Daily British Whig (1850), 24 Jul 1915, p. 10

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IN THE. REALM OF WOMAN --- TOLD IN TWILIGHT THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, SATURDA Has Removed Wrinkles For| - Over 2,000 Years Cleopatra, the] preserved | and kept] wrinkles | bination preparation of the time pf of the Fast of from Since beauties their fresh bloom their skins free all by the application of a com of Oriental oils, the which i8 a secret handed down from generation to generation A Canadian traveller in fortunate enough to eur the gecret from an Arab. After. exhat tive tests of the preparation in Eng land, United States and Canada, the preparation has been placed in the hands of druggists everywhere un- der the'trade marked name of Usit Usit Mfg, Co., 14d, 476 Roncesvalles avenue, Toronto, Ont. have youth Egypt wa mn Hair Made Curly In Single Night (Woman's Tribune.) It has been discovered that the arg plicatdéon of liquid sllmerine makes straight hair curly an in a single night! Algo 1t ? perfectly harmless hair beautifier and dressing. It was the gécullar quality of drying in pretty waves, swirls and creases Straight, lanky curling dron are Any druggist of course « with a few aunces of merine, enough to keep the hair curly for several weeks It 4s neither sticky nor greasy, bul very pleasant use Apply to the hair at bedtime with a clean tooth brush. In the' morning your hair will be very beautiful and have a most natural curl and wavi- ness aoe and Lips oc Tole ye acts i hair and the eruel] no longer necessary in supply you | the liquid sil- Por Ghapoed Hands, the lexion Davis & Lawrence Co., Montreal Frackle-Face Sun and Wind Bring Out Ugly Spots. How to Remove Easily. | Here's-a chance, Miss' Freckle- | face, to try a remedy for freckles | 3 with the guarantee of a reliable | dealer that #t will not cost you al penny unless it removes the freckles; while if it does give you a clear com- plexion the expense is. trifling. Simply get an ounce of othine double strength--from Geo. W. Ma- hood, or any druggist, and a few applications should ghow you how | easy it is to rid yourself of tho homely freckles and get a beautiful | complexion. Rarely is more than! one ounce needed for the worst case Be sure to ask the glruggist for | the double strength othine as this | is the preseription sold under guar antee of money back if it fails to remove freckles, the ard Jones and { Campion, | Ross motored to Gananoque for the Yacht] visiting'Mrs. Burns 'in Kingston. | Club dance last night Loui Carling and Mr. Wood mot-| versity, Mrs. Stone and son, in Mon- ored from Oftawa to spend the week-|treal for tain and Mrs. nued weddi dnesday at th Mrs Frank n their « st (Conti quiet We united in marriage to Frederick To 1as many friends in * Dutch Country when those funek prese { Roche Pawson, Mildred Jones, Messrs, Ayerst George Dick Eln Livingstone Driver, end with (: Mrs. Leonard Rochester to-day after spendipg the past week Kine street. Miss May Stewart, of Mise Sylvia C Miss Ressie | Thousand Island Frank MeMarti with Miss Ruth to-day to visit Clergy street. Mrs. A. B. Tur guest of her par | Thomas Slater, Mrs. E. J. F. ing her mother, Frontenac-street. Mrs. Samuel Birch.and her family avenue, F. Emery"and her "fam- and Mrs. G. a Club Miss Miss Lilian Kent. x Rogers, in Ottawa, is now the guest from P. ng took e redidence Elvin daug 3) place of Mr thter Gertrude ronto, a pepular . enn was given on Leon ster), Mrs. Nan * * Macgowan, » Driver, er, Leslie and P. Smith Garret Zeigler. Jones returned tc Mps, K. lL. Jones, 'visiting ochrane. Farrell is visiting at) Park. in returned to Chi- cago to-day, after spending the past month with the Misses Johnson and| his children, Earl Henderson, came up from Thousand Island Park |%¢! McCune are spending their vaca- Martin, street. Montreal, ! Miss Nora ner, Toronto, is th ents, Mr. and Barrie street. Williams returned to Brockville yesterday after visit-|spending a month with her sister, Spooner, Mrs. C. on Belleville, at| time Wednesday, | nt were Mrs. ! Herbert derson, Miss Bessie Sanderson, Miss Paterson Walter| Both Mrs. Stanley will leave in a Tew days for a trip up Mrs. Mrs. lily, Bagot street, expect to go to their cottage at thousand Island Park this week. * * * K Winnipeg, will to Kingston, as well as ta Toronto, while she is in the east. Mrs. Clare White, Winnipeg, is on her way east to join her husband {in Montreal. She will stay a little in Kingston. Miss Middleton, and Miss Reid, Toronto, are visiting Mrs. J. R. Hen- Clergy street. . - * Mrs. A. pay a visit Cross, Miss Freda Burns, Kingston, is with her sister, Mrs, R: H. Partridge, {on Orchard View boulevard, Toronto. Partridge and Miss Burns i the lakes. t Miss Charlotte Green, Cornwall, i Prof, E. A. Stone of Queen's Uni- some time, have gone to Val Mgrin for the rest of the sum- >| mer. John McKelvey has returned from Atlantic City looking® well, He had a pleasant holiday. Mrs. T. B. Cook, Harrowsmith, and little son, Bert, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Cook, Rideau Ferry. - - . - * Harty O'Reilly, Cornwall, has gone to visit William Mulock of Toronto, at Minicoganasheng¢, Muskoka, for a couple of weeks. Miss Bertha Paynter and Miss Ha- tion with friends at Toronto. Franklin Plewes, Toronto, is down ¢ for a month's visit with his aunts, Mrs. W. J. Renton and Mrs. J. G. Elliott Miss Mabel Stuart, New York, is Mr¥. Harold Ansley, Mrs. Stuart street. C. J. Hinckley, University retiirned from Watertown, N. Y., on Thursday. y -~d | FASHION HINTS lof the new linen and pongee and | Palm Beach cloth coat suits. These collars are made of striped linen, fig- ured cretonne, plain and figured pi- que and organdie, Black and white is more effective- | ly used than ever befere--and they |a new frock the whole bodice, form a combinati and grass green, tmake it so. Silk sport hats with wide, shad- | before, are {ing brims, some Over collars are worn with many as on warm winter days. A ct A tA i Baby Thriving Mother fieoes ion that ean if one times figured and |on this side of the Atlantic this year. | sometimes plain, are featured by the | And, indeed, it is diffic ult to see why { smart milliners. Bead embroidery is still used. In save be | the sleeves, is covered with bead-em>| | made far more striking than erimson | broidery daisies. wishes to | | { Furs for summer wear worn in | France last summer and the summer (gaining ground rapidly furs should not be worn on cool sum- I mer days in the mountains as well While fox orm my (HAO E cannot be forgotten, suitable, Woe ally because of its for summer and is so far the most popular. is especi color far by . ' lar skirts are yoke seems this flaring Yoke gaining pomtlarity to give more stability bias skirt. tops on circu Ihe to are coming back and one indi- Princess dresses into fashion, it aid cation of this return the front panel cut in one piece for waist and skirt shown on some of the new lin- gerie frocks This gives a good chance for embroidery, which is so much used this summer on net and other lingerie frocks is DADDY AT THE WAR. Cecil Biggs, the six-year-old step son of Henry Huard, who is serving with the First Contingent at the front. He resides, al 221 Wellington street. DESSERTS! EASILY MADE Changes Rung On Old Favorites With Little Trouble. AY sorts of water ices are partic: ularly refreshifig and tempting when warm weather arrives. Various fruit juices from last year's supply of canned fruit can be used to flavor the ics, with a little lemon juice to give 'sweet. The' plain water ice consists of the fruit simply frozen, To make a sherbet 'add the beaten whites of two or three eggs for each quarts of juice when it is almest fro- zen, or a tablespoon of gelatin soft- ened in a little cold water and added before the juice is frozen. For a change you can grate bit- ter chocolate inte vanila ice cream | mixture just before freezing. The {| flavor of chocolate will be there but the color of chocolate will not. In- stead the result will be a white ice cream dotted with brown. Grape juiee sherbet is delicious. Add the juice of two lemons to each quart of grape juice, and, add more sugar if necessary, then add dissolved gelatin, and freeze--one tablespoon of gela- tin for a quart of grape juice. Tarts at this time of year are far more appetizing than pie. Make either a big crush of rich pie paste, baked crisp and golden brown, or else individual ones in muffin or pat- ty cake tins. Cool the crusts, fill x. = gy AN 5 = ANFRS 55H VERY mother and nurse is anxious about baby's health during the hot weather. The dread of colic is ever present, and the awful infantile mortality in summer beleg on only thrive during the summer if his food proof against contamination --is suited to his age and and nourishing, MILK FCOD NO. 1. MILK FOOD NO. 2. From birth 10.3 months, From 3m 6 months, absolutely powers, and is wholly digestible a ey 8 Write for book * free ft Fey iE] oY Vander mother. Post ave of aby andar whether Weaned ot tof, pure, is them and serve. They can be filled with chocolate blanc mange and top- ped with whipped cream, or filled with lemon filling, thickened in a double boiler and topped with mer- ingue. They can be filled with canned peaches drained of juice and served with whipped cream they can be filled with fresh berries. Custards and floating islands, es- pecially at this time of year, can be Aaintily made and daintly served. Three tablespoons of smooth boiled eustard chilled thoroughly and servy- ed in a thin, long stemmed 'glass with a Dig tablespoon of beaten egg white, topped with a single candied cherry, is far more a izing than the same dessert, serv more gen- erously without the cherry in big china saucers. Nothing in Them. "William," said the good wife, looking up from her paper, "here I jee an article that says'a man out in Kansas is suing his wife for di- vorce simply because she went through his pockets 'sfter he was asleep. Goodness knows, Willia probably the poor woman never got a cent from the brute of a husband in any other way." '"Ub-hub," replied William. "William," ¢ame from his better half, "don't you dare sit there and 'uh-huh' me in such a manner! What would you do if you woke up and foutid me going through your pock- "Who--me?" asked the sleepy husband, 'who had already turned over his pay envelope to the boss of the house. a, I'd get up and course, my Y, J ULY 24, 1915. srl ee uo . :] | ACTIVITIES OF WOMEN | _ Montclair, NJ. domestic servants Over 62,000 women in the United States cultivate fruit, There are over 13,000,000 ers in the United States. The woman suffrage party in New York city has 151,668 members. Women in England generally mar- ry between the ages of 26 and 27. Most German housewifes conduct their homes just like a business house. Boston has an office building cleaners' club composed entirely of women. . Mrs. Vera K. Frye, the only wo- man bank cashier.in Illinois, has re- signed to become a bride. Miss Alice Carpenter is , has a school for moth- at the a large New York bank. Holland housewives are complain- ing of the shortage of female ser- vants in that country. Mrs. Mary E. Rawcett has been appointed dean of the women at the Oregon State Agricultural school. A Moslem woman is permitted to know -no men but her father, her husband and her sons. Women will hereafter be eligible to membership in -the National Un- ion of Railway Men. Serbia is said to be the one coun- try in the world in which there are no women over twenty years of age unmarried. Thousands of German women are said to be engaged in powder and} of war, Miss Sadie V. Fenton, editor of the Logansport (Ind.,) Times, is the youngest woman editor in the United States. It is claimed that the woman re- cruiting officers in England are more successful than men in secur- ing enlistments. Dr. FlorasMurray and Dr. Louise G. Anderson have established a mili- tary hospital in London which is un- der women's rule. Miss Anna Robertson, head of the millinery department of a large New York firm, has just started on her 40th trip arcoss the Atlantic. The newest of Londen's 600 ralil- way stations, which has just been opened, is staffed entirely by women, from stationmaster to perters. Perhaps the most coveted of all or- ders for women is the Golden Rose, which is bestowed upon pious daugh- ters of the Catholic church by the Pope. The Illinois mothers' pension law has been amended so that 'mothers whose husbands have deserted them will be eligible to recéiye penstons> Miss Jane J. Martin, head of the advertising department of <a large trading stamp concern, is said to be the highest paid woman in advertis- ing work. Paris has many women physicians of distinction, and the "greatest among them is Mme. Klumpke-De- jerine, celebrated for her researches in neurology. Miss Susan Strong, who starred in the Metropoliton opera company has been doing the work of a cook in one of the field ambulance units in France. Mrs. Estelle L. Lindsay, who re- cently took her seat in the Los An- geles city councils, will endeavor to have the city establish a municipal farm for girls. Miss Amanda Austin, widely known in the world of sculpture and artistic painting, is also a farmer, owning several hundred acres of farm land in California. The Glasgow tramways committee has sanctioned the employment of nearly 400 women to act as tempo- rary conductors. They will receive $4.80 for a 51-hour week. Florence McLaughlin, Philadel- phia's eleven-year-old phenomenal swimmer, has issued a challenge to mermaids of other cities to meet her over the sixteen-mile course. Hundreds of women -are now at work on lathes, drilling machines and stamping out machines im one of the Russian factories where they make high éxplosive shells. Miss Louise McDanell has been awarded the fellowship of the Balti- more Association for the Promotion of University Education for Women for the year of 1915-16, Mrs. Thomas R. Marshall, wife of Vice-President Marshall, boasts with pride of the fact that she has never been away from her husband 25 hours sinte they weré married. Many of the soldiers confined in the Cherche*Midi prison in Paris awaiting court-martial for infringe- ment of regulations, have asked to be defended by women lawyers. There are 44,848 woman stock- holders of the Pennsylvania railroad, repesenting 48.22 per cent. of the total number of shackhiidats and holding 28.09 per cent. the stock. In the 43 years she has been ing the mail from the trains to postoffice at Lancaster, Pa., rs. Samuel Walters . has made a trips without missing a' mail. In an effort to save the life athe young son, who was badly hurned, Mrs. L. N. Mixser of Bet Pa., hes consented Yo have several Inches of her Sein grafted to the branches of the military nursing ser- v Mrs. Mary T. Bigelow of Denver, Col., not satisfied with being an art- ist, lawyer, mathematician and mo- ther of a family has h Just added an- other grefession to Wer list, that of a doctor, having been graduated || MER NNEN head of the woman's department of |, HT | | Tn 1 La er -- RT a mw alin SERRE HIN EL RE RR ERE MISS ordnance factories making munitions || Exceptional Millinery Values at HAMILTON'S. Phone 1267. 370 PRINCESS ST. Store closes 5 p.m. dur- || ing July and :August. 1 Yellapatty A High Grade Black Tea of Exeeptional Flavor, 60c per 1b. For Sale at D. COUPER'S, 341-3 Princess St. Phone 76 ANY people find a 5-cent cake of Ivory Soap too large for toilet use. But the cake is so shaped that it can be cut in two with a string. Half can be used in the bathroom; half / for other things. ZT a 5 CENTS IVORY Shs (=) . 99% PURE r 19 ~~ FLOA \ v Fw, Procter & Gamble Faclories in Hamilton, Canada rom Ine medical schoo) of the. Dus. Jerity of Colotado with the highest A ES NANI MADE IN CANADA The Bread that Builds Brain and Brawn must be made of the whele wheat grain--white flour bread will not do it=--neither will the se-called "whole wheat flour bread." The only real' _whele wheat bread is TRISCUIT It is made of the whole wheat grain steam-cooked, shredded, compressed into a wafer and baked by electricity. All the meat of the golden wheat pre- pared in its most digestible form and smallest bulk. A whole- some substitute for white flour bread--a delicious snack for luncheon with butter or soft chessarciisp, snappy, strength- ening and satisfying. ~ Made at Niagara Falls, Ontario x Toronts Office: 49 Wellington Street East

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