Daily British Whig (1850), 27 Jun 1919, p. 11

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SARL a lr rer Wate a CARS FOR SALE OR TRADE One 1918 Ford Sedan, WORTH MORE THAN 11917 Chevrolet Roadstes, Hl jae ) i i Raspberry Able to Do One 1017 Overland Roadster, ||| Housework First Time in "All kinds of cars Four Years--Qains sold or exchanged. +. Bert Stansbury, Ld Haglan Road. Phone 1674m if fworld," of 1812 Campbeyl 1City, Mo. street, by the Armour Missouri, road, | "Before my wife Kansas 'and couldn't even dress herself, i | wag ¥ could "Haedly 'digest anything. | | GROCERY |= gas on : i High Grade Groceries, Fruits and Vegetables, Cooked aud ee Uncooked Meats, LEWIS ORR 5920 King St. Phone 249 Liecgiige No, B-27448. ful spells' of that she could was extremely: neg was short and Yep ily stand it. pQus, wag hardly more thafi a frame. en pounds and had not been" gb do any housework in four years. she now weighs one twenty-two pounds {has J ALL HONEY ON EARTH 36 Pounds. oe A "I had rather see mv wife well and happy like she is since taking Tan. lag than to have all the money in the declared( Hedry 'Raspberry, by Kansas Mr. Raspberry, who has jrecently been employed as a foreman Packing Company, was formerly in the service of the Texas Rail took 'Tanlae," continued Mr. Raspberry, "she had rheumatism in Wer limbs so 'bad she I would shave to help her cut of béd in the {mornings and put her clothes on for A{heF, Her stomach in the mornings p. such a bad condition that she The 8 stomach would cause in- tense paind ih het side and such aw. itation of the heart ' Phe her breath oifensive, and she had fallen off in weight until she "At the time she began taking Tanlac she only weighed eighty-sev. to hundred and actually gained thirty-five pounds--and is as » THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG, FRIDAY, JUNE 27,1919. ~~ IN FAVOR OF CAPE All-Covering" Garment Is Kind to the Figure. In Some of Its Phases It May Easily Be Fashioned by the Uninspired Dressmaker--Look Smart. The long, all-covering cape remains | & favorite with the up-totdate woman. It is tucked into the season's outfit, whether for Northern or Southern climes. ' It is kind to the figure, this long cape. It bas such grace, such pictur esqueness, Ii 80 easily put on and off, and supplies such a comfortable extra wrap to be thrown on over a suit that its vogue is readily understood. And in some of its phases it may easily be fashioned by the uninspired dress maker. However, one must not allow oneself to be deceived on that last count. Some of the latest models, un- In cut and adjustment, and unless one can be content with a simple circular cape it 1s well to be sure of a good pattern before undertaking a home made wrap of this order. One of the most popular of the sea- son's cape models came out a little be- fore the new year and has been copied to the point of monotony, yet it always manages to lpok smart, even though [it Is no longer exclusive." % has a full, voluminous body, at- TT et | healthy (and detive 48 she Was thirty| tagfd to a yoke which extends half 25 acres good land; [ili ii her wid she can do| th, 4h of the upper arm. forming house and barn, six |||! her work and look ater the tam. large Sew) collar whieli ls draped miles from Kings- eats, Blo a kinds To plice fashion hud fastens at the back ¢ wants and never have'a sign of indl-| underneath the ¥olds of the cape. This ton, for sale. : W.'H. GODWIN & SON gestion. I can't find words. to thankfulness for what express She is not the least nervous any more, sleeps Hke a child every pight and is as well as she ever was. my Tanlac has model is well sapted for summer wear, as it leaves #{sible at the front, from the waist do a panel of the pretty summery frock. \ short ot| One model built wu these lines . Real Kstate & Insurance done Sop Ber, 3t Is nothing, sho was made ¢! gray silk figured in a 89 Brock St, Phone 424 Tanlac Js sold In Kingston by A. [soft rose-colored design. J : P. Chown, in Plevna by Gilbert Ost-! In dark blue serge, white serge, : ATR - ler, in 'Battersea' "by ©. $:°OI#FK Mn [black and white checks, black satin. rr ARE, Some men do the right thing be- calle they are afraid of being caught it they do otherwise. dock by M. J. Scullion, Lake by W. Y\ Cannon -----Advt. + f 5 Férnleigh by Ervin Martin, in Ar- in Sharbot' gray serge, beige serge, ete, this cape Is very effective, and is fairly typical of a large class of such wraps, varying age ema Tar only in minor details. Some of these capes and cape-toat models are of a distinctly sporty char- acter, bullt up in plaids, black checks, gay wool velours, tweeds and jerseys. Others are designed more specially for street or travel purposes, and among these are some particularly good-looking fust-gray models in fine, soft serge or twill. Paris 18 very fond of this material and color for all kinds of travel coats. It is good, too, for a separate cape for travel or motorcar, a long, ample, en- veloping 'garment, warranted to pro- tect the 'frock or suit beneath. But for hard motoring a cape is not desirable ror-protection over & cdats/The capes not taut enotgh, is prone fo fluttering or flying folds and flapping is the un- pardonable thinig'in a motor outfit that asks to be taken seriously. ! Belge and the various shades of light brown are modish. éolors, tod. though Paris likes the dust gray bet ter for this special é of garment, and it. 1s more pracf¢al in the matter of resisting soil. INTEREST IN EVENING DRESS With the Trying Days of War a Thing: of the Past Women Are Dressing in Gayer Clothes. ------ More fnterest is being taken In the question of evening frocks just now than at any time since American en- tered the war, During the trying months of the War women were too thoroughly occupied with really seri: ous interests to spend either time or money on apparel for formal functions, and as a matter of fact there were few social functions that were not 'of a semipatriotic er philanthropic na- ture, s0. that simp! costuming was considered Mn the best possible taste, All women agreed, however, that they must continue: to dress well in order that the public morale might be kept in wealthy state and the all-the-day through frock was by all odds the fa vorite outfit. } 8 Now that the war is over. and sol diers are yeturning by the thousand every week, social festivities are tak ing on a new lease of life and the regulation eveni mand. Women in full evening dress jdeveloped the fact that the new law assuming in air, are extremely subtle, save, perhaps, to afford extra warmth | evening gown is in de | HIS WIFE OBJECTED. Why Hungarian Women Have Not Been "Communized." Iwas due to aNamily gnarrel that Hunbary esdaped having its women "communized' after the fashion of the Russian "republic" of Saratoff, rather than to the abhorrence of Blea Kun to the scheme, as the jats ter afterwards stated. The law to communize women was actually framed and in the printers' hands ready for publication, when Herr Weltner, one of the Cabinet of bright young men who gre now rub ing the fate of the former kingdom, went home for supper, During the meal he told his wife and his mother-in-law in glowing terms about the projected reforms. "What are you doing for women?" they asked. Weltner then explained that in fu- ture women would be free, too; that they ;would be permitted to choose their own husbands and discard them if they liked by the simple process of paying a few cents for a legal paper declaring their "unfitness" for married life. Further: conversation also gave hus the same right; that children might he turned over to the care of the State, so that both hushand and wife would get rid of the duties 'and ' responsibilities of rearing their offspring - "Do you mean to tell me that you can get rid of me from one day to another and marry the next day if you like?" demanded young Frau Weltner, "Thats how the law stands," re- Sh, plied the husband. Then the storm broke. Both wife and motherdin-law began to scream } and a frenzied scene ensued, the up- | shot of which was that the women demanded the ( Weltner should get ! the law stopped, or they would leave him at once, and would, moreover, get all the wives, mothers, and mothets-in-law of all the Ministers to do the same, Weltner, in the interest of his home comfort and peace, eventually promised to do Nis best ana use his influence with his fellow members, through his papér, the People's Voice, to get the law rescinded. He went to the telephone and had a conversation with Bela Kun and the other Ministers and then called up the printers, 'telling 'them that no proofs needed to be "pulled" from the forms where the law lay. He also ordered that the type should be melted up and the copy destroyed. It was thus that the law end. ie Who Are the Kurds? Who are the Kurds? When a delegation of Kurds suddenly appear- ed at the Peace Conference asking for the freedom of . their . historic land, so a story' goes, many of the attaches and newspaper nren were wholly at a loss to know who these Kurds might be. : Kurdistan, a hill country north of the Tigris river, is the heme of a 'brave, virile, largely illiterate series of tribes and clans known as the Kurds. They are descendants of 'the Cardushi, who gave Xenophon and his 10,000 so much difficulty on their march across these same hills' on their way to the sea. Nominally they are Moslem in re- ligion, bat. tained. many, elements gf<heathen worship. Some of their tribes are "Yesdi" (Yezidis), or devil worshipers. Th loving, frugal and capable of eadur- ing great hardships... They practice Strict monogamy and their women occupy an 'equal place with their men in the family Jie. ; The Kurds have Furnished at least Ofie great man in history, for Saladin, the chivalrous leader of the en hosts, the'co r-of Richard Coeur de Lion, was from this people. Roughly speaking, Turkey is di- vided' into 'five 'great provinces, orl districts--and Kurdistan is one of these, Thé others are Anatolio, Ar-! menia, Mesopotamia and Syria. ! Carpets. 'Carpets aré garments worn by floors. The immodesty of nude-floors 18 seldom tolerated anywhere except in ballrooms, where they pass un- boticed in the general heterogeneity of nakeduess, When a carpet gets into society it is called a rug. If it is an expensive,rug it is called Orien- tal. Oriental rugs are made in this country, in advertisements and. in hosts' stories. Rugs, like other sar- torial members of society, do not entirely cover the wearer. The rug is cut. decollete; 80 that it shows part of the Hoor. "Many Hoors are very daring in this respect and would be. proper objectives for purity crusades, Probably reformers have overlooked the floors which a SHE OE [HAVE % NOTE OF QUAINTNESS a TTT TT TTT MAA ey are home- | ii HEI HATTA ll a --_-- KEEP KOOL! Dominion Day--and every day. My summer suits, made of air eaves, flannels, gerges and worsteds, ve that breezy, cool feeling effect t is so much desired by the man who to dréss well and feel comfort- le these hot days. They are well styled--the waistline d slenderline for the fastidious dres- and the more conservative for the man who does not care for frills. Come in and see my fine fitting Genuine $3 5 Summer Suits (iE §8 ~ oe » we AT 7 REMEMBER operate in LOW RENT SHOPS ONLY, and do away with delivery service, book losses and many other unnecessary expenses--therefore save you $10 on every garment. j EE, a= imi COME MEN---SAVE TEN jinn ® "Are "Clothes that Show | the designer's genius and the tailor's skill. { $38 = $45 J PALM BEACH AND KOOL KLOTH SUITS + No neéd of sweltering when a few dollars invested in one of these feather weight suits will wd SPECIAL DISCOUNT TO RETURNED SOLDIERS IN UNI 2 Winnipeg, | . Vancouver, ete eep you cool and comfortable: You will Jind them in many different patterns and styles. FORM, oon ser - valtive: man. 7 My price, c.. g Fresh Seasonable Fruits of | all kinds arriving daily. Tomatoes, - Cucumbers, Ru- | : barb always on hand. - Welch's Grape Juice, Ginger : : Wine, Vichy Water, Rises Lime Juice, Dalton's Lemonade Dal. ton's Orangeade, Gurds Ginger 'Ale, Boda Water, Li Porter. Nice drinks for hot weather, Alex Princess St. Phone 207 | CT pa a Gath

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