m.l::tlon o raily cu-n-' Shaee a Yory Sus & a very favour. If, however, plant is grown at a low elevation, it may still be ‘on_R: Pekoe‘ but also be of very poor quality, consumer‘s only safeguard is to buy a tea of ncog,nlud goodness. High grown ‘Orange Pekoes‘ comprise a large part of every blend of "SALADA" and give to "SALADA®" its urequalled favour. + BROTHâ€" ..... _2 300° NCenka acts on BOTH upper and tower bowels, and removes ul' gasses and poisons. lflut out matter you never th-ru obitinate conscyation, Exitl . Far: 0 . Far« rell, Grimsby and Grimsby East. h be releved nc lb _ PMIW bochamen t uons t ample Sbrgeriop Tk, ¢tc, as h lerikn. _ M t the low '::"."_}" A“'!’.‘c"l‘.!:."l n MARTINâ€"SENOUR, SsTATIONERS James Street and 1 OPEN EVENINGS. Robt. Duncan & Co. Our new stocks of Import: ed and Canadian Papers are now complete and. the deâ€" signs are unusually striking. May we h: ve an opportunâ€" ity of ~showing you how these papers will make new rooms of old ones? It pa We have a new assortment in BEFORE THE BIG RUSH Special Cargains on Easter Hate Also Mats made to Order and Remodelied This is the ideal time to redecorate your rooms. Before the which keeps busy. Ladies® Sitk St Ladies® Ladiea® m Ladies® Summ« Ladies‘ Walste Spring Cuau from miito e bik‘ss Many buge'u of tea have come tr. ask for ‘Orange Pkoe‘ believing that it signifies fine quailty. This is not, however. necesâ€" sarily the case. In thouuie'unn‘el’okot' is only a name given to the first leaf below the bud or tip on any Indian.or Ceylon tea LADIES‘ DEPARTMENT TRY GRIMSBY PIRST SPRING COATS a UE dEILLELE _4 E1 Oc _ PFi mkmmm&fm HOME PAINTING MADE CASY Silk Stockings..86c. and ou Appendicitis And Don‘t Know It? Tommer Veue e the bi .prini rush keeps iconm S« MILLINERY FACTS ABOUT TZA SERIESâ€"No. § HAS iL ON ‘Grange Pekoo‘ Means LEE HARDWAPY®T Stoney Creek THE WHITE STORE THAT SAVES YOU MONEY $1.98 and up Market lith Century Whims, The fourteenth and fifteenth cenâ€" turies were responsible for one ‘of the widest extravagances in fashion ‘the long poinied «hoes which beâ€" eame «o long and so pointed that the dandlcs of their day (it was a masâ€" culine foible that carried things to lata lc CA CS P should hold it in ¢):cs. Pull well did whe know that this added touch of charm to her infinite variely would not be lost on the eritical eyes .of her princely admirer _ One thing ds wery tertainâ€"tind that is that the porfectly dressed woâ€" man, be whe classic om 07 twon» tleth century tfll tl'i. hus down through â€" all Centurles that 1e between, bestowed as much considerâ€" ation on be chassure as on almost any other pat_of her tollet. It has heen said with truth that :"the welâ€" dreased woman 4s one who permits no Amperfect part to mar a perfect -lbdg"ndwno‘-ull olh::-l enâ€" lire perfection ‘does the ax apply with more aptness thin to her shoes. Cleopetra Knew, we may be sure when lu?r:rninul( to _ recalve axtony world have taken care that her voot» wear reflected the very latest of the Roman fash‘ons. No papy woven eandals for her, ho-m!q&nhmo the Anterweaving of their deaignâ€" the* shapely drsky foot of hers should be encased in a sandal of scariet leather, like tho > that had won fasâ€" bon‘s spproval a m.h(:“" "f the Pmperor, High at he k. Jt should (‘«_closply to the ranndad Iï¬ sombre SBRENMBE 2 sn y n e n m en n s B0MB Men‘a Work Shtrie ,... .... ..8#e Men‘s Sunday shirts ....98¢ and up Even In Fourteenth Century Shoes Were Sufficiently Imâ€" portant To Be Chained To WW-MMW. Addicted to Exaggerated Pointâ€" ed Toesâ€"Whims and F. ol ulC Wt w e c MEN‘S DEPARTMENT Men‘s Work Socks ............ 19 Chiidren‘s Resfer Coats .... ,.$1.3% Striped Flanneistte ....19¢ per yard Every Period Mirrored In Fashions of the Time. Next to Moore‘s Theatre # meogwork, the 3 CHILDREN‘S NEEDS tometh "DAIm r.,, 1 C BrAnlV Wr @ANDUAL TO PRESENT ERA OF FOOT SANITY ANP GRACE MILADY‘s sHors HAVE FOLLOWED FAsHDN t PHONE 420 N0 papyrus woven horm-%uu. _of their designâ€" ‘ foot of hers should sandal â€" of scariet that had won fasâ€" A raad duh . rounded. Seal," white stoep delic~to atraps, conaiderâ€" on almost t. It has when fashiay had made heols lllm enough, down they wontâ€" lato e@ghtconthâ€"centu"y one‘s â€" attention. ‘Ther gatin embroiders1 in chory. the curioue th al twtf.l $ ®udiy ved The beâ€"rowe! ® ! no dowbt. | | day. somew LiÂ¥.ante hn T th stil} whore genuine Progch hoals are «32â€" cernadl, <boss of the Low‘s ?n perlod following the iashion of the mnt‘:‘nmumuut exagge aled curves, while tur .ous Solze ies, not #6 huth and tess tareiâ€" ful in I‘ne, ts an altugecher «cory iag» ritled as! slmpler affair, Embroldery on Sols«, There was an eightconthâ€"sentury ~ablâ€"n, in which it is possbl¢ tm Wetary raay rep><. Msolf before lonw. for boue oof atly t ¢e4 leau trâ€" a ratber aMmactive ic _.~. when the rlyit sereon make use of It, as some af tas Louls ho 1 which generai‘y o?- a high. nz ‘row he«! wib a mss our ved line into which +beâ€"sole or the whoo ye=al> «. fteolf, . belag â€"careed Jows Jiet + 40* the instep. along the infer line 0*#he hed. I: reality where !» a 2304 Jsal 3f ditrerence Origin of Louls Heel, The latter Ralf of the e!@hteenth century was the period at which the high heel, in England at smy rate, lterally reached its Mighost both in 4rches _ and in popolarity. In the Vietoria ‘and AKSert Maseum onllecâ€" tion is an examole of 450 "splutle" hee! which the mo#ish wowan of the «lgbtwenlh con‘~=v most have gone through consider.»l/ dbcorifort . in wearing. On« woudâ€"<@# indeed how al cout, have oalkal on it as all, a» somdly Js : and «o shaple t1cur» rod The inâ€"=iry.ng fasbion . was bowrowe! *om the Preath, and house. no douwbt. iP. . arighs of what is toâ€" day. somewhat vaguely known as th* was not to have a rival in slimnessâ€" Iucmmm was to accentuate its grace! T -~â€"â€"-â€"vvâ€"-â€"'â€"--â€"-â€",“ . |M.}‘, ;‘ n funned «n thele Seeh l otP R20 10 D6 /if You expec: \o »cape medioerity of could sedan chairs, BA theY | design in such plecse8. . y n:n:: m.*’ Remember, in lm&:†sort of from the practica) "facade p8Â¥ONed |allver pleces. that s y of design pattens that hl“. mot only in best thite, but makes x = g'm’ '-"m for case in cleaning. 1 muml‘.“‘*l tood Ware Mean® Good Care ‘ '.n.l'd. served “:-‘r..-u-: 3 The "wea" in nlnn'.'n '«.-d-‘ «hat height lady rge! the care YOU give it. h‘-m- the highest heels ; ...'l‘:ï¬.". M aker and bags which come not high enough togjve her the Inckes from ine jewel<~> Wilk your silyerâ€" she craved, I"".] and use mm‘ln keep i; in, If iirigin of Louks Wesk _ * Tinke ‘your boâ€"coomioteee eun $9y The istier balf of ihe eigtteenth mt on o oo ff aloe add in ventuâ€"y was the period at which the for the vaâ€"ious p<§8; or #imply cut high heel, in England at smy rate, squares of cloth to x $@P thet 18. The Hterally reached its Mighost ooih in fost mmorial to. .4 Uaga or clotw, 1y Hoels after that grew higher and higher tlll it came to the days when John Evelyn desoribes in bis diary howithe fad‘es in Venice had heels of Mgn? bradh Sscc ds B c Maiden Queen that she siould have Nnmmnmmnm] aymptoms of a highâ€"heeled shoe. Possibly the idea was the sequel to the gift of a wair of silk slockings which so delighted her Majesty that #he forthwith decreed that allk stookâ€" l-nmmhwnwnm al use and that her fadios were to keep to the cloth stockings which had been worn hitherto. The royal ankle| her aMtmactive :; _.~. when the -m-o'l“.m-l eMee . ad _ Laty ‘ly â€" post ) bear withess.. Another pm Shoes have been what cas only be :‘11‘.""‘"" as "d~wdy" when fashion so : Lâ€"witness the squareâ€"toed, bunchyâ€"lobking «i‘ppers of the latte: part of Henry VIlL‘s reign, which one feels, «omehow, <liat Katherine Parr would have thoroughly approved of, with hor long, full and severely «a t . wity the tastes of Queen: Elizaâ€" bflht. hat we might today desâ€" cribés as ':nfl" elothrâ€"d is well in sccord. with one‘s ideas of the plain skirts! ne«s}. Does fushion â€"inc prim or the demurs, th that wolk in her ways are the same. 2 C3 . oW Wear ffor a penchant for fashionable shoes is by no mean to be reckoned as a purely femine weakâ€" fact is at one ine footwear (( fashionable hocy Whoes Mirror Fashions, Shoes have. siways mirrored the fashtona. Did the modish whims and fancies of the moment tend toward the extreme and the faniastic, the fact is at onee betrayed in the cut and patteâ€"n of masculine as well as femâ€" Are ug, by the way fuï¬u"ur "carven «ome of the shoes of elaborate apenwork? Chaneer‘s Tastes, The shoes of Richard 11., and doubtâ€" less of ~the wo:ld u“‘md hiw t me, were lavishly * cwith "quatrefoils and discs"; .and to go back a lite way in history Chancer, wito, as his pictore . in The Natlonal Portrait Galtery shows, was also q_l_ns to pointed shows, writes of "St. Paul‘s windows" â€" being the shoes" of the priest A :-th_vhkt :.:l:;:‘; era & Polish house. is of doather daced up the side and the td; 4* absurdly u.;m. h!-hk ...- an t Show masorae T iteer nigen e i hee! to tos. The name denotes that th hl:‘lawc‘o to u-" from m broug England, may Anme of Rohomia, the wife of Richard IL, Poland being at that time ulhr‘ Bohsmian | julediction. * Cl Twnce when walking, _ _ "7- followed the fashion, howâ€" «ver, to a modificd extent. Among the ':-r centurieg o.(. shoes" -u“.‘ can studied at ¢ Victoria Albert Museum, oue of the canliest @xamples . 4# . whut . was banuw 2s S O aPIes _ is .what was fifteenth century fashion: :"zh« noted! ) h‘.ol‘:: .-lm“m r onvenience w laing . _ Women followed the fashinn haw. (Queen Bess‘s High Heels, They must have been far from l®@ping the tastes of Queen: Eliza~ ",t‘ what we mleht mnnt Meels Going Up, MCY fashlons as a Craâ€" ulaine, which was found s of a Polish house. It t daced up the side and absurdly naâ€"row, terminâ€" carven" ornament in â€"_ DUDs "carven on priest Absolon, way, returning to the t Jp fashions as h:.uiiéâ€"& the {notsteps ire an echo of pair 0 . a prost of welt k whit log the THE INDEPENDENT, cz MSBY. ONTARIO tm ree ts( en astreats 6 onichand wauve som wase ave cams ..â€"-u LABLIN 4 f #RiKLEL, We Moath bie > Pricey evenin: mosl delignt.) will be heli Lena Davis ca the:~ flua, da putting forth ov »~csems. The | ï¬ Peninsala, a e# ‘umand has, to a |’= :h.llod 3 1 expect t |design in such parate secth should be a wo that It w a few pleces vontainer.to allver ware. Bemetabe. Prid ‘_ Bave the cases trom ihe jewel ware, and use you do not get make your pur r‘l' hage of the vacious squares of cloth test material fo eanson Nanp > o gray or rather . jowelers have fo fannol, because in its bleachin: sliver. PURREC® EYES [\ (n whole sct, = ing. your co :2 mever be 1 passed w! |the richer cl: and spo was fitted int ‘earried about â€"_â€"_lt is an e«p ment to own w- and . are th _ Neverthe in the nat if you can afford it, b» platéd sllver, selected with diserim:ion, will do elmost as much t0 Ad. zirm to your table, _ And it is both <â€"ble and easy Bteri ng «liver in t parts sllver to 75 =. as the Tï¬m of age. 1t is, of course, _ The neow rich woma toally told tor Je wouldn‘t buy a. «lmgle ware *unless M=, 8: on It," know ay Htike ol plated ware as al meaning of the term which all the bost $ d ihnaragee lore . each footâ€"therd wer foot shoes before th turyâ€"and, above a the correct kind of : -r:: «ho pursul: 10 w 8 ‘ticular thing whe 6 would, . to the mode faux pas unthinkable Out 4 the mode PUTTING "WEAR" IN SILVERWARE Alsâ€" wil.o satin boots pair of royal w l“h 1 posed for orn:â€"n blo«som. . see any day OUntigge London crossing P-u’i‘u o Vazaries, On the sa b:l were vh Soled Boots Of Viewri»n" > even brides wore to (their on sBingly beaches t more ‘wden r:.l'l. n:l'ald ® fragile, fanyâ€"strapp bl we come 4o wi%» iDe demure rgb %n‘d the Jane usion whil. apparently, thelr â€" wearers _ #tr.""â€" aboul, un: chilled, in damp #ar.â€",, or roamed and away they «en !{ your pyimary . ~~«i@@pration is vur vare oi buy that ich h""m give u good, t years, youâ€" give t ope care. the that ou m t > to j 9\00 1 Wt n the m n mak 4s Comprise sap. lLint allve". Theze ached t0 ths cnsa 1tb "lol'ol, Put Oamphor tito the taPrAIShIDE of the members ; U D. &1 i tho seat B# of red. § than whio, for i white canton chemical mmed Sarkens «t uC <| 141b CURLIRN nfafer xo o| â€" {LEAIL____ OR ‘" dgea a sliver | . CROSSE & BLACKWELL‘S aplaott . Thetk, bu 4( t owm, which ime case and iIÂ¥er in forks and ‘ pleces, for ® wide deâ€" @Rt, cheapened as buy fime ware ape mediocrity of sAtisfying achlioveâ€" it Beayillis 92° of the XB6 sas aon mm as Aft hly desirable platied sliver, 1p enthusiasâ€" p that she co of sllver w‘s name ds WBlne pper. Tixed sikve> colnâ€" to bos 0: your Qisfled ether, and the ‘damure the season ot the the w about e elasticâ€" kid thinâ€" ys, when --o‘“‘ r roamed all, were ~ng# and one may a muddy ~rain? from &n ive beon usty orth the So Ever Try Cheese Toast? _ JARVIS whore the surface Of the leather is completely worn should have a coat of warmizh after the dye has been a pplied. Springâ€"cleaning .:' provides an eccasion for m the small nec cssary repairs to articles in dally use in the bome, + Chairs generally need overhaoling at this time, Loo#ge and *&:‘“‘ caused by broken webbiugs m adjusted. The canvas under g seap must be removed, exposing webâ€" bings. Broken webbings must be out off and new ones tacked on firmly and sown with stron« thread to the springs they support If can vAs lining has also broken &flav‘l new p.ece to cover the whole of the unddt= seat will make a neat finisb, ‘ A tapestry seat that needs deâ€"ning can first be cleaned if'l'l“-m â€Io: and noatly repalred wools sllks to match the pattern If the gimp that Minds the edge of the seat to the frome is removed wnd the cover lifted cnough to get the hand beneath, Lift the cover in the same way when the front of a seat has become crushed and unsightly. Pad up the front with hair or wool packing. Leather chairs can be restored and should first be washed with a sponge wrung out in soapy . water, Where the color Was gone spirlt dye should be applied . with a fine paint brush and finished with wax polish. Patches SPRING TINE FPOR MENDING FOR TOASTING, -C?)KING OR ORDINARY THE BEST RESUL‘T§ ARE OBTAINED s» 165C ), | BAKING Fowprr . ( ERAFT CHEESE IF YOU HAVRN‘T, YOU‘RE MISSING SOMETHING! Made from c:.. wscipe below it is especially delightful, SERVE IT FOR BREAKFAST OR LUNCHEON. FISH AND MEAT PASTES 41b CURLING BRAND PAIL __ ORANCE SPECIAL BLEND TEA â€" _ BAYSIDE A CHOICE BLEND each week. HOME MADE BREAD On# complete Grocery Order placed at your nearest DOMINION STORE will quick! convince you the uv:syou are able to make in buying ymu-l- there -e‘ wu‘_k. Ju:t one trial you‘ll join the million and more customers served 4 slices bread 14 cup grate_. chcese ‘4 cup millk Saltnndredmtoum Remove crusts from bread and fry a delicate brown in h Removefromfatl::nflahwmmflkmï¬!m Cov: rated cheese. S loonthe::.ltmdulpqmuw g\e minutes in a hot oven. Serve at once. 227C ORANGES Dozen Jarvis Cheese Toast 25¢ BAKING POWDER ;# 21 MOLASsEs 3 25c For Week of April 27â€"May 2 onlyl RAISINS 1 O THIS IS RAISIN WEEK 15 oz. PKT. CALIFORNIA SEEDLESS Ing needs renew! it a crepe simila: hions your frock or sven sheer bla charme not buy this _ ye with a beige â€" | ® ues _ an t t Many a w Js intending to take e ie o o r trip or ¢ \d&inul tzuhr. «be . will find ‘lhll!- costume will enable her to make a good appesrance with i 1 very amall amount of luggage Porhaps a cont of a tailored type is the â€"wisest cholce for â€"a traveller. W.th this wrap abe can wear « matching cloth frock h the cool days which she is scre :o encounter, with a plain «ilk frock in the same color for more dressy occastons, Tweed, Kasha or flannel are all splendid mate:dals for this 4ype of costume. â€"â€"_For wear on the boat or the train. eway whes mt in use w.thout inâ€" juring it in the leaat, One does not bave ¢o buy an out und out ensemble, but one must be sure that spring cast amd frock harâ€" monize in color if one would follow For wear « a woft match conventent . | eway when juring it in t If you LEMONS DHESSING TY TRAYVEL MARMALADE 59c n# folt will be the most 1s it can be packed in use w.thout inâ€" #, you ¢ to that Beige, k hose c the well dr 23¢ moist. Covs, with i sepper and bake Dozen BAN toward sheer black and the tans in hoslory. ANAS, TRY GRIMSBY FIRST NARKY USE, ? FROM ho* frs, SYRUP $1.89";!° RIVERSIDE OR AYLMER