Daily British Whig (1850), 27 Jan 1922, p. 4

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THE DAILY BRIT IS FRIDAY, JANUARY 27, 1029. H WHIG. The Dread Pyorrhea Begins With Bleeding Gums Pyorrhea'sinfecting germs cause manyills. Medical science has proven this, Diseased conditions, 'which not long ago doctors were unable to trace to a cause, are now known often to be the result of Pyorrhea germs that breed in pockets about the teeth. Rheumatism, anaemia, nervous dis- orders and other diseases have been traced in many cases to this Pyorrhea infection. ¥ Don't let Pyorrhea work its wicked will on your ly. Visit yout dentist frequently for tooth and gum inspection. And watch your gums yourself. Pyorthea, which ve people over forty, begins with ras; then the gums recede, the afflicts four out of fi tender and bleeding gu out, or must be extracted their base, teeth decay, loosen and fall to rid the system of poisons generated at Forhan's For the Gums will prevent Pyorthea--or check its progress, if used in time and used consistently. Ordinary dentifrices cannot do this. F orhan's keeps the gums hard and healthy--the teeth white and clean. Start using it today. If gum-shrinkage has already set in, use Forhan's according to directions and consult a dentist immediately for special treatment. 35¢ and 60c tubes in Canada and U.S. If your t cannot supply you, send price to us direct and we will mail tube postpaid. Formula of R. J. Forhan, D. D.S. Forhan's, Ltd., Montreal Forha 5 FOR THE GUMS Checks Pyorrhea TO-NIGHT=] Tomorrow Alright 12X13 Get a 25¢ 'MAIN STREET The Story of Carol Kennicott By SINCLAIR LEWIS Iv Kenicott had returned at mid- night. At breakfast he said four several times that he had missed ner every moment. | On her way to market Sam Clark hailed her, "The top o' the mornin' to | yeg! Going to stop and apss the time |of day mit Sam'l? Warmer, eh? What'd the doc's thermometer say it was? Say, you folks better .come round and visit with us one of these evenings. Don't be so dog-gone proud, staying by yourselves." Champ Perry the pioneer, wheat- buyer at the elevator, stopped her in | the post office, held her hand in his { withered paws, peered at her with | tadded eyes, and chuckled, "You are | 80 fresh and blooming, my dear. Mo- | ther was sayinging t'other day that a | sight of you was better 'n a dose of { medicine." In the Bon Ton store she found Guy Pololck tentatively buying a modest gray scarf. "We haven't seen you for eo long," she said. "Wouldn't | you ge to come and play cribbage some évening?" As though he meant it, Pollock begged, "May I, really?" While she was purchasing two yards of malines the vocal Raymie Wutherspoon tiptoed up to her, his long sallow face bobing, and he be- sought '"You've just got to come back to my department and see a pair of patent leather slippers I set aside for you." In @ manner of more 'lian sacer- dotal reverence he unlaced her boots, tucked her skirt about her ankles, slid on the slippers. She took them. "You're a good salesman," she said. "I'm not a salesman at all! T just like elegant things. All this is so inartistic."" He indicated with a for- lornly waving hand the shelves of shoe-boxes, the sea* of thin wood perforated in rosettes, the display of shoa-trees and tin boxes of blacking, the lithograph of a emirking young woman with cherry cheeks who pro- > Never put off until tomorrow what You can have done for you today. Any men can lve within his means #2 he has means enough. It is quite easy to point out the ure, professional works them. "His Master's defects in @ man's programme after he has demonstrated that it is a fail- The amateur plays cards, but the claimed in the exalted poetry of ad- vertising,, 'My tootsies never got hep to what pedal perfection was till I got a pair of clever, classy Cleopatra shoes." "But sometimes," Raymie sighed, Victor Records Played by Leading Dance Orchestras Everybody Step Ka-Lu-A--Blue Danube B lues Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra Club Royal Ore The Sheik Birds of a Feather - Leave Me With a Smile - All Star Trio and Their Orchestr My Mammy - Weep No More, April Showers \ All on 10-inch Double-sided 85c. Fox Trot Fox Trot } 18826 Fox Tyot Fox Trot : } 18831 Fox Trot Fox Trot } 18834 Fox Trot Fox Trot } 18825 Paul Whiteman and His Orchestra . Ask to hear them Played on the Victrola atany "His Master's Voice" dealers Manufactured by Berliner Gram-o-phone Co., Limited, Montreal y Voice" 2' Masoop Bros. F. W. COATES (Jeweller) 158 Princess Street. - NYY R. J. RODGER Vic'or Rec rds and Needles ps x -- a 1 2 "there is a pair of dainty little shoes | like these, and I set them aside for | Some one who will appreciate. When | I saw these I said right away, | 'Wouldn't it be nice if they fitted Mrs. 4 Kennicott," and I meant to speak a] you fist chance I had. I haven't for- gotten our jolly talks at Mrs. Gur-| rey's!" | That evening Guy Pollock came in and, though Kenicott instantly im- pressed him into a cribbage gama, Carol wae happy again. Vv She did not, in recovering some- thing of her buoyancy, forget her de- | termination to begin the liberalizing | of Gopher Prairie by the easy and | agreeable propaganda of teaching Kennicott to enjoy reading poetry in | the lamplight. The campaign was de- | layed. Twice he suggested that they call on neighbors; once he was in | the country. The fourth evening he yawned pleasantly, stretched, and in- quired, "Well, what'll we do tonight? Shall we go to the movies?" "I know exactly what we're going to de. Now don't ask questions! Come and sit down by the table. There are you comfy? Lean back and forget you're a practical! man and lis- ten to me." It may be that she had been influ- enced by the managerial Vida Sher- win; certainly she sounded as though she was selling culture. But she dropped it when she sat on the couch, her chin in her hands, a volume of Yeats on her knees, and read aloud. Instantly she 'was released from the homely comfort of a prairie town. She was in the world of lone- ly things -- the flutt-~ of twilight Hnne's, the aching call of gulls along a shore to which the netted foam crept out of darkness, the island of Aengus and the elder gods and the eternal glories that never were, tall kings and women girdled with crust- |ed gold, the woful inftessant chant-' ling and the-- "Heh-chacha!"" comghed Dr. Ken- | nicott. She stopped. She remembered | that he was the sort of person who | chewed tobacco. She glared, while he uneasily petitioned, "That's great stuff. Study dt in college? I like 4 Dane McIN TOSH 4 Days Only | BROTHERS | Only Last of the Month Sale FOR THE NEXT FOUR DAYS THE FOLLOWING PRICES WILL STAND GOOD WAISTS A line of Ladies' Waists in Crepe de Chene and Georgette; in shades of Pink, White and Navy; reg. $4.50, $5.75 and $5.95. To clear ,....... easing. $2.25, $2.90, $2.08 MIDDIES--Ladies' and Girls' Flannel Middies in Red and Navy; usual $4.98. Sale ....$3.33 NIGHT GOWNS -- Ladies' Flannelette Night Gowns in White. Reg. $1.25. Sale VESTS and DRAWERS--Jadies' Vests and Drawers, $1.00 GLOVES--Ladies' Chamoisette Gloves in Grey, Brown, Black, White, Navy; reg. $1.00 ..e65¢. MEN'S WEAR All Men's and Boys' Underwear on sale «+ 25% oft each garment. SHIRTS--Men's Dark Grey Flannel Work Shirts ----special quality. Usual $3.25. sale .g2.10 GLOVES---Men's Unlined Work Gloves; usual price 85¢. Sale CAPS--Boys' Dark Tweed Caps, $1.25. regular Sale , oo ceireion ne et seen DRY GOODS COTTON DRESS materials in Khaki, Blue, Mauve, Green; values up to 85c. Sale tee ven mame vs. R0¢, yard WHITE FLANNELETTE--usua yard. Sale .......... KIMONA CLOTH suitable for monas; usual 40c. yd. Sale .. shades of Black, CHILDREN'S WEAR SCARFS8--Children's Wool Scarfs in Black and Red; usual price 35¢c. Sale , VESTS and DRAWERS Children's All Wool Vests and Drawers; prices from $1.25 to $1.50. Sale GIrls' Fleece-lined Vests lar 50c. Sale BABIES' BLANKETS--Baby Wool Blankets in Blue and Pink; usual price $1.50. Sale .89c¢, HOSIERY--You will save 20 % on every pair of Ladies' and Children's Hose purchased dur. ing the next fou days. 1 price--30¢, «+0 086. yard in Green and Red 88c. WHITE AND CREAM MADRAS CURTAINING --regular 25¢c. a yard. Sale 17c, yard MILL ENDS TABLE DAMASK in 2 --Tegular $1.70. Sale ENAMEL WEAR FOR 4 DAYS ONLY, 25% OFF ALL ENAMEL WARE SOAPS--1 Packet Lux and 2 Cakes Laundry Soap--Sale and Drawers--regu- HEAVY CURTAIN materials --regular $1.25. Sale Sree sinatra. yard lengths CROCKERY Milk Pitchers--reg. 75c¢. to 85¢. Sale White Tea Plates--15c. each. Sale ..2 for 19c. White Plates with Clover Leaf--sale 2 for 25¢, Glass Tumblers, usual 10c. each. Sale 2 for 12¢. SPECIAL!--4 ply Scotch Fingering Wool -- White, Black, Navy, Red and Grey. Regular $1.50. Sale ........... .... vw... $1.28 1b, 21 Se. Tessas poetry fine--James Whitcomb Riley and some of Longfellow--this *"Hia- wath.' Gosh, I wish I could apreciate that highbrow art stuff. But I guess I'm too old @a dog to learn new tricks," With pity for his bewilderment, and 4 certain desire to giggle, she consoled him, "Then let's try some Tennyson, You've read him?" "Tennyson? You bet. Read him in school. There's that: And Jet there be no (what is it?) «of farewell 'When I put out to sea, But let the-- Well, I don't remember all of it but -- Oc, sure! And there's that 'I met a ive country boy wno--' i don't remember exactly how 't goes, bat the cacrus ends up Ve arc seven'." "Yes. Well-- J3hatl we try 'The ldyl's of the King?' They're so full of color." "Go to it. Shoo." But he has- tened to shelter himself behind a cigar. She was not transported to Came- lot. She read with an eye cocked on him, and when she saw how much he was suffering she ran to him, kissed his forehead, cried, "You poor forced tube-rose that wants to be a decent --_-- SAWYER'S SHOE S DISCOUNT SALE OFFERS SAVING OF 20% ON ALL OUR FOOTWEAR. ALL SALES FOR CASH. NO DISCOUNTS ON RUBBERS Vomen's Five Buckle Overshoes, latest styles ces nninien eaee $4.00 The Sawyer Shoe Store Phone 159 184 Princ TOR arnip;"' "Look her now, that ain't--" "Anyway, 1 sha'n't torture you any longer." She could not quite give up. She read Kipling, with a great deal of E. Warburton emphasis: There's e regiment a-coming down the Grand Trunk Road, He tapped his toot ¢o the rhythm; he looked normal and reassured. But when he complimented her, "That was fine. I don't know but what you can elocute just as good as Ella Stowbody," she banged the book and suggested that they were not too late for the nine o'clock show at the movies, That wes her last effort to harvest the April wind to teach divine un- happiness by a' correspondence course, to buy the lilies of Avalon and the sunsets of Cockaigne in tin cans at Ole Jenson's Grocery. But the fact is that at the motion- pictures she discovered herself laughing as heartily as Kennicott at the humor of an actor who stuffed Spaghetti down a woman's evening frock.' For a second she loathed her laughter; mourned for the day when on her hill by the Mississippi she had walked the battlements with queens. But the celebrated cinema Jester's conceit of dropping toads into a soup-plate flung her into unwilling and the afterglow faded, {the dead queens fled through dark. ness, 316 BARRIE STREET » (Uptown Post Office Sale Fibre Furniture SATURDAY, JAN. 28th, AT 2.30 P.M. Sale of Manufacturer's "Surplus Stock Complete sets--Settees, Rocking Chairs, Arm Chairs, Tables, Dining Chairs, Fernéries, Jardinieres, etc., etc. Manufactured from Waterproof Washable Fibre in standard colors, Must Be Cleared At Your Own Price 8

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