Daily British Whig (1850), 30 Jan 1919, p. 10

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

PAGE JEN >! in THE DALY BRITISH WHIG, THURSDAY, JANUARY 30, 1919. ~ In the Realm of Woman == Some Interesting Features and Whitefish, 'Sea Salmon, dock; Halibut and Cod. When it comes sufts, some taHQrs solne lawyers. to ying resh Had- » MSprecds Disease § since 1870 TERMS Ladies' Buits, Dresses and Fars, Gentlemen's Suits and Overcoats, gan discount N. M - . 374 King St. about AIA sei a AAI SI GAN Bt Satisfaction when you purchase ; Ror R MILLS CO; I2d., TORONTO, Ost. Better Porridge Use PURITY OATS Coat, we rea a 18. Gold Soap buy. Geld the walks laundry work easy be- cause it is the best laundry soap you can Soap is economical to use because it is better soap and because there . is more of it. Tutsing Bh Kate soap tha the next st cake at the same price. You will Each cake of Gold Soap size when you buy it. You will notice the quality when you try it. Gold Soap is made in the Procter & Gamble Factories "THE CHAPTER CL. his arms and kissed her fondly. "You talking about. Brian said: ready for me, Ruth, But how much even Lhe little waiting room. . Phere "But Ruth"-- much of anything to live while aun earning a big salary--Mr, Mandel the business almost entirely in my "Poor -Mandel! how sad he must heen good to you always; mew you you. 1 used to feel jealous of him, craved, and that I couldn't give you. And 1 also know you better, One gle for the betterment of the world, peared of paramount importance Ruth.. It is simply a perfectly ap- money." Here Brian blew his nose By Jane Phelps. RUTH TELLS BRIAN, WIFE" ones WONDERFUL NEWS Ruth saw, but with her usual deli- cdcy, turned her back and commenc- ed to talk of what more was needed. The desk for the telephone in the waiting room, the extension to his private office, ete. Yet she could not help heing plédased at the emotion he had shown--even if she wanted no thanks. "Now sit down, Brian, I have some wonderful you." "it's that million! bones." "1 am glad you feel something be- sides pain in those bones of yours, but you are wrong. I told you YOU were to make the million. 1 expect you to, and I do not bear disappoint- pment at all nobly. But, Brian, jak- ing aside, I was so glad to hear you speak of Mr. Mandel as you did. You never had any reason to be jealous." Ruth flushed ever sd faintly. Only too well did she know how much Mandel cared for her, but it was his secret. He himself had no idea she realized what she had grown to mean to him But this knowledge had made it both easier and harder _ to leave him. x "I know dear, I was a cad. But I was sore and thought everyone must love you because I did." "Now listen, Brian. Mr. Mandel knows of this office. - Knows that you are starting in to build up a practice interrupted by the war. He told me to tell you that you were retained as his attorney, wait--yon don't know. what that means, but 1 do. We paid his lawyers every year enough for us to live off You see his importations, etc., make neces- sary legal advice on matters which seem simple, enough, but which are not. Then tooche also told me to tell you that he several friends whose business would require a law- yver's serviees because of the condi- tions caused by the war. He would recommend you as one who would be willing to study those conditions as affected their business and "set them straight again." and listen. news for 1 feel it in my "So 'this was the mischief you were doing?" Brian caught Ruth in fittle witch! It looks like the office of that Millionaire Hackett you were "It is his office." After he had examined everything, "Don't think I do not appreciate all you have done in getting this do we owe for it all?" with a compre- | hensive sweep of his arm, including "Not a penny, Mr. Hackett are your receipts on file." "No objections: allowed." Then: "You see, dear, it didn't cost 2 of tie was with mk. She wouldnt let me pay for things. And és I was raised me. again when he became so engaged with war work, so leaving charge. 1 earned it, too, 1 assure you," be to lose yon. Honest, Ruth, I feel like begging his pardon. He has dre leaving him to get along as best he can because your husband wants too. He had everything I didn't have. Money, social position--all that youn Is iv any wonder I was jealous? But I know something of what he is now. couldn't be "over there' and see the things I saw, take part in that strug- and not grow. Petty personal affairs now seem petty. Before, they ap- But to get back to our muttons: You must have spent g lot of money, pointed office. Nothing like having a wife with good taste as well as suspiciously hard, and afterward his eyes also seemed to need attention. "Why, Ruth--I---it's you ' dear! You have done all these things for "Dear ne Moon: lam a young wife---that is I am only twenty-four, but Thave been married six years and have four children. . Ever gince we've 8 one baby and then another. I love 40 dance and swim and hike and ' tennds, but food---I seem to be of an old woman I'm losing (heart; it just seems as if 1 never WILL be able to have a taste of fun again. er, tried to Rep gesting that I go to OY on with him. He will say in an offhand way 'too bad you can't do the new dances,' hut he never seems to think that I could LEARN to do them. He is very handsome and young looking. Although he is four years older than I, he is much younger looking, and he acts towards me as if I were a set tled down old house wife, and noth- ing more. When I suggest going ont he says, 'What about the children?' We have a perfectly. good nurse and there is really no need for me to Stay in." Of course, there fs no need for you to stay in!' Phere is very great need for you to step-out; dear me, child, you HAVE been meking a per- fectly unthinking selfish creature out of that husband of yours! It's Me you mgried to eure him. Begin home. 1 gan go out t fin never inks 37 do | the breath feverish, the a " Mien the child drops, won't play 'or is restless, | pale and grunty, loak to see if the tongueis white, +. hurry, mother, but don't werry! Give Cascarets, the harmless gandy cathartic. sscales Without Gugaing ~ ~ only 10 cents burt stomach sour. Then 7 Children take : THE FIGHTING SHIPS OF The Orkneys, Nova \ One of - House of me. -I WILL make that million, dear, if I have to live fo be a hundred to do it. And Ruth dear, will forgive me for anything I ever have done to make unhappy? I think sometimes you were unbappy with out cause, but I was too hurt and proud to'explain." Ruth knew he re- ferred to Mollie King, 50 she said 1 WAS jealous of Mollie, Brian, dreadfully jealous after you went overseas and I knew she was also over there. But" "Mollie is going to marry Major Williams, Ruth. I was silly to make yon jealous of her, because Mojlie never cared for me, only was sorry because 1 had so unappreciative a wite"--Then *'As she thought." "As you let her think, you mean." Ruth was sorry the moment she spoke. That her words had gone home, was evinced by Brian's blush. To make amends she added: "We will telephone Mollie to take dinner with -us to-night also. If she is to marry the Major we might as well fet her see that we are having our second honeymoon. What do you say?" "Let's ask her by all means.' {To be Continued) you you REPORTED ENGAGED Mrs. Vernon Castle, the beautiful widow of the famous dancer and aviator, 1s reported engaged to marry Tom Powers, actor and member of the Royal Flying Corps. He was an fntimate friend of Vernon Castle and ft was' under his instruction that he learned to fy. Mrs. Castle is ap« pearing in "Oh Boy" with Powers. ENG- LANL, William Hurd .Hellyer in York Herald, The 'fighting ships of England, sailed the seven -seas, From the Clyde and rainy Cornwall to the sumlit Cyclades, Vancouver, Yokohama, Pacific forlorn, the New they Isles Scotia, 'round Good Hope and the Horn, And everywhere men wondered and everywhere men saw ] That the fighting ships of England brought Anglo-Saxon law, Not the law of lawless rulers, ruling in the name Of God o'er godless Kijigdoms; where those great ships came Was certain death to tyrants, and 80 the saying ran-- ™ "Trade follows the flag--and justice and the ancient rights of man." mis~ but The fighting ships of 'Eagland, those g00d gray men-of-war, Were gathered once at Whitby, from cruising fast and far, When sudden and clear at daybreak the call to action rang, For the German Midgard serpent had struck with his iron fang-- Struck, and the wholo world shud- dered, as If with a mortal wound--- But quietly sailed at sunrise the Grand Fleet, eastward bound; And the North Sea kept the secret-- how thé hell-born powers re- coiled! -- And the world was saved for free- dom, and Fafnir's brood was foiled, While many a distant harbor and many a far-flung key Saw the good ships of England as they kept the ocean free, The right arm of Great Britain-- who'd shorten that arm now? The Fleet--who'd grudge the splen- ' dor of one victorious prow? Behold our fenceless coast line = by foreign foe untred; Behold our unspoiled -yast inviolate sod; Then rail not at the glory that 'round the Grand Fleet elingh, For the Sea Hawk held the Vulture til the Eagle found his wings; More 2 owe or to the Sea Hawk, bow- ong we bow' To fhe 8 fighting ships of England, that keep the ocean free! - cities, our Shoes. es of the dered away from that tion & on Tuesday, but rd ocatod or hae mo Man A 'ocated on out two miles fro ouge: s and he w 10 te HEI f ted Has been Canada's favorite yeast for over a quarter of 8 century, Grenada bakod with Royal Yeast will hoop fresh and molst longer than that made with any other, 0 that a full week's supply oan easily be made at one baking, Gnd the lest font will be Just as good asthe first. MADE IN CANADA EWGILLETT COMPANY LIMITED WINNIPEG TORONTO, ONT. MONTREAL ta DEATH STALKED THE STREETS. --- v All Babies Under One Year Old Died. Omsk, Central Siberia, Jan. 30.-- Death stalked the streets of Perm until the city was captured by Gen- eral Gaida, according to the official report of an investigator who has Just returned: from the Ural front So terrible 'were conditions under the Bolshevist regime that the frightened people of Pérm have not yet recovered. It is said that the few pedestrians encountered . there were emaciated, with livid lips and a constant nervous trembling of the head and hands. There are no children: less than a year old In Perm, «all having died, says the re- -- pA a Pc, Ma, "SNAG i ~~ port, which adds that in three months the whole population would probably have perished The report states that the - Bol- shevists regarded all bourgeois in- habitants of the city, even those ruined and dying, as outside the law, i newspapers the soll -re salf-re- In the Coblenz burgomaster appeals to the spect of the Germans to refrain from commercializing iron crosses and other German decorations of war. Pte. Ray Ward, Chatham, who re- turted a few days ago after nine teen months' service in Fraaee, celebrated his sixteenth birthday on With the Quality I sealed inthe Can 9 3%, 1, and 2 1b. tins--in the bean) ground, or fine ground or percolators. Write for booklet: "Perfect Coffee--Perfectly Made". It's free. CHASE § SANBORN ts WHY SEND FOR-- THE "PIANO POLIS You can obtain as fine results as the ex; v Re O-Cedar Polish on piano Fiptit removes the dust and ie, revealing thé of wood. . R""? wrniture liant lustre that lusts. What G-Oedur Polish" does for farmitine. O-Cedar, . Polish Mop aceomplishes on foots. The Polish comes in 25e, to $3.00 wives. _ Mog, or ou will find bot! his 3 Grocery or Shain Shp Stands for Edith, So pretty and bright She's washed night and morning ; With" Infants Delight" A clear, healthy com- plexion always follows its daily use, because --it's BORATED. { Send us three of these ade--all different--for a FREE trial size cake of INFANTS-DELIGHT. JOHN TAYLOR & CO. Limited, Dept. 14; TORONTO.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy