Some New Easter Hats | { | tan gloves of the winter, : | | Fair, Washable chamois and doeskin | {smart for street wear | | glace kid gloves with .| style of sleeves. THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, APRIL 3, 1915. MORE THAN EVER BEFORE Washable Chamois and Doeskin Are Popular For Street and Motoring White gloves are now being worn more than ever before; they have {taken the place even of the heavy avi Vanity je GLOVES NOW WORN | | gloves with one button are Light weight black -and white stitching on the back, and with large t | three buttons are much wern for af- ternoon wear, also soft white glace gloves in the Biarritz cut, which is particuarly smart looking with tail- ored gowns, Even for travelling or | motoring heavy White washable zlov- es have replaced the darker ard less atereetives varieties. During the season at Mo: Springs white doeskin gloves of Biarritz cut, but longer than the average Biarritz glove, and gathered close across the wrist by a strap held with a clasp button, were worn with walking out- fits. In conjunction with the walk- ing stick which the smart woman in- variably carries on her tramping ex- peditions the effect was very chic. Black gloves are now worn only with deep mourning, as white gloves with black or black and white tail- ored gowns are quite correct for se- cond miournings. For deep mourn- ing black doeskin gloves are an in- novation which appeals to the wo- man with whom economy is either a fad or a necessity. Illustrating the practicability of the women of fashion, is the habit which many of them have contracted of having in their motors an extra pair of knitted gloves which may be slipped on over the white kid gloves to keep the latter immaculate. The custom is a sensible one, as the busy woman of the day makes good use of the moments during which her car is speeding downtown to read the re- ports of the latest club meeting, or even her mall, and the easily soiled white kid would assuredly show the effects of this handling of papers. The motor gloves are knitted either of wool ar silk and are frequently laundered. Design For New Sleeves. Models shown in Syracuse stores yesterday indicated that all design-! ers have a set idea concerning the! There does not seem to be any law governing them, but beneath the seeming license there Is real order. The sleeve must show the arm, or rather reveal its shape. The style chosen to express this is left to the dressmaker. Some of the best frocks show long wrinkled slee- ve¥ of the fabric, others have trans- parent sleeves of batiste, of chiffon, of organdie. The kimono and the elongated armhole do not appear, except in is- olated cases, but it may be safely sald that they are reserved for top- coats. In these the raglan should- | er dominates, although in the short outer jackets in brilliant colors, which are the prevailing fashion for! country wear, the armhole is nearly normal, Coat sleeves are long and modera- tely small, ending in some kind of turnover cuff. The gauntlet shape has been revived as a foundation for more buttons, and there is also a sleeve that tapers down toward the wrist and closes with small buttons of horn, run through tailored button- holes. Loose three-quarter shapes are not in first style. Here and there one sees the half-loose elbow sleeves, with a long lower sleeve of transpar- ent material, usually white. I ACIVIIES OF WOMEN | The Sultan of Turkey has no less than 300 wives in his harem Oregon has two women harness- makers and 29 female hatmaKers Ten thousand women are being ad- ded to the colleges every year Colorado will probably have 2a woman juvenile court judge. Wisconsin stores and factories em ploy nearly 50,000 women, Temple university in Philadelphia has a women's fencing club. The woman suffrage party in New York city has over 150,000 mem bers. Columbus, 'Ga., has a board of trade composed exclusively of wo- men. Fargo, S.D., has three woman de- puty food inspectors who serve with out pay. The army in Holland always trains under the watchful eye, of Queen Wilhelmina. The suffrage bill in the Texas legislature was defeated by four votes. Thirteen Port Dodge (Minn) girls have mutually agreed to walk 500 miles each year. Branches of the National Women's Peace party are now maintained in seven cities, Mlle. Marie Marvingt of France is considered the greatest female ath lete in the world. Miss Helen V. Drogaris pays $1,- 000 a month rent for a flower stand in New York City. Twenty-one per cént' of the wage- earning women in Michigan receive less than $6 per week. Thirty-eight per cent. of the grad- uates of Goucher college have mar ried during the last year. In Persia girls are often married to their cousins in order to- kéep the family properly intact. Mothers in Kansas are allowed a pension of $12 per month for the first child and $6 for cach addition- al child, + ¢ Philadelphia has now four female assistant judges whose duty it is to try all cases of children now under sixteen years old. Miss Gladys Newman, an English girl motorcyclist, has been detailed to the Red Cross service in the French was zone. The Oregon legislature has passed a law providing that woman school teachers shall be paid equal wages of 'man teachers for similar service. Mlles. Hyvrard, Tharlana and -Ba- dueld Rousseau * de Givonne, female lawyers, are now geting as Red Cross nurses with the French army in the field. The Corean wife must not only act the washerwoman for the whole family, but must act as tailor as | well, for she makes all her hus- band's clothes as well as he own and for her children. Because she sang the mnationml Ser. bian air from an open window, Coun- tess Dobrila Devidovio has heen sentenced to'ome year at hard la- hor by the military tribunal at Ve- nice. Professor Johnson of the Univer- sity of Pittsburg claims that the fail- ure of college women in this country to marry and have children is killing off, some of our best racial stock. Miss Marie Grill, owner of a dis- tillery in Cleveland, O., had early ambitions. of becoming a nun, but the death of her father changed her plans and she is now the active head R | The abobe illustrations represent a few of the new nillliviery ereations which are now heing shown. wh 1 just simply Lawrason's wil Tt de mo i brigh a Po) fr tocate ; ® [Some Refreshing Beverages Kumiss, Milk Punch, Lémon Whey, Junket and Orangeade, All Are Strengthening. Kumiss--Milk prepared in this way is a boon to tired digestions, serving the purpose of both refresh- ment and food. 3 Ingredients are one quart of fresh milk, 1% tablespoonfuls of sugar one fourth of a yeast cake, one ta- blespoonful of lukewarm water. 'Heat the milk to 75 degrees, using a tooking thermometer for the- test- ing. Add sugar and yeast cake dis- solved in the lukewarm water. Fill inches of the top. Cork these and shake them. Then place the bottles at a temperature' of 70 degrées for ten hours; then put them in the ice box or in a eold spring 'and let them stand 48 hours more, shaking oceca- sionally to prevent the cream from '| clogging at the top of bottles. Kumigs is also one of the best in- always advised in. gastric troubles and with high fever, It is sold in pint and half-pint bot- tles at all good drug stores. ! Milk punch--two thirds of a cup of cold milk, one half tablespoonful of sugar, a few grains of salt and one 1 of rum, brandy or old 'Put ingredients in 4 tall glass, cov- and shake until frothy. This is another nourishing end beverage for invalids and it més) advised for nursing ened with the demands of a strong, health liguor will give the agreeable punch 1 without fp id cup in thick crockery and put + slack teaspoonful of fh FLiEgs fos 2 stertized beer bottles to within 1% | upside down where they can remain, er with a tin shaker or deep tin cup,| mothers who find themselves weak. 'fear of affecting the : h fresh mint--Heat a ao of sponge or pound cake will go well with it. 4 Orangeade-- The juice qf oe} 'orange and three tablespoonfuls of finely crushed ice. Put the ice in a glass and pour over orange juice. Add sugar or sy- rup to sweeten if liked. The syrup is made by boiling sugar with water, The liquid is then cooled, bottled and ! kept in the ice box for the various summer drinks that need sweetening. Clam juice---One dozen hard shell | clams and two tablespoonfuls of told | water. * Wash the clams thoroughly, scrub- | bing the shells with a brush to ge' | off grit and changing the water sev- | éral timed. Put them in a sancepan, | add the water, cower closely and steam until the shells open. Then | remove the clams from the shell, ad- ding liquor that conjes from them 101 smartest bi WE EVEN, hang THAt already in, the saucepan. Take | off all scum, strain and serve hot | With toast sippegs. If put on the ice, clam juice will keep several dayd. It {is very stimulating to tired nerves | and is one of the best drinks that can | be given invalids. 4 Oatmeal gruel--Take half a pound ; of oatmeal and put it on the fire"in | three quarts of cold water. Let it | simmer to a mush. salt to taste and | when cooked thoroughly strain through a colander and then through | coarse cheesecloth. Served hot with | @ squeeze of lemon juice, oatmeal { gruel will be found a delicfous and nourishing drink. | Lemon whey---One fourth cup of ¥ baby. A teaspoonful of any Mik and two teaspoonsfuls of lem- on juice. { Add lemon juice to milk and let {stand five minutes. Strain threugh : ble cheesecloth and sweeten if | Junket--Three | one fowtn Jukes tablet or one tea- L q renget. 2 h t the milk until lukewarm and Of one of the largest distilleries inf that. section of the country The memorial to be erected in Washington in memory of the weo- men. who perished in the Titanic dis- aster will probably be placed in Po- tomac Park. The cost of the me- morial, which is to be defraved by public subscription, already totals $40,000 The National Union #f Women Workers of iGreat Britain and Ire- land, which is a union of women's national societies, has received the permission of the. Home Office and of the Metropolitan Chiefif Constables fo organize bodies of women patrols in London and throughout England, UNIFORMS FOR WALKING SUITS TO BE POPULAR Military Styles To Be Much In Evi- dence This Spring--Airy Even- ing Frocks Of Tulle Now All the Rage. New York, March 27.----If the Am- erican woman is suddenly called up- on to take up arms in defense of her native land, she will be prepared in so far as an attractive uniform is con cerned. Blue, of course, is the pre- vailing color in feminine uniforms. A dark and serviceable shade it is, "BEST YEAST IN THE WORLD. FE ME SUINE THE NUMEROUS INFERIOR = { IMITATIONS THAT ARE BEING OFFERED \ AWARDED HIGHEST HONORS AT ALL EXPOSITIONS EW. GILLETT COMPANY LIMITED. WINNIPEG TORONTO ONT. MONTREAL pm -------------- usually though at times the suit is in # tone certain to show every spot. | Its material is gabardine of the | spring weight, which readily lends| itself to pleating schemes. THe pleats | are found chiefly in the skirts, al- ways very full and nearly always of i ankle length. : | The high-topped shoe goes with the | military uniform walking costumes, | and that shoe is so triny that to com ceal any part of it would be a pity | One of the plainest of these models | has a' skirt so severely cut that while it fits * without a wrinkle over the hips it falls in loose pleats below | them. They do not drop inward about the ankles, however, although there is no apparent scheme for mak- 'ng them stand out. Trim fitting as the jacket of a well set-up young soldier is the coat of this model. A belt in flutted black braid straitly girdles its back at the waist, but in front double bands of braid, centered with a strip of gold, run from high at the right side to low at the left side and under a huge, obiong enamel buckle which is the coat's sole fastening. At the waist line is attached a flaring basque, which falls many in- ches below the hips and lends to the garment an eighteenth century effect This effect is carried out in the -wide revers turned back from low- | rolled fronts of a high standing col- lar, whose 'ends come a trifle beyond | the ears, and in flaring cuffs turned back almost to the elbows. Bands of Autted braid trim the cuffs and the collar, and loops of it on the should- ers simulate a novel--and feminine ---effect in epaulets. Not all of the uniforms are in the form of suits, Some ef them are developed as frocks, which go on as one piece, although generally built 'in two sections. Certain of these one-piece creations are elaborately trimmed with braid and enlivened with red and gold. Particularly color- ful is a blue gabardine model whose skirt, slit at either side half way to the knee, has braid embroidered ed- ges which for an inch or so upward part to show a petticoat in old red cloth. A narrow band outlining the waist's fronts, which open - over a sharply pointed vest, is in the red cloth, embroidered in gold. From it are extended outward loops and knots in black soutache. Similar loops and knots cress the wrists at the back of the long, tight, smoothy set in sleeves, and a double line of those trimmings runs almost half- way down the skirt's front, starting undér a bread girdle. In this girdle] a third color note is introduced, for, while the centre of that silk-braided | ribbon is black, its border .is stripp- ed in yellow and old 'red. the feature of this frock is its four full-length box pleats, two at the front and two at the back. Starting at the shouldets, they tap- er slightly at the waist and flare gra- dually over the skirt, with whose gores they merge. As the girdle is threaded under these pleats they pre- sent an unbroken line; the long sil- houette combined: with the flare. | This "'uniform' demonstrates that no woman need fear 'the . wide skirt, sincé any clever tailor can adapt it to the demands of her figure. SASHES FOR NEGLIGEES, In Loose Bow. A sash is-a part of many of the wometmes It is no more than a piece of narrow black velvet ribbon which is knotted about the waist. Sometimes it isa wide, soft how In the back or at the side. Sometimes a sash is formed 'from an extension of the two fronts, folded about she waist, ang clasped under a jeweled fastening at the back. Of course a big bow is rather owt of place in a negligee which, iu spite of its daintiness, should be durable jenough to withstand rather treatment. For when one is resting or dressing, one seldom caies to he careful of the gown one wears. A Pretty Boudoir Cap. A pretty cap is made of crepe de chine, in bandanna fashion. Instead of tieing, the ends of this Vandana are pulled about the head and of tened with a spapper fastening under i fourths cup good tea. : "boiling water and let the ilk, one teaspoonful of cold water, & rosette of ribbon.. But 81] the aftractive lines of the pulled bandanna in this cap. rr te Waist Line For All Types. There is a waist line to suit every type--the Empire for the slight youthful figure, the Strain | line Mrs. Wiseneighhor Says : "kL should have told you the other day when I was speak. ing of "Eddy's washboards that it is just as necessary to have an indurated fibreware tub to held your cloth es if you want to make a success of wash-day." Mrs. Newlywed says: "I've heard of Eddy's fibreware. What's the, difference between fibre and ware? indurated wouden- "Fibrewhre is made from compressed fibre, baked extreme heat. All in one solid piece, it cannot warp or fal apart. No chance of splinters. Wears much longer, looks better and. is light to carry, The latter point yom should always take into consideration," concludes Mrs. . Wise. neighbor, at Sometimes Of Soft Wide Silk Tied "hard | Every Cent you spend for "Made in Canada" goods elps you as well as other Canadians Table Salt ; is "MADE IN CANADA" "; i ( Itis the finest grain of the famous Windsor Salt--blended with a very small quantity of Magnesium Carbonate. : 149 MADE IN CANADA Do you know Triscuit? It 1s the Shredded Whole Wheat Wafer. Try this whole wheat toast a few days instead of white flour bread toast and see how much better you feel- "heated in the oven to re- store crispness and then served dvith butter is a delicious snack for luncheon or for hungry "kiddies." It is in a class by itself. It has every- thing in it that growing youngsters need and they like to chew it because of its crispness and tastiness. MADE AT NIAGARA FALLS, ONTARIO Toronto Office: 49 Wellington Street East