kingston on Do- minion day in command of the ican soldiers vis siting here thar day. Mrs. Joseph Hicks, of Aylmer nue, Ottawa, announces the eng: ment of her daughter, Marion to. Winfred Stanley, only and Mrs. J. R. Breakenridge, port, Ont, The marriage place edrly in September. brightness. Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Wormwith a Miss Gill, Earl street, are spending several weeks at Rockport. Miss Gretta Haycock Adolphus- town, was the guest of Mr. and Mrs M. R. Davis, University avenue, for a few days last week. - of the en Whitney, ave Edna, Mr West son of Gapt. George W. James office, has been spending a few hol days at the Britannia Hotel, Lake of Bays, Muskoka Miss Madeline Saunders, was a recent guest of Mrs Marsh, Carleton Island Mrs. Lorne W. Sanders and son Donald, staying at her father's, G. H Bickell, Bowmanville, have returned to Kingston, Mrs. E. Gilmour, Kingston, ing at Mrs. N. A. Stewart's, Station. Kingston, Chester is visit- Folger's THE ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN Philadelphia has a government fags tory, in which every employee is won ! The~mtithorities of Coney Island prohibit women from bathi ng without stocks Miss Ruth Chivis is now igedetroit investigating industrial conditions among female workers. Women employed on Maryland farms are paid at the rate of $15 a month and their board. Mary MacArthur, a Scotch woman, is a candidate for a seat in the British Parliament, During the month of June the Pennsylvania railroad added ],481 wo- men to its working force. In the town of Amarillo, TPex., there are more women than men enti tied to vote at the coming election. The Union Pacific railroad will shortly try an experiment by us sing women to load freight cars. Hotels and club in Columbus, O, have barred all women irom securing intoxicants in their places. Trade unions in Great Britain have shown enormous increases in feminine membership during the last year. One of the latest forms of war work for women is that of bee rais- ing to increase the supply of honey. Women in Texas may vote in the a Aact passed by the and will take | } Amer- i will take { | | | Registrar's | EW GILLETT CO.LTD. TORONTO. CANADA WINNIPEG MONTREAL | % pe DER i} DNrains nO ALS ------------------ a ---- +A Se A Ea AA Mh Hundreds of women in the South j 1 ERK clubs which enables aeeoegEs at a reasonable primaries under a restricted last session legislature In England superintendents nition factories with der them ' ¢ establishment of the The shortage of male help has made 5 dian recruiting mis- imperative for York city tau ted States to pass tae rant proprietors ¢ women a i i 1 for service in managers. force. A A HENNA OO HA Sl Al NNN there and over men are many of . Mass, of the first Allsto being sers of working Ney e€nga 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 mateh Is extinguished -- Cheapest, because there are more perfect matches to the sized box than in any other box on the market. War time economy and your own good sense, will urge the necessity of buying none but KEDPY'S MATCHES. SPRINGTEX isthe underwear with a million little springs in its fabric which *'give and take" with every movement of the body, and preserve the shape of the garment despite long wear and hard washings. It is the year-around underwear, light, medium or heavy weight, as you like. "Remember to Buy It-- You'll Forget You Have It On" Ask Your Dealer > UTICA KNITTING CO, Makers 3 Sales Room: 350 Broadway, Now York AMMAN ¥ KEEP YOUR SHOES NEAT =inl LIQUID oJfingtex el FOR sual init ELLY CHILDREN 5 SHOES == One bar in every five FREE--there's ecenomy! 0 The bigger €omfort Soap bar gives you more soap for the money than ever before. The weight has been increased because, as you know, there are no premiums with the Bigger Bar's wrapper. Here is a real thanee to save in in housekeeping expenses. : If you _ your money you'll just firmly ask your grocer for the bigger Comfort Bar--he ean supply you. If you are still getting the former, smaller Comfort Scap, keep "on saving the wrappers, they are still good for premiums. ~ Pugsley, Disgmian & Co. Limited + Toronto -

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