Daily British Whig (1850), 11 Feb 1919, p. 10

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_fHE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 1 1, 1919. ee ee ® In the Realm of Woman --. Some Interesting Features of Tea Combined with Economy jin Use La Is so full of good qualities, as to measure up to every desire of purse |. and palate-- - Rh a 4 WARNING Now is the time 0 come and make arrangements to have car stored and overhauled. TAKEN We still have space for a few Automobile repair work The James Sowards 4 2 Coal Co. ED. WALSH, Prop. Phone 155. 885 King St. Phone 2188 hd is - "Try It Today" pr Ate | TY TT +3! COKE ORDERS ONLY ania Sen "More Bread and Better Bread and Better Pastry" the skill and care used in making the orginal high quality PURITY FLOUR 1s maintained i in Canada Food Board License Nos, Cereal 2-000 Flour 15, 16, 17, 18 Western Canada Flour Mills Co. Ltd. HEAD OFFICE Toronto, Ont. St: THE the al Cah EMBER given LAT Ra" (ASRS RE ES SUNKIST Seeded and Seedless Raisins. In packages only. Buy from your grocer. Ifsending mje books he was ho of Gold Soap. You will see that it is heavier than any other cake of laundry soap at the price. Stand it against the other cake. You will sée that Gold Soap is Jager Try Gold Soap and you 'also see that it works better, lasts longer and is a real econo- Gold Soap is made in the Procter & Game Fuctorin Canada pl Promoter' s Wife BARBARA'S FIRST LOVE LETTER : : CHAPTER 1V. i's, lett er £o ymmenced: friend Bab: an. can tell you. s together, our tennis even if you did a New York reems awl ¢ stuffy after the cool, shaded of Huntingtom, 1 find mye ing that I were sitting in the han no with you instead qf cu a I garden, stifling 'nights now nothing of summer heat | grass grown, shaded vil thing in cainmo n with the streets cf this big tawn, 1e day 1 am comi ng back lar er visit. 'Will you ba just 48 ind to.me, or shal? $-find you have hanged-----perhaps' (awful thought!) married to some of tnose good hearted youths 1 met? [Please don't Bab. I should hae do iad you Mrs Somebody, "instead Of Barbara Hill, one of the dearest playfellows 1 man ever had. 'Tell me I am going to these 1 ool, anoth all about yourself, Bab send you some new books casionally, something I .am reading Then we can talk about it in our letters. Would that please you? "Remember me to your father and mother. They were good to spare you to; me so often. Really, as | look back, ¥" seem to have ralner mon- opolized you during my atay with Aunt Grace. By the way, she is aw- fully fond of you. Perhaps vou al- ready know it, doubtless you do. But in view of the fact that she told me, and that she is a relative of mine; go and sit with her occ sionally won't you? 1 see that I haven't given you any real reason that you should but do just the same "I am having some pictures taken for mother. She has hounded me to death for months to have my face put on -a card. Would you like one? Don't be afraid to say 'mo.' It wont urt--yes it will too. I find that I really want you to have one. "This is quite a long letter for a first one, isn't it, Bab? Do writ: me soon. 1 shall be looking for a letter every day mow until I receive it. Very sincerely, NEIL FORBY%3." My first man letter. Yet no cne could call it a love letter, I thougnt ing it! How could he make fun about my getting married? That hurt. Just as if 1 would think of marrying one of the village boys, now--after meet- ing him. . RE delighted that he proposed reading. It would seem like being together to talk of them in our letters. But what delighted me most was that I was to have his picture, I had tried to get Wp my courage to ask for it hafore he left, but couldn't. Now I was glad I had not, it was so nice to have him wifer it of himself. Of course I would go and sit with his aunt. I"had done so frequently since he left and we had rpent the efitire time talking of him. Nrs ATT. fo emo several sheets of paper as I pressed it to my lips after read- fon one of the Carter had told me all his boyhood, of his pe much, as they had lv apd her brother's w ngt been very conge all wonderfully interesting to i I said to myseathat 1 would walt | just as long a¥ Neil had be fog 11 whole figured answered his letter. Two weeks. But I couldn't! 1 that the longer I waited to reply to] bis letter, the longer it would be be- fore I received another. So at end of a week I sept my answer, 1 spent many hours, before I was fatisfied "with what I' had Evén then J realized it was very in- adequate as far as either expressing ny feelings, or in interest. But was the best I eould do d/ | and destroyed | written. | vs a 1 had told him Wow I missed him, | but tind UOF 10 48 him see too plain- ly how much. 1 bad thanked him in advanve for the picture and the books. It was @ very ordinary letter from «one friend to another, I wanted awfully to sign it "with love" but 1 restrained the impulse and simpli said: "Your friend, Bab." To-morrow----The Tone of Neil's Let ters more Loving | MARRIED FOR 65 YEARS THE PRINCE EDWARD COUNTY. They Have Lived Continuously on a Farm on Little Sandy Bay--Three Things Outstanding in Their Lives. Picton Gazette In Hallowell township, Prince Ed ward county, on Jan. 22nd, 1831, there was born to the union of John J. Hyatt and Susan McDonald, a son, whom they named James McDonald Hyatt. Within five miles of this place a little over five years later, on May 9th, 1836, to the union of James Har- ris and Mary Levens, a daughter was born whom they named lLyda Jane Harris. On Jan, 18th, 1853, these two were married by the Rev. "Mr McFadden in Pieton. On the same day Mr. Hyatt took his bride to his home on the south side of West Point jaws of the mouth of Little Sandy Bay. On this farm Mr. Hyatt has lived continuously for eighty-five years, and with his bride for sixty-six years. To them were born on this farm seven children, four boys and -three girls, 'The youngest girl died when eightben months old. The other members of the family are still living, Three of the boys, Ro- bert M., George and Garret, are in Atlaume, Cal, and J. Clayton at the ol home; Jennie, Mrs, P. L. Weeks, is in Tontwanda, N.¥., and Minnie, Mrs. J. D. Stephenson, in Hillsburg, Ont. 'Mr. and Mrs, Hyatt have been hard-working, industrious people, and through their long married life they have been blessed with unusual good health. They are growing old gracefully. There are two persons living to-day who were present at their marriage--Robert MeDonald, West Point, cousin of the groom, and Mrs. Richard Jackson, Bloomfield, cousin of the bride. Mr. Hyatt has always taken an in- terest in the municipal and political affairs of Canada. He has been a Bhs LR Reformer in politics, and says he has often been disgusted with the corrup- TALKING ---- Sparing Careless Ned left her high and dry again the other evening, Tors got all about getting the tickets for the opera; and there were the guests she had invited for dinner and theatre party, all dressed up in evening clothes and no place to go! = Of course, he beamed his good- natured smile on everybody as he explained that he had gotten a fchance to buy a h of a driv. er" from a féllow who was selling his golf outfit, land that the tick- ets had slipped " there vr * seats to be had. The guests agreed that the driv- er was a beauty, and attempted to spare the hostess by saying that they would enjoy a niet svenin 20 much more th the 8 A & IT ames With Lorna [ OVER the Rod spent the first half hour enthusing about his horse, and the next writ- ing his resignation. . But he is still congratulating: himself on' getting all that exercise while he had a chance. It isn't hard to understand his outlook, if you hear his mother tell stories of his boyhood, and it's very easy to place the blame for his fail- ure where it 'belongs. = There's va story she tells of the day they sent him for baby food, he didn't come back for hours, and when he did he was wreathed in smiles and bear- ing a brand new kite; "of course," she says, "we were so glad to see him that we didnt mention the baby food." All right, mother! Bat unfor- tunat for your boy, the world is not so lemient--it insists on men- baby food--also on the sulprie! pan COUPLE ARE NATIVES OF| the | - "Ut's halite : tion in politics and thinks that both Grits and Tories need to be reformed. To-day, at the age. of eighty-nine years, he is ready to tell you what he thinks of the misdeeds of Sir Wilfrid --as well as of Sir Robert. In religion Mr. and Mrs. Hyat( Disciples of Christ, and have members of the West Lake church for sixty years, There are three things that stand out 'clearly in the lives ofthese two persons, First, hard work, that is the key to health; second, devotion to each other- and their family, that binds together with strong affection third, religion, the foundation of ev- ery true character and which makes people thoughtful of others and opens the door to the chamber of blessed- ness, For sixty-six years they have lived where night and day they can hear I are the wash of the waves as they break |. on the lime-rock shore, and in the house by the side of the road where the races of men go by and they are ever the friends of men. NOW AND THEN beent i a on LE ' 99 dood for me Emsam oe OVERCOATS $48.00 to $38.00 SUITS $20.00 to $38.00 Large stock of indigo blue serge and fine worsted suitings. All wool, extra heavy weight pants, $8.00. John Tweddell, Civil and Military Tailor, Princess St. GASTORIA For Infants and Childre Mothers. Know That Genuine Castoria © For Over Thirty Years. THE CENTAUR BEMBANY, MEW YORK SITY,

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