Daily British Whig (1850), 7 Jun 1902, p. 7

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GERUTLH ad 2HT WHit, SATURDAY, JUNE 7. SHER Yo If You Are Limited inn the matter of fresh gir and ling breezes to the supply "fort ' Liquified Ozone to baby's food; | you sterilize the food in that way and keep the little one's | stomach in a healthy condi- tion. Two things that prevent | cholera infantum. i We give you these sug i because they are valu- able to.yon. Just as valuable -as¢baby'y life in some jn course we ex to t by selling you a the of Pow- : didn ited by taki i you 't profit ing it 'we wouldnt be in business very long, however, ange J here is "tho daint LATEST NOTES FROM AMERI- ------ 8 The Beautiful Things Desig Bewildering Mass of , And Flowsrs--A Pretty J ~Somé Striking Gowns. New Yi June 7.--In selecting wardrobe which will he on reghe the entire season, (he gmmer woman finds hersell much tion as a good the exception that the diffic knowing what not to select what not to say; for indsed the sum- itr "wardrobe as Tt 1s dpelled with & capital W contains dainties almost too numerable to mention. To be sure it is a lpbor of love to tell of all the beautiful things designed he season of nineteen hundred and two, nevertheless it is'a despair be cause words are inadequate to. éxpress all that the eyes hehald. Such a be wildering mass of lace and flounces; such a carnival of colors, all blending into one harmonious scheme; such in- tricacies of stitehi and tuckings, it is too dazzling to think about, except to grieve that the average-sized purse cannot boast them all. Never was there a more transitory creature than the sommer girl of this ear. From morning until night she continually Shanging and it in only the greater wonder how whe accom- plishes 80 much 'and dresses so often within the short space of teen hours--for she has only six in which: to sleep 'wi a complete sche dule for a is earried out. i is u- ¥, To be, ultra- ~, stitched in dull 'black, shoul selected, The shirt' waist is a Gibson of white pique or madras over a swell little patent leather belt and smartened at the neck with a broad four-in-hand tie of the same material. the "slot-seam' A reached barely to the hips and is lined either with white or grey taffeta satin, The stoek are dreams of open- work Stosking "av be of Fate embroidered in French nots of a con: trasting color. show prettily above the low shoeiof dull kid laced with strong strings linen. There has been an | effort in certain directions to fasten laced shoes with strings of 4 different color, but the vogue seems to have been transferred to the men, and it is therefore . wltra-chic summer morning constititional, breakfast gown of lawn, made, or a deli- cate shade of blue is very desirable for this purpose 'and the simpler the design the more comme il faut, for early morning is one of the few per iods on the schedule of fashion w simplicity is the quintessence of fas breakiast there is he bougloir preceding the, seashore dip, or game of goli or hE ta of eg w and ruflles, edged with ith valenciennes, are quite as smart ying oie vat ony Scamart oy there is a decided leaning toward the White, sim on, how in tbe 4 iddlie .odih posi. | pou. Taal the ittle frilled fichu drapes the low neck and is drawn upon one side under a choux and long ends of black velvet. Exquisite evening gloves, mits are being displayed in the ionable shops of Gotham. These opera ves, for some reason quite explicable outside the realm dressmakerdom. A few women in very exclusive so- ciety in the metropolis have taken up the English fad of having the arms lovers' the flesh i ate stamped upon f and io tints in harmony with the pink and white of the skin. The fad is a pret: one and most likely will be limited to the enjoyment of fashions elect, as it is very expensive to have the work executed skilled thttooiste At the jonably summer resorts the fashion revived/last summer of wearing finely knitted shoulder shuwls is steadily growing in favor and many exquisite effects in. the caales, to use the strictly modish térm, are observed. In all cases they are made of silk and borders of rosebuds and leaves embroidered in raised design ornament many in addition to a deep silken fringe. It is considered the correct thing also to have the fringe composed of two colors, that of the chale with t predominating tint in the embroider ed design. MAUDE GRIFFIN, THE BEAUTIES OF BRITAIN. the Gardens of the World. One of By a Banker. Une of the principal causes of the varied beauty and char of the sce: ery of the Uritish Isles is the fact that within its narrow sea-gire boun- daries strata of all ages--from the plutonic rocks forming the skeleton of the earth, right on wwrough all the long aeons of geologic time--have heen forced from beneath, and now, in dil ferent parts of the islands, form the surface. Slegting a few of the principal for mations iti their natural sequence, we find that granite, one of the earliest of the primaeval rocks, gives to the sosbery a wild and moufitaibous © as- pect; sheer precipioes, 'dark caverns rugged; though beautiful , diversmlied with those peak: and upreared pyramidal pikes which add so much to the grandeur of the lake scenery. Serpentine, another of the earliest of the earth's founda. tions, gives to the Cornish constline its massive sublimity; and as the rock appears to vary in hardness, numer ous deep caverns 'are worn by the over-continued onsluughts of the 'wild Adlanti¢ rollers; in some cases a row outlet being cut from the u end of the cavern, through which, rough weather, a great roaring jet foaming water is forced high in air, certain stages of the tide. The carboniferous limestone, abounds in lovely Derbyshire, has pro- duced thowe sublime elifi-bordered gor- ges, thowe precipitous acclivities and precipices; and also that wonderful subterranean with its pillared halls, its dark sombre es and rush- ing torrents which so bewilder the explorer who ventures into. those vast and gloomy Satie caves. Then in of at y promptly ! £ 8 have led me into is. H hear your voice again, New Eden, May 12th, 1902 Sweetest,--1 have just received your letter--the breath of your pre sence in it, "the delicate perfpme of violets ! How of you to write so 1 of you pli last night, and am ing of you now. The fellows laugh at me for my ab- sent-mindedness. What do I care! 1 have something better to think of than logarithms and Greek roots. But I must stay some, 1 suppose, or our secret will be So 3 bye for now. 1 enclose a leaf from the inmost heart of my rose. Kiss it for me, as | have kissed it for you ! Forever yours, Clarence. New Eden, May 15th, 1902. Darling,~You are too unkind, 1 know that | have missed a day, but examinations are. close at hand, and those two weeks, while we were find- ing our heaven, have made such ao gap in my work | You say that I love jou less than my "nasty old bboks." hat is just like a girl! Why can't your sex have a little common sense? But there goes the bell--eonfound it ! Hastily, Clarence. ---- New Eden, May 20th, 1908. My Dear Jessie,~Why oan't you keep your temper? I have not, been lecturing you, and I have not négleot- ed you. One charge refutes the other, I simply asked you to have a little charitable common sense, in view of the bard work that is crowding on me just now. Of course, I am just as fond of you as ever I was; but I'can't write love letters and grind matbema tica at the same time, and no reason- able girl would expest it. You know that I love you. Why should you in sist upon my repeating it every single day ? Lovingly, Clarenve. ---- New Eden, May 25th, 1902. My Dear Miss Northeote,~I ' am sorry you feel as you do. ation at all, after the present week, and will write you at lc.iah my views upon this sub- Then, 'perhaps, vou can ' con sistently claim that 7 am lectaring you ! Ever sincerely, Clarence. SE -------- » New Eden, May 27th, 1902. Mise Northeote : Dear Madam, --1 beg to acknowledge receipt by express of the package containing ring, | let- ters, photograph, I return, also by express, like artichn of yours in n. indly acknow 0 y possession. ian, Japon delivery, and listering as te and driven snow, are a welcome sight he "soos to the Saiining migrant ss the long white lind rising above the distant horizon in all "their well i i £ 4 g r j J i i A i | T it E Yours respectfully, : Clarence Murchison. t ca : "Sire, it in your majesty's bedtime." His | ma- jesty instantly ETE an = wr ---- > C= : * Linen like Snow wilh Sunlight Sodp '= Sunlight Soap is pure as snow. That's why linen washed with Sunlight Soap- is white as snow. That's why woolens washed with Sunlight Soap are soft as the snowflake. BEACONBFIELD'S PROPHECY. -------- Discovered the Tory in Radical "Joe" Chamberlain. Loudon Daily News. "Colonial = Secretaries I Have Known "* is the title under which, in " Journal, T. H. 8. Escott gossips entertainingly of some of Mr. Chamberlain's sors, and of that great man himself, Of lord Car- navon he relates an incident which is of special interest to-day. He was at the colonial office when the Boer dele gates visited England in 1874. He en- tertained the delegates at Higholere castle, par Newbury, Berkshire, and the Transvaalers were so impressed with the brew laid before them that one of them observed : "Really, this old ale is one of the very few Eng. lish institutions which we can con | scientiousl '4 It is of Mr. Chamberlain that Mr. Es- cott tells the most characteristic anecdotes. Mr. Newdegate, the typical tory squire of the house of commons, in the days before Mr. Chamberlain had recanted Ris radicalisn, used pleasantly to remark : ic seem to think my Birmingham friend belongs to you, Ro such thing. Some ad imple wil be sent You. free of cock county constituency, He is in a sense ol tho Bitminghat. district is in my colleague, ought to ksow. | T lives not a stouter tory of the | feudal school in England then he | whom. they call the people's Joe." | Mr. Newgate based his then You could not expect pure white linen and soft woolens using common. Soap mide from impure fats and oR ole bs containing freé alkali EVER BROTHERS LIMITED. Toronto, sending his naane "lease don't omit to give your own full name and addres, ot REDUCES EXPENSE FOR dressmaking and family sewing Corticelli Silk is the best silk"made. For hand or machine use it has no a equal. Corticelli Silk runs smoothly in the needle ; it is al ways even in size and always full length and full strength. Ask your dealer for Corticelli" and politely 'but firmly refuse all substitutes which some clerk say are "just as good." You may be sure they all lack many excellent qualities of the genuine Corticelli Silk. dealer does not keep Corticelli Silk it is probably As Corticelli YOU no more than poorsilk, why don't you try it ? Ask for "CorricarLr" Dressmakers' Favorite Spool Silk. " ------y » 2800 2000 00000000 PIOOEOSOP PROVE IT! i Bome shopping around Look st Arnih Ria ROR Jd QUEEN OUALITY. I he Gus Ql best ob hte a Tr We have the sole of sale Because it's § fo the . right oe thom. 's given +

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