Daily British Whig (1850), 28 Jan 1919, p. 10

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o ay THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, TUESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1919, dl PAGE TEN In the Realm of Woman --- Some Interesting Features ¥ 25 A Record of Good Character 25 RL Rab 25 Packets against which - fdillion. Annual » . sale There is No Possible Appeal "5a! : "SAL I lg The Quality Looms up Conspicuously above A Hundred "Would Be" Rivals. ue A Tea-Pot Test - - - -- Is All We Ask RG, =-------------- LIBBY'S| wf Sawed } ove i. n St Asparagus Tips .. . °.. .80¢ x Mammoth Green, large tins 80¢ Salad Dressing ... .. 30¢ (Coast Sealed Oysters) D. COUPER 341-3 Princess St. Phone 76 "BOOTH & CO., F oe DE et ARH A a SA COKE ORDERS ONLY TAKEN brown su bh Le fh Old Fafhioned B as wi useful for general cooking, the pantry of every household which. wR as sweetens, things fo eat JF RESH, snappy, brown ~~ cookies, ding--but it was good enough for a millionaire--rich coffee cake with fruit and spices put in with a generous hand, pumpkin pie with the genuine old-time flavor, and many more. All these good things Grandmother made with : daughters can make them just as successfully to-day if they use --three kinds--Light; Brilliant and Dark Yellow=sold by grocers ighout the Dominion. Of these, the Brilliant Yellow is recommended , Pure brown sugars give to baking charge, if you will fill out the and desserts the characteristic mo- coupon below, We know you will lasses taste which is a great improve- enjoy making these old-time dishes ment to many dishes. Brown sugar, and that your family will enjoy as well as white, should be kept in eating them. foe : appreciates old-time goodies. Brown Lantic Old-fashioned Biown Sugars ugar is economical, It costs a are. made by the same firm that little less per pound than other makes the famous Lantic "fine" pure sugars and it flavors as well granulated. | : < 3 Lantic Old-fashioned Brown i For fear Grandmother's recipes packed in 100-Pound Bags, from © | be forgotten, we have re- which your grocer will sell you as.) number of the dest of them much or as litile as you need, The =} booklet Allustrated at the book tells you how to keep it mois will send it to you without and fresh as well as Bow to use it, "THE WIFE" By Jane Phelps. BRIAN RENTS OFFICE RUTH SELECTED CHAPTER CXLVHI, | About eleven o'clock Ruth and Brian called on the agent whe had 80 kind allowed Ruth to hold the 3 r so long a time on the offi- lected. She felt almost to ask him if it were still t, but when he assured her that vas, and added: I was perfectly sure you would want jt, Mrs. Hackef?, so have not tried to let it," she thanked him pro: fusely Brisn was delighted with it. The location just suited Him, and the room was bright and sunny with a small waiting room leading into ii. it was -all the space he should need until he became famous, he remarked jokingly 2 "Which I hope may be very soon, Lieutenant," the agent politely re- plied, { WIR NN MON NN, I lS Relief from Suffering You will find ready relief' from Back- ache, Lumbago, Sciatica, painful urination, brick dust deposits,\add gravel, by taking XL Poor Man's Pud- ar. Her grand- c 10,000,000 joblesa {United States te "It ig going to be soon," Ruth ad- ded with decision, : Ruth insisted that they at once get the office cleaned and furnished. In this she was not quite as unselfish as it might appear. She would have something to oceupy her mind Tor a day or two---the first spent out of business in years, To tell the truth, Ruth rather dréaded these first days, altho she in no way allowed regrets to fill her mind. She couldn't! Brian was itoo boyishiy happy. If, in his exuberance, he said things which hurt a little--if he did- n't seem to realize that she had given up anything really vital for him--- she tried not to notick, and did not explain, Brian's absence, his danger, his wounds, and lastly the recognition ul her own desires and plans seem very unworthy to Ruth as compared to making her soldier-hushand hap- py and contented with his home. This she realized that he nefer had been. , And she also sensed that it was partly because he did not feel that it was HIS home; but he thought of it as HER home, the homs she provided. The agent had recommended a the building, so (Ruth left Brian talk- ing to him while she found her and made. arrangements for the thoro cleaning of 'the office. Then she and Brian measured the floor and win lows, New shades and a nice rug were the first requisites. They went at once to a department store, and selected them. Then they tQok a taxi and drove to the warehouse where Brian had stored his small "library. They ordered the books delivered, but Ruth. decided the old bookeudse wouldn't do.- It was an old walnut one Brian had picked up for a song when he first left college and opened his office. "You must have the sort of book- ase which can be added to as you buy more Books," Ruth said decided- ly. "Yon are going to need more hooks right away. You haven't near as many as auntie's lawyer down home had." "Considering that Mrs Clayborne's lawyer was am old man, and had been practising many years, I scarce- ly think that is very strange," Brian returned with a laugh. But his eyes were a little moist, his manner very tender because of Ruth's thought for him. « That night after dinner they talk- ed of what they had done duripg the day, of all they hoped it might mean to Brian to have ah office in such a locality and in the same building with men of affairs, Ruth astonished Brian with her grasp of both essep- tials and what he had deemed nén- essentials, but which he saw ' were really things necessary to build him- sell up in his profession----after she had explained. ' Ruth was really very practical where business matters were <con- cerned, The responsibility which had been nécessarily hers because of the war taking so much of her employer's time and attention so throwing on her shoulders the onus of the busi- ness, had developed her greatly along the practical lines of affairs. Not only had sie become an artistic *{and valuable member of Mandel's | force because of this, but also be- causé she had, thru this late exper- lence, become almost. the Business manager of the firm as well, .. Brian was truly astonished at her acumen, but he said nothing of this to her. He was too well pleased with the way matters were going: too happy that she was going to, at last, becontented to remain at home, "Will it put you out if I bring Major Williams home to dinner to- morrow night?" Brian asked as they started for bed. Ruth was delighted. More because it proved that perhaps she WAS doing what would be for the best happiness of both in the end, than because she really eared about megting Major Williams, For Brian. 10,000,000 IN UNITED states Director of Employment - ' Says Situe Is y / ah -- New York, Jan. 27.--There are l ¢ peltons in the given him by his gountry, had made cleaning woman who_ was working in|, To-morrow---Ruth Plans A Surprise ~ "TALKING IT OVER | Te Deum Landamus He's an artist at side stepping matrimony, he's been doing it tor twenty-five years. He is still step- ping carefully round the edge avoiding all the pitfalls. He has al® ways got a girl of course, and he weighs his attentions minutely; al- - : appearing to be ready to de- clare himself, and yet: never sdying a word that might § lead to a wedding ring. Hé is forty-five and has a fat red face with over- eating, a twin six and laundry which gives a big re- "tur. There's no- A thing in his mind i but profit and $ loss -- absolutely nothing! There's nothing iu his heart but a desire to make the pro- fit bigger. There's nothing in his brain but plans for building new laundries, and nothing in his soul but steam from dirty water, I think I know, because the pretty Littie {time as the famous Diva's ike {voice filled the great Or Kign, know. The pretty Lifule and "lof it all, she looked up at him. for qn | SYmpathy fu her jby. His jehins sun Thing, and "he and I went to hedr Galli-Curel last night, The pretty Little Thing loves music, and she thinks she loves him. I caught sight of his fat red face from time to what was he thinking? 1 long aguiver with the iit 5 § - El

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