Daily British Whig (1850), 23 Dec 1916, p. 14

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

PAGE FOURTEEN _-- Ee | Salil fo TULL Baker's Cocoa stands all tests of laboratory and home. (By Frances Walter) Tha TT w rived topday to spend her holidays ith -her mother, M A TLi€ Collingwood street Miss Madele W jexpected in Kingston shortly to visit Mrs. J. H. Birkett, Bagot street {| Miss Hazel B:own will leave s | Saturday for Ottawa, where she will {visit her uncle, Major Hubbel Finnie and| (Continged frooy Page 7 most enjoyatle little rmal jw was held : The 1esday evening AM GIVEN TWO SURIIANISES, nurse would i Stewa © was a more serious sftuati had expected to encounte - 'H Pendleton out of his head I approached Room No. '102 from suffering gnd injuries. The 1 intpess whieh 1 had felt when | Burse, seated on the other side I enered the hospital left me, and |the room, apparently was paying nt all thought of every one ex-|2itention to our conversation He might be hurt; he! She looked out into the courtyard dangerously hurt. What-|the hospital had done he was still my | chair. amd he was lying helpless, | Has he been delirious $16, by the MeClure lady Syndicate) oe Ison, New York, is Mrs. Charles, Mrs Hora Carthy and Fenwick Connoly, will spend the Christ with Mrs. C. H. Boyes, 4 of | Mr. and Mrs. H. V I tiptoed over to her children, Peterboro, are with Ald.| Miss Hattie L and Mr. WwW H. Wormwith, Earl for Utiea, street, Mrs. Finnie and children will | the Caristma3s holi of on no eet. It is pure, it, is delicious, it is 'hown left to-day » she will spend he and before? perhaps dying! The boy | partly open door, rap-| i gently and withdrew Present I heard the shuffle of the nurse's t and the door opened . said simply. | wider, and I ring aopped at a »f hoes, ! tis wife," 1 door I am opened the entered On the narrow bed, lying prone] pon hig back, his head and face al- I coyered with bandages, was a fifure, 1 took the nurse's Jair and bowed my head as the irs fell on the coverlid. The man before me moved slightly and mum-| led something which I did not un-! lerstand. 1 bent closer. It was so good of you to come! 8. Pembroke. Where is Arthur?"! I sat up rigid, electrified. That] waa not my husband's volce! Yet he moe and knew Arthur. 1 bent loser, but there was not enough of is face visible for me to recognize ( Mr knew How do you feel?' I asked, hop-| ng to be able to solve the puzzle putting the direct question | to the injured man. { Dotter now," he replied faintly. What's the matter?" There was a movement of the bed | lothes as 1 detected the note qf mild | irprise in Harry's tone. Nothing," said I, "except very happy." Happy?" mumbled Harry, almost n the voice eof a drunken man. What're you happy about?" I remembered and replied vithout | that I An quick- ly "That you are better, I heard you were terribly injured. Naturally it is a relief that you are constious and able to talk." "Narrow escape," went on Harry. Never thought we'd wake up. How's Evelyn?" I beckoned to the nurse. He is*asking for Miss Philips-- the young woman who was injured with him. How is she?" "Oh, she is all right!" was the smiling reply. "It was the shock more than anything else which gave her trouble, A few bruises were about all the doctor could find." 'She's all right, then?" Harry asked In evident relief "Yes, Theo doctor advised that slie stay until morning, but she 'ould go home now' without risk." How about me?" mumbled | Harry. "Can I go, then, too?" | , "I'm afraid not." "Nothing much the matter, there? Nothing hurt except my face, ia there?" "And the rest of your body," add-| od the good-natured young atten- | dant. "There are no broken bones, | but, on the other hand, there is very | little unbroken skin." "Well, I'l get out of this in a jiffy," declared Harry with firmness. | 'Where's Arthur, Roxane?" Ho was detained downstairs," To my surprise Harry showed no! turther suspicion. I naturally thought he would imagine Arthur was In Evélyn's room, but he did] aot, . | "Give us a little more light, ! aurse," he requested, turning pain-| fully over on his side so that his! bandaged face was toward me, is | | Be- tween the slits in the cloths his eyes looked out, and it seemed to me that I detected a fire in them that | one would not suppose could be found in the eyes of one suffering! serious injury. { "We were married this evening," | he said faintly. 1 looked at him as though I? thought he was delirious and raving. | "Married?" I repeated. "Who | wore married 3 "Hvelyn and 1." he went on. ""It| was while we were returning from the clergyman"s bouse that we bump- ed into the other car. Gad! I'm zlad she's not hurt much. Can you have her moved in here? "I am afraid not," I replied, con- vinced now that Harry .was out of jattendant | my jask?' | somewhat | T entered. I queried. The well-trained, showed question "He hag all," sh suffering-proof mild surprise at not replied at you heen irrational o "Why do "Well, he is now." | declared "Would you not better see to him?" She moved quickly to the bedside "How are vou®" asked the injured man "Oh, I'm all right," was his al- most cheerful response "Why did Mrs. Pembroke get up so suddenly Tell her to come back." ' "What's the matter?" he almost peevishly, when I sumed the seat heside him h she See 'What do you see?' 'You thought I had gone when | said Evelyn and I were ied, didn't you? Well, 1 razy in some respects, but that Statement is a fact. We were mar- ried at 9 o'clock tonight at the resi-' dence of Rev. John W Leek, pastor | of the First Church. * We were at) dinner when I asked her to marry me. [I didn't have much hope that | she would accept, although she had said a few things lately which led me to think she might. She didn't agree immiately, and wanted to think ic over, but finally I got her to | say the magic word Then I asked her if she would mind being married right away, because I didn't see any use in waiting, once our minds were made up. She objected again to! that, but it must have been my lucky! evening, for she finally consented, and I put her into my car---or, ra- | ther, Arthur's car--I had his earlier in the evening we went marriage about her if for it." He stopped out of breath exertion, while I tried with all the might of a very much befuddled | brain to grasp the truth of what he had told me. Even though he talked | rationally, I could not bring myself | to believe him. It was impossible, 1 told myself, Every circumstance | that I had noted tended to indicate | that Evelyn was in love with Arthur, | and I had been informed behind my back that Harry was in love with | me. Despite these facts here, Harry | was telling me that he and Evelyn | had just been married! 1 "I will see how Evelyn is," I told! him, an idea coming suddenly to me. | "All right," mumbled Harry, be- | tween bandages. "The nurse will! show vou her room Try to bring her back with you." Evelyn was awake aad crazy mar- | may be and away ' I think you will find her certificate somewhere | vou will make a search | from | | v glanced | suspiciously at me when | "I want to be the first to congrat- | | ulate you," I told her, going straight | to the mark. "Harry has just told | me of your marriage. 1am so glad." | A faint smile came to the girl's | lips and her 'eyes lighted up. . "Thank rol" ane said gently, "I fear my father not easily forgive | me for eloping, for that was what ! it was after all. Does he know that | I have been injured?" ' "I do mot know," I replied. "Ar- thur wasn't at home when the tele-! phoné message came to me, but I decided to come, anyhow." } "It was so good of you,". mur- mured Evelyn, Then her brow wrinkled. "But why should they telephone you first? It seems to me | it they had learned who we. were | they would have telephoned father || and Mr. Henderson." ! "I do not know why the message | came to me," I returned. 'But! wait?" [ erled, as a flash of light | came to my mind, "It was the car' | Harry told me you were ri Arthur's car! The police took "th: number of the car, and that was | why I heard it!" "Of course!" murmured Evelyn. | (To Be Continued.) Him Wise. ! Traveller-- How's your train ser- vice here? Small Town Native--Wal, they ad- vertise one train a day, but you and me know them advertisements exaggerate! ™ : -- Tired Out. 'Is the first edition of your hook exhausted yet? "No, Why?"" *"T thought it might be from stand- ing so long on the counters." A Guess, * What we don't, understand is why, they call a big guh "she" when it can be silenced, remarks a contemporary. | Possibly it's on account of the re-! semblance between a big gun and| our cooks--both get fired often. i Where He Got it? i "Bet 1 know where you got that necktie." i "Five bucks says you dom't." i "Around your neck, you boob. "| Ilinois Siren. A i remain for several weeks Charles Sherman, Toronte for vhe holid to v Mrs, John S 120 Miss Ethe Funnell, Barrie Christmas in Bellevill ling" parents Mr. rand Mrs. A Miss Helen Trickey spend Christmas wit} Boves, dlfred street is here Vig motaer, street, are Ifred Connoly and Yark H Norman B. Wormw Toronto is parents, Ald. and Mrs. W , Earl street. McMurray Kelso and Toronto, are h RV the ( Mrs. J. Mrs George Boomer, stay with their sister, Mrs Rogers, Barrie street, for mastide. Mrs. Ivan Wotherspoon, Montreal, is the guest of her son and his family for the Christmas seazon + © = n 1as his par Cadet Haitland Paterson arriy ed spend holidays with ents, Mr. and Mrs. Alex Simpson street, Montreal Mrs. William Gordon, Toronto, will his nis | spend the holidays with the Principal | of Queen's and Miss Gordon Mr. and Mrs. F. C. T. O'Hara and children, Ottawa, are going to Belie- ville to spend Christmas with O'Hara's parents, Hon. Henry =. Corby a" and M. Macdonne!l and will spend Mr. and Mrs. G. Miss May Macdonneil Christmas with Dr. and Mrs bell Laidlaw in Ottawa Mrs. Stratford Dawson and her with Canon and Mrs. Loucks Miss Fannie Jex will arrive from Montreal to spend Christmas week with her aunt, Mrs. T. A Pembroke street, Lieut. Wallace McKay, of Queen's Ambulance Corps, has gone to Pem- broke to visit his parents - -. * Miss Florrie Stewart, nurse- training, Welle The Whig's to Paterson, Mrs, | Camp- son, borrowed | Montreal, are here to spend Christmas Davidson, n- y Hospital, Toronto, ! Miss Annie Gow, who has been.at | tending Macdonald College, Guelph, arrived to visit he ar, Mrz, W Gow, Lower Union | Judge :Pritton, Toronto, spent a few in town this week with ter, Mrs. D. & Maephail, Union wotlk treet his attending is spend- 'Sunny- own, Guelph, home ! Miss Dorothy Macdonald College ing Christmas at her ide." : Mr. and Mrs. H. Gordon Hubbell, | Winnipeg, arrived to-day to visit My | Hubbell's Mrs. Hubbell Bagot street. Arthur Martin, To Christmas at his | e. Miss Mary Macarow | rived to-day to \ | Kenneth Ireland, King = Busy Old Santa. mothe onto, will spend Clergy street New York, a : Mrs J OLd Santa's packing his { tovs, | For all hovs \ : . THis nose 1s cold | For he is old [ But oh. he loves his ' | OVS i +H tle girly and the hit Christmas | Hoop-la! he avs he's on his way, {He's gol ta travel far to-day I And late to-night '\When eyes are tight [He ll visit you ve heard him say! Christmas Fye, bed, [ And cover up vour curly head: | For those who peep I And do not sleep. Will get presents | said! Daily M | [10s { no itis en | Menu for Sunday BREAKFAST Oranges or Grapefruit Cereal of Cholee Cream Muffing Orange Marmalade Coffee or Coven DINNER Tomato Soup Roast Loin of Pork, with Roast- ed Apples Rrowned Sweet Potatoes Celery Sala Grape Gelatin silver Cake Collec SUPPER _ Milk Teast Mixed Frult Sitver Cake Knife, bowl, measuring Utensils tablespoon, 2 lander, Directions- Cut the oranges in half, scoop out the juice and pulp Put the skins on to boil with six quarts of cold wateg and boil antil tender; remove and put in colander to drain. When they are well drain- el take a spoon and remove all the white; it will come out easily. Shred thi: yellow and add to the juice and pulp. Be sure that all the white fibre has heen removed Ada the sugar and water and boil slowly 2 hours or until thick saucepan, cups, co- # Grape Gelatin. Materials --Two cups grape Juice, réa, Mit Coron I -------- - Christmas Day Menu BREAKFAST Apple Sasee Belled Whole Wheat Cereal Tomate Omelet Currant Biscuit Caffee or Coron LUNCHEON OR SUPPER Hominy and Bacon Apple Sauce Cake Tea, Wik or Cocoa ROAST CHICKEN DINNER Oyster Cocktail. Cream of Tomate Soup Celery Stuffed Olives Reant Chicken (Cora Fllllag) with Giblet Sauce Maryland Sweet Potatoes Candied Cran Creamed Canlifiower Tamate Jelly on Lettuce Leaves Garnished with Cheese Stars \ Mince Pie 4 Coffee Centerpiece: Basket of fruit aed unis, trimmed with holly leaves and - Menu for Tuesday BREAKFAST Stewed Fralt or Oranges Mush and Mak Exgzs of Cholce Teotne Jam or Frult Butter Coffer or Coron LUNCHEON OR SUPPER lg cup sugar, 1 tablespoon gelatin. Utensils--~Bowl, mold or turk's head, 2 measuring cups, tablespoon. Directions --To the grape juice and sugar add the gelatin, which has been dissolved in 1 cup of boiling water. Dip a mold or turk"s head in cold water, strain in the mixture; set in cold place until firm. Turn out on deep plate, and if desired, garnish center and around the edge with whipped cream Oyster Pie. Materials, 25 oysters, cups cut potatoes, 1 cup milk, | teaspoon but- ter, 1 teaspoon salt, dash paprikam For crust--2 cups flour. 2 teaspoons! baking powder, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 tablespoon shortening, milk * Utensils-- Bakedish, 2 measuring cups, teaspoon, knife. pastry brush, mixing bowl, flour sifter, tablespoon, bakebbard, rolling pin. | Directions--Line bakedish with! crust, dust bottom with flour, put in half the oysters, sprinkle with salt and pepper, the tomatoes, which are boiled, and the rest of the oysters. hutter and % cup of milk. Cover top with crust, cut two or three stars in the top erust to keep the crust! from separating. Brush top with] The crust is made by sifting 2} cups of flour, 2 baking | der and i; "teaspoon salt into 9 i i i 5 mn i . Carrot Salad. } nil raw grated car- ATE SR Sh onion, 1 tablespoon finely | El coarse grater. Directions Put on shredded lettuce, dressing and sprinkle with parsley. . he althful, Walter Baker & Co.Limited MONTREAL CANADA + 2 and 5 Ib. Cartons-- 10, 20, 50 ahd 100 Ib. Bags. THE ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN The crops in France is being hare vested by girls - | Over 800,000 women have replac- male labor in England | English breweries now employ over 18,000 women Wellesley and Bryn Mawr have women presidents Over 45,000 clerks have been replaced by women i Kansas has fifteen women county treasures and two female probate ndges Over women have unions during the last year Millinery workers in Boston aver- age $5 per week the year round The female vote in Oregon creased per cent ar the election Over States are trade Insurance statistics reveal the fact | that the female suicide rate for 1915] per 100.0060 population was 7.7 per cent An eight-hour day, week, is advocated the servant problem, The number of women employed! failway work in England has in- reased 200 per cent, { The election of Miss Jeanette Ran- kin to the United Statog senate may change the floor privileges of that hody Many London schoolgirls spent | their summer vacation holidays help- | ing at the mills and sewing sacks of | flour for the army Ethel Barrymore, the talented ac- tress, will abandon she speaking stage and devote her time to acting | for moving pictures i The Ladies' Dog club, the second largest of its kind in the country, ! has over 200 members, each of which | owns her own kennel, Miss (Mara R. Mozzor, the youn-| gest woman ever admitted to the] bar in Colorado; has |been appointed | assistant agorney general of that state. { Mrs. Nettie Bratton Jack- son, Miss., has Yuecessfully passed | the bar examination in that state and is now practicing law with her husband { Lady Kathleen Scott, widow of} Captain Scott, the British explorer, | who lost his life in the Atlantic after reaching the south pole, is working in a London muaition factory. Lillion Russell, the actress, has left the stage for good and antici- pates spending the rest of her days in peaceful domesticity. In private life she is Mrs Alexander Moore, wife of the Pittsburgh publisher, The work to which French women have mostly taken since the wa: ig in food industries, textiles and the , which many are also working in rubber and at sackmail- ing. Miss Mary Davies, bacteriologist at Ris-Orangeis hospital, in Paris, has invented a cloth which defies in- fection and is entirely disease-proof and makes vermin impossible. Mr: Frederick Penfield, wife of the United States ambassador at Vi- enna, who received from the late Ewperor of Austria recently the nd cross of the Order of Saint beth, is the only one ever given ed colleges in England 20,600 joined ine recent ie United millinery £6,006 women in t employed in the of six solution days . a as a of | of Wash, scrape 'and | 10 anyone except to royal person- grate the carrots on the downward |38¢s. Ia Japan the women who discover the slightest growth of down on their faces do mot remove it in the secrécy | bitious woman. 'ment of ESTABLISHED 1780 DORCHESTER, MASS. al TTT TTT ITT 7 No one ever doubts REDPATH quality, because in its Sixty Years of use no one has ever bought a barrel, bag or carton of poor Redpath sugar. It is made in one grade only--the highest. "Let Redpath Sweeten it." Canada Sugar Refining Co., Limited, Montreal. of their own rooms, but boldly visit the barber, the same as their hus- bands and brothers. Women bar- bers are becoming quite numerous in Japan Fanny Brice, the comelienne with Zeigfeld Follies, is an unusually ams- In addition to her stage duties, Miss Brice devotes much of her time to the manage- a Fifth avenue, New York, millinery shop, which she owns. She employs ten young women and when not eilgaged upon the stage she spends all her spare moments in the shop geting as a saleswoman Mrs. Walter McDonald mond county, Georgia, is largely re- sponsible for the election of her hushand, who is totally blind to the legislature of that state When Me- Donald, who is only 24 years of age, threw his hat into the ring as a can- didate to represent his district, his wife, who rather pretty, decided to accompany him on his campaign tours, and it is claimed that her be- witching served to elect her husband of Rich- 1s eves a ING GOING! G&G ® © HERPICIDE 12 To Keep Skin Healthy, Youthful, Wrinkleless Now t social season is here, he especi careful to keep your skin in fine condition You know how cone spicuong complexion defects appear une. der the brig! light of the drawing or bal nom iso bow very evident are some make-ups when similacly fHum- nal ed I have meself disearded coss metidsdulirely using « nrodess which gives far better ved which leaves no t « on the \t night I smear on a thin coa [ ordinary mereolized walk, washing | off next morning gradually absorbs the devitalized particles of surfgee sKing Just as tually thy more youthful skin rth, providing a oom piexion « ar, wih and deleately titited a x 1 Get an ounce of meres at your Jdrugglst's try cmarkable treatment tempember, too, that wrinkles, even finer Hoes, are not easily conceal ed in 8 brilliantly lighted room You can quickly bliterate 'these hateful marks by ing your face in a solu- rd saxolite, one half in wilitch-hazel, «ne- your face wom using paste Realm a GONE! & resieits skin 1 a "¢ wd And after man's Pb. Q SAVETT HERPICIDE WILL SAVE IT 700 LATE FOR IS YOUR HAIR SLIPPING? The presence of dandruff and fall- ing hair conveys a warning which it is bent to heed. At first the loss of hair may be mo slight asto be hardly noticeable, Hut ne may be the fall each day, it is ing toward the same and inevitable result; and that is total baldness. You may have hair enough today, but how abent tomorrow and the day after? Dandsu'T apd falling hair mean baldncgs sooner or later and demand the immediate regular and | energetic uaa of Newbro's Herpicide. It keeps the sealp Tree from dirtand dandruff and allows the hair to grow abundantly and naturally, By this means total incurable baldness may be preven Herpicide does nat stain or dye and has a most exquisite fragrance which Makes it especially pleusing to the | Why pay Send for Premium Catalogue to ladies. It stops itcaing almost in- stantly. You may be told that there are remedies 'ust as good as Herpicide, You cannot afford to take chances with nor can you 'expect to ob results from "'an off brand' ar , Insist on having genuine Herpicide, the Jriginal Germ-Remedy for Dand- ruff, You can get a sample of this de- lightful hair dresting and a booklet on the care of the hair by sending ten cents in silver or postage to The Herpicide Co., Dept. 8, Detroit, Mich. Try Herpicide once and you will never be without it. Sold everywhere in 50 cent and $1.00 sizes and guaranteed to give satisfaction or .noney refunded. Applications obtained at the better barber shops and beauty parlors. Makes House-Cleaning Easy Full geen PACKAGE z more!

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy