Daily British Whig (1850), 20 Jan 1920, p. 8

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PAGE EIGHT FEMINISMS CnniTo="@ Dre ddy Zr Pb, Fe > EVERY MISFORTUNE HAS ITS SILVER LINING. Mrs. Sweel (most sweetly )-- al a bargain sol can't exchange it. me to-morrow and ANS ga -Oh, I'm so sorry you don't like my new hat. But, dear Jack, I want to square myself. You come with I'll let you pick another just to suit you. T By Annette Bradshaw I bought it an LOVE and IED by the noted author iar, a i "Is it possible?' 1 said 'to myself, "that. a woman can utterly forget the father of her children? Was it Ruth Gaylord's pride which was speaking when she said that she was 'glad ta. dismiss her husband from her household and her heart; that she did not want to divide the love of her children with anyone? Someway I could conceive of a wo- man who, like Helen, could be so blinded by that magnetic attraction she called love, that she would for- get the world, 'her duty to it; yes, even her duty to herself and follow where love oalled. But reason has always semed to me to be the touchs stone of maternal love. As 1 had been lying there with the knowledge that my hope of the little new life I thought was coming to me, was dead, I knew that notwithstand- ing my grief, which had been great, I could not feel the same unreason- g reaction nst Fate that 1 1d have had if my husband had dah M%Gione Gibson All at once there was a great con- | striction about my heart! My hus- band---what would I do if some wo- man should come to me in the same | way that Helen Van Ness had gone | to Ruth, and say: "I want your husband. He doesn't | love you any more! He loves me!" Would I have stopped to consider the why or wherefore; would I have said: "They drifted into this: with- | I do not belive so! out thinking!" _ Must Not Forget Duty. I think I would fight for my own. He is mine. At one time, at least, he loved me. He has taken upon him- self the responsibilities of marriage, and now at the mere entrance into his lite of a lawless passion, he must not forget he has a duty to me and to my children.' This is what I should have decreed had I been Ruth Gay- lord. Others might think otherwise. 1 wonder. Was Ruth a bigger and better Wo man than I? Or had she tired of Bob and his idiosyncracies? It seemed yn been taken away from me. PAI co cm ns en, If 0X0 Cubes save yom only 5 minutes per day-- that means the tremendous saving of about 303% hours in the course of a year! Reason enough for A Cupfal In a minute -the minate you want it? Ties + We, Se, $115, $2.25 using OXO Cubes if that was the only reason. But they do more than save time, they save the expense of meat -- make other foods go farther -- and build wp sed weintaia the health of the whole lamily, HER, -- Plant Food Toné up those straggly ferns and pale, weak plants. They are Starved . We carry the best brands of Plant Foods--the clean, odor less fertilizers that contain alt the elements necessary to strong, vigorous plant growth, 'and it costs next to nothing, AD. HOLTON FLORIST, ; 280 Princess Street. | Applications ot Barber Shops | 11 p.m.--~How about a Cheese Sandwich and a glass of milk! (Ingerso Cream Cheese Spreads Like Butter : ~~ ran pm iy to me, however, that no matter how much I had wished my husband away from me, and I acknowledged to myt self that I had wished it many times in the last few months, the mere thought of his loving another woman would fan the affection that might have cooled into lova's hottest flame, "Ruth was wrong," I said to my- self.' "She should have told Helen, when Helen made the confession to her; that she would keep her hus- band against the world. 1 really think it would have been better for Helen in the end!" Then my vagrant thoughts took up Helen's side of the matter ,and I went back to her letter for a mo-« ment. No Invitations Extended. Continuing . it read: "And, oh, Katherine, I alwoet believe that I have brought to Bobby the very thing from which I tried to save him! Bob's friends will not accept me. They invite him to luncheon at rest- furants; they do not take him to their clubs. And since we have come here we have never been invited. to the home of any of his friends. Even the women that I knew before my marriage to him pass me on the street unseeing or with the coldest of nods, as Alice did the other day. "Itry to make it up to'Bob, and we le to each other by saying that we do not care for society now, nor_ its edicts, when we hive each other. Herpicide Mary Says: You can have a wealth of . beautiful hair § NEWBRO'S HERPICIDE is used IN TIME Sold Everywhere Honestly, Katherine, I think that it we were on a desert island, Bob and 1 might be perfectly happy. But, liv. ing in a world of convention, whose uawritien laws are supported by P ants more severe than the breaking of those laws that were banded down from Mount Sinai on tables of stone, we find that we must perforce take our medicine, bitter as body aloes though it may be, "1 am not asking your pity, my dear, por pe continuation of your friendship, but I do want you to un- derstand. 1 want { from under her by the HE DAILY BRITISH WHIG speech of people. I knew I should be censured | | by my entire coterie of friends and | acquaintances and yet after much | thinking I came to the conclusion that I could not desert my friend in this tragic crisis of her life. i | (Copyright, 1919, by National News- peper Service.) To-morrow--Thoughts of Home. Winifred Black Writes About A PRETTY NAUGTHY GIRL Copywright, 1920, by Newspaper | Feature Service, Inc. | ly "And then," said the pretty little | blonde, "I just sat right down on the {floor of the motor car and screamed | | "Oh, I just simply screeched, and I | { wouldn't stop. No matter what they | {said or did, I wouldnt stop, and so | they just had to turn around and take ime home. "And when I got home I was so HE * OA) 16: KY LOVGHS COLD Why are Peps best for children ?| Because they contain absolutely rugs. Because, wh mad about it that I shut myself up in | my roem and cried for two days, and 1 {tore my dress pulling it off, and I} | thfew my hat on the floor, and. the| | puppy got hold of it-- wasn't I ter-| irible!--it was a lovely mewshat, and {Daddy had just paid $35 for it, too, {| "Ism't it terrible to be so bad 7" { One of the men in the room smiled [a kind of sickly smile, and the other {stared and didn't say a word---and | the pretty little blonde was actonish- {ed. You see, she thought they would be | charmed, She Cannot Understand | Men always had been charmed when | |she told how naughty she was and what a temper she had, and how her Daddy had spoiled her, and how much money she spent just for nothing, and dissolved in the mouth, they are] breathed down to the air fumes In pastille form 'When these pastilies are dissolvedjbringing relief and healing to the ore and inflamed membranes, ading n the mouth they throw off pin vapor, such as is breathed and lungs--not swallowed to the child's delicate stomach, which i 80 easily upset; and because th are so pleasant to take children never refuse them. Peps provide health-giving KITCHEN ECONOMISE By ISOBEL BRANDS Of the Applecroft Experiment Station How to Make Some "Fancy" Oyster Dishes, how she cried for days just for temper ---and she couldn't understand these | two men at all, | | They looked as if they didn't 'like | | her--wasn't it odd? | { But I could understand them. | | Those two men were brought up in| {her part of the country where they| | spoil girls, and make selfish little pets | {of them, and flatter them and expect | {them to be helpless and unreasonable | --but they've been away. i Oh. they've been a long ways away. | { To the Training Camp, first of all, and | then to France, and then to the hospit- | al---and things don't look the same to| them since they came back. | They've seen pain and suffering and | sacrifice. | | They've seen devotion and love and | i generosity. i | They've seen courage and quick wit {and resourceful wisdom. | | They've seen self-control and they | know what it means. | Somehow they don't think the little | {blonde girl is "cute" any more--they | | just think she's silly, And neither of fem would marry and begged them. Real Women Desired They want, not a silly little doll for a wife, but a deep-hearted, kind, lov- ing, generous, reasonable woman, And - they're going to search through the world 'till they find her, too. I know it, 'because each of them have told me so. Oh, we talk about strange things together--the men who've been over- seas and I--things that we really mean, Things that are important parts of our lives, We've got all through talking sur- face nonsense--unless we do it just for nonsense and for nothing else, We talk of real things and real people and real life, not life as it ought to be, not life as it ought not to be, but life as it is. And, oh! I feel as if I've been eat- ing caramel cake all my life, and somebody offered me a nice slice of plain, wholesome homemade bread, with good, homemade butter on it. and a cup of sweet, rich milk, just fresh from the spring house at the foot of the garden. And the men seem fo feel so, oo. It's done that much for us, the jt has stipped the mask from the silly faces of foolish women and the cruel faces of selfish men--and I'm afraid the pretty little blonde and others like her aren't going to have so much fun "screeching" and crying and locking themselves =p in their rooms and ruining their brand new hats, just to show how deliciously spoiled they are. I think the little blonde herself is beginning to worry a little. wonder if she really is, or if I just imagine it. , Odd and Iuteresting Facts. One of the most efficient wireless systems is the Invention of Japanese. Danish scientists have perfected a process for treating cheaper woods that makes more durable, chemical action in 24 hours produc- ing the effect of several years of drying. » * * An English inventor filters the Scrathing, and metal) he gounds from phonographic . music! through more than 50 ing filled with peas s. her, not if she got down on her knees Oysters, in some fancy form, are an ideal basis for the quick company luncheon, that midnight supper, or for that debatable meal---Sunday night supper. They can be prepared more quickly than any other fresh food, as they may be served either raw or with quick cooking. Here are a few sug- gestions for using oysters in unusual ways: Double Crust Oyster Pie. 1 quart of oysters 2 cupfuls of flour 1 cupful of top milk Ye cupful of shortening 2 tablespoonfuls of cornstarch 14 teaspoonful of salt 2 teaspoonfuls of baking powder Sift together flour, baking powder and salt, and cut in shortening. Grad- ually add cold milk. Toss dough on floured board, cut in two parts and roll out, Place in two shallow, greased pans and bake for fifteen minutes in quick oven, Dissolve the cornstarch in -------- on, hen the first symptom of a cough a cold appears. Just as suitable a little milk, gradually add rest of milk and cook with oysters and sea- | sonings. Pour half of oyster mixture on one pie crust, cover with other, and pour the rest over top crust. Serve at once. ho : Another delicious oyster pie is made by using just one pie erust, Fill the baked pie crust with the creamed oysters as above. Cover with a merin- gue made of the stiffly beaten whites of two eggs, one teaspoonful of sugar, one-eighth teaspoonful of salt and two chopped, small, sour pickles. Bake in a moderate oven until meringue is browned. Broiled Oysters. Season large oysters with salt, pep- per, dip in melted butter, then in cracker crumbs. Place on a greased broiler and broil for three or four minutes, turning frequently, Serve on thin toast, buttered, gar- nished with slices of lemon. Or thicker bread may be toasted covered with minced bacon and the oysters served atop each slice. Browned Oysters. 1 quart of oysters 5 tablespoonfuls of flour 3 tablespoonfuls of bacon fat 35 teaspoonful of salt A) LS 15 teaspoonful of celery salt 14 teaspoonful of pepper TiNs illustrates but which 2 A dren. is the best "First Aid." , preveating blood-poisoning and inflammation. ease pain and build up new healthy Zam-Buk is entirely different fromall other ointments. tbal essences quickly tissue. TUESDAY, JANUARY 20, 1020. In the Realm of Women---Some Interesting; Features ee : (Bs BD Ve parts of the breathing organs, that tight feeling in the , making breathing easy aad any cough. Keep Peps i "hte winter and use them . Give them to the children 3 de - 1 teaspoonful of Worcestershire sauce Cook oysters until ruffled, then drain from their juice. Melt fat, blend with flour and stir. Add oyster juice and stock or milk and mix well until a smooth, thick sauce is formed. Then add seasonings and oysters and cook a minute longer. Pour over toast oz cracker. This is easily prepared in a chafing dish. Spiced Fried Oysters, Make a dressing of 3 tablespoonfuls of vinegar and 1 tablespoonful 'of melted butter, adding salt ond pepper to taste. Place oysters in this and let stand for 10 minutes, covering each oyster well with the mixture. Drain oysters, roll in crumbs, beaten egg and crumbs. and fry in deep fat. The oysters should not be: fried longer than one minute. Test the fat first to be sure that it is sufficiently hot, but not smoking, and do not fry more than 5 or 6 oysters at a time. On Friday the death occurred of one of the oldest and most highly re- spected residents of South Elmsley, Mrs. Henry Joynt. Her demise was dune to pneumonia; she had been {ll for ten days. Deceased was in her seventy-ninth year. one of the many uses to m-Buk, the great herbal balm, is daily put. idents will happen, especially where there are Mothers should never be without Zam-Buk, Zam:Buk Its strong antiseptic properties kill all Its rich, It is purely herbal and contains no poisonous coloring matter, Take no substitute. See the name on every box before paying, ZAM-BUK HEALED SEVERE CUT Mrs. J. E. Bierwirth of Carnduff, Sask., writes : As'it was such a severe cut, I was going to take him to a end off his f "My little son cut the docter, but in the meantime to ease the pain, I applied some Zam-Buk. This st th dv ped the cryi day I day, nothing but Zam-Buk. resulted.' hlegding and gave him such relief that and seemed quite at ease. I therefore decided to see if Zam-Buk would beal the wound. Next feplaced the dressing, and continued to do so each Zam-Buk sold by all droggisia and stores. or Zam-Buk Co., Torenlo, 50c bex. ¥ Complete cure _ |FREE Send this coupon; name of paper and le Buk Co., Toronto, Our Milk Is Thoroughly Clarified Completely pasteurized-- adequately cool- ed--reliably bottled It is clean--it is safe--it is good. It is 14c. per quart. PHONE 8465. Price's Dairy you tea satisfaction, and more cups to the an any other tea on the market. TRY A PACKAGE All Grocers sell it. We have a supply of cut hard "wool and kindling. J. Sowards Coal Co. FOR SALE 50 acres; 3} miles from Kingston, on the water front. W. H. GOUWIN & SON Heal Estate & Insurance 89 Broek Bt. Phone 494 -- OR THOSE | FEATHERS SHOULD BE RENOVATED NOW. SHE US WE ARB EXPERTS. Kingston Mattress Company 556 Princess St. Phone 602, +

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