Daily British Whig (1850), 2 Oct 1916, p. 10

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PAGE TEN THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, MONDAY, { FRM THE COUNTRYSIDE, MR. GORDON COMPLIMENTS ME. you do not show such tenderness very joften. Is that right, Roxane?" (Copyright, 1916, by the McClure "1 supposa it 18," I replied medit N spaper Byndicate). o ry "Ry oy . Have New De aoa out to go, tively, * Bus perbaps1 have had thi ol YOU KNOW FOU oan: a core votn tle Ba 10% > Of course you Ba [ere a very pathetic little figure tha It may havé been soe smal] affair | By deca I must been," « which involved no more Serious con- | "EE Mm. "I often w : sequences than the hardening of |) Aim Ry afm. t > ol : your conselence, or it may have been | '= 5 eves os Gut ol Last " something, laden with terrific possi-L%"" he ncle John has always bilities. In either event you know me at it was your wxatiple what It is to be burdened with some- | pulled Ta thioug h, and | am thing your mind will not throw off, Bete is gs 2 : which you may be able to forget mo- | ~ 3 0 Whig mentarily to a certain extemt, but "oT Mr. Gordon. which still hovers like a shadow over '00 An though ay were hol brave a & se Ph y 16 your soul JO, a observed quickl) I This wa | passengers all sald they might have ternoon on the long drive to Mr {wanted for everything had you not . been there." Gordon's club. 1 knew 1 should not | Deen there." ; have gone and that in any event | Passengers imagine many thing should have telephoned Arthur or{ "Dich are not true.' -No one knows my plans. This Bp Loy not done To that. better than a railroad man. In - : fac ef imaginat 8 be sure, we expected to be back in act, Shely in Ag ations New York long before Arthur reach-!' Bb hoi tony ia ed our hotel, so that it would be a tid a } nony. is a -- . 41 : 1 Bb ane 1y merely a matter-ef my telling him witnesses, Mr. Gordon." 1 said. "Both that I had taken luncheon with my ' " . two friends. But this did not satisfy "ariam'and I happened to be there." me, | knew when | told Arthur he Mr 1 ras i hod Sa¥ interposed would be displeased, He had shown iordon, delicately turning the me only the night befo that he would not approve of my associating too ouch with Mr. Gordon, and here I was, with his words still ringing in my ears, driving far away with the very man to whom Arthur object- ed. I consoled myself with the thought that Arthur had no right to object to Mr. Gordon, but the consolation was have told which | j gure | . HE were very the way with me that af- supported though I had not known you or been time, 1 have seen ypu under rather | varying circumstances. My first! glimpse of you was when you were serving in the capacity of a volun- teer nurse and comforter to Mariam. Then I had the mournful pleasure of isting you from the wreckage of ae |@ sleeping car Later [ saw you not lasting. I knew that if I Was | hen you were your normal self, with He honest with myself I would admit | ov ontional surroundings that Arthur had both right and rea- | Mariam [ never saw gs. sou on his side. No matter what| WHEE . BEVE au so resolutions I had made or how much to see you more beat tiful." self-control Mr. Gordon possesséd, |.) 0 even | nate Jobs is paying the same danger which became a you compliments," laughed Mariam reality in Audobon Park in New or- "The man who never sees anything leans might lurk Dear me so long 4%! worth while in women is really say: Mr. Gordon was in my company. ing nicé things about one of us." But these thoughts, which, caus- "I wish all women deserved nice | ing momentary and periodical de- | pings said about them." returned pression, could not completely MAT | rr. Gordon. "But I fear they do pot. | my enjoyment or keep me from show- | = = *a Suffrage parade the other | jug that 1 was pleased with the day, and I wondered what kind of' hy ' ' . archi | "Isn't it fine!" exclaimed Mariam. [men ora hu the street, maf hisg | vl can never get enough of things guy' yireq, "unkempt.looking they | like this. The air is so exhilirating, | wore" [thought of you, Marissa, and] the country se beautiful, that it {of you, Mrs. Pembroke, and could | makes me feel like a bird flying over |, + imaoine either of vou doing such | the landscape." : ny. 2 thing." : ! "It is glorious!" I returned, as Mr " t i . 55 Gordon smiled first at Mariam and cua raid | am nat yeh of 4) then at me. "It has been a long time |r y wera 'I wouldn't ke that. It is | since I saw anything grander or en- |g waieulous. It reminds me of a lot | joyed anything more keenly. of foolish schoolboys parading | I am so glad you are enjoying through a town on the day of a big | it," Roxane," declared Mariam earn- |g, 41.1) game, only with the suffrage | estly. "And 1 do believe you are. » | Sour chteks ar. an sony aa wo wp. [Ble thre ln't'eVen' che" Ehime © ples, and your eyes are as bright as . : 80Ing to stars." bin talk about that horrid subject, There, | I felt myself blushing at my I see the clubhouse in the distance. | friend's words, and my color mount- Isn't it a beautiful place?" | ed higher when. Mr. Gordon spoke. It was, indeed. Stretching before | "It Is something new for me to see you thus," he said, gazing at me in- us for miles was the rolling, deep- green, grassy landscape, and rising | tently. "I have seen you under other circumstances----some unfortunate, to our right was the low, rambling building where our luncheon was | some commonplace, some pleasant; but this is a novelty. Do you re-J member when we first met on the railroad train going to New Orleans. It seems years and years ago, does it not? Yet it has not been quite twelve months," | "It does seem ages and ages," !|telegram broke in Mariam, "I shall never for-| brother, ani lope |g us all hungry, and when the car drew |S up to the entrance we were not slow in tumbling out. {To be continued). Anthony J. Moxon, had | . Pr A Gn ens He He found on frequently Th two very competent He But Doe pres associated with you for a very long (50 couldn't He But He I am like He' being prepared, The drive had made | err September Morn. r Hubbard went to the ¢ up- yard 1 a bottle of beer, : got there the cupboard re Ribition was here. the taverp- Ppiifchase me aie > t when he got there the place wa i him wood spirit I was terrific! BT ? a Vet to prescribé for a y would do--say a pint d a half, rety ed him fa bottle contained only water alts, ' Vet play and went to a doctor for rum for a boil, ribed sulphur and sweet castor oil onversation from himself, "that al- | He went to a druggist without a pre scription, liquor of any de- get scripjon. sought a blind only resort; when it was in court. went to the farm wut a rest; thought when released, tion was best, g glad to be freed from King hol's power: goes thirsty or drinks sour, pig as raided kg landed at Guelph for prohib Alco now he lemon LATE HON. JOHN 'COSTIGAN. Member of four Conservative Gov- iments at Ottawa and finally Liberal nator, who died on Friday last. H. E. Olafield, wife and baby, | Huntsville, Ont., arrived in Picton this week, position in the dress goods and silk H. M. Moxon, Picton, received a|departemnt of G. E. Fraser on Friday stating that his | Limited. Mr. Olafield has taken a Sons, Mrs. Royal Church has purchased get how kind you were to me thai died very suddenly of heart faflure | her home and furniture, Picton from day. You know, Roxane, 1 some-|at his home in Binghampton, N.Y. times think that the tenderness which | you showed toward me that day was| sold his farm, has i the | the dearest experience of my life. purchased | the executors of Robert Adams, Greenbush, having | Church, deceased. the late Royal Albert Vallette, an old resident of I| farm of his neighbor, Edward Vance, Picton, employed for many years in have thought about it many times,|and Mr. Vance has bought Willetl the Pars foundry, died on Sept. have when I do think about it is that Norton's farm near Orser church. 2 NI i i ss ND 3rd. Putting It Over The Line Many a man can think up plays in sport or business who lacks the rugged strength and energy to carry them out. | Human power comes from ve food, and it is vitally essential that it contain the elements required by both body and brain--in good balance, Grape-Nuts combines all the nutriment of whole wheat' and malted barley, including their mineral salts 30 necessary to thorough nourishment. - J , Grape-Nuts is a winning food--ready J 8 . Wo eat direct from package, easy to digest, 'Every table 'should , have, its 3 daily, ntion of Grape Nats," | | & shop for a bottle of | Pte: Young, V-C., (wearing cap) playing bowls, his fav= orite game, on the hospital green before he died. . hoped that an operation would cure him and enable him to return to the front, but he suc cumbed a day or two after the picture was taken. ; A A A A A AAA AA AANA re ti nemo THE NEW DUBLIN. of misgovernment. The' present Under-Secretary does not seem to be inclined to recommend the Govern- ment to rebuild. Nevertheless we believe we can make out a case which Parliament must listen to. When 2,000 rebels take possession of houses, and the Government blows the buildings to pieces to get at the rebels, the Government is morally re- sponsible for replacing them. The Coliseum Theatre, which cost £40,000 and was only built two years ago, was like properties of a similar nature not fully insured. The corporation meanwhile is losing £16,000 in rates while the ruins exist, and how can it provide the ne- cessary employment? The working class difficulty is abnormal just now. We pay £8,000 to clerks and officials, and £70,000 to workiig men alone. We shall be compelled to part with temporary men. With regard to the question of re- building the slums, this must wait until after the war. fact, we had 13 rebuilding schemes on hand, but are not allowed to bom row money to carry them out. : All the same, we have borrowed £24,000 for housing plans and another £34,- 000 to finish the Roundwood water- Yoia, This work will be done in Plans for the Restoration of the De- stroyed Sections. One of the "burning questions" connected with the restoration of sections of Dublin destroyed during the recent riots is as to whether the British Government shall foot the bills or the municipality, or whether there shall.be a division of the bur- den; and also just what shall be the character of the restoration. Dis- cussing the problem with a corre- spondent, James M. Gallagher, the Lord Mayor, had the following to say: : One thing appears certain, namely, that the owners of the-houses whieh have been destroyed, as well as the other occupiers and their stock which has perished, should be compensated. The Government is expected to pay for part of this," through the insur- ance companies, but in my opinion it should also lend 'money to the cor- poration, who might again lend to business men and traders, so as to enable -them to start afresh with good buildings. With regard to improvements, Sackville street, that is O'Connell street, should be laid out in fine buildings for offices with shops un- derneath, A circus such as cca: dilly Circus is, round Nelson's Pillar, would be handsome and would bring | The li A Miady Prince. in a large profit from the premises | oh e st of new midshipmen in in it, and with the widening of Bar] | ¢iudes the name of Prince Louis Francis of Battenberg, the younger street into Talbot street, would re-| lievésthie congestion from which that | S00 Of Admiral Prince Louis of Bat- i | tenberg. district suffers. The committee in charge of the rebuilding could do all 15, concluded hia course as a cadet, the work in five years and would dis- a becomes an effective officer. He solve after handing it over to the Das been appointed to the battle corporation which would after that be the authority. According to another scheme, the Government could lend £1,000,000 or £2,000,000 to the corporation, which would carry out the work. My own private idea, the Lord Mayor con- tinued, is that the Government should buy up the whole of the de solated area, clear it, and replot it ready to let at a head rent of say, | £50 a plot. Then those who did not wish to rebuild need not & so and we should have men coming in with capital from other cities.and in time Dublin might be the finest city in the Empire . A deputation is being sept from the corporation to London censisting | of the town clerk, the law agent, and the engineer. Another deputation representing the Fire Losses Com. pany Is also going, and they will ask Mr. Asquith what he intends to do With the assistance of public opinion they should obtain a hearing, and if the Government refuses their request | ous flagship. His only brother, | engagement to the Countess Nada Torby, one of the daughters of the | squadron, being a lieutenant on the | New Zealand, that colony's contri bution to the Grand Fidet. Mrs. E. G, Foster, Picton. received | Word that _her prother, R. Alfred Fralick, Gilefte, Wyo., died on Aug. 31st very suddenly, of rupture of a blood vessel near the heart, Not one arrest for drunkenness in twelve days under the new prohi- bition regime, and a searcity of other court cases, is Belleville"s record. Col. and Mrs. Adams were in Pic- ton over Sunday. Their house on | Ferguson street is now offered for sale or to rent, { The Andrew Bnchanan residence | on Mary street, Picton, has been sold | to Ethan Palmer, High Shore, Soph- | iasburg. Living' Menu | chopped cabbage % cup mayonnaise, 1 cup whipped cream, 4 cup finely chopped green peppers, 1 tablespoon salt, Utensils---Cabbage cutter or knife, bowl two measuring cups, teaspoon, tablespoon. "Directions-- Put the cut or chop- péd cabbage into bowl, cover with cold water 1 hour. Thea drain and shake until dry; add peppers. Mix the cream and mayonnaise and pour over cabbage, add salt and mix well. remain a monument. | "Low Cost of -- for Tuesday BREAKFAST Stewed Plums or Frult of Cholece Cold Boiled Cereal there will only LUNCHEON OR SUPPER Vegetable Salad Apple Fritters Whole Whent Bread * Apple Dumplings. Materials--4 apples, 1 cup flour, 1 teaspoon baking powder, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon shortening, 1 cup milk, 4 tablespoons sugar, 2 tea- J spoons butter. : Utensils--Mixing bowl, flour sift- er, two measuring cups, teaspoon, ta- 1 blespoon, bakeboard, rolling pin, knife, agate pan, pietin. Apple Materials--3 cooking apples, cup milky 1 cup flour, 1 tea n baking powder, % teaspoon agen Directions-Sift the flour, salt-and eggs. baking powder into bowl, rub in the Utensils--Knife, howl, reas. lard very lightly. Add just emough uring cups, te dow) a cold milk) to work a dough. Place frypan, mixing bowl, flour sifter, egg- on floured 'board and rol lout 3% beater, soup plate to beat eggs In. inch thick. Divide intq 4 parts. Lay Di Wash, pare and core oO each quarter an apple, which has the apples; cut into rounds ¥ inch Deen washed. pared, Saved: sid the thick. Dip into the batter and fry in sugar in core Jecp bon fat. Dust with pulverized SPOOD butter; wet the edges of dough sugar. : der and salt into bowl; add the milk well-beaten slowly \ eggs; mainder of the sugar and Balt the PIR oon butter on each A over the rest of milk; He had |: THE BEAUTY OF SUNLIGHT is that every garment washed with it bears the impress of purity; a purity begotten of sweet, cleansing oils, and maintained by absolute clean- liness in manufacture; .a purity exalted by the co-operation of workers united for the purpose ; a purity demonstrated by the "$5,000 guarantee' which rests upon every bar of SUNLIGHT SOAP. A substitute for Sunlight is net as good and never con be. Insist upon the gemuine--Sunlight Soap / The ame Lever on Soap is a guarantee of Purity and Excellence. 5c. N \ Ii - ' N NERA a TSS - fo NJ Ye Sc. As a matter of | No re-stropping The young Prince has, at = cruiser Lion, Sir David Beatty's fam- | MENNEN"S TALCUM FOR MEN htful after ng-oatural == invisible-- antiseptic and protective. Re- tains all the high standards of Mennen quality. Has a distinctive perfume and pack- age that make a hit with the masculine. Shave the Mennen Way N° rubbing in--no restropping=-no re- lathering, but a quicker, cleaner, more pleasant shave than you have been accustom- ed to. Mennen's offers you a new shaving experience. 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