Daily British Whig (1850), 14 Jul 1920, p. 10

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THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG WEDNESDAY, JULY, 14, 1020 In the Realm of Women-----Some Interesting Features RENLTREERR | eX | LEMON JUICE Sd | | LEMON JUI : meted FOR FRECKLES id oom ie { I Girls! Make Jbeauty lotion for i a few cents--Try It! Squeeze the juice of two into-a bottle containing three ounces | | of orchard white, shake well, and you have a quarter pint of the best freckle and tan lotion, and complex- | fon beautifier, at very, very small] cost. Your grocer has the lemons and! any drug store or toilet counter will | supply three ounces of orchard white | tor a few cents. Massage this sweet- | ly fragrant lotion into the face, neck, | arms and hands each day and see how freckles and blemishes disap- pear and how clear, soft and rosy- white the skin becomes. Yes! It is harmless and never irritates. STEAMSHIP LINES For information and rates apply to J. P. Hanley, C. P. & T. A. G. T. Rati. Stolen Shoes Recovered. New York, July --Three men | and a woman were tas and §10.- 000 worth of shoes stolen from the Acme steamship pier on the Hudson river were recovered by the police. Police declared that thieves have been raiding the piers for some time, and thefts aggregating $225,000 have occurred along the waterfront during the last few weeks. i Sm-------- | Mennonite Settlers Not in Demand. ~ Jackson, Mississippi, July 14.--The | Democratic state executive commit- | tee adopted a resolution opposing the proposed migration of 8,000 Men- | nonite farmers trom Canada to south- { era Mississippi. Til a A------ i Rich Fruit Desserts For a Trifle A paciage of Jiffy-Jell serves six | people in mold form, or twelve if | you whip the jell. It is a real-fruit | dainty. Each package contains a wealth of frult-juice essence, con- | densed and sealed in glass. No artificial flavor is used in Jiffy-Jell. No saccharine is used Every housewife who once tries it | will always make sure to get it For this is the only quick gelatine'! dessert which has these ttled fruit flavors. Your choice of ten flavors--try it. In Jiffy-Jell you get the delicious fruity flavor and goodness of the | fruit itself, From Queves to Liverpool July 28jAng. 23 Pr. Fr. Wilhelm Aug. 4/Sept. 1 ..Victortan Aug' 11 ..Emp "ot Frencs From Montreal July 17---Corsican. Livers 7 July '€4--Scan 1 King Street, Toronto AN OLD TIRE With a blow out fitted with an INSYDE TYRE. Ran 3,000 miles. Cost less than $2.00. Have yom tried one? J. R. C, Dobbs & Co. Tel. 819. 41 Clarence St. WHEN USING WILSON'S FLY PADS | ai Best of all Fly Killers 10¢ per Packet at all Druggists, Grocers and General S Campana's Italian Balm - ~ relieves the discomforts of sunburn. Get a bottle and use it when you are on your vacation. 35c.atall LUX and Your Sweater There is a delightful way of washing it--so easy you can do it yourself--so pure that te be washed again and again A ch ra we ii Ang . It is with the ri ps lather that the eandesiul LUX is sold at grocers, departmental stores, etc. "The Care Deas Chant, a LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO LUX y ued my mind. | at once I felt too tired to probe fur- | ther. | did not want to think. soon I should be bacK in the world t nded all my courage, all my energy {| Dorothy Gildersleeve, Miss | Lesslie, | F. Foulkes, Miss Laura Kilborn, Capt -| Laurier, Ottawa. I think I surprised myself more; han I did Miss Parker when I said] Jemons | ar I liked men as men, but not in| where she has lived so many years. the mass. But, thinking it over, I knew that I had told the truth. 1 could not like individually, and yet when 1 thought of men as a sex I} jal most hated them, ss 1 ke to nurse women better than men," confided Miss Parker. "Wo- men are braver and much more pat- ient, although I have met a few men who were the exceptions that proved the rule, just as I have met a fo fussy 'and querulous women. You were a splendid patient," she said | with a smile. "I couldn't have been otherwise; | I was: most of the time unconscious, | you know." "It is then," remarked Miss Park-| ar, * that people show their true nat- | ures." "lI do not believe that. I 'have | been told by physicians that some of | the loveliest mothers in the church used blasphemous language under an | anesthetic, and some of the roughest | of men became as little children pnd- | er the same conditions. "That in po way controverts my | assertion," PAT) Miss Parker unex- | | pectedly. | "Qh," was my astonished remark | as I subsided. Filled With Wonder, | 1 looked at this woman sitting be- | side m® again and again during the | next few hours of our journey, and 1 wondered how two people could live | together as we had done for many | weeks and yet one at least might! not know the other at all. Miss | Parker has seemed to me a kind of scientifically ministering automation. | I had never thought of her as having | | her thoughts and opinions upon prob- ably evesy subject which had intrig- "I must get her point of view." I said to myself, but all I wanted to rest and look out on the ever-changing landscape. I I knew that --the world of bustle and business, of huyry and strife, and that I should and all the enthusiasm I possessed. +1 was awakened from my reverie by Miss Parker asking me, "Shall we go directly to your home, Mrs. Gor- don?" "I think not," I answered, "al- though Mr. Gordon did not say. think he expects us to go for a few weeks to gur rooms in his mother's house. I, would rather not move in- { to the new house until at least a few of the rooms are made habitable." "Will Mr. Gordon's mother live with you in your new home?" asked Miss Parker in tones that made me understand that she was not at all curious in the matter, but just trying to make conversation. | felt sometimes that she had not paid "No, she is to live in the old house, A friend and distant relative of Mr. Gordon's and of bis family is to live at her home. Mme Gordon is a handsome woman for her age, rather austere and, you might say, set in her way. She has always run the house and Jobn and I have begn more as guests or boarders with her. How- ever, like most cases of this kind, the arrangement has not been particular- ly pleasant. Mme. Gordon has ex- pected more of us than she would have :asked of guests, and we have as much attention to our, wants as she might have had we actually been has always paid the house bills." Miss Parker made no comment but I was a little curious to know just what she was thinking, for there was a peculiar look in her face. "You look relieved," I said. "Oh, I beg your-pardon," she sald quickly. "I did not mean to show my thought, but if I be allowed, my | dear Mrs. Gordon, I will say that the only trouble I have ever experjenced in nursing in families has come from older people, who thought they had a right, not because of any training or special fitness for the work, but solely because of age, to know bet- ter what to do in all cases than I or | anyone, else. It is sad, Mrs, Gordon | that age almost always brings sel- | ishness and conceit in its train. 1 have rarely met and old person who could say to me, 'Yes, my dear, I have been through all those things which you are going through now, but, take heart, take courage, I have weathered them, and so will you.' Instead, most old people say to you, 'You are not doing the right thing. It isn't what I did at your age, and anleg you change and do not only ing I want you to do, and in the way I want you to do, you will never come through as I have done.' Heart Beats Faster. 1 had no time to go further in the conversation, because we were be- ginning to slow up as we went into the home station. I felt my heart beat a little faster, as for the first time I allowed myself to ask, inward- ly, "Would John be there to mest us? 1 did not expect him, really, but, oh, how I hoped he would he there. Although we had begyn slawly to pass some people who were evidently waiting for friends, I did not really k out the window until we came to a full stop, and then to my amaze- ment I saw Elizabeth Moreland--and no one (Copyright by National Newspaper Service) Tomorrow--A Tilt With Elizabeth Moreland. Told In | Twilight | a--a---- (Continued from Page 3.) > * » The Country Club provided an- other delightful afternoon for its members and their guests on Satur- day. The tennis courts were full and the postponed Clock Golf competi- tion came off with many interested spectators, Miss Wilhelmina Gordon being the prize winner. An Ameri- can tennis tournament is being talk- ed for next Saturday. The tea table, bright with pink popples, was in charge of Mrs. Heber Lafferty and Mrs. Garnet Greer. Among those present were Col. and Mrs. Hill, Col and Mrs. Foulkes, Prof. and Mrs. Iva Martin, Mrs. W. H. P. Elkins, Capt. and Mrs. Neil Black, (Toronto), Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Gildersleeve (Den- ver), Capt. and Mrs. Webber, Major and Mrs. Garnet Greer, Mr. and Mrs. Hugh Ryan, Mrs. Fortt, Miss Loretta Swift, Miss Isabel Gildersleeve, Miss Marion Miss W. Gordon, Miss Mamie Anglin, Miss Aileen and Miss May Rogers, Miss Edith Macpherson (Ottawa), Miss Hilda Hague, Miss Lee, Messrs. Rudd, Foulkes, Swift and Rogers. Dr. and Mrs. S. J. Radcliffe, Tor- onto, accompanied by Mrs. Rad- cliffe's sisters, Misg Scholtz and Mrs. Craig, of Kingston, and her nephews, sons of the late Major Loghrin, mo- tored to London last week and were guests with Mrs. Mara for two days. In honor of her guests, Mrs. Mara entertained at a picnic at Port Stan- i es en Mrs. Turner and children, Hamil- ton, are with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Slater, Barrie street. Dr. Gordon Byers and family, Sum- mit Circle, Montreal, are at Ganano- que. Mrs. W. Bitkpatzick and Miss Las- sie Kirkpatrick, Barrie street, are leaving tomorrow for Lake of Bays, Muskoka. \d Miss Mildred Kingston, is the guest of Miss Botting, Westport. Capt. and Mrs. S.\V. Cooke, King- ston, are staying at the Chateau Miss Kathryn Diamond left on on a motor trip through New . Elliott and will settle in Rich- Alta. Mrs. Charles S. Tupper, and son, 'Boston, Mass, are Yisiting Rer r par. ents, Mr. and 'Mrs. N. GS. .P3- 0 133 Clarence street. | Rockland, Ont. 'Staten_ Island, are spending several Miss Avia MeConnall. Taranta laft today for Montreal after spending the week-end with her father, Joseph McConnell, Williamsville. . - * Mrs. Bond, Cleveland, will come down to Kingston this week to visit Mr. and Mrs. W, J. Fair, King street. "Mrs. Crockett, who has been the guest of the Dean of Ontario, at "The Deanery," Wellington street, will leave for New York on Thurs- day. Mr: and Mrs. Esson and Miss Effie Esson, Rochester, N.Y., are the guests of Mrs. Gamsby, King street west. Mrs. Robert Bowie, who spent the goek-end with Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Calvin, Garden Island, returned to Brockville on Monday. J. H. Mitchell, Alexandria, is visit- ing Mr. and Mrs. JR. C. Dobbs, Al- bert street. Sidney Drew, Montreal, is a visi- tor in town this week. The regatta and tea al the Yacht Club is the social event of the after- noon. - Major Geary, Ottawa, is in town and will be one of the officers at- tached to the R.C.H.A. Mrs. Geary and three children will come down from Ottawa later to make their home in Kingston. Prof. Donald Ross and Miss May ahd Miss Isabel Ross, Alfred street, left on Monday for a trip down the Sagieney. Prof. and Mrs. P. G. C. Campbell, Queen's College, and their two small sons, went out to Bob's Lake today for two weeks. Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Rathwell, are visiting Mrs. Rathwell's sisters, Mrs. Andersonand Miss Baxter, Johnson street: - - Mr. and Mrs. R. J. Carson, "Romily House," Mrs. Earnest Dawson and her small daughter, have returned from a motor trip through New York State. Roy Gibson, Toronto, is the guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Gibson, Earl street. Mr. and Mrs, Vincent Mullen, Mr. and Mrs. VanLuvgn and Miss Mar- guerite Mullen, K ton, are spend- ing a few days in Prescott. » - - Mrs. Rew and Miss Helen Rew, days in town. They are going down to Bostwick Island for a week or so, but will return to Kingston later to visit Mrs. Rew's sister, Mrs. Gams- by, King street west. 5. Miss Lilian Mowat, who Fas been in'St. John, N.B., as one of the King- ston delegates to the annual meet- ing of the National Council of Wo- men, returned to town on Saturday. Miss Ethelwyn Mowat, who been spending some time at Atlantic City, and at Trenton, N.J., met her sister in Montréal and came home with her. Mr. and Mss. John St Dennis, Three Risers; announce the engage- ment of their daughter, Lily Maude, to Hush McFeérn. Stella. Wherever-tea is liked to-day, you will find the favorite =" always LIPTON'S. ET ---------- PICNIC & CAMPING SUPPLIES Cooked and Canned Meats, _ Plekles, Relishes and Juma. / COREE TTR CE PRE and everything to help, make your holiday enjoyable, ate. C. H. PICKERING 490-492 PRINCESS STREET Phone 330. her ee AS KAY "uy Look Out and prepare for your coal needs. ' Sica: Joly 1 Sa months be ore Dr. Harry J. Helseiden, a physi- boarders, although of course John (cian, died in Havana, he hay bY ion. E. W. 00 to buy two hundred bales of cot- tom. A. Chadwick & Son Corner Ontario and West Sts. Phone 67, Was a Friend Indeed. cents a pound.' Once Helseiden was told he had a big profit. His reply was to buy more. When he died his estate was valued at $25,000. Later, by an order of court, Mr. Wagner closed the cotton deal at a profit ot $170,000. is Wagner, a broker, §5,: The cotton was bought at 15 Every flake in every package must be good enough for your children to eat. That iswhat is guaranteed by my signature on every "Wax« tite" package of Kellogg's Toasted ER wig Kellogg's Products--Toasted Corn Flakes Shredded Krumbles --Krumbled Bran--.are made in our new modernised kitchens TORONTO and elweys wrapped "Waxtite" Sold i. Codfi sh Zhe EASIFIRS Toy (roqueltes © Mae AZAINTY, , satisfying and economical dish-- when properly cooked! Use the reci a given here--just a wee bit of skill, --and EASIFIRST. Your Codfish Cro- quettes will be light and delicious indeed. Why? Because in deep frying EASI- FIRST may be brought toan intense heat without burning. This means that foods fried in it have a quickly-formed, ing crust which prevents the fat from soak- ing in. The interior cooking is done by heat alone, as it should be. The EASIFIRST left over may be used again. It t will not carry any flavor. Here is a Good Recipe --~Try It! 1 cup boiled codfiah 2 cups mashed potatoes 1 cup thick white sance Tn --_-- Tor Cam Sancn Lev tablespoon EASIFIRST, Lr iaypouns iin EASIFIRST bears the Government's stamp of Your grocer will supply you. Sold in cartons and tins. Write foday Sor 2,50 GUNNS LIMITED ~

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