Daily British Whig (1850), 30 Jul 1925, p. 10

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG CROSS-WORD PUZZLE Just because America's dry, don't think that beer, 63. horizontal, S soak themselves snowy white in Rinso . One of the hardest tasks on washday used to be the washing of big, heavy sheets. You had to rub and rub away at the sheets and afterwards you were so tired that the rest of the day was spoilt for you. i "Today, no miore of that back-breaking labour is necessary. Just let the Rinso soap-suds do this work for you! It soaks dirt right out. Rinso dis solves instantly and completely in boiling water. Always use sufficient Rinso to get = 8 lasting suds after the clothes arq put to soak. Brothers Limited Wi Lever Brothers LY eruptions, and to establish a per- manent tondition of hair health. 25 and Soc. Talcum Be. E nome Lut Mi price Bose Cuticura Shaving Stick 28e. means soda pop. It doesn't! . Leather strip. 43. . To sew temporar-| 46. ily. 48. used in Recolls. . Pad of cotton used to arrest hemorr-| 52. hage. 55. . To equip. 57. . Returned (as mo-| 58. ney for a deposit).| 59. . Skill. 60. . Always. 61. . Resinous sub-j 63. stance. 64. . Article used by| 66. smokers. 68. 24. Married. } 5. To secure spotted] 69. effect of paint. 70. 7. Neither"s partner. 8. Exclamation of surprise. . Strong alkaline so- lution. . Point of compass. . Gaiters, . Amount at which a person is rated for assessment. . Hinders. . Compares. . Positive terminal. Poems. Ado. Beer. Asiatic lopes. . Tripod. . Stormed . By. . Full of . Bvil. . Part of . Country electrical Stepped. . Almost a donkey. | 45. Point of compass, Constellation. Printer's measure. . Exchanges. 50. Resinous substance Sorrowful. To repulse. Opposite of even. Patterned. Bmoothed. Titled persons. To question. Long grasses. Vertical. . To scatter. y 51. . Paid publicity. "bull fighters, . Lethargy. . To come in. - 30 14. Believers in same creed. To relate. Small inflamed tu- mors. Small candle. Shades. Lures. Unfolds. To be aroused from sleep. Edge. Mineral spring. To scatter hay. Wing part of 'a seed. Guided. To employ. Auriculate. 'Wainscot. Seat on a horse. Matures. Went bankrupt. Circles of ropes. Tree whose wood is a moth preventive. To poke. Valley. Vapid. Garment. Cry of a cat. Drone bee. Negative. To subsist. the 15. 18. 19. 25. 26. 28. 31. lacquer. 32. 33. 34. 36. 37. 38. 42. 43. 44. 47. 49. 50. goat ante- 63. 54. 55. 686. 61. 62, 85. 67. life. verb to be. famous Tor THAT YEAR OF FREEDOM BY MILDRED BARBOUR --% p.m.--Baseball scores. THE GOLD-DIGGERS WORLD Looking back of the affair after- ward, Larrabee hardly knew how he happened to drift into his friendship with Flora Hartley. But drift he did, and, before long, he was seeing the! willowy, wistful eyed, clinging, little creature almost every evening. Wary as he was after Caroline Pres- cott's pursuit, he still failed to note that it was Flora who deftly engineer- ed their increasing intimacy, not ym | self. Unlike Caroline, Flora had no use for straightforward, strenuous mea! sures: She pinned her faith to the old belief that strong men like helpless, | appealing, kitten-like women, who | gaze at them adoringly and show by) every word and gesture their complete dependence upon - their society. She had never failed yet when she put the theory into practice and, after a few weeks, she congratulated herself upon the fact that Dane Larrabee was her most shining example of the com- plete success of the system. As for Larrabee himself, he made; little attempt to analyze the impulse that kept him frequently in Flora's | company. She possessed not one qua- | lity that was essential to his ideal; woman. In every way except her ex- treme femininity, she was in direct contrast to Nan. But he was lonely, and it was good once again to have a pretty woman across a table when he dined, encouraging him to talk, mar- muring her admiration of his accom- plish ts. It was pl t to attend the theatre, or go to supper at some gay cabaret afterward, with a pretty companion, althou, his fastidious taste rather revolted at her choice of gowns, But there was still another reason which urged Larrabee to an acquaint- ance and an intimacy that was against his better judgment and his every sense of taste. It had its inception the night of Phil Tanner's party--the night he met gin caed Vi, had lef off dancing with him and told him to take a drink and wake up. His subse- quent meeting with the same young woman and others like her, when he | was accompanying Flora to this party and that, had deepened the conscious- ness in his heart that he wag not only no longer a man in the ie of his youth; and that years of business and recently a happy, contented, married life, had diminished the qualities that make a man attractive to women. That is the deathblow of masculine vanity! He wondered if Nan saw him that way too; if he were no longer a roman- tic lover to her, if that were really the secret of her becoming weary of him and going out into the world to see adventure among younger, fresher men. «It was a disturbing thought to Lar- rabee. His normal vanity, until then rather dormant, came actively and painfully to life. With a big wirile man's breadth of vision, he had al- ways scorned the so-cilled "ladies man." Now he would have asked no- thing better than to be so characteriz- ed- It was a dangerous time for him to discover this impulse! The immediate effect of his discov- ery was his deliberate cultivation of Flora and her kind of people--young people, gay people, ultra-modern and rather careless people. He wanted to emulate them, to play as they played, to be up to date and full of pep as they were. Most of all, he wanted to discover the qualities in men that made the girls declare that "So-and- So was a shiek," that another one had "the most marvelous line--my dear, ur pulse isn't countable when he's - the room," or "when he kisses you, believe me, you stay kissed." GOLD LABEL PILSENER SPECIAL ALE LAGER STOUT With a bottle of O'Keefe's in your hamper, you are content to wait for a bite. On sale at hotels, clubs, and restaurants. By the case from your grocer. O'KEEFE'S BEVERAGES LIMITED, TORONTO Local Distributor: E. BEAUP RE, Kingston Bottling Works TIAL IE 1 SIT, LIAN TARY House Wiring and Repairing All Kinds of Electric Apparatus Satisfaction guaranteed. Best work at reasonable prices, "THE DOWN TOWN ELECTRIC STORE" HALLIDAY ELECTRIC CO. Corner King and Princess Streets. "Phone 94. Answer To Wednesday's Crossword Puzzle. RADIO FRIDAY, JULY 81st. KDKA Pittsburgh, Pa. (309). 8.45 p.m.--Concert. WBBM, Chicago, Ill. (226). 8 p.m.--Orchestra music. WJZ, New York, (454). Re You will. like ol the ART of 5% 183] | ChasesSanborn's 1 Se SEAL BRAND ERE > (dil 3 233 CT hn COFFEF AIRTIGHY ~~ TINS oh - TEA SOLD IN e's wit TEA™ f p.m.--Wall Street Journal Re: view. 10.30 p.m.--Concert. WOC, Davenport, Iowa, (483). 8 p.m.-~Mrs. John Malloy, so- | prano Ralph Fuller, baritone, ||| Doyle trio. 1 WRBZ, Springfield, Mass. (383). 6 p.m.--Hotel Kimball trio. 6.30 p.m.--Baseball scores. 8.15 p.m.--Piano recital. 8.30 p.m.--Musical programme. 8.45 p.m.--Concert. 9 p.m.--Orchestra. 9.50 p.m.--Baséball scores. FOR SALE A BUNGALOW----4 rooms and Mhed, oak floors, good cellar, toilet, verandah, finé lot with extra driveway. Albert Street, near Princess. Price $2,000. Terms. M. B. TRUMPOUR 'Phone 704 or 2072w. WGN, Chicago, IL. (870). 6.30 p.m.--Drake concert en- semble; Blackstone string quintette. 8 p.m.--Studio programme. 10.30 p.m.--Drake Hotel Garden programme. WGY, Schenectady, N.Y. (379). 5:30 p.m.--International Sunday School lesson. 6 p.m.--S8trand | Theatre orches- tra. ' 6.30 p.m.-- Baseball scores. 6.40 p.m.--WGY orchestra. 8.15 p.om.~~Philharmonic orches- tra. ! ? 9.30 p.m.--Three one-act plays. : -- Complete radio programmes sold at Canada Radio Stores. RATTAN CHAIRS -- Fumed or Walnut finish, upholstered Spring Seats-- » - . $10.50, $12.50, $15.00 to $30.00 and Mattresses. |

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy