Daily British Whig (1850), 12 Apr 1919, p. 14

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

, _ PAGE FOURTEEN __THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, APRIL 12,1919. There is no § sediment --- the last drop is just iH id as delicious as |G the first. - jot Society, duringthe past J seventy years have relied soft, refined, pearly white complexion ~ it renders instantly, always the source of flattering ¢omment. _ Gouraud's OI IN ST 1: PIMPLES ON FACE CUTICURA HEALS Caissed Disfigurement. Itchyand Burning, Had Restless Nights. "My face came out in little pim- ples that were , and I scratched AS them tonstantly, and then oy they turned into scales, causi much disfigure- was and rest lese nights, "This trouble lasted about a year before I used Cuticura Soap 'and Ointment, and after using three cakes ol And 1a hoses of Ointment was " igned) W. Byrng, St. Basile, Que., Nov. 23, 1918, - Make Cuticura. Soap, Ointment and Talcum your daily toilet prep- arations, ES LE each of Cuticora Seep, Oint- post-card: "Outicura, " "Sold everywhere. By Jan \ BAB'S INDIGNATION CHAPTER LVI. I was terribly indignant with Neil, told 'him, could exceed of proceedings. iid make Blanche Qrton, ysirory of his busi- andalous. There estaurants and hotels could tak® such men as we receive in our' home. It Wasn't necessary to take them---and incidentally himself--to her, He listened for a while in silence. He had exhausted himself before I had a chance say all that was in my mind. Then he broke out; "You refused to help me, You even tho you are angry because . of Blanehe's kindness to me, have not offered to do what she is d ing---help me. You are too high and mighty to make your agreeable to men who mean success to me, money for you Yet you object to having a friend who cares enough for me to make herself attractive to my business ac- quaintances that she helps me al- ready more than you ever have in all the years we have been married I recalled what she had said about getting rested 86 she could properly entertain and interest some one who bored her, She did this for Neil. The full significance of this action on her part rushed over me. She was inJove with Neil and had taken this 'way to make him care for her. She had been in love with him be- fore Orton died, 1 thought bitterly, as I recalled many little things which were unnoticed at the time because I had thought of her as mar- ried, and so not free. Now they flair- ly glared at me, Had Neil also lov- ed her? Did he care for her now as & woman, or only as a means to an end? That, I must know at all haz- ards, and---at once. Jealousy of her was the predomi- nant feeding now. I cared nothing about the business, her connection with it. It was Blanche Orton, the fascinating widow, with whom, I was occupied, "What did you do after you finish- ed eating?' T-asked. "You eortainlv didn't stay at the table until one Nothing, 1 the basene his That he where he could not to | +The L | Promoter's | e Phelps ife CTED jo'clock? 1 recall distinctly that was { the hour you came 'in." "No, if you feel interested, we play- ed cards." His sarcasm nearly made me cry, but I winked the tears back and aske 3 "Bridge?" "No, poker---Haltman wouldi't play Uridge. He calls it a woman's game," Unconsciously I name for future use, "Did you play "Fairly high." IS ALL AGAINST BLANCHE OR registered that "Haltmau, for high stakes?" me having to pry everything outvct you?" 3 "And so deny you the great pleas ure you seem to find in questioning me? 1 would not be so cruel." I rushed from the room at this an- swer, and threw myself upon the bea, sobbing and erying bitterly. 1 want- ed him to tell me wll about that din- ner, and while he had not refused to answer my questions, he had re- fused to talk about it or to satisfy my curiosity in any way He had gambled, too! Was that something else meg had to do to get business from ti{egh common men? [ didn't believe it any) more than believed it was necespary should be entertained 4m our home "I suppose she was all dressed up in some of her queer gowns?" [ said to myself when I grew more calm "They are only intended to make men stare, anywhy!" I realized, long after that all my indignation that day was directed toward Blanche Orton, instead of to- ward Neil. What right had she to even allow him to make her home a business rendezvous? How dared she invite him and Kis business friends to dinner and slight me, his wife? Not that I wanted to go if those hor- rid men were there; but was it her place to give me the chance to re- fuse, if she asked my husband. That she knew I had refused to en- tertain men of Haltman's stamp and had offered to help Neil by having them at her home, would have an- gered me still further had I known Lt. Monday Neil Refusés to Tell Where He Is Going. Bab | TALKING | { IT OVER -With Lorna Moon "Dear Lorna Moon: I have just got back, from France, where 1 fought tén months. I am damaged a little, but nothing that time won't set right. I've got a grouch on, but it isn't with anybody but myself. Everybody has been awfully square with me. ------_ The boss gave me _ ge my old job back at 'a; old salary; my dear old moth. Jor had my room all freshly done over before I came home, my sisters make all kinds of a fuss over me; and my girl was true Alue all the time I was away ifand all tickled to bits to get me back. This reads as If everything is rosy, doesn't it? | St can't stand the office. 1 want in the worst Way to thréw up my job and got some. thing to do out of doors, and when I get hoiife at night it seems as if all the fuss and frills will smother, me. Worse than all of that, my But It fut. 1 Re-adjustment I-Don't-Cares hate to whisper it even to myself, but 1 don't Ive her. i.haven't a single 'thing fi cgfmon with her. She's a lovely . and clever, and good, and all that a man would want in a wife, but it's no use mo trying to fool myself, her kisses mean- nothing to me. I've kept up the bluff ag well as I could ever since I came hofie, but it's pretty hard, for she expects me to be around her most of the time, and I want to be with the fellows. I sound Jtke an ungrateful pup. I'm not trying to get out of marrying hen (she's walted for 'me three years), but is it fair to marry a girl when you don't care far her?" It isn't fair to marry a'girl if you don't care for her; but I am ROL at all sure that you don't care for her. You see, soldier boy, you | GON't care 'for the office, or the fuss and frills ac home. I think you are Just suffering from an attack of re-adjustment-----I-don't cares. You- '¥eé been 'with men for six months In camp and ten months overseas. It took you a while to get used to 'them, you know; now, it will take you a little while to shake down in- to 'the old place again. Don't tell that nice girl that you don't love sweetheart expects me to marry her right away, and I'd just ag soo get hanged as marry anyone. 1 her, not yet anyway. Wait - until you are sure. Good iuck---send me someé of thre wedding cake! . * Ta - (Continued from Pago 3.) Mr. wid Mrs. A.C Hardy, 'Brockville, have left on _ a trip through the western s Py y eA | fo Portland, Ore. Mrs. HS gina Lowden, spending some time in Kingston, have gone - Toronto. Miss Jessie Dickson 18 expected from Toronto to Abend er with her sister, Mrs. RH h Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Kirby and Miss Marjorfe Kirby, who were hore for the Kirby-Phillips on | Bart street. } Wednesday, have {daugh Miss Ruby Duff, Toronto, is the uest of Mrs, H. E. Richardson, olinson street. . | Mrs. Walter Boyd, Ottawa. Mrs. Gayley Brown and little ter, who have been visiting Mrs. wv G. Simmons, Bare street, returned this woek to New York. George Thompson, oronto, has Been spending & few days in town. Mew, G6 1 left to-day Jor Mr. and Mrs. 3 rs Bulkley sue wa gard, was also in the pasty. - < Major and 1 "Can't you tell me things without] that they | SL 3 a t eadine 'Arui Is--The Married Men Who Courted Girls | in Wartime. = | { By Margaret M. Luke: The many instances in which mar (ried men represented themselves a: i single med during the confusion o | the war and paid court to girls {ought to teach girls a good sound les {son. They should know just whe apd what a young man is before the) fengourage his devotion--no matte: how attractive it may be To some girls a few honeye j words or a stolen kiss is about al j that is needed to vouch for a man' [ vast, present and his future The | slightest suggestion on thé part o j any one else in the household that { would be well to find out a littl { more about the young man before he {18 admitted the freedom of the fam {ily circle is taken as unwarranted and | branded as rank suspicion | Not so long ago a mother wrote tc {the page saying that her daughter was about to marry and go to the other end of the continent with ¢ { young man who was in the nayy. The {girl had known the young man for {sfx months ve mother did not | care for the boy Still she would {not have stood in the path of her daughter's happiness, but for one | thing She knew nothing about {him He just seemed to have drop {ped in from nowhere other /than te { casnally mention once in a while re | Iatives some 2,000 miles away In tuitively the mother felt something rat cA AAP M-TRAGI BATTLES ON THE BRITISH -FRON (Continuer from) Page 13.) machine gun fire, and thousands of wounded poured batk again to the dressing stations and field hospitals These men of ours cursed the wea- {ther as the cause of their iH Jack {| They cursed it with deep and lurid oaths, cursed it wet and cursed fit cold, by day and night, by duck- boards and mule tracks, by shell holes and swamps. For it wis wed- ther which caused 'their defeat, and {held them in the mud when they had set their bearts oh the heights. It wa§ this mud that beat them. Man after man sald that to me. "Fritz couldn't have stopped us," said an Australian boy, warming his hands and body bv a bragier after a night In the cold slime which was still plas- tered about him. "It was the mud which gave him His chance." "It was thé mud that dia as fn," sald an officer of the Berkshires, sit- ting up in a stretcher and speaking wearily, "Wa got hogged and couldn't keep up with the barrage. That gave the German machine gun- ners time to get to work on us. It was thelr luck." A young Scottish. Borderer, shiv- ering so that his teeth. chattered, | spoke hoarsely, and there was no warmth in him except the fire in his eyes: "We had a fearful time," he said; 'but it was the spate of mud | that kept us back." | "Whenever we got near to Fritz he | surrendered or ran," said a young sergeant of the East Surreys "We | should have had hini beat with solid ground beneath us, but we all got stuck in the bog, and he came out of his block-houses and machine- gunned us as we tried fo get across the shell holes, all filled Mike young ponds, and sniped us when we could not drag one leg after another." These were some of our bad bat- ties. But through them all shines out the valor of the British soldier, grimi, enduring, patient, refusing to surrender the courage of his soul to the devils of. despair, and going on to the end of his job, even though his goal were death. SC od allio) CAVENDISH of the Duke and wh will Londoa, . who bas been spending a short time | n Ota, a pow In Kingston vistt- ing Mrs. J. B. Careuthors. © Try n the Realm of Women --- Some Interesting Features 1 ) WHEN A STRANGE YOUNG MAN: I WANTS TO MARRY DAUGHTER | i | Don't Call in a Detective, But Do Find Out Who and What He Millinery Economy You can freshen up your Old Straw Hats, or take new ones, if they are not the color you desire, and re- color with "DY-O-LA STRAW HAT COLOR." Black, Blue, Navy Ble, Tan, Brown, Green, Cirdinal Red, Pink, Purple and Reducer. Handy little brush with every bottle. Complete 2c. TRY IT { Ask your Druggist or Dealer for DY-0-LA Straw Hat Color vas wrong, and her mother's heart hrank from Jetting her daughter amble her life away It was th n he letter came to the page, and the sother was advised te write to cer- Ain authorities and make inquiries Vithin a wek she wrote a grateful ittle note saying she had been in. 'ormed that the boy had a wife and 'hild in another city. « ry 5I1t would not do to suspect every 'oung man who rings the front door wil of concealing encumbrances in wmother city, bu: in a matter as veighty as matrimony there is no 'eason for a girl to rush into things. \ lifetime 'of misery and heart break nay be avoided by looking at things from four sides and taking time. There are many ways to find .out tbout the young man from the far- way city without putting a deteetive on his trail. If a man loves a girly 1¢ is going to tell her about his peo- Jle and he is going to tell his people tbout her, and in letters his mother will make mention of this new- 'ound sweetheart and perhaps want © write to her. I know of many lovely friendships that have been 'ormed in this way: Every boy is wt fortunate enough to have a moth- ¢r, but he usually has some one whom § 1 id only too. proud to tell. about is girl These instances stand in sweet and safe contracts to the .stran- ger who looms in town and makes a fark secret of ail his affairs When Visiting Toronto * Put up at Cook's FIRST-CLASS sleeping and eating arcommodation at Cook's, in addition to the Turkish Bath, which ia such an excellent tonic for your health. The Turkish Bath is Nature's way of ridding your system of waste HOURS FOR rad polsonous matter, and removing the old, dead skin, GENTLEMEN You come from the bath feeling like & mew person, Every day and all th every metve and muscle rested and refreshed. night except Sun- mental outlook is made more cheerful, as it Te days and Ladies' figets the liaproved slate of your physique. It relieves Hours. the pain of rheumatism and sciatica, soothes the nerves FOR LADIES Mondays, Wednes- days and Fridays 9.50 am. to 2 p.m. and is the most effective ture and preventive of colds in the world, " ' Oa E® TURKISH > &RUSSIAN MOST COMPLETE UP-TO-DATE EQUIPMENT IN AMERICA Prices, $1.25 to $2.25, according to sleeping sccom- modation, Good meals served at muderate prices, 202-204 KING STREET WEST, TORONTO Only 3 blocks from the Union Station Mic : TL SE dd mn Female farm labosers in Ger. many receive from 38 to 48 cents a day and their board a Sr A A AA A 0 LR ROVING A a 0 - RN ant Georgina dhoes "IPHE new styles for spring A as developed by our artists and craftsmen are'fascinating in their charming lines and beautiful finish, Concealed in them is a wonderful . ease and comfort, and a serviceability given only by leathers of fine, even, close-grained texture, Our trade marks guide the way to supreme shoe satisfaction. Bit Cxelasively By Blochford drroclenufécturing Gmparny oronto Cl 7 S 4 Onur By \ Obtgined through Canada's leading boot hops 4 peer And in Kingston { ORGINA Shoes for sale by ONYX Shoes for sale by * git Post Stop. J. H. SUTHERLAND & BRO. SURE test of the value ad quality of a product is the number of years it has been upon the market. Red Rose Tea has stood the test of time. It has given the best of tea satisfaction for more than 24 years. . Its high standard of Quality has been maintained under all conditions during that time. It is always the same "good" tea™ ~ Rich, full-flavored, fragrant and Sold only in

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy