Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 4 Sep 1919, p. 9

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« AMURsDAY. PAGE NINE | -------------------- SEPTEMBER 4, 1019. THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG B | Eternal Feminine Asserts Itself After Years Of Suppression po PROCES ERS - Lee a a ON oe NSN ~ Loe aw \ 8s One sees the eternal femini in the eternal feminine asserting itself (and embroider ; .. | after four ye of suppression | designs. * The With it walk Ingenious designers are using black | silhouette, which is Youth, the ereative motive behind the | satin for frocks for all occasions. |longer than in previous seasons lender and graceful is a model with [noticeable is the great variety in s two-piece skirt, gathered at the [movements of the new skirts, on/up or down. : aist-line and finished with a deep |which many trimmings are on the| Another pretty effect for a chintz aid Gipoh general | DEM. The sleevés of the blouse.are [bias. Soutache braid used in border |is niniscent of grandmother's day ~e . {cut in one with the front and back |effect is one of the dominant attrnc-|It has long puffed sleeves set-in vel- an ever. There 1 jand are elbow length, with turn-down | tions in ultra décorative schemes. Fre {vet piped should and -round neck so much diversity in design and.trim-| cuffs slightly pointed. There is an | quently the braid itched on the | with several rov velyet ribbon en- ning each frock éreated is more | 8bplied back and front of gray satin | skirt or tunic to a depth of twels } | ing the same wer, the waist oF less indi of which the collar and girdle als {fifteen inches, there being no other !f stens in the back with velvet bn | made. It is the introductjon {trimming on the 'dress. tons. The sleeves have the long p | gray trimming that gives\the | Quaint beyond description are the | finished at the wrist with narrow v n entirely "different" touch, chingz dresses with collar and cuffs vet trimmed ¢ , | its simplicity. [of tub satin. 'T generally are « fi Among the season's noveélties there | signed upon very sinfple lines, nome |t . es are many smart costumes of black |daintier than a straight gathered gkirt | the ¥ particular period; they and 'white - satin combined with nov- {attached to a surplice-closin version of 1919 styles, | elty tricolette and upon which braid 'skirt attached to a pongee sil) NN AI NINN i - every phase of dress. s a2 model in Ni buoyant and delightful styles which | 7 decoration women of all ages delight to wear, | w rt sleeves, | | dy out- | challis{ Checked nd challis hat idea was fir shown w at Palm Beach and wn in favor. rt » mull edged i % Ea Less emphasis is organ lines this season th frill of i The neck. 1 flowered organdies plain color collars 'en | broider te, and satin girdles |and p rolor vy have curved e | drapings ¢dged with plaitin in the strictly practical frocks there=is, of course, the usual strong percentage of navy, regardless of the material used. All of the cotton fabrics, as well as -the silks and satins come in m= is sti wi 0ilés th tual, So instead of draw- ing lections 7s. gen ideas from all - ck on display, spite nall® floral 'c reometrical patterns against the | k white and light gray backgrounds are} of tucked or- good, and will find favor with women actors. in the mode. | who wish to select something both | attractive shades of irk blue -which and ite chaijlis | cool and durable. {combine well with all the colors used straight skirt trinimed' Dame Fashion decrees the return!in smart decorative schemes. A MPA mi AES Sim. I ptr 1 1 CARSON HAS OPENED {on 'them. Magistrate = Stoddart ral s ¢ NE { promptly ruled their names out of | W IRISH CAMPAIGN the indictment, and lectured the con- | stable who 'served the papers. rth considerin tks are seen ad 'wool mixtur y are used for skirts that are wom t with contrasting 8 A pretty thing in two sh rown 'has the | something that resembles the look of : { | spring and r are not DRESS BY ANNE RITTENHOUSE ---- Well Fed And Clothed. Berlin, Sept. 4 The first conting- 'ent of German prisoters has arrived at Cologne and Deutz from the Brit- ish camp at Calais. The men appear- ed to be well fed and they wore good clothing: the eagle sbout the Americans. It g { a new. look to France and those who | like . psychology may well pay atten- tion to it. It is not only apparent con cerning clothes. But that is a big story that no one writes. THE HOUSEHOLD | Edited by Anne Rittenhouse: | Proposed Colonial Ho Same Thing As the Fein. . 4~ the e Rule shia inn i A polite bachelor always gives up [his seat in a crowded street car to a { widow of long standing. tf § Sir Edward Car-{ The matches that are the result of ler of Ulster Unlonists, {love must be-the product of trust. has cofne to Belfast to open the iti-Home Raile campaign, ad- Love of man grows less. a te at lA i io ~~ for himself never Ah Arh Aria daha mA ian (Copyright, 1919, by the Mec Clure Newspaper Syndicate) American Women Who Are Showing [ Paris, such as an actreéss,'a woman of More and More Individuality in [Society who wears her own clothes, as Choosing and Wearing Their [they put it, for it is a saying and a Clothes, Look te Paul Poiret, the | belief in Paris that the actual lead- Individualist, for Inspiration. {ers in the smart world and all their Paris, Aug. 10.--The extremists, the | followers never accept the styles put eolorists, the wamen who 'dress in an out by the dressmakers for the rest individual manner are intensely inter- jof the world. ee ested in the recrudescence of Paul| "Ip America it is different. A few iret, for forgakes the path | women adopt their own styles which : ¢ s no {have been erehted for them by their mode; he does not acknowle he | special dressmakers, but as a race our existi~ea of what is called fashi e | women who have dominating places of work$ one in his studio on ideas that | wealth and power accept the silhou- he draws from his brain and lets his |ette, the fabric, the color of the mass- inspirations have full swing. Becau s. . Up until last season we had-a of this personality: he puts iste h ational impulse to be clothed alike, i work he is apt to ereate a doze ut there have been most hopeful * houettes. What he works for or signs that the sap is moving toward and line.: Tell him that the hion |& new and fruitful outgrowth of per- "is so and so and he looks at you in sonal dressmakers and the extraordin- perplexity. . {ary effort of our clever designers to} He never goes-to the races, to the 'stand on their own feet. The result | Deauville, to the has been more gayety in-clothes, less er thing as this respect {il perfectly logical -{ : ONE MILK MEAL. Drink milk and bé good-natured-- likewise save money and be "well nourished. Out in Illinois the mana- ger of a factory e oying some four- teen hundred mel" has consented to permitting milk vendors to 9] through the plant every morning and afternoon ,and most of the men buy! milk, which they drink either as a | tween-meal or in piace of a regular! i midday meal. Since this milk vendor > l has been going the. rounas the 'mana- | ; ger of the factory-reports that not | oe only are the men more efficient, but | /i veo they are better natured. Ergo, drink if J / 2 9 / Qi 3 AY A oe southe &/ AR be south milk and be cheerful. | Why don't you have a milk meal in your house? "Oh, I am very fond of 5 ! i milk myself," answers one housewife A self-dete A, or it Canada|] - 2 Quebec to have Red charmeuse gown, by Poiref, with . Decldaring that for luncheon, but it wSuld hardly seem blue ang Sold embroidery, and ct of a 'settlement . a belt. There a enough. 1 don't know what Mary trousered effect at the hem. would think"---Mary is the maid and 3 . bread and but- so. "Yes," she says, "but it would {ter or wafers and perhaps a little seem like lunch. If that's"all we had, fresh sweet fruit. there oul? be nothing to set the ta-|. nd sepa rd challenged the Gov- =] Ff ~ I r Nf dward ag © i phrases the ates wou § smart resorts, te play for observation ér knowledge. He | slavish adoration of the prevailing fa- letests uniformity. i shion, a better chance for the Ameéri- Therefore he must dress the in-|can designer. dividual, not the masses. He cancopy| What is the result? The best: Fa frock but he rarely repeats it. He dressed American public that has ever . prefers to twist and turn each piece existed. I have not heard a single L of drapery and to dye each yard of | American in Paris, buyer, pleasure- ecloth in some new fashion the mo- | seeker, man or 'woman, who does not ment he puts his hand on it. It is for| openly say at any time that the Am- is : to whom the question was put, "and the children have li beside milk issue with you happen to know that she is very ing a nice jug of fresh milk on a sup- fond 'of milk. You tell the housewife | per table with some 1 HAVE BEAUTIFUL FLOORS this very kind of wizzardy that he is ericans are mow the best dressed wo- in | men to be seen anywhere. The French i beloved by the unusual women j dressmakers are coming up against 'an entirely néw proposition, which-is] the amazing independence of the Am- ericans in clothes. The buyers may acept the extraordinary clothes that the Parisiennes wear, but, if judged by the comments and the stubborn- ness of those who are to buy these clothes for their perSonal use, there will be slight sales unless vital and important alterations are made. As for this season, our women have not only continued the wearing of the i long skirt in Paris, but they do it with an air of bravado that has not existed before. They refuse to show their knees in public. They refuse to cut their bodices into a deep decollete for for the afternoon and eliminate { their sleeves. The Paris dressmakers regard extraordinary attitude ble for, and onelhates to get out of the habit." And this in spite of the fact that this very housewife is for | ever complaining that housework is such a drudgery and is never able to keep her maids because there is so much to be done in her house.' If vou have dinner at noon--and there are a lot of people beside rustic folk who do--then you might have a fhilk supper you would doubtless be surprised r much improved in health were members of your family; and ; agine the edmfort of having t ess of getting the evening m g more than plac- = Do mo BS EE Pi LE FA cr N weit vel ion SED the t prd h i with a trace of hauteur, then per- plexity, then conciliation. There is i e you at oert ; Bo Ra TEr SE RY Sample hox free it 58, paper and siclose fo. stamp For the person who has to have meals away from home certainly there is no habit that helps so much or thas savés so much as fhe milk-for-lunch habit. Then your whole problem dis- solves into this, of finding the place where you can get the best milk. Sometime to your office eyery .morning where you can keep vour- favorite bands of crackers on hand. : ~ Some persons find that cold milk is |a rather chilly lunch, and may per- haps feel some discomfort after a niidday meal with nothing hot. These might soon 'accustom themselves to hot milk, which goes very well if you segson it with a little salt, salt and pepper, or nutmeg, if you like the flavor. i Rev. W. PF. Midland.' you can have it delivered] Sidell, pastor of the |. Th + Baptist churth, Port Hope. hes ten- Hi ; 4 dered his resignation tc accept the | Kessock, pastorate of the Baptist church in roo pe SUMMONED INFANTS ~~ TO POLICE COURTS i : --The Magistrate Was i Dumfounded. Sudbury, Sept. 4.--The most un- | usnal case in a long list of unusual i ones in this district police court came | off yesterday morning before Magis- |. trate Stoddart, when two defendants | in a case were found to be children of one #nd a half and three years oid, resectively Naturally, their mammas refused to allow them to : appear. and the conrt was convnlsed {when their atforney, J. A. Mulligan, | suggested thit bench warrants be {issued for them. a £ sirate was at { Fas Crown Attorney Me- | and they erewded court; aled with laughter when the, full force of the happening dawned x st dumb. ed A Funny Incident At Sudbury | | A-burd, collect dust--a! leaving a last surfaces RH You can easily kee using an O-Cedar 3 triangle shape--price, $1.50. $3.00. or } You will find O-Cedar Polish M. assures you of these results: clean surface--that will not get the beauties of 'the lustre. Preserves varnished O@laMop Eliminates bending and reaching: also saves time. floors clean and sparkling 'olish Mop--obtainable in either round O-Cedar Polish is sold in various sized packages from 25¢ to both polish and mop at any CHANNELL CHEMICAL COMPANY LIMITED Toronto : treated with O.Cedar Polish athe out; wood are br and pain by frequently or te

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