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

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LSTRENGCTH minoria A Cuts grease CALI Td Softens water Sewing Machines Spring is here and you will want to do a lot of Get that troublesome machine overhauled dnd adjusted by an expert. J. M. PATRICK 119 SYDENHAM ST. Phone 2056J. == CHOICE WESTERN MEATS and ii - Phone 1182 282 Princess Street BE ------------------------ - Sg SARA ME, Alt, Rectal ent rset di ra 0 A A re Pre | Parkers Dye Works | Cleaners Dyers sewing. THE "LIFTUP" (Patented) 4 ALL BIAS FILLED CORSETS are dp 'signed in conformity with the science of Ansiomy The "LAMtup™ a patented invention with non-slip elastic inside. belt, gently sup ports the abdomen, and is very beneficial for use 'T an operation involving' an abdominal incision. Most. effective in re- lleving those physical ailments from which many women suffer, Write us NOW. for useful hints on filing and self-measurement. Free upon request. BIAS CORSETS LiMirTen 41 BRITTAIN STREET " TORONTO ~ Where Do You Have Your Things Cleaned? AT PARKER'S, OF COURSE There is as great an art in cleaning garments as there is in dyeing them. Experience teaches that Parker's excel in both. We have studied the treatment for every fabric, every color, and every kind of blemish. From Georgette to velvet brocade, from white gloves to furs and feathers, you can safely entrust your treasures to us for cleanirg, confident of satisfaction. Branches and agents everywhers. 69 Princess Street, KINGSTON "THE ¥ DA In the Realm of Women---Some In |see you. Are you the author of f Told in the Twilight { | ! {Centinued From Page 1.) Mrs. Richard Cartwright, Univer. | Walsh wedding on Thursday, is with | Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Lambert, | ILY BRITISH the author of 'Wayland"s Moral Sci- | + HIG rs 'Wayland"s Moral Science?' © "No," replied the newcomer "But Shoe yas Inemuthor of mer REGARDING RAW FUR PRICES There Is World Scarcity for Fresh, Seasonable Goods." Last spring and summer raw furs sity avenue, entertained at bridge on Thursday afternoon in honor of het guest, Mrs. Alexander Henry, Toe- Clergy street, for the . . Mrs. W. 8: Connolly, Hamilton, .is { The trappers this spring, for their the guest of her sister, | declined considerably from the specu- week-end. . [latively high peak reached in 1919: Mrs. William {prime muskrat skins, received the onto THT€e tables were in play, and. | the guests who won the pretty prizes { were: Mrs. Ashby, Mrs. G. W. Mylks, fand Mrs, Charles Livingston The | cosy rooms with their bright open | fires, ferns pink begonias , and hy- | drangia, were a welcome haven from the dreary weather out of doors. Al | the tea hour, Mrs. D. G. Laidlaw and [Mrs.\W. W. Gibson made the tea in | the dining-room, where the color sch- leme was also' pink, carcied out in the | sweet peas and pink candles decking | the charmingly arranged tea-table. | * . . - | The "Normandy Peasants," gave a jolly. supper party at the Grand Cafe citer the performance of 'Queen Zephra," at the Grand Opera House on Thursday evening. Mrs. Drake and Miss May Perry were guests and the former brought with her the lovely. bouquet of sweet peas, given her dur- ing the 'performance by the news- boys, and it centred. the pretty sup- per table . . * Mrs. John i. Whiting, street, and will spend the summer in France and Switzerland. Her son, St. Clair Ward, McGill College, Montreal, will Join her fn England, where he will | take a military ..course with the | Grenadier Guards at ( helsea. = * -. -. Mrs. W. Ennis Kidd, Wellington street, 'returned on Thursday from a vigit to Hamilton. D. 1. G. Bogart, Wellington street, left for New York on Wednesday. Mrs. Thomas Harold has come from Vancouver, B.C., to spend the {Summer with her mother, Mrs. Wil- | liam Cochrane, Frontenac street. Rev. W. T, G. Brow n, William streei, went to Toronto on Friday. Migs Margaret Walsh, Cobourg, {who came down for the Denyes- em mmm, in mn, Bermingham, "Otterburn." Major-General Sir Archibald Mac- donell, Royal Military College, has gone to Windsor. Mrs. J. M. Campbell, "Glen Lyon," Emily street, left on Wednesday for average price of $2. Fisher sold as high as $165; red fox, $15; raccoon, $6; beaver, $26; mink, $5 to $15; otter, $28. Below you will find a summary of the New York fur auctions on April 15th; Strong demand, mink very ae- Clergy | will sail for England in May, | | St. Louls to spend several moriths | with Dr. and Mrs, L. Dunbar Steven- | son. very satisfactory, all furs selling from | Mrs. James Richardson went to twenty-two and a half per cent, to | Toronto this week for a few days, but {forty per cent. higher than January, | Is again with Miss Agnes Richardson. Summary of Hudson Bay London | University avenue. fales received April 21st: There was i - .. so a general rise in prices: OfMcial com- Miss Marjorie Ellis, Smith's Falls, {parisons were: Beaver and silver fox [ who came to Kingston for the Deb- {10 per cent.; muskrat, 20 per cent.; {yes-Walsh wedding is the guest cg |otter, 25 per cent.; fisher, 30 per | Mrs. George McLeod, Barrie street. |cent.; cross fox, 5 per cent.; white | Mrs. Friel, who has been the 8uest fox and mink, 25 per cent.; marten [of Mrs. H. W. Richardson, "Alwing- land wolverine, 20 per cent.: Russian jon." left on Wednesday for Chicago. (sable, 10 per cent.; lynx, 35 per Mrs. M. B. Baker, William street, | cent.; grey wolf, 33 per cent. All after a month's visit at Pittsburg, higher than October. Maximum Nees | Pa., has returned home. were: Northwest marten dark, 380 tive; Prices obtained regarded as teresting Features -- Full of flavor gathered from mountain breezes in South America Co fT © NOTHING ADDED NOTHING TAKEN AWAY SOLD IN TINS ONLY~BY ALL GOOD GROCERS rie - qui, pool Silks Garment 57 ol [| Mr, and Mrs. William McCarthy, | shillings; mink strong Mackenzie { Earl street, have returned from a | River, firsts 78s.; lynx, firsts, 240s; Lwo months sojourn in Florida. | wolf, firsts, averaged 100s.; squir- . ' jrels, 5s.; red fox, firsts, 80s.; mus- v % * | quash or muskrat, 9s to 12s. : Mrs. D C Macarow and her | daughter, Miss Frances Caverhill, There is a world scarcity for fresh | seasonable goods. | Montreal;-will spend ten days in New York. : | Miss Minnes, Kingston, is visiting | | her brother, Dr. R. 8. Minnes, and { Mrs. Minnes, Ottawa. | Prof, Stafford Kirkpatrick, Otta- | wa, is with his mother, Mrs. W. Kirk- | Patrick, Barrie street, for the week- { end, Mrs. T. G. | Smith, Bagot street, attended Smith and Wililam the Hodgins-Fielding wedding in Ottawa Wednesday, | At the Hodgkins-Fielding wedding | in Ottawa, the groom, Captain GW. | F. Hodgkins, was attended by his | brother, Col, F. Q. Hodgins, D.8.0., | Kingston. : jos FAMOUS "WITS" OF HISTORY By MARK STUYVESANT. : ) non | How Spurgeon Humorously Chided | a Backslider. The genius which bullt the great est non-conformist church in Eng- land, the Metropolitan Tabernacle of London, was possessed of many an- gles. 'Indeed, some persons of the congregation which built the Taber- nacle for Charles Haddon Sputgeon believed him endowed with supernat- ural powers. They told of such in- cidents as the following to substanti- ate their statements: In a burst of eloquence during one sermon Spurgeon declared there was a man in the gallery listening to him 4 nomen py ) i down to give him her hand in pledge of a better life, "There was a similar sequel," writes the Rev, W.-J. Fullerton in his interesting biography of the great preacher, when Spurgeon uncon- sclously pointed to a certain man and sald: "There is a man sitting there who MRS. BRIDGET GILMOR Toronto's oldest citizen, who died on Tuesday at age of 104. Wise or Otherwise. : "Mama, is papa going to die and 80 to heaven?" . "Of course not, Bobby. Whatever Is a shoemaker; he keeps his shop {put such an absurd idea into your open on Sundays. - It was open last |head?'--The American Legion Sabbath morning. He took ninepence | Weekly. = and there was fourpence profit on it. | 4 His soul is sold to Satan for four- pence, "This man," the Rev. The sea-serpent sometimes gets to {be 600 feet long. But he never gets Fullerton | so big that you couldn't get him into |& quart bottle of bootlegger's hooch. Our idea of the height of some- thing or; other is to hear a chorus Outlast the " Rosesof France Help Canada's Beauties. Attar of Roses, mad, from, athered Jag in Scathoce fables the natural flomer extracts which give s Own Soa lingering mond p its delicate fragrance : and adds to the beneficial effect on ~ g " Improve your ion by kee ing the skin ep sion by keep. use of Baby's Own Soap and water--Dry AEE, ACCS = ) 'BABY'S OWN XVE Sold by Druggists, otc, Everywhere, ALBERT SOAPS, LIMITED, Mu, MONTREAL, While we are agin the Anti-Tao bacco League, it might be a go0« thing to have parliament limit th size of a chew to at least one half o Our idea of a diplomat is a hus- band who can get his wife an electri. washing machine and make her for- get that it was an automoile that she girl gushing about her profession. wanted. one pack of. scrap. "Ah!" Said Spurgeon. "You 'with a bottle of gin in his pocket. It 80 happened that there was such a a man and that he was so startled that he became converted. A woman who had determined on suicide came into the Tabernacle one Sunday to hear a last message which might prepare her for deith The text was "Seest thou this woman." It so impressed her that she gave up the thought of suicide, and told Spur- geon the reason when she rushed of the Columbia Grafo- nolas place them back again on the pre-war basis of value. Call inf for new prices. CORNS Lift Off with Fingers Doesn't hurt a bit!/ "Freezone" on an stantly that corn sto shortly you Iift it right - Truly! - our druggist of "Freesone" Drop a little ng corn, in- hurting, then off with fing- | business was the sale of a celebrated "| ber of ting as a present, In feturn, Have a Good Consciefice says, "was afraid to 80 and hear Spurgeon again for feAr he might tell the people more about him, for what he had said was true' He con- fessed it later." Some persons may find examples of similar qualities in the way Spur- geon replied to an inquiry addressed to him by an actress. This ydung woman had introduced into her act | . a song about Mr Spurgeon. Some of | the London newspapers protested, | and so she wrote Spurgeon on the | subject. He replied: "Dear Madame, I am very grate- | ful for your courteous inquiry, and | feel sure that I may 'leave what is | purely hands." Needless to say the song was with- drawn, . But Spurgeon could be stern when he considered thst cire mstances re- quired such treatment, and at the same time witty. It is said that a S0n of one of the deacons, after pro- longed absence from the services at thé Tabérnacle, met Spurgeon and declared that his conscience would not let him stay away any longer. ing out with fully. "Ah!" said Spurgeon. "You have | a good conscience." But the answer- | ing smiles of the young man van- ished as he added: "Almost as good as new, for you haven't used it much." + One or Spurgeon's friends, whose brand of ox tongues, sent fiim a num- Spurgeon sent him two or three of his books of sermons with this In- scription in each: * "A sample of tongue." 2 That Spurgeon "could appreciate wit in others 'is evidenced by this at bit "of repartde, which is recounted . in his biography: ns "Hello, Dr. Wayland!" he greeted my own preserved an American visitor. "I am glad to To free your skin from blemishes --rhe right way Ask a skin specialist why it is that disfigu n : tell you that this condition comes from an outside infection. question of taste in your | dickies on the 4 ny ead, dually but thoroughly fi owing simple treatment, you can gradually but oroughly free Youre om blemishes: ACH night just EG sade finishing with a dash of cold «Now dip the tips of your fi "rub them on the cake of are covered with a heavy, : Cover each blemish with a thick coat of this and leave itron for ten minutes. - Rinse your face water, then wit Su ment this treatment with the re Parl Soap in stantly forming free . Get a cake of Woudlny's today, at any drug store or toilet goods counter, 25-cent cake wi of this treatment and for general cle Jergens Co., Sinus, New York and Perth, Ontario. ' / our skin is continually break- little blemishes. He will almost certainly skin now say that skin blemishes are gener- a parasites which are carried into the through dust and soot in the air. By the fol- before retiring, wash your facé 's Facial Soap and oe water, water, and dry care- Ts in warm water and oodbury's until they creamlike lather. thoroughly, first with clear hot oy : Ey. ar use of Woodbury's daily toilet, to keep © new skin which is con. your from blemishes. last for a month or six weeks ansing use. .The Andrew

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