Daily British Whig (1850), 7 Jan 1914, p. 10

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would not bring you a more delicious cap of tea Easy and Practical Suggestions FOR THE Sweet Oranges, 15¢, 200 80c a dozen. : Malaga Grapes, 20¢ a 1b, Bananas, 160 and 20¢c a doven. Figs, 16¢ a Ib. Dates, 10¢ @ 1b. B14 Princess 8t. Phone 1405 PHONE 1170 Kingston | Automobile Co. | Quesn ang Bagot Streets. Btorage, Repairing, Acces sories. We Guarantees Satisfaction. ' RIDGETOWN, "Your ** Prui ivi i Jt was the ealy medicine made any impression on me. I was a terrible meilerer Toor Rb 1 as laid bp for four wititers with OWE. May atat. 1913. caand M ad was a cripple completely, not able to fo hing 1 ton ih dif- erent ians, but not help me. Suter I were equally unsatisfactory, and I have taken several. g : Some neighbor of mine told me that "Fruit-a-tives" helped him, and I took them faithfully every day and the result was marvellops. Forovertwo now, I have been from any pains whatever, and give "Pruit-a-tives" the full credit for making a remarkable cure', x W. T. RACHER If you are subject to Rheumatic At- tacks, Sciatica, Lumbago or Neuralgia, take *' Pruitia-tives" right now and start the peananent cure which * Fruit-a. tives' will complete if taken faithful ly. soc a box, 6 for $3.50, trial size, 28e, At dealers or sent on receipt of price by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa. lus that tres and balls is, naturally emough, the land of dinners. But there is a growing population which dines away from its sleeping place as a rule, with- out any Intention of amusement. Gradually it is being borne in upon bination in feeding leads GRAND UNION & HOTEL =, Send 20. tug RYE EEL mae i S-- 1 i Women's Confidence In | the efficacy of this thoroughly tried | home remedy is never misplaced. In every way-in health, strength, spir- | its and in Jooks-~women find them- selves better after timely use of BEECHAM'S PILLS Sold everywhere. In boxes, 75 cents. i fue ions of space are pérmitted. to convenience and even to economy. The row of flats in which your scribe dwells contains some 450 kitch- ens, employing an army of cooks and assistants to feed, on the basis of five persons to a household, some 2,500 persons, and to providing dinners for perhaps 2,000 bodies after excluding infants and abseritees. What waste! What overlapping! Four big reatau- rantr would do the business, and at waat a saving of thought and man- agement. The wonder is, therefore, not that new restaurants should be announced almost weekly, but that they should not have been baking, frying and serving hard already for twenty years. Bright surroundings and change sti- mulate appetite and cheer the jaded worker. - Good cooking, efficiency of service are obtainable from the ex- pert who devote that time to making th restaurant business iw success. You like music! There are few of us can afford the luxury of its strains at dinner at home, even if considcr- You adore shaded lights and exquisite de- corations. Your landlord provides HOME DRESSMAHKER This handsome dinner waist is made of black net built over white satin and trimmed with si i A striking bit of color is supplied in the crushed girdle of bright green satiny The sleeves are very short, since they are designed to be met by long gloves. It is very easy however, to convert the waist into a more practical de- sign by adding a yoke of lace or some , transparent material and under-cuffs of the same trimming, or even bishop sleeves that extend to the wrists where they are finished wigh cuffs. The materials required for making the waist are: 1) -yard 36-inch lining for front, back and Jeriom, (If the lining is of silk, it will cost about $1 a yard). 214 yards of 10-inch flouncing and ' 13 yards of 36-inch net. The lining is made and fitted first, then the outside of the waist is' pre- pared. Close the 'under-arm and shoulder seams as notched. If the neck is inclined to be hollow, then the seam may be taken up a little in putting the materials together, as this will save alteration in the fitting. Turn under the edge of side front and side back on slot perforations, lap on front + and back, notches and edges even and BLACK NET AND LACE. An evening bodice made of black net and silver lace and trimmed with a girdle of Kelly green satin. It closes at the front and may have cither a high, round, square or V:shaped neck. The short sleeves may be piped with satin, veiled with black net. "25 stitch leaving edges to left of center- front free for opening. Gather lower edge between double "TT" perfora- tions. The center-back is indicated by single small "0" perforation at lower edge. Close the sleeve seams, leaving ex- tensions free. If a piping or banding of any kind is to be added, this should be 'stitched on before the scams is closed. The belt does not require any special making. It may be of ribbon or satin, cut in bias folds, hemimed and tied around the waist in artistic fashion. CONSTRUCTION GUIDE 5467 than you a = The vetysbest for use in ill-health and convalescence Awarded Medal and Highest Points in America ; TOUT at World's Fair, 1893 ! PS " James McParland, 7 -s-ate:- JOS. B. ABRAMSON'S I will furnish ladies and gentlemen thing they require by paying $5.00 do ance on the $1.00 a week plan. I have a large stock of ladies coats, suits, boots and millinery; also men's overcoats, suits, boots and boys' supplies. Call in and look over m For cash, 10 per cent. off. y large stock. with every ! wn, and bal- | neither, and to the small property J'owner the expense is prohibited. You love to entertain. Your staff of ser- fvants is too limifea and to increase 257 Princess St. 'Phone 1473 MOTOR "CARS for FIRE AR A MOMENTS NOTIOB Bibby's Garage ONARGES REASONABLN CAREFUL DRIVER, Phone's 201 & 917, Phone For Your Our stock is complete In all lines. 341-3 Princess Street. Prompt Delivery, (Coast Sealed Oysters.) _ D. COUPER ec | To have your winter's coal In | now. - It can't spoil or go out of "stoll." P. WALSH | 55-57 Barrack Street | Why Pay High it means more house room, a grave Prices? | 1 will give you A FIRST CLASS GOODS The Style and Fitting will be : Faultlexs. The Fluish and Workmanship wil be Perfect. The Price will he from $500 to $7.00 LOWER than you have } been paying. RALPH SPENCER | 820 Princess Strees. Opposite St. Andrew's Church. are especially good for children because they are pleasant to take, gentle in action, do not irritate the bowels nor, develop a need for continual or increased doses. 25¢c. a box, at your Druggist's. National Drug and Chemical Co. of Canada, Limited. 1 ! } ARR LIGHTNING SX We. HITCH | | Men's Hocke 191.75, $2.00, $2. i} Also - Boots, | , $3.00. | Hockey Boot at $5.00. | Boys' Hockey Boots. 191.50; $2.00, $250. | Ladies' Hockey Boots | $1.75, $2.00, and $2.50. It 1 1he Sawyer Store smaller places in the Straic at prices i | but before we leave this street, cross matter when every additional foot of space meéans more rent. You wish to sec your fellow-men (and women) around you, to run the chance of see- ing people you know. For all these reasons dining out maken an appeal to you. Where shall wi go? Had Dr. Johnson lived in these days he wouid have taken his walk, not down Fleet street, where the newspaper man still snatches his has- ty meals, but down Piccadilly, and its jostling ne'shbors. At one end In the manner of the Rue Rivoli standu the world-famed Ritz, balancing upon its 'andsome but imitative colonnade. Within, the prevailing note is dignity, as cellence, super-excellence, and effi- eloney., No garish decorations, nd noise, and vet withal no dullness. The best of everything is good enough for ithe Ritz--but take a well-filled purse ¢f gold. x Equally well known and in the same class is the Carlton hard by the Haymarket, and close to the popular theatre of 'that name. Sof' music ¥ an excellent orchenrtra, the bert o" at- tendants, the thickest of carpets, the most delectable of women. : The Savoy, in the Strand, is more widely known to those who seek sus- tenance after the theatre, but it is a great dining. house of the premier class. Near by you will find a strong contingent at ihe Cecil, whose big dining room and many banqueting halls are known as 'well. fore you le..ve the Strand let us take you into Sithpson's, an old-fash- loned English dining house, where you 'may sit in pews secure from draught, or at round separate tables' Here foregather lovers of plain Eng- lish fare, cuts at wonderful joints wheeled all piping hot on smooth- running tables to your elbow, where you may choose your tit-bits for your- self. Or you may mount its stair cases fo upper rooms where more ela- borate meals are served. There are, we had almost written, hundreds of to suit all purses, and everyone seem- Patented April No. 5467. measure. = 30, 1907. Sizes 32, 34, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44 inches bust These Home Dressmaking articles are prepared especially for this newspaper from the very latest styles by The Pictorial Review. NAVY WORKSHOPS. ------------ / Fully Equipped Naval Dockyard Is a Hive of Industry. The principal workshops of the British navy are, of course, the dock- yards. The fully-equipped naval dockyard of to-day, the Government establishment 1 rere war vessels of ever: kind are huilt and repaired, is a hive of industry. There argslips i r building ships, and dry dock) for re- pairing them, machine shops for the making of engines, and machinery of all kings, together with stores of a ms, ammunition, coal, oil, and pro- visions. > Nowadays, the building of men-of- war, which is a highly specialized and comyplicat®i business, involving the employment of a powerful and cosily plant, and thousands of highly-train- ed artificers, is naturally centralized and' confined to a few great dock- yards. The construction of warships Is also entrusted to private firms, who build them to an advanced stage, leaving their completion and final equipment to the dockyard authori- ties. Previous to the reign of Henry VIII. there were neither naval arsen- als nor dockyards in' Britain, nor, in fact, any regular establishment eof ny playing to big business, as the | ers, theatrical manager would phrase it; the road to a more Bohemian butiex- cellent resort, Romano's, called affeo- tionately 'the Roman's" its terra cot- ta structuye stands out wel, so that you cannot mistak. it. Once within, yon will appreciate the affection which its babitues have for it. You may not wish to dress, but you may have a desire for largeness. Off again to Piccadilly, where the giant 'Popular' rears its great edifice. He ¢ that Napolepn of the world of eating, Sir Joseph Lyons, has ordaimed it, i best evidence of doner is learning to away from his own fireside. Belong- irg to the same co ny, the Troca- dero, at the end of Shaftesbury ave- ue, is as well known as almost any house in town. The conductor of its orchestra is a public favorite, and its fine and lofty dining réom is not for the Casual Hiner, for here, as at most of the big places nowadays, you m re_erve your' txble beforehand, -- furn up in immaculate bib and tucker. Ur A ---- A man may be game and at the same time mighty vii Lots and lots 'of times the sofi answer is the business ome. s A business failure can never suc] cessfuily pose as a Ooureier, ' ' OR ist employs an -army of artisans and la- borers at the different dockyards. Portsmouth iz the most important of the workshops of the navy, at least, so far as the building of ships is con- cerned. There many of the most fam- ous ships in the "British navy, past and present, have been built and launched, notably in later years the epoch-making Dreadnought and such super-Dreadnoughts as the Orion, ete. «War vessels chare with passenger ships the greatest complexity of strue- ture and the necessit for the highest degree of accuracy in building. The British Government Dockyards where shipbuilding i¢ carried on, are equ'p- ped with modern plant of the most approved type. stvsnue Ofterw, very ofien, our needs grossly exaggerated. And the rolling stona also receives some very hard knocks. CASTORIA The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature of an We have the the best obtajnable, mat all prices, and consider each to be . For Men We are sole agents foi the famous Hurd Boots hoot that ha s everything to make it~the perfect hockey boot; price $5; also similar boots at $3 and $1. For Ladies * Warm lined skating boots with or without strap attachment, $2 and $2.50. The same as the men's, price $2.50. For Boys J. H. SUTHERLAND & BRO. L The Home of Good Shoes Sa 26 KING ST EAST. ' TORONTO. ESTABLISHED LONDON, CURITIES LIMITED CanapiaN GOVERNMENT MUNICIPAL AND (orPORATION BONDS The Standard Investment ( Standard Bonds constitute safety, saleability and regular income. The insurance company in which your life and the lives of your family are insured selects bonds as part of its investment for surplus funds. You may purchase the same' bonds with funds cvzn if the amount be as small as $100. @ Our. list of bonds, yielding 59, to 69% income return, may be had uzon request. 'Domnion Sk your surplus CANADA LIFE ENG. : PORATION sua, MONTREAL.

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