Daily British Whig (1850), 17 Sep 1924, p. 9

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NEWS AND VIEWS FOR WOMEN READERS The Quality "SALADA" XT El A is most appreciated in the 'ich. Y up Grape Nua: 6 hard. delicious flavor. Try it today. 'Mrs. foe. 3 5%, Siopped very sweet pickles, 1 ia gm , bi Ci chopped onion, 2 Pe tablesyonas finely - ch celery, 2 tablespoons awh, 1%; teaspoons salt, % MASOUD'S | | | BEE ICE CREAM will spread easily. Use a "The Cream of Creams" silver knife and spread on buttered slices of graham bread. This recipe makes Pasteurized and Homogenized. We freeze to please. _ Sold wholesale and retail. Extra Vitality to Push You On LUNSRARE NUTS, ks EVERY hour of the Biainese day your body uses up a tremendous amount of energy--energy which was fresh when you left home iii the morning. Lookout for four o'clock then! Look out for the time when you feel like slowing up--when your mind becomes sluggish from the all-day grind. That's when you should be able to call on an exfra supply of energy from the storehouse which is filled by only the most highly nourish- ing foods. » Grape-Nuts is the food you need. It's the most energizing food you can give your body. It's composed of whole wheat and malted barley-- wonderfully efficient builders of strength and vitality. The goodness in Grape-Nuts is taken into the body, too, for a long process slow baking concentrates all the food value of wheat and malted barley in a highly-energizing form. Don't slow up at four o'clock! Push on right through till closing time. Start right away to build up your system so that you can do this. Have Grape-Nuts for breakfast tomorrow. It's the most vitalizing, delicious and economical food there is. Four tea- spoonfuls with cream or milk are sufficient for, each Person and each Grape-Nats package contains many such servings. Costs 1c per serving. Your grocer can supply you. Ask him for it. Sling for eighteen sand. DELICIOUS PASTRY-- - ELECTRICALLY BAKED 238 Princess Street. "Phone 980. MRS. DOROTHY CAMPBELL HURD. By defeating Mary K. Browne of California in the finals of the recent woman's golf championship at Providemce, R.I., Mrs. Dorothy Campbell Hurd became the American champion for the third time. It was, however, her first triumph as an American representative. In 1909, playing as a representative of Great Britain and as Miss Dorothy Campbell, she won the event for the first time, defeating Mrs. R. H. Bar- Tow of Philadelphia in the finals 3 to 2. The following year as a representative of Hamilton, Can., she won again, her opponent in the finals being Mrs. G. M. Martin of Tavistock, England, 2 and 1. ITIVE NN. "See Us When In Need Of Tans We are distributors for EDISON MAZDA LAMPS HALLIDAY ELECTRIC CO. CORNER KING AND PRINCESS STS. i Incidentally that was the only American golf championship in history which brought together two alien representatives in the finals. Since those days Dorothy Campbell has become Mre. Hurd and" has Joined the ranks of American players. Always a consistent and steady golfer, capable of matching shots with | the best, yet Mrs. Hurd was unable to pass the outer edge of the champion- | ship circle since her spectacular bow to the American public 14 years ago. She had many children, but she knew what to do when it came to buying shoes for her boys and girls. She bought Chums shoes, because Chums shoes gave wear aplenty and when the soles became worn she could send them back to us through her dealer for resoling and resizing up to and including size 10%.. She also kept her children's feet perfect, because Chums -- for children of all sizes and ages -- are built to give * perfect freedom to growing feet. There are no other shoes like Chums. Ask for them by name 'Drop 1 a card and we'll send you our Chums booklet and name of your nearest dealer. Made Only By CHARLES A. AHERNS, Limited, Kitchener ' 's Shoe Store aur nan, Athens, was killed by a boit of effer- | lightning. An exception was in 1920 when she went to the finals, only to lose to | Alexa Stirling, 4 and 3. Mrs. Hurd"s record of returning to the heights | after a lapse of 14 years is almost without parallel in golf. FOREIGN TRAVEL. { Prove, Ashbury Park, N. J . Foreign touring is usually | thought of as requiring a trip over- seas and involving considerable ex- pense and difficulty. The British Whig of Kingston, Ont., gives a timely reminder that there is good foreign touring right next door, with everything made eady. Tha article is intended for Canadian readers, but is of interest to Am- ericans as well. Getting across the border is sim- plMeity itself. The American can states, within a day or two of leav- ing home. '""He can go on driving on the same side of the road. He can go on us- | Ing his own money (if he does not get too far from the border), and when he has spent it all he can tele- phone home for more. He can go on buying his own newspapers and magazines, nad listening to his own records on his own phoncgraphs. He | can drink his own coffee, and in | parts, also, other drinks that were | his own once but are so no longer, | And 'this individual who 1s irrestibiy | impelled by all these considerations | to come and travel in our midst is the greatest tourist that the world has ever known, and with every suc- ceeding year he has more money and more time and more cars and more inguisitiveneas and a keener desire for the great wide spaces with which Jack I Dempsey For the hea made nose, Bim when he cross over, from any of the northern | Canada is so plentifully supplied.' What would not Switzerland give to have at its doors, not the impov- erished peoples of France and Ger- mapy and Austria, but these lords of the wealth of the world?" Our Canadian neighbors are be- ginning to appreciate us. As for the pleasures and benefits "to be derived from visiting thelr big friendly coun- try, which is to-day in so many waya what ours was half a century or more agh, though with a neatness and onder running through its plo- neering, much more might be said than our northern néighbors venture to say themselves. Canada is prob- ably destined to be the playground of this continent. On Sunday, fire completely des- troyed the barns and outbuildings on the farm of Charles Edwards, Fair- field, purchased about sixteen months ago from Harris D. McDougall, now of Brockville. After the association of twenty- seven years with the staff of the Brockville branch of the Molsons Bank, C. BE. Baynes Reed, manager of the institution since 1918, has re- tired. Mr. Greene, who succeeds Col- onel F. C. Denison as American con- sul at Prescott, assumed his duties Mr. Green was transferred from Brazil. Falling down the stairs of her home in Morrisburg, Mrs. Jane Bock- us broke both of her wrists. JACK DOES SOME INTRODUCING bashfully may deny he is gugaged: but he can't getaway Fwith it among the homesfolks in Salt Lake City. t champion and movie aclor, with the re- t Eatelle Taylor also of the movies, up with dropped in for a little visit. His mother, Mrs. , met them at the depot. And after a while, Solin dropped around to see "Pa" Dempsey and the new sfep- mother, and duly introduced Estelle io them, also. "There's a Reason" rape-Nuts Made in Canada CANADIAN POSTUM CEREAL CO. LIMITED" Head Office: Toronto Factory: Windsor Made in Canada Bon for cleaning mirrors and glass-- To make mirrors crystal- clear, there is nothing to equal Bon Ami. It is made in both cake and powder form, Put it on in a thin soapy lather. It will dry in a minute to a soft, light powder, absorbing the dust, smears and finger-marks as it dries. Wipe off this powder with a soft cloth and the high polish of the mirror will be left, clear and shining, without a trace of fog or a speck of lint. So it is with everything. Bon Ami brightens up windows, nickel, aluminum, bathtubs, etc.

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