Daily British Whig (1850), 6 Nov 1919, p. 8

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BOILED i PAGE EIGHT rg THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1010. ° -- ee ------ tr eat---- In the Realm of Women---Some Interesting Features BETTER FLOORS Use this better Polish. Use it on a hardwood floor, a painted floor--andto preserve and polish linoleum or eil- cloth. Use ia with the aid of the O-Cedar Pol- ish Mop, which eliminates bend- ing and reach- ing and gives a lasting lustre with a surpris- ingly small amount of effort. O-Cedar Polish gives equally grati- fying results on furniture--whe- ther varnished or painted. is obtainable in 250 to $3.00 sizes ~~the Mop, round or triangle shape $1.50---at all Grocery and Hardware Shops. THOMAS COPLEY Telephone 987 Wanting anything doke In the ca __tery line, Estimutes gives on all Kk | Women new a . ail Hage aw ae of repairs & vw oors of will receive prompt artention, 28 Queen street. Gour aud s Oriental Cream DINNER JUST John Plays Good Fairy. Naturally I was much depressed, but when I arrived in my room | found my | telephone ringin and John's volce came over the wire with the same accents which had so often thrilled me before our wedding. "Get on your glad rags, honasy, and ask the chauffer to bring you down. Alice and Bessie and Alice's husband and myself and Karl Shep- ard, if we can get hold of him, are going odt to the golf club." This particularly cheered me as I knew that 1 was quite profieleRt at god and 1 was sure that John did not know it. We had been too busy with our love-making to pay any attention to anything but a twosome in his roadster or a secluded oor- iner of the verandah. {' My trunks had ¢ome andl had an immaculate white silk sports suit which I had never worn. I dressed myself with great care. "You certainly look bettgr than you did last night," I said smiling at my mirrored likeness. From my white duvetyn sports hat {with its stunning white wings to my {low-heeled whit duck sport 'shoes, {I felt I was not only appropriately {but perfectly dressed. With a feel- {ing of triumph I noticed that my {"great brown eyes,' as John called [LOVE and MARRIED noted author Idah MSGione Z Lace floumces are used to drape their frocks, and dt may be thread metal. A Gown of Yellow. The sketch shows a young girl's frock made ian anticipation of the gayties of the Thanksgiving hol . days. ft. "Why, I shall be a mew woman It is of yellow satin over which is to John' I said to myself. pose gr in ud iace. There is a I wonder if it would have been belt Nutter hius hatin x better for John and me to have |C8uUEht at one side with a great pin waited a little longer? Or would we |™ ever have known each other better before our marriage? Do all married people have to walt until the real girls, and the mother Who makes lod kr {frocks at home for the youngsters Ee horaahly, |e to KNOW! who wants to dance will find that Every time I see Join now, I al |Mmauy of the lovely colors which she most feel that T am being introduced | herself wore as a girl to a New man and somstimes I catch | Pack into youth's wardrobe. his eyes upon me With the look they held when I told him I would not consent to usurp his mother's place in the family home--an expression) THE H that meant here was & woman h 1 had not. known, | & Rittenhouse. I had drawn on my heavy White | Edited by Anne gloves and, throwing a kiss te the] girl in the mirror I went downstairs. 9. This combination of colors is mush sought after by those who design for or | SALAD PLUS DESSERT. If you want to sknplify your din- ers, try combinigg your dessert and | salad course. I met Madame Gpgsion's personal maid in the hall. "Will you please tell the chauffer a v drive me to Mr. Shas 1 want him to i Emme Almost apy sort of dish can be line if Madame Gordon asks, tell her | mud I ihe ne Sa salad, and that I shall not be back for luncheon." | ® " st ghy purpose in the meal. We An imperative ring took Emme-|™M0 : 9 | line to Madame Gordon's room before | 081 Hake an Snide heal ou a i she had a chance to give orders od Frey Ta Ca 8 Sra te the chauffer hut she came back al-¢ N salad, 4 3 most &t.once with the information | oF, who count. themselyes as Soul | that it would be impossible for me mets, favor having salad Hetwgun the to have the car as Madame Gordon SOUP and meat course. But for the {them, shone brilliantly. Laughing- {17 I said to the girl in the full length | mirror: "I am not sure whether hap- | ipiness or anger is the best cosmet- | {ie,"" for my cheeks were so pink. that | {I only needed a tiny bit of rouge up- | {en my lips to complete the assurance | {that never in my life had I looked | { better, | | A little of this was caused, perhaps | | because of the surprise I knew was | {in store for John. He never had | {asked me and I had never told him that I was an enthusiastic sportswo-| {man and had been in many tennis| jand golf tournaments. The previous| {winter at Coronado I had made one| {of the women's polo teams, And on] {still another occasion I had won a| {loving cup in the woman's amateur! {swimming race at Coronado. i { John had never known me as any- { thing except the .most feminine of | I had not intended to de-| ceive him in any way dut we had] been so much in love with each other | and our love making was so engros- | sing that I never had thought about | iar aia There Is a Decided Tendency Toward Pastel Colors for the Debutante - Who Has Evolved an Array of Fashions Solely Suitable for Young Girls. New York--It is quite difficult for the women of other nations to real- ize the impontance the Americans at- tach to girlhood. In France and England a young girl is so cloistered, so simply brought up, that her clothes are mat- tars of minor importance. In this country the young girl appears to be a dominant factor as regarded by the outsider and the outsider is aot very far off the track. , The Ameri can mother will sacrifice rer ward- robe every season to give the young girl of the household mew clothes and keep her fitted out to dance, to go to tea, and to attend school. The American gir! 'begins her social life when she Is fourteen years old. She has her own dancing classes, which are attended by all the paraphernalia that exists in parties for older wo- men. She recélves flowers, she wears partly low frocks, she hes her silk stockings and satin slippers, she bas her supper engaged and fer dances taken before the Friday and Saturday nights given over to her weekly parties. When she is seventeen, o she leaves se! she is in a fall ng of gayety during her week-ands. Her Christmas and Easter holidays are filled with a round ol dinmers, teas NN ry DRESS (Copyright. 1919, by the McClure Newspaper Syndicate) ssi t o out herself. | sake of simplifying your meal just i bo IE . this except | tFY having a salad and dessert com- I ae Eybmeline te get my husband i When sugar is scarce this is a very oo i good ides, for you may have a salad | T will get him Jor Io, Nr: Gon Hf at ns oa as sort of fruit | don,' she. guid .GUSkly. or aC for its sweetness, but actually re- rity gave me a little inward | rex Do'sapar £t all swile for 1 foresaw that it was very | qU.T88 I aon oid be lettuce probable that Emmeline's sympath- | oii oe oe shy Srean jes would be with me although her | 70 Some ON a mac Til wed interests might lie with Madame Gor- | Pe Day are aise OF don. | Sing, ul ) a I took the receiver from Emmeline dressing > £2 ae Sasjes do and in reply to John's voice I merely } ma se an &, sual Lh repeated his mother's message in the} -. ory as I at asin us most matter-of fact tones, and I (8 pu og he fc on essing 4 could not help a little feeling of tri- greed Ey ik ov pit bilver umph when 1 heard John swear. =~ |," ;ana:, sprinkled with chopped | What lie 1s A heard him | vainuts. Some people first dip the | ual Of SOmOUHS In me, "You have bananas in white of egg to make the plenty of time, my dear, to wait for nut stick but this is an extravangance your own car. I will bring it myself. | When eggs are sitery Suits of mets John, John, what do Fou mean?" ja dosed. Fo oF Boo Hod, ia § You ue rast Phy nok Ens | ned pineapple with cream cheese and fiddle " re may be stuffed with cream elteege 3 ; nd placed on lettuce leaves. Dates {Contlsved tomorfow ) Gnd Va stuffed with cream cheese and placed on lettuce leaves, A salad made by mixing diced fresh minced celery is also excellent for ths combination salad dessert. Ripe | choice pears may be used by cutting them in half, paring them and re- moving the core, and them serving with a spreading of chopped nuts, diced celery and mayomnaise dress- ing. apalrust forme a good topping for this sort of salad. It should be well d d with French, dressing. Malaga grapes may be halved and seeded and then served with chopped nuts and Frénch dressing on the bed of lettuce: CUPBOARD FROM WOODEN BOX ry Antari Add Aabeikuiae with the best restaurants in the great cities. She knows &1 the plays more intimately than her parents. She is often able to tell her quiet mother, who stays home to give her daughter the chance for new clothes and new satin slippers, the ways of the modern world with the deailed narrative and sophistication of a wo- man of thirty. 'Whether or not it spoils her youth, whether it takes the bloom off the bud, is a question for the psyeholog- ist and the student of human nature. It does not directly relate to fash- fons. The European cannot under- stand our attitude toward young girls, and yet we seem to fare very Well with our womanhood in its final result. A Wide Variety. Therefore, what do these 8 sture 'wear when they 80 to da as school-girls, or in the full swing of "coming on?" le Spar 48 that their clothes are en y lovely this season. They cen 'wear the hoopskints, the flounces, the shimmering pastel shades of the eighteenth century, | pelican skins, | bows and arrows and stones, fight wita | | their teeth and nails, and eat human | they can garland themselves with the roses of the Princess Lamballe and twist Natier <dlue ribbons through their bodices, as did the women of the Pompadour's court. 2 They have chosen the eighteenth century as the fittest epoch upon which to model their clothes this and dances. She ds quite familiar JIODAYIINGHISTORYS Answer to yesterday's punale: Right side d winter. Natier blue, rose pink, shell |e tae huis in hse ener soins | HATS MAY BE MADE AT HOME Touches of Hand Bmbroidery Are fu Be Seen on Such of the Fall Millinery. A coatinwed vogue for the marvew back hat is promised for the ceming season and already tlie shops are show. ing advance fall and winter models in poke shape or glorified narrow back ndbocs, Manubaccarthg sills mbes rth er earnest effort some months sgy discourage the midsummer wearing of | velvet hats, but the shops seemed to demand them and these heavy, warm | looking bits of headgear put in their | appearance quite early, as usual ak have came | though sot in quite 45 generous num- ; bers as heretofore. Among the new materials being strongly featured for autumn hats, & very soft velvety finished wool mater lal probably leads and some decidedly chic sports hats are made of suede. Bro- caded and plain velvets enter into the develop t of hats for awtumn and winter. These fabrics are often hand- somely embroidered In chenille or INFANTS-DE ToILET So&P A ee EE adit | EL os | Stands for Isabel She almost forget to Sag " Infants~Dlight. Keeps the skin clear and fresh--because it's BORATED. . @ Send us three of these ads--all different--for a FREE trial sire cake of INFANTS-DELIGHT. JOHN TAYLOR & CO, Limited, Dept 4, TORONTO. heavy wool, this embroidery being the i | only trimming employed. Certainly this is the day when the | home milliner is encouraged to try her | hand, and there is.no reason why she should not have splendid results. Unconquered indian Tribe, Of great interest are the people now living on a smell island off the coast of the peninsula of Lower California, who have successfully repulsed all at- tempts of the white man to civilize them. They are a huge Indian race which has not yet been precisely placed by ethnologists, hunt with primitive flesh. The men are all said to be over six feet tall, and to possess incredible | Accord. | ing to one autherity, a band of feur | can run down and capture a mountain | physical skill and endurance. deer, which they then kill with stones, The Seris, as they are called, have re. sisted over fifty attempts te conquer them, and in all the centuries since | their discovery they have permitted only one whité man te land and hunt on their island. He has somehow man- aged to win thelr friendship by pres ents of beads snd clothing. Rainbow Wenders, The most familiar form of halo iy the rainbow. When the sunlight falls on a cloud of water drops on the op posite side of the sky, a portion of It is bent compietely back, and In being bent is reduced to its primitive colors. The arch of the ralubow is due to the roundness of the water drops. Rain- bows can occur only when the sun is near the horizon. When the sun Is high the refracted light passes over head and is thereby rendered Invisible, On occhsions whea the sun shines un- | usually bright two ralabews may be | seen, one above the other. OE SRS E RA od BBR They wear | LIMITED 69 Princess Street = Kingston ® Peninsular Ranges | For perfect baking, fuel economy and ap- pearance the Peninsular Range excells above all others. They are guaranteed absolutely. We also have a few good second hand ranges. Lemmon&Sons PHONE 840 187 Princess Street we a = The Refinement of Purity AREFUL cooks know the value of purity. In the making of cakes or use thos

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