Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 17 Jul 1918, p. 10

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Li PAGE TEN lta WARES SERA a In CONSTANT PAIN AFTER EATING The Tortures of Dyspepsia Corrected by "Fruif-a-tives" Sr. Marriv's, NB. | "or two years, I suffered tortures from Severe Dyspeps fa. I Bad constant pains after eating ; pains down . the sides and back ; and horrible bitter stuff often came up in my mouth, I tried doctors, but they did not help me. But as soon as I started taking 'Fruil-a-tives', 1 began to improve and this medicine, made of fruit juices, relieved me when everything else failed." MRS, HUDSON MARSHBANK., B0¢. a box, 6 for $2.50, trial size 25¢. At sll dealers' or sent postpaid by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa, ee = Choice Meats Special low prices on all steaks and fresh meats for one week. The very best fresh and cured meats carried in stock, Prompt Delivery Charles Quick Phone 1102) 112 Clergy Bt. ------------" et A PA A I rt gtr gee tt LADY PINK TOES HAS HER INNINGS There 'is no excuse today for women to have ugly, painful corns A eB ee entientpnite RR 0 BEB BB BB ere Be For a few cents you can get a quar- ter ounce ofithe magic drug freezone recently discovered by a Cincinnati} "The The 'Woman Who 'Changed CHAPTER CXXI1V, knew when. the doctor came They told me, attérward, that IT became delirious almost hnmedi- after giving my consent that Celeste told me that 1 raved terribly, crying that | wanted {my baby and couldn't be happy in having it because I would lose my hushand's love. "It was frightful, Madam, to hear you," she said, "it made us all weep." Toward morning my baby was pre- maturely born, born dead. I was very ill for some time, too ill 'to even think. Mother-eame and 'either she or George were with me day and night, as well as the nurses. I recall that I used to wonder fii' a detached sort of way, why George stayed home so much; why he wasn't with some- one else. [I took mother's being there for granted, and asked no questions "No one has ever told me so, but I know that by my foolish hiding my condition from my husband, by my constantly exceeding my strength, by my dancing hour after hour, killed my baby. As I grew better, I gave expres- sion to this thought to mother; and 'she gently scolded me for even think [ne of suc bh a thing. : | | 1 never jately {he be sent for. | A Heart To Heart Talk. | { 1 bad been sitting up for about a week, and was much stronger. George came in early in the after- noon, bringing me a wonderful bou- quet of orchids. "Do you feel well enough to talk to me--talk seriously, for a little while?" he asked as he Kissed me. 1 thought it was worth all the terrible pain and "illness to have him -s0 ten- der with me. a . "Of course I do! | am almost well By JANE PHELPS HELEN IS DELIRIOUS now," 1 returned, with a: smile. He brought a chair-and sat down beside me, taking my hand in his. "Now Helen, tell me what msde yon think | did not 'want children-- would not love you if we had them? Tell 'me honestly, dear. Don't hide anything, even' your thoughts about it, from me." The tears were very near, but I forced them back. I would not cry before George. In spite of my weak- ness, 1 had not done se since the day I had said I would not. 1 waited so long, trying to think what to say-- just what to tell him--that he leaned over and kissed me again, saying ten- derly: "One would think me an ogre, dear. Please talk freely to me. When you were delirious, you said many things 1 did not understand." "You remember when we were at Narraganset, last year, that Mrs. Col- lins was also there?" that I, "Yes, F remember that very well. Why, what has that to do with it?" "One day I was sitting in a shel- tered part of the piazza and over- heard her talking to another woman. They spoke of you and me, then they talked of children. Mrs. Collins im- mediately said that men who were particular---who wanted their wives to look well, and to appear in society with them--didn't want children. Then she added that it was because of children that men" grew intimate with other women, and their wives were neglected; that babies took up much of a woman's time and thought, that husbands grew away from them, and some other things which I do not recall well enough to repeat." "But 80 oh, I see. Because -you ns rman overheard this conversation, you mn TALKING ~~~ With Lorna Moon IT OVER cheudist. | Apply a few drops of this treezone | upon a tender, aching. corn or callus and instantly, yes, immediately, all soreness disappearS and shortly you will find the corn or callus so loose that yoii lift it out, rept and all, with the fingers. Just think! Not one bit of pain before applying fréezone or after- wards. It doesn't even irritate the surrounding skin, Hard corns, soft corns or corns be- tween the toes, also hardened cal- luses on bottom of feet, just seem to shrivel up and fall off without hurting a particle. ' It is almost magical, LAs WI"SON S dod LIS rans "I wonder {f she is ever going to give us a rest from that Roman strip- ed skirt. She's been wearing it day in and day out for months. I would' n't be surprised if she doesn't own another rag." The speaker was the wife, or rather the divorced wife of a Ef manufacturer who % had made millions profiteering before ¥ the eagle eye' of Washington got fixed upon him. § "Yes phe has 4 another frock," giggled her com- panion--a widow Ss with an expensive wardrobe and in- : expensiye educs- tion, who" came from somewhere east; "It's a SIGHT--I'm SURE she made it herself." "Yes she made it herself," said the Comfy Lady quietly. '"'She makes most of her things herself--now. You see she is NOT a wealthy widow, neither is she drawing alimony from a rich ex-hhsband, she is a mere no- body--simply the wife of a lieuten- ant who has gone to fight for you." more effective than 'Sticky. F ph Clean to handle, Sold 4 ea and Grocers everywhere There was a very chilly silence. 1 wanted to shout "Well put" but I just let the silence continue--it was a very educative silence for at least twp people present. 2) re War Garden Bulletin Practical Daily Guide For Va« cant Lot and Backyard Gare deners Enlisted in Great. er Production Came paign, : Togied by he aneds, Fd Bakes on 'the staff of the Dominion Experimental Farm, | Some His and Their Cures. The insect world Is at its busiest these days in the war garden and it is jmportant that the pests be given attention just as soon as they appear. Delay In spraying or removal may prove fatal. The following tahle may help the war gardener to make the best of his beet crop: Leaf Spot----(Red s The New Roll of Honor. The thinking women of this coun- try are beginning to take a new view of this clothing question. They are beginning to realize that women are dividing themselves into two classes --the women who send their men to the front and wear their old clothes ~-and the women who buy summer furs! Summer furs! Can anything be more ludicrous than the sight of an apparently sane woman enveloped in a fur coatee while the temperature is ninety in the shade? Our men are not going into this war wearing summer furs--they are wearing Flanders mud mostly, and other things one doesn't mention in drawing room conversation. We wo- men of America are the most pam- pered 'women on the face of the earth-----we spend more money on clothes than #ny other women in the world--but summer furs in war times--that is the last straw! The children of France and Belgium cry for bread and the women of America buy summer furs. But thank Heaven not ALL. .the women of America. Thousands are sending their men to the front and are wearing a "Roman-striped skirt day in and day out." THEY are the women who mean it when they sing "MY country 'tis of Thee." Must they stand the sneers of the Summer Fur Class undefended? No, we wo- men of America are starting a new Roll of Honor. upon it are the names of the women who wept their old clothes because Told In Twilight . * ». (Continued from Page 2) Mrs. F. H. Henry and Master Floyd, Belleville, are spending a vacation with Deseronto and Kings. ton folks. Mrs. F. R. Wilson, Kingston, is on a visit to Trenton. Cyril ° Gilbert, Brockville, 1s Spending the vacation with friends a on. Lizzie Daniels as to Toronto £44 spendin two wee) h Tiwi, turned the past er, Mrs. AN PNA. PINS NN < thought that I--why" "Why shoulewt | tilak yo¥ were just as she said? You had held her up as a model to me, ever since I married you; her and other women | like her. Then, you enjoyed her so- ciety" stumbled on. (He had ask- ed me to talk freely; 1 would try to. Perhaps I never would get up cour- age to do so again.) 'You often left me albne to spend the evening where NOT How mucha pound 9 Realm Of Vere pine ETS Features BUT | How many cups from a pound ? LAD A" will yield twice as much in the teapot as will ordinary tea. It is REAL economy to use it, to say nothing of the unique flavour, Beds she was, and she seemed to know you so well--to know all about you, your likes and Hislikés--even to the color "you liked your neckties to be. I never said anything of that to you; but it hurt me, and let me know how intimate you must--have been with her. 1 wanted to be like her, not because I admired her, George, but because I. though: it was the only way to please you. So, naturally, when I overheard that conversation, I judged she knew your feelings on that subject. When I found I was to have a baby, I hid it because I wanted to be with you, to go out with you. I was afraid you wouldn't fet me if you knew---that you wouldn't love mp, even a little bit." "You poor child!" George exclaim- ed, as he swept me up out of the in- valid chair into his arms, "You peor child," he repeated. 'Why, dearest, I want children, long for.them. 1 have been a bit disappointed because they did not come. You dear girl, to bear such a thing as that alone How. can I ever repay you? Tell me, dear, was what you said in your de- liflum true; that you locked yourself away to sew because you feared to to have me know?" "Yes, George. Many days, dnd I made such lovely things." BEECHAMS PILLS Constipation is the arch-enemy of health. Conquer this enemy and you rout a whole army of physical foes, including indigestion, biliousness, cick headache, sleeplessness and nervous dyspep- sia. Beecham's Pills have been a world-favorite laxative for over cixty years. They go straight to the cause of many ills and remove it. They act prometly, pleasantly and surely.' Contain no abit-forming drug.' These time-tested pills Srp the stomach, stimulate the liver and Relieve Constipation T Worth a Guinea a Box Thomas Bese Lancashire. Cagland, Pistored anly, by Salons: La Halants In boxes, 25 ante ~~ ' "You poor child," he said again, {To be continued) i . house on Grindstone Island, Rideau Laes Misses Reta and Ellva Penwarden, Kingston, are guests of Mr. and Mrs, S. E. Blair, Westport. Mrs. Charles Webster and child- ren, Kingston, are visiting Miss R. Webster and Mrs. Bert Armstrong, Lansdowne. Dr. and Mrs. Fred Cornett, St. Thomas, and Mrs. R. Cornett, Kings- ton, are spending a week at Ivy Lea. Mrs. M. Chadwick and her daugh- ler, Miss Amy Chadwick, of Valley- field, Que., are spending a few weeks at Kingston. * Miss Cecile Putnam, the guest of her aunt, Bryant, Johuson street. Mrs. Phillips, Toronto, will motor to Kingston and later will go on to Kennebunk Beach. Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Northrup will spend a few days in Toronto, later going to Muskoka Lakes for a week. Mrs. Walfer Boyd and children, Ottawa, have left for Algonquin Park. ' Mrs. Stewart Wotherspoon, Ot- tawa, is visiting Mrs. J. Wesley Alli- son in Morrisburg. Miss Madge Hodgins, street, is visiting her sister, George Otton, Woodstoek. Mrs. Thomas MeGuire, Ports- mouth, has returned from Rochester, N.Y., where she has been spending a few weeks. » Mrs. W. Hamilton, is Mrs. James Clergy Mrs. * - A.- Sanderson, Peterboro, announces the engagement of her daughter, Genefieve, to William Harris Mathis, M.D., resident -phy- sician of University Hospital, Au- gusta, Georgia. # o - *. » The engagement is announced of Mary, youngest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Robinson, Barrie street,' to George O. Vogan, BSc. eldest) son of the late S. H. Vogan and Mrs. Vogan, Ottawa. fT 8 '® Mr. and Mrs. W. H. O'Leary an- nounce the engagement of thelr daughter, Ray, to P. J. Fowler, Al- berta, son of Mrs. Patrick -Fowler, Mount Chesney, Ont. . meth ---- 'These Modern Days. "The Cavaliers used to drink'a toast Summer Shoes of Charm and Distinction FLEET FOOT offers a new comfort, 2 new grace and style, a new economy worth while, in pleasing summer footwear. Shoes have cool lop of finest. canvas, and comfortable, flexible soles. They are the ideal footwear for holiday time -- fe sea shore, lake-side, mountains and country, Don't, leave for Jour holidays without having one or two pairs of FLEET FOOT. None genuine without the name FLEET FOOT ta ped on the or wl guarantee of style, comfort, service. The. best Shoe Stores sell Fleet Foot THOMAS, COPLEY Telephone ¢ 987 : aay uything sone rhe on hoe Bod Fi of repairs and sew work; alse COAL CUSTOMERS Please Notice | Coal Sales will be for Cash Only. "BOOTH & CO, "Phone 133. = COKE ORDERS ONLY TAKEN The James Sowards Coal Co. Phone 1585. A OK ECS NEW *! hy LAWN MOWERS ARE COSTLY. Get your old one sharpened, re- paired or refitted at intake cost. Parts supplied for all standard machines. John M. Patrick 140 Sydenham Street. "Phone 2056J. Pumps & Oxfords JTBan adie white kid and Oxfords. : ies" white reign- Rr & canvas pumps. Ladies" Oxfords 'in brown calf. Ladies' Oxfords in . gun metal calf or kid: Ladies' patent Ox- fords, high heels. The newest of the new duting shoes. The Sawyer Shoe § Store to some ccurt beauty and then smish the glass so that it could never be used again." "We get the same results with the samitary paper cup."--Louisville Cou rier-Journal CC YY FOOD BOARD FLASHES FOR FEMININE FoL There is no question about it individuals in their homes. ~-more sugar must be saved by . Candy manufacturers have had their sugar allowance cut w fifty per cent. Bakers and t+ Jersey Cream Sodas ere made from Government Standard Flour and 1 i accordance with the Fegulations of the Kanada Food * Coglimit-d bs i GENERAL OFFICES AND FACTORY, LONDON, CANADA . Most, Gute; Renton, Ein Wise, cog, Part Aethat; 64. Joey 3. oy

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