Daily British Whig (1850), 22 Oct 1919, p. 5

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PAGE FOUR NEED A CAP? THE WONDERFUL FRUIT MEDICINE Every Home In Canada Needs "ERUIT-A-TIVES" Tothose suffering with /sdigestion, Torpid Liver, Constipation, Sick or Nervons Headaches, Neuralgia, Kid. ey Trowbie, Rheumalism the Back, Eczema and other skim affections, "Fruit-a-tives" gives prompt relief and assures a speedy recovery whem the treatment is faithfully followed. " Fruil-a-dives" is the only medicine made from Frwil--containing the medicinal principles of apples, oranges, figs and prunes, combined with valuable tonics and antiseptics, 50¢ a box, 6for $2.50, trial size, 25¢. At all dealers or sent postpaid by Fruit-a-tives Limited, Ottawa, Ont. ---- a Pain in If so, try the Eastern Brand SOME SPECIALS AT MEAT MARKET | ROUND STBAK PORTERHOUSE STEAK STEWS | . 18¢. and | LEGS OF LAMB . | LAMB CHOPS wes PORK LOIN CHOPS | PORK ROASTS. .88¢, | HAMBURG vie 20c¢. { Choice Smoked and Cooked Meats. 30c. 33c¢. 20c¢. S4c. . 35¢. $0c. | Corner of Princess and Phone 15: Pr i on Clergy Sts. 4 ee Canes Be Bn lee Easy to Make This Pine Cough Remely Thousands of families swear by its prompt results, Inexpensive, und saves about $2, "THE CLUB" 112 Princess St. PA ey { You know that pine is used in nearly i all prescriptions and remedies for coughs, The reason is that pine contains several | peculiar elements that 1} able effect in sooth hd membranes of the throat and is famous for this purpose Pine cough syrups are combinations of pine and syrup. The "syrup" part | is usually plain sugar syrup. To make the best pine cough remedy . that money can buy, put 215 ounces of I.nex (50 cents worth) in 16-02. DIRECTORY FOR RETURNED MEN, APPLY hea } i "hest For employment information. chest. For Land Settlement, matters. advise: Bank of Toronte Bidg., cor. King and Brock Streets genaral For Vocational Courees, trial Re-tralning! Merchants Dank Bldg, cor Brock and Wellington Sts. Indus a and fill up with home-made sugar Or you can use clarified mo- honey, or corn syrup, instead of yrup. Either way, you make 16 ocunces--more than you can buy ready- made for #250. It is pure, good and very pleasant--children take it eagerly. syrup. lass For medical sugar appliances: Gelden Lion Bleck treatment, surgical For Pensions: ; i ea Bibby Block, Princess Street or cold in a way that means business. 'or may be formation o same--inflamed persistently loose from the membranes--and © Just received a large ment of High Grade Chocolates Sold in bulk and in fancy boxes. assort- or any ordinary throat ailment. and is famous the world over for prompt effect upon coughs, Beware of substitutes. its directions, and don't accept else. Guaranteed to give absolute satis- faction or money refunded. The Pinex Co., Toronto, Ont. Ai ee That Hair Mattress --- The quality of our Ice Cream cannot be excelled in Kingston. LBAR'S 288 PRINCESS STREET PHONE 1128. OR THOSE SHOULD BE NOW. SEE US EXPERTS. FEATHERS RENOVATED WE ARE resend Kingston Mattress Company E58 Princess street. Phone Mw, The brains of a dude are not bur- densome. Be sure you are going ahead---not in a circle, 'Boyd's Garage We have several five passenger Tour- | ® ing Cars, from $250.00 up. Don't go home without seeing our new % 3 Boyd's i 129 Brock Street Garage, J THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG DRESS BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE (Copyright, 1913, by t M France Quickly Reinstated the Tunic- Blouse After She had Given It Up, and American Women Are Wear- ing It in Silk Jersey, Knitted Wool, | Taffeta and Metallic Tissues. i Paris, Oct. 6--That over-blouse is ia capricious garment. It appears iand disappears like a comet. It was rarely worn in Paris during the sum-| {mer. People thought it had vanished, and then suddenly it came the {horizon at the different ex ms of {clothes and was an established feature by September In these modern days. v man attempts to cut her ure at the i waistline, she abandons the attempt ir {despair and goes back to a garme {that gives her a straight line fro over nN & Wo- FISHER'S 4 29 ey ¢ a 2 ecoonfOO__ ood ot &7 rz Nr ba You can (feel this take hold of a cough | The cough may be dry, hoarse and tight, | phlegm. The cause is the | this | Pinex and Syrup combination will stop | it--uasually in 24 hours or less. Splendid, | too, for bronchial asthma, hoarseness, | Pinex is a highly concentrated com- pound of genuine Norway pine extract, | Ask your | druggist for "214 ounces of Pinex" with | anything | Over-blouse «. light blue taffeta em- broidered in silver thread. There is a flesh chiffon vest with sleeves. Narrow silver cord at waist. | | SYRUP OF FIGS" 1S LAXATIVE FOR CHD look at tongue! Remove poisons | from stomach. liver and bowels. Accept "California" Syrup of Figs only--look for the name California on the package, then you are sure your child is baving the best and most harmless laxative or physic for the little stomach, liver and bowels. Children love fits delicious fruity taste. Full directions for child's dose on each bottle. Give it without fear. Mother! You must say "Califor- nia. IF YOUR EARS RING WITH HEAD NOISES re emit" It you have roaring, buzzing noises in your ears, are getting hard of hearing and fear Catar- rhal Deafness, go to your dryg- gist and get 1 ounce of Par- mint (double strength) and add to it X pint of hot water and a little granulated sugar. Take 1 tablespoonful four times a day. This, will often bring quick relief from the distressing head noises. Clogged nostrils should open, breathing become easy and the mucus stop dropping into the throat It is easy fo prepare, costs little and is pieasant to take. Anyone who has Catarrbal trouble of the ears, is hard of hearing or has head noises should give this prescription a trial { and luke | clean except at the exact moment it | blouse girdled with si { worn under a fur coat in Paris w jered with silver beads | little cape sleeve that i { other blouses, 1under-sleeve,"a tiny vest Clure Newspaper Syndic shoulder to knee. If s white sash blouse under makes it do the cover: if 2» Wes the tunic she mak it serve as a frock. T former seems an extrav- agance; the latter appear. | economy. ate) a ¢ service of a Q Ola? one-piece as good Silk Jersey. Tunic-Blouses. 1 think the house of Bernard was the first to bring out the jersey silk | blouse with a tailored suit. It was often in the form of a waistcoat with short sleeves to hold the shields. These blouses were frequently re peated in the shops. One could find hem in white, in pastel and in vivid tones. : Other houses exhibited these*blous- throughout August, along with short tunies of metallic tissue, of embroidered taffeta, of go and silver net run with bullion threads In fact, all the houses made quite a feature the tunic-blouse, whether nod it was to be worn with a coat There was nothing cheap about the garments, The silk jersey ones ran to one hundred dollars apiece; but one cannot reckon the value of a | garment, its final price, by what 1s asked at an important house dur- jing the fi week of its exhibition to American buyers. The shops get hold of the garments and reduce the price witholt always reducing the workmans The great houbes rea lize: that these blouses can be cop at less than half the price the) for them; but that a con reial condition that cannot be helped either n America or in Europe. The silk jersey blouse was a nov { elty 3 appealed strongly men who realized that the wash wai is a perishable garment, contin demanding a hot iron, a bar of warm water. It is es ¢ of or ask is t to wo Ap never Pp 1; its hour. The jersey e contrary, may be rol led into ab nd packed into any {corner of a valise or trunk, from which iy emerges fresh, This is true of the silk jersey which is run with metallic threads; as well f plain weave, The 18 put on; it wrinkles it rarely serves blouse, on th when former material, by {ig exceptionally brilliant = for t blouses. There. is a gray } bands of through it, When ma Jersey which broad silver woven mto a tunie- 'er, it may be | wor ] ith a variety of separate skirts and may thus serve a frock. : The same is true of tafieta and | metallic ue blouses. The taffeta is apt to erush more than the jersey and bullion weaves. but it suis cer- tain types of figures. The sketch shows one that is worn ] ith a soft duvetyn skirt. {It is of light blue taffeta, embroid- . It has an odd Ss not: seen in and beneath it is an and fence {collar of flesh-colored chit "The vest is dotted with tiny buttons and as tis drawn in at the waist with a nar- row silver cord. Tt ee mint THE HOUSEHOLD Edited by Anne Rittenhouse. WASH IT IN SUNSHINE. Few housewives know the cleans ing value of sunshine. They know the good effect of sunshine on themselves and their children. They know that i baby has had &n outing in the sun- 'shine he is rosy and good-natured, but! that the days when the sun is under clouds and he has to remain indoors he is irritable and pale of cheek, They know, too, that their own spirits are brighter and life seems pleasanter | when they have spent a few hours in a room where the sunshine has been | shining. But that sunshine can act-| ually be something that is just as| valuable as soap and almost as valu-| able as water in that eternal task of | the housewifeskeeping things clean | --they seem sometimes to forget. i No housewife likes to have good | woollen blankets washed more often | than is necessary. And there is little! néed ordinarily in washing them pro- 'vided they are given a good sunning | once every week or 'ten days. This! cannot in any way injure the blankets. To be sure, we are warned not to hang | woolen things when wet after a wash. | ing in the direct sunlight, but that is! because the combination of 'sunshine | and water is rather too much for, them. But the sunshine alone can do! no harm. And it does much good. It| makes them fresh and actually gives them a sweet scent that is apparent | to the one who lies between them | after they have had such a sunning. | Especially sweet is the effect of this | sunning if it has been given on a day | when the air is dry crisp besides. | All bedding should be occasionally | sunned. This applies to mattresses | and pillows, too. In the house where | there 1s a baby much attention should be paid to the value of flannels ought not to be oftener than is necessary. by sunning them well you go for two or three days, much the better. Sometimes jt js! sible to sun foe little band that! Dy wears at night so that it need not be washed again for the next night. Baby's pads and mattresses | also 'should be hung out in the sun as! often as there is a sunshiny day, Even the sunshine on vour lounges should | be given a sunshine bath once in a while and it is a good thing if once! in a while vou can have heavy uphol- | istered fu mituee roiled on the veranda | and brushed and then left to be sun-| ned for an hour or so. i ------ Professor of Journalism. New York, Oct. 22 lips, eoity i Times, h {alty of of journalism, as associated profes Sor of journalism. Several other New i § so! editor of the New York as been appointed to the fac- the instructin visgry board. & staff and to the ad- I | per observance, {| arranged for up and down cars, and | the Indian highways. ~~--Charies Phil-! Columbia University, school | York newspaper men were added to! CHANGING THEIR NAMES. New Fad Has Developed In In Recent Yéars, ngland tle the war ar thing he like law. A pr to indulge nam in € or corded keeper English © During the res Norfolk-Howard the last four yea following n abandoned: Baggs Onions, Outlaw, Pickles Tart. When the war broke but there was a rush among people who bore Ger- man names to ge them, but in 1914 the Defence of the Realm Act stopped en y aliens {rom doing so, but British bjects were still per- mitted to make a et ge, and they have done so ever gin and continue to do so Up to te over 2,000 changes of enemy surnames have tak- en place since the war broke out. The first foreign surname changed after the war broke out was that of a Liverpool man, who changed his Rosenheim to Rose on August 11, 1914, and b ena of the month 64 similar n es were'changed. The sinking of the Lusitania was follow- ed by an increase in changes to and 132 in May and June, 1915. Af- ter this thé figures dropped until January, 1919, when the number rose to 80, which has been the aver- age figur s'year A list the Bri Union give iggy, Gotobed, , Scragg and h Empire he changes, and it is not difficult to trace the dif- ferent principles on . which changes have been effected. In many cases there have been direct - lations, such as Konig into Muller to Miller, Schloss into Ca hneidner lor. tre lation has been in- h as Steinthal into Petrie, '"'petros," Greek word and Leinenweber into Web- ster, which is the Scots for weaver. A very popular form of chs has been the adoption of the initial letter, especially Gee, Kay and Kaye, for unpronounceable polysyl- lables. Tt we can understand that Mr. Gunzenhauser may have been known by his friends for 'vears as Mr. Gee, and Mr. Kronenberger as Mr. Kay In other cases the first svilable h heen adopted, such as Hittbrecht into Hill, or it has been the last syllable, such as Hansmann into Mann In the process of change a many: famo Teutonic disappear notably Handel, delssohn, Wagner British into through for the Stone ge great have Bach, Men- and d 1, ames Koch, Schumann A number of celebrate ngmes have been utili such as Burus Gainsborough, burn, Scott, Shelly, Sheridan Wallace. Among the notable titles adopted surnames are those of Airlie, sford, Burnham, Soven- try, Curzon, French, Milner, Ruth- ven, Rutland, Sheffield and Went- worth, £ A very curious aspect of the gques- tion is in the fact that different members of the same family, living sometimes in the same house, have changed their names at different periods during the war. Still more curious is the change of the same name by people of the same address into different names. In one case a Mr. Meissenheim became Mason ind another Homer, Schubert and Be An Indian Motor Road. Although the 69-mile road which climbs from the plains of India to the summer resort at Shillong, some 5,000 feet above sea level, is as hard a road for automobiles as one would be likely anywhere to encounter, pre- cautions have been taken that make it probably as safe a road for motor- ists as any in the world, The road is one of many a twist and turn, stead- ily climbing at a steep gradient, and with many a blind curye. To make | it safe for traffic has required un- usual precautions both in making road rules and in securing their pro- A schedule has been 'gates which bar the road when not lifted are placed at intervals, while roadside admonitions, impressively worded so that those who ride may read, are a frequent part of the land- scape. During the day the road is used chiefly for automrobile traffic, an indication, by the way, of how rapidly motor cars dre taking the place of the old-fashioned bullock and camel carts and the one or two- { horse tonga which not long ago were the only means of transportation on A picturesque feature of the road, for that matter, is the sight of the bullock earts which have halted at the sidings and are waiting for the éoming of night to continue their journey. 3 The Shah: Travels. The Shah of Persia is on his trav- els. London will see him and keep him, apparently, for some little time. Europe has memories of the pere- grinations of other shahs. They are quaint memories, some of them. There was Nasr-ed-Din, in 1873, and there was Ahmed Mirza, many years later. There would have been a visit, in 1894, on the part of Nasr-ed-Din, but for a Brussels journalist, It happened that, on the Shah's travel-. ing program becoming known, a Brussels daily published an article which seemed to prognosticate a cool welcome in Belgium. The Minister of Justice of the period thought fit to | give the article the publicity of judi- if | cial | summoned before a Brabant tribunal, proceedings. The writer was but he was exonerated. But the ver- dict had the immediate efféct of keep- ing Nasr-ed-Din at home in Teheran. Balls. A correspondent of an 'English paper recently indulged in this bull: "lest a whisper of the hidden hand be heard--." Was it an English clergyman who said to his congrega- tion, "Brethren, the muddy pool of politics was (he rock om which I split"? y ------------------------. Insults might be slower in coming 80 tif we would not leck for them often. Imitation is always right when it DAY, OCTOBER 22, 1 210. f DONT SPECULATE ages of buy is new, We Are Down On High Prices see our nd rison., That is money every 1Re compa will save Men's and Young Men's Suits--8235, Men's and Young Men's Overcoats--$25, $28, $30, $32, up to S40, Trousers--a very special offering--86.50, Raincoats--splendid ffuality, at $13, $18, 820. Sweater Coats--all the way from $2.50 up to '$8.00, Boots. Shoes, Rubbers, etc, at attractive prices. ISAAC ZACKS 271 Princess St. D A internal and External Pains 5 are CLE relieved by pe Thomas' ECLECTRIC OIL THAT IT HAS BEEN SOLD FOR NEARLY FIFTY YEARS Se AND IS TO-DAY A OREATER SELLER THAN EVER BEFORE IS A TESTIMONIAL THAT KS FOR ITS NUMEROUS CURATIVE LITIES. octor Tells How to Detect ------ w to Detect Harmful Effectsof Tobacco i suffering from have been aflilcted ha I t b t ¥ y of Ot b t , @ ti b ¥ t tpginning of mo i AAAI NA Pt AAA i i jeads you on to the road of improve-i Hi | ment. The man who [¢ content with little {seldom finds himself if: the possessor 1of much. After you have harvested vour {wild oats you vill find no sale for § wi; tthe wroduet. ArT gestion, constipation, extreme Try These SIMPLE TESTS New York. Doctor Cor former! Johns Hopkin 5 men who smolk y, and who 0 Ly of | émoke walk up three flights of stairs Mar cular pace, then stop. If you find re out of breath tim of functional or If you feel that you niet ust sm Your nerves acco habit, and wowid o ourself with pf tobacco. The chief hat ming in either case iple of tobacco ix « a deadly Just two alternatives roison, which when absorbed by the ays self em slowly affects the nerves, mem. [the daegers, and suffer the cone yrandg, tissues and vital organs of the or give up the habit and escape t ody The harmful effect of tobacco re. You ean overcome the craving x ircumstances. On top the habit in a very general - debility, | using the following inex the throat, indl- | Go to any drug store snd ask for Nie | tad take one tablet after uch in a comparatively short tin have no desire for tohaceo, the © will have loft you. WItK the nico on out of your syst th will quickly imp e ote. When asked abot lets one of our leading dr it is truly a wonderful AWRY re have ever sold before d by the manufacturers to refund ney to every dissatisfied customer, ¥ nents. , Thousands o pet well if the ven aries and il be pthers with short time arch ess. sleeplessness, loss of memory, will-power, mental confusion, from heart disease burdeniug of the sr-| po blindness, even | bes ragcer or the common affliction known as A obacco heart. If you use tobseco in any orm you can easily detset the harmful fleets bv making the following simple ests Read aloud one full page from a sook. If Iu the course of read olce becomes muffed. hoarse inet, and you must frequently would not permit the use hrost, ' chances are that vour throat | unless the remedy nosses # affe hy catarrah rit Nleotol lets are Next, | city ander sa iro taking your usual{antee by all up-to-date druggists, Ri ggists = uedy for ind it may be the |r » serious trouble, 1 the morning before old in "Come in and Save Ten" My Name on a Garment Guarantees You eliability Or finest quality est wear ndividualit, ewest patterns ifty and a aving of 10 dollars "There's a Verdict" $B T.0% W Farts LB SSS EER : Ls OPEN wm Hr ate that your heart beat is ar, you may seganiec deart oke, you are the you keep on with poisoning process, irrespective of oes, dan- and by nalve formula otol meal, you av tine Four general Nicotol tab- id the ahead of anything We are anthor- the and nf out ngme unusnal this ad money-back gure a)

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