Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 14 Sep 1923, p. 4

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REFRESHING - STIMULATING \ Take up a Moir's chocolate and examine it.' Notice the perfect satiny smooth coating. Bite into that luscious shell. Honest, did you ever taste such captivating freshness or flavor? Everything that goes into the making of Moir's choc- olates is the purest and best that money can buy. Mellow honey, full-meated nuts, pure cane sugar, MOIRS LIMITED - MESSRS. R. H, TOYE & CO. Distributors fer Kingston luscious fruit juices, and most important of all, a perfect chocolate coating made by a secret process which preserves the de- licious centres and gives to Moir's that "just made" taste. If you have never tried 'Moir's you'have a new and satisfying pleasure in store. They look good and they taste better. You'll eat them with relish and want more. HALIFAX 6 Toi Chocolates - TORTOISECOOK The Stove Women Are Buying ! Recent months have demonstrated that this new TORTOISE COOK STOVE possesses 'an attraction for Eopen that they are almost power- + less to resist. raceful of lind and clad in lustrous tiles, with here and there a contrast of silvery nickel, this perfected TORTOISE COOK is pro- nounced the handsomest creation of its kind. Lemmon & Sons 187 PRINCESS STREET WHEN A MAN IS HALF IN LOVE The Head Tries to Rule the Heart But It Lamentably Fails. Coilingon Owep, is the author of the fuilowing article that was print- ed in a recent issue of the Sunday Fiecorial {Longon, England). I have & friecd who Is Balf in love and who is wondering very urgeut- ly what we de with the ctaer naif. He is = bachelur, approaching close to the watershed of forty and bas ample means, . Somewnere among the seven mil- fous of London there i» & certain young person for wiom De has a very tender regard. He 1s ponder- ing very deeply ever ihe question of taking the plunge into :natrimony and there is euly ¢me ihing thar re- strains him. : He is frankly afraid! Se much has he seen, in nis pro- fessional capauity as a solicitor, of the faliuras of others, thal he fears to tread whers 80 many have met digseer betorws his eyes. He 18 suf- fering from toe much knowledge. is tmking a& chance with fate. Yeu though he does wot quite know what Jes ahead, he is confident that he will not altogether fail. My friend, however, has seen 80 many battlebred failures come stag- spite of a heart yearning to be warm he Glas contracted cogld leet. The subject of happiness «r oth- eripse in marriage is one in which, apparently, the collective experience of humanity teathes nothing. What father and grandfather learned is of little use to the son when Nis turn comes to try the greai expevi- ment, Qur conversation. on the subject to waich my friend is just now giv- ing such intense thought took place in his flat, a comfortable and attrac- tive place with the usual evidences of the suceggsiul man ¢f guod tastes ----choice water-colurs, etohiugs and the rest. And he told me the opin- ions he had drawn, from his profes- sional abservations in terms which will startle most peuple, i Saw Only the Failures. My friend had come ww the mel ancholy conclusion thar, xoughly, ninety per cent. of warriages are failures in varying degrees. Some | where about ten per cent., 'he || thought, were reasonably satisfac- | tory. But te only about une per i cent. would he award the palm of ) ase "Then listen to the Café de Orchestra play Mannilging" --on the reverse side of the ut Yourecit A Plece of Cake Fox Tras Jennie Fax . er ot any "His Mafler's Voice™ desters 3 ne 3 | complete and unalloyed success »-- {tke sort of marriages of which one could say that they are ideal and perfect unions. He spoke of marriages which were apparently happy, until suddenly 50! g precipitated a breach ol came out which showed that behind a conventional facade of content, if mot active happiness, two peoplé hed really been in' tor- ture. Why -give up a bavhelor life, he asked, which, with ail {ts draw- backs--a little lpneliness, a little boredom--was infinitely preferable to a marriage which might go wrong? How could he evunt ou lucky where so many others led. : Not 'only did he know, he said, how tnuch marriage was a {allure as an institution, but he knew why. The fault lay overwhelming with women! Hence his fears. ; "I sm not speaking of those fall- ures which are caused by martial infidelity," he said, 'they are of things that may or may uot end in the Diverce Court. We can put those in a class apart. It's not that kind of danger I'm thinking of at all. The great proportion of mar riages are wrecked on anything so decisive. It is whet wost people would regard as the smaller things that cause the mischief. "It is the female temperament that is at the bottom of most of H-- intolerance, egotism and the rest, "There are-more husbands bullied to death than (he worid imagines. It is the hikbands who keep wayriads of these marriages going Ly their herole acceptance of a state of things which would justify them in clear- ing off the ends of the earth." So there we dre---an indictment from "a man who knows." Ii.doss not come from his heart, but his ya- tellect. He believes it more in sor- emg fail- Normally, every mean whe marries | 8 q THE DAILY BRITISH of human beings, likely to be gov- erned by the same laws only one man in a hundred married, | venture to embark on. | ty-nine men in a hundred marry, and od he whole seem no worse for it, then he might taie it for grant. ed that nothng areadful wouid hap- pen to him, I aiso pointed out that his post come muda mere likely to lucrease than "diminish. A man Who can most powerful guarantoes of hap- piness, either in married "ifre wr any other kind. After all, awkward temperament usually reveal themsolves uaaer stress. If things Tun smoothly it is easy to keep smooth. Financial anxiety doves as much to marriages unhappy as any other the whole it is the greatest factor of all. Think of tue households where the husband is suappy and ii- tempered because of the strain of meeting biiis which are always just too much for him; wnere tue nre is worn to shred in body and mind by living in an atmosphere where financial. strain kills laughter and joy. A man who at 40. can begin married life shorn' of some of.his others, ang Mvith the certainty of always being able to give his wile all that is necessary, and a good deal over, is surely, beginaing under the bapplest auspices. I think I know how his affair will end. A gman who is half in love, even though he rs letting "I dare not wait upon I will," may be counted 'as being already. lost to his' bachelordom. The young lady has to be reckoned with in the case. There will come &« moment, it may be in a taxicab going home af- when a little something--a look In her eyes he has never seen before, or the silghtest thing--will dissovlve all his fears, In a flash he. will for- get all the terrifying experieinces he has heard in the. musty lawyer's office. He wil forget the unhappy fates of A. B. and C,, pity them for the failures they are, clasp his missing half of him. Women Learning Business. The entrance of women into busi- ness and the business training which women are acquiring in the admin- listration of the modern home are making "pickings" among the fair sex much poorer for the fake stock salesmen. In former years the women with a little money and no financial training .have provided an especially lucrative field for the blue sky promoter, 3 This is an argument for & Ntile business training for every woman, which is seldom considered, The oné who 1s alive to what Is gomg on, conversant with the fundament- al principles of incomes, expendi- ture, . and the investment of savings, will not turn her little hoard over to the first smooth taiker who cumes to -her with "gilt-edged" promises. Fortunately for 'the women them- selves, as fgr others who woute ve affected unhappily by their losses, your home with the original flavor retained : NG AF Rideau Hall A "Tall" can of St. Charles is @ quart of ordinary milk. For As 1 pointed out to my friend, it it would indeed be an awful ad- But as nine- tion in life was secured with an in- 3' be 'certain of this holds one of the render tactor--there is little doubt that on where there is never quite enough illusions, aware of the mistakes of ter a @ance, or any other moment, and gladly | the kind, and everything WHIG and they recommend Lux. Won't Shrink Woollens --true, says MONARCH KNITTING CO. The above firm, one of the larg- est manufacturers of woollens - in Canada, investigated the best method of cleaning sweaters-- Here is their letter, which tells how sweatersshouldbe washed. -- education in business and finance is progressing rapidy almost eavery- ére as women become active lu club, commerical and public Ife. This is very hopeful. For a woman learns a helpful fact, she hasteh to teach it to her children, and so the war against the promoters of bad securities is wought doubly as wo- men learn wisdow in the financial game. THE COLORS OF THE FLAG. What is the blue on our flag, boys? The waves of the boundless sea, Where our vessels ride in their tameless pride, And the feet of the winds are free; . From the sun and the smiles of the coral isles, To the ice of the South and North With dauntless tread through tem- pest dread, The guardian ships go forth. What 1s the white on our flag, boys? The honor of our land, Which butns iu our sight like * a beacon light. And stunds while the Mills sKall stand; Yes, dearer than fame, is our land's great name, And we fight, wherever we be. For the mother and wives that pray for the lives, Of the brave bearts over the sea. What is the red on our flag, boys? The blood of our heroes slain On the burning sands in the wild waste lands And the froth of the purple main, And it cries to God from the erim- soned sod Ang the crest of the waves out- rolled, That He sends us men to ; again, : As our fathers fought of old, fight We'll stand by the dear old flag. boys: Whatever be sald or done, Though the ghots come fast, as we faco the blast And the foe be ten to one;-- Though our only reward ba the 'thrust of a sword And a bullet in heart or brain, What matters one gone, if the flag . fioats on f And Britain be lord of the main? ~f'rederick George Scott. i He Got There. A regular sced home spun entered the sleeping-car and paid for a berth. He had never boon insidd of a ear of him. When the porter came lo make up the: beds ae sew the native was pe , Dut as the native ade no direct a pesl, it wasn't bis Kills all insect pests -- flies, moths, ants, mos quitos, etc. Will not stain finest fab- rics, pleasant odor, non. poisonous to humans. Free sprayer with every bottle. Eight oz., 50c, Grocers and Druggists. CANADA REX SPRAY CO. SRIGHTON, ONT Abraham Goldstein was almost reduced to tears when he met his old friend, Patrick O'Bries, om the board-walk at Atlantic City. "They won't let me Ir at any of these swell hotels, and [ can't find any plaze to stay. Oy, what cen I do?" . "Sure, and ye aréfit using your heaq at all. When ye go to register sign the name of some Catholic and there'll -be no difficulty.' A few hours later Pawlet, came across his again. Abraham lnoked worse troubled than before "Oh, yoy vot a terrible business. I regisered as you said and now Jook on me." "I don't undestand. did ye sign?" "Archbishop Flannigan and wife." What 'name Timely. "That certainly was a very fine sermon," sald an enthusiastic church member who was an ardent admirer of the minister. 'A fine sermon, and well«imed, too." "Yes," answered his ucadmiring neighbor, "I certainly was well- timed. Fully half of the congre- gation had their watches out." The end mus justify the means. concert stage was a jour de fote. Thousands thronged his way to the theatre, thousands besieged hin as he concluded his Arst.performance. a benefit affair. friends of the great Pole were his guests this opening day, says the magazine, Time. He bought (ae tiakets to the box office, asking the theatre management only for a dres- sing room where he might soak his hands in hot water for half an hour before playing. That is his recipe for suppleness. The French press took occasfon te retell the story of how the world's most noted planist was expelled from Russia after playing for Tzar Alexander 111. Yae gist of this tala: Alexander II1:---"Joun, are a great artist and an honor to Kussia.™ Paderewski:---" Pardon, Your Ma- jesty. To Foland.' Next day came the order to cross the border. Paderewski has never entered Russia since, He who has not a dram of folly in his mixture, has pounds of mueh worse matter in his composition. The couptehance is the portrait of the mind---the eyes are its inform- There are numerous uses in every for Gillett's Pure Flake Lye. household It costs very, Nearly » hundred - ) E & 5 3

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