Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 29 May 1920, p. 9

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SATURDAY, MAY, 29, 1920. Pe oP The New Cream Custard from England so pure and wholesome. HITS Lie Its delicious creamy flavou makes fruit, puddings, etc., so enjoyable. = Im tins and packets from all Steves. RR Te RS IRS The brand "PRIMUS" is your guarantee of purity and quality. L. CHAPUT, FILS & CIE, Limités, 11 MONTREAL fL » J J ® J Rd \d » BJ Comfort bh powerful i al ie wp the oldest and hardest dirt, grease. ote. Comfort is fine f king sinks, Comfort Lye Kills rats, mice, reaches and inset pests. Comfort Lye will do the hardest spring cleaning you've got. Combort Is good for making soap. Goats in tod For making sees. id RP Pi a a a-- Det frust fo chance hn of coffee , OY merely as ing or il, you can obtain a brand that has been tried and found trustworthy. Foery can of Rideau Hall STEEL-CUT Coffee | CHAFFLESS contains the most perfect blend that years of experience in coffee selecti paste ful g can prod : When you see the Rideau Hall Label on coffee it is a guarantee that no better coffee can be ob- tained anywhere. Packed in sealed d and half pound cans. at all Grocers. GORMAN, ECKERT & CO., LIMITED is largely caused by waste resulting from spoiled cakes, pies and pastry. Many people do not consider baking powder a very important ingredient in baking, whereas it is most ant--Success or failure depends upon the powder helps yi down the HIGH COST OF BAKING, because, first, it is sold at a reasonable price, and second, its double ties absolutely as- sure perfect ing at all times. Al- ways follow the directions on the label, you use less powder. ying Ben-O in the larger tins is most Egg-0 Baking Powder Co. 3 i THE DAIL In the Realm of Women---Some Interesting Features | FROCKS FOR GIRLS: TRE Heavy Linen or Cotton Used fog : Spring and Summer. | Georgette and Net Dresses t Honers With Other Materiale for Party Wear. i i The sketch shows a sensible dress | | tor a little girl of six years. It may | be of woel fabric or of velveteen em- | broldered In wool or chenille, or of | heavy linea or cotton material for | spring or summer. The dress buttons : In the back and a belt of black vel- | | vet ribbon is slipped through open- | ings arranged for the purpose, and | tied in a bow in the back. The little | pouched pockets are finished at the | edge,. as are sleeves, cellar and jacket | with a long buttomhole stitch dene in | the floss used for the embroidered | motifs. | Yellow heavy linen is used by some | of the designers In developing smart | tallored spring or summer dresses for { | little girls. One frock shown is of | burnt orange linen embroidered In | heavy black wool and finished with la patent leather belt. The three-piece tub frock is featured | for girls of six to ten years. One of these recently brought out has a plain | | linen skirt laid in wide box plaita, | | bleuse of white and colored dotted | handkerchief linen with a little square | cut detachable coat of the plain ma- | tertal, Lavender is also recorded as { rT -- NEW PLAITED PON '| and decelletage, and one magnificent | éveming wrap of cerise brocade is lav- | Ishly trimmed with white ostrich | fringe arcund the edge of a deep cape Y BRITISH WHIG Dainty Plumes Are Placed en Under wear as Trimming; Also Used for Corsage Bouquets. Various and wonderful are the uses to which ostrich is put this year. Who would ever have thought of\ ostrich corsage bouquets? Or ostrich trimmed underwear? But beth are fashionable | this season. Evening frocks have fringes of uncuried ostrich om tualc collar. of Small estrich tips are used for cor sage ornaments instead of flower clus- ters, and a smart restaurant dinner frock of black jetted net is made very | chic with a bright blue ostrich tip-- ' | the curled ostrich kind--at the left | of the wide black satin girdle. With | me other color in the cestume, the blue ostrich decoration stands out promi- | mently. So here is an opportunity to use that little bunch ef pale piak or pale yel- low ostrich tips that you have been cherishing for years agaiast the time of a possible dressy hat, which yeu never quite got up courage to wear. Tuck the little buach of ostrich feath- | ers into the belt of your winter dance | frock and be sure you are delightfully | up te date. You cam alse get all the laces yeu have been cherishing, for now is the | time of times to use them. Lace is lav. | ishly used on this season's costumes; | in yokes and other motifs for blouses {& color leader im next season's tub | pm { dresses for children. | This season velveteen and wool jer- | sey cloth hold the center of the stage | im serviceable materials chesen for | dresses for little girls, the staple serge | belng compelled, to some extent, to | take a back seat. Angora and heavy | wool embroideries are popular trim- jming touches both en velveteen and {Jersey cloth frocks. This very sturdy material is so effective and charming when shown In the pastel shades that frocks of it are quite good enough for dressy occasions. A particularly smart and popular type of school dress this season com Simple Frock for $in-YearOld. & middy blouse of black vel- with a plaited skirt of Scotch sooo N " Billowing charm is in every bit of this 'accordion plaited pongee skirt, trimmed with several rows of stitching in delicate blue. This stitching is aise used on the cuffs of the charming waist which has a dainty cellar of old blue velvet. The girdle is of the same material. NEW LINGERIE AND GLOVES Dainty Undergarments Are Embroid- ered; Shoes and Slippers of Satin | and Velvet; Long Gloves. Lingerie is one of the things which have had an impetus during the sea- son. There seems to be an idea of getting away from, the old and well- tried ideas and of indulging in under- garments which are original and pretty at the same time. Chiffon is the material most favored. The pale | yellows and the shades of mauve are particularly attractive, and so are the i tones of cerise and orange. For a | bright color in chiffon leses the heavi- | ness which might result from the use of a thicker material. These dainty bits of undergarments | are embroidered in thin rows of flower | patterns: and are "generously helped | may be turned into tray cloths. of georgette, in bands and flounces on eveming frocks, in panels and draperies and in whole bedices, If you have enough. Scraps of fine lace that are left over you can set into lingerie garments, surrounding the lace sec- tions with filet insertions or very sheer machine embroidery, attached by hem- stitching. Sometimes lace is used with shirred net and everything is put te- | gether airlly with lines of hem stitching. FOR HOME-MADE TABLE LINEN Worn-Out Clothe May Be Made Inte Napkins and Tray Cloths at Little Expense. Old damask tablecloths that are worn around the edge of the table way be utilized by cutting a square yard from the center, hemstitching the hem and using it as a luncheon cloth. From the ends of the old cloth nap- | kins of breakfast size may be cut and ! hemmed. If there is enough goed, | firm material left at each side, they | Un- | bleached linen luncheon sets are easily | made at home. These linens are fia- | ished with hemstitching or a fime feather stitching. In seme Instances | | the round ceaterpiece with dellies to match are scalleped around the edges | and finished with buttonhoele stitching done In white, brown or blue linen | along by inlays of hemstitching. Then | fless. Asbestos or cotton fennel pads | there are ribbons used not too con- used under the dollles protect the LC spicnously and varying a little from | fable. the general tone of the material. Accordion plaiting is cleverly used. | Twe or three rows of double hem- | stitching, with the rest in plaiting, and | you have a silp which cannot be sald | to have 2 serious rival. Laces are used i | with cautien and they are, of course, ! mest attractive when they are hand | made. Shoes and. slippers are often ade) of satin and velvet. In Paris these are | cut with scarcely any vamp and they | | are supplied with straps over the in- | steps and with butterfly ormaments in the place of buckles. These are made of a bit of gold or silver gauze and a ! strip of wire and some rhinestone | party wear, georgette and net | | dresses are sharing honers with those ECKLINE BOWS AND RIBBONS | | smart | at the back | is mew style, one Wp mew and | dréssmakers, and the market 'costume untll the Aj HF esi] i vf i g2 iH i it {il ; i i 8 if i ef : F ; EF i 3 §id ih afsa it | i | § E f i i i i fH i iH | i i Hi : f Ss "Manner is something with every- body, and everything with some." ~--Bishop Middleton. 1 sparkles. Gloves are another accessory of | ! woman's dress which have undergone | a change in Paris in that they no lenger are worn wrist length. Every sleeve ends in a gauntlet glove or a Eousquetaire glove or a long 14-but- tened glove. There is always a wrinkle | around the wrist when style is in the | balance and sleeves that are long are | made tight enough for the glove to | slip over them. The shorter sleeves | | expect the glove to meet'them. Long | gloves decidedly are in again. JEWELRY OF CHINESE JADE | Season's Vogue for Green Tints Brings Cestly Decorative Articles Into the Limelight. One of the things which the season's | vogue for green tints In womea's gar- | ments has dene Is to bring inte, un- precedented popularity various articles | of jewelry made of real Chinese jade. | The articles in demand range from | sold in China at from $1000 to $3.000 each. Naturally, the values of thege necklaces are enhanced when they are brought to this country and resold, New Veil Fastener, A smart veil shown In one of the The result of good planning and ard work is often called luck. | tiny eardrops te mecklaces so high in| | price as te sdrprise even persens who | | think they kmow a geod deal about | costly gems. It Is a matter of record | | that small necklaces of jade beads, | | every one measuring less than a quar- | ter of an inch in diameter, have been p GEE SKIRT | New USE FOR OSTRICH TIPS | - We grow it-- P We blend it We pack it Your Grocer Sells It Canadian Chief Offices 3 "EATER 24 Front St. West, Toronto To look your your corset mus perfect fit. La Diva corsets, fitted Canadian - Models, and best, t be a on living made in Canada's most successful and largest factory, are produced in styles to suitevery figure. are of the best. Materials Sold and recommended by leading corsetiéres. SonsTiea ON 18 A COMMON AILMENT FROM WHI F US LEA AND 1S A CONDITION WHICH WHEN eR! TO CONTINUE BECOMES DANGEROUS TO HEALTH. A UGHT AT ONCE, AND THIS RECTIVE SHOULD BE SO T TIVE YOU WILL FIND IN = | 2 p " O|IARMELEE'S VEGETABLE PILL A A A SOWARDS a . t \ wy ET PATION A -------------- COAL CO. Until further advised, and subject to change without notice, the price for COAL will be: PHONE 155. ALL SALES FOR CASH. Phone . $15.00 . $15.00 . $15.00 . $13.50 orders C.0.D. a Dairy Supplies # GOOD 30-GAL. $10.50 0 ALSO MILK STRAINERS, LEMMON 187 PRINCESS STREET MILK CAN FOR PAILS, DIPPERS, ete & SONS One of Canada's Quality. ll INJO possession 5 45 jrssious us as the good will of one's friends. The same can cerning the works of our hand and mind. The makers of GEORGINA SHOES have gained the good will of thousands of Canadian women by building into. thelr product only those materials which would represent the true meaning of Obtained through Canada's Leading Boot Shops - PE 9a 2000 Lo vot 8 J Bw a be said con- i

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