Daily British Whig (1850), 1 Nov 1922, p. 9

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¥ a WEDNESDAY, NOV. 1, 1022. The Telgmank School of . Music Plano, violin and other stringed' in- struments. Alida V. Telgmann, B.E., teacher of Elocution and Delsarte sys- lem of Physical Culture. Pupils may Nein at any date. Terms on applica- n. 484 BROCK ST. Phone 2217). Since Viking Days cod-liver ofl, now known to ® be exceptionally rich in the vitamines, has been a means of health and strength to thousands. | Scott's Emulsion SAYSREDPEPPER HEAT STOPS PAIN . INFEW MINUTES Rheumatism, Iumbago, neuritis, { backache, stiff neck, sore muscles, | strains, sprains, aching joints. When you are suffering so you can hardiy | @et around, just try Red Pepper Rub. Nothing has such concentrated, penetrating heat as red peppers, and when heat penetrates right down into pain and congestion relief comes at a8 soon as you apply Red Rub you feel the tingling In three minutes the sore spot warmed through and through and torture is gone. Rowles Red Pepper Rub, made m red peppers, costs little at any rug store. Get a jar at once. Be ure to get the genuine, with the name Rowles oft every package. DAUGHTER HAD TO HELP MOTHER Eq HEE |," y rn ante ar a ie ee bench--so near and yet |" HOME-MAKING HELPS | "Everything About the House Helps to Make the Home." By WANDA BARTON To do our work well, we must live in cheerful surroundings. There is no- thing more depressing to a woman than to work in a dreary, colorless kitchen. It has ceased to be a cause of wonderment that persons who work in monotonous surroundings get nerv- ous prostration. The wonder is that they escape it as long as they do. It is not always a matter of expense that keeps the owner of the dull kit- chen from freshening up. Often it hap- ns that she does not wake to the rea- ization of its deadly dulness until she has a jolt of some sort which causes her to see with new vision, then she 13 likely to get busy. We all know that is nothing better than fresh paint to give a place the appearance of af. fluence. Prosperous-looking environ- ment ig greater effort to ac- quire more of the agreeable things of life, which in turn makes for a great- er degree of happiness, and everything that creates happiness is valuable to the human family, The kitchen is the vital centre of the farm, and serves as both ki- chen and dining-room in many busy homes--the meeting-place, three times a day, for the amily and its helpers. The farmer's wife is a busy woman, for there is much to be done and help is scarce, and she should be surrounded by all the first aids that can be afforded and have a cheery place to work in. The up-to-date far- mer has all the {oder equipment he can get, magazines an papers keep the family posted on the general news, and their annual attendance at the i ™ What gulfs may lie between those who share 80_far apart are they! she looks with '"'careful carelessness" direction. And yet behind him Cupid rt cree " %: 15 £5 Diss OY 7 A AS : 8 AY : the same Painstakingly everywhere except in his THE DAILY ERITISH WHIG. | WANTED--AN INTRODUCTION By Juanita Hamel ~ pts - 4a " 5 1922, by Newspaper Feature Secacs. Inc.. Creat Britain rights reserved.v | her way, powerless because without proper introduction he | could not sanction-- Oh, for some human being to introduce lingers, leaning wistfully! them and stand sponsor for each to the other. county fair keeps them in touch with what others are doing in their line of endeavor, but it oftentimes takes some unusudl event to force them to realize the importance of pleasant home sur- roundings. When this happens, the owner of the kitchen is very likely to set a pot of paint and brushes in the middle of the floor and get her men busy in off hours "fixing up." An all-white kitchen is rather deli. cate for practical use, so we propose another combination. First, wash the kitchen walls and wood vor, then ave the side walls two coats of corn-col- ored paint and tint the ceiling a clear cream. Next, paint the woodwork a good mouse gray and cover when.dry with a coat of waterproof . varnish. This brings a sunlight effect to the walls and room and the paint may be wiped down quickly with a damp cloth when soiled with finger-prints. Paint the floor the same gray and varnish it with water-proof varnish, or better still, put on a blue-and-white linoleum floor covering. Next, wash and scrape down the furniture and paint it gray to match the rest of the room. Cover one table with sheet zinc and put reversible wooden rollers on it. Then it may be rolled up to the stove at serving time or to the sink at dish- washing time, and it will be found a great comfort and step-saver. Heavy cheesecloth curtains with blue and white gingham borders will be attractive at the windows, and gin- gham, slip-covered cushions may be used in the chairs where needed. This makes a cheery, practical and sunny- looking kitchen to work in at small outlay for materials, and it may be decorated in leisure hours. . Should there be a brick fireplace in the kit. bricks with white lines. Keep the stove polished and the faucets in the sink bright, to agd to the general appear- ance of careful upkeep. Another great convenience is a small vegdtable bin for daily use. This may be made with three compartments and a cover and castors, and should be built to roll under the kitchen ta- ble out of the way. It may be painted gray. A wood or coal box, also paint- ed gray, or a basket having a close bottom or a canvas lining, also paint- ed, may be used for the same purpose. Another step-saver is a so-called "tea-wagon," which can be made at home if there happens to be a baby- carriage available that has outgrown its usefulness. Remove the body of the carriage and mount two shallow trays on the frame, ten or twelve in- ches apart,.then paint the entire sur- face gray and varnish it. At meal- time, dishes may be stacked on this wagon and food may be passed on it, and in many ways it is as good as an extra helper. White oilcloth tacked neatly around the sink and drain- board, or back of a kitchen table, will save the wall from becoming splashed and can be renewed when shabby at a small expegse. Many persons get quarter-round moulding and paint it the color of the woodwork to keep the oilcloth in place. Another kitchen con- venience that is worth while is a drop baking table. This table is fastened to the wall with hinges, and its two fore- legs fold under when it is dropped against the wall and hook in position when it is standing. ready for use. This is handier than a moulding- board and is just as easy to wash. On- ly the legs and the piece where the chen, paint it red and stripe off the | table is fastened to the wall should be painted. Stand still and look about your kit- chen carefully, and see whether a pot of paint would mot turn it into the cheeriest place on the farm. Achieve an atmosphere of prosperity by using paint--freely, A FAREWELL BANQUET. Was Held in-Westport For Rev. and Mrs. Drysdale. Westport, Oct. 30.--On Friday evening in the Sunday school room of the Presbyterian church, Rev, A. W. Drysdale, scout master, Westport troop No. 1, was tendered a farewell banquet by the Boy Scouts and Girl Guides, who to the number of eighty gathered to do honor to him and Mrs, Drysdale. Mr. and Mrs, A. J. Culp spent the wegk-end in Smith's Falls. H. W. Lockwood returned home after spending three weeks in. the west. Rev. and Mrs. A. W. Drysdale will sail for Scotland on Friday, Nov. 3rd. Rev. G. W. Comerford is under going treatment in the Brockville General Hosiptal. Dr. W. D. Stevens and T. G. Butler leave next week for Madawaska for two weeks' hunt. Mrs. C. O. Richardson and children, Balderson, spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. John Forrester. If you burn the bridge behind you sour pursuers will have to wait or wade, ° An American missionary tells that the ancient Koreans used gunpowder 200 B.C. HIS AUDIENCE No maiter how many 'hundreds crowd the hall they | fade before his eyes--one face alone remains. "A thousand eyes may stare at him--he sees the eyes of only one. And | though he strives to touch the hearis of all. he is content «if he arouses true applause and tender 'approbation in the heart of one 'wonderful girl alone. By Juanita Hamel a "Mother makes the most ; delicious 'French fried' in the world!"* a They are crisp, tender and delicious. S She fries them in Cooket, a new veget- . able shortening of the utmost purity and richness. Cooket stands a very great heat,and when the potatoe is dropped in -- the outside is cooked 4 almost immediately. 3 Cooket is very economical and canbe used for all baking and frying purposes. COOK IT WITH~ (OOKET for frying and baking : Unrivalled for Purity All good dealers sell Cooket in tins of 5 11b. and 3ib. net weights. i LEVER BROTHERS LIMITED, TORONTO ©¢ Write for Cooket Recipe Book. h I TT UT or 3 Sr For Infants--dainty vests with the downy softness of the very finest quality wool . : --they cannot irritate the 5 tenderest skin. : They are unshrinkable and 73 retain shape and soft "fee]" ; after many washings, 4 --Tie-over style, (no buttons, : x 30 ping) or probed buttoning : 4 wii i a ha front. _ For older kiddies--underwear Ee of the same famous Mercury 4 We also make infants bands and ties. h ~for Comfort--ask for 3 sali Shi Ere

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