Daily British Whig (1850), 3 Nov 1919, p. 8

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PAGE EIGH THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG MONDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1910. In the Rea!m of Women--Some Interesting Features fr m---------------- EMPIRE GROCERY High Grade Groceries, Fruits and Vegetables, Cooked aud Uncooked Meats, LEWIS ORR '820 King St. Phone 34 License No. 8.27448 Nr The Telgmann School of | . Music Piano, violin and other stringed instruments; elocution and dra- matic art. Pupils may begin at any date. Terms on application. Engagements for concerts ace cepted. | - 216 Frontenac Street. Phone J How To Make It irst, usea T ricolator, the automatic ¢offee-maker which requires no attention and never fails, provided you choose SEAL BRAND Allow a heaping tablespoonful to each cup. Pour bosding water on the coftee. hen filtered, serve. Jt will be the most delicious coffee you ever tasted. Use the fine-ground grade of Seal Beand, in ¥, 1 and 2-1b. sirtight Tins. At all good dealers. Our booklet, "Perfact Coffs -- Purfactly Mada" is sent free on request. Weine for ft. CHASE & SANBORN Begs Gd announce that he | has resumed his practice. corner Johnson and Welling. ton Streets, Kingston. Tae phone 363. f Above all others--baby's things must look and be absolutely clean. of its purity --beeause of the ease with which it cleanses § > without dnsixt on getting the soap you ask for, SUNLIGHT S04P One year ago today, November anda Iden M<SGione John's Friends. I suppose I should have been big €nough to have risen above the feel- { lng that, because I was not dressed | suitably and was travel stained and worn, I was out of place in this gay i party. Instead of being able to make i my Hirst appeard among John's | friends after a visit parlor and the selection of my pret- | tiest frock, I was painfully aware of j the fact that I never looked worse in { all my life. After the first gay inquiries and { answers were over, I lapsed into sil- énce with the painful consciousness {that I was being judged not only | plain, ill dressed, awkward, but stu- | pid as well. | - John had made a place for himself { beside Elizabeth Moreland with the words.: "By Jove, Bess, you are the best looking girl I have seen in a { month of Sundays!" urse he didn't realize just t these words told r did he think she was the g girl he had seen i: Sundays. He just was { tell her that she was looking | her exquisite, if somewhat bizar peacock-blue, spangled gown and wonderful emeralds and sapph | shone in her ears, about ex- to the beauty | author Gibson "Good! More power to you," ans wered lis friend, magnanimously. Meantime I could not throw off the feeling of being "out" of it. 1 wondered if all the days of my mar- | ried life were going to be as long as | this one had been. Never again, I sald to myself, will thst old joke about married people living longer than single ones, and the cynic's sug- | gestion that they don't live longer, it j only seems longer, be anything but tragic. ;: "Why, Johh, you were only mar- ried yesterday!" Alice exclaimed. "Well, you see what luck Kate brought me, don't yor?" And John gave me one of those rare smiles that 4 started in his eves and slowly reached his mouth. Such was its fascination for me that all that tableful of beau- tiful women were as maught. John had told them sincerely that I had brought him lutk and my heart sang i and nel-} best | with joy 3: "Yes, here she is. I have selected { her from the entire world of women { i 3 1 , on her fingers and in her blue | | black hair. I had never seen stones set together before, | diamonds to brighten them, bu { Moreland's gems were so gorgeous | and the settings were so unique, that { they were indeed stunning. Every ot- { her woman's jewels in the room look-; {ed conventional | comparison. saw her surreptitiously cal ttention to a magnificent din- with a large central sap- and ordinary by) that I have known. She may not meet your approbation but her appeal to! me is supreme." I felt yself glowing under his i ¥ raise "Do your know that you look as ough you had been using your puff nd rouge stick?" wh Shepard to me audacio I answered: 'Happiness greatest cosmetic a woman knows.' "Then she is a fool not to s happiness when it comes-her w isn't she?" was his somewhat eryptie | question. "1 did," I answered with the desire {to ignore any flirtation interpreta- | tion that I might put upon kis ques- rrounded by emeralds and set | im. She seemed almost to from her finger. John shook ad, putting up his hand in ne- ion. He looked across at me quick- though fearful I had seen the { grossed in the | Karlton Shepherd. | "Are you sure," gay he said, "that! | Jack has never told you about me? | | Why, we have been inseparable all} { our lives--~had the same room at col- | | lege, are members of the same frater- | nity, and now are deadly enemies in business. I belong to a rival advertis- ing concern." i turned in our direction, for he said: | "Well, I've put one over on you this time!" "Oh, I | ried, you 1 rrigible bachelor," said { John. "I got the Dunham ae¢count this | morning." dai Pm nin i Do you kpow."" he sald, in a low voice, "T ad#Nre you more than any woman I have ever seen." I looked my surprise, and he con- { tinued: "I think you carried off that i i Iy | horribly awkward position in which | episode, but I pretended to be en-| i foolishness of | Jack put you with the greatest bra- very and aplomb I've ever seen. You knew as well as I did, that you were being weighed in the balance----"" ? "And found wanting!" I interrupt- ed. "Well I have had a rather trying day. It has included a hot, tiresome railroad journey, meeting of John's {i mother, and then being brought here unexpectedly to meet his friends in {all their festive array while I am at- John's ears must have been acutely | n't mean getting mar- tired almost shabily as you can mee It is a rather impossible position Don't you think so?" "John should not have put you in that position, but he always was thoughtless. However, he is true blue { Just the same," Karl said loyally. (To Be Continued.) | ------------ AFTERNOO!N CREATINN feries on filmy fabric, and finely run shirrings In net. These things are bound to be more expensive than pique stitching. But how much lovelier are the filmy, frilly neck-fixings! No won- der woman cannot resist them! There is one joy about it--many of these en- ticing things can be manufactured at home if one has patience and exquisite skill with the needle. It will take fime to fashion a fichu, all tiny hand-tucks and rows of shirred puffing and narrow lace; and when you have finished your labor you will understand why these pretty "trifles cost such discouraging sums at the peckwear counter. It Is not the material involved, it is labor, Yet the material has something to do with it too. Women are much more fastidious about fineness of materisls than they used to be. The woman whe used to be quite well satisfied with a 50-cent collar and cuff set bt white lawn It was as though he had i he { All sorts of things are done to keep | pered Karl is the | ar cotton gaberdine collar and cuff sets | Gnished with a simple row of machine | FLIMSY STOCKINGS OR NONE? | Opinion of French Leaders of Fash. jon Seems to Be Divided on the Subject. There is at present waging a very interesting controversy in the minds | of those who «desi In footgear for American women. It is all about the new fashion in Paris of wearing laced slippers, which sometimes are no more | than heeled sandals--with or without stockings, In Paris these slippers are quite the i expected thing. Everybody wears | them. Timt 1s, everybody wears & slip per that is laced over the instep and about the ankle. Some of the French women, of course, wear sandals, and | most of them wear stockings. It is | perfectly true that stockings are some- | times dispensed with and very élab- | orately jeweled sandals are fashioned to wear with bare feet. But for the most part stockings are worn, albeit they are of the fllmslest texture and | are often flesh-colored, so that thelr presence Is not noticeable. They are then but a slight barrier interposed be- tween the world and the bare, bare skin, Te Stands for Harry Who's ready to fight. The soap dish Is empty Cf "Infants-Delight." Pure white, fragrant and soothing. BORATED to soften the water. q Send us three of these ads--all differentw-for a FREE trial size cake of INFANTS-DELIGHT. JOHN TAYLOR & CO, Limited, Dept. 14 TORONTO. those new, flimsy stockings from ob | | Hvion, | Of the 1,015,148 who registered to | vote in New York city at the last el- ection, 408,671 were women. A i PLAIN FOOD is transformed in a moment, takes on a new deliciousness, becomes savory and appetizing the moment you add a little 'LEA:PERRINS SAUCE THE ORIGINAL WORCESTERSHIRE Adds zest to food. { HA | A SERGE DRESSES JUST RECEIVED A LARGE NUMBER OF LADIES' SERGE DRESSES--in black, brown and navy blue, in all the lates styles. Prices from $15.00 to $35.00. 5 I FOR ONE WEHK ONLY » MEN'S OVERAJLS--black and blue striped, at cost price ... ++. $1.25 to $2.25 JOS. B. ABRAMSON PRINCESS STREET. PHONE 1283). Our rent is low--our prices are low. i I ress Eeennen V7 E c E E E : E = ef NTS-DELIGHT | SOAP EL. the 3, 1918, the Austrians; retired across cupied by. the Danube, and Belgrade, the Serbian reoc Serbians. : E Sagitaly. was nd another soldier, Atsiswer to Saturday's puzzle: Upper left cor i o to right. PP ner down, nose at shoulder PLAIN LINEN SUITS POPULAR RA notes T S not enough to 'make WRIGLEY'S good we must KEEP if good until you get it. Hence the sealed pack- age -- impurity -proof-- guarding, preserving the delici | IA i Biel ji: i i Nourishing to est degree. Healthful to young and old. vourLasts J x

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