L "FOR THE. Home Embroiderer Specially prepared V COREL SNE SO Sy By KATHERINE MUTTERER. .. The new embroidered garments for Wee bables are just as pretty and dainty as they can be. A charming Nos. 12414-12415--Bib and Sack. set consists of a sack, bootees and bib. The sack is made of fine cash- : mere and is lined with China silk or silk crepe de chine. It may be in white, blue or pink, but popular taste seems to prefer white with a lining in some delicate color. The pattern of the sack pictured includes both tie Pictorial Review Transfer Pattern No. 124186, blue, 16 cents, supplying Some Exquisite New Embroidzries for Infants. shape and design With scallopad edges and prim little floral sprays, the design lends {itself to flannel or cotton materials as well as cashmere. The embroidery may be carrfed out in delicate color or white, raised satin stitch being used for the flowers and sprays. The scallops are, of course, buttonholed. The bib is made of fige linen cam- bric. It has just a little more body than the sheer handkerchief linen and is not so expensive and still is soft and pretty. The bib is embraoid ered in raised satin stitch with but- tonholed scalloping. Ribbon is drawn through the eyelets and then tied at the back. This prevents the bib from moving upward. Use only two threads of stranded cotton for this fine work. The pattern for the bootees gives two different styles, both of them ex- ceedingly desirable. Baby rubs through so many pairs of ljttle shoes that it is almost impossible to have too mahy. They may be made of corded silk or satin,.or pique may be used for the purpose. Embroidery or- naments the fronts of the bootees, the No. 18416--Bootees in charming new styles for Baby. design being as simple as it is pos sible to make jt. Solid satin stitch is used in {ts development. Rosettes" or bows of narrow satin ribbon may be added to the trimming of the bootees one transfer of each design, shape for both pairs of bootees, diagram and fnstructions for making them. Transfer Pattern No. 12414, blue, 15 cents, both shape and design. Transfer Pattern No. 12415, blue, 10 cents. Pictorial Review patterns on sale at local dealers. -------- ----For Sale by -- NEWMAN & SHAW 'McFaul's Old Stand Princess Street .e ve INFANTS = 8 Zz Stands for Tommy, Who thinks mamma might Wash him before Baby With ** Infants-Delight.' Bath time is joy Se when you have IN- FANTS - DELIGHT in the house. DELIGHT TorLer Soap «J = & USN NN tw . ro BN fq | 9 Send us three of these ads--all ifferent--for a FREE trial size cake of INFANTS.DELIGHT. JOHN TAYT.OR & CO., Limited, Dept 14. TORONTO. 1 ii y Ladies' Satin Oxfords, Louis in white kid, grey suede, black vici kid, patent leather, and Havana brown. The smartest shoes in town . $9.00 - Four styles of Colonial buckles. New York's newest street ornament PUMPS, APAIF .. ns a: uo... " .$1.00 Cosas dain 90,00 { ~ BLOUSE IS COSTLY Garment Almost as Expensive as Entire Frock. Model Is So Simple That the Making at Home Would Not Be a Difficult Task. a -- It is impossible to eliminate the | peplum or costume blouse from style discussions and reviews at the present time, because this garment is one of the most interesting and most talked- of items of the wardrobe. When an out-of-the-ordinary style is introlluced | It is usually taken up by the cheapest manufacturers and dressmakers, and developed in such inferior material and with such poor workmanship that it quickly loses caste, This has not been the case with the long blouse. It seems safe to say, writes a correspondent, that for the present at least the woman who | wizhes ome of these blouses must | either buy material and make it or have it made, or else pay a very high price for it. Most of these blouses shown In the shops cost as much as an entire frock. Undoubtedly this ac- counts for the fact that up to the Present time they are worn only by very well-dressed and smartly groomed women. . The blouse shown in the skefch is extremely good-looking and at the Same time it is so simple that making it at home would not be difficult. The foundation of the blouse, which is a little longer than the overblouse, is satin. Either black, white or colored lace may be used over this. The gar ment would be lovely made of white or malze-colored satin with over blouse of black lace, a skirt of soft black satin to accompany it. i A narrow bead fringe finishes the edges of the blouse. The satin foun- dation is sleeveless. The blouse cam | Costume Blouse of Satin and Lace. be more easily made and more easily slipped on if the two sections are made separate. For very early spring wear some of the clever designers are showing long blouses of figured foulard to be worn with white satin or silk Jersey cloth skirts, A blouse such as the one shown in the sketch, worn with a handsome silk or satin skirt, makes a costume suf- ficiently dressy for any afternoon function. SHAPE AND COLOR OF SHOES Footwear Déalers in Annual Conven. tion Limit Height of Shoe Heels to ~ Two and One-Eighth Inches. Simplicity In shape as well as in color will be the predominating style in footgear for the coming season, big dealers declared at'the recent conven. tion of the National Shoe Retallers' association at St. Louls, standards set by the war industries beard, for shoe manufacturers had ad- vanced far into the output of 1919 goods when the government lifted shoe regulations. > - o action, . and her chief » 'g REPRESENTS CANADIAN WOMANHOOD | os Canadian womanhood is worthily represented at Philadelphia, where Mrs. Charles Robson, of Winnipeg, will address the annual meeting of the Natienal League for Women's Service in Pennsylvania, as their re presentative and the spokesman of | the Repatriation Committee, The Government was fortunate in securing her services for the Repatri- ation Committee. She is now in charge of the Women's Department of the committee's work, though she is reinforced at intervals by the as- sistance and advice of Miss Helen Reid. of Montreal, and Mrs. Bowlby, of Windsor. Mrs. Robson has a peculiarly good equipment for the task. which she has undertaken with such success Born in Pictou 'county, N.S., which has given to Canada so many distin- guished citizens in every walk of life, she migrated west after her mar- riage and settled in the city of Re- gina, Saskatchewan. Possessed as she is of a first-rate practical mind and endowed with a quality of public spirit which is all too rare, she threw herself energeti- cally into the public life of the com- munity in which she found herself. Her husband being General Secretary of the Y. M. C. A. in Regina, social welfare work was her natural line of interest for some years was a hostel for fmmi- grant women which she established From 1913-15 she acied as presi- dent of the Local Council of Women, and lent her energies and abilities to every gopd cause. An excgllent plat- form 'spéaker, she took an active in- terest in polities, and was a keen supporter of thé suffrage movement. Hy 1916, when she moved to Win- nipeg, she had established her claim to be regarded as one of the ablest leaders in the feminist movement in WAR HAS SHAKEN MORALITY. Henry Seid® Canby in April Yale Review. . Morality is shaken, especially sex morality. The old Victorian order was passing, had to pass, as its, best exemplar prophesied-- The old order passeth, giving to new. And God fulfills Himself in ways. It is not God, however, but Dme haphazard chance that seems tN be fulfilling itself in the general SYck- ening of 'the moral sense, I mean no more than I say. I do not mean decadence; I do mot mean corrup- tion; but it is certain that men and women are confused and doubtful in their judgments of sex relations, in- consistent. in their actions, less sure of right and wrong than before in this generation. As the church has vacillated, now choosing one moral attitude towards war, now another, So men and women--whose lives may be unexceptionable--are vacillating feeling their moral sanctions and inhibitions melting beneath them I think thet this had to come. Per- haps it is a Wlessing, not an evil Much of it, I know, is. transitory Pimples Broke Out "All Over Face, Arms and Neck Pimples are a sure sign that the blood is not in its proper shape. While the skin is the seat of the irritating, unsightly pimples, the real disease is a the blood. ' eat lotions and wders may allay the itching and {iritation al continued. and the condition is often aggravated and the skin' permanently injured by their use. The disease is more than skin deep; the entire circulation is lace ny {pido Blood Bi § g 121 : g if i : Mo matter how long | b3 THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, MONDAY, MARCH 24, 1919. the west She discerned at an early.| date the necessity for Union Govern- ment, and her public pronounce- | ments in its favor converted a large | body of feminine opinion She took a prominent part in the steps which led up to the actual formation of Union Gavernment, and appeared on public platforms with some of the | western Unionist ministers. | In Winnipeg, where she transfer- | red her enthusiasm and public 'spirit, | she worked assiduously among the | foreign girls; she organized the Busi- | ness Women's Red Cross Branch, and | was active in Y. W. C. A. work | She was indefatigable in her la-| bors for the soldiers' wives and de- pendents, and their gratitude found | expression in her election as presi- | dent of th Women's Service League | of Winnipeg for this year Her home is now in North Winni- peg, where whatever time she can! spare from her family duties is given to public causes and good works of | every kind. Mrs. Robson is one of the sanely | progressive women who have encour- aged the male sex to welcome the ad- | vent of women to political life Her | public services, which have been! quietly and unobtrusively performed, | have been infinitely valuable to the] community, and the women of Can-| ada have few more capable and at- tractive representatives | The problems arising in connec-| tion with the wives and the depen-| dnts of our returning army are in- numerable, and demand a thetic----spirit--and =e ; standing to find adequaté solution Mrs. Robson has brought both | these qualities and others to her present duties, and has earned among her fellow-workers a reputation for | quiet efficiency and genuine capa- city. 1 | ' and due to the mixing of races and the state of war. But it is not a| happy condition; habits formed und- er it will be hard to cure. No one blamed the soldier for recklessness as regards wine, women, and song, when the next week his shell might burst; but that does not lead us to praise the exigency. We shall leave Puritanism iw.its undue emphasis upon sex behind us as one result of the war; that is clear, and good. But just now we waver on the edge of new moral standards whose bounds and sanctions are not fixed. ------------------------------ JUST 80 He---~Why shouldn't we be happy? We have almost everything In come mon, She--Yes--all but my fortune. © THE ONLY ONE "The farmer's wife tells me it Is profitable to keep a pig to get rid, of the scraps around the house" "1 presume so. I find, however, that my husband will eat almost any. thing.™ {very apt to lose his retain its stylish lines many months of wear. store. sympa- - DOMINION RAYNSTERS "Made-in-Canada" Raincoats Are Good Style Dominion Raynsters correctly interpret the bappiest styles of the spring season in men's, women's and children's coats. In addition, they are absolutely waterproof ; which means that a Dominion Raynster will This is because of the absoiute reliability of the materials used in these garments and the thoroughness of every detail of their manufacture. Made in a wide variety of styles and patterns. Ask to sce the new spring models at your favorite All genuine " Raynsters' carry the guarantee label of the Dominion Rubber System. Look for it in the coat you select. and a shapeliness after The most delicious Hot Biscuits are easily and quickly made with DALLEY BAKING POWDER--Fine for all home-baking, IDENTIFIED BY THIS § . MARK OF QUALITY { The F. F. DALLEY CORPORATIONS Limited, HAMILTON, CANADA Wherever you see Gold Soap resting on a grocer's shelf near other laundry soap you will notice that Gold are larger. Five cakes of as six of the other, Gold Soap as large Soap cakes the Gold are is unsurpassed in quality, unequaled ing. quantity at the price. "Hence you sav money when you say "Gold Soap" to your grocer. Gold Soap is made in the Procter & Gamble Factories "at Hamilton. Canada bil Gok J: Soap man goes to mmrket and with a tough fowl, be in respect for old A gosling never sttempts 10 teach 4 goose, yet there are some children who imagine they are wiser than thei: parents.