PAGE EIGHT | In the Realm of Women---Some Interesting Features THE & DAILY BRITIS H WHIG = SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1019. Pl Comfort Lye is un very powerful po cloanser. It is weed for cleaning up eed the oldest and hardest dirt, grease, ote. Comfort Lye is fine for meking sioks, desing snd closets sweet and clean. Comfort Lye Kills rats, mice, ronches and insect pests. Comfort Lye will do the bardest spring cleaning you've got. Comfort Lye is good for making seep. It's powdered, perfumed end 100% pure. R PIT Ad RA Sevoroewew Drink Charm Black Tea Sold in Packages Only GEO. ROBERTSON & SON, Limited Dies JAFAN TEA That subtle charm in each cup im- mediately proves why Japan Tea has gained such favor in Canada. Govern- ment inspected -- uncolored and unadulterated -- Japan Tea is a tea of real cup quality. * Over our lea -- guaffing the sovereign drink of pleasure and health. ~Brady. " For Quality and Economy W------. Inatit IR Your Children a lve of Good Music WILLIAMS ~NEW SCALE PIANO : ive tone "that is so delightful Te Wilk de ts : Write us for descripiive literature. 'WILLIAMS PIANO CO. LIMITED Canada's Oldest and Largest Piano Makers OSHAWA, 'ONTARIO i es SEE AND WEAR ; {The Wiliams New Scale Piano at ~The J. M. GREENE MUSIC CO., Limited. STREET; KINGSTON v adh | A Round 'of Golf. : "Do you golf?" asked Karl Shep- ard of me as we found our seats at the luncheon table. "Surely you are not wearing that gown as the women wear smart bathing suits, just to be seen In them." "1 play a little," I answered mod- estly. "Be careful, Kate," broke in John. "Karl Shepard and Bess Moreland are the best golf players in this club. Don't run up against them!" "1 do not intend that Mrs. Jack shall run against me," said Karl. "I am going to ask her to play with me. And you, Jack, can play with Besa." "Ye gods," said John, throwing up his hands, "friendship could offer no more." And as he looked a little troubled I knew he feared I should make myself ridiculous if I attempt- ed to play, He waited for me to de- cline but saw that I had accepted. After luncheon we proceeded to | the golf course. I insisted on driving | last. The others got off the tee { nicely. I knew John was on tenter |'hogks for fear I should do poorly. As {1 swung my club above the little { white ball I breathed a prayer that { I might do my best and I scored bril- { Hantly---dri¥ing the ball a 'good two {hundred yards down the fairway. "Good shot!" sald John, patroniz- | ingly, evidently still believing that | my. stroke was a fluke. But Karl Shepard, with more pe- netration, whispered in my ear: "You hypocrite! You little hypo- crite! That drive was Vardonesque!" I could see that Bessié Moreland also recognized my skill and for some reason it seemed to spoil her play for the entire morning. "You've got Bessie's goat," said Karl, and a quiet smile flickered about his quizsical mouth. "Oh, I'm sorry if my lack of know- ledge of the game is making her play badly," I couldn't resist saying. For answer Karl continued: "No woman can help being hypocritical, can she, even you? I have never been able to understand why it is that husbands are so easily deceived. I knew from the very look in your eyes, as you said you played golf a little, that you could play under ninety---and I also know women well enough to know that you, a brand new bride, would not put yourself, fn your first appearance at the golf course, against the woman that your husband had just told you was the best women player in the club unless you felt pretty sure of making some kind of a showing." "Now I know the reason you have not married," I said. "You read us Told In Twilight * - » (Continued from Page 3.) - » -. On Thursday afternoon Mrs. Ey- erett Birdsall received for the first {time since her marriage at her at- tractive home on Gore strbet. She Was wearing a most becoming and dainty frock of pale pink georgette. The November flowers chrysanthe- muns, delicate pink ones were artis- tically arranged in the drawing room, while on the tea table in the dining room a silver epergne filled with yellow "mums" was much ad: mired. Here Mrs. Benjamin of Yar- ker poured coffee while Mrs. Hugh Ryan made tea their assistants being the Misses Bessie and Isabel Benja- min, Gwendolyn and Doris Folger and Helen Strange. ' Among the guests at the May Court dance given in honor of H. R. H. the Prince of Wales, in Ottawa on Thursday evening were Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Horsey, and Miss Mil- dred Horsey, 'es Mrs. Stuart Bleakley and bad: daughter, who for several mouths have been with Mr. and Mrs. Russell Stuart, Lower Alfred street, left on Wednesday for Ottawa, to join Mr, Bleakley. They: have taken a furnish- ed apartment in the capital for a couple of months. -. - - Mrs. E. P, Jenkins, Princess has been visiting Mr. and Mrs, J, Elliott, Bowmanville. : Hon. and Mrs. C.. "1100 quickly and know us too well." | "Kate--I'm going to call you Kate from now on because 1 foresee we | are going to be great friends--I1 want | to engage you this moment for my i partner in the next tournament which takes place two weeks from | today." : "All right," I said, *'T'l{ be delight- ed. And 1 might as well own up now that I won the women's champion- | ship cup at Coronada last winter?" | "And John didn't know this? You | never told him?" : 'Well, you should know, Mr, | Shepard--"' "Karl," he interrupted. "Well then, you should know, Karl, that when people are very | much in love they don't select a po-'| pular golf course, that is usually in full view of the gossips who frequent the piazza, for their love-making!"" "That's right, they don't," he chuckled. Then he added audacious- ly: "You are very much in love with John, aren't you?" "Well, I married him, didn't 1?" "Do women always have to love a | man to marry him, or do they always | marry the man they love?" he asked i cynically. | "I can answer both those ques-| tions in the affirmative. I could not | have married John unless I loved | him---and I married him because 1| tloved him." i "You are young, very young aren't | you?" "Yes, isn't it glorious young?' I asked, laughing. i * "Fore!" shouted John, and I rea- lized that we had absolutely forgot- ten our opponents. | We hurriedly stepped aside as John gave his ball a vicious drive which landed him in the rough. and I knew that we should have to walt again while John and his caddy hunt- ed his ball. & As they came up to us again John said: "You are having the usual] beginner's luck, 1 see, Kate." ! "Don't be a fool, John," said | Bessie, 'no beginner handles a put- ting iron or a mashie in the profes- sional manner of your wife." "But you never played before, did you, Kate?" "Oh, yes, Tve times," I answered. John's mouth shut with a snap. He was angry at my little ruse. Karl noticed this as plainly as I did but he resumed the conversation as though nothing had happened. "It is wonderful to be young and beautiful and in love," said Karl. "Perhaps," I answered with a sigh. to bel played many (Continued Tomorrow.) Que., where she will spend some time with Rev. and Mrs. Alfred Bright at the manse, Vincent Greene, Toronto, spent a few days with Lieut.-Col, and Mrs. Eric Phillips, Union street, and re- turned on Friday. W. T. Minnes an® Miss Vita Min- nes, '"Hilleroft," left today for Tor- onto, where they will spend the week end. Herbert Horsey spent a couple of were est They realize that they than Red Rose Quality. And Red Rose probably will cost them no more than common tea, because Red Rose not onl farther. . Consisting chiefly of Assam teas--the richest and strong- grown~--three A the teas, which blended by experts and packed in air " JFROM the sun kissed tea gardens of Ceylon and India, come and dust proof packages, are offered to particular housewife under A) the name of z N.S strength, rich in flavor, yet so delicate in fragrance "PRIMUS TEA" meets all the requirements of a perfect,wholesome and deliciotis beverage. \\ @ 4177 day in the city, and returned to Ot. tawa.on Thursday. Rev. A. V. Brown attended the annual conference of the Theological | Alumni Association of 'Queen's Uni- versity and returned to Picton yes. terday. . . - Mrs. Douglas Youhg, King street, left on Thursday for Toronto. Mrs. G. F. O'Rielly and Mrs. C. Cunningham, Buffalo, N.Y., visiting . AUTHORITATIVE in style, beautiful in finish and reliable in quality, Georgina Shoes are the logical choice of exacting dressers end careful buyers. The "Georgina" trade mark distinguishes these shoes of quality and refinement from ordinary: shoes. , Confident of the syperiorit of Seongian, 3 Shoes, the produc, makers 'take in ? trade mark on their that you will want to buy the same brand the next time. This trade mark means distinction and LOCKETT'S BOOT SHOP glas, city, have returned home. Col. Macphail, Clergy street, left today to spend the week-end in Mon- treal, where he, with Colonel Fell, Vancouver, will be the guest of Sir Andrew Macphail. < Mrs. Stanley Mills and little son, Jack, Ottawa, are expected on Tues- day to be the guest of Mr. and Mrs, Thomas Mills, University avenue. . * - Mrs. A. C. Courtice, Toronto, an- with their sisters Mrs. Mathew Stan- | nounces the approaching marriage of ton, Barriefield, and Mrs. Hugh Dou- i her daughter, Adabel, to Keith Colin [clubs in the D mR. | camper, Toronto, the marriage to take place the middle of November, Two-thirds of the lice force In Petrograd are women, all of whom wear long blue coats and dresses with a badge on the right arm showing the letter G, patrols in couples .and carry loaded rifles, A sew law in England allows wo- men to serve as members of juries in all cases. There are more than 376 women's Philippine islands, > URING the last few years people have had to be content -- with many lines of goods that y inferior in quality to those procurable before the war. To-day, people are demanding the better grades again, Those who from a mistaken idea of economy tried to be satis- fied with common teas are coming back to Red Rose Tea. cannot be satisfied with anything less y tastes better--it goes ifuls of Red Rose goes as far as five of ordinary tea. A brewing will prove it. Sold only in sealed packages, T. H. ESTABROOKS CO., LIMITED 3. Jobs, Moieen, Torso, Winnipeg, Calgary, Edmosten, 50 Job's. Wd, Pertend, Mies