Daily British Whig (1850), 5 May 1919, p. 10

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WHIG, MONDAY, MAY 5, 1919. THE DAILY BKITISH | In the Realm of Women --- Some Interesting Zz Features - WHAT IS THE BEST TONIC? The Complete formula of Vinol is printed on each label showing that it is the' greatest tonic in the world. Why experiment with unknown preparations? If you need ; more strength take . ) The Well-known Cod Liver / and Iron Tonic, Without Oil THERE IS NOTHING BETTER ; is the one great drawback to health after sickness or when one is run ' down. Vinol creates strength because "itis a non-secret combination of the most famous body-building and strength-creat- ing elements known-- Beef and Cod Liver Peptones, Iron and Manganese and Gly« cero-phosphates. You who are run down, 'nervous, lack energy and strength, we #now that Vinol is what you need. DRUGGISTSRETURN YOURMONEY it Vinol fails to benefit you. S Rh gE Me pag Ragin EE ---------- CRYSTAL BOTTLING WORKS | St. Lawrence | Ale & Porter all kinds of soft drinks. We deliver to .all parts of the city. ei CHAPTER LXXIV. When I asked Mr. Frederick what he thought of Blanche Orton my heart seemed to almost stop beating so anxiously did I await his reply. Would he think that she and Neil ?-- "Mrs. Orton is bard up. 'She Is the kind of women we see occasionally in the west," he interrupted my thoughts. 'She is hard as nails, too clever to be wicked, knowing she is not, caring nothing what people say ~at least 1 judge she does not." "No, she never did! Even when Mr. Orton was alive. But then people simply smiled at her actions; now they talk." "I ee. 1 know very little of so- ciety folks. 1 know a good woman when T see her, and an honest man. 1 know, too, a clever woman like thig, Mrs. Orton. How long have y band and his friends been goMig there?" "A long time--nearly six or eight mouths. Ever since I refused to en- tertain those men here. 1 gid wrong, didn't 1?" [= "That's a question 1) can't an- ewer. You certainly cguld not en- tertain that bunch -at Mrs. Orton's last night. Whether you could have prevented Forbes from getting mixed up with some of them if you had allowed a few like Scott to come here,' don't know. I doubt it how- ever. And it is too late to think of that. I would rather lose every dollar I have in the world than see you making free with those people I was with last night." "You are so good to me, 1 don't Knowing why--thiat tie cared for me, Then before he could answer my tact- less question 1 asked another: "How can Blanche Orton endure them? She is "educated, accomplished, dainty. As 1 spoke I remembered what she had said about resting so she would be at her best when she was going to be bored. "If she wasn't al those things she wouldn't be the kind of a woman who could help in promoting. Add to what you have said, cleverness, need of money, love of luxury, and gou have the typical woman aid 'to any promoter." rr "Then you think that"-- "Phat you have cause to fear her?" reading 'my thoughts uncannily. "If mean. She is fascinating, and very A CONFIDENTIAL CONVERSATION Bee why?" I murmured, all the time! do not think so--not in the way you | The omoter's Wife By Jane Phelps -- pt beautiful. But a man with a wife like ygu would hardly allow himself to be duped by a woman of her type. Tren tbo when men and women are ort of business deals, either in any- don se honest or dishonest, they have love affairs also, They don't go together, I would not worry about that phase of the matter if 1 were you." I was so relieved I sighed audibly. This man's plain common sense view of thd matter had taken away the Jealousy I felt~--ayg least for the pres. ent. "Then you think that what Mr. Powers, and others said is true? That Neil, Mr. Forbes is not quite-- honest?' My face burned as I put the question, yet I must know. "I am wifraid that all his schemes won't stand daylight as I said. He can't be entirely ignorant of the fact, as he 18 the brains of all the things he goes into. There are usu- ally three or four fypes in ali pro- moting outfits. The society man, or the man with education and appear- ance, the bluff common man whose very bluffness causes confidence, the politician often, and either some wo- man like this-Mrs. Orton, or another man who is equally clever at enter- taining.| Wine and women sometimes play a big part if the deal is crook- ed." . 'Do' they blame Neil for being so ~1 was going to say generous, but instead I changed to 'extray gant'? For this?" I| gestured to include house, everylpmg. "Yes. Théy say he uses other peo- ple's money to live as you do, in- stead of trying to make them . the profits he promises. I am sorry. But I must tell you the truth." "No wonder Lotraine--and you al4 80 discouraged my social plans." "You are young, just put them of? a while. I musf go now. I shall be in town a few days. I am going to talk with your husband like a Dutch uncle, as we say, Then I will 'tell ou of a plan I have." "You are the only real friend I have in the world!" I said impul- sively, giving him both my hands. He drew me to him, kissed me once on my forehead, as he might have kissed a child, then left without an~ other word, To-morrow -- Sad, Disturbing Thoughts Follow: a . tn» a ly A Tt "Smells Clean" Ivory. Soap: "smells clean". This best describes its odor. It smells clean be- cause it is pure and good. Artificial | THANG IT OVER ~With Lora Moon-- Does This Strike Home? "How would you lke to get up and give your seat to a woman who glumps right doWn in it without even lifting an eyebrow, never mind saying 'thank you?' ' said the busi- hess man. '"We hear a lot since the Why Can't I Get To Sleep? Thousands of people all over the country ask this question, but stili continue to toss night after night on a sleepless bed, and it is fmpossible for them to get a full night's refresh- ing sleep. Some constitutional ~disturbance. worry or disease has so debilitated and irritated the nervous system that it cannot be quietened except by the pernicious use of opiates or narcotics, Or again, you have heart palpitation, and sensation of sinking, a feeling you are going to die, or perhaps you wake up in your sleep feeling as though you were about to choke or smother, and the only way you can women came back from overseas about how polite the European men are, and how boorish we Americans seem to be in comparison. We may be boorish, boor- ish, but it's the women who have made us so. Yon don't catch an American being boorish or incon- siderate fo his own woman, do you? No, he takes plea- sure in doing 'things for her be- cause he knows that she appreci- ates it. don't--why, 1 have held open a store 'door for four : Fore strange women to pass out, and not ong of them even glanéed at. me; they just acted as itl 'the porter." "The American is a polite in his home as any European could be, It's his community manners that..are way off, but the women are {o lama for that. Their manners are. the Hmit, just watch a woman at & theatre ticket window, for instance. Does she get in line and wait her turn? Not unless ft can't be avoid- ed, ae will elbow her way in front of sone man, and Re, poor brute, has to stand for it. "YIt Isn't any use tie women try- ing to reform . my manners, until they get busy and reform their own. Tl be polite to the women I know, ~ and to old women, but after that, | "[the others can look out for them-} get relief is to sit up in bed. To all who suffer in this way, Mil- burn't Heart and Nerve Pills offer an inestimable boon. They bring back the much-needed night's rest by im- proving the tome of the nerves, strengthen the heart, enriching the blood and making the whole organ- ization act in harmony---then you sleep as peaceful as a child. Mrs. James Latimer, 39 Leinster St, Bt. John, N.B., writes:--*"At night I could not sleep. I had to sit up in bed, my heart beat so fast, and when I walked up stairs I would get all out"of breath. A friend re- commended = Milburn's Heart and Nerve Pills and after using two boxes I can sleep all night and am not out of breath after walking." Milburn's Hedrt and Nerve Pills are 50c a box at all dealers, or mail- ed direct on receipt of price by The T. Milburn™ Co,, ted, Toronto, Ont. . The hotel building at Tremont Park, near Gantghugue, was entered Some time recently, and the party or $ removed a dresser, a mattress eel oe Pringl al Lowndes, o : n( : » Arnprior public SShons. was tae nurse-in-training at ele le Se el Ne a Sp Through the § i Looking Glass | By EVELYN NESBIT TATE Why does the farmer no longer dig up his fields with a spade? Why does the builder no longer make his awn bricks of straw? Why don't we walk from New York to Washington? Why? Becausa 'we have improved. Men are too clever to waste their * time and energy making pins by hand or splitting rails with an ax the way Abraham Lincoln did. La- bor saving ma- chinery has been devised to release men's energies for ' " better things. The men who tsed tof pound out nalls with a hammer, and turn out one nail in five minutes, are tending machines that produce thou- sands of nails In the tine they could make one nail by hand. So it Is with everything In industry. That Is why the modern farmer can cultivate thousands of acres of land in the time he used to spend on his tiny back yard; why the builder can construct skyscrapers instead of lit tle houses, and why we travel from New York to Washington in speeding express trains. ' That is why the women of today are learning, and thinking. Laborsaving machinery has crept into the home to make possible for every woman leisure hours in which to read and study. Any woman who does not avail herself of the new de- vices is as foolish as the carpenter would be to cut down trees and saw them by hand into boards before he set to work to bulld a cottage. Put a fireless cooker Into your kitch- en. Make use of electricity the way men do in industry, gnd see how much more you will be able to accomplish with less effort. Get vacuum clean- ers to save your backs. Get an elec tric washing machine to save yeur hands for piano playing. - Stop knead- Ing dough and get a bread mixer. Rlec- were not invented as a luxury. They are here to help women. Use them. Be as progressive as the blacksmiths end the pin makers. a FINISHING OFF THE EDGES Machine Zigzag Stitching, Battiement true of bundles. And yet, when you stop to consider how little real time and trouble it takes to add a row of given to the "edges" ' Here are but a few of the lovely things that can do duty as decoration, as well as finish: Machine hemstitch- ing worked zigzag, hemstitching in battlement effect, ruffling or plaiting of net in white or color, easy stitches, and tinted laces... y It is an easy matter to peneil off an Irregular line for the hemstitcher to | follow; and that is perhaps the very | easiest finish of all. But the tinted lace and net idea Is quite tha newest and most effective. Both are seen usually done in tiny, tiny plaits. Among the easy stitches which are always effective and pretty nearly al- ways within the vogue, come French knots worked in groups of three, al- ternating short and long blanket stitch, long horizontal stitches inter spersed with squares or dots worked solid, and the aforementioned stry ] stitches worked In threes. These are especially decorative dofié on the the stitches graduating or alterna In length, - vd Miss Ada Cronkright, Napanee, left for Rochester, N.Y., wheres she entered the first class as' vanced to $1,200 per annum. ¥ Ai Habnemann Hospital. =A SEAL BRAND COFFEE 'Now as always--Your Guarantee of a perfect cup of Coffees In 3, 1 and 2 pound tins--in the bean, . _- hn or fine LIL for percolators. \-- 2 Write for booklet: "Perfect Coffee--Perfectly Made®. t's free. CHASE & SANBORN. MONTREAL tric: irons, power sewing machines, | | ng Y Tsu Stands for Freddie, Self-satisfied, quite. He knows the enjoys ment Of "Infants-Delight." Fragrant and re- freshing. Soothes and cleanses --because it's 9 Sead us three of these sdicall Sffernr tes FREE vi) an cake of INFANTS-DELIGHT. JOHN TAYLOR & CO. Limited, Dept. 14, TORONTO. - oS In Centre of Shopping and Business District ith Prva poe hi EUROPEAN PLAN SAM. H. THOMPSON, Pace. hair tonic: at home-- Sir?" There would be 'decidedly less baldness if more m. knew the great comfort and simpli- city of % ' thoroughly cleanses and" invigorates the hair and "Scalp. oft-tir something of a task but with Lux it is no trouble at all. a bo Lux will remgve only the superfluous oils . e 'Bx-ghampoo.. Its: rich lather Washing the hair is ofttimes the dust and grime--it is so pure it can injure Rinses out absolutely clean leaving the hair soft, silky and glossy with new vigor and health. aE ¥ perfume coyld add nothing to its desir- ~ You do not tire of Ivory's odor. Like the sweet fragrance of the meadow, it is ---- ---- o---- "Nelghhers met at the home of Mr.| and acs: A Flake, Lavant Hotel, J-¥, Dupont, commercial ti and moved 4 veller, formerly of Kingston, | has| Mr Norton bought the Martha VanLuven resi-'to Durward Gerow, Wk a

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