Daily British Whig (1850), 26 Oct 1916, p. 10

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ti. (Copyright, 1916, Newspaper Syndicate). The glimpse of myself which I had caught in the theatre was not suffi- cient -to cast a permanent damper wpoh my spirits, although it had ser- There's economy in using H.P,-- the odds and ends are made simply delicious with just a few drops of H.P. Sauce. " { of some uneasiness and dread. As usually quiet, for Mariam rallied me once or twice and offered « total of two cents for my thoughts. Mr. Gor- don, 'who undoubtedly understood better than Mariam the ason for my silence, gave himself up to the task of making me forget what I had { seen and beard, and bétween his tact and Mariam"s sparkling gayety they | succeeded in a remarkably short { time. { As we walked into the great din- "ingroom of one of the liveliest and | most fashionable places, I felt once | more the thrill which comes only to the daring. With an effort I shook off the last vintage of gloom and turned a radiant face to my two com- | panions. Both of them seemed to un- PHOTOS, he de- i Sur. fore, and if seemed to me that they were the most wonderful people in the world. I had never dreamed of such handsome men or such beautiful women. I bad never beheld such magnificent costumes. It was all like a visién--rose-tinted, gold-embroid- ered and properly perfumed. "I carried the momory of that af- ternoon with me for many years. Whenever I saw any spectacle that was extraordinary 1 contrasted it with that circus. [I say 'contrasted' because that is precisely what I did. There was' no comparison between that and anything I ever had seen, "One day I was compelled to re- main several hours in a Southern city { derstand, and the knowledge drew us 'Weese's new sunshine light. Photos| ©, Ye hin 3 Isn't it magnificent!' exclaimed taken rain or and , Saturday | Mariam almost in a whisper. { while' I unaccustomed to such scenes Remember, it is at | had" difficulty keeping myself well WEESE'S : | *It one considers only first 'im- pressions, it is grand and magnifi- . i other conditions and circumstances it | might seem otherwise." Become a Physician || a | declared Mariam. 'Perhaps Roxane Surgery, Bacteriolo®¥: | can puzzle out the meaning, but I off: ° Opportunities ta work way through. "It is beautiful," was my comment, itlea to ambitious men and women | «It is even more than -beautiful." Jhedical Sentre of the wor] with | "Uncle John, I did not know you Iacy Y. facilities and Squipment uh had become cynical." Eree o Gordon. "I will - tell you a story. + For catalogue address: | Once when I was a boy I went to a and the riders and the acrobats be- BA AGES ar the past 3 16s h but mot affect |. 1 cer together in a common tie. nights, | 'Mr, Gordon smiled paternally, | poised. FRAMES, | PICTURES | cont, replied Mr. Gordon. "Under "That is too enigmatical for me," Pabhe Health, ea " Yelences the greatest opportun~ | can not. n i oat "Of course it is," insisted Mariam. or five course leading to t "I am not cynical,'" protested Mr. Hoetor of Medicine and ar, 330 Rhodes Ave. Chicage, 11. | eo, Ti} circus. I never had seen the clowns hae the £9 ved to cause me a backward glance | we drove away I must have been un-| iis DAILY Bi yecause of poor railroad comnections. I did not knew what to do with my- if until I saw a circus poster, By good luck, as I though, the cir- | cus was in the city that very day. 1 | determined to go to it. | "I shall never forget the shock of | my disillusionment. It was the fag | of the season, and the tinsel, { which once shined and sparkled so b itly, had lost its luster. The gorgeous costumes were faded and torn. The beautiful wowien were painted and the handsome men, had become hard-visaged and coarse. Not even the clowns could bring a smile. It was all changed because 1 had changed or because I saw with differ- ent eyes. I have never been to a cir- cus gince." "But you cannot apply your experi. ence to this beautiful place," pro- tested Mariam. "Surely everything here is new and lgyely."" "Just as the fircus was the first time I saw it," said Mr. Gordon. "But you changed as much as the circus did." "I admit it, and so will you ¢! ge. Perhaps the owner of. this place will keep it looking new. He will have it painted ever so often. The owners will be renewed every day. The linen will never become soiled. The music will be just as sweet as it is Tto- night and the cusine may be better. but how about yourself? He has not the power to prevent your chan®ing." . - "How gloomy you are!" exclaimed Mariam. "You almost give me the creeps, - What are you coming to?" "Perhaps I should not have develp- ed the thought," he replied. "My first remark was made as a result of a hope which sprang up in my heart as we sit down that you and Rox-- Mrs, Pembroke--might not come to love such as this. 1 see my mistake. I should have kept. my thoughts to myself and should not have put them into words." "But why shouldn't we like it?" persisted Mariam. '"'Surely it is not wrong to like beautiful things." 'No, it is not wrong to like beau- tiful things; but is this beautiful? Is it the right kind of beauty--this that you see. here?" "Of course it is," interrupted Mari-) am. "I can see by Roxane's face that she it enjoying it, and if the dinner is as good as the looks of the rest, we shall both be happy, and then you will 'be compelled to be, whether you want to or not." Mr. Gordon forced a smile and gave his attention to the waiter at his elbow. Evidently he was an adept a! such things, for in a very few minu- tes he had given his orders and the waiter glided away. Once more Mari- am and I turned our wide eyes to our surroundings, end (To be Continued.) "Low Cost of "=~ Menu for Friday - WARD, | y BUFFALO'S LEADING SPECIALIST PREAKP AST " N.Y. Cold Dolled Cetenl with Fruit ce Creamed Eggs on Toast Ro! - Coffee or Covom LUNCHEON OR SUPPER Baked E lant Piekied Steamed Apples Buttermilk, Cocon or Tea IMNNER Cream of Rice Soup Deviled Fish with Savery Rice Border. Tomato Salad Grape Taploea Coffee "~ . Cold Boiled Cereal. Cut into slices and put in cereal dishes; pour over any fruit juice one has on hand. This makes a very pleasant change from the hot, cereal and milk, and one fire does the work. All fruit juice is saved, and often one can cake it from fruit parings, and it takes the place of other fruits, when they are feagee or the housekéeper has forgotten them. Steamed Apples. Materials -- Eight medium-sized apples; 3% cup brown sugar, 4 tea- spoon nutmeg, 4 cup water. Utensils--Shallow. pudding pan, tin to cover, paring knife, cup and nutmeg-grater. Directions-- Wash and pare the ap- ples, cut in half, put in pan cut side down, add the water, cover and put on quick fire until they beil. Reduce the heat; add sugar and nutmeg: cover and cook until tender, but not broken. Serve in ice cream' glasses. Deviled Fish with Savory Rice Materials-~Two pounds of steak fish (halibut, cod, haddock or can- ned tuna fish can be used), 1 cup MARRIED BY TELEGRAPH. 5 S-- th v Parties to Contract Separated by Laredo, Texas, Oct. 28: by 1.200 wiles of telegraph wire and represented by proxies. "cream sauce; 2 tablespoons finely cut ' sauce, 1 26. --Separated || Livitig"' Menu | parsley, 1 teaspoon Worcestershire teaspoon grated onion, 1 teaspoon butter, 1 egg, '%. cup bread- crumbs, 1 guart boiling water. Utensils--Shallow pan to boil the fish in, measuring cup, teaspoon, ta- blespoon, fork, small turk's héad or bakedish. Directions--Put the fish: in pan, cover with. boiling water; boil ra- pidly ten minutes, drain, remove all skin and bones and flake with fork, and add cream sauce, salt, paprika, onion, parsley, Worcestershire sauce, Mix lightly with fork. Butter moll or pan and put in the fish. Beat the egg unti! well mixed, and with spoon cover fish with egg; then cover with bread-crumbs. Put in hot oven and bake twenty minutes or until nice and brown. : Cream sauce recipe is given with chicken loaf with green peas. Savory Rice. ' Materials--One cup rice, 2 cups strained tomatoes, 1 cup finely cut ouion, 1 teaspoon salt, 1§ teaspoon pepper, 2 tablespoons chopped pars- ley or green peppers, 1 tablespoon drippings, sprigs of parsley. Utensils--Bowl to wasl# the rice in; a three to four quart boiler to boil rice in, saucepan, knife, méasur- ing cup, teaspoon, tabléspoon, strain-| er. Directions--Wash, boil and blanch | the rice as usual. "Put the drippings and onions in saucepan ind cook un-] til the onion is tender; add the to- natoes, salt, green peppers, if you have them; boil all five minutes, stirring quite often;' then add rice. Keep on fire a few minutes. Put the fish in centre of hot platter with the rics around. Garnish with sprigs of parsley. P.8.--The water in which the rica was boiled is Wed, for soup, and if] there is too much/put it in a glass jar for futdre use. . ; ary & Practical rT IRENE" u ~ > AE TY Home Dress Making =) a Lerrons Prepared Specially for This Newspaper o By Pictorial Review ward in box-plait effect. ' Turn the tuck in- back forward and form plaits | in front at shoulder. Next, closé under-arm and shoulder | seams. Turn the edges of front and back sections der slot perforations | and base, Adjust pocket lap to posi- tion, Join dide gores as.notched and form inverted plait in eide gores and press. Adjust to position, lapping the folded edges of front and back on side gores, apd close seams under neath, leaving the edges free above single large "O\ perforation in side WEL 7 Se}. AN LX # \ -p \ [nw : =] JAS TN gore for pocket, Bew the upper edge of side gores to fromt and. back as notched. Plait front above the front edge of side gore placing "T" on small "o" perforation and tack. The - two pocket sections may now be arranged together and edges hav- ing double notches and small "o" perforations stitched together. Stitch upper edges of pocket and sew pocket to edges of side gore and front. Next, face the collar and sew to neck cdge. A pretty cuff "adds chic to the sleeves.' To make with this effect, close seams as notched, gather lower edge between double "*TT" perfora- tion, then close seam of enff. finish edges below perforation for closing. Face turn-over and sew to cuff, | notches and edges even, Sew cuff | to sleeve, notches and seams even. Sew sleeve in armhole as notched, small "'o"' oration at shoulder seam easing any fulness. "\The two belts may Jone adjusted to tion with upper edge of upper Ripe lower Ye of lower belt at-small "o" perforations near cen- terback: close belt at left side front and finish with a bow and ends If desired, 2 leather belt, or ribbon sash may be used. Dark blue serge of excellent qual- fty is used to make this informal frock. The trimming includes but. tons, pockets and a collar of tan chiffon cloth; ------------------------------------ Many of the most attractive dresses for Autumn are made of dark blue serge of excellent quality. This cos- tume has admirable lines and is in expensive. The open neck is finished with a large round collar of tan chif- fon cloth, The skirt is in six gores, with panel effect back and front and the side gores attached to the long body below the normal waistline. In medium size the costume requires 4%, yards 34-inch serge. Before sewing any seams at all, find the front of the body, which is indicated by large 'OV' perforations Hem front edge of front, then take up two tucks in froat and one of each side of center-back. Turn one tuck in front forward and one back- Piotorial Review Costume No, 6940, Sizes, 34 to 44 inches bust. Price, '80 cemta. In }5,1 and 2 pound cans. Whole -- ground -- pulverized -- also Fine Ground for Percoe lators. se Trains will leave and arrive at City Depot, foot of Jonson street. ent. Lv, City. Ar. City, fo. 13---ati oa am. ifien ' .". a. am, No: HLL to For, 00am S8eam 1--Intl 3.12 p.m. No. T--Mall pam 5.40 pm, 8.50am, 1252 p.m, 1.38 pm. . 48pm. 737pm Nos. 1, 6 7, 13, 14 185, 18, 19 rus dally, other trains daily except Sunday. . Llfam. k a 12.20 pm. . 14=--dntl. Ltd,. 1.08 p.m. . 38--Local to Brockville For Pullman accommodation, tick- ets and all other information, apply to J. ¥. Hanley, 42ent, corner john ren and Ontario Streets, Kingston Cat Agency for all Ocean Steamship, Lines. CANADIAN SERVICE MONTREAL TO LONDON (Via Falmouth) : : M Oct. 1 5... ASCANIA .... Dot, 1 CABIN AND THIRD CLASS . MONTREAL TO BRISTOL * (Aveamouth Deck) Montreal CABIN PASSENGERS ONLY. For information apply loeal Tieket Agent or The Robert Reford Company Limited, General Agents, 00 Kiang St. VVVVVVVVYYYYWY East, Toronto. N PAC CANAD: ic LIMITED = MANAGERS ss AGENTS Have You Tried GYPSUM WALL PLASTER _ It Saves Time P. WALSH Barrack St. on Scotch Accent 'Too Much for Him. | ounded The only real blot on my visit to | Experiences of Some of the W Glasgow, says a writer in the Lon- ! From the Somme. don Sketch, is my total inability to London is mow being thrilled bY speak with a Scottish accent. { stories of the push on the ryiher pride myself, as most people | which the wounded 8 go, on my vocal imitative faculties, | have brought back. Sorely wounded pyi | confess to all the world ere and after a journey yng now that I cannot imitate the which all the care made barely en-g. stich secent. durable, the men still tingle with the ay Trish is begutiful; it would thrill of the charge, -and their talk p46 all Dublin weep. - My Ameri- can is quite good; I could nearly al- is all abthe Tuahi stile." said "We went over in grand ly get anything that I wanted in a sergeant recalling the assault ony, shops if 1 had the money. Any- Montauban, "and found the place in pogy can talk Welsh who cares to an awful mess. Most of the houses o,yoiiente "p" for "b" and "f" for had been knocked h over heels-- «oo» the only ones I saw standing Were pg. {he Scottish accent eludes me. a couple of cafes. As We €ame ON gopetmes I speak a_Mttle Scottish we saw lots of Germans Tanping Out yontatively to the policeman or the of the back of the village, but there... conductors or the shopkeepers. were plenty of them monkeying yp, policemen draw their clubs, the about the ruins. We. divided the... onquctors stop their trams. company up into groups of §iX, But, 4 the shopkeepers put up their as 'we neared. the village we ¢ shutters: I am not quite sure, but I bp. again. Hs Bve pelt and mysell rather think that I shall abandon aa grou room, we dropped a Mills bomb through the the qual sruggle. The One to Pay. window and. didn't wait for an an- swer: . " When she was Lady Randolph a ed a0ad the end of a Churchill, Mrs. George Cornwallis- wall... He'd 'a machine gun and West consented to electioneer for y . emplacement with i Ashmead-Bartlett in his first par- > a had made a tarn amed thing campaign. Mr. Ashmead- bricks. . He timed. the bi foot, It Bartlett was married to the Baroness didn't stop me, though, and when 1 Burdett-Coutts, a very rich woman, ting near to him I felt two Who was nearly forty years his sen- I didn't waitior. Lady Randolph, with her ply beauty and charms, did splendid 8 1 work for the candidate. so 1 sat To a group of farmers she said one day: , bat- "Won't you promise me to vole breast for Mr. Ashntead-Bartlett?" Lit. I "My lady,":said a red-faced farm- thater, with a chuckle, "we'll all vote gh my for him if every vote 'll be paid for rough = my With a kiss." their "Thank you very much" said carrying, Lady Randolph. 'Your offer is ac- the morn-cepted. I'll send for the Baroness book and Burdett-Coutts at once." A Great Vocabulary. It was the office of a great { newspaper, and thé golf edi fm taking & brief holiday. In his | from readers | sport- | tor nstruments as the fu. Episcopal 1 | Ni \ Ee am---- DR. DeVAN'S FRENCH PILLS $iT'ke: guiating Pill for Wolnen. $5 a box Or threo $10 oid at all Drug Stores, or 4 on recelptof price. THE Co. Bk Catharines, Ontario. PHOSPHONOL FOR MEN. sfor Nerve and Brain; increases on eins Soom = "we ALLAN LINES. * Lv. Liverpool Ly. Montreal Oct 237 Scandinavian Nov 11 Nov. 10 Grampian Now. 35 Lv. London _ Lv. Montreal Corinthian Oct, 27 Sicilian Nov. 11 Nov 11 Nev. 7 Corinthian Now. 25 ---------------------------------- Lv. Giangow Lv. Montreal Oet. 31 Seotian Nov. 4 Nov, 3 Pretorian Nov. 19 Nov. 11 Scotian Nov. 35 CAN. PAC. LINES . Liverpooh Lv. Montreal Sith Lane Manitoba Ore1 Oct. 20 Missannble Nov. 4 Nov. 3 Metagama Nov. 18 For rites, reservations, ete. or rates, reas A ALLAN LINE Ki St. W,, Toronte "IE SUCKLING 1 King St.E Toronto General Agents. forms Passports, application furnished on request. ANNOUNCEMENT ! premises in the early now prepared to make As Ihave decided to vacate my present of 1917, 1 am on any monument that I have in stock. If it is your intention of purchasing it would be to your advantage to buy now, J. E. Mullen, Granite and Marble Works Cor. Princess and Clergy Sts., Kingston. Phone 1417,

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