Ontario Community Newspapers

Port Perry Star, 7 Feb 1917, p. 7

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: Fashion Fads . Tussur and pongee have few rivals among the materials for suits and dresses. ~~ With splashes of bright colors inhuge dots or squares against a white or natural background, they + make tha most fascinating sports The striped and dotted de- striking and introduce i note. Some of the designs are distinctly Oriental in ef- fect. Silk and wool jersey are oth- er important fabrics which in spite of suits. 'signs are ve an entirely Crepe de Chine Negligee with Angel ves | having been used over and over again are. still counted among fashionable materials. bai Green seems to be good for early spring wear and ranges from the pale "chartreuse to the deep forest tone. 20 the fortune tellers of fashion { queer and intricate cuffs, , straight up and down a lifted waist will be fea- lines, es 2 styles. tures _ .»fis the new suits, skirts fall from the in many pleats, arranged in Healthful Habit A daily ration' of Grape-Nuts and cream . | ands of young girls from what might 1a cup to take a drink. My heart -|{ did not seem to be able to help me at which you may have left over in the house. a, ; These patterns may, be obtained' from your local MeChll dealer of from the McCall Company 70 Bond' St., Toronto, Dept. W. ren messin PALE, FEEBLE GIRLS Weakness Generally Comes On as Womanhood Approaches. Girls ypon the threshold of woman- | of all care and attention, How often | one sees girls who have been strong! and lively become suddenly weak, de-| pressed, irritable and listless, It is | the dawn of womanhood--a crisis in the life of every girl---and prompt measures should be taken fo keep the blood pure and rich with the red tint of health. If the blood is not healthy at this critical stage the body is weak- ened and grave disorders follow. Dr. Williams Pink Pills have saved thous- have been lifelong invalidism or an early death. They are a blood-builder of unequalled richness, strengthening weak nerves and producing a Fberal supply of red, healthy blood which every girl needs to sustain her strength. Dr: Williams Pink Pills have proved their, great value over 'and over again to young women whose health was failing. Miss A. Stern- burg, Haileybury Road, New Liskeard, Ont., says:--4I have much reason to be grateful to Dr. Williams' Pink Pills as they restored me to health, if, in- deed, they. did 'gpt save my life. In 1914 I began to feel run down, and the doctor who was ealled in said that mine was a bad case of anaemia, I lost flesh, always felt tired, and I got s0 nervous that I could scarcely hold would flutter alarmingly. The doctor all and my family and friends all thought that I was in a decline and could-not recover. I was in bed for some weeks when an aunt came to see me and urged that I try Dr. Wil- liams' Pink Pills. My father got a supply, and by the time I had taken three boxes there was a noticeable im- provement, and from that on I stead- ily progressed toward recovery. I con- tinued using the pills for some time longer, and they restored me to my old time health and strength. I shall never cease to praise this medicine, and. to urge all weak run-down girls to give it a fair trial as I have proved in my own case their great merit." - Dr. Williams' Pink Pills-are sold by all dealers in medicine, or you can get them by mail at 50 cents a box or six boxes for . $2.60 from The Dr. Wil- liams Medicine Co., Brockville, Ont, Novia, | gl MERCHANT NAVY'S UTILITY. i -- The Country With Largest Merchant Marine Will Lead Post-War Trade. "That British exports in 1916 should have been of record volume, about $2,5600,000,000, speaks: with clarion note of the war-time service of the British merchant marine. The British is a splendid food for those: who want vigor 1 quire 80 Ireight Admiralty had under requisition a month or two ago about 60 per cent. of the merchant tonnage. The' Gov- ernment has compulsorily purchased many vessels. Government orders re- per cent. of space on British in ordinary service, to be served on home-bound trips for § ernment material--foodstuffs and munitio British freighters are for- bidden + 0) I # destroyed two million British 10 hoo et i the pain wilt soon be lived. No Liniment HILLS PAY: British shipping firms have to face, not only the burst of German energy, but formidably strengthened neutral lines. The shipping firms of Dinmark, Norway, Sweden, Holland and the United States, potwithstanding losses, hood often drift into a decline in spite | have grown fat and powerful on war | rates, without heavy taxes or requi- sitions, Britain's trade supremacy de- pends on whether it can keep pace in the construction era with its com- petitors in the aggregate. The intima- tion from British naval authorities that as soon as the immense energy devoted to warship construction can be turned to building merchant ves- sels, remarkable output is ' assured, may well be believed. During the war a million tons of new warships, from giant super-Dreadnoughts mounting 17-inch guns, to destroyers and sub- marines, has been launched. This energy, applied to the turning out of standardized merchant vessels, would speedily distance German and neutral competition, In the grand race for markets, for commercial recuperation, the country with the dominant merchant marine, able to seize the carrying trade of most of the world, will triumph. It is of utmost consequence that Britain specialize in heading off German am- bition in this direction, eg Revival of Jet Industry. An industry in England that began a thousand years hefore the Christian era and was practically given up half a century ago has been revived since the war began. It is the making of ornaments out of jet. This material is believed to be wood that has gone through. an age-long process, per- haps a slow burning. It is a cousin of coal, a second cousin of box oak. Sometimes the tracing of a primeval fern is ground in its grain. Jet rosa- ries are now, it is said, in special de- mang. Arthur Machen, an English wri says that jet ornaments "pass- ed out of popularity with horse hair sofas and ecrinolines, with thé paint- ings of Landseer and Frith, witlf all those brave mid-Victorian things." The Victorians reveled in funerals with heavy plumes and hatbands and lavish crepe and jet, which is black, fitted with a scheme of things that has passed away.. But it is coming into its own again, though where once 1,500 or 2,000 workmen were employ- ed in cutting and polishing ornaments of jet there are now scarcely one-tenth of that number; and these are mostly men too old for service in the army. i arr Granulated Eyelids, ore Eyes inflamed by expo- sure to Sus, Dust and Wind i uickly relieved by Murine Eyes: ly. No Smarting, just Eye Comfort. At Your Druggist's 50c per Bottle. Murine Eye Salvein 25¢. ForBook of theEyeFrecask Druggists or Murine Eye Remedy Co. , Chicago -" He Stopped "Em. The following story comes from the front. At one part of the lines, where No Man's Land was merely fifty yards or so in width, the Germans one night happened to be in a very talkative mood, and the wind blowing towards our lines their jargon exceedingly ir- ritated one of our men. The Tatter, a fine old soldier, absolutely without fear, bore it for a time, but finally in- formed the sergean he was go- ing out for a walk. The sergeant ¢ knowing smile ds he saw. the | of filial piety, devotion and charity," ears, after only two 'treatment with Zam-Buk I am coms pletely cured." Zam-Buk {s equally good for eczema, ulcers, Stecestes, blood-poisoning, piles, cold sores, chapped hands, chilblains, eruptions, ete. At all drug stores, 50c. box, or from Zam-Buk Co., Toronto. COCOANUT BUTTER. An Excellent Substitute for Butter Comes From Cuba. The Cubitas Valley, on the north shore of Cuba, is not a dairy country, and butter at fifty cents to a dollar , 8 pound, and scarce at that, has made jus look round a bit for a substitute, ,88ys a writer in The Country Gentle- man. This is what we have found: Butter made of cocoanuts is entirely as good as, and some people think better than, that which is made of cow's milk. | Grind the meat of the nut as fine as { you can with a good grinder, and to | each nut add a pint of beiling water; {put it in a press to se very much like cow's milk in looks and taste, It can be used on cereal, in coffee, for custards or anything for which one would use cow's milk. From this stage the treatment that we follow is just the same as that ordinarily used for cow's milk--let the milk stand and the cream rise; sour it and churn. After washing out the buftermilk, salt and make into rolls or moulds. I always color it, otherwise it will be white; any butter coloring will do. I use the annatto seeds that grow here in abundance and from which most butter coloring is made. our cocoanut butter and sometimes carry a jar of it home with them. pound of butter. It should be churn- ed at a temperature of seventy de- grees or below. This butter took the premium over cow's butter at the Your "Heal Cheerful, Chubby Children Make the Home Happy y's We puny babies are a constant care to tired mothers and are subject | to many diseases that do not affect healthy children. Keep your children in good health, See that psi bowels More Segululy ~especially teething period. This is a distressing time 08 the life of every child and the utmost pre- caution should be taken to keep them well and strong. : 9 'Mrs. Winslow's thing Sy it is possible to avoid many childish ills now so prevalent. By the consistent use of It is a corrective far diarrhoea, colic and other infantile silments. It soothes the fretting baby and permits the child to sleep well and grow healthy. Tt brings comfort and relief to both ild and mother. Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup 200 yrup Makes Cheerful, Chubby Children A er sot eat their derivatives, It is soothing, pleas- ant less. For mothers in all parts of the world have used it and m s of babies have been benefited by it. ~~ Be eve hal 4 "§ + Relieve and Protect Your Children Sold by all druggi ; | § parate the milk C from the pulp, and you have a milk Our friends from the North who |4 " visit us frequently are delighted with ' It | takes from six to ten nuts to make Cubitas Valley Fair in the year 1915. ; = | there are 5,080 /men did most of the harvesting. ; France, in the harvest fields, no men | nificent co-operation of the Minard's Liniment Cures Diphtheria. formed a new club." Le i a | ho or bi wy i poor--school mitre working wo- 'men, domestics, have worked miracles said he. "Servants, faithful to their employers, fallen into distress, serve them without wages, and even in cases aid them by sacrificing slowly accumu- lated economies to pay their debts. One of them is raising seven children of her dead employer. Another _ 80- year-old servant is raising five or- phans. A widow, mother of three chil- dren, has taken charge of six orph One mother of thirteen children has extended her maternal care to fifteen orphans." From Up Among. The Yukon Snows | Comes Advice to Sufferers to Use Dodd's Kidney Pills. Glacier Creek Lady Says They Have Been Her Stand-by for Sixteen Years and She Has Never Known Them to Fail. Glacier Creek, via Dawson, Yukon, an, Feb'y 6th (Special.)--"North of fifty-three where doctors are long distances apart and those remedies | that are a very present help in time the | of need are the reliance of settlers, Dodd's Kidney Pills have es- { tablished an enviable reputation. Hear what Mrs. A. Armstrong, a well- known resident of this place, has to. say of them: { "Dodd's Kidney Pills have been my stand-by for sixteen years," Mrs. Armstrong states. "Both myself and my family have the greatest faith in their medicinal qualities. When any of my friends ¢omplain of even a headache I treat them with Dodd's Kidney Pills and they never fail to o good, It always gives me pleasure to say a good word for Dodd's Kidney Pills." Dodd's Kidney Pills cure all kidney {ills from backache | Bright's disease and heart disease. | These troubles come from sick kid- neys. That's why Dodd's Kidney Pills cure them. mre A a . WOMEN'S WORK IN WAR TIME. In Britain and in France Women Serve in Freedom's Cause. In England there are four hundred thousand women directly engaged in munitions work, and six hundred thousand in work connected with the war, not to mention those on street cars, etc. There is scarcely a position in England to.day filled by a man whose work could be done by a wo- | man. In one munitions plant in Eng-! land 18,000 women are working; in another 10,000. In one plant, where workers, 4,400 are ;women.. There was a prejudice at fl first against women working in man- 'ufacturing plants, but this prejudice has entirely disappeared, and manu- facturers who objected now agree that the results have been highly sat- isfactory. In some sections the wo- In were to be found, just women. Great Britain could never have successfully prosecuted the war but for the mag- women, and also of the laboring men, who have- co-operated with the Govern- ment in an admirable manner. The labor men have given th Ives and their best vitality, and in the future nothing can be too good for them in Canada and the old country, for they had earned every consideration, psn Delicately Eliminated, "How did you get Mrs. Bounce out of your bridge club? Did you ask her to resign?" . "No, we "didn't like to do that, but we all resigned except Mrs. Bounce, and then we all got together and Ng The Nova™ Scotia Lumber King! says: ry "I consider MINARD'S LINIMENT the best LINIMENT in use. | I got my foot badly jammed lately. ° 'I bathed it well with MINARD"S LINIMENT and it was as well as ever next day. Yours very truly, T. G. Mc(MULLEN, 1 / L Urgent Business. "Your honor, I admit that I was ex- ceeding the speed limit, but I was afraid of being late at court." ! "What was your business at court?" "I had to answer to a charge of ex- ceeding the speed limit." zi Tan The most expensive way to buy any. thing worth while in this to rheumatism, - gists or Rich Lumberman (at the opera)-- By jinks, Mame, that's music such as I calls music. City Niece--I hardly thought you would appreciate it, uncle. Lumberman--Why, by jinks, Mame, it sounds jest like my three sawmills on Beaver Creek all runnin' at once. Minard's Liniment Cures Colds, Eto. Telegraph Message. Assistant (to old lady, who has handed in a badly spelled telegram)-- What's this word, please? Old Lady--Never mind that, miss; it's none of your business. They'll know at the other end. Minard's Liniment Cures Garget in Cows, Fortune smiles on some men merely because they paid no attention to her frowns. NEWSPAPERS POR SALR ROFIT-MAKING NEWS AND JOB Offices for. sale in good Ontario towns. The most useful and Interesting of all businesses. Full information on application to Wilson Publishing Com- pany, 78 West Adelaide Street. Toronto. MISCELLANEOUS ANCER, TUMORS, LUMPS, BTC, internal and external, cured with. out pain by our home treatment. Write us before foo late. Dr. Bellman Medical Co., Limited, Collingwood, Ont. "© ,, BOOK ON DOG DISEASES And How to Feed Malle? free to any address by the Author H. CLAY GLOVER CO., Inc. 118 West 31st Street, New York ATENTS TARGUS Book " Patent Protection" Free BABCOCK & SONS Formerly Patent Office Examiner. Estab. 1877 99 ST. JAMES ST., MONTREAL Branches: Ottawa and Washington When buying your Piano insist on having an "OTTO HIGEL" PIANO ACTION Artificial Teeth Bought Send us your old false teeth, plates and gold. We remit best 'cash value by return mall. Gold & Platinum Refining Co., 24 Adelaide Bt. West, Toronto ) VEERED NE Reduces Bursal Enlar; nts, Thickened, Swollen Curbs, Filled Tend: ness Jon raises o trains; 80] eness, allays pain. Roe _ r, remove the hair or lay up the horse. $2.00 a bottle at druggists or fivpied. . Book 1 M free. ABCRBINE! R., for mankind--an iseptic lini or bruises, cuts, ds, strains, painful, swollen veins or glands. It heals and soothes. $1.00 a bottle at drug- setpaids Will tell jod more if you write. Ma e inthe U. 8. A. by W, F. YOUNG, P. D. F., G16 Lymans Bldg., W |, Can, bine and Abserbloe, Jr.. ace made In The Spirit of Amerion at play! Maguitude and Cheerfulness AMERICAN PLAN BUROPEAN PLAN D.8 White, Pres. J. W. Mott, Mgr. el ATOR world is to

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