Daily British Whig (1850), 16 Jun 1920, p. 8

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THE DA ILY BRITISH WHIG WEDNESDAY, JUNE, 16, 1920. In the Realm of Women---Some Interesting Features New life-- -_new freshness-- with LUX The daintier the garment the nore delighted you will be with the refreshing, renewing qualities of the LUX bath. For washing the finest pastel- tinted Georgette, Crepe or Silk blouse, sheerest silk stockings, etc, use the foamy, cleansing free LUX lather. There is nothing like LUX. No substitute for it. The maichless purity of these satiny wafers of the finest essence of soap can harm nothing that pure water itself may touch. LUX is sold at all grocers departmental stores, etc. A handy litle recipe book, **The Cave of Dainty Clothes" fs gladly sent . free on request. LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED TORONTO on Your Camping Trip Toes ral i gap onl _ ST.CHARLES BRAND EVAPORATED MILK with the cream left in * &=pure, rich, country milk with the cream (ee in is just what you want on the camp- | Wherever you use rresh milk, Borden's { Evaporated Milk will surely please. Grocers all over Canada will supply you. [ Don't ask for'milk -- say "BORDEN'S* WHOLESALE AND RETAIL Flour: Feed and - SWRulestle Warehouse, foot of Princess St. : . Phone 51. Retaf] Store ...un-. 117 Brock St. Phone 217 Frances Eleanor, daughter of | Governor of Ontario, Sir John 8. Miss Mr. and Mrs. W. A. Hollon, was mar- | Hendrie and Lady Hendrie. ried at Ma- The U. 8S. government mélted 68, on 10 'or iam Tn day Hendrie, | 000,000 silver 'dollars into beliien in _D8.0, enly von of former Lieut.' 1918. : ¥ {| money matters as John had made me. : would tell him, and then the thought Charles' Request. Tears of gratitude filled my eyes. This splendid bequest, added to the { home which mother had left me | and the little $150 a month income, { would make it impossible for any ! man to make Mary as unhappy over | 1 wondered what John would think about it. And then I smiled to myself because I understood that however he might feel about Charles giving it to Mary, the though of hav- ing an extra $25,000 in the family would make him good-natured. it was not true, however, that I cathe to me how far I had gone along | the road since the time I thought I} must tell my husband everything. | When I first married there was no | matter of conduct--myself or the house--that I did not want to con-| sult John about, and then I found | that he never gave me any construc-| tive advice whatever, that he either | found fault with me or was bored, | consequently I decided to tell John very little. Grows Tired of Thinking. I grew tired of thinking about it all and decided that I would never again cross a bridge until I came to it. One by one my experiences were making me philosophical and teach- ing me that impulse and emotion could not be the only motives in life. The nurse came forward and I turned a Httle impatiently--not from my baby, but from my thoughts. She gently lifted the tiny form and put her in the darling bassinet which Helen had sent me. I then turned to the letter--the thick letter which I was still holding in my hand. "Shall I open it for you?" asked the nurse. 'If you please," I answered. She ran the paper knife through --all thought of other friends--all thought of anything in my life--and stay out here in the solitude living to the utmost what must always be nothing but a dream. It is night, my dear, and the wind that scarcely shakes the flapping sales is like a solid, heated wall. Sheeted, Mysterious Forms. "As I drift along past the city I have a hazy vision of sheeted, myst- erious forms, huddled together here and there against vag habitations, while overhead the da es 'gainst the pale, unhappy moon. Over there comes into view the squat minaret of a queer old mosque, and I can almost hear the mournful call of the pigeons resting one the leaves. "Since I saw you last, dear Kath- arine, I have had much time to think of you--wthing else has seemed to matter. Nothing seems real to me --rather I feel as though 1 were the only living thing in a painted world wherein disports a queer kind of marionettes, like gnats in a sunbeam. "During the day in this far-off land I see through half-shut eyes within the mystic gloom of deep set arches where sits the ever present mendicant--chanting, chanting his wailing cry for alms. Here and there 'mid splashes of almost blind- ing light and through afaber shad- ows, under brilliant canopies, one gets a glimpse of rugs like bits of ruby glass«<like opals--pink, purple, blue--gleaming in the sun. Odors Are Indescribable. '""The ordors are The taint of sweating camels; bitter tanging smell of coffee and the clinging oriental scent of coriander | assall the m@éstrils with a something almost visible. gaunt loneliness. "lI do not know just why I am | the flap and handed it to me. With a curious, pleasurable feeling I drew the thick folded pages from the en- | velop--the letter I had seen written | in my 'waking dream some time be- | fore -- 'I know, my dear Katharine," the | letter began, '"'that it is folly--utter | folly--for me to spend this interval | in my life as I am doing now. Truly | I think I could label it as Mary Rob- erts Rinehart has one of her stories --'The Amazing Interlude'--for it is amazing that I, Karl Shepard, can leave behind all thought of business staying here, my dear Katharine, un- less it is that when at last the sky clamps down its purple spangled lid upon this scorching grdat brass bowl filled with squirming, creeping, rest- {ship-to the A palms creak | and moan as they brush their branch- | indescribable. | the | All seem to add to | the pitiless heat and accentuate my | F. J. CREGG, SYRACUSE | GOES TO WASHINGTON Take a Special Assistant- =Gen= To eral of United States. Washington, June 15. --Frank J. Cregg, Syracuse, N.Y., who has been | serving as assistant United States I Attorney in the northern gistrict of | New York for several years, has been named special assistant to Attorney- General A. Mitchel Palmer. The ap- pointment provides that the new spe- cial assistant will have sole charge in { that district of all inyestigations and prosecutions under the Lever profi- teering act. Mr. Cregg's appointment to the new post was dated June 1st and took its course through government channels before it was disclosed. It carries a salary of $6,000 a year and gives jurisdiction over the depart- ment of justice profiteering agents | and investigators in the northern dis- trict. Questions About Syrians. Ottawa, June 15.--Fernand Rin- fret, St. James, has given notice that Wherever tea is liked to-day, you will find the favorite is always LIPTON'S. LIPTON S c-- CEYLON. Canadian Chief Offices 24 Front St. West, Toronto TEA -- he will ask in the Commons whether there are at present any entry fees on Syrian immigration and whether the government intends; to cancel those fees. He further queries as to the number of Syrians now in Can rant from close my eyes afd then--can you | believe it--I am with you.- I see your face; I look into your eyes--I feel your very presence. although you are at the other end of the earth. madness. . To-morrow--Karl's surprising let- ter. Told in Twilight (Continued From Page 3.) 'Sir Frederick and Lady Orr Lewis, Montreal and London, gave a ball at Aldford House, London, on May TT. to remain a month inthe hospital there as a dietician. Mrs. Leadbeater, Barrie street, has returned from Toronto,r where she was visiting Dr. and Mrs. Dennis Jordan, Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Renton and sons, University avenue, will leave at the end of the week to summer in their cottage at "Glen Logie," on the St. Lawrence. * - » 20th, for the debut of their daughter, Miss Helen Orr Lewis. The hostess was wearing a black charmeuse gown and a double row of pearls, and dia- mond tiara. Her daughter received with her, dressed in white satin and lace garlanded with roses and hold- ing a bouquet of lillies of the valley. | The walls of the ball-room were draped with mist grey silk, and the approach to it was through a grotto of early spring flowers among which little fountains played. The tables in the supper room were decorated with iris. The roof garden was used for | sitting out. About three hundred guests attended. * Dr. and Mrs. D. D. MacDonald, Alexandria, announce the engage- ment of their daughter, Bertha Ev- elyn, to Charles H. Kerr, of Calgary, late of the 43rd Battalion, and son of Mrs. H. J. P. Kerr, of fAvondale, Carlingford, County Louth, Ireland. Mr. and Mrs. J. J. McCann, King- ston, were the guests of Miss Effie Riply, Westport, over the week-end. Dr. and Mrs. Meyers are at Roch- ester spending a couple of weeks. On their retdrn they will spend the sum, mer in Napanee. " * Mies Margaret Gordon, niece of Sir Charles Gordon, and Miss Kath- leen Rosamond will be among Mont- real girls attending the Royal Milit- ary College ball on June 21st. Miss Annie Gow, Edmonton, spent the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. John E. Gow, Union street, and has gone on to St. Agathe, Que., Glorious Relief! Corns, Callouses, Foot Lumps Go You'll feel like a kid again, you'll be tickled to death at the painless, quick riddance of all your corns once you paint on Putnam's Extractor. Do it to-day! Dealers everywhere have been selling this safe, depend- able and sure remedy for nearly fifty years. Only costs a quarter, Does the trick every time. Putnam's Corn Extractor was the first corn remover on the market, has to-day the largest sale, and simply because it's by long odds the best. {and ! Mrs. Claude Robin and Mrs. Frank Mr. and Mrs. F. W. Molson and Miss Louise Molson, Montreal, are coming to Kingston to attend the marriage of the former's son, John | | Henry Molson, to Miss Florence Haz- | ' el Brown, which takes place soon. | Other Montrealers coming for the event are Mrs. Markland Molson, Mr. Mrs. Herbert Molson, Mr. and Scott. * * Mrs. Herbert Saunders, street, returned on Monday Napanee, 'where she spent the week- end with her sister, Mrs. G. Haw- ley. Mrs. T. Ashmore Kidd, "Alwing- ton," and, Miss Agnes Richardson, University avenue, went up to Tor- onto on Monday, to spend a week at the Queen's. Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Horsey, Ot- tawa, who spent the week-end at Mrs. Efa Dennison"s, King street, motored up to their summer home at Cresy, on Tuesday. -. . * Alice 9 Mrs. Buxton Smith returned on Saturday from Toronto, where she had a delightful visit with Mrs. Stan- ley Smith, and left on Monday for Ottawa to join Miss Jessie Smith and spend the summer at the Capital. Lt.-Col. and Mrs. Schmifilin, Royal when their guests will be the cadets of the senior class and their friends. turned yesterday from where she had a delightful visit with Mrs. BE. A. Chown. * + land street, cruise on the yacht Sylvia over the week-end, the guests of Mr. and Mrs, William Casey, King street. Miss Clara Farrell has returned from Toronto, where she attended Branksome Hall and will spend the summer with her father, J. M. Farrill, Barrie street. Miss Eleanor Minnes is returning to-morrow from Toronto, and will spend the summer with her parents, Mr. Mrs. Minnes, "Hillcroft." Mrs! Andrew Forman, Montreal, is the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Dalton, Johnson street. . 5 = G. B. Nicholson, who has Mrs. spent most of the parliamentary session in Ottawa with her husband, Mr. Nicholéon, M.P., will leave this bok Ont. Early in July, Mr. and Mrs. Nicholson will leave fof England and France, where they will spend a few months. . Miss Marjorie Loomis, daugh ter jof Sir Frederick and Lady" Loomis of Montreal, whose marriage to Don- ald Simpson Mackenzie, is taking place on June 30th, at the Church of St. James the Apostle, will be at- tended by Mrs. John Aird, as matron of honor and three of her cousins as bridemaids, Miss Eleanor Mundeil, Kingston, Miss Virginia Loomis and Miss Louise Foss, Sherbrooke, Que. from | Military College, are entertaining at | The Dansant, on Friday afternoon, | - Misg Ruth Anglin Earl street, re- | Toronto, | Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Ryan, Mait- | enjoyed a delightful week for her home in Chapleau, | What madness this is--what utter | Children run for heaping dishes of rich, crackly Kellogg's Toasted Corn Flakes---toasted as only know how--poured WAXTITE" package plump with goodness. M. acked in our big kitchens here in oronto. This signature is your guarantee | Wt Heblogy, { less bits of flotsam and jetsam, I| Kellogg's crisp and frag- ade an ~ ada and the number who entered the country in 1819 and 1920. Ee It's a pity that more of us are not willing to follow the advice we give to others. me - Kelloge's Products-- Toasted Corn Flakes--Shreda ded ot Fics wrapped *"Waxgite" rumbles--Krumbled Bran--are made in our modernized at TORONTO and "Sold Everywhere FIRST. and easily digested. cooking fats. Gingerbread that delights the kiddies! he EASIFIRST way ~-Discriminating cooks use EASI- It is a pure, wholesome shortening, always of the same high quality. Everything cooked or baked with it is light, dainty, appetizing omical--to buy and to use, for three- quarters of a pound of EASIFIRST goes as far as a pound of many other Be a Successful Cook! VERY woman realizes that one of the big secrets of successful cooking is in the shortening used. Here is § It is very econ- Cream littie sweet slow oven. Your grocer will supply you--but get EASIFIRST--then you're sure of results. Sold in cartons and tins. bread Recipe cup EASIFIRST cup brown sugar cup mol ¥ cup sour milk 34 teaspoon 3 teaspoon salt, 2 eggs 2 cups flour 1 tablespoon 3 teaspoon EASIFIRST and brown add molasses and well beaten ad sour ilk, hed the sifted flour, salt, bak- in er an bg the bal shallow pas and bake 45 minutes in a [I a Splendid Ginger- baking powder zs finger. Beat thoroughly aking soda, dissolved in a milk. Pour into a greased

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