Daily British Whig (1850), 20 Oct 1921, p. 3

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YQ AY, OCTOBER 20. 1921. The "FLU" weatherhis here, and the one real, relial§e pre- paration to combat the 1 fut is DR. HICKEY'S MIXTURE healing for Antiseptic and Coughs and Colds 25 cents L. T. BEST Prescription Druggist. Phone 50 - Open Sundays » unedmmon words--maybe, but yery common causes of HEADACHE We have glassus that remove these causes and give IMMEDIATE RELIEF Before consulting the physi- cian, before using medicines and drugs, come and see us. If your headache is caused by eye strain we cure it THROUGH PROPER GLASSES Keeley Jr., M.0.D.0. Optometrist and Optician, 226 Princess Street. 3 doors above the Opera House The shortest days of "thd year will soon be around again with their dark mornings. A Reliable Alarm Clock is a wonderful help towards getting up on time. We have a splendid assortment. Priced | from -- $2.75--$6.00 Marriage Licenses. Wedding Rings. Jewelers - Established 1540. Registered Opticians 85¢ Kirg Street Dr. Nash's DENTAL PARLORS: 183 PRINCESS STREET KINGSTON, ONTARIO We specialize on:--Painless Extrac- tion, Latest Treatment of Pyorrhea, X-Ray work. 4 - BLUE SERGE SUIT SALE From October 17th to October 22nd Regular $60 to $75 Blue Serge Suits --for-- $50 SPOT CASH Made to order in our regular manner, Fit guaranteed, CRAWFORD & WALSH TAILORS BAGOT and BROCK STREETS THE D mm ge A Joint Partnership ina Pup ---- By MARTHA WILLIAMS An adventurous small boy snatched the puppy from the dog seller, ran with { it, was chased, and, to escape' being | caught redhanded, dropped the poor | mutt into a dark areaway. There it | lay stunned for some time, but at last | Btruggisd to its unstead, legs, whim- | bering faintly, and tried vainly to | elimb the steps to the sireet. Morton | found It as he came out of the Italian | Festaurant, where he had dined. He | had made rather a pretesise of dining, | being nearly as miserable as the puppy looked. Misery loves company, hence, | perhaps, his action. strode, the dog cuddled in his paim, | | excuse lookin "Do you m : | almost under her smoftered. | | | Inio the light he | {sat down at the nearest vacant fable | and demanded Instantly milk and het soup. He had decided they would be comforting to the shivery, | to eat when food was set before it. | Morton, bending inthe effort to help, was amazed to see a woman's hand | stretched | clear voice said: | "Let me have him, | also a spoon. We must manage a | supper some way." Shortly he was watching a rather inscrutable young person, whom he had | bot noticed across the table when he [sat down to it, deftly feeding his pre- | tege, huddled In her lap. [ "There; that will do until next time," she said at last, as the shrunk- jen sides rounded almost dangerously. | "Keep him warm; he will sleep. Such |a beauty is worth a whole lot of | trouble." "He isn't mine--found him outside fo-evaldn's leave him to freeze this bitter night," Mortch hazarded. The girl smiled at him. "I'm glad | you couldn't. A lost puppy Is pite- ous. I know--I'm losi myselfzuntil 10 o'clock." "Why the time limit?" Morton asked, almost forgetting his own troubles in this new appeal to sympathy. Again she smiled, saying: "Polly set it;/she will be home then. I came a day ahead of my plans and was discouraged from walting on the stairs | outside her door. Do you think," look- ing suddenly straight at Morton, "I look the least bit ike a burglar's pal jor a confidence queen?' "A movie queen would be nearer the truth," Morton laughed, suddenly sensing the atmosphere of unostenta- | tious breeding his questioner exhaled. | "If you are walting here--may I keep | you company? With Trove for chap. | eron--that must be his name." "Treasure Trove," the girl repeated, softly. "If I thought you'd part with him--" pausing in embarrass | moa which Morton ended by saying: "You can't have him. for keeps, but I'l lend him to you gladly--if you Medhink Polly would permit--until I can find proper quarters for him." "Polly loves the under dogs--and 'the lost ones," the girl smiled back -at | him. As to staying--that is as you please. I shall be glad of company, but would hate to detain you. I'm not afraid in the daylight, much less In the dark. It's hardly more than a step], but I ordered my cab on the way in." 'You are a Wonder--with the capi- tal letter," Morton returned. "As such --your name, please--that I may ap- proach the presence properly. Here I am," extending his own card." No- body In particular, but not, I hope, wholly a bad sort." "I'm Ruth Desha--you never heard of me--but I knew you in spite of your glum look. Betty Bruton gave me one of your pictures when she--she decided to--go abroad," the girl an- swered. Morton flung 'up his head, smiling bitterly. "I got her weddin= Many Women Need Better Blood HOOVERS, PIANOS and VICTROLAS, CARPETS, CURTAINS , ! AND FURNITURE , . ~ TF Harris Co., Limited Phone 90 Furniture We have just now a large stock of, Chesterfield Suites, covered in Tapestry and Ve- lours in all the popular shades. > These are well constructed and will give excellent ser- vice and comfort. We are offering special values at this season. A "Look" you, will convince They Lack Vitality and Color. It is a fact proved by thousand of grateful letters that Hood's Sar- saparilla is remarkably beneficial to women, Whose most common ail- ment drain and weaken the system and .sometimes result. in anaemia, nervousness, general break-down. Women overworkéd by family du- ties or overstacked socially, find their nerves all unstrung, faces pale, appe- tite poor, sleep unrefreshing. k Hood's Sarsaparilla gives the blood more vitality and better color, makes stronger nerves, and contributes to the enjoyment of life. It embodies a long-ttied and found- true formula for relief of the pale, nervous and dyspeptic. SAGE TEA DARKENS HAIR TO ANY SHADE Don't Stay Gray! Here's an Old- - time Recipe That Anybody Can Apply. + The use of Sage and Sulphur for restoring faded, gray hair to its nat- ural color dates back to grandmo- ther's time. She used it to keep her hair beautifully dark, glossy and attractive. Whenever her hair took on that dull, faded or streaked ap- pearance, this simple mixture was ap- plied with wonderful effect. + But brewing at home is mussy and out-of-date. Nowadays, by asking at any drug store for a bottle of "Wyeth"s Sage and Sulphur Com- 'pound," you will get this famous old preparation, improved by the addi- tion of other ingredients, which can be depended upon to restore natural color and beauty to the hair. A well-known downtown druggist mes cannot be traced further In the latter part of the 10th have invented a flashless jy but not for the flashy girls. Everybody has his own roubles One man worrtes over buying a set of new tires for the car, while another worries almost as much over buying new tires for the children's feet. says it darkens the hair so naturally and evegply that nobody can tell it has been applied. You simply dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking ope strand at a time. By morning the gray hair disappears, and after an- other application or two, it becomes beautifully dark and glossy. beside his own, while a" small | beast, so small it did not know how | cards the nignt my last play was | "Still, that doesn't | § damned," he said, like a death's head." d--much?' Ruth asked breath. His mouth set as he nodded, but almost instantly and was blinking at him happily over Ruth's haods. "I. réchristen 'Luck,' " Morton all but whispered. Ruth looked at him narrowly. AILY BRITISH WHIG. Treasure Trove had roused | > him |] "14 Am grad she s#a-- "I-heHeve re witt + bring it te--both of us" He took her home to be embraced by a rapturous Polly, who, however, deserted shamelessly at sight of Luck. Luck, Indeed, became privileged-- when on puffy down cushions in _the---sun- niest window nook, with Polly at hand | | sketching his every pose. "Don't ming | hear a | word," she called over her shoulder. | Ruth; ensconced on a soft couch, mo- | tioned Morton to a place beside her, | me, good people. 1 shan't and after a little drew a hard breath, saying: "I wonder if I am going to make you think me crazy? "Impossible !" cried Morton. Again she. smiled: "But wait tm you know all. I want a playfellow-- it is what I have come here for. nobody to take me there--and couldn't leave granny if I had had. Now--she has gone--I don't want to do anything that w own property. I want to spend them --waste them, If you like--in making | And I can't-- | my dreams come true. unless you help me." "How? Morton asked suddenly, de- ful. to man--Dutch treat, you know--and all that--showing me whatever is worth seeing. Not risque things--I hate flith--but places and people where I can't go alone and where dear old Polly won't care to take me. You won't get mushy like the men at home --because of Betty, you know--we can be just pals, playing in the sunshine, Don't you think it*would help you? Maybe a lot?" "I am sure of it," Morton said al- most gayly. "The plan is heavenly-- except for the Dutch treat regulation. Won't you relax that? I'm not quite 8 pauper, if the play did get itself damned." + "I know what we can do!" Ruth cried gleefully. "Dutch treating may g0 hang--but you'll take me places, and then I'll take you to places--and we won't ever speak or think of any- thing so vulgar as money--except when we are paying the checks." "Handsomely compromised," Morton ty had sent back his ring. He made a strong mental nances in future. cdlla #iding on it, Followed three blissful menths. The more he saw of Ruth the more won- derful she became. She had the finest intuitions, the kindest heart in the adjustable, of course--and de- n the motto to be engraved entreaties as to absolute ownership of Luck. "A diamond wrist-watch will be nearly as much trouble and a heap month; he has outgrown this town, Just as I have, and needs God's out- doors to find himself, in." "How about me? I am under the illusion of owning him," Morton sald, over her shoulder. She looked at him in mild surprise, "Of course you own him--that's partly why I am taking him--so you will have no excuse for not coming aleng." ARE KNOWN BY THEIR _HATS Variety of Headgear Distinguishes the Various Tribes in the Cap- ital of Persia... Every city, town or district of any Importance in Persia is sure to have representatives at the capital, Tehe- ran, and -there are picturesque repre- sentatives of numerous tribes as well. The readiest means of distinguishing the latter is by their headgear, says a writer in the National Geographic Magazine, The Kurds, of which there are 600,- 000 in the country, wear hats which look for all the world lke huge, in- verted black coffee-pots bound round 'with gay silk handkerchiefs. The Bakhtiaris, from the mountains in the direction of the British ofl fields, In southwestern Persia, whose chiefs maintain a numerous retinue ip Te heran, wear white felt preserving kettles. In fact, a dissertation on masculine Persian headdress (women are not allowed to wear hats) would give a ready key not only to recogni- tion of the different races of Persia, but even of the different classes of Society, since hats are ra removed except when the owner and vary in appearance and dimensiens from. the huge, pillowlike turban of the mollah, or lady's woolly muff of the Persian Cossack, to the round, brimless felt or lambskin cap worn by the middle and upper-class urban residents, . -------- You cannot get her to" admit it, but just'the same we are williig to bet there. are times. when a woman wishes she had the nerve to wear as much warm clothes hese chilly days as her husband does. Most of us think if we had been in the other feliow's place we could have done better than he did. Put own jobs would herdly prove it. The casual observer might not think so, but dad, who pays the bills, knows' the girls bave plenty of clothes. bark is used in some instances for staining cloth. The brown juice of . "butternut" Morton called next afternoon | he found the puppy lying In state up You | | see, down In the grass country I've | bad years of reading and dreaming | | of life out In the world. I've had | d have hurt her--but she | left me a few thousands outside my | ciding that blushes made her beautl. "By playing with me--just as man laughed, his first real laugh since Bet- | reservation as to fi- | Then trifiés being | adjusted he proceeded to serious mat. | ters, "such as measuring Luck for a | world. They made her deaf to Polly's | more stylish," she said in mitigation, | "Luck Is going home with me next | the failures we have made of our} | Bargains!!! 3 A stirring list of special values that should arouse the interest of all thrifty women. 2 Double Discount Stamps 4 From 9 to 1 O'Clock An opportunity to save ten per cent. on all your regular cash purchases by shopping in the morning. FY All Wool Serge - Reguar $2.00 Value---Friday $1.29 Friday $1.29: inches wide, in navy and r-value, at this very special 81209, black only---this is absolutely a supe value. : Friday PR ang * 25Doz. House Dresses Regular $2.00 to $3.00 Values Friday $1.49 25 dozen print house dresses in a large assortment of light and dark patterns in sizes from 34 to 44---marked for a quick clean-up--your choice .. .. ..". .~ .Friday $1.49 Bed Comforters Regular $3.50 Each Friday $2.69 Friday $2.6 Art Sateen, covered heavy cotton filled comfort- in. size---a broad assortment of colors and pat- y last. . .. .... Friday $2.69 60 only fancy ers, full 60x72 terns for your choice---while the White Flannelette Night Gown Friday $149 10 dozen only heavy white flanneléite Night Gowns, in good full sizes. Regular $2.00 ... .. ...... Friday $1.49 *- ' t » + - Limited hl Steacy's =e =

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