Daily British Whig (1850), 4 Nov 1919, p. 8

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] b THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG ___ The Sauce = of Known Quality Look for the i ture Lt ir OI CIA EL LR | NS & SON Herpicide Mary Says: No Matter What the Color of Your Hajr Is-- NEWBRO'S HERPICIDE Will Not Change it in the Least Sold Everywhere Applications st Barber Shops To blaze an aera trail senger and freight Iying boat belonging to: the ~---- twa pilots, $100,000 worth of fountain pens. Leader Drury admits there is strong feeling among the farmers in favor of the system of electing Min- isters by vote of the legislature. Our New Home. + I am wondering if 1 have always been unduly sensitive or whether it iis only human to ymiortable | when one feels out of place among a gay party? L think perhaps it is a human trait for 1 recall that John was as ugly as 8 bear when he appeared at an affair in & business suit, and found all the rest of the men of the party in dress clothes. He did not carry off his annoyan- ce and chagrin nearly as well as 1 did although he was among old { friends and who understood, while I was making my first appearance and Was sure to be subjected to very eri-| i tical analysis. I remember John said, { when he got home from his party, | | that he would never visit that house { again----that the hostess should have {told him that it was to be formal, jand B® was nearly a vear before 1 { could persuade him to 2 cept-anoth- er invitation there, Being married to the man who put mie in this posi- tion only two days after my wedding day I could not very well get rid of was 80 loving and sweet and so pe sald pened at the club that I hadn't the heart to tel of my unhappi J "Well, that's over," he said, you've been introduced to the gan { Pretty decent lot of folks. aren't fectly fellows. Karl Shepard, to whom I { am glad to see you take a fancy, is my very best friend. Karl would do anything for me!" "Yes, even to taking pity on your wife when she was in a most uncom- { tortable position through your thoughtiessness!" I thought, but I | did not speak, I could not hold this in rt, however, hecause John, arms around me, was say- Sweetheart, do you know we are going home, and from now on We are going to be the happiest peo- ple on earth?" In John's arms I forgot heaven and earth and all that is In them, and 1 closed m ymind to every thought ex- cept that of his nearest and dearness. There seems to be but one bond and that is the cord from his warmly beat ing heart to mine. . Madame Gordon did not make her | appearance at breakfast next morn- | ing. John did not make any great ob- fied with-all that had hap- | { "Come in." ud 5 { never do. The most they? The women are the handsom- | put | v v 1g i ro est in town and the men are all good | intimate room, oneself, Secondly Jections when 1 not sit in his times I have thou mistake in th that we lived dame Gordon full uf anncy insisted that I could s place. Some- t that 1 made a because every day wouse with Ma- FOR AUTUMN WEAR Parisian Design That Is Smart | A ead of it was! es and humiliations: for me. 1 1} aed most thoroughly | that it is true that no house is big enough for two families. Although Madame Gordon knew that [I bad graciously insisted upon Lier retaining her place as head of | the household, never while she lived with us did she comsult my comfort or inclinations in any way. I was made to feel that I was an interioper always I never knew just what Jobm had said to her but he is absolutely hon- est, even though brutally frank, and I am sure that he told her that he wanted me to run the house and that i I through consideration of her feel-| ings, did wish to do so. One of the reasons I had for think ing this is that late in the morning, when John and I had finished our breakfast, Madame Gordon sent for me to come to her room I went is fear and trembling for I understood the advantage had not she >| scored over me by this summons I rapped lightly heard on her door and in her cold voice the words, one ever "Come in" with she is graci d the visitor? 1 gracious act, f one's ¥. one ng inflec- Does any 18ly inc says, tion I am very sensitive to the greet- ings of my friends and my heart sank at the cold curtness and implacibility xpressed in those two words: "Come a." "Come", with a ris i I do not believe that I am more easily hurt in this matter than the majority of my sex and the greatest martyrdom that comes to modern and Original, favy Blue Best Color That Could Be Employed for Such a Costumes Smart Velvet Toque. It Is an accepted fact that the more exclusive society leaders purchase their autumn and winter trousseaux at Biarritz at the end of the summer sea- son. Novelties are shown there, just as they are shown at Monte Carlo in early spring. It is "the thing" to buy dresses, mantles, and hats at Blarrits because "everyone does it." This year the Blarritz dress artists, | such as Prquin. Callot, Redfern, Imrue and so on, are showing some really startling models. writes Idalia de Vii- Uers in the Boston Globe. The barrel outline is very wuch in evidence; and as to flounced skirts they may be said | I am very much | afraid that the barrel outline has came | | with intention of staying. to be ubiquitous. It Is not | really pretty, neither is it becoming to { tassel, the same coler ns the dress. women is the habitual impoliteness | of those who love them and those with whom they are thrown in con- tact daily. Every woman in her heart | knows ThTs Since the time that Madame Gor- don crushed me with the nasty way | in which she enunciated a perfectly | common greeting I have tried never to be impolite to anyone for whom I felt the slightest consideration. I had no illusions as to the recep- | tion I should receive as I entered that | door . (To Be Continued.) it i ch et nt ea RY CANADA WINS SIX PRIZES, Results of Imperial - Competitions-- i Australians Lead. London, Nov. 3.--The National | Rifle Association has issued the 1919 {results of the Imperial challenge i shield competitions, which have i been held annually throughout the | empire since 1910, each team shoot- {ing with a miniature rifle on its own or pas- range. : traffic between New York and Havana an asromarine Aero, Limited, Inc. left for Cubs carrying: 654 teams competed three passengers and division, In the senior division for boys over 15 years, 775 teams entered and in the junior representing a total of | neanly 14,000 boys. The challenge | shield, medals and prizes are pre- sented by Lieut.-Col. Raymond W. Fennell of South Afweca. 2 A feature of the resuls in the z / make easily a cup of OXO with an OXO digested and delightfully flavoured. OXO Less than 1 Minute gives freshness and vigour to mind and body--counteracts effect of fatigue, and makes good the weer and tear of everyday life. Prices same as before the war, 10¢, 25 $1.15, $225 " "R C TINS OF 4, 10 & 50 CUBES & ES LU, a . senior competition is that most of | the leading prizes ane won by Aus trallans. The excellance of the mus- ketry training of the Australian ca- dets is very marked, wins, dn all, six prizes out of a total of 223, namely: Senior competition----1Tth, chester County Academy; Smith's Falls CoMegiate; b58th, Belleville High School; 67th, No. 1 Platoon, A Company, Kingston Colle- giate Institute. Junior competition--33rd, Smith's Falls Collegiate. Of the remaining prizes Great Britain takes forty-five, including junior shields, Australia forty-nine, inoluding the senfor whield; New Zealand nine, and South Africa ten. The 1920 conditions will be issued shortly, and will remain almost the same as in 1919, with the exception that the age limit is reduced from 20 to 18 years in the senior sompeti- fn. It is hoped that Canada will enter more teams. i "Trish MP. Starts ITunger Strike. DubHn, Nov. 3.---Ernest Blythe, Sion Fein member of Parliament, on Friday Wa sentenced by court-mar- k of the document and character. ized its proposals as abominable. The Jeisoner has gone on & hunger sted] > I h-- The strike of the miners in the United States soft coal mines will have Bile, of any effect on the Can- adian National ways unless it con- tinues for a considerable time. Col- | 44th, | | the average woman, but certainly it is unusual. Many of the more eccentric autumn models are frankly stiffened; nearly ail are piped with strong horse hair to give the desired stick-out effect. The latter method applies especially to tunic-coats and tunic-blouses. Take for example the Paquin model sketched. | Here you have a really beautiful au- tumn costume which is smart and orig- inal without being eccentric. The ma- terial was navy blue ponit de sole and aavy serge, the siiken material form- | ing a pannier-ceat which was clever iy stiffened at the bem. : This coat ran- tao a long, wholly unexpected peak at the back and on the collar there was an immense silk ceiiis gg : Ww ot re ll "0 ear, Y do wish father ould buy me some more b Victory Bonds" Sy Vi, 19 v SPACE CONTRIBUTED BY THE PROPRIETORS OF FRY'S COCOA velvet togue shown In this sketch. This is one of the latest models from the Maison Lewis of Biarrits, and it the best Paris milliners are making large and very full toques, either In velvet or In tulle, with an effective touch of short-haired fur on the crown. FOR LINEN CUSHION COVER Embroidery of White Wash Silk or Flax Thread ls Pretty--For Color Effects, A linen cushion cover may be quick- ly embroidered in white wash silk or flax thread with insertion of cluny Should a touch of color be desired, the cover might be drawn over a col- ored cushion which would show g 38 ie i ---- All railway passenger and traffic service throughout Germany will icease for ten days beginning Novem- ber 5, in an effort to save coal. » 69 Princess Street ! fs | LIMITED. Kingston O'Brien to Build Paper Mill Pembroke, Nov, 3.-- THs construc- tion of a large pulp and paper mill is expected to begin next year at the end of Lake Temiskaming. The M. J. O'Brien Limited, a tweaty-mil- Hon-dollar corporation, which con- trols the O'Brien Mine at Cobalt and the Miller Lake-O'Brien Mine at Gowganda, as well as other large in- terests, is involved in the enterprise through having owned control of a part of the great water power of the Quinze River, the whole of which would make it ¢ to upwards of 100.000 h. as 250,000 bh. p., estimates, ptember, 1833. In 1862 he, with a brotherin. law, founded extensive flour and lumber mills in Lindoay, from which be reo- ry bry a: - developed he ' or partner dew the Fenelon Pa) is electric power Lindsay. He was a member of th chal! Felton #0 meet him in a race for th work's title. : Every man ought 10 leave at enough money to settle the claim Lake undertaker

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