GET YOUR MILLINERY AT THE WHITE STORE, WE HAVE THE LATEST HATS AND SELL THEM AT THE VERY _ LOWEST PRICES: ALSO REMODEL N â€"ANYV SEYLE vyOU WISH. _. OPENâ€"NMGHTS: PHONE 420 Main St.,. â€" Grimsby ‘ Now turn again to the right side and press the crease firmly from top to bottom of the leg. _ The silk helps to retain the crease, permitting the cloth to slide freely over the knees when the wearer is sitting or stooping, thus preventing bagging at the knees. Now dissolve one tablespoonful of this powder in half a pint of hot water and shake thoroughly. Turn â€"the trousers wrong side out and moisten with this preparation a strip one inch wide down the front of the leg. â€" Turn on the right side again and press the trousers with a hot iron along the crease. To retain the crease in trousers and prevent bagging at the knees use the following method: ~Reduce to a fine powder one ounce of gum tragacanth and one ounce of gum arabic and mix well. If the goods is the kind that stretches easily and gets out.of shape quickly give extra protection in this way: â€" Turn the trousers wrong side out and attach to the edge of the leg seams just over the knee, a silk patch eight inches long and as wide as the width of the trousers leg. Sew this securely along the outer edge of the seams. Lo ame ces o <meâ€"o <unâ€" C â€"ameâ€"0 en 0 4R 0 ‘ 3.... e e But yor can Promote a Lo “k"flw’ cleaz, Healthy Condition OUR EYESUgeYMurine Eye Remedy Night and Morning." Keep your €1 lear an althy, * °~Z 1%?&%%: Frzg?:"yg CareaBo‘Z)lf.!edmd Warine Eve Remedy Co.. 9 East Ohio Street, Chicegso LESLIE J. FARRELL, The Rexall Store § GRIMSS8Y THE PRESSING _ _ _OF TROUSERS Wednesday, March 12, 1924. White Store We can supply you : beautiful { 0â€"<mmpâ€"oâ€"asm ind eï¬A T MAINLY FOR WOMEN HARDW QOD . "â€"rLOORs // L /%/â€Hâ€'“‘“\‘“ï¬\“\\“\\\?\\\\\\w 3 L //A h f? / | l4 ARDWOOD fiooring is : H not expensive. Its low cost will surprise you. Think 6L _ what hardwood flooring means! ns C.aeg â€" It means the disappearance Feaswfagey â€" forever of a rough and unâ€" artoonmmels â€" Sightly floorâ€"no more carpets to buyâ€"or take up in the muntcns Spring and Fall for cleaning. § It means that the floor can be cleaned with practically no f effort whatsoever. It means perâ€" manenceâ€"for hardwood floors don‘t wear out. It means also that your house is more valuable. of a"/ CONTRACTORS AND BUILDERS, GENERAL LUMBER DEALERS f Mills at C. N. R. Station. Consumers buy 30 million feet of SEAMANâ€"KENT FLOORS a yearâ€"of Oak, Maple, Birch and Beechâ€" each fascinating in color and grain. SEAMANâ€" KENT is the highest standardâ€"it is tradeâ€"marked and guaranteedâ€"and it is the height of economy in first cost and in service. P Es 4 ? NP _;,‘i-‘:l\' 2s3 EAMANâ€"KENT . MARSH, Estate 13 SUPPLIED AND LAID map * Each season offers novelty. Someâ€" times this means a radical change that at first presentation finds resistance, then gradual endorsement, and finalâ€" ly becomes the standard. As examples we have the waistline dropped several inches, and the contour of the figure losing its curve and: becoming a straight silthouette. This year changes are radical, ofâ€" fering interesting novelty. First, there are the delightful new materials. Not only are their names new but the fabrics offer variety from those of other seasons. _ They are all beautiâ€" ful in texture and in color. There are heavy woollens, reserved specialâ€" ly for the spring swagger coats and the later sports clothes. Apart from these, fine twills and crepe goods take the lead. â€"Later, there are to be lovely printed silks, crepes, and Henâ€" rietta cloth, the latter with a strong resemblance to the o‘dâ€"time cashmere. Fine Fabrics Delightful utility frocks, coat dresses and other oneâ€"piece styles are made of the twill known as. Poiret. The printed silks for dressier wear, are foulards, India silks and crepe de chine. Little blocks and geometric patterns, and dots and allâ€"over deâ€" signs, will decorate these in all the new color combinations. The latest foreign ideas to invade the world of our dress are the Chinese and the Japanese; here and there just a line and a motif taken from the dress of those lands. There is, ~for â€" inâ€" stance, the Chinese coat effect, and ways in which beautiful embroideries are introduced. Mannish Suits But the most insistent note. in everyâ€"day street wear is the suit, which has come back to its own this season after a year or so of comparâ€" ative oblivion. This is the mannish suit, strictly plain, in rough material. Its coats is short, the collar notched, fiat and masculine. With one of the They are approximately 8$8,000 colorâ€" ed women of voting age in Pennsylâ€" van‘a, 73,000 in New York, 69,000 in Maryland, 61,000 in Illinois, 58,000 in Missour‘, 56,000 in Ohio, 38,000 in New Jersey, 25,000 in Ind ana, 21,000 in West Virginia, and 18,000 each in Kansas and Michigan. For earlier wear there is an Occasâ€" ionx. coat or sports suit of which a cleverly designed scarf is the feature. The scarf is of soft wool like â€"the suit, is attached to the collar of the coat and is cut across at the side so that one end may be drawn through in winding it close about the neck, to fall over the shoulder. smart little hats that are with us_still. iwuststentiy, th.s is the upâ€"toâ€"theâ€"minute costume. % SPRING FASHION NOVELTIES uns 0 <om 0 <ue 0 aue 0 <umâ€"0â€"€rn 0 ue 0 â€"acn> â€"Gre c 0 o m mm n M Pmz 4e <a% -(b-()â€().()“()-11-0-0-0.().0-0.(9“_ 0 cun o <mp 0 <meâ€" 0 «e 0 4c Y@un o aue.câ€"ameâ€" In furnishing, many mistakes are made because of lack of experience in gaining the desired effect As soon as the error is pointed out it is readily perceived and the woman wonders why she did not see it before. To obtain, for instance, a harmonious apâ€" pearance in our rooms, we must study lines. The lines of a room follow the rectangular ‘or the squareâ€"it is selâ€" dom that an elliptical or a round room is found in the small home or apartâ€" ment. . The construction lines being rectangular, we should not disturh them and ourselves by placing rugs and furniture at angles and diagonal to the room‘s lines It takes the pracâ€" ticed eye of an experienced decorator to swing a daybed, couch or bed diagonally out into a room and not disturb the response of the room. 2 It is neither correct nor artistic to place an upright piano, a desk or china closet or bookcease across a corner and leave an ugly. triangular and useless space behind it. The piano and the room will look much better if the long lines of the case are allowed to follow the construction lines, and the same is true of bookcases and desks. If the corner space is the desired locaâ€" tion for the desk, then place it against the wall not across the corner, and let the light from the window fall, if possible, over the left shoulder. s It is impossible to tell the quality of tea by the appearance of the leaf. A rough, coarse, unevenly rolled tea may taste much better in the cup than a closely rolled, well tipped tea that LOOKS much finer. The only way to be sure of gett ng tea of reliable qualâ€" ity is to buy a tea like "SALADA," whose goodness and purity are guarâ€" anteed. â€"Advt. «o : Bn oBe aZe aBe oBe oBe aBe oBe se aBe aBe eBe aBe eBe aBe aBe aBe «Be aBe aBe aBe aBe aBe aBe aBe aBe aBe aBe aBe aBe oGe afe aBe oBe aBe Bs aBe 1Be aBe oBe ofe aBa se aSe aBeobe afe afe aZe ofe Rugs are often placed at an angle in front of a fireplace or a davenport or desk; a square is often turned diâ€" agonally in the room; the effect from both is one not only offensive to the eye, but inartistic as well, according to the simplest and best standards of home furnishings. Often a woman places a table fourâ€"square and properâ€" ly but lays â€"across it a square cover, ‘"fancy," turned diagonally! ‘FHis ts just as bad as any other cornerwise arrangement. se s The best arrangement for furniture and rugs is in accordance with the diâ€" rection of the walls, either lengthiwise or across the room. If the room is large enough to accommodate furniâ€" ture out upon the floor, the rule still holds. Chairs and stools may be left about the room at convenient angles and give pleasant variety so placed without disturbing, are often more convenient, and help make the room livable. Likewise, small tables adâ€" vertised as "occasionz.." tables to hold the newest book or magazine, are, of course to be placed conveniently near couches and chairs; their size perâ€" mits them at any angle which makes for convenienc.. . % Everyone knows it‘s a very simple matter, backed by a sufficient bank acâ€" count, to march into a store and say to the clerk, ‘I want this suite of furâ€" niture. Charge it, please," and on the downward journey to the street entrance to acquire as a_sort of affluâ€" ent accompaniment, rich> rugs, â€" and lamps, and silken curtains . . . as well as many other things. So much is possible with the background of a working bank account. But for those whose bank accounts savor of sacrifice and the possibility of a rainy day, there is perpetually beâ€" fore them a stopâ€"lookâ€"andâ€"listen sign which keeps them from propitiating the smiling clerk with a "Charge it please!" Instead, they make many journeys to many stores, they add up a few figures many times, to see if many addings will not make the total come a little differently, and the clerk, if he is a good natured one, politely sets one at ease for having only "looked". It is a matter for conjecture among wise souls as to which method makes for the most happiness. The ability to chargeâ€"anythingâ€"please does not leave much to strive for, does it? There isn‘t even much incentive to care for and cherish an easly acquired possession. It would be possible to charge another one tomorrow! And so I feel that it must not be considâ€" ered an undue hardship if, owing to the just claims ‘of the needy account, a half must do the work of two. _ There are degrees of economy, howâ€" ever. There are some people who would feel that they were practicing the strictest economy by furnishing a dining room for the sum of $250, and it is perfectly true that nothing exâ€" travagant could be purchased for this sum. In fact, the person with the highâ€"topped bank account would say that it simply could not be done. . But let us seeâ€" Having about $250 to spend on her | dining room, a woman set out to hunt‘ the very prettiest dining room _ she could find for this amount. The prices of the good suites of mahogany and | walnut were discouraging to even a| $250 pocketbook, and being a woman | of artistic taste, she saw plentiful posâ€"| sibilities in some of the other kinds.| Particularly was she attracted to a| cottage breakfast room suite pxa.in:te-dl a putty color. â€" Against herâ€" cream ; colored walls she seemed to see it | shine. & t She bought this furniture, and she really felt that she was getting a great deal for her money, since for $197.50 she was able to buy an extension gateleg table, a quaint china closet, in which she intended to keep a set of old fashioned china which had belongâ€" ed to her grandmother, a good sized * cZe ol oS Be oBe aBa aGe a%e oBe afe aBe cBe oBe aBe oBe aBe aBe aBe aBe aBe aBe aBe aBe aBe aBe aBe aBe aBe oGe aBe aBe eBe eBe oBe aBe aBe aBe aBe eBe aBe oe oBe aBeaSe aeaSeaGe aZe aZe o$: ©E* If You Are Short A Hundred $ $ _ PRINCIPLES IN FURNISHING YOTCâ€"Cannur. 3g0066E BV APPEARANCE <me. cemmp ce WHY IS A CHILD ALWAYS HUNGRY> You don‘t need to tell the moth ( a large famly that Childrenther:'egctii large amounts of £00d. She knows it The appetites of children seem, at times, insatiable, for many a twelyeâ€" year old boy eats twice as much as| his father, who has double hig weight.| What is there in the child‘s l‘fe that makes so much food necessary? Ag. a‘ result of many measurements of thei food needs and muscular activity of adults, it is known that there is a very{ close relationship between a person‘s activity and his need for food. 1 e f Food is Fuel | Every time a muscle moves, heat is given off. The greater the activity, the more heat is produced. . As children are normally veryâ€" active, they give off a great deal of heat, and as the heat must be vroduced either from food or from the body substance, they must eat a great deal in order not to lose we ght. A normal healthy ch ld does not know the mean‘ng of food economy. The â€" halfâ€"starved children of V enna were listless and thin because their ~scanty diet was only sufficient to supply the needs of growth and exercise. Fosd is Building Mater al Food provides not: only fuel for muscular activity but building maâ€" terial for growth.© The growing child needs an extra supply of food from wh ch, by the process of digestion, material may be absorbed, and then reâ€"bu‘lt by the bodily machinery into flesh, fat and bone. In add‘t on to the demands for muscular activity and growth, food must keep up the internal vital activiâ€" ties of the body which goes on in the body at rest independent of any exerâ€" tion. This ‘nternal vital activity is greater in children than in adults and greater in boys than in~ girls. In babies a year old it is greatest of the whole range of life. No wonder children are hungry and eat ravenously! Th‘nk of their food demands!‘ They are incessantly acâ€" tve at play or work, and this activiâ€" ty results in the combustion of fuel or food in the body; they need food to supply the material for growth; and finally they have a higher vital activâ€" ity, even when perfectly quiet and asleep, that is, the fires of life butn more ntensely than in adults, more heat is being given off in proportion to their size, and for every unit of heat (a calory) lost there must be cOrreâ€" spond ng fuel furnished in the food. Erying, as usually employed, is cOnâ€" sidered the least gerviceable method in the cooking of food. The fat OT o‘ly material permeates the food and makes it d‘fficult for the digestive Jjuices to penetrate. [Jhe frying Of H%%‘}E even D deep fat, produces f'att_y wcids which 3 Ye a tehdency to itriâ€" tate the stomaâ€"D endalcause â€" lindiges It is generally Wéll known that food fried in deep fat absorbs less of the fat than that which is salted in a fryâ€" ing pan. This may be determined by frying two p‘eces of fish of equal weight by the two methods and â€" then reweighing to determine the amount of fat which has been absorbed. buffet a flower stand, a serving table »nd four Windsor chairs. She spent $15 for the curtaining of her two winâ€" dows, and $35 for her Jute rug. Her window chintz and her rug were preâ€" dominately a gold a§ ue, and she always used orange o.g-f_ ellow flowers in the room, which looked very wonâ€" derful with some blue Japanese china she used all the time. _ _ _ But the story is not finished here for there was another ladyâ€"with anâ€" other degree of economy, and another home. Add to this she was the best friend of the first lady. and you natâ€" urally have a combination which would make ‘her desire a pretty dining room, too. In fact, if fate would only so decree, & dining room exactly like the $250 one would be her dearest wish come true." But it was here that calamity stepped inâ€"for she was just $100 short! e o _ Some time afterward she was glad that her hope of a pretty dining room seemed slim, for when her clever brain began to work, and she found out that the dining room could be forthcoming after all, she felt that she would always appreciate that dining room the more, because she had once had doubts of its accon hment. Her clever thought was this: That she should be able to get exactly the same furniture that her endâ€" had. Her clever thought w she should be able to._% same furniture that her only. not having so mu would not get so many | that would be simple â€" that she had th'oug‘h-t-’i'}?f thinking of it :h‘ad‘abg thing â€" And happily shi It is surprising how much furni you can do w~it§ou€g~:‘?’. _i_ljmture prising ‘how nice that. ie is Surâ€" looked with the extension p oo table four Windsor chaits, _ gateleg fet. _ Por is this not 20ti@lly e bufâ€" furniture for a dining 10 t‘nough Of course. it is; andâ€" t " all? be looked upon in the BJ “ â€"especially if you can‘t @ffordâ€" xury the time.. Since the tab it at and the buffet cost $109.5 8 ihalrs* and more economical Aady c ff?ii' spend $35 for a rug and ';‘i;f} still windows. ~10 @rtor her And then there was t in the future; the p1>e*a§§ being able to buy SOM china closet, the serv‘in»% flower stand! & Ol «+. +++., AVYOID FRYING CcolDs : CHAPPED money. she es. Surely ugh, now it. The the clever t to work. h furniture 8 it is surâ€" hing. room n gateleg y lurking ospect of ime, â€" the e and the URNS There are certain precautions that one should take if they want to ge}t{ the‘r money‘s worth out of â€" sil stockings. CARE OF SILK STOCKINGS No stocking should be worn more than once without a vigit to the launâ€" dry, or at least the wash basin, where they can be lightly rinsed out and cleansed of perspiration, even though they may have been ever so lightly affected by it. There are acids in persp‘ration which are very injurious to the silk fibres and threads. If care is not taken of hose worn by those who perspire freely, they will rot last as long as if given reasonable care. It is well to rinse them out as soon as it is convenient after wearing and use only pure soap or an equally pure substitute. & Strong sunlight and hot radiators are not the best means or drying silk hosiery. They should be washed in warm, not hot water, and dried in a shady place by natural means. There is just as much danger of tearing a silk stocking when drawing it on as any other way. One should | be careful not to wear rings so they | will catch in the slender threads, and | a stock‘ng should be rolled down to the ankle, then drawn gently over the foot and just as gently unrolled as it : is drawn up. The suspenders should then be fastened to the garter top, and not in the less protected part of the top where it is likely to tear with the least strain. Most persons feel dull, sleepy and generally uncomfortable in crowded, ill ventilated rooms. It was believed unt‘l comparatively recently that this ill feeling was due to some change in the chemical makeâ€"up of the air. Sc‘entists say that they know now that the physical properties of the airâ€"its temperature, humidity and movementâ€"are of most importance. WARMTH AND f VENTILATION Dopeaaet on m n e CR2 Ne A220 AAMELLNO L c 10 PUICLALLCE. il One of the biggest problems in the ’l' ventilation of houses, schools and: i other buildings is the avoidance of | overheating, which in reality is more ] injurious than moderate coolness of & a room, except in the case of the ! very young, the very old, or invalids. | Man has a number of mechanisms in‘ j his body which regulate his temperaâ€" | ture. [ In addition, he successfully proâ€" vides against too much loss of body heat by warm clothes and by artiâ€" ficially heating the air in . h‘is living apartments. The problem of ventilaâ€" tion is to surround the body with air of sufficient warm, humidity and moâ€" tion to sustain the body of its normal temperature without calling on the automatic dAevices ._(‘i“u{"fea?}réj’v to inâ€" crease or decreage: heat. s a _ _ s s . . i . about ventilation, practical science concludes that there is nothing better or healthier than keeping the winâ€" dows open, which permits of the best range of variability. Having travelled 3,000 miles to Engâ€" land, a New York woman left that country after a sojourn of a few minâ€" utes. No sooner was her ship docked at Southampton than she rushed ashore, hailed a taxi, sped to another part of the docks, and caught a steamsh‘p for Cape Town a few minâ€" utes before its departure on a 6,000â€" m‘le trip. s s Whay 11 fcreases _‘ _ ‘*~{m _ /{\5k in "anad"?. ; ation, practical science 1| _ . _ at there is nothing better i y 2 than keeping the winâ€" i & (The Final Test of Quality-uâ€"u_-'-«? 1 and Purity Isâ€"â€"â€" 1 Until You TIry § GREEN TEA you have not tasted the best. Fresh, fragrant and pure. Try it. "SALAD Blue Ribbon Box Cakes THEY‘RE SO RICHâ€"THEY JUST MELT IN YOUR MOUTH THERE ARE SOQ MANY VARIETIES: ~. Ask the Drivers on Ourâ€"Wagons for T piorpporpnminAide mt B 1 Lt C6b c t cLe is absolutely proven when cut into genâ€" erous slices for regular meals, or served as a pleasant surprise in the children‘s lunch basket. GOLD, FRUIT, â€"GENOA,._ RAISLh, ~MILVER, CHERRY,SULITANâ€"®, CHOCOLXTE The Daintiness, Tastiness and Wholesomeness of USF * Main St. Store, phone 108w Depot St. Shop, phone 108j GRIMSBY CAKES PASTRY THREE K457