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

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

card fo 13 Fne street when anything dv , in the carpen- Estimates ,ven on all kinds and new work; ales bhard- re of ail «winds. Al] orders receive prompt sttentten, Shop, ean Street o "fy NTS © Herbert J. 8. Dennlson i REGISTERED Ao. IRNEY, 1 1 t wi. OF 0, - 2 a rade Marks, Deslgna, yright, protected eveery~ where; eighteen years' eXxper- Jence. Write for booklet. rm DeVAN'S FRENCH PILLS 0," bie Re- Pill for Women. $5 a box or threo for Bold at all Drug Stores, or walled to any on receipt of price. Tug ScoueLr DRUG Cathar! ines, Ontario. AT NNT Restores . HONOL FOR MEN Vim snd for Nerve and Brain: Increaces 'grey i \Ponio-- will bulld you up. $3 & box, or 0 , at drugstores, or hy mail on receipt pe, THE Scusesl bxua Co, Bt. Catharines, 8 10 at Mabood's Drag Store." OUR FRESH GROUND OOF. FEE AT 40c, CAN'T BE BEAT, Tey a sample order afd be | _eonvimced. NOLAN'S GROCERY cess Bt. Prompt Delivery. Furniture Dealer : and Undertaker 281 Princess Street Ambulance Phone 861 A A IN SGALY OTS Around Mouth and Chin: Spread All Over Face in Big Disfiguring hes, Baring and Itchy, Used Cuticura Soap and Oint- ment. 'Ringworm Disappeared. Bumt Churth, N. B.-- "For shout four I was troubled with ringworm on my 0e. It first made its appearance in little A SCE1Y Epots around my mouth and chin which would last for about a week, then would disappear and in two or three weeks' time would appear again. As the little scales or + scabs came off # would get " Hke @ cracked sore which was alwiys increasing In sze and eating into the flesh. Iu was worse until it had spread 'sll r my. face' tn big disfiguring blotches have a burning ftchy 3 worm disfigured my face very mach for the © time and was always very irsitating. | Bow. perfectly delicions tea and Serving Tea Out of Doors. A. .weman who spent part of last YHimmer-vielting her husband's rela- tives in England, waa discovered one morning, this spring, superintending the plasting of hydrangeas and rho- dadendrous in a semi-circle around a tall llac bush in her suburban lawn. x "1 am making 9 wook for after hoon tea on the lawn," she explain- ed to her interested friends. "One of the most delightful memecries of my English vigits is the memgary of tea Hour out-6f-deors. Do you know hot butered toast can taste, aut on the grass in a low chair, late in the af- ternoon? Well I do, and I mean to treat my friends to it, every aay this summer, Now, | haven't any big trees or tall hedges---only this little lawn between the house and the street. Bul I've happened to note that my big lilac bush casts'a gener: ous shade on the side toward the bhonse when sun gets low. In this gpot of shade I am going to have a low white table and some chairs tc match. There hydrangeas and rhedo dendron® will shut off and nook from view of passers-by in the street, and when fall comes 1 mean to plant some syringa and forsythia bushes and to start a real English hedgé Meanwhile, with my I#fac¢ bush and wicker tea furmiture----and a lovely muffin stand that I brought from England; well you shall see fwhat you will see in the way of tea, when 1-get things started." A wicker muffin or. cake stand i¥] an inestimable convenience im gerv- ing afternoon tea out of doors. Tiny biscuits, piping hot and well butter: ed thin slices of bread and jam, small, frosted cakes or doughnuts may be carried out, three plates ata time on the muffin stand, tellewing the big tray of tea paraphernslia. If this tray is always Kept ready, lack- ing only the fresh jug of cream and fresh pot ef tea with accompanying jug of hot water, one maid may serve afternoon tea, very quickly and ata wowent's notice. Millinery for Midsammer. It was quite to be expected that 'hats 'would grow a bit 'wider by the beginning of sultry weather. Phe tiny 'hat, perchad at an 'angke on the head and trimly_ veiled, loses its feliarm 'when the Sun-rays beat un- § ercifully 'on unprotected ecomplex- ons, and the humidity makes even the filmiest veil an intolerable dis ecqmfort. There ave few days dur- ing July and August when a tailored hat and veil are desirable, and sum- mer eostumes worn by Canadian wo men demand hats of a less formal ;| and smote picturesque character than the chic, small hats that are suit- able with smart tilleurs on breezy spring days. Caprice is rampant in the summer millinery. Dame Fashion seems to have flung- aside all considerations of dignity in her choice of midsum- mer millinery and has gope in with reckless abandon for coquetry, de- mure or daring The demurely co- quettish hats are the shepredess affairs, which make a pretense of hiding the eyds while they tilt aunda- ciously up at the back, The daring hats are the much tilted shapes which shoot up to excessive heights and send upward tall trimmings which augment the dashing effect. A 'careful coiffure is essential a' the torrect effect of 4 new summer hat. Gone is the day when a wo- man might remove her boudeir cap of a morning and drag eclose-brim- med 'mushroom' down over .her unarranged tresses for a trip down- town a-shopping, putting off the building of a complete coiffure until dinner time. One side, at least, of the head is wntovefed by the new tip-tilted hats; some of the models show both sides, and a good deal of the baek hair to boot; and as for eye-brows, they are quite in fash- ion again. The hair is waved Auffi- ly and then drawn upward close to the head--- that is, it is not puffed ont the least bit at the sides. The tip of the ear again appears, and if the stmmer millinery is to have he correct ensemble, locks at: €ach temple will be drawn forward aud made into the little ring-eurls, which were called "beau otdtchers" or "bpitcurls'" in the seventies. As infinitesimal pateh of black ecourt- plaster just to the 1éft of the mouth or below the cormer of the eye, com pletés the daring and dashing effect of the tip-tilted chapeau. As Paris undérstands it, the cha- peau niniehe (8. a hat raised at the back on a bandeay, the Howl-shaped top floping down to shade the eyes at the front. Over there this hat is called the shepredess style, - and bands of ribbon are drawn over the top of the bow shaped ¢rown, giving the hat the appearance of being tied fo the head. So captivating coquet- tihs 1s this shephredess style that it has caught like wildfire, and every woman this summer has determined to have one of these entrancingly be- coming tied-down hats, The typi- cal tied-down niniche is of leghorn with nattier-blue ribbon drawn across the crown and pink roses heaped under the brim againdt the bandeau at the back. There are scores of other trimming ideas, but the leghorn natiier blue ribbon pink rose combination is far and 'away the most popular. . Another charming 'model which will appeal to the woman who does not care for the titled up niniche style is a legnorn and the 'brim turns down in supple ,flappy leg- horn-ieffect all around. Across the front of thé brim are six large pink roses and 'behind these, restin against the erown in front, a 'wide band of soft 'pink ribbon passes down around the brim and fastens under two roses at the back of the neck, a snap-button being used to effect thé fastening. ------ » How To Develop Attractive Arms There 'were some rather startling rumors about the length of summer sleeves last winter. Sleeves 'were all to be long, we were told. 'Fortun- 'ately these were but rumors. Sleeves 10 be sure, are sometimes long in the new coals and frocks. Bunt shorf sleeves are still so usual that the woman with: a; pretty arm ean many age to wgar them. on almost ail oc casions; 'and even the woman with aerzwny "arms must gometimes go with them 'partly uncovered. As short sleeves have been more lf and 'more worn, women have geem- ingiv developed beautiful arms, just ¢3 they have shown themselves pos sessed of plump. and attractive pecks. These ehangés are partly due to 'the fact: that women have tried vo make their necks and arms more at- tractive; partly to the fact that the lack of light collars and cuffs has been productive of good results, 'I'here are many blemishes to the beautiful arm that are readily avoid: able. To begin with, red hands and arms are caused by poor circulation ainc' timés out of ten, and hence to reduce the-calor you must reach tho seat of the dinorder. The cirenlation can be greatly assisted by bathing and massaging, . Many women will pend «plenty of timeé on their faces and atterly disregard their arms, which, in these days, are almest as ; ronspicious. ' AS a rule, hot water should be used, with good plain.seap, and your arms need much rabbipg with a rough Turkish towel, or other towel with a rough fmish. Whis. y#fbing tends to keep the fiesh smo8ih| ard oft. If the skin is rough and ; rritated, use oatmeal or bran . always rubbing the flesh dry with the rough towel until the skin is rosy red. 1 Regarding discelorations «f the, arm. home remedies are really hew dp ter than any amount of prepared bleaches, The toilét tables of beauty parlors look like a veritabley vegetable garden. They are lade. with lemons, tomatoes, cucumbers)" and even lettuce. All of thede are lor bleaching purposes Perhay i wne of them is mmoré valuable than | the lemon. If the skin on the | irms and Wands has become dizcol- | wed through exposure or house work, nothing will it HOME clear better than the cométant application of - non juice, Cut a lemon ia half ind rub the arms well évery night | nd morning. Fresh, ripe tomatoes ire 'also good for this purpose, while] v milk made from the- juaive of fresh :ucumbers "is also éxcéllent. Man) women have a rough élbow, and this | affliction can be. greatly relieved by subbing 'with a coke 'of pumice stone svery night. "The rubbing should be | gentle and gradual, not vigorous and | violent. \ Many simple exercises are good, for the development of the forearm. ! A simple pulley rigged on the back | of a door is very good. | One of the sinfplest metfods of increasing the size of the forearm is to stand erect and extend the arms out straight, closing the hand tight over some object like a of tightly rolled 'paper. 'While the full-arm fs thus: éxtended raise the forearm and try to touch the should er, and then go back to the original outstretched position. This is really one of the best ways of developing the nyiscles of both the fore and uppey arm. other simple eéxercise is to clésp the band at the back of the neck, working the elbows forward as much as possible. Both of these exercises should be taken in a loose gown and after the corsets have been removed. Some women are burdened with too much flesh on the forearm, and) to them it ean only be said that con- stant scrubbing with hot water and a rough brush will help them more than anything: "Kneading" the flesh is also very beneficial, as it seems to break up the particles of fat, leaving the arm in a more pliable condition. The wo man who has a very stout arm should also avoid tightly fitting slee ves, as they only tend to draw at tention to the size of her arm. A looses sleeve will hide the size and relieve the redness very much, | | i | wad | | In connection with the care and proper exercising of the arms much thought and time should of course he given to the hands and nails for they are very important adjuncts to woman's beauty. Indeed, schools are now established which train women to use their hands propertly and to! help remold 'the shape of both the hand and each individual finger. Photograph Sum From plane Seat, Boston, July 7.---From a mono- plane, 20,000 feet above the earth, Prof. David P. Todd of Amherst col fege will seek to solve a mystery of the corona of the sun. Prof. Todd is to sail for Riga, Russia, within a few.days, where he is to study the eclipse of the sun in August. "The Russian government," he fald, "has co-operated with me most graciously, baving furnished pass-| poris, Tree transportation for my party "amd instraments. Twenty thousand feet above the earth the power of absorption is materially re- duc@d, and I. expect to obtain the bes. photographs of the corona that have ever been taken." The Royal Clocks. The members of our Royal Family are noted for their punctuality, and although King George now has all the cloeks at Buckingham Palace and other royal residences set to Green- with time every day at noon, at Marl- borough House and Sandringham they still follow King Edward's cus: tom of Raving all the clocks Kalf an hour fast. The idea was that there would be less danger of the king or anybne else concerned being late for an appointment, but King George evidently realizes that if every ome is aware that the clock is half an hour fast it might as well point to the right time. irs. Catchpole Smith's Falls was badly injured on Monday last on the street. Two ribs were broken by a fall, : - " * will Mono- | 'starging 'wherever ROYAL TOUR OF THI: MIDLANDS, - This photograph shows the 'kisg and queen at Mansfield. directors of the Bolsover colliery arebeing presented, pata ¢ Notes on Baséball, 'Rowing aud Running. ' Cornwall is now paying the penal- ly. of being the best centre in Can: a for manufacturing lacrosse play- ne" "With men who learned the na- tional game in the Factory Town professional la- e¢rosse is known ,they have not en- pugh new material to make a team that can hold up their end in N. L.U. the -- James Duffy, Hamilton's crack | marathon runner will hook up with "Billy" Queal of Boston on the 18th of this month in 'his first profession! al race, and as the Hamilton boy is goimg better than ever at the pre- sent time good results are expected. T. Thompson, Duffy's traiher, was successful in arranging for the match race. Ty Cobb's idleness, forced on him by a broken thumb, while his rivals slumped, put him in first place am- ong the batters of the American lea- gue, according to averages. His per- centage i8 .349. The next six bat- ters are: C. Walker, St. Louis .343; Baker, Bhiladelphig, .329; Crawford Detroit .324; Jackson, Cleveland 323: E. Collins, Philadelphia, .314: Speaker Boston, .301. The Athletics lead in club batting with- .261 and Detroit is second with .2486. E. Burns of Philadelphia is lead- ing batter in the National league with an average for 24 games of .395; next comes Hummel, | Brook- lyn, .352; Dalton, Brooklyn, .339; Grant, New York, .337: Byrne, Philadelphia, .320; G. Burns, New York, .312; Becker, Philadelphia, 320. Philadelphia leads in team hitting with .267 and New York next with .266. Montreal Evening News: Our Uncle Sam is entitled to the credit for a very. complete comeback dn at least one sporting event of Intdrnational significance. It takes a mighty good boat crew to go to Henley and come away with the Grand Challenge cup, not so much because the English are so very expert at the art of pro- pelling a racing shell through the watér as for the reason that the A AA A ef At A lt PPA The Hanley Regatta invariably attracts the very best rowing crews which Europe and the British empire ean syfply, and that means quite some rowing. This year the United States has secured a double victory by sending over two crews, both of which defeated the opposition and have to- day to fight it out in the final for what may be called without exag- geration the rowing championship of the world. For a brié¥ period at least ourihats are off 16 you, Mr. American Eagfe™® - ' CAN BE NO IMPROVEMENT Is Reached. In July of last year, a Kingston | gentleman who makes a hobby of keeping tad on the business -gitua- tion visited the north west and gave {the Whig his opinions which at that time seemed unduly, pessimistic but have since proved correct. Fe said: "The real estate boom is all over and everyone mow realizes how ridi- culous the paper prices were." Asked for .an opinion now he said were were still in a period of liqui- dation as regards real estate stocks labor. etc. There could bg no per- manent improvement until bottom was reached. Urba values in the west and some of our larger cities were still too high. Those would be ent in two again. The embarrass. ment of the C. N. R., and the Cana- dian agency would restrain flow of English capital which would only come now for "conservative invest- ment upon proved values. The crops are important. So far western conditions look good, a tr'fle too much rain in south making fear of rust. North and west of Saska- toon there has beén a scarcity of rain. This applies from Humbolt to Battleford where the chief crop is oats. The price of wheat this year win be discouraging. There has been a big crop of United States winter wheat and it is selling at the Jowest prices since 1903, or about ted cents under last year's prices. The Cobalt and western booms gave rise to extra business to keep running. In the textile company, contraction from last year of 25 to In Business Conditions Till Bottom | | romtracti bridge building, there is a 50 per cent. \ . iS NA ! Sour Stomach and Heartburn? LATTL E DIGESTERS CURE OR YOUR MONEY BACK At an Druggists or direct trom 'COLEMAN MEDICINE CO., 25c. a Box, Gary & Practical Fone Dresr Making Lerrony ¥ Prepared Especially For This Newspaper by Pictorial Review IN TUB SIIK, 3 4 require: 3 & yards of 86-inch silk at §1 yard. 1 yard ining 36 inches wile. ii uviana. 3 yard all-over lace 86 inches wide at Bl Jord ...ioirersnige % yard satin for COAT .ceessrsnnses Jn » 'as The Nittag for the waist 1s made first; then fttéd by taking dp the dais dnd ren A design suitable for morning and early afternoon wear. It is made of tub silk, trimmed with a satin collar and vest and undercuffs of all-over lace. Bome of the very latest tub silks are In crepe Weaves, both in solid colors and striped effects and may be used for effective, though simple, frocks for misses and small women. These silks can be washed and rough dried as suc- cessfully as any of the cotton fabrics Pictorial Review Pattern No. 6682 closing 'Bekins in the usual wily. The seams of the sleeve are now closed and the upper édes gith to be Insert. ed in the armhole. The puff of all over 1atesis thén halle and Séwed to the lining Mlééve, notéhés dvén. Siw in lining armhole as notched. Now 'chétise the tutks in place 'and stitch thém to the front of the watst. Close the under-arm and shoulder seams. Fit the waist to wee if altera- tions are needed. Before joining the Japanese collar of satin to sections 'as rations. Now close the 'seam of the cap sleeve, wrrange outside on Malig ana stitch. Clobe the tentér seam at the front of the Skirt, and hem right back gore to overlap the left side. This can be finished with machine stitching or & marrow line of sotitache braid. , Join the gores as notched, leaving left side weain free above single large "O" per- foradtion for placket. Séw the skirt Lower the lower edge of outér front and back, placing 'the centers even 'Take up the tucks at the front to give the slight draped 'effect shown. Sizes 14, 16 and 18 years. 15e. Newman Above Patterns,Can be Obtained from & Shaw, Princess Street NAA Sn, A . WHY should I wRiGLEYS "he sure" to get." SPEARMINT BECAUSE it is beneficial, preserves the teeth, purifies and sweetens appetite, --every particle that goes into it 'is cl to rigid examination to insure quality: mouth and breath aids digestion. , soothes the throat, quickens ean and wholesome--subjected --it is the BEST that men, machines and money can produce in the most up-to-date, sanitary chewing gum factories in the world. --we spent several hundred thousand dollars for new machines to encase each 5¢ package in an air-tight, impurity-proof seal that guarantees "its reaching you always absolutely clean and fresh. --it is the BIGGEST nickel's worth of beneficial enjoyment you can find! LE ALAS 22 APE Ad

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy