Daily British Whig (1850), 14 Feb 1925, p. 10

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Tf SIE! 3 § rg) i i i L F E Ertl il i i § ; i i | | ; fs \ | : ; | 1} i 2 ¥ i : he. i SHNEAN VETERAN . TELLS THE STORY "SAORNT BAGK TO NEALTH BY li | f i H i HE of Rio Grande--L. Clarke. Lagra--H. 8 Jorry--G. Ogd ur--=, Sidgwick. Bay Tree--IL. Bromfield. ® Tuck. ¥ Style "And Feonomy | Fashion Expert Tells How to Make These Two Extremes Meet By Hortense Saunders. New York, Feb. 13.--The great problem of millions of women in the United States is to obtain stylish and attractive clothes on "moderate in- comes. fashion addresses a sermon- ette on es economy. He tells them how to combine those $wo ex- tremes--style and economy. "Clothes economy," said Beandeal, "consists in getting 100 per cent. util- ity from everything you buy, instead of assembling an impractical ward- robe in which there are many cos- tumes from which you can get only limited service. - "Don't buy a cheap coat that will soon lose its style, and an elaborate dinner gown that you can't live up to in any other respect. Your street wrap gets hard wear. It must be of good material and well cut so you can be absolutely sure of its lines and general effect. It will be compara tively expensive, Economise on Silk Capes. "It is much wiser to economise on the silk cape or wrap for afternoons, because you will wear this 1 fre- quently, and you may depend on its material, color and general becom- ingness to contribute to its effective- ness. th Whe "Instead of buying a number of summer dresses of different shades and hues that require picture hats and expensive lingerie, buy a few good white skirts+--some pleated, oth- ars plain--and overblouses and col- ored sweaters. Get some blouses tailored for sport and others more elaborate to give more the sffect of a costume. "This way you need only two pairs of white shoes, one flat-hesled for sport, the other regular pumps to wear when you wish to carry out a more elaborate scheme. You can build your hats to the popular felt models that are also appropriate with your street costumes, and perhaps hindulge in one large picture hat such as the girl in the illustration wears. It is so ornate and colorful that it adds chic to any simple costume. Budget Your Income. "Budget your income so you will | A LONDON LETTER By Panton House. London, Feb, 4--In an article on "The Influence of St. Paul's Cathe- dral," the Times, which is receiving subscriptions to meet the cost of re- pairs being made to the famous dome of St. Paul's, says: Outside all is din and motion. The To this large class, Henri Bendel, |' says, "always knows what she wants and she gets it. She is not carried away by the first pretty spring things she sees which may bear no relation to the wardrobe she already has, and she never buys a costume that does not fit her general scheme, oH Decide on Colors. © "First decide on your colors, That way you simplify the matter of ac- cessories, because you can use them interchangeably. If you buy one gray dress, another tan one, you have two distinct costumes calling for differ eut shoes, gloves and coats, whereas it you buy ome tan and one brown you can use the same for each cos- tume. "It you decide om a brown wrap keep your dresses in shades of tan, champagne, beige or any of the brown tints. : "If the coat is lined with tan, you can have two distinct ensemble cos- tumes if you buy two dresses to go with it, one brown and one tan. The ahoes and hats that match ome out- fit will be good with the other." Naturally, Mr. Bendel admits, Ar you are very practical, you will make black or white the mainstay of your wardrobe. You can 'use touches of color where you desire, have colored bats and accessories for variety, but the essentials are always in one key and everything harmonises. If you preter navy blue to black you can build your wardrobe in blue and tones of gray, and have an equal- ly good working scheme. : N----- HER FACE WAS COVERED WITH PIMPLES Miss T. Hunter, R. R. No. 8, Lon- don, Ont., writes:<---*T wish to recom- mend Burdock Blood Bitters to all women who are suffering from pimples or any other facial blemish- es. About two years ago I was greatly troubled with pimples and The | could get no relief until, finally, a friend recommended me to take B. I. B. This I did, and I am now glad to say that your remedy has given me the desirable results, and 1 now Get B.B.B. when you ask for it; it has been on the market for the ity je tf To knit a man's sleeveless eweat- er, buy «ix balls of camel hair yarn, and ons pair each of number four and number five cellulold or bone knitting meedies, yn. Back: Using the number four needles, cast on 88 stitches and knit plain for three inches. Then change to number five needles and work in rib pattern of knit ome, purl one, for 22 inches. Again using the ndmber four needles, knit one inch plain and on the next row work the first 29 stitches off on & stitch holder, then bind off 30 for the neck. On the re- maining 29 etitches start the front. Front: Knit ome inch plain, then using the number five needles knit one, purl one, for an inch. Now in- ereas® one etitch every row for two rows, knit two rows without in- creasing, repeat firom *til]l 21 stitch- es have been increased toward the front; when armhole measures seven inches from shomider, increase one stitch every other. row five times to- ward armhole; when there are §5 gtitches on needle work till front is as long as back, (knitting ithe last three inches plain on number four poedles. * | ribs, working six buttonholes Be ---------------- CHILDREN Cay For 'Work the : second front to corre- derarm seams. Band: With the gumber five meedies pick mp stitches on both fronts and around neck, - knit six on left front. - Pockets: With the sumber five ome, purl one, iil a square is made. crease in the next row to 34 stitches, ¥uit three ribs: on the next Tow bind off four stitches in centre for knit three more ribs, then bind off. Sew the pockets to the sweater and the work is done. Answer to "J.C."": I regret that I cannot do as you ask. You see the reader who wrote that letter to which you refer did not give her ad- dress, or even her full name, and no stamp, because she wished her message to be answered through the column, Furthermore I cannot at- tteropt to sell things through this column. All ingnirtes addressed to Mims Kirkman in care of the "Efficient Housekbeping" department will be answered in these columns in thelr turn. This requires considerable number received. So if a personal or quicker reply is desired, a stamped snd self-addressed envelope must be enclosed with the question. Be sure to use YOUR full name, street num- ber, and the name of your city and state. ~The Bditor national or ecclesiastical. Yet it may be doubted wheifier, in the end, St. Paul's is better loved by any than it is by those who have turned to it for no special purpose to seek re- fuge from the stress of daily life, and with no special claim upon it ex- cept that it gives them what they need. Such people (and they are of ell ages and calling and of many faiths) take St. Paul's lato their hearts, as St. Paul's takes their care and weariness into its stately peace. All day and every day, out of serv- ice time as well as in it, this great church, set like @ rock in a boiling is saying It you had been passing through the rather dingy neighborhood of Bunhill Fields, in the City of Lon- don, one night recently, you would have marvelled to hear the wild cries of children as if in the ecstasies of delightful y and the roar Ried th the joy and h TT lip i fen i Beis : ig i il ih reiki h i 1 A § | ! § i" ¢ : i CORNS Lift Off-No Pain! fo Doesn't hurt one bit! Drop a little "Freetone" on an aching corm, in- stantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you lift it right off with fingers. Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of "Freezone" for a few cents, sufficient to remové every hard corn, soft corn, or corn between the toes; and the foot Sallanes, without soreness or irrita- on. duced friction and then a spark. He kindled the spark into flame dy wav ing his bands and transferring it to & mouse's nest, chosen for its dry- ness, and when the nest was well ers, who howled "Blue Sky, Blue It 'was one of the weirdest and yet most inspiring epectacies seen in the heart of London on a evening: ASKS BRITISH NABOBS 10 HELP COLLEGES spond. With mumiber four needles | pick up stitches around ammhole, "{ knit four ribs, bind off. Sew up un- needles 'cast on 30 stitches, knit With the number four needles de- ( A 2 N MOTHER: Fletcher's Castoria is especial ly: pre- pared to relieve Infants in arms and Children all ages of Constipation, Flatulency, from, and, by regulating the Absolutely Harmless - No Opiates, the board of education, returned re- dently from a tour of the United States and Canada, during which he visited many of the principal col- leges and universities. He spoke in partioular of the 'superb academ- ic" buildings for the wunder-gradu- ates at Yale, built by part of the Harkness endowment of $40,000,000, and said that he wished thede quar ters could be seen by all . persons here interested in education. "I think it would be a capital {dea if we could send all England's weal- thy men to America to inspect the wonderful universities and to see what had been done with endow- time, however, owing to thd great|ments fromm some of the American millionaires. If this were done, per- haps some of our eich men would ac- quire the habit of giving away vast sume to institutes of learning. "There is not a college in the Unit. ed States, or in Canada, which does not appear to have a well-trained retinue of millionaires. on its etaff, We here in England have much ¢o learn from American educational- ists." INDIANS TURN TO IODINE. Since Sorcery Has Been Banished in Minnesota, Cass Lake, Mion, Feb. 14.---The passing of the "medicine man" with all of his supposedly supernatural powers over evil spirits, is enabling Minneapolis Indians in increasingly large numbers to take advantage of the facilities for medical treatmemt at reservation hospitals, according to P.'D. Wadsworth, superintendant of the Consolidated Chippewa Ag- ency. 'While most of the approximately 14,000 Chippewas in this state have become. fairly civilized, hundreds of the more timid Indians are finding the gap between the old-fashioned tribal manners and the modern heal- ing means difficult to bridge, said Mr. Wadeworth, Once the ' Indian overcomes his characteristic super. stition, however, he makes an apt loonvert and readily submits to this phase of civilization's contribution to his welfare. " When the Indians become wnocus- tomed to patronizing "the 'white man's medicine man," as they term him, they make good customers. Old men of the tribe who have learned the advantages of such common treat- ments as the atomizer, or spray, for nose and throat infections, and iod- ine for external aliments, hasten to Wind Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising thers Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleep. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Zourt Bid Physicians everywhere recommend the infirmary at the least p tion. S For Exigencies of W 0 on Military Basis. Helsingfors, Finland, Feb, men are organised into Lotta clubs, auxiliaries to the wal! military organizations of men, are In constant training to the standing army in cases ergency. The women are ong on a military basis and partic! the manoeuvres of the 0 forces so that they may be to carry on all work for which are qualified in time of war, ing the drills the women wear ¢ gray garments and sleep om just as the men volunteers do, to accustom ves to the ships of military service. The fighting between the red white forces which followed the tablishment of the Russian government sew much of Finland volved in the bitterest sort of sirife. Railway communications severed for months and the ¢ population was involved in a which taught all Finns many in modern warfare. AY Princess Street = YOU BUY WHEN! v ud y - 3 to! { . ih Wel * HEAR FOR YOURSELF AND BE CONVINCED. C. W. LINDSAY'S Warercoms, mets ASTHMA xc Freedom fer | I coups Lea Yn @ tL

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