Daily British Whig (1850), 24 Sep 1918, p. 10

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

THE DAILY/ BRITISH! WHC, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1915. In the Realm of Woman --- Somé}Interesting Features a : EY tana AOR < SEO Ty ay Pe SE es ACTF PH SNRs via ' a JB Gray Hair "The Wite" By Jane Phelps SIR Har Healt do so. or else to so concentrate on a Eps RUTH IS DISTURBED BECAUSE OF MRS. i ! i { The Telgmann Sc of | : Musi Plano, violin and other stringed | fnstruments; elocution and dra- | matic art. Pupils may begin at any date. Terms on application. Engagements . for concerts ac- cepted. i i | 216 Frontenac Street. | * Phone 1610. | LIVEN UP THE LIVER ARMELEE"S VEGETABLE PILLS [| HIGHLY EFFICIENT CORRECTIVE { (POR REGULATING THE ACTION OF | lL THE LIVER AND ASSISTING THE { R\ (DIGESTIVE QRGANS TO PERFORM JJ | N THEIR ns | FUNCTIO AND ELIMINATING IR RBiGEsTive TRACT. 4 i _ For Women's Ailments . Martel's Fernale Pills have ardered by physicians andsold | | y reliable Druggists everywhere over a quarter of a century, t accept a substitute. | retnmrstmmd er. | THREE FULL LOTS FOR SALE On Nelson Street CHEAP t W. H. Godwin & Son [Insurance and Real Estate. } 89 Brock St. Phone 434 AAA AA A AAA indir | elbow, smiling down on her, "I have| | | hin | you told n CHAPTER XXXVII, { v mn with: Mrs. Curtis had a ver setting effect upon her. All the noon careless re- marks recur 1g Ruth ra- j ther absent ied so much so that La Monte w iered if her husb-nd had been u nt because of her absence. For » pot at all intend- ing to do so vu nad given both' Mr. M i clerk an impres- | sion n objected to her be- ing in the shop own and talked of, al- Ruth i that Brian hadn't taken Mc » to ar, Of course| { she couldn't say so, couldn't object y what he did when she was away. t it was rather disconcerting to be is Mollie King Ruth had to 1t that Mollie was at- cinating" Mrs. Curtis| her She would watch Brian closely if Mrs. Curtis did give a dinner and asked them. She would also watch Mollie King "A penny for your thoughts, Mrs. Hackett!" Mr. Mandel stood at her tood here for ten minutes and you aven't moved a muscle." "Oh, excuse me, Mr. Mandel!" Ruth flushed with embarrassment as yers he had brought ad for the redecora- » took the I house ew apartment| going to take he asked with & zical smile. "No--but [ really am. going to| | move, and I haven't half thanked you| | for t yvely things you said I might he Ic have to help make it attractive," she | returned with more f omeness inj | her manner than » usually die played, She had been glad he spoke] of the apartment, that he had said| nd more about what she was think- ing. She was not accustomed to hid-| ing her feelings, She must learn to her work that even what Brian had or might do, could not take her hts from it Mandel said no more, save about the work in hand. For half an hour they discussed the lovely old 1 » they were to "make ever in- side." as he expressed it; and when he left her with the plans nearly ready for her to work up the color 1e, Ruth really. had forgotten all about what Mrs, Curtis had said-- had even forgotten there was such a person as Mollie King, But she recalled her again at din- ner when she told Brian of meeting Mrs. Curtis "She is going to ask us to dinner, and she a said she was going to ask that nice Miss King you took out to dinner while I was away. 1 told her we would be glad to come. I hope I did right." "Of course we'll go! The Curtises are rather jolly people and they also have a very good ¢ook. Curtis is pretty well fixed," he added, flushing a little as he always did when money was the subject. Ruth started to repeat what Mrs. Curtis had said concerning a woman who worked. and a husband's atti- tude because of it; then caught her- self. Brian was already more than a little sensitive on the subject. It would be better to say nothing that might possibly make him more so. But several times during the even- ing Ruth thought of what had been { said, and wondered if, by any possi- bility, Mrs. Curtis could be.righf Did it have a demoralizing effect on a man to have his wife earn money? Why should it? If a woman were happier doing something outside of the home, and capable of doing it so that she made money, it seemed to her that it showed a smallness, a lack of broadness of character, which she did not like to think of in connection with Brian. rp ct At AA NNN MANN CURTIS'S CHATTER. "Of course 1 won't earn more 'than he does very long," she said to her- | self, "then he will feel differently about it: Yet, even as she sald it, she wondered how long it was going to be before her husband earned fore they were married, so sure that he would soon be on "easy street," as he had often expressed it, that Ruth had shared his views without questioning them. But now they had been married several months, and in- stead of more clients he seemed to have fewer. He had copaributed less money entertaining Mollie Kipg, she | of course was not aware, altho she knew he had .taken her to dinner twice. But when they had taken a meal at some restaurant together it had been a simple, inexpensive one-- except the time Brian wanted to show off because he 'was hurt that she which she never thought without a smile at his childishness. So she never figured that nearly ' half a month's rent had been spent. on Mollie. Had she known it, she would borrowed of Clark, she would have! been angry. He had promised not to| do so again, and Ruth never even| ing his word. Had she been able to diagnose | Brian's feeling toward her when she realized she could earn more than | he ever had been paid, she would per-| haps have been surprised, That he for a moment felt, really felt, she was belittleing him to the extent he considered she was she never] dreamed; had she known, it is doubt-| ful if she would have understood, Tomorrow--Brian Finds Out That] Ruth Wears Expensive Clothes, mmm TALKING --~With Lorna Moon IT OVER a nn Washing Won't Rid Head of Dandruff The only sure way to get rid of dandruff is to dissolve it, then you destroy it entirely. To do this, get about four ounces of ich v) liguid arvon; apply ft at night wien re- tiring; use enough to moiéfen the scalp and rub it in gently with the finger tips. 3 Do this to-night, and by morning most. it not all, of your dandruff will be gone, and three or fur more ap- plications will completely dissolve and entirely destroy every single slgn and trace of it, no matter how much dandruff you may have. You will find, too, that all itching! and digging of the scalp will stop at once, and your hair will be fluffy, lustrous, glossy, silky and soft, and look and feel a hundred times better. You can get liquid arvon at any drug store. It is Inexpensive and never falls to do the work. A Humanitarian, "What is your' objection to child ren?' asked the man who was hunt- ing a flat. : "1 like 'em." replied the janitor. "1 haven't the heart to ask anybody with children to move into a place that was as short of heat as this was last winter."--Washington, Star, Hopeful Corporation. Pat--"This is the folst time inny of those corporations hev done Inny- thing to binnefit the workingman." Pat-~"It is this siven-cint fare. I her bin walkin' to and from me work | and savin' tin cints, and now I kin save fourteen cints,"--Boston Trang seript, Women's Work in Dallas, Dallas is going to have a woman @eputy sheriff. Women are doing men's work right along in Dallas. tndeod, many of them mre supporting husbands - and children, -- Houston 2 Study the store ads--{hat you may understand the drift and the trend in present day merchandizing. ring- courtship a young couple are apt to sit around and hold hands in silence, but after marriage---oh, well, that's another story. If a man is unable to boast of whnt his ancestors accomplished, it's up to him to do something worth while. There are two kinds of family jars, Into one you put preserves and into, _the other you put your foot. contentment Jitchen; after living four years in a We are all go glad that they have come back again--the little old lady with her kind brown eyes and her understanding smiles; and the bent old man-with his decided opinions of things and his stories of the ¢ivil war that we have heard a hundred times. They are Pa and Ma to the many young couples who make their homes in the hotel When they went away in the spring we were sofry to lose them, although we were glad that daughter wanted to have them. We were glad, because' they were so sure that they would be happy living in a real home once more with a gar- den and a garage, and a full grown otel apartment. They came back two days ago. Pa hasn't been well a day since he left. Ma says he be- came 80 melan- choly that he would sit on the veranda for hours and mumble to himself. At last he became s0 de- pressed and weak that he couldn't ; walk a block, al- of 49 thoukh the doctor ~ insisted that exer- e cise was very ne- cessary, - Ma' also found the ime AL NG Ante Pa and Ma Come Home Again. heavy on her hands for daughter had a perfectly efficient cook who never needed to ask Ma how to make jelly "jell," so quite suddenly in spite of daughter's protests they decided to come back. Daughter can't under- stand it, but she would if she could see Pa this minute seated over there with an audience of young people. I don't need to cross the lobby in or- der to know what he is saying. When he rdises his hand like that he has come to the part. where "General Grant rode up, and then sir, etc. etc, I_would go over and listen but Ma wants to know all the news. The hotel "ent up" is telling Ma the latest midemeanor of the hotel scalaway and Ma says she hasn't laughed so much for months. Ma has a thousand and one things to do, and she's fussily elated over ft. Mrs. West wants to know how to knit a heel double, and Mrs. Draper wants her to help preserve peaches, and then there's little Miss Wyness who will 'never learn how to mend a "lad- der" no matter 'how often she is shown. So Ma is perfectly happy again be- cause she is needed. And Pa is per- fectly happy because he can tell about General Grant to a new audi- ence every evening. And we are per- pectly happy because Ma is here to "show us how," and we can stand Pa telling about General Grant because our turn only comes round once in six months. ------ Pelican an Abused Bird. New York Sun What a wonderful bird is the pelican. His bill can hold more than his beli- " can; He can keep in his beak Food enough for a week, But I don't know how the helecan. --From 'the ballad of the pelican as . qiaoted by W. D. Howser. poet of the Fish and Game Commission of Tennessee. » The tentpconvention of the $wter- national Association of, Game and Fish Commissioners. which closed its session at the Waldorf gave the WOUNDED IN. RECENT ADVANCE brown pelican a clean bill of health as being no destroyer of food fish, thanks to T. Gilbert Pierson, of the National Association of Audobon So. cieties, Mr. Pierson told the delegates, who come from various states in the Union, how he stood up to his waist in swamps in Louisiana, Texas and Flor- ida, with mosquitoes feasting upon him, trying to learn definitely of the fish-eating habits of the pelican that the three states accused of being re- sponsible for their depleted fisheries last year. Pelicnias, when disturbed, it seems, hd { western. t some time ago. While Standing fore a great barbed-wire} bal | son Sete Semon, The man who cannot forgive any | mortal thing is a green hand in life.-- Robert Louis Stevenson, Nothing. is impossible; there are ways which lead to everything; and if we had sufficient will we should al- ways have sufficient aneans. -- La Rouchefoucauld, " To say well is good, but to do well is better; Do well is, the spirit, and say well the letter; If we do ayell and say well were fitted in one frame, All were won, all were done, and got were all the gain. --Anon. A friend that you buy with pres- ents will be bought from you.--Solo- mon. When thou doest alms, let not thy left hand know what thy right hand doeth.--Matt. 6: 3. O Truth is easy, and the light shines clear In hearts kept open, honest and sin- cere, «Abraham Coles. There are three kinds of people in the world--the wills, the won'ts and the can'ts; the first accomplish every- thing, the second oppose everything, and the third fail in everything.--Wil- liam T. Ellis. a disgorge their food, and when Mr Pierson could get near enough tp a rookery he investigated the" contents of the bill, that ig an adult bird will hold four quarts. The Auadobon man found that pelicans are decreasing in the Gulf States very rapidly, and he estimated that the 50,000 to 65000 pelicans that breed in the reservations do little or no 'damage, to food fish, for their diet consists of menhaden principally, varied with mullet, pig fish, pinfish, herring, with an occhk- sional crevalle, of which only two are food fish whose price in the markets does not exceed four cents a pound. The pelican is of more value as a curiosity in Florida, Mr. Pierson said, than in any other form, and thousands of feet of film are used yearly in pho- tographing the bird, and the picture postcard is an industry of some.ac- count throughout Florida. » Dr. William T. Hornaday remarked that "if the quail and grouse are to be saved there must be long close sea- sons, killing of cats and other vermin. the suppression of free ranging dogs during the breeding and rearing sea- sons, the utmost possible feeding and sheltering of quail in winter and the eliminating of the deadly and now universal pump and automatic guns," ee . " Morty Years More. Harry Lauder paid a visit to the © he asked a Highlander how} Jong he thought the war would last. 'an eyelid. ther year, and then nine years more. He had been so optimistic be- |. to expenses that mouth than the pre- | ceeding ones. That he had spent the | earned more than he did; and of] have been shocked and--hurt..: And | had she known that because of his] lavish entertainment he had again] thought of such a thing as his break-| | The best way to get the most. work out of the "human engine" is to give it the food that has the most energy in it. Of all foods, certainly this means FRY'S COCOA ~~ the great food beverage that is all delicious nourish. ment. If you have to work harder these days, try a regular course of FRY'S. You will need less of other and more expensive foods, There is concentrated strength for muscle and brain in every single cup, * Truest economy--use FRY'S oo TIATED pepe FA cers BAe. 2 % ce Tow PRL TI SRS bind in | AA AAA AN NNN AA MA A oo hg dh Drink Charm Tea To Reduce the High Cost of Living try a : package of Charm New Japan Tea at the dh dh dd dhru low price of 28c a half pound package. Canads Food Board License No, 6-084 X Rg TTT TTT TTT TY YY aaa a a a haa a AA A Add A Ad ddduiuiuiuiuiuiuiuiuiely 1 on ¢ "Forty years," said the Highlander, : {never movin SERVE BY SAVING WHEAT To Fight, our armies must have plenty of food. We can all help by using substitutes for wheat flour. TIME TABLE CHANGES A Change of Time will be made on September 29th, 1918. Information now in Agent's hands. J. P. Hanley, C.P. & T. A, : Kingston, Oat. CUNARD MONTREAL AND GREAT BRITAIN Money Sent by Mall or Gable Apply ta Loeal Agents or The ROBERT REFO CO. General Agents, 50 King Street East, - Toronte ~~ Go To Robinson and Wiltshire's Garage For Repair Work of All Kinds. Veleanising --- Cars Washed We sell gasoline, oils, tires and mecesmories. Open Day and Night. 239} Bagot Street Fhone 243. 2 No . .WHEAT-SAVING RECIPES MAILED FREE a=" ON REQUEST : . A lawybs never gives up 2 case un< til he has exhausted all the means at his client's Aisposs. dei 2 fs a | i ~~ | [

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy