Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 31 Mar 1917, p. 18

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To Have Beautiful Hair Use _ NEWBRO'S HERPICIDE No woman can afford to be indiffer- ent to the appearance of her hair. A mass of nice snappy hair, becomingly dressed, will oi more in genuine looks than a pretty face, or an ex- pensive gown. Don't allow the scalp < to become clogged with dirt and dan- druff. Don'tallow dandruff to destroy your hair. If your hair is uneven, dead, dull and brittle and comes out by the handful ~v~ry time you draw dand 13 the a comb through it, 4 cause. To rid your alp of the dandruff and check the loss of hair should be your first anxiety. NEWBRO'S HERPICIDE will do this and at the samé. time put the hair and scalp in a sanitary condition. HERPICIDE appeals to those of greatest refinement on account of its exquisite odor, its purity and clean- liness. It contains no grease and does not stain or dye. There is noth ing more depéndable than this re- markable sealp prophylactic. The hair responds readily to a regula and intelligent use of NEWBRO'S HERPICIDE, Try it and see. Send 10 cents to- day to THE HERPICIDE GO. Dept. 8, Detroit, Mich., for a sample bottle and a booklet telling all about the hair, For sale everywhere in 50c and $1.00 sizes, Guaranteed by The Herpicide ~\ Company. at the better Barber Shops and Hair Dressing Parlors. Twi mi == ight -- In the Realm "of Tame | THE CONFESSIONS OF ROXANE (By Frances Walter) ' y = M, VITEAUX AND 1 TALK BUSINESS SOME MORE C pyright : Newspaper 8 ¢ Excessive immode ér had been one of my failings, when I remember the praise w 1 bestowed upon myself thers in 2 | Viteau's office 1 blush even now. of the worst things abeut| hat I did not awaken to the that 1 telling this man in glowing terms what wonderful abil- | ity 1 possessed, any more than it | oecurred io to tell' him that I | knew nothing all about the bus- |.iness into I was seeking an | entrance ! , 1 think, one Was me at which I was keyed up by the excitement . resulting from my guest 1 imagine | that I felt very much as a business man fel when he starts out to | "land" big deal He is so intent { upon t matter in hand t! r gels self It was so with me Al though 1 bad very little confidence {at first in my ability 10 convince M Viteaux that he should create a pos- | ition for me in hig establishment, I had not advanced far in my argument before 1 had convinced myself that his business would go straight ruin unless I was installed there to But I fear that I did not impart my conviction to M. Viteaux. This man had a dual personality, as I M have intimated different finan Viteaix was a very from Mr. Sulli van . M. Viteaux was the poseur, the Parisian who assured his clients that the hats he offered were of the very latest mode, who managed somehow | minus one of M 11 said t0 his e¢reditors why meet his explained could not who administered bills that he needed a "superintendent of styles" in his shop, 1 saw his whole personality undergo a change as com- plete as that which marked the pass- ing of Dr. Jekyll and the appearance of Mr. Hyde. He dropped his assum- ed French accent, laid aside his habit of lifting his eyebrows and elbows, abandoned his excitable tempera- ment, settled back into his chair and looked at me keenly He was now Mr. Sullivan "I understand," he said, nodding his head slowly. "You are applying for a position here?" "That is but part of my purpose," brazenly "It is true that I want employment, but I also want to see more of your hats sold, and know that more of them will stay sold." He squinted hisweyes at that and 'stared at me through narrowed lids "At first 1 was at a loss to know what you were driving at," he went on, without appearing to have heard my statement "1 did not know whether you would offer to buy out my business «© would suggest we burn it and collect the insurance You made it evident from the start however, that you thought it was un he promptly, | verbal castigation! to Monsieur Smith when poor Smith | jallowed 4 woman to leave the shop; Viteaux"s latest de-; that | i to fool them by assuming a French profitable to me. Now will you accent when he was not so excited! ;jeage tell me why von arrived at | that his Irish brogue betrayed him.| (hat conclusion. | Mr; Sullivan was the I of the establishment, It was he w WINCARNIS gives New Health to all who are Weak, Anaemic,Nervous,Run-down 4 THE wonderful results of Win- 4 carnis in cases of Weakness, 3 Anaemia, Nerve Troubles and that 4 Fv Nest por drs Looted r the four er 4 possesses. Wincamis is not merely a tonic--it isa Tonic, a Restorative, a Blood-maker, and Nerve Food-- all m one. Therefore, when you take Wincarnis' you derive new stre and at the same time new rich blood----and at the same time new nerve force--and at the same time new vitality . Thus the system is mvigorated, and R= bcomes po c with a g of new life. That is why over 10,000 Doctors Prey Gp an estare Shout Wines a oe a ere hl: 3Ouhid beforermote ich rod bid than but a positive i al who see Work: Arter TT a bled by Old £ ; : Hi e - is lasting health--not a wert Gasbuinithe . "not a "whipptag.up™ Fhe vitality but rea igorous' Resi that makes you feel it is to be alive. Take advantage, of the new and lasting health Wi istoffers you. Don't suffer need- | unrivi reputation of 30 years' standing. Don't accept substitutes. ? ASK YOUR DOCTOR GET IT AT YOUR DRUGGISTS Pints 90c. Quarts $1.50 FRANK 8, BALL, Resident Director, 67 PORTLAND ST., TORONTO 33 sss mtr: business ms ho a in "I might hurt your feelings." "You can't, Go ahead." "lI knew it because you cater to the fashionable element while many of your hats are not the kind that please persons of that class." "Won't you be a little more ex- plicit?" "Your designers turn out some | beautiful hats, but they also make | some atrocious ones. Every custom- er who gets an atrocious hat becomes | yeur personal enemy." | "And you propese?" "To offer nothing excepts goods { which will stay sold" | He was thoughtful for a moment. { "Would that mean that we would { have to recomstruct the business from the ground up?" "No; only that there should be a | little careful supervision." "Which you yourself will give?" 1 nodded. '" F see," he said; 'if you will leave | your card I will telephone you later." | 1 complied and was about to leave | the office when the door opened, and {a wom#n, yery red as to face and | very angry as to expression, strode | into the room, | { i (To Be Continued.) re v THE ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN | Lakewood, {rifle club Boston store girls have formed a {gun club. London policewomen receive $5 per week. Kyoto, Japan, is soon to have a university for women. Women are taking the census of the men in Connecticut. All the roads in England are now {being built Dy women, Woman school superintendents in Wyoming now number eighteen. Women are now permitted to vote at the primaries in Arkansas. Women will replace the man mail {carriers in Paris in the near fufure. | Miss Helen Hammond is classed {among New York's most gifted deco- | rators. Qver 500,000 women are now en- gaged in making munitions in Great Britain. Jeanette Rankin, the only woman member of Congress, has a hobby for horseback riding. big success in New Brunswick, N.J. Female messengers have proved a Over 18,000 applications for ser- N.J., has a women's in £ 4 i imported The best features and styles to méct Canadian which doubl= the inthe D& A. DOMIN ER ------------ = g ¥ \ ry 3 ~ Comt ort--Support--Style D & A Corsets suit you better than nes costing twice as much, ce the latest tions, and the customs duties and heavy ©ost to you of imported corsets are avoided There is a style for every figuve-- Ash your corsetiire. ' ION CORSET CoO., an Makers aloo of the La Diva Corsets asd D & A "Good-Shape a # made in Canada. are fitted foreign corsets are improved QUEBEC -- Montreal -- Toronto men Suffrage and the National Wo- man's party have united, the com- bination name being the Woman's party. tain Leonard Hughes, daughter of a German baron, once a lady in waiting to Princess Elingy Minn., whe is now past 90 years old, attributes her longivity to smoking, a habit which she formed some 52 years ago. woman ever to run for public. office the independent ticket for members of the board of educatidn town. have joined classes in cookery, auto- mobile mechanics and wi graphy, So as to prepare themselves newspaper woman, has been chosen by Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt to di- rect the expenditure of $1,000,000 left Mrs. Catt by the estate of Mrs. Frank Leslie. making munitions in England smok- ed cigarettes on the sly in factories jthat it has been found advisable to send a number to jail as a warning} The Whig's Daily Menu | Menu for Sunday RREAKEPANT Oranges Cereal of Choice Fruit Toast" with Maple Syrup Cofiee or Cocon LUNCHEON OR SUPPER signs, and it was Mr. Sullivan, 1 was Split Pea Soup {about to leard, who employed the Watercress Salad help Steamed Cereal Pudding Now, as I lauded myself outrag- Tea or Coton eously. and attempted to show him DINNER Haked Meat Loaf With Peas Coleslaw Corastrach ( uxtard Colfer Menu for Monday BREAKFAST Inajoduasy Holled Cereal of Choice Waffles nud Honey Coffee or Cocon DINNER Lamb Brota Filled Roast Shoulder of Venl Hominy Border Creamed CUarrots Seallion Salad Apricot jee Uream Coffee SUPPER Cheese Toast ERg Salnd Cream Cake (Continued from Page 7.) Sir Joan and Lady Eaton, Toronto are in Baltimore. : H recovered from an attack of measles onto lege. Mr. and Mrs. Asa Gordon, Ottawa, at present at San Diego, Cal, are ex- pected home shortly after Easter. from the Royal Military in Kingston, having received a call for immediate overseas service * * * Lord Milner has recently placed at of his beautiful houses in Kent for the use of wounded Canadian officers. G. Yarker, of 57 avenue, formerly manager of the To- ronto Clearing House, and a promin- has just celebrated his eighty-first birthday. Mr. Yarker retains his old- time vigor and is enjoying excellent health. He is a former Kingstonian. * * . Mrs. Alexander, London, Ont. is the guest of her .sister, Lady Hen- drie; at Government House. Misses Viola and Mabelle Allén, --- J ----N --- iSliced Bananas or Strawberries Ter or Cocon German Sour Materials--One and a half pgunds soup meat, % cup vinegar, 2 table- spoons cut onion, 3 tablespoons drip- pings, 1 teaspoon salt, paprika Directions-- The soup meat is boiled slowly until tender in 6 cups 'of water. When tender cut into thin slices and put in soup gravy, which is made as follows: Put drippings and onion into sauce- pan and cook until onion is tender; then add the flour, which has been | browned on pietin in moderate oven. Mix until smooth, remove from fire, add the cold vinegar and 1 cup of stock in which the meat was boiled. Return to fire and boil slowly 11 min- Jites, stirring until smooth Meat { "Orange Gelatin, Materials One cup strained orange juice, 1 tablespoon lemon juice, 1 eup ghgar, 1 tablespoon | granulated gelatin, 1 cup whipping cream Utensils jowl, 2 measuring cups, teaspoon, tablespoon, cream whip Directions cup cold water 10 minutes; Missolve 'in 131% cups boiling water; add sugar lemon and orange juice Pour into ice-cream glasses and set in a cold place. Whip the cream and put a spoonful on top of each glass I ace Soak the gelatin in 4 R. H. the Princess Patricia has Cadet Norman MacKay is in Tor- Col- Miss Mae Kennally, Peterboro, is the disposal of Lady Drummond one | Kendal | ent figure in Toronto financial circles, | former residents of this | spending a few weeks {| cousin, Mrs. George A. 239 Alfred street. \ Sir John and Lady Gibson are spending a short time in California. Mrs. F, C. T. O'Hara, wife of the Deputy Minister of Trade and Com- merce, has left for San Francisco to sail for Honolulu, where she will join her parents, Senator and Mrs. Corby, Belleville. x as Mr. and Mrs. Neil 8. McEachren, | Owén Sound, announce the engage- ment of their only daughter, Annie Jean, to James Joseph Wilson, B. A., | | Belleville High School, son of Mr. | and Mrs. James Wilson, Guelph. The marriage will take place early in! { April. | city, are with their Macdonald, | * . » The marriage of Lord Hartington, | | soh of their excellencies the Duke and Duchess of Devonshire, to Lady Mary | w~-- {Hamilton will take place at Easter | | either at Bt. James', Piccadilly, or in| ne This is) 40° WHICH Old tea looks just the same as fresh tea; Poor, cheap tea looks the same as good tea; Damaged tea looks the same as seund tea; The tea in the scoop looks all right; The tea in the Red Rose package is all right. It is guarantee to be pure, fresh, fine quality team - Guaranteed so fully that if you ever should happen to find a package not right up to the standard, and that is a very rare occurrence, your grocer will give you-another-package free of charge, or refund your money, and we will pay him for it. You don't have to depend on looks when you buy Red Rose. The name, the sealed package and our guarantee insures you getting tea worth every cent of the price marked on the package. sealed packages T. H. Estabrooks Co., Limited St. John Toronto Winnipeg | Hatfield church. The Bishop of Ex- {eter will officiate, and probably the! ! Bishop of Southwell and Rev. Wil- | | liam Temple will also take part in! | the service. vice in France have been received from English women. J In Arabia the pay of cooks and house. servants runs from $8.30 to $13.20 per month. Winnipeg (Con.) telephone girls have formed a labor organization to protect their interests. Miss Rose Moriarty, city clerk of Elyria, O., is recognized as the political boss of that tows: After 1921 no gi ill be allowed to graduate fro assar College un- less she is an expert swimmer, It is estimated that the women of this country waste over $700,000,- 000 yearly in their kitchens. Mrs. Charlotte Reagan, aged 70, has proved her right to 160 eres of homestead land in California. Women of the Pacific coast at New- berg, O., rank higher than the male students enrolled there. A New York magistrate has ruled that it is no violation of the law for 4 woman to smoke in public. Spanish women believe that it is degrading for a lady to take up anv kind of work for which she is not paid. In order to release more men for the war, London taxicab companies have agreed to employ women as drivers, The Congressional Union for Wo- National Mrs. Leonard Hughes, wife of Cap US.A., and was of Reuss. Mrs. Johnna Olson, of Saint Paul, Mrs. Charles C. Pedrigk, the first n Glassboro, N.J., is at the head of in that Hundreds of women in New York less tele- for service in case this country goes |bed for the 4 eight years, though! to war. \ all of this time she has successfully | Miss Rose Younger, a New York |run her ine order So many young women engaged in rain to anthers. committee has issued a warning that styles in women's clothes cannot be allowed to change every six months. | This edict i wearing apparel in that country. { has not been able to rise from er magazin with the aid of a telephone. Geneva, Wis., won the title of cham-! pion girl farmer of Wisconsin at the 1916 state fair. Miss Hatch had to make her own | fapron and cap, name twenty different kinds of cloth, can one can of ear- rots and one can of peaches, bake a loaf of bread and a biscuits, show her. skill 'In patching, | Wilson's inauguration was designed by Miss Loretta Lewenstein, a Wash-| CHEMICALLY SELF -EXTINGUISHING What do these words mean to yon? They mean greater safety in the Home =~ Surely something that interests you keenly! Perhaps you have noticed these words and the notation 'No fire left when blown out" on our new "Silent Parlor" match boxes. The Splits or sticks of all matches contained in these boxes have been impregnated or soaked in a chemical solution which renders them dead wood once they have been lighted and blown out, and the danger of FIRE from glowing matches is hereby reduced to the greatest minimum. SAFETY FIRST AND ALWAYS -- USE EDDY"S SILENT 500s ington. artist, A measure permitting women to practiogls solicitors hag received its first ding in the British House of | Over 300 girls students of Toron- | to university will don overalls during the summer vacation and work in the munition factories. has invented a bathing cap with a patent inflated band which prevents the hair from getting wet, Mrs. Charles Van Rensselar has ment the military abservation a loon exhibited at the First Pan-Am-|" erican Aeronautic Exposition. i Boston society women recently] Mme. Sarah Bernhardt, the eminent' French actress. The proceeds will | EO to ajd of the suffers in France. | Wives of Vienna ployees who have gone to the front! have appealed to the mayor to in- | Crease their pensions to prevent | them and their children from stary- Archduchess Maria Josepha, moth- er of Charles Francis, the new em-| peror of Austria-Hungary, is a mem- | ber of the house of Saxony. and it is! for the German empéror, | Miss Esther M. Ranck, recently | awarded the highest honors for schol- | astic standing at the Pennsylvania dent to carry off the prize since the! inauguration of the custom of award- | ing scholarship medals. i Helen Dutriexe, who has been do-| has returned to the United States and has signified her intention of | volunteering to the American army | in case this conntry goes to war. | Lords. Miss Juil M. Riley of Minneapolis, | started a fund to buy for the Govern- paid $50 each to clasp the hand of tramway em- ing. reported that she has a great dislike, State College, is the first woman stu- | ing aviation scout duty in France, The German Imperial clothing, is issued to conserve the Miss Mabel Long, of Settle, Wash., | her business | Miss Helen M. Hatch, of Lake To win this title; @ pan 'of 'baking! The official medal for President darning, making 'corset covers, pete " 2 Sensible Mothers know Baby'sfood isa factor towards bis th. Health meansto good start life, and lay he foundation for the use of his possibilities as a man. Baby has a rightful demand: withhold i ond he cama: handicapped, and for years he will cost more in care, anxiety and money. Mf Baby has to be hand fed from birth or at any time, wholly or partly, give him the 'Allenburys' Foods, the foods that are suited to his needs step by step. Let us tell you about them--send for our booklet "lofant Feeding "and Management" free.

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