WEDNESDAY, JULY 18, 1029, THE DAI LY BRITISH WHIGC. THAT LAST TOUCH By Juanita Hamel Try Lifebuoy ONE WEEK See the improvement ° ill make in Win Tea, warms without inflaming, ekin inthat short time, I, oe he Rov be omnis Tora ' gs INN TG > Bo . and gently stimulates the whole in 18 system. On a hot day, no drink is more delicious, nor more won. derfully refreshing, than a cool, clear glass of ICED "SALADA". Just try it. / The odour of Lifebouy is the greatest health principle ever put into a soap. ¢ NA NE i) | AN HR SONI Sa [/% ) KD WTI TE TTT LH UTHTTTTTTY NOTHING BUT THE BEST When you are buying general commodities such as groceries, dry goods, etc., you always make sure of the best. Do you overlook this when you buy your milk? Perhaps you don't. If you do, read further; if you don't stop right here. Milk is one of the greatest commodities of any household --it is a pro- duct that can be handled in & very unsanitary way, Price's Dairy has what is known as the Pasteurized and Clarified sys- tem. This system insures the milk consumer that he is buying the best in every respect. Call us up, and give us a trial to-day. ' PRICE'S DAIRY HERE is a Moffat Electric Fopyright, 1922, by Newsoaper Feature Service, lnc. me--Dbi Bo # : ib Range for every ho big » It really doesn't matter whether we agree or disagree on just what ought to be the last HT TTT TT, { touch--or even whether this particular last touch should be applied at all--there always lis a last touch which either mars or makes beauty. And he to whom ten minutes ago she sent word that she was all ready, save for the last touch, wonders Just what it can be. But when she does appear he forgets the long minutes he has waited--in the Joy of seeing her at : Wo last. And, perhaps, it is that last touch which puts the final touch to his decision and causes him to ask the question she has long seen shinng in his eyes. ' es _--_ | Tips to Housewives tent unknown to the opposite sex. Nevertheless there is still vanity in him, and who knows but the peri- or small. And there are Moffat Ranges for clubs, hotels, hospi- tals, cafes. Moffats of all sizes, to suit all purposes and purses. ll "ene Once installed, a Moffat Electric e saves the Bpuseholder money in fuel bills. 28, Moffat Electric Ranges are in daily use throughout the world. Write for free booklet to Moffats, Limited, Weston, Ontario. kept on the soapstone of a fireless cooker, Try serving hand sauce with hot apple ple. : Never allow oranges to stand af- as such. The polite fiction that "it is not done" must be maintained. It may even be that they have some 1 Do not garnish a dish that has to The Public 268 Princess 8t., Kingston, Little Girl Falls From Balcony. At Lyndhurst a rather serious ac- cident occurred when Mr. and Mrs, Gordon Leadbeater's little daughter, Birdie, fell from the baleony on Roy Black's residence, a distance of seven. Morrars FOR SALE BY Utilit teen feet. sclous for some time. bunes were badly shaken taken home nicely. ange y Hydro Shop Ont. Phane 844 She was rendered uncon- Fortunately no broken and although up she was able to be where she js recovering | We CHI Forty prominent before they went for a drive around fown. Mrs. W. A. Chamberlain, Mrs. E. J. Glackin, ° OHICAGO PARTY IN CANADA, people from Chicago ested in the development of the d and Illinois, eep waterways scheme rf i Bobbed Hair at Court Sregmtne s The eighth of this month saw two royal events of unusual interest; the one, the wedding of King Alexander, of Jugo- Slavia, and Princess Marie, of Rumania; the other, the opening court of the season at Buckingham Palace, when trains, vells and feath- ers were worn for the first time since 1914. But amid the traditional splend- ors of each of these events there was one modern note which would have been absent a year or two ago. Pictures of the royal bridesmaids (Grand Duchess Chira, of Russia, and Princess Ileana, the bride's #is- ter) show both girls with bobbed hair. And an account of the affair at Buckingham Palace says: "Tiaras were not numerous at this court, the reason being that so many were broken up during and since the war. The favorite jewel- ed headpiece wag a bandeau of diamonds and pearls, often with a large penant pearl. The bandeau Proved most adaptable to the bdoo- bed hair of many of the girls and, younger married women. " " The passing of the tiara and the presence of the bobbed debutantes and matrons at a royal reception are in a gense symbolic of the changing times. Traditions are be- Ing badly shattered nowadays. Even the court trains are curtailed; "The shot train or court mantle was a distinotive feature of this court. It lends itself to more art- istic tréatment than the 'old heavy train. Moreover, it enables presenta- tions to be made more quickly." Precedent is 80ing by the board. They even fox-trot at court, But the programmes which carry these modern dances do not name them dignified name for bobbed hair. But what would Queen Victoria have said? She might have afforded a new chapter for Strachey by boxing a bobbed ear. Things are changing. Class and tlass customs are becoming blurred. And under these circumstances it is Interesting to recall that differ- ences in dress were at one time de- signed largely to distinguish one class from another, An early French law complained that it was no long- poseible to tell a laborer by his clothes. Relics of these class or oc- cupation distinctions stil] survive in the gowns of lawyers, the robes of church dignitaries, and the wigs of judges. The last named are not Worn hereabouts, however, althdugh there is a judge of the admiralty court in British Columbia Who not only wears one himself, but ingsts on counsel doing so. We still have Occupational uniforms for firemen, rolicemen, bank messengers, hotel porters, and some few other classes but on the whole there is no line ot dress demarkation between the var- lous classes, except such as result from limitations of pursé and taste. This being the case, and an age hav- ing arrived when all follow the fash- ions and even royalty bobs its hair, it is interesting to reaq that "Fash- lon in its modern sense cannot be sald to begin until the fourteenth century. Then complaints first arise ot clothes being cast aside for oth- ers of newer shape and cut." Until the nineteenth century man's clothes were as delicate in color and &s rich in texture as woman's. Pepys tells in his diary of how he had his wife's clothes cut up into waistcoats for himself. But man has now standardized Nis garments to an ex- Nang Friday. The , camera e: Mrs. A, Weller, man caught the ladies Mrs. A. W. D Weis, wigs of Pepys' day may yet retun-- those cascades of curls which re. quired their male wearers to have their natural hair cut off and to wear a nightcap when the wig was doffed for the day? Fashions have ever travelled in cycles. If bobbed Lair, why not peri-wigs? er een The gloomiest hearts on earth are those that have never learned any glow of gratitude. be carved. Never allow the silver to stand un- washed overnight. Put a teaspoonful of salt in the cooked starch and the iron will ust stick. Brown sugar that has become very hard may be grated on a common frult grater. Pulled bread should broken, Irons will keep hot a long time it snap when Had Your Iron Today? ter slicing, as they become bitter. When frying doughnuts, never put a great many in the fat at one time. ------ Engagement Announced. Mr. and Mrs. W, M. Acheson, Pembroke, announce the engages ment of their daughter, Florence, to John T. Preston, Ottawa, The wed- ding will take place quietly in New York city early this month, - Nc Go on hikes in summer--sun beating on thei heads. Carry little raisins to regulation with A560 calories of nd in practically pred; pi to work almost i But they get there fresh. : sustain energy. Its g some troops. energizing nutriment per ' gested form, so mmediately; yet doesn't tax digestion and so doesn't heat the blood. Fatigue-resisting food-iron, stamina. too -- good for Heat got YOU this summer? Try the Boy t's way. Put ba weather saps. ty two packages ck the vitality that hog and 2 glass of milk for an energizing, healthful summer lunch, Little Sun-M Betwee --in Little Red Packages w ¢