PAGE TEN - : 1 : 1918. THE DAILY BRITISH ,WHIG, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 3, In the Realm of Woma bs n Re -- Some Interesting F eatures THREE FULL LOTS FOR SALE On Nelson Street + CHEAP | W. H! Godwin & Son : Insurance and Heal Kstate. 89 Brock Se.' Phone 424 Foon A Akai Pg it tis = Preserving and Pick- ling Season Requives the best and purest vinegar and spices, Our stock is selected with care: nud will give satisfaction. C. H. PICKERING Grocer and Meat Dealer, 490 and 402 Princess St. Phone 580, Licenge No. W-2152, Var i i 4 A VP We have just received a nice assortment of high class shoes for the coming season. Woman's = Mshogany Calf, with Neelin soles, $6.50, to' $9.00: Woman's. Gun Metal Calf, with Neolin soles, $0.50, assortment of $7.00 and $8.00. Also a gre Vici Dull Bi high cut, with sporting Cuban and French heels.. Latest designs. Ask' for sample number 380; Gray Calf Boot at $8.00. Regular $10.00 value. The Model ~~ Shoe Store Known For Its Reasonable Prices. . H. Rotgauze, Prop. 184 Princess Street. sadhana hd 4 a a 4 a AAA AAA AAAI RL POOR 4 4 - A : 4 4 4 4 4 E p 4 E 4 4 9 4 4 4 4 3 3 4 4 hh RAT QR Bi ; he £2 The World's Appetiser This new Sauce is rich--thick--fruity, ahd such a wel- come change the old hioned kinds AUCES. HINT HY Hit ! 1S to FH TERY \ fH 11 FERRER ELTIVERA REG it NO TROUBLE TO PREPARE IT Early or late, you can have a cup of sav coffee in half a minute -- with Borden's Reindeer Coffee, Preparedfrom High Grade Coffee, Rich Milk and Pure Sugar. A 35¢ tin makes 25 cups. 2 Send a tin to your soldier boy-- ne postal regulations prevent, BORDEN MILK CO, LIMITRD Montreal ~-- Vancouver "You Just add Boiling Water Canada Food Control License No.l4-u3 Contains Milk & Sugar wunner H. W. Nolan, Newbore® re~ ported gassed, went overseas' with a draft from "C" Battery. He was previously wounded. Miss Frances Nolan, Brockville, is a sfsfer. KEEP YOUR STOVE BRIGHT tack KminT 'STOVE POLISH A iew minutes with a cloth, and Black Knight makes your stove look bright and attractive, - Can be used on cither warm or cold stové. Black Knight will not burn =--and is dustless. "Yes, they're Familiar objects, or metal aii was fit only for the junk pile or the where the rubbish is shot. =~ : these, in the days when the coopered r use. But those days are IDE ¥ vr ooo ms ah A: : gone! Sad wrecks, aren't they ?-- dismal places in common He growing use of © D PAILS © Wootl shaped by tree raked 1 intense heat, ical container for liquids and Tk pails, butter tubk, etc., not actiles of metal or woodeaware, : You : has them. n CEE {he declared aloud. | appeared in the doorway | friends.' { ing: : \\' | £0 tg,a restaurant," knowing all the Bilt { ¥ bilt. p'We won't run into anyone we know." MASS Ase. lB ; Chaplin--what "The Wite" By Jane Phelps CHAPTER XLV The first night of Ruth's absene, Brian dutifully went home to his din- ner, Afier he had finished, he tried to interest himself in a book; but his ming. insisted upon fixing itself upon what he considered his grievance. "Ruth's place is home with me!" "Did you call, sir?" Mrs. Crawford "No~--yes, while | think of it, you need not prepare dinner while Mrs. | Hackett is away, 1 will die out with "Very well, s ' Brian eased his conscience by say- "No use eooking a big dinner. just { for one, It will be cheaper for me to time that it would not be cheaper {for the simple reason that he had no slightest idea of going alone, He | would be just as lanely eating alone | in a public place, as at home. i The next morning he took longer | than usual to dress. He wouldn't be ablé to freshen up for dinner to the | same extent as when he dined atl! home. | thought of Mollie King would come to him always followed by that hurt | feeling he had because Rutly had left him alone. Finally he went to the telephone and called Mollie up. "Take pity on a fellow again and eat opposite him?' he asked "I sure' will, Brian, if you'll pro- | { | | | Frequently during the day the | { | | i i | mise to look pleasant! reason? Alone again?" } "Yes; Ruth .is off to Chieago, or somewhere near there," he imagined | ie heard a little gasp of delight, ana {it thrilled him pleasantly, So Mollie still Mked to be with him even ir te tr es te tro, EAA What's the } the world in general. | nate Ruth did negleet film shamefully. " "All right, Brian, where shall it be?" . "Meet me at the Thirty-third street subway, We'll go up town. Get away from the old erpwd."" "Too much talk, eh?' she laughed gayly. : "You bet there was! It's no one's business. That bunch make me tired, sometimes," ¥ "Look out! you're treading. one of that bunch, you know." "A mighty little you are like some of them. Meet me at six-thirty." "I'll be there with bells on." "Good little soul." Brian smiled as he hung up the receiver. "Bully company, too. Where'll 1 take her? Oh, shaw! I don't have a lark every night! T'll take her to the Vander- Only swells go there to eat. I'm All the afternoon Brian smiled or whistled while poring over dry briefs, Not one did he think of his grievance against Ruth; in fact he did not once thing of Ruth herself, His thoughts were of Mollie, and the pleasant evening in store for him. He counted his money before he left the office; Yes, he had, plenty. Ruth had paid the first month's rent of the apartment in advance, without consulting him, when she engaged it. He would have no rent to pay, so he and Mollie could be a bit extravagant if they wished. ; .Seated opposite her in the Della Robbia room of the hotel, he felt very much satisfied with himself and It was fortn- he had no rent to pay, he thought, as he scanned the menu. Well, never mind. He knew Mollie's tastes, he would order her a good dinnér, One could him scarcely blame BRIAN SPENDS ANOTHER EVENING WITH MOLLIE KING. Mollie seldom came to such a place to dine, and the novelty of it all, the beautiful room, the music, the well the Greenwich Vilage artist. laughed and chatted merrily, her eyes shone, 'she was so altogether attrac- tive ' that several men looked envi- ously at Brian, He noticed, and it increased 'his pleasure, ' "Having a good time, Mollie?" he asked after a while. "Such a good time, Brian. I am almost afraid it is a dream and that I shall wake up antl find myself in the studio. Pinch me so I can tell if it be I?" and she held a plunip arm across the table. Brian.gave it a little pinch, noting at the same time that a man at a near by table was watching them curiously, "Envious dog!" he muttered. "What's that you' said?" Mollie questioned, "Oh, nothing, only I'll tell that fel- low over there what I think of him if he doesn't stop starinz at you. Trying to attract your attention pro- bably." L "Never mind, Brian! it won't do any good. A cat can look at a king, you know," she laughed at her ver- sion of the old saying. She knew something of Brian's jealous nature. It was rather a pity Ruth didn't know it also, -Z The dinner over, Brian proposed they take a '"'one hoss shay' and go Jor a drive, "1 can't afford a taxi," he said just as the dark, well-groomed man whom he had noticed looking at them in the dining room, passed them, To-morrow---A Bus Ride While Away the Evening, Helps A ett pra TALKING ~----~--~With Lorna Moon IT OVER There's a gold star on the service flag to-day. Buddy has "gone west." Buddy who marched away with a merry jest and a promise to write his Christmas letters from Berlin. Bud- dy "who came home in uniform last August and set the fall fashions in men's wear for all his chums. se ------ Buddy who nev- er took anything seriously in all his § life. Buddy who grinned his way 8s through school Sand "I don't ear- ed' himself out of one job after an- other. Buddy who enraged his fath- er becauge he § wouldn't 'settle down and make something of him- self. Buddy could out party was y St hg a who 2 acs Charlie complete CONCERNING SALE OF MEAT PRACTICAL PLAN EVOLVED BY WOMEN OF HAMILTON. The Proceeds Go Towards. Christmas Parcels for Men Overseas--Pack- ers Co-operate on a Large Scale. Sept. 30th saw the inauguration of a new conservation schemme--one which should arrest the attention of every woman. The prime mover is Miss Florence Meakins, head of ths women's trench committee of Ham ilton. The scheme is an ambitious attempt to popularize meat by-pro- ducts; To bring them more forcibly to the attention of the modern woman, and to serve to remind her that her grandmother extracted every last ounce of food value from the cow or hog killed by grandfather. ] The abattoir has taken over the killing of animals and the dressing of the various parts for the shop counter. Thé prevalence of high- priced roasts and steaks and chops has tended to make women forzet the mifiur parts of the animal which are equally mitritious, much eheap- er and as palatable ag the primal parts. » Pigs and cows still have feet and legs and livers and backbones; spouts and eas, tails amd tonges; of fashion. A little education on the cooking of these varieties of meats," and the judicious buying of cheaper cuts is what is nesded for women of all tlasges and the Food Boatd heartily endorses tho project about to be launched in Hamilton. . _ Sale Begins Immediately. 4 Some ae, me Mewburn asked Miss. Meakins to take over the organization Gf the women in his constitnency; and ney she novel idea of putting on sefvation ri bonnets they have rather gone out istmas gifts for amilton men in France. The "com- Jmikiees represent 3,000 women, all sol whom have relatives in France, Saleswomen have 4 Tor the duration of the will be held daily in the |} ; en at The Gold Star on the Service F lag although, Mke crinoiines and poke | without him? Whe ever thought of a corn roast, or a sleigh ride or a picnic without thinking first of Bud- dy? Buddy who made love to all the girls and proposed to none. Buddy who could dance like a dream and make love like Francis' Bushman. Buddy who made his mother blush when he lifted her off her feet and called her "'cutie"! Buddy who was a man's man, and a girl's boy, and an all round jolly good fellow. Buddy whe was all fun and life and laugh- ter--Buddy is dead! : Killed in Action! Neo, not dead! Only*cowards die! Buddy will live forever! 'The glory of that gold star on the service flag will never. be dimmed. Killed. in action! Fighting for Justice! What more glorious epitaph is there than that? Who shall face 's God more worthily than Buddy? There's a bright gold star on 'the ser- vice flag, to-day. Buddy has gone west. AA A NAINA NANA B 30th to October 4th, After that, each committee will hold a weekly sale in the basement of a large store, making -a_nine-weeks' sale in all. The packers have generously come to the aid of the committess. They will donate 1,000 pounds of their products the first week, and for every pound they sell to the ra- tailer during the week they will give one cént per pound towards tho Christmas ft fund. It is expeet- ed that 1,600 pounds will be sold per day. The meat will be supplied by the packers at current. wholesale prices and the average profit to the committees should add materially to their fundg for patriotic work. Huge Wastage Goes On. The truth of the matter is that about 76 per cent. of the minor por- tions of the animals is now thrown into the vat for rendering, because women do net ask for them. Fig- are it oft for your own city on the LEMON JUICE TAKES OFF TAN Girls! | Make bleaching lotion if. skin is .sunburned, tanned or freckled - ox Squeeze the juice of two léemons into a bottle containing tlhiree ounces of Orchard White, shake weil, and you have a quarter pint of the best freckle, tn and tan lotion, and . tn and at very, very #eeived the | Your grocer has the lemons and any drug store or toilet counter will t of rd Moved, Pet, _-{the first basis of the at Hamilton In that city, with a population of well over one hundred thousand, there are 14,000 pounds of meat hy- products weekly... This is based on the killing of 1,500 hogs and 450 head of cattle a week. Various at- tempts have:been made to popularize them but, for the greater part, they have gone te the grease tank. | Think of it. Over 10,000 pounds of perfectly good meat products gant to be rendered into fats every week in a city with a population of over 100,000. And yet women complain about the high price of meat The rational way to equalize the mar- ket is to use all the meat. The average price would be lowered cor- respondingly. Popularizing the mincr cuts of meat does not mean the introduc- tion pf something new and grotesque on the market. It simply means re- verting to the thrifty ways of cur forbears, and to fhe full utilization of our food resources. ¢ The very meat products that we despise on this continent are considered daint- ies in Europe. : wasiage that goes on Women Might Organize. What about the powerful women's organizations in these and other cit- fes, which are doing all in their power to educate and help the wo- jmen who dig tied down with her do- lmestic cares and duties? If Hamil- ful one, and nobody doabts that' it will, other cities might follow suit. The packers will be only too glad to co-operate, as. they are all | doing their best to popularize by-produgps, and some of themvhave even' issued recips books . dealing exclusively with this kind of product. --_-- HINCHINBROOKE. * . Piccadilly, Sept. 30. --~Couneil met; members all present. Ac- counts paid: H. C. Snider, $7.65; King & Smythe, $4; 'A. Wagar, $10. Moved, MoCloud-Wagar, that the road between lots 1 and 2, con. 7, be 'closed as a. pubile road and be given to Elmer Kennedy, as it is not now needed for road purposes. Carried, 1 Moved, Wagar-Jelfry, that cul- vert on Hick's road and cattle pass on Echo Lake read be repaired, and D. McCloud be notified that in fut- ure lre-is to keep cattle pass in re- pair or the council will close it up. Carried. I -- Moved, Peters-Wagar, that the reeve and clerk be authorized to glgn and submit to the Department of Public Highways the statement of the Township of Hinchinbrooke, showing thatsfrom April 23rd to Sept. 30th there haa been paid as {salary to the roid overseer appoint- ed under by-law 'ane, the sum of $168.73, and requesting the grant as provided by the Ontario High. ways Act of 1915. Carried. "| Moved, Jeftrey-McCloud, that Archibald Loe ao the Had- dock bridge and put railing on hill 'under the instruction of Couneilor Jeffrey: Carried. 5 Moved, - Wagar-MoClond, that J. Moran repair his cattle pass; and the council will hold him respon- sible Jor all damages caused by said law No. 4.for - eclonizat be read.the first and second ; to the depart- Moved, ar Shak by 1aw No. 5, to clode and "stop up the Toad Stomsing. lot 6, con. §, be read ind sefond time and ad- Moved, Jeffrey-Wagar, that the jresve and A. change of : Hills, * and the to ay. in suryey suid ad, farnish dressed people acted Tike a tonic tof" Shel- She also knew how to manage him. ton's unique step provas a suecess-, Township Comeils | quarter of a century. Bread baked with Royal Yoast will keep fresh and moist longer than that made with any other, so that a full week's supply oan exsily do made at one baking, and the last loaf wili be just as good as the first. : $ . MADE IN CANADA wold | EW.GILLETT COMPANY LIMITED a SET, nrupeo TORONTO, ONT. MONTREAL » tion' of the reeve and cle ride, Couneil Parham on Car- KING ALBERT'S REPLY. at | Belgians Proud to Share Triumph of Allied Cause. Paris, O¢t. 3.--President Poincaire vesterday received from King Albert of Belgium a telegram replying to | congratulations sent by M. Poincaire | on the success of the Belgians in the solidation with the old First Presby | fighting against-the Germans in Flan- terian chureh, has been sold ders, $500,000 to the Metropolitan Life{ "on i { | ' adjourned at November New York, Oct. 3.--Announc was made yesterday that Dr, C H. Parkhurst's famous church at Madigon Square, closed through con- | | | ment for ? he Belgians," said King Albert, Insurance Company, and will be re-| "are véry proud to contribute by ev- modelled for use social centre ery means to the triumph of the sac for the company's employees, of the Allies. as a red cause "This name & can - your R guarantee JM of "Coffee Satisfaction" In 34,1 and 2 pound sealed ting ~also for Percolators, 1 iw 198 Every lover of delicious coffee should have our booklet, "Perfect Coffee = Perfectly Made". Write for = copy. } (PET FOP , CHASE & SANBORN, MONTREAL 2% ; i) "Woman Hath Her Reasons, Which Reason Cannot Know" Ask a woman why she prefers Lipton's Tea, and the probability is she will answer "because" and let it go at that. There are, however, cogent reasons for this preference. The first is that Lipton's is the only Tea sold in Canada / the quality and flavor of which is guaranteed. : We guarantee it because we grow it on out ewn planta- tions. We know the quality of our leaf, and we blend it, and pack it ourselves. : pn No othef firm selling Tea in Canada can give this guar antee. - \ You cannot know the complete joys of Tea-drinking until you drink Ty [iPTON'S THE UNIVERSAL TEA 300 cues TO THE POUND 5912. cue Finest Coffee Improved Blending Improved Roasting _ ; "makes , that by- 2 rood Morning, Noon and Night x Fn air-tight tins, 1 Ib. and a 4% Ib. sizes. Never sold in bulk The FF. Dalley Corporations. Ltd. Sole Distiibutors Hamilton, Canada Bentified by this Mark of Quality fot Se rover 'Dalley laa . tracts i Dalley Mustard Joffréy-Wagar, that col-