Daily British Whig (1850), 26 Apr 1916, p. 10

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Seki, § | jl I g : o . . 'v Mus, B, H, Hurd; Kingston, is the ter, Mrs. Freder- Fr Sitter. kville. A Mrs. Gordon Cumming, Ottawa, is for the past two years from 8t*John on the , for England where TRO an' appointment in Alexander, Imperial Nurs- tie Hamilton spent Easter 's Falls her mother. Blea + Sydenham street, spent: Easter in Gananoque. Fis " 8 ss Cadet is spending the Raster holidays with his parents in Toronto. "Mrel M. Buck, who has been spending: the past two weeks with her sister; Mrs. Leighton Guess, Brock street, returned yesterday to her bonterin Sydenham. Miss Helen McKay who has been with her parents; Mr. and Mrs. John | « gtreet, for the ays: returned to Toronto yester- | | Toronto spent | Bester Monday in town, "Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Cunningham leftron Monday to spend a few days | n i } + Rees, Miss Violet Brit- | ton-and Miss Edith Stark are three | Gananogue girls who will come up | for the Queen's Battery dance on Friday evening. { . " La * * 1 : by, King street | returned home yesterday after a shioRt visit with Mrs. C. W. C. Bate IOttaws: "Bre, Bernard Browne and Miss Housel Browne, Kensington Place, \BMaster in Ottawa with Major Hubbell. - Miss Oonstasice . Forneri, Alfred} street, was the guest of Mrs. Austin In treal; for the week-end. Carter and Miss Gwendoline Who have been in Kingston # winter left. this week for their Nome'in N A Hale, Queen's Univer- t Easter in Gananoque with ponte; Mr. and Mrs. W. Hale, ss Louise MaClelland, Toronto, few days this week with Miss i ngham erga cane on her way Ww tread 'es ® oo = Gieut. and Mrs. Hugh Ryan, Tor- onto, have been the guests of Mrs. A --L especially to growing ch The fact remains, however, Edward. at "Rockwood House" this wi Miss Jean Young, Union street, re- turned from Toronto on Monday af- ter di Bane with friends. 4 acLeod who has been Miss Edith Carruthers' guest returned with her yesterday to Tor- onto where they will continue their studies at Havergal. ? Mrs. E. J. Adams who has been spending the winter with her sister, Mrs. James Craig, Barl street left yesterday for her home in Ottawa. Miss Waldron remained a day or wilight -- In the Real two with Mes Henry ph in Montreal on ber way home from New York. Prof. W. E. Macpherson and wife, Albert street, are in Torohto, Miss Alken, Earl street, is visiting ber aunt, Mrs. E. F. Ely, Toronto. Aprons Of Crinoline, Aprons of crinoline are used to distend the skirts of tailored suits. The apron of stiff crinoline, plaited closely, hangs from the inside of the skirtband at either side, giving the silhouette the right lines, There are also new flounced petticoats of pussy willow taffeta, run with light therbone hoops at a peint be tween hip and knee, A petticoat like this holds out even a skirt of soft, thin wool material in the lines it should: take, and now that wide pet- ticoats have come back women won- der how they ever endured the tight affairs of a few seasons ago. -- mA A at ROSE CHARMEUSE. : There seems to be threatening a return to the old-fash- ioned basque if*we judge by the design of numerous spring gOWNS. hese have a sort of elongated vest or bodice por- tion to-which the skirt is attached. In the drawing above the low square corsage line is filled with soft folds of white tulle. The close fitting elbow sleeves frilled with the same. The skirt follows the old-fashioned design in ils pannier effect, and is made entirely of the rose charmeuse which forms the and Children It would be difficult for any parent in the Dominion to find a physician of modern education. who sould conte ud that tea and coffee are not harmful, ildren. that many parents give these beverages to their little folks and allow their use -in_ older children at a time when physical and mental development is the most rapid. The drug, caffeine, in tea and coffee retards growth and interferes with school progress. - Disturbances of eyesight, headached, nervousness, ifritabil- ity, indigestion and other ills appear in many, seemingly without cause, and the damage often occurs at the most impressionable period of life. No parent should permit the use of tea and coffee in the growing young; for the men and women of to-morrow will be what the parent of to-day makes the children by wise upbringing. 3 Children as well as adults need an invigorating, warm drink, growing number of Canadian hemes it has been found th somé table beverage is This pure food-drink, f and in a at the most whole- Lo it Postum ¥ § . p , made of prime wheat and a bit of wholesome mo- lasses is readily prepared at the table, a cup at a time. A level teaspoonful of Instant Postum in a cup of hot water, with eream and sugar wins children and usually the parents. 's a Reason" Grocers everywhere sell Instant Postum. Cagadisn Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Windsor, ed, makes an attractive, healthful drink, and its pleasant flavor a a boeuf sted HOW TEDDY BOSSED BEAR. Once upon a time Larry took his dog, Teddy, out for a walk and when he came home he found bis little bro- ther, Loony, sound asleep with the little dog he had given him, named Bear. Now Teddy was much smaller than Bear but We thought Bear must do just as he wished him to, and he looked out for him just as Larry looked out for - his little brother, Lonny. When the two dogs were out Teddy would run along close beside Bear and if Bear wished to go a different way Teddy would run up to him and make him go the way Teddy wished him to go. After the dogs had lived together for several weeks, Bear had grown to be almost twice as large ag Teddy, but still Teddy thought he should look after Bear as closely as ever. One day the dogs were playing out! in the yard. Larry had gone to school and Lonny was in the house taking his nap, when all at once Teddy ran up to Bear and began to push and grow! at him because the larger "dog did not do just as the smaller one wished him to. Bear stood a minute, took a long look at little Teddy, then walked up to him, took him up by his neck in his teeth and walked into the house where he put Teddy into his basket just !ike a baby. Teddy was so astonished that he didn't move for a second, them he started to get out of the basket, but Bear pushed him back every time he tried, until at last Teddy seemed to understand that Bear was new his master and he must mind him, When Larry came home from school there were the two dogs; Teddy in his basket and Bear sitting close beside him watching to see that he didn't get out until Bear was ready to let him. . Bear didn't jump up to greet Larry as he almost al- ways did, but just looked out of one eye as much as to say: "You see, Teddy must do as I say now," Ever after that Teddy did just as Bear wished him to do and never tried again to boss his larger playfellow. A A AA Pr "Low Cast of Living" Menu Menu for Thursday BREAKFAST Corned Beef Hash Oatmenl Muffins Coffee LUNCHEON Chicken Soup Cheese Puffs Stewed Apricots DINNER Oyster Soup Dolled Mutton, Tudian Sauce Potatoes String Heans Mixed Salad Baked Coconnut Pudding Tonst Ten ~ BREAKFAST. Oatmeal Muffins----Mix one cup of milk, ome cup of rolled oats, half a cup of sugar, a cup of graham flour, a heaping tablespoon of lard, a tea- spoon of baking powder and one egg. Beat one minute and bake in muffin tins, LUNCHEON. Cheese Buffs--Mix a cup of water with a level tablespoon of lard anda little salt. When boiling stir in quickly a cup of flour and half a cup of grated cheese, stirring constantly until smooth, Cool and add four eggs, one at a time, beating well. Drop on a well greased pan far apart and bake in a moderate oven about forty minutes, "DINNER. Oyster Soup--Boil one quart of milk, add a pint of oysters, a large piece of butter and boil five minutes. Seagon and serve at once. Boiled Mutton--Wash the meat and boil slowly until tender. Serve with a sauce made of two tablespoons of chili sauce, four tablespoons of mayonnaise and half a teaspoon of curry powder. Mixed Salad----Mix a cup of raw chopped cabbage with half a chopped green pepper, ten olives cut fine, three sour pickles cut in small pieces, and half an apple sliced, Pour over a mayonnaise and serve on lettuce, Cocoanut Pudding--Mix two eggs with two cups of milk, two table- spoons of sugar and three of grated cocoanut, Bake in a moderate oven. in Waste, Gained Property Letter in Toronto Globe Did I tell you the day, you may re- member, you said you envied me the possession of a little bit of property that is all my own? Well, that came | ings. Here are a few more waste-savers which I practise: When apples are cheap in early fall I can enough to last all winter for pies and apple sauce. Then I buy a pig's head and a shank of beef and always make the old-fashioned "collared head." This helps to lower the meat bills through the winter and if kept on an outside porch, the basin holding it tied over with cloth, it will keep as long as the cold weather_lasts. To cut down the gas bill I make five pounds of split peas into soup at one time, a saver not only of fuel but time, as pea soup requires long cook- ing and frequent stirring. This also will keep a long time in the cold, I keep it in small pots and bring in one at a time, as required. In the fall, when celery costs far less than at any other time of the year, I dry all the green tops and use them for cream of celery soup and for soup stock all through the win- ter. By the way, the celery soup made entirely from these green tops with milk, flour, butter and water, is delicious. The Vogue For Stripes, Stripes have quite a vogue this year, and perhaps the chief reason for this is the effectiveness on the golf course, the tennis court or the shaded porch of the country club. Their neatness and style make them acceptable as 'well 'to the busines® woman, and as they may be had in cheap, cool materials, toere is no need to doubt that they will be one of the most popular designs this sum- mer. 3 One frock especially pretty for playing tennis used a combination of white silk and a wide, dark blue stripe, with two narrow yellow lines on a white blackground. The skirt was made of the striped material The blouse, very much like a middy blouse, was of white silk. It. was entirely out of household economiz- | | The Indian woman of the Isthmus of Tehuantepec, Mex, are said to be the most beautiful in the world. English women worked as barbers {as far back as the eighteenth cen- | tury. | | frm---------------------- || How to Look Years ) Less Than Your Age The most aged face will look years |vounger after the nse of ordinary {mercolized wax for from ten days to, two weeks This remarkable sub [stan e, because of its peculiar absorp- [tive power, actually removes the thin [veil of faded or withered outer cuticle [a little at a time. Gradually the | fresher, more Vouthful skin undérneath revealed This absorption process Ibeing a purely hygienic one, an ens | tirely natural complexion is acquired quite different from the artificial complexion, which appear™ anything but girlish, though often bearing pain- {ful evidence of childishness. An ounce {of mercolized wax, obtainable at any drug store, is, sufficient to rejuvenate any complexion It is pat on like {cold cream at beiltime,--and removed irnings with warm water. » erudicate sweh e mfarks as wrinkles and firrows, mkke =a wash lotion by dissolving 1 oz powdered saxolfte In % pt. witelr hazel This has wonderful astringent and touie propert'es, It quickly .effaces all kinds of wrinkles, no matter how skin firm, smooth CARPETS ou wil be deigined o slit infront through which a white | silk sash was caught. The sash ends were tied in the back and hung down: almost to the hem of the skirt, Cuffs | lar which began in the front as a] sailor, ended in a rolling gut, which | was split and separated. A sailor tie! of dark blue was used. i Another frock used white silk to} form a Russian blouse, which was belted in with a 3-inch band of old- rose striped with silk. The sailor collar was banded with the same ma- | terial, and the pepluim, which was long at the sides and very sh at front and back, was further elabor- ated by square pockets of the stri laid lengthwise on the white silk. Paris opened its universities to women in 1868. : of the stripe were used, and the col-| - We have every facility for dyeing « carpets of every descripti ith PARKER'S DYE WORKS { LIMITED © vy m Try it--it's delicious. A CR L7 HY should you pay 8 cents, 10 cents or 25 cents for a small cake of soap that cannot be a particle AC ! OR BLACK GREEN or el 5 2 70, better than the S-cent, six-ounce cake of Ivory Soap? Ivory Soap is as mild and as pure as soap can be. It agrees with the skin as well as any "complexion" soap. It is the most pleasant and refreshing soap that ever entered a bath- &\ room. And you get a big cake for § cents, ary &Practical Flomé Divers Makin Lerrons Prepared Especially For This Newspaper by Pictorial Review Frock For Gala Occasions. inch lining and is made first, for reas sons easily acknowledged. Begin by! pleating the lower edges of the front as: indicated. Next close under-arm and] shoulder seams and bem the front. Stiteh 2-inch belting t4 »osition, lower edged even with underbody. ® | Next, close the sleeve seam as notch! ed. Gather on crossline of small "o™ perforations and % inch above: draw' gathers to the required size and stitch) tape underneath. Sew in armhole asi notched, Then close the right shoulder and underarm seams of the outer front and/ back as notched. Finish the left shoul der and under-arm edges for a closing. Gather the lower edge of waist, then gather the neck edge of the front bed tween double "TT" perforations. Gath-i er on crossiine of small perforations in front and back: and make 3 rows of gathers above perforations % Inch apart, Arrange outer front and back on un- derbody, center-fronts and center« backs even; stitch the neck.and lower together, under-arm seams even, leaving the outer back free fn y alah id: sdger dra 1 » o 3 : ton On hon NE! la aR Princess Street : =

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