Daily British Whig (1850), 18 Dec 1918, p. 10

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_PAGE TEN _ == sm -------- - % i In the Realm of Woman === Some Interesting Features a FERRERS ny : AREY TRE "The Wife" By Jane PhelpsiTolain | BERTI ay Twilight i| a RRIAN IS ORDERED OVERSEAS | ; 3 ; 'R h d CHAPTER XCV, about twenty minutes. I'll jump in a 'Hello, Ruth, .where are you?" AHA i n'a rh a | Eh resh as new, my dear-- "Brian--hurry--'"ghe gasped: He taxi so that I may have more tie | came Brian's voice with a ring of was going to leave ier, and perhaps | with you." | somethi like joy in it. She (Continued from Page 3.) EH . 39 the never would see Gm again. Had "Wait a minute, Brian--how lon stily brushed her hand across her Mrs. W, Hooper, after a Téw weeks' { | , v If she any right to keep from him the] will you he with me?" She had what | | eyes before she answered. stay in-Kingston wit! Mr and Mrs : 3 an was Cc it my SC Ndndaifal thing that was dng to] he had sald in her mind: "fully an| "Here, dear! in the bedroom." David Smith, King street, returned | 3 them? Wasdn wrong hour--not longer, if 1 can help it." Brian caught i i "mS @ t yns B a, on Tuesday. t ab ing an 10t-Bu go oR ILERF, a P Flan caught her in his arms and | to Brewhstarg. Que. on Tues i 3 "It's my old georgette--another tussle with the wasper-woman and I in ignorance? Who was Brian talking to--what wo- | kissed her tenderly. Sir John Hendrie. Lady Hendrie] -- > 4 still held the receiver | man? And why was he going to hur-| "Isn't it. wonderful, Ruth? 1 am |and Miss Enid Hendrie will spend]! [SSS believe it would have fallen to pieces. So, of course, as we must all make to her ear, sie heard another volce-- [ry to get back to hier? | going over at last. Gee! how we| Christmas with Mr Hendrie at} a onds, | thought & woman's, As (he listéned, Brian's "Just long enough to pack up and | have chaffed under the waiting; how | "The Holmstead," Ha milton. § 4 the old things do and save om Jor istory 2 nd h it, tough: 14 tones came to her miftled, as If he |say gdod-bye, Ruth. Hurry orders, | | we have longed to go! Wily, you Mrs. A. AV. Hepburn, Picton, has i wash it, myself, wit unhght r rather--Iet Sunhght was were holding the mouthpiece against | dear. 1 will be right afong." The | should have seen the boys when the | come up to spend the winter in To-| Ra no need of any rubbing-- just soaping and rinsing, And see--isn't it just some object, receiver clocked, She was shut off. | order came, Such shouting you never | ronto and will be with her brother, | lovely ? Fresh as new, isn't it? [I'm delighted." "I'll hurry--yes, and--of course!" She sat like one benumbed untfl|heard. I tell you, Ruth, those damn- | Colin MeCuaig, The last rather impatiently, Ruth | she heard his key in the door. Alljed Germans will open their eyes Mrs. Gordon Dewar, West street, A ® thought 4s she stradned to listen. | power of thought seemed to have| when they see us--if they do sneer | has heen a recent Slaitos in Dundas, | : . Then: "Yes, it will be fully an hour | been taken from her. She neither at us because we are green at the | the guest of Mrs, C. McPherson. | ay 3 ~no--not if I'cap help i." Then | thought \nything off the question | | fighting game, We'll show them a Mrs, Jack voll yh two children, § { | | THE Dally} BRIT ISH WHIG, WEDNESBAY, DECEMBER 18, 1918. i once again he spoke to her. "Hello, | which had seemed so vital to her a trick or two even if they have been | Mildred and Stuart, Copper Cliff, are Ruth!" while before, nor did she think of (at it for forty years so they could | in the city to visit *her parents, Mr ae anything else. Her mind had atro-| whip us. We've a bag full of them, | and Mrs. R. Filtz, for over the holi- . "I'll be up just as soon as I can, }phied for the present. you know! [I tell you, Ruth, all the | davs. AenrarimAn | other nations have got to get up early | Mrs. W. B. Crey has come trom] BE The purity of Sunlight is such that it will | if they are going to get anything on | Toronto, owing to the illness of her| z not fade or discolor anything washable-- it contains absolutely no fillers or adul- . ' - Stomach on Strike? Here's Relief! Uncle" dom Not that hey ent Line. Miser wonderful--but Just wait until we| Harold Hooper, medical. student, H terants--it is the most economical soap | get across and give them a breathing | left today for his > 3 g : oday r his home at Browns 2 your money can buy. It's all soap. No Indigestion, Gas or Sourness I see, a he Bi is, burg, Que., to spend the Holidays, q LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO | nothing of Belgians and men of the Mrs. Walter Walsh Vancouver Upset stomachs feel fi fine. { other smaller principalities, : have | 354 her little daughter, have arrived Pp 5 Jo vo felked and i or uke us 10 in Toronto. They will spend some i indi ; ses. & t a. 0 Heit on LAs) time in the east. Mrs, Walsh before A igestion, gases, sourness, {same dine with the Camadians'|her marriage was Miss Irene Swift, heartburn, brash or acidity goes | Thiuk of the time the 'poor devils| formerly of Kingston . 1 share | have been bucking that Hun proposi- Major and Mrs, BE. lancaster are | instantly. No waiting! tion, over there. Maybe they won't saving on Thursday to spend | give us Yanks a warm welcome. 5 H Christmas in Hamilton. | wish 'you were going along Ruth 'Mr. and Mrs, T. G. McGinnis and ; ; : | He hag not Hopped talking a aos their two little children are spend Just as soon as Pape's Diapepsin ment, while he was TuMmMagIing| ing Christmas in Belleville with . {through his chiffonier drawers, and the former's parents reaches your sick, unsettled stomach in the closet; but that had been the| victor Minnes Chesterville. Pa JIT all stomach misery stops. {first word he had said that showed | 1c expected in town on Friday to LS { he had any thought of her. The tears| pend Christmas with his parents . : i . filled her eyes, but resolutely she yr and Mrs TD. iM e Kensing. sts ef 1 sts ' . ; 2 Minnes, £ Costs hittle--All druggists. ; winked them back. If he didn't care' roy and Mt innes, Kensin anything about leaving her, she Dr. Thomas Macgillivray, Port Stomach suffering is needless. wouldn't let him 566 how near tO| arthur, spent a few days in town x | heart-break she was because of his| ao: week with Dr. and Mrs. Mal ef hy iy Quickest stomach relief known. WiLL uJ i PUT ou | going, oln »Gillivray Inivers UPSETS Pape's Diapepsin ON YOUR FEE | "No--I'll not tell him!" she whis- SE MacCillivigy, Capversity pered, her lips quivering. : Mrs. Anderson, Toronto, is the . RP 00 "Can 1 go to the boat with you?" guest of her sister, Mrs. R. J. Wil & iA " 74 she asked when she could control her| gop, University avenue fap J ) il ZF, voice. iH (Miss Hazel Browne returned 3 No, dear. They won't let anyone | rrom Toronto on Monday We will have to say good-bye . 8. go. jiefe." His voice trembled just a Mr. and Mrs, George W. ¥. Kirk- Mttle. io \ 3 es a. patrick, Edmonton, announce the en-{ mer ad hover 8 Pn) al ee 0 ee : . t . A er rN Mert et eo corsa a tt na ~ ma, nd ------ han Re nN 4 Suh pagement of their eldest daughter, Canadian prisoners of war have are there taken charge of by the Sir Percy Sherwood, for . thirty- eat, and some coffee Gladys, to Lieut. Harold B. Bates, | returned to England to the number | Canadian army authorities. Each | five years commissioner 'of the "you'll have to hustle, Rachel" he M.C., Worcestershire egt., son of {of 2,000 and are now arriving at man is fully interrogated as to his| Dominion Police, "rétired at the looked at his watch, "I shall have to the late Newell Bate and of Mrs.|the rate of 25 a day. They reach |treatment in Germany and a state-|wéek-end from the position which be out of here in about half an hour." Newell Bate, of Ottawa, the country at Dover or Rippon and | ment is drawn up for his signature. [je has long and acceplably filled, «*Xg4 soon as that, Brian? What NA Et SINE Am ni time do you sail?" Ruth watched -- a him narrowly as she spoke. The z flush that dyed his face for a mo- ment did not pass unnoticed. "Yes, and I don't know the time of safling or anything about it, We are ¢ y ® : told only ome thing at a time, you = -Vocal AN IDEAL : "Yes,--I have reid that even the captain of the boats sail under sealed CHRISTMAS Gift orders, but I had forgotten it." Once more her eyes filled. And as before, Can be made of a Be prin he table, Bissell Carpet or JiMeee (ron Bal! leaves Ruin. Vacuum Sweeper. . She Is Heart-broken, Every home should have one. iC It is said they have seme NG IT OVE out of Sweep. So h see that you get With Loma Moon one for Christmas, if not before. Pm Tired of the Realist i am tired of ithe Realist, heartily tired of him. (He has read George Bernard Shaw until he picks every emotion of life to bits, leaving only an ugly spectre with joint hat RT The Greater Phonopraph--A Christmas Gift of Good color, and song but then any Ee a. Music--A Gift Of Lasting Joy For All,The Family. {An , unlearned clown may turn the 'pages of a Book 454 Joule ui EVER in the history of th 1d has th oat oles ry of the world has there lion will quickly prove to logical reason what it fsymoos aherein; N been such a definite need for good music =~ has been slow to believe tint at last a phono- BD AY peary as now. And never in the history of graph of true musical perfection has been jess. seratobes music ¥as there bees an insiiuin ul of such achieved. ty univ scope as the Vocalion--that could St ome Jum be t so freely and completely, music's com- The: Graduola' tone' control device, with its Suze he caunot fran ' J wonderful lesson of expression in music, will fing: ana it me rt, music's inspiration to young and old. create for you a vision of the unsounded possi- Juul. in 2s On Christmas morning in many homes the bilities of the phonograph. there, is no Vocalion will bring, for the first time, the trans- As 'you pla fine tonal rd, sh beauty, no mean- forming influence of great music. That will varying, yy ane hr you ading, ing, no romance, no excitement, no + mean new inspiration, new vital beauty in the you will understand the world-wide popularity lite in those pages, shail we listen fe much 4 fool? | lives of many men and women--an enduring, if the Vocalion--that this magnificent musical For Tender Skins Be on" Romance in thet growing happiness in the eager hearts of children. {ict ument is the greatest gift for this Christmas. : . : . first gift we mak the object Ivory Soap is soothing and comforting our devotion. It i ate Few are the gifts that can fulfill so wonderful to the tender skin. Millions of mothers BBA woudl Much makes au prdin a promise--that are so certain in their mission - Vocalion Advantages second (Psyche, and turns work into of joy! : ' TONE QUALITY of uisequalled naturalness and besuty, use Ivory for baby's bath because of its - a glorified path 1 lish- mildness and its freedom from materials ment ih x 1 ge 0; Hear the Voa Vocalion tomorrow, you who are [THE GRADUOLA--s simple and. wholly artistic means for hm al : ch It can be used for the it he ia tov tired, 100. Muorant, or j a Try OPO a ABILITY 0 PLAT ALL Ri athe additional irritate. for fine laundering, far 'washing. too, indifferent to impart it. He can Iry upon this wonderful call the 'moon & pi ou matter i es or glassware, with the complete: {thrown att By the ear. he can « pire a record. : APPEARA NCE Case designs and workmanship of unques- ance that it will not Foughen or 1 a beat fu; hte 2 ieee ai a 3 AUXILIARY FEATURESsuch as Automatic Stop, convenis | ' howiihg x 3 ent filing devices, etc. STYLES--$69 to PERIOD STYLES--$360 to $2000 es er, 132 Princess Street. "talk : or Nordhei mer and Steinway Pianos.

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