THE BEAUTY OF SUNLIGHT is that every garment washed with it bears the impress of purity; a purity begotten of sweet, cleansing oils, and maintained by absolute clean i in manufacture; a purity exalted by the co-operation of workers united for the purpose; rity demonstrated by the "$5,000 guarantee h rests upon every bar of SUNLIGHT SOAP. Sc. The hmabe Lever an Sosp is s guarantee of Pufity and Excellence. a » w Sc. A DAINTY CAKE that fills a long- felt want at afternoon tea tables. It is always deliciously fresh; it comes in five event flavors--a new one for almost every week-day tea--it is wrapped and packaged and sold by your own grocer at ten cents a cake, Chocolate--Gold----White-- Cherry -- Fruit, rt AA A A tf o ary & Practical Home Dresr Making; © Lerrons £453 Ig | Prepared Espécially For This Newspaper by Picterial Review 8) Just A Matter of Comfortable Simplicity. fashioned of rice cloth, having the front and back cut in one, The sleeves are long and flowing. Among the latest designs in robes d'intimes, as these models are called, there fis nothing that is more restful and dainty. In medium gize the kimono re quires 4% yards 86inch material with 1% yards constrasting material 18 or more inches wide for the trior ming. If ribbon is used---and it may be with such a good effect--3% yards will be needed. A casual glance at the cutting guide will 'convince one of the simplicity of this part of the work. Section A is so laid on the material that the part marked by triple "TTT" per forations rests on the lengthwise fold, while the other section rests on a lengthwise thread. The piec- ing is placed along the selvage edge. Place the sleeve over a lengthwise thread as illustrated. But a few hours are required for the making. Close the underarm seam as notched from large "0" per foration to lower edge. Close back seam of band (indicated by small "0" perforation), sew to neck edge of back, and to front, notches and ctnter-backs even: fold band through center, fell remaining edge over seam. To make the sleeve, close the seams as notched, leaving seam having 3 notches free between the 2 small "0" perforations. Sew in arm- hole as notched. Turn hem in sleeve on small "0" perforations and bring the 2 single large "0" perforations at hem in sleeves-together and tack. The straight belt illustrated is the smartest idea in kimono walst finish- ings. place, the boudoir. It is faghi from rice cloth trimmed with ribb The atyle secret of this long Jap- anese kimono is its simplicity. It ia Above Patterns can be obtained from - NEWMAN & SHAW, Princess Street bust. g DAILY B - The Butterfly King Once upon a time the Rose Fairy sat on her vetal couch thinking about her roses and wondering if she had done everything that she could fo help make them the most beautiful roses in the world, for you know if the roses have a kind and helpful Ruse Fairy they grow more beautiful than the ones that hive no kind friend. . The roses loved their Rose Fairy and tried ¢ach year to grow larger and more beautiful and to have the sweetest smell of all the roses, and because they had tried so hard the Rose Fairy's garden was she love- liest of any for miles around, and wheén the roses were in bloom a great many people came to see them. She was very happy this day for she knew her roses would soon be in bloom and then her friends, the bees, and butterflies would come to see her and gather honey from her flowers. She knew the butterflies all by name and was glad that she could help by giving them all the honey they needed. "Good morning, little Rose Fairy," sald a voice just tBen close beside a A her and when she turned she saw the most beautiful blue and gold butterfly she had ever seen. It was almost 'twice as large as any of the others and its wings were as blue as the sky, while its body was a deep rieh gold which-glistened in the sun. "I am King of tha Southern but- terflies," he sald "and we have been brought to live here this summer. used to very sweet and nice honey and what -we have found so far has not been very good. So when the Golden Bumblebee told me about you and your wonderful roses I thought I would ask if we eould come to your garden for our honey as long as we stay. We won't hurt your reses. They will be all the better for our being here for we will see that there are no bad bugs to harm them." The Rose Fairy was very glad to have such beautiful butterflies in her garden and so she told the King that she would be glad to have them come as often as they liked. She took him to all her roses and told them about their new friends. They seemed very proud to think they were going to he of help to such beautiful little creatures and hoped they would ceme very soon. Ams mn "Low Cost of Living" Meno | Menu for Tuesday BREAKFAST Stewed Rhubarb Pomona Hash Potatoes In Cream Toasted Oatmenl Bread Coflee LUNCHEON Scalloped mb Bread and Butter Clove Cake Ten DINNER Hotel Steak toex Rice Soup Mashed ¥ Dande ns Radish and Lettuce Salad Spanish Pudding ee BREAKFAST Pomona Hash.--Mash enough hot potatoes to make two cups. Add quarter of a cup of milk, salt, pepper, and one beaten eggs, "Beat ovér a fire cne minute, add a cup of minced lamb and brown, LUNCHEON Scalloped Lamb.--Mince lamb en- ough to make two cups. Place in a baking dish a layer of raw potatoes, then a layer of lamb, and again po- SPRING IS THLE OPEN SEASON (Continued from page 9.) embroidery adds effectiveness suit, it may be added to the front panel of the skirt just above the hem. For these decorations only a single bloom is used. There must be sufficient to attract attention and not too much to be ostentatiou¥ to a Guide to Patterns The fashions shown on this are Pictorial Review patterns. Numbers and sizes are as follows: Jacket No, 6709. Sizes, 34 to 44 inches bust, Jacket No, inches bust, Skirt No. inches waist, Jacket No. 6690. Sizes, 34 inches bust. Skirt No. inches waist. Jacket No. 6156. Sizes, 32 inches bust. Skirt No. inches waist, page 6713, Sizes; 22 to 662° Sizes, 24 to to 6640, Sizes, to 99 to 44 6628. Sizes, 22 to 0 AAA A AAA A A AA AA FOR TAILORED COSTUMES. | on 1 Signature of tatoes and lamb until the dish is full. Season well and pour over all a cup of water and a tablespoon of water. Bake in a hot oven half an hour. Clove Cake.~--Mix one cup of sug- ar, one egg, one cup of milk, a table- spoon of butter; two teaspoons of baking powder, a teaspoon of cloves, and flour enough to make a stiff dough. Bake in a moderate oven. DINNER. Rice Soup--Add as much milk as you have rice water which you had left from yesterday, season, stir in a tablespoon of cold boiled rice and boil one minute, Hotel Steak.--Get a sirloin steak, pour over it two teaspoons each of oil and vinegar, rub in thoroughly and set aside. Turn once or twice and after two hours, broil. Spanish Pudding.--Boil two of milk. add two beaten eggs cook until thick. Cut slices of stale bread, dip in the custard and fry brown on both sides. Pour over a lemon sauce made by boiling a cup of water, half a cup of sugar, add a teaspoon of dissolved cornstarch and boil five minutes. Remove from the fire, add two teaspoons of lemon juice, a tablespoon of butter and a little nutmeg, . cups and A AA nt Jacket No. 6727. inches bust, Skirt No. Sizes,. 34 to 44 6185, Sizes, to 34 | inches waist. Jacket No. 6739. Sizes 34 to 44 | inches bust, to 38 Skirt No. inches waist, Price of each number, 15 Pictorial Review Pattern local agents, Sizes 22 cents, on sale by Capt. H. Redfern, Colborne, left Wednesday for Buffalo to take charge of a new steamer purchased by George kett of Cobourg. Chas. E , who for past few ye the For Infants and Children In Use For Over 30 Years Always bears ZT 4 the In the new comic opera, * : i J and on Wednesday, May 24th, matinee and night. . OSCAR F AN AND PHILIP RYLEY : an "Phe 'Princess Pat," at the Gr 1916. SOLDIER'S STATIONERY. 700 Different Kinds of Army Forms . Are Supplied, A shrewd observer once remarked that an army marches, not on its stomach, but on its army forms. This in a great measure is true, for the! army would be powerless without its | army stationery. The stationery or-| ganization of the army comprises a score of officers and some 260 men, | according to a special correspondent | at the general bheadguarters, who! deal dally wit millions of forms | and papers for the administrative purposes of the army in the field. | The Stationery Service supplies an | unending variety of army books (106 { types), army forms (about 700 4if- ferent kinds), books of regulations | (136 varieties), and sixty different | sorts of writing-paper,"ten of envel- | 0128, twenty-one of pencils, and no fewer than twenty-six descriptions of inks in- powder form (black; blue, red, green, and violet, waterproof Ink, drawing ink, ete.). | Figures speak, they say. Up to! last June the Stationery Services had supplied some 52,000,000 field ser vice postcards (printed in English, | Hindoo, Urdu, and Gurmukhi, the last three for the different races among the Indian troops), nearly 100,000,000 army message forms, 7,000,000 message envelopes, 2,000, 000 war diaries and Intelligence Summary of Events (for army re-| cord purposes), and 50,000,000 and | 25,000,000 respectively of two dif-| ferent types of army form. | There are several hundred differ- ent kinds of labels for goods, etc., in| use, The stock usually stands at] somewhere about 2,000,000, and it] will probably come as a surprise to | people who have visions of army commanders pencilling despatches in| tents at dead of night to know that | there are considerably more than] 1,000 typewriters, in special travel-| ing cases, in use in the field at the present time, and these are kept in| order and repaired by traveling me- chanics in the Stationery Service. Tit-Bits. { Great Titles Won by the Sword, | Will the present war produce a | new British dukedom? Probably it | will, for it is a curious fact, and one | apt to be overlooked, that although | the minor peerages are filled by all sorts and conditions of men, access | to the highest rank of all has usually | been won in the first instance by the sword. i The first Duke of Marlborough, for | instance, was given the title for his| services to his country. So, too, was | the first Duke of Wellington. The | first Duke of Norfolk died fighting! for his King on Bosworth Field. The | first Duke of Manchester fought for! King William at the Battle of the | Boyne. i The first of the Dukes of Somerset | -----whose sister, . Jane Seymour, mar-| ried King Henry VIII.--fought for | his Royal brother-in-law in France and Flanders. The Dukes of Argyll! began as fighters, and they have been at it pretty well ever since. | The first Duke of Grafton com- | manded the troops in Somersetshire sent against the Duke of Monmouth, and later-on saw fighting in Ireland, | where he was wounded. An ancestor | of the present Duke of Sutherland | was standard-bearer to Prince Ed- ward, son of Henry VI. at the Bat-| tle of Tewkesbury. { The present Duke of Rutland is| descended from the famous Marquis | of Granby, who upheld the arms of England in Germany throughout the | Seven Years' War, The Dukes of Northumberland have been fighters | ever since the days of the crusades; while the first Duke of Portland was descended from the earl of that ilk | who accompanied William of Orange | to England, and fought as a lieuten- | ant-general at the Battle of the] Boyne. Wonderful Runners, The feats of professional runners | seem insignificant when compared | with the régular performances of an | Kast Indian caste. These Kahars, | who are also known as Jhinwarb, | live in the Punjab, where for centur-| ies they have acted not only as run-| ners, but as fisherman and as water- | fowl catchers. | It igrsaid that these men are able | without resting. There is offered an | instance, apparently well authenti- | cated, of one Tika Ram carrying dis- patches 300 miles in three days-- from Mean-Mir to Meerut. It is fur- ther said that so far from shortening their lives these performances really conduce to longevity in the Kahars, many of whom are able not only to withstand the strain of covering great distances, but to thrive under it. The jinriksha man, too, notwith- standing his irregular diet, excessive use of liquor, and exposure to the elements, lives to a reasonable age. In Tokio, when a census was taken of the jinriksha men some time ago, there were found to be more than 1,300 who were over 55 years of age. Spider Superstitions. Spiders, according to common sup- erstition, are always omens of good fortune and money, therefore to kill them provokes wrath and invites dis- aster. Superstitious people will tell that the bride who finds a spider in the folds of Ler wedding gown may look forward to a married life of great prosperity, and that if by any chance you are sitting in a room with other people and a spider singles you out from the rest and wends its way towards you, it means that a large sum of money will be yours at some future period, The belief that the appearance of the little red spider in- dicated the receipt of money may have originated in the belief held by Cornish miners that the spiders scent o- t gold, and that their presence will always show where gold may be found. To Employ Veterans. The Canadian Expiosives Company al Novel, Ont., will employ returned scldiers as watchmen. A Ladies Aid was organized at "Ernesttown Station with Mrs. Mal- col Hogle as President. , Mr, and Mrs. Charles Young, Bath, have taken up residence at Ernest- town for the season, Used in Millions of a Daily --Every Leaf is Pure Every infusion is alike delicious Black, Green Black, Green} Sealed Packets only. Tea Pots | Phone 845 FOR THE EMPIRE'S SAKE .® Save the Babies USE ONLY PASTEURIZED MILK Our Milk is thoroughly pasteurized and sealed bottles. The most stylish foundation for the up-to-date costume is a D&A or a La Diva corset. Save money and improve your appearance by selecting a D & A or a La Diva, which are made in Canada by highly-skilled opera- tives, in one of the finest corset factories in the world. Every corset is guaranteed. At best dealers, everywhere. Daminion Co. Que Lee, Nona) d Toronto. o sold in Price's J UST a few dashes of water and the copious lather of Ivory Soap vanishes from your skin. Ivory lather does not stick and make thorough rinsing impossible because it does not contain 'unsaponi- fied oil. - 3 CENTS IVORY SOAP IT FLOATS Procter & Gamble Factories in Hamilton, Canada 995% PURE to accomplish a hundred miles a day | woo Rs AJ Pi te ay Err 7 Ce EE 2 Pe - CO \ Soe . BAI