Daily British Whig (1850), 24 Nov 1919, p. 8

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THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG PAGE EIGHT i NEO | TALKING | MACHINES All makes of Phonograpas clonned, repaired, adjusted. Parts for all makes supplied, expert workmanship, moderate charges, quick service. J. M. PATRICK ; 149 Sydenham St Phone 2068]. SORA REAR =» The Great English Lewra Tones and invigorates the whe a m, Bares sew Blood ns, res. Nervou: fal and Brain Popes © J "hax, six Debil Mend 8 of Energy, Patpltation emory. $l CHOICE BEATING APPLES CHOICE COOKING APPLES By the peck or barrel NEW FRUITS SEEDLESS RAISINS SEEDED RAISINS NEW CURRANTS, CLEANED in packages or by the 1b. PRICES REASONABLE considering the scarcity of the goods. LEMON, ORANGE AND CITRON PERL-All fresh and new. : The United Grocery 188 Princess St. "Phone 207 Next to Standard Bank "TJections that most people IVE to aT Ee , The Telgmann School o . Music Piano, violin and other stringed instruments; elocution and dra- matic jart. Pupils may begin at any d€te., Terms on application. Engagements for concerts ac- cepted. 216 Frontenac Street. Phone 1325; Stands for Nora, Who washes each night, As well as cach morning, With * Infants-Delight." Its soothing qualities bring ([; z peaceful sleep at night. Its refreshing fragrance i invig- | orates in the morning. Send us three of these ade--all erent--for a4 FREE trial size cake of INFANTS-DELIGHT. JOHN TAYLOR & CO. Limited, ' + TORONTO. I me SPECIAL SALE OF FURNITURE . FOR ONE WEEK ONLY p. Mattresses, highest quality. und Extension Tables. dozen Dining Room Chairs, i dozen Buffets, 4 Bureaus. SACRIFICE SALE PRICES--BELOW COST "7 Going Out of the Furniture Trade, 40S. B. ABRAMSON 257 PREJORSS STREET. Our rent is low---our prices are low. 0 plain and leather seals. 'PHONE 1288J. el nN the making of Sunlight 'Purity! Purity! Purity! The one dominating note that runs all through $5,000 Guarantee you get with every single bar is not a mere advertisement, * It marks standard set for the buyers who select the choice Sunlight Soap materials--for the soap Soap is Purity. The Comparisons Are Always Unwise. Mother seemed to think that per- | baps it wasn't just the thing for { Charles and me to go down to the village the day of my father's bur. {ial, but I felt that if I did not get { out of doors, I should go mad. Be- i sides, 1 wanted to send that tele- | gram to John. I wanted to bring his | neglect. of me to his attention and | more than all the rest I think I want {ed to see just how much Charlie | Goodwin knew about the situation. 80 I overruled my little mother's {objections which were the same ob- | breach of social conventions: 'What | will people say?" and Charles and I | started for the village. | For a long while we walked in sil | ence, Charlie unconsciously dropping into my pace as he had always done in the y years gone by. Finally he said: { "Are you very happy, Kate?" "Well, not today," | anéwered.' "Oh, of course I know you are { grieving for your father, but you al i 80 know that I did not mean that at { ail. I got off the train as your hus- { band got on. He is very-handsome, { Kathie, and I imagine he is a master | ful man. 1 have been told that wo- men love masterful men. | He looked at me rather searching ily. I met his gazé bmvely, for I had | determined to be perfectly honest with him. "I don't think," men love masterful bands, At least, a woman of my tem- perament does not. I want to be able to say my soul is my own--*"' "that wo- | = "And ean't you?' he interrupted. | | | | } { | | I said, men for hus- "Oh, yes, I do say it,." I hastened! comes with a every "but it of surprise to to answer, shock time." Charlie laughed down at me quis- | zically. "I wonder, dear girl!" |ed (I gave a little shudder-- I did | not want him to call we Girl, my { husband' 8s pet name)-- 'What's the | matter, are you cold?" he asked soli- | citously. | "Oh, my no. Not in this weather, { Isn't it wonderful?" I evaded. "Don't try to turn the subject. You know, Kate, what I was think- ing about." "If you are sure I know. what's the use of telling me?" I countered. "Simply because I think that hus- band of yours is a gad," he burst out indignantly. "Any man who would John he exciaim- '| leave his wife under the circumstan- ces that he left you yesterday, has no business to have a wife.-And then there was the matter of the check." | MOTHERHOOD (By E. Johnson.) 0, source of life; O, channels of Light! & OU, mother of nations yet to be! Wo hear the tramp of your unborn sons, and we kno: yet he frea. tha: the world shall Is there anMhing greatee in the world tBdfA a good mother? Well has a great poet of democracy said: "Through you I wrap a thousand anward years! Through you I plant the best beloved of me, and of Am- erica." Goodness and greatness-are Siamese twins, Goodness, the elder, always comes leading greatness by the hand. And if you kill goodness, then greatness must dle. Canada stands crowned with good mother- hood. She is our queen. Let us be 'careful that we lose not our crown, I you plant a good apple tree you will get a good apple, unless you: pluck the young fruit too soon, while it is green and immature, in which case it 'will wither and become a bit- ter poison; or unless you let some insect sting the fruit in the bud and leave a worm at the core that will make it rot through and through, unthl it is nefther good for food nor good for seed. It is only good for a fertilizer for worms. Is the heart and mind and soul of your childrén aot worth as mugh as an apple? Said the Fresch during the war: "Our women are not, nor ever have been, innately immoral or impure. But ever since 1870 Germany has kept up a ' contigual propaganda against the purity of France, sending over a flood of indecent literature and illustrated magazines and ar ticles to discredit us before the world and to demoralize us at home. And we, mothers of Canada, some- times wonder who or what is carry- ing ,on, apparently, a simflar propa- ganda against the purity and good- ness of our girls and boys, the po- tential parents of our country's fut- ure and the civilization of our race. It is the slow, insidious developments, becoming a litle worse, and a little worse, and a little worse, until the evil has reached such stupendous proportions that it makes it Jogsible for sueh evil to continue; one submits to it like they do to influenza, con or the "hlack -{ erine." Charlie, I am not going to "rug. Als so about my husband.' let you "Then know for leaving you.' "You have no right that." "I have the right of a man who has always - loved you, Katherine, and who always will love you. 1 be- Heve I.could make you happy, and I tender to you than he in your grief. 1 should like to meet him this minute and tell him what I think of him!" Stop, Charlie; f-you-talk-to-me like this I must not let you go an- other step with me." "look here, Kate, you're not be- ing honest with me. You knew I would talk to you lke this, and you were so lonely for sympathy that you asked me to come out with you pur- posely so that you could hear it.'l .|' wonder why it is that whep a man marries he puts on smoked glasses, not only over his eyes but over his reasoning powers? He seems to think that there need be no more conside- ration for the girl he marries. He doesn't remember that the atten- tions he doesn't give his wife some other man will offer." - ; "You are wrong, Charlie." "Oh, T don't mean the considera- tion that most men pay to their wives in public. 1 mean the little thoughtful acts that a man does for his sweetheart and which he utterly forgets as soon as he marries her' "Don't you think you would be the same as any other man?" I ask- ed. "Perhaps. That's the reason I'm not going to marry, especially as the girl 1 love has thrown me over for another man." We had reached the station by this time and I filled out the tele- graph blank to my husband: "In the hurry of leaving you forgot to give me check. Please wire me money im- I have gone for current fare home. Love. Kath- mediately. expenses o: "Send it as & night letter," I said to the girl and again I grew indig- nant because in the little town even the telegraph opérator phew me well and while she might not gossip 1 knew she would form her opinion of my. husband. the thought that she would see his telegram in which he would send me at least two hundred dollars, and that would go far to rehabilitate him in her mind as well as in mine, {To Be Continued.) a man like ong of these 'vampire } | women" could, To the pure maiden the man she loves.is a saint, a demi- god; or a hero; to the pure, good, in- telligent wife the husband and fath- er of her children Is the earnest, good, faithful upholder of all that is best in his age .and civilisation, staunch for right, true #8 truth, a man whom both his times and his God can.trust, If he fails her and is not so good as she believes him to be---well! may she never find it out! And may he never fall victim to/the vampire whose husbands (four of them! One wonders how she came to have se many) became under her sireen development, snakes, vultures, human beasts." "But," 1 seem to hear some man or woman say, 'you are talking about ideal home and ideal marriages where love exists. But what if it {don't exist. What if the woman has | no -inspiration- tor the man who is tied to her?" Well, if he is capable men who are, he will find it in the lives of his pure sons and daughters. It will flow like an ever widening river outward to bless the sons and daughters of the race. He don't need the Impure basilisk éyes of a vam- pire for inspiration to make of him "a snake, a vulture, a human beast." He don't need to be married (and, we presume, divorced also) four times in order to learn that is all she will ever make of him. The ancient idea of a vampire was "'a dead man or woman who, though dead, found the craving of lust insatiable, and fast- ened its thoughts on a living man or woman until they smoked his lite away. Don't forget that ancient de- finition of a vampire. It applies to the living vampires also, a dead soul with insatiable lust and vanity, who has no heart or sympathy for all the Be eC misery it aie Mrs. hs tn "The 's Highway" say 'the poor wo- Ras The mother and wives of those homes are such helpless slaves of their fords and master's wishes and whims, who cin write out a notice for them to leave home a' any mo- ment, homeless, shelteriess, child- Joa, 'without protection. it t the poor things are afraid for their own children if ou must prove to me that | he had a more serious reason than I to ask me | know that I would have been more, However, I comforted myself with | of inspiration, and Heaven bless the | a Cream. West 304s -- the hard wheat flour that is guaranteed for bread Of uniform strength and quality for high-rising bread, 'delicious biscuits, etc. Your recipe comes out right always. Ask for it at Yoar Grocer's The Campbell Flour Mills Co., Limited affiliated with Maple Leaf Milling Co. LIMITED Toronto Ontario A COAST TO COAST SERVICE 20,000 BBLS. DAILY WRIGLEYS The Greatest Name In Goody-Land WRIGLEY'S vin aol CHEWING GUM DOUBLEMINT CHEWING GUM | r the expert chemists--for the girls, yg rehas- , mond, Sd i week- Go TR Wi Bie ward | end visiiors at B. Blanchard's, Miss cher; Dey on the 10th oan Bisa Myrtle Blancher spent a week rei} , Smiths Falls, it Sateen | friends | cently with frien at natal, a her here. : ] cro auc] elie by Willism Move Joyut bas Eres ra ed

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