Daily British Whig (1850), 23 Feb 1921, p. 8

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THE DAILY BRITIS . H WHIG WEDNESDAY, FEB. 28, 1921. The F ragrance ) ? "SALADA" Anticipates its exquisite flavour. Send us a postal for a free sample. Please state the price you Pos payand whether Black, Green or Mixed as Salada, loronto. 8723 "nd LA or )aby A ¥ bur LJ wa You don't need powder after a wash with "Baby's Own Soap". It leaves the skin fresh, smooth, white and withthe delicate aroma of the Roses of France and Geraniums of Tunis | to which "Baby's Own" owes its perfume. | In the interest of your skin--Buy "Baby's Own Soap" | | Demonstration SPECIAL ! $2.20--thick, hard, steel. WEAR-EVER Aluminum Fry Pan--9 in., for $1.19 and Coupon if presented Feb. 21st to Feb. 26th A Wear-Ever Kitchen is just as im- portant as a well-appointed Dining Room. = Each day of the year, three times a day. Wear-Ever utensils serve you. Qur demonstration will be in charge of a spe- cially trained demonstrator from the depart- ment of Household Economics of the manu- [ms etreet for supper and some -- In the Realm of Women---Some Interesting Features Told in Twilight (Continued from Page 3.) "Avonmore" was en fete on Mon- L iv evening, when the house ! 3 jolly partt for sor of the Students cf Que # Mrs heater receivsi the gues's, a fl duiiciag went on during the gyening | in the large receyticn room, which | was gay with flowers and ferns. The din'ng room wu: decorated with | | evergreens and strezinurs of Queen's colors, shaded lights sending a rosy i low over it all. "he Inusic Was ex- | | cellent and the, party altogether a | most enjoyable 'one, the Avonmore | | girls proving ms: gracious hos- | | { tossps j tosses, | » » y i Mrs. J. F. Foulkes and Miss Fran-)| {cesca Foulkes, 'Calderwood,' were | [the hostesses of a merry little tea | | dance on Saturday afternoon for | some of the younger girls and a {number of cadets from the R M.C. | | The spacious rooms, with blazing | open fires, were most attractive. The | | girls present were Miss Gwon Carr- | { Harris, Miss Lillian Fair, Miss | Louise Hill, Miss Barbara Bidwell, | | Miss Helen Tofield and Miss Lois | | Taylor. f | * : { The splendid skating on the har-| | bor has been taken aavantaze of bv | many merry parties, On Monday jevinimg one of them returned to Mrs. Percy L. Murray's home on music. . * - | { B H. Pense, Wales, spent the | week-end with Mrs. Pense, Welling- | ton street, Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Sutherland, | Gore street, went up to Toronto on Sunday. | Miss Margaret Cunningham and | Miss Ruth Parker have arrived in England. Miss Cunningham is with Col. and Mrs. W. D. Gordon. Miss Audrey and- Miss Stuart Me- giris | , Leod will come up from St. John, N.B, for the wedding of their cous- | in, Miss Kathleen Carruthers. | JOSSELYN'S WIFE By Kathleen Norris Author of "The Heart of Rach- ael," "Martie, the Unconqubred," "The Story of Julla Page," "Mother," etc,' To both father and daughter ths lingering twilight of the season's first warm day was memorably sweet blossoms in the village, doors were open, bareheaded women chat- ted over garden gates. All the coun- try sounds were set free again, voi- ces and the barking of dogs, and the honk of motor horns. A hundred lit- tle boats rode the satiny waters ot Manhasset Bay; old Captain Latimer, sauntering home, lifted his disreput- able old hat to Joe's friends from the Point. "I never was glad that I'm going to be rich before," Harriet said soft- ly after awhile. "It didn't make me happier at school, and it never has seemed to count very much since. But Joe's so ambitious, that I'm glad now--for Joe. He can travel, and af- ter awhile he can write books, as he longs to do." } Her father glanced at her. She was looking straight ahead, into the feathery green tunnel that was the road; her plain, intelligent little face was lighted with the great light of youth and love, He did not answer her. He thought of the nursery into which he had reverently stepped, nearly twenty years ago, to look at ~~ "nm A facturers of Wear-Ever. In order that the factory may have an record of thenumber of WEAR- EVER Fry Pans sold at the special price of $1.19, we are required to return to the fac- tory this Coupon with purchaser's name and address plainly written thereon. ADDRESS Replace Utensils that WEAR-OUT with Utensils that WEAR-EVER. Cut out this coupon present it to-day and get one : - durable Wear-Ever Fry Pans Careful attention given to mail or ders, it to be mailed add 14c for pos : 4 McKELVEY & BIRCH, Limited BIG BUSY HARDWARE Phone 237. Kingston, ONIN A -------- Rev. J. J. Monds, pastor of St. An. . drew's church, Almonte, had receiv- ed a call to Petrolia. Various alterations in the lows Temple at Gananoque are 'being' planned by A. Stuart Allaster, archi- tect, who has been engaged to carry ©ddfel-| out the work. - : 20 MILLION WOMEN ON BUYING STRIKE / They Refuse to Buy but are "Diamond Dyeing" old Gar- ments, Draperies \ Women are finding it fun to dia- mond-dye and add years of wear to vld skirts, dresses, waists, coats, Sweaters, stockings, coverings, every- thing. Easy directions in 'package. Don't risk your material in, poor dye that streaks, spots, or fades. Buy "Diamond Dyes" --no other kind. Tell druggist whether your material is wool or silk, or if it is cotton, linen or a mixture. 16-rich, fadeless col- ors. i A { hahha | | EXT time you're telephon- ing the grocer, ask him to send your favorite flavor in a Pure Gold Jelly Powder. Take a few moments to pre- pare it (instead of bothering with some fussy dessert), and serve it to the family that night. v Watch the look of interest on dad's face change to a smile of satisfaction as he tastes its wholesome 'goodness; listen to the exclamations of delight from the kiddies. You'll never . bold Desserts POWDERS Buy Your Desserts From Your Grocer have seen a dessert disappear as quickly as this will. You can have Puze Gold Jel- lies on hand--always. They'll solvé "your dessert problem whenever 2 dainty dessert is needed quickly. The better grocery stores carry Pure Gold Jelly Powders. All true fruit flavors in straw- berry, raspbefty, red 'currant, pineapple; lemon, orange, cherry and vanilla. Order your favor- ite flavor to-day. Pure Gold Manufacturing Co., Limited Terente his daughter. And nis heart was wrung with an exquisite emotion that was partly joy and partly pain. Days went by, and were weeks. It was June, and still the younger Jos- selyns were domiciled at "Villino dell'Orto," where all the roses were ig flower now, and the lawns as green as jade. Still Gibbs was desul- torily hunting for the right studio, Interrupting this enterprise wheneve; golf kept him in Wheatley Hills for the day, or when his father planned a two or three days' expedition for | them all in the car. Outwardly, the life they lived was ideal. The lovely house was at its prettiest now, and Lillian gave lun- cheon and dinner parties three or four times a week. She and Ellen motored to tea at the club, and brought the men home after their golf, or departed in great harmony for lunch or card parties, in the car. Ellen had some dainty new summer gowns, a rough crash with dark blue stripes, a handkerchief linen exqui- sitely frail and simple, a rose-check- ed French gingham in which even Lillian and her friends seemed inter- ested. ' But she was not happy. She did not want all these new luxuries and all these new friends; she wanted Gibbs, and she realized that they were daily growing further and further apart. He did not need her now; they had less and less to plan, to discuss, to decide. In their first days in America they | had gone to their room to talk tire- lessly, like children, to compare notes and exchange confidences. But they-did this no longer, Gibbs was usually tired of talking on the brief occasions when he and his wife were alone. He talked at breakfast, talk- ed while running into town in the car, met his old friends at noon and talked, came back to Wheatley Hills to be swept into the unending talk at the club, talked at dinner, and talked far into the night. "He would greet Ellen carelessly, and dress in silence. His life was full to the brim without her, all these lives were packed full without any particular reference to the claims of husbands and wives. Gibbs thought 9 'he was having a glorious time, he | down the heights of Mont Saint was excited, flattered, carried away by popularity. The men welcomed tiny cry that was soon to be stilled echoing through the gas-lighted, hot { room, : | (To Be Continued.) aew blood, another rival on the links, another hand at cards, another elig- ible dinner guest, dancer, and racon- teur. The women were all captivat-' ed by his unusual appearance, his easy French, his art, and his ambi- tion. They found in his indifference a supreme charm. He did not play their game any more readily than his odd but nice little wife did, but while no man ever dreamed of tak- ing the slightest liberty with domes- tic, serious, pretty little Mrs. Josse- lyn, half a dozen women at least would have been glad to be able to speak of Gibbs as a ¥suitor." Lillian lazily called Ellen's atten- tion to it: to the petticoats that al- ways fluttered across Gibbs' path at the club, to the intimate conversa- tions for which traps were eternally laid beneath his wife's very eyes, and Ellen was filled with a sort of sick anger and terror. Anger because she did not want to fight for what was by all rights her own, and terror be- cause sometimes she was smitten with the thought that she had noth- ing with which to hold him, should he try to go. She could not be her old self in this environment. She no longer feit like the busy little wife and mother who had so gaily climbed up and Etienne, Tommy toddling beside her, Gibbs rushing to the landing to meet her, or to bid Her farewell. Surely this was not the same Ellen who went into Yvonne's kitchen and mix- ed "cormbread Amasicaine to the amusement and admiration of the sturdy Lilioise? Had she, only a Year or two ago, been able to call cheerfully to Gibbs through a Brit- tany twilight that he must undress Tommy at once, tha bath was walt- ing, and was it the same Gibbs who had obediently come across high grass under gnarled appletrees to present her with a warm, nude, dusty Tommy to bathe? AR, and there were other times to remember: a night in a French hospital, and Gibbs' shining head against her a on an There can be only one soap for you, for toilet and bath, once you have discov- ered the refreshing frag- rance, the fine texture, the mild cleansing power of Infants-Delight. JOHN TAYLOR & CO. LIMITED Toronto, Canada INFANTS DELIGHT _ ITS WHITE immaculate countefpaae,

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