Daily British Whig (1850), 8 May 1915, p. 12

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

\ Sir To AEE SEL FEE WORLD-WIDE CONFLICT ; ' : THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDAY, MAY 8,.1915.. TAILORED WAISTS ts a o -- a FOR SPRING WEAR. Senn > iii | job & here ry x rE > a AE IS NEAR AT HAND, SAYS GER MAN SAVANT. Prof. Kuno, Meyer Predicts a Whole Century of War--=Says the United States Will be Drawn Into It, Philadelphia, May 8.--The predic- tion that a world-wide war is draw- ing near, anl that the United Sta'es will be drawn into it in order to pro. tect her own rights on land and s»a, was made yesterday by Professor K+ no Meyer, he distinguished German savant, Dr, Meyer recently attracted atten tion resigning his appointment as exchange professor at Harvard Uni- versity, because of an anti-German poem printed in a students' publica- tion at Cambridge, It was entitled "Gott mit Uns." Dr. Meyer took strong exception to the poem and sent a letter to Professor A. Law- rence Lowell, president of Harvard, in which he expressed his indigna- tion. Asked his opinion on the European conflict and whether China and Ja pan will go to war, Dr. Meyer re- plied: "1 think so. This will be a whole century of wars. China and Japan will fight. The the indian and Pacific Oceans, Aus- $ralia will be brought Into it. Amer ica will be drawn into it despite her efforts to remain neutral In fact, it will be a world-wide war between the white and the yellow races as my Emperor has expressed it." "This is a golden opportunity for Japan. She realizes that the Euro pean nations cannot interfere with her, and that America will not, Those who think the statesmen of various countries are suffering from aber ration will change their minds later on, It will be a question of super lority. There are so many underly- ing reasons for the great war that is to come that it will take a great deal of time to explain it all "It will not he a question of Be glum. Nor' will it be a question of Serbia. Nor will it be a question of Alsace Lorraine. Enormous inter ests are at stake, Nations are in the ascendency, one above another, They will fight for eommercial develop ment and finally against England's control of the seas. That is one rea son for the present war. Germany will not stand for it. "America will try to remain neu- teal. Nations will gradually en eroach upon her rights, and the Unit ed States Government will have to fight to protect her own interests." Dr. Meyer sald that all the causes of the present war which have been war will extend to | r iH if ------------------ New Notes Of Interest In Connection ¢ ? y ; 3 \ With Latest Models; 'Using Long Sleeve. The "tailored" blouse coptinues in popularity, but on the 1915 model is not the severe masculine looking af fair like the "'tailoreds™™ of a few pre-| vious seasons; it is a dainty concoe- tion of striped or dotted crepe de chine, hemstitched silk or printed taffeta. No severely plain neck line is chocked up tight with + drab col- ored tie-sipstead, a becoming and novel collar which will close in a va- ~riety of ways makes the blouse prac- tical for house or street wear, and the tie is of delicate tinted crepe silk or de chine, No Short Sleeves. There will be no short sleeves this summer pravided the devotee is faith ful to the most careful dictates of { Dame Fashion. Only in evening and {dance frocks may the summer girl show her uncovered arms, but for | the rest of her frocks "sleeves" is the slogan. But the tailored blouse shows how attractive the wrist length sleeve may be made, Set-in sleeves are fav- ored, and many are filled into a quite close armhole, Much In Vogue. The bishop and ~~ semi-bishop sleeve is much in vogue, and some of the smartest models show them ga- thered into narrow black velvet, wrist bands fastened with natty lit-! tle bows or buskles. | Buttons of very diminutive size are extensively used on tailored! | waists, outlining the cut of the yoke, | vest fronts, etc, or defining some i pretty pattern on front revers, Over; | blouse effects continue to increase in|' popularity, and also aid in taking (away the plain appearance that made | former tailoreds so unpopular with/| well-dressed femininity. | SAVED BABY'S LIFE. Mrs. Jos. Desrosiers, St. Alphonse, | Que., writes: "I cannot say too much in favor of Baby's Own Tablets, as they saved my little one's life. Before giving him the Tablets he was great- ly troubled with worms and was like a skeleton and eried day and night. The Tablets soon expelled the worms and now baby is the picture of health." Baby's Own Tablets also! bréak up-colds and simple fevers, | ourg constipation and indigestion | and make the teething period pain-| less, 'They are sold by medicine! nha IONS {my ; BEETS, ON , PARSN 4 CH BREST 8 £8 Ft) / poe y " | I Th RUN Ti Qa | + [hey may disagree on the EAbbib low fy of the play--and ETF on many other subjects SES --but they agree that fotorin 4 there and ack withys Dunlop 4 42 Tractioafa p Treads was 4 : TREAD -------------------------------- ------------ HM CRAND TR Double Track Route FOR WINNIPEG TEL LCI PACIFIC | |" AND VANCOUVER The International Limited---~No i. Daily WESTBOUND i Lv. Kingston , Toronto .... . Hamilton . , London . . Buffalo Ar. Detroit : . Chicago 3 announced; published and narrated, | de8lers or by mail at 25 cents. a | since the Ailes took up arms against box from De or Williams' Medi- | Germany are only surface conditions, | ¢/2@ Co.. Brockville, Ont. and that underlying them all are con. | rE bir ditions of far bi bio importance, such | 10 Japan, where pearl fishing Is as industrial, commerccial, and terri. | #0 important industry, nine tenths| _. torial development, | of the pearl divers are women. Tiny | Dr. Meyer saimmed up his predic. | 8irls, mere babies, are taught by|? tion of a woria-ide strife by saying | their mothers to swim, and later to that anyone who hag made a study | dive, and at thirteen or fourteen, of conditions can easily see that | When they leave school, they are us- | peace among the nations of the earth {ually ready to begin diving in ear-| is far distant. (rest: i Leave Toronto 10.20 pan daily. Attractive Tours to PACIFIC COAST POINTS. Particulars from ¥. CONWAY, C.P.A., City Ticket Oflice, corner \ Princess and Wellingion Streets 4 {is an inexpensive dish and is deli- | BOBBED HAIR NOW Phone 1197. Lele LEADING FASHION 3 ited --Ne. 1 Daily i ' cious. { The International Limi -- na Here $ a Budget Deviation From The Close BASTBOUND | - | Sponge Cake, | Slight Lv. KIngston ..iceeecneurens Tn ; f Fi KR 3 3 eggs, 1 eup sugar, 1 cup flour; 6 | Dressing Popular Last Winter Ar, Ottawa ... .. oe d 0 ine ecipes | tablespoonfuls hot water, 1 teaspoon- | {ful favoring. Beat eggs and sugar There. is a slight change in hair Ar: Now For. t g STEAMSHIPS Ar. New York . | fashions or rather a deviation from Liverpool PPPPYS 888 A LETTER FROM HIS COUNTRY COUSIN. _--- i Sn a ' ne PPYEY SREER Fig Indian Pudding. One quart milk, three heaping ta- | ren) asa Ar: Portland . i i , field . wits wire beater ual ght 1014 In | {h'accepiea modo of lose hair are 45 BRC"! e sifted i : | sing. and, lastly, flavoring desired. This, All winter the accepted mode has Ar. Hartford .. 8:81 am, | HOMPSERKERS' EXCURSIONS. if you notice, has neither shortening | t > | blespoonfuls cornmeal, one _table- nor baking powder, yet is-light, ten- | Deen the close coiffure with the { spoonful cornstarch, four eggs, one- | de alici | French shell-like twist at the back, | halt cup sugar, one-half a der and Selisious. | hair drawn on toward the 200 of the | salt, one-half teaspoonful cinnamen,-| Baking Powder Biscuits. | head tightly, except for t @ Tafes | one tablespoonful butter, one cup Two cups flour, one-halt teaspoon- | VAYes, and the ends of the hair tuck- | figs, chopped. Soak figs ten minutes | WO us ou he ~ | ed in under so that the head was I é i 3 hor ges ful salt, four teaspoonfuls baking | od in height. n warm water before chopping; boil ywder. two tablesponfuls shorten- lengthen n heig { the milk and stir in it the meal and M ' RE 0 arters nt one cup of |" Now comes the fashion of bobbed | cornstarch previously mixed with a ne, THe qu Sire hf ix the dry | hair, says The Fusion Magazine of { little cold milk; cook 10 minutes, | ™" a OY ur I A inD, on The New York Herald. First only a | Beat eggs, reserving the whites of on big BS ixtees is ia to corn- few women tried it, but, as they | two, with the sugar, salt and cinna- ey 3 m utd slowl to make soft A were women 'in the public eye, the { mon; stir into milk; add butter and i To Pail all. Take fashion has become so popular that | igs dusted with flour. Beat the a di . . {o s jons" are now made so | whites of two eggs with two table- a large spoon and drop dough into transformation | spoonfuls of sugar and two of cream {and stir lightly into the mixture. {Bake slowly one hour, Serve with | creamy sauce, Mash Deck Oabin Launch "FANNY LL." Length 55 ft.; beam i 1 { 8 ft.; draft, 3 ft. Cabin chairs, rugs, toilet, ice-box, wood top and | Tomato | amb Stew. side curtains entire length. Buffalo 25 H. P. 4-cylinder motor. | . Two pounds of lamb, six potatoes, Speed 13 miles. Price $800, jone onion, one-half can tomatoes, {one-half teaspoonful pepper, one Motor launch "GEISHA." Length, 30 ft.; beam 6 .1-2 ft i _ ON€ ter, 1 tablespoonful of flour, 1 tea: | ipo knot is tucked underneath after ||Lv. Kingston Standing roof, toilet, clothes press. Buffalo 14 HH, P. 4-cylinder a Te. iT. | spoonful of vanilla. Put in agate ii. braided loosely and twisted. It|| Ar Qitawa (Cen. Station) motor. Price $300, | put in potatoes, sliced thick, anda | kettle and cook 10 minutes. Don't! quite evident it is there, for hair- Ar. Toronto 9.16 p.m. { > ¢ let it burn. This mixture makes one | . leverely placed in the outside 1 Address caretaker, THE EDGEWOOD HOTEL, [poner Uneredionts, and voll ont pins © (Daily except Sunday) | done. Thicken broth with two table: | Pie: Bake with two crusts. When | p,r gefine its contour. The front of ois, eC. "uni City Tieket . Alexandria Bay, N.Y, USA. {spoons flour. Potpie can be made | tI crust is done the pie is. | the hair parted at the middle or side apply, M. C. Dunn, City Ticket ! Saunt: or R. H. Ward, Station ere BUS this 'way, by putting in dumplings | lis waved horseshoe shape, and the a 20 minutes before it is dome. Porhis | Ginger Cake, | waving continues the length of the | Four tablesponfuls of fat, one and | hair to the part that is braided. The | three-quarter cups of flour, one-half | hair line against the face is pulled { cup of sugar, one teaspoonful of gin- | by a convenient hatpin or hairpin | ger, one-half cup of molasses," one- | into a graceful line. | half teaspoon of cinnamon, bné egg, ne tn -- | one-half teaspoon of soda, one-half Made Over Curtains. 44 B88 Round Trip tickets to points in West- | ern Canada via Chicago or Port Arthur, | on sale each Tuesday until October 26th, | inclusive, at ao fares. the Return limit two months. For full particulars apply J. P. IIAN. | LEY, Rallroad and Steamship Agen! | sor. Johnson and Ontario Sta. Montreal iiedune 3 Particulars from F. CONWAY, ©, PA, City Ticket Office, corner Prin teas and Wellington Streets. Phone 1197. Metagama Ann CANADIAN NORTHERN NIGHT TRAIN Between Toronto and Ottawa Dail DAY TRAINS TO } well-bettered pans and bake in a hot | that a woman can dress her hair this oven for 12 or 16 minutes. These | way without cutting it off. It is a | make delicious individual shortcakes | pretty boyish -coiffure. The hair is | also. | parted a little to one side in front | | and marcelled in horséshoe fashion, 'and the ends waved into little eurls { 114 cupfuls cranberries, cut Hn | that are ringlets Sombed ou tt | halves; 1 cupful of seeded raisins, Newer still is the low knot a e | cupful of sugar, 1 cupful of-cold Wa- | nape of the neck. It's odd in that Toronto and Ottawa ---- J Mock Cherry Pie. 8. 8, "Bermudian", fagbow, most taxurious Risnmr. In 2.45 pm. 7.06 p.m. 2.45 p.m wow Sum a LLAN|INE= mixture. Beat quickly and bake in very wide net embroidery sparingly with small sprigs, and the hems on both edges and along the bottom traced by delicate vine, were literally { worn to rags where the cords had From MONTREAL, Sn TL XV TN ; J eo Sup of sour milk, one-half teaspoon | (yr parlor curtains, which are of : . | salt, A i Cream shortening; add sugar and : peaten egg, milk and molasses. Mix all 'dry ingredients and add to first a moderate oven about 25 minutes. | looped them back. 1 made them | over into very dainty ones for our west chamber, as follows: £ twd cups of boil. | cut off about one-third of the I spoonfuls flour, | ap bt each curtain, which left spoonfuls oF butter. MIX sugar' an | L¥O-(Difds fairly good. and fies lemon Sauce. . duke 20 One cup of su June, 24... WE OFFER YOU THREE BIG BARGAINS WHICH WE HAVE JUST SECURED FROM A WELL KNOWN MANUFACTURER. . % flour, add water slowly and boil 15 | the raw edge with narrow hems; ' a {ups minutes, stirring constantly. When | then Jevernsd them, bit ng ae hap S ready to serve add batter and lemon, broidered hems facing each other: y rd 1 the Regular $12.00 values -- on sale Saturday and Monday $1 90 I then cut about a yard from i . | upper part of the severed third, or Ser Estee a raha ae eyes . 25 Men's Dark Brown Tweed Suis along the cut edge large enough to Regular $10.00, and good value at that--On Sale here Satur- 1: ahem Foy ginger cake, corn bread, etc. Carrot Pie: 6H. P. 20YMINDER ,.......... 120 MADE IN CANADA -- NO 'DUTY. for Five Years. WILSON MOTOR C0. = WALLER, NT H. Milne, Agent, 272 Bagot St, hpste Ont. curtains. ; As our guest room is "blue .and white". I then worked the vine slip into the pole horizontally, to be along each wide hem in "briar at hung between the two long narrow tad an with these lighted with the result. Mrs. M. P. ---------------- Hibhazd was \exhibiting § = THE s Tweed and Worsted Suits Plain D.B. Coats, bloomer pants--regular $9.00 and $10.00 Young

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy