Daily British Whig (1850), 7 Aug 1920, p. 8

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THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG In the Realm of me TN Pens Some Interesting Features "ONTARIO LADIES COLLEGE WHITBY, ONT. Becton 10 43h Your Sept. 14, 1920 A Few Advantages 28 miles from Tor onto. A City Coun- try School, nasium, min Outdoor Play fa. For Calendar and cilities unequalled. Booklet Apply to REV, F. L. FAREWBLL. B.A. PRINCIPAL. have been known to resume business as well as social activities, and feel quite at ease In conversation by the use of the Acousticon--a hearing instrument that can scarcely be detected while worn. Write for descriptive leaflet to desk 5 re ACOUSTICON SECTION #T. EATON C%m SRR HNN a For a Good Sammer ert, Economical and Quickly Prepared, Use PRIMUS JELLIES During the hot summer days pudding ings and pastry must give way to lighter and more ing desserts. With "PRIMUS JELLIES" the -- appetizing, de- licious and refreshing desserts can be prepared instantly. These Jellies can be had i in different favors: Straw. berry, p istachio, Goosebe Lemon, Cherry, Orange, Chocolate, Natural tA Tn Foot,)' also and Port Wine,--Need no cooking. The brand "PRIMUS™ is a guarantee of quality and purity. Insist on getting from your dealer 2 PRIMUS JELLIES". They are the best. L. CHAPUT, FILS & CIE, Limitée, MONTREAL Te eee | & Partially Deaf People .| to -me. : A - Norma Talmadge Knows A Good Thing Like thousands of other people who realize the value of a soap that disinfects while it cleanses, Norma Talmadge, the famous screen star uses and praises : HEALTH LIFEBUODY Sass Think of the hundreds of germ-laden things . your hands touch each day--think of the value of having the pores of the skin really clean. Then get a cake of Lifebuoy and let its copious lather make your skin glow with health, too, and you will say with Norma thoroughly Lifebuoy--it gives the ska th proveaton everyone necds." Yuons elondy em Lifdhuty Soap is s0id at ult good grocers and stores. LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED TORONTO "The time has come, John Gordon, when you and I must have these matters all out." "For Heaven's sake, don't be so tragic I have never cared for that house down in the country and I see no reason why you should keep it just to provide a resting place for your mother's maid." "Keep still, John. I don't want to fezl more exasperated and more dis- appointed in you than I am." John looked up as though to speak { again, but'1 held up hand. "I don't know just en the time came, John, when you first began to grow tired of me, but I think, per- haps, it was when you found out that [I was a real human being instead i of the plaything you evidently had meant me to be. Something with no mind you thought me, except as 1 reflected yours; and no ambition, except that which might belong to a petted cat that would purr as it basked in the wormth of youn smile." Katharine, Going to Tell the Truth, "Oh, yes, know," I-.gaid, as I noted the grey look come over his face and the smile of sarcasm trans- | form his mouth into a thing' of ugli- | ness. "You are thinking that I am | still posing as an abused angel, but | won' t you please just for once take ime as honestly saying exactly what I think. Won't you try to under- stand? For I am going to tell you the plain truth, even if it is not put into the plain, ugly language which you often have used. John, I don't think you ever have loved me. I think' the woman you have really cared for is Elizabeth Moreland." '""Are you going back to that, again?" "Stop! Hear me out--for upon what I am saying and upon what you shall decide depend our future lives. I do not know just what it is that attraots a man momentarily ;that takes him off his feet. I do not know why it is that some women will have this attraction for some men and leave others cold, but I do know, John, that I have given you that strange magnetic thrill. I konw that the first time you met me you felt it as1 did, and from then until our marriage you thought of nothing ex- cept that I should belong to yor. But after all, John, you and I have very little in common. I can not be hypocritical, I must be frank. You in your brutally masculine way have overruléd and overrun all the wo- menfolk you have had about you. It has ahnoyed you greatly when I, the first woman you have ever known to do so, have stood up to you, hold- ing my own even though your blows always reached my heart. I receiv- ed this letter the other day. If you look you will see thh#it is addressed I do not know .whether Elizabeth * Moreland intended me to You know that have this lettet, and sent it to me this way purposely, or whether she was writing to you at the same time and got the notes mixed. But it was just after my child was born, Johan, and I made up my mind that I"would | come here and fight for my owi. Then, if I found that you still want- ed her, more than you wanted me, determined I should take my baby and go away, back to that little hav- en of rest which had come to 'me from my mother, and to her from her mother, and on back through generations that I have hardly count- ed. It belonged to me and mine. But you have taken this refuge from me with a cruelty that might be thoughtless, but which you must have known would be barbaric in its torture of me if you had stopped tp think at all on the subject." John had not read the letter, and I said to him, "Read it!" He open- ed {t mechanically. He turned ashen as he read the first line. And then he looked at me and said, "At least ohé woman has loved me, even though she knew that I did not love her.' "Do you mean to tell me, John Gordon, with that letter in your hdnd, that you do not love Eliza- beth Moreland?" Mgther for His Children. "Of course I don't. I guess I have been born without the power to.love any woman. The nearest I have come to loving one was in loving you. You mean. to me what I want. A woman to be the mother of my children. A woman to grace my home. A woman who can give evidence of my prosperity. That Elizabeth Moreland never could do. Wha are you going to do; Kath- arine? You are not foolish enough to make a scandal at this late day. Perhaps you are only looking for something that will give you an ex- cuse to get rid of me. You know that I could make it uncomfortable for you if I put a copy of those let- ters from Karl Shepard in any di- vorce proceedings that you might constitute," "How little you understand wo- men, John. If anything would make me get a divorce that threat would do it.' "Then you won't get a divorce?" he asked eagerly. "Not if you dacced to my terms. I shall never live with you as your wife again unless something mater- fally changes my views. Good night, John, I am tired." I did not sleep, and it was the next morning at the breakfast table when I looked across at John, stolid- ly reading his paper as if nothing had happened ,that'I found myself wishing hat he were dead. . (To Be Continued.) (Copyright by National Newspaper Service) Told in the Twilight (Continued from Page 3.) Mrs. John Carson, Villa St. Claire Apartments, was the hostess of a particularly bright and charming tea on Thursday, the guests being Mrs. George Warner, Miss Marion Starr and Miss Margaret McLeod, Toronto. Lovely flowers adorned Mrs: Carson's pretty rooms, the tea room being especially gay with its polished table centred with a silver basket of cos- mos in their varying tints, resting on the handsome Madenia cloth. Here Mrs. Manley Baker made the | tea and Mrs. Beatty (New York) cut the ices, their assistants being the house guests and Miss Ethelwyn Mc- Gowan. The other guests present were old friends of Miss Starr and Miss McLeod, who were in Kingston during their school days, and includ- ed Mrs. Cyril Smith, Mrs Ross Brad- ley (India), Mrs. Harold Singleton, Mrs. George Bawden, Mrs. H. R. Pense, Mrs. Greenland, Mrs. Sidney Kirby (Toronto), Mrs. Kenneth Car- son, Mrs, Charles Dalton, Mrs. Stu- art Crawford, Mrs. Gordon Smith; Miss Rene Beaudin (Montreal), Miss Claire Robinson, Miss Alivia and Miss Elizabeth Bute (Texas). * * Mrs. Thomas Bedell, Earl street, entertained at the tea hour on Mon- day in "honor of the staff of Syden- ham Hospital. The charming home- like rooms were filled with flowers, and the wives of the medical officers, nurses and aides present thoroughly enjoyed the hour over the tea cup and the pleasant chat with Colonel Bedell who came in during the after- noon, and with their bright and thoughtful hostess. In the tea oom, with its dainty table of polished wood with a centre of Maderia embroidery, brightened with lovely sweet peas and feathering ferm, Mrs. Joseph EI- liott and Mrs. Dr. BE. Mundell poured tea, and Mrs. W. Ennis Kidd cut the ices, assisted by Miss Leta El- liott and Miss Virginia Fair. * & Mrs. M. J. Lawlesg-gave a picnic at Lake Ontario Park in honor of Mas- ter Kenneth Lawless' eighth birth. day. There was a lovely birthday cake with eight candles. The little folk iad ada jolly £ime. Mrs. Clement end Miss Lily Clement, Sorel, Que., were among the out-of-town -gudsts. Mrs. Nathan F. Dupuis, Univer sity avenue, gave another of her pleasant little teas for her house guests on Thursday afternoon. At the flower decked table Mrs. Mathe- son and Miss Annie Fowler made tea 'and Miss McLean assisted them in caring for the wants of the guests. Mrs. Neil Polson, who is spending the summer at '"Maitlafy House," ren"s party on Wednesday for her small daughter, Miss Virginia Pal- son, . . » Mrs. R. J. Gardiner, "The Chest- nuts", was the hostess of a very pleasant bridge on Friday afternoon. Lady Macdontiell, Commandant's Quarters, R. M. C., went up to To-{ ronto on Friday for a week. Mrs. J. T. Greenwood, Toronto, is visiting Capt. and Mrs. H. A. Stew- art, Lower Albert street. Miss Nan Pratt, who has been spending a few weeks in town, has re- turned to New York. Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Crawford, Al- bert street, have returned from Mont- real. Mrs, P. J. Dickson, St. Anne de T. E. Coleman, Frontenac street, Mrs. T. J. Coleman, Frontenac street. Mrs. Dickson has many friends in King- ston, as her husband, Prof. Dickson, was at one time on the staff of Queen's University, ! PR - * * Mr, and Mrs. J. Farrand Pringle, Ottawa, are the guests of Dr. and Mrs. Robert Pringle, Portland. Miss Kathleen Lawless, who spent her holidays with Mr. and Mrs. Law- less, University avenue, has return- ed to New York, where she is on the staff of the French Hospital. Mss Beatrice Armstrong, Trenton, left on Thursday for the Laurentians. W. G.. Crothers, Jr., Kingston, is at the Chateau Laurier in Ottawa. Mr. and Mrs. Stuart Hawkins, and son, Centre street, have left for Ot. : LS GIRLS! USE LEMONS FOR SUNBURN, TAN sn, Try RI Make this lemon lotion tan disappear clear, soft and white the skin be- 'was the hostess of a charming child- Tstréet, south, with tawa and Algonquin month's holiday, Mr. and Mrs. Henry F. Mooers, and daughters, Misses Isabella and Grace, have deft an an auto trip to Goderich. Miss A. V. Finnie, and daughter, Alice St. Catharines, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. W. H, Wormwith, Barl street. Park on "a . . . . Mrs. J. Ww. Tims, 24 Frontenac little Barbara, who have been visiting Mrs. 8S. Go- wan at her summer residence, *'Ori- ental Island," near' Brockville, re- turned on Friday. Miss Genevieve Connell: has re- turned to Brockville from a visit to friends at Kingston. Miss Thelma Haffner, Division street, is visiting her sister, Mrs. G. D. Dick, Montreal. W. J. Rochefort, Montreal, is in the city: for the Gourdier-Sughrue wedding. Miss Honor Gowan, Brockville, is visiting her aunt, Mrs. J. W. Tims, 24 Frontenac street south, °* Mrs. John Bigford, Kingston, is the guest of friends at Bishop's Mills. Miss Agneés Stanton, Bapriefield, has returned having spent her vaca- tion visiting among relatives in Buf- falo, N.Y. Mr. and Mrs. J. Stanton and fam- ily, Rideau street, have returned home after a pleasant visit at Brew- er's Mills. » * * hd E. H. Penge, Wales, Ont., came up to town today, to spend the week- end with Mrs. Pense and his small daughters. Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Baker, Brock- ville, spent the week end with Col. and Mrs. Thomas Bedell, Earl street. Major William Goodwin, who with Mrs, Goodwin has been camping on the Sagueney, returned to Kingston on Thursday. Mrs. Goodwin and their little son are with Mrs. Stirling, in Montreal. Gordon Mitchell, Toronto, is ari- sitor in town this week. Miss Lucy Merrick, William. street, whose visit to Mrs. Carlos Kirk- gaarde was postponed for a week, left for Beloeil, Quebec, on Friday. Miss Beatrice Armstrong, Trenton, left on Thursday, for the Laurentians and was joined at Kingston by Mas- ter Innes Fraser, Earl street. They will be members of a large house party at Mr. Redpath"s cottage at Lac Renaud, Que. Mrs. E. J. Wallace, Mottreal, is visiting her sister, Mrs. Fred ReidAd at her summer home on the St. Law- rence. > Dr. and Mrs. E. C. D. McCallum, Brock street, have gone down to Bos- ton to spend several weeks. Mrs. Hogan and Miss Nellis Hogan, Nelson street, have returned from a visit of two weeks with the former's brother, Dr. E. J. Melville, at his camp "The Hermitage", on Lake Champlain. Mr. and Mrs. D. Jackson and fam- ily, Oshawa, and Miss Tena Jackson, Kingston, are at the Hay Island se. Mrs. MacParland, Kingston, is in Toronto, visiting her son, Col. M Parland and Mrs. MacParland, Madi- son' avenue. Mrs. J. K. Kerr, Toronto, who has been visiting her daughter, Mrs. Os- ler, at Toronto, has come to King- ston to visit her daughter, Mrs. Wil- Ham Harty, Jr. LJ * . Mrs. James Gunn and Miss Kath- leen Gunn went down to 'Fetter- cairn' on Wednesday to spend some {ime w.th Miss Agnes Richardson Nisa Afless Rogers, Barrie street. returned (0 town to-dar Miss H. M. 'Muir, Thorburn, is the guest of her nieces, the Misses Wil- son, Union strost. Miss Jessie Croft Toronto is the guest of her wuncla and aunt, Mr. and Mrs, J. O. Hutton, Albert street. George Kirkpatrick, who was in town for his sister'd wedding, has returned to Montreal. Miss Elsie Robinson, Albert street, is at "Ivy Lea," among the Thou- sand Islands, for her holidays. . A. M. Kirkpatrick, who spent sev- eral days with his mother, Mrs. Alex- ander K. Kirkpatrick, Sydenham street, has gone up to Windsor. Mr. and Mrs. A... W. Brundage, York street, have left for Montreal to visit the former's parents, Rev. Manley and Mrs. Brundage. They will go on to Lennoxville and Sher- brooke to visit friends in both places. Mrs. "W. R, "Givens, Mrs. Ashby, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Steacy and Sherman Hill left to-day fer a motor trip through the Eastern States, * Dr. and Mrs, G. W. Mylks, William street, have taken a cottage at East- view for August and with their fam- ily went down there to-day. Miss Lena Burns, who has been the guest of Prof. and Mrs. Murray, York street, has returned to Brock- ville. - Mrs. 8S. H. Simpson, Albert street, and little Miss Isabel, have gone down to "Ivy Lea' for a few weeks. 'e * . Mr. and Mrs. James A. Balley, Stirling, Ont., announce the engage- ment of their daughter, Miss Esther Caroline to Rev. Harold Baker 1 Neal, Toronto, son of Mr. and Mrs. E, B. Neal, Hope. The marriage 'will take place in August, at Vancouver. l « Lectern New to Him. The chaplain 'was a Scotsman, who resented any innovation in the ser vice. A generous number of the con- gregation, thinking it would be de- Siruble ta to have the lessons read from eu TT pio e a handsome one in the form of an e The , however, did not take kindly to it, and declined to use it the first morning, but towards even- ing he relented, and at the close of the service he astonished and enter- -| tained his congregation by giving out the following. "I give notice that next Sabbath the wurrd of God will be read from 'that burrd." Sham always endeavors to pass as the real thing. Charapter injury is the rankest Sind of injury. LIP 'We grow it-- Canadian Chief Offices 24 Front St. West, Toronto SUIT OF BLUE TRICOT SERGE Blue tricot serge is the material used in this offering for spring. It has the popular Eton effect, with wide black braiding finish. A striking Span. ish girdle of many colored silks is the finishing touch. ~ New Sport Clothes. Many of the new sport suits consist + of separate skirts of white flannel with / velveteen coats. The fashion demands dark rich colors for the coat, such as burnt ,orange, dark green, dark blue. The coat is trimmed with black patent leather or leathers of bright colors. Smart suede coats are worn for mo- toring. Care of Hands. When hands have become soft and shrunken, by using soda and hot wa- ter, rub them with common salt and it will help to make them smooih. The Lord never accepts service by proxy. : Correct estimates are usually in the minority. N' We blend It We pack it Your Grocer Sells It 2478 YLON. Kill them all, and the germs too. 10¢ a ket at Druggists Tokers and General Sto rr ------ "TIL tell the World The fragrant creamy lather of "Baby's Own Soap™ and its absolute 'purity have won a great popularity, e Those who live by their wits are not always jokers. We are to a greater or less degree inventors of excuses. no Corner Wellington and Princess yy 10% Off on Screen Doors at W. H. COCKBURN & CO. Street. Phone 216. Tal PURITY TABLE SALT THE SALT THAT SATISFIES----eeeMADE IN CANADA I RANGES at prices from..... We invite your inspection of 187 PRINCESS STREET Gas Ranges You will find on our floor a very complete stock of GAS LEMMON & SONS cesreigess. $17.00 to $70.00 these, 3 3 KINGSTON

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