Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 25 Mar 1920, p. 8

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FAGE faGhy "A TIE ML taatea a EFAVA 5 AN AR vr aa - In the Realm » 23 -v SIERRAS Msy Aware . EAA EY -_ -. --r. Mi a SAME «ov " -- rset 8, Chills and Influenza » BOVRIL cooking. It en- riches, nourishes more. Te nt Sawa a, Boil har boom 1ereniy Dervments Rn on 2 fee he amen of Boveil tmhen. g lal hair can be re- 1h or regained with MNewbro's Herpicide. Thous- ||! ands testify to this fact. 4 It is no experiment. The results have been destroyer. First comes dand- ruff, later falling hair, and then unsightliness ever in- Neglect of the hair is un- . pardonab) get Herpicide today. Sold Everywhere. Send 19. cents for Sam te and Book- Tot on © Care Of The Hair." Address: The icide Co., Dept. I8T-A, Detroit, USA. Applications at Barber Shops. ting. Wilton, March 22.--The annual meeting of the patrons of the Wilton chcese factory was held in the Grange hall on Wednesday, March 17th, with a large attendance. The factery will open on April 5th, with Eldridge Babcock as cheese maker, this being Mr. Babeock's ninth year in Wilton factory. Farmers are pre- paring to tap their sugar bushes. A baby girt arrived at the home of Rev. H. J. and Mrs, Latimer on Sat- urday, Mareh 20th. Stewart Sim- mons and A. W. Baboock are drawing material to build two fine residences this coming summer. The meeting of the Women's Missionary Society will be held at the home of Mrs. Er- well Miller on Tuesday, March 23rd. Mrs. R, Purdy and Mrs. W. R. Purdy John's Code. The tone of John's -voice com- manding me as he would an unruly child was unbearable, and I answer- ed, "It is impossible for me to come just at present. I am planning with Helen a pall to be made of some lowers which have just come in for mother's casket." » "It is unnecessary for Mrs. Gay- lord to take any trouble, now that I am here," said John icily. I know that I could not talk with him over the phone with Helen standing by, and so I said: "I will come immediately." "Katherine," saide Helen, "please do not let' me make you any trouble with your husband, I can't quite un- derstand, though," she added, "why he dislikes me so much. Why he met you at my house and Bobby was al- ways one of his best friends." 'He does not dislike you, Heth. That is not the trouble." "Oh, you mustn't say that, dear, | just to salve my feelings. No man | that does nol dislike us would have treated us as Johmy has--oh," she suddenly interrupted herself, sop didn't mean to say that. Please con-| sider it unsaid." Most Prejudiced Judge. | ly, but he does not dislike you, In-}| fonder of you and Bobby than per-| haps any of the rest of his friends. | My dear, John is the most prejudic- | ed judge I have ever known when | anyone has broken the laws of con-| vention. He will forgive sins against | the moral code, put the conventional code i#sacred ag far as other people | are concerned. He does not even rea- | lize that he himself shatters it into | small pieces almost every day. John| hag one commandment 'which he keeps religiously and that is the ele-| venth." - i "But we were not found out, Kath- | erine, we had nothing that anyone | might find out. We did everything] with the utmost propriety. We_ took | the real and only right way when | we told the world that we loved each | "other and that we were going to be] married because Bobbie's wife did| not love him," said Helen quickly. "Yes, dear, but the world then found out that you loved: Bobbie-- that you had probably loved each ot- her before Bobbie was divorced." "Do you mean to say," said Helen quickly, "that we could have kept John's friendship if Bobbie and 1 had kept on loving each other sec- retly- and he had remained the hus- band of Ruth?" Morven spent Monday at the home of James Lewis. Mr. Lewis, who has been {ll for the past two months, is still confined to his. The Ladies' Ald will hold their March meeting on Thursday afternoon at the home of Mrs. Frank Ward. Several from Wil- ton attended the entertainment in Odessa hall on March 18th, given by the Odessa Dramatic Club, under the auspices of the 1.0.0.F. Mrs. Yelpha Stoner returned to her home after spending the winter with Mrs. J. Shibley, Harrowsmith. On Feb. 18th, Mrs. Samah Eliza- beth Dempsey died in Seattle at the age of eighty-seven years. Deceased was born in Picton, Ont, and for many years was an esteemed resi: { could not make out his words. "I know that John treats you rude-| deed,' I think that personally he is|™ dent of Marmora. | Women---Some I nteresting Features Like a Lazy Individual. "Yes, dear, I think you could. The world is like a lazy individual. What it doesn't know doesm't hurt it and what it" can pretend not to know saves it from a great many decisions as to right and wrong, which it ne- ver likes to make." Again the telephone bell jingled. Helen and I started simultaheously for the phon, "I'm quite sure it's John," I said. "Tell him I have left if it is he." As I went out the door 1 heard Helen say, "Katherine has left for her own room," and I knew that John had grown impatient. Notwithstanding that I knew he was Waiting for mé, I.went first to Alice's room, but her maid told me that she had left word that she could be tound in mine, "Oh, dear, I wonder if they are quarreling," I said to myself. "I am 80 tired of this constant fighting. Why could not John be nice to me for at least the time that my m remains to me on earth!" Reluctantly I went.down the hal from the elevator to my door. As I reached it I heard John's grutf tone and knew that he was angry but I was trembling so that I could hardly turn the knob. © Sordidness Creeps In. Isn't it strange that even when we | are wrought up over the loss of our nearest and dearest the sordidness of life will enter into our inmost souls. I knew that Alice was so full of something that John had been do- ing that she had determined that no-| thing could keep her from telling me | of John| exactly what she thought when he was present. Of course, I understood that Adice had not known my mother, had me her but once, and I also understood that she pro- bably loved me very, very mua, but despite her impulsiveness it seemed to me that she should realize that she was only adding to my hurt by telling me the details of it now. "I will not have Katherine's mind filled with such nonsense," came to | my ea 2 John's angry tones. "Why | you wils. understand this is only gos- sip, Alice. I can't understand why you should repeat it to Katherine when" you know that it would pro- bably Cig a separation between us?" "I hope it will," she answered: "you are too unspeakably mean' to live with." I opened the door. Tomorrow--Wgat Has John Done Government Guarantee For Bonds. New, York, March 24---A local fnancll house is forming a syndil- cate t¥ underwrite and offer to the New York public $12,000,000 of Canadian Northern Railway three and five-year notes. The Dominion of Canada unconditionally guaran- tees by endorsement the principal and interest of the nates. John McMasters, Gilead, is remov- ing with his family to his farm near Consecon, recently purchased from Wilter Locle. Mr. and Mrs. Locie will reside in Consecon. Wright & Mackinnon is the name of a new legal firm in Windsor. The Wrignt is Capt. Willlam M., Ren- rew. SR \ ~~ Food Is Your Building Mater fn ------ a If chosen wisely, you'" profit in energy and health. You can do this with econ= ony when you choose for your cereal food- = Grape: Delicious in flavor. r » » Ir cooked. Grape=Nuts is the ideal ready-to-eat dish which should be on - family table There's not Grape-Nuts needs no sugar Made by Canadian Postum Cereal Co, Ltd. FPncle Sam's Avistion During War an Expensive Joke. In the report of the United States sub-committees on aviation of the Spe- cial House Committee appointed to investigate the cost of the war, made public recently, were these outstand- ing assertions: ring the 19 months of war, the War Department spent $1,061,000, 000 on aviation, but sent to the front only 218 "clumsy, utterly dangerous" De Haviland-four observation planes. American aviators at the front re- ceived only 740 planes, the addition al 427 having been "begged or bor- rowed from our alliés." Secretary Baker and Director Ryan are charged with "full knowledge of the defective and dangerous character of the De Haviland plane, 4,000 of which were buiit at a cost of $50,- 000,000, but few of which got over- seas The War Department speamt $283.- 000,000 on Bristol and Standards J. machines, which later "were scrap- ped as worthless." Col. B. A. Deeds, in charge of air- plane production up to January, 1918, a8 recommended by Judge Hughes." tween Director Ryan and the Siems- York, which had $30,000,000 contracts. x Col. B. P. Disque, in charge of | Spruce production, "illegally spent" { $1,600,000 of Government funds, | and, according to the committee's | expert accountant, "wasted more | than $30,000,000, as based on the | contract price of spruce, as produced | in 1018." The report concludes with a re- | commendation for a separate air ser- Vico, independent of the War Depart- ment. in 2 J When the Compass "Goes Mad." rtain deviations from fact occur in' the metion of the compass in a rapidly-moving airplane, which at first sight seem to indicate that the instrument has 'gone mad' or "lost | #ta magnetism," writes C. H. Claudy in Popular Mechanics. It is, thers fore, highly important for the pilot who must at some time depend upon his compass $0 know when it is tell- ing the truth, and when it is mislead- ing him. Obviously a properly mounted éom- pass, properly compensated, and not affected by engine fibration, w.il when used In a plain flying straight ahead on a level tell the truth as to direction. But if a plane be fying from south to north and turn sud- denly to the right with a/steep bank, the needle, instead off remaining pointed toward the magnetic north, will also turn. to the right. If the aviator trusts' his compass here he will be seen to be turning to the left. If a similar turn is made to the left from a south-north direction, the nee- die will not indicate it, and when the half turn fs completed and the avia- tor is pointing his plane due west, the needle will show him going to the north. If the airplane is caught in an eddy, and be compelled to turh and dodge and twist to balance and keep going, the compass will indicate anything except the true direption: aviators firmly believe that there are magnetic currents or dis- turbances in the upper air which af- fect the compass and make it "go erasy." Long experiments and eare- ful investipation, however, seem to prove conclusively that it is not the compass but the plane which moves distractedly, in the first place, and that the apparent insanity eof the compass is due to these movements and the vertical magnetic component of the governing foree. The maddest of compasses, the most contradictory and insane of cards, will steady down to a quiet behavior once the plane is successfull, set on a straight level course for a period of time greater than the period of the compass. ; The Tramp Once More. ~ Itinerant hawkers, street "trick- sters" and the vagrant class are om the inerease. Rowton houses are full. paris of England are reporting a plentiful orop of "hoboes" for whom that the war has been ne TH Hil i x £ 5 i 1 1 i y i 8 sre TODAYS FASHION "should have been court-martialled, | A close "association" existed be- | Carey-Kerbidugh Corporation of New | { Beachburg, Masters of casual wards in different | | they provide Jodging. And se it would | By MME. FRANCES Black Lace and Charmeuse are Com- bined with Turquoise Biue and Silver Brocade in This Evening Gown. Black "registers" charm on almost every woman, and black is never more charming than when compined with turquoise blue and silver. - This. evening gown makes a little ot t expensive fabric go a long way toward contributing a striking trimming on the bodice where a tri- angle of the brocade is overlapped by a surplice of black charmeuse wie extends into a broad sash whose one snd is faced with brocade. A tunic of lace that falls over a narrow black satin skirt and jet shoulder straps complete an exceed- | ingly striking evening gown, for | "very best' wear. A project is under way among the women of St. Andrew's church, to place a bell in. the tower. It is planned that the ¢ost of the bell and its erection shall be borne altogether by the women of the congregation. The plan is meet- ing" with ready encouragement. celery stuffed with cream cheese? ANTS RL OPINION -- sick people of 'my charge, I have proved it . absolute fact that for old wounds; cuts, eczema, ™ skin diseases, Zam-Buk is really marvellous.' Rev. D. MacLEOD, Harcourt, N.B. ** My personal opinion of Zam-Buk is @ " Eczema was my trovh. and 1 suffered for yess. TH practically everything, in vais Zam-Buk cured me ; and fra the day the last sore was healed there has been no tra of return of the disease."--®. E. ARSENAULT, J.B Wellington, P.E.I. ** Speaking professionally, 1 i apply Zam-Buk to all cases of q zema, ulcers, abscesses and ally diseases. 1 have proved Zsm-Buk able to cure dl worst cases."--NURSE KEITH, Olds, Alta. "Give me Zam Buk! It isthe finest all-round healer known. It cuted me of a poisoned hand, my 3 children of bad scalp sores, and my husband of a badly crushed finger. . No home should be without it."--MRS, VILLIERS, Stadacona St., Montieal. Zam-Buk is purely herbal, and for piles, ecae Baby's sores, ulcers, and all skin diseases and | known and quickest cure. SOc, box. all Jrseien and steree. The sion of the majority of the mothers In Dominion ie tS RUE MI REN AR AA Tah Ask the Cook A Use Lea & Perrine' A ITI in aia, stew the palate new atid delightful experiences in food flavors. THE WHITE STORE The United Farmers' Co-Operative Company' have taken over the agency for the King" Cream Separators for all Ontario and are offering these Separators at a reduced price." Come in and look them over. Our price for +600 capacity ..... .800%0 We also have a 14 h.p. Gasoline Engine, which can be utilized for running your Fanning Mill, Churn, Washing Mas _ chine, and Beparator. Our price x TRY OUR CREAM OF THE WEST FLOUR. : L ~ It's Guaranteed + United Farmers' Co-Operative Co., Ltd. . alge Phone 14. ry James A. McNulty, eldest son o ars he has been trmingat Margo, Mr. and Mrs. P. McNulty, Barryvale | Sask. is home upon & wisit for the first] It is easier to get well on in years time in ten years. For the past six] than it is to get well off.in cash, DELIGHT IT'S WHITE : TOILETSOAP SKIPPING is : exercise--but not to compared with the healthy enjoyment of /[nfants- t, If you are skipping see your Ta.

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