^o 
LAND & WATER 
(Jctober- 25, 1917 
With YOUR Cheque or Treasury Note 
WE 
Can save a Child's Life! 
A Committee in Holland, under 
the Presidency of H.S.H. Princess 
A.deLigne, receives from Belgium 
STARVED, CONSUniPTIVE. 
RICKETY, BROKEN CHILDREN 
Feeds, Houses, and Clothes them. 
Theyare then returned toBelgium, 
for funds do not permit more, 
600 CASES 
ARE DEALT WITH MONTHLY 
Donations should be sent to the Hon. 
Treasurer, " Working Men's Belgian Fund," 32 
Grosvenor Place, London, S.W.I (Registered 
War Charities Act, 1916), earmarked for the 
" Belgian Children's Fund." 
FOR INDIGESTION 
A FAMOUS PHYSICIAN'S REMEDY 
As a remedy for Indigestion and Acidity Messrs. Savory 
& Moore strongly recommend Dr. Jenner's Absorbent 
Lozenges, which they make from Dr. Jenner's original 
formula. The Lozenges afe pleasant to take, quite 
harmless, and give speedy and permanent relief even 
in the most stubborn cases. 
TESTIMONY : 
■' With great pleasure I add my testinmiiy t> that of others who have taken Dr. 
Jeoner's Absorbent Lozenges and (ierived great benefit from their use. My 
powers ''f digestion seem really strengthened, and the distressing FLATULENCE 
froiu v^hlch I suffered is greatly relieved." 
" Mis* B tried the Absorbent Lozenges and found they gave relict in an attack 
nf ACIDITY OF THE STOMACH wheti the- usual indigcsli'Mi irt-atinent had 
tailed. Further suppUes obtained locally led gradually to a complete cure," 
" ] found Dr. Jenner*s Absorbent Lozenges wonderfully beneficial in preventing 
a SINKING FAINT FEF.LING which I thick is described as HUNGER PAIN. 
I have suffered much from this, but since taking the lozenges have felt quite a 
di0erent person." 
* 1 suficred very much from HEARTBURN and ACIDITY, and your remedy 
has been wonderful in relieving this, and consequently curing the almost in- 
ce^aut SLFEPLHSSNESS I suffered from." 
Boxes 1/3, 3/-, cmd 5/-, of ad Chemists. 
A FREE SAMPLE 
of the lozenges will be sent on application. Mention L.'vnd 
AND Water, and address, Saxors' & Moore, Ltd., Chemi.st!i to 
The King, 143a New Bond Street, London, W.i 
DR. JENNER'S 
ABSORBENT LOZENGES 
Terms of Subscription to " LAND «S WATER." 
At HOME— Twelve Months, £1 15 CANADA— Twelve Months, £1 15 
ELSEWHERE ABROAD— Twelve Months, £1 19 6 
The abci't tales itclwie all Sfedal \ti'nbfrs ami Posta^t. 
*'L\ND &. WATER," Old Serjeant** Ino. 5 Chancery Lane. W.C.2 
Telepbone ; Holbom zSat Telegraphic Address : " Agenclorum, Fleel, London." 
DOMESTIC 
ECONOMY. 
Names and addresses of slwps, where the articles mentioned 
can be obtained, will be forwarded on receipt of a postcard 
addressed to Passe-Pariotct, Land & Water, 5, Chancery 
Lane, W.C. 2. Any other information will be given on request- 
Coats for 
Chilly Weather 
Just at the monu nt a clever shop is 
laying special stress on their sports 
coats for the cold weather, and doing so 
with ample reason. For anything so nice as these particular 
coats has rarely been seen. Made of Scotch wool, they have a 
delightful warm fleecy surface, the fleece being sometimes 
inside sometimes out, but always adding to the warmth-giving 
properties of the coat a hundredfold. Coats of this kind have 
gone up so immensely in price that it is good to hear the shop 
in question are selling them at 59s. 6d. At this they come 
very near to the bargain category, if, indeed, they arc not in 
it altogether. The a\ailable colourings are lovely, a particu- 
larly becoming shade of oatmeal being amongst them. 
For people really feeling cold weather, a coat such as this 
is a possession par excellence. It gives warmth in a way 
few other garments do, and is becoming into the bargain, a 
point not always assured with all utilitarian garments. 
Specially designed for the chUly mortal, too — though others 
will undoubtedly take them to their hearts also — are some 
jumpers in velour cloth, some with check collars, and pretty 
conceits of that kind, others more or less plain. They slip 
over the head, and are without doubt the most fascinating 
notions seen for many a long da}^ and a refreshingly opportune 
suggestion for winter. Blouses and jumpers of thick materials, 
UHless well interpreted, are apt to be dowdy affairs. Fhese, 
however, are just the opposite. 
The Best Way 
of Cooking 
Xow that coal has grown such an un- 
certain quantity everybody's attention, 
perforce, is turned to other means of 
cooking. Gas is one of the available and bist mediums, and 
anybody with a gas cooker should certainly not only make 
the acquaintance of the new economy giilling dish, but have 
it for their own. 
This is the cleanest, most efficacious and easiest way of 
cooking ever mooted. It is of English fireproof earthenware, 
and a nice looking dish it is, as fireproof dishes nearly always 
are. The results, however, are as good as its looks. This 
dish takes the place of the ordinary tin griller — always part 
of the equipment of a gas stove. It is put underneath the 
grid in just the same way, and once the contents are done can 
be brought absolutely straight from the stove to table. 
This is the method of cassercle cooking the French always 
advocate, and with abundant uason as_ their delicious dishes 
show. With this dish washing-up is saved, cooking pot 
and dish for the table being in one, and it is economical into 
the bargain, nothing being wasted, as it so often is in the pro- 
cess of moving the food from one dish to another. 
The pi ice is all in its favour, being the moderate one of 
2s. gd., an extra shilling being needed with country orders on 
accoimt of the extia packing and pc stiige. 
This winter will see women busier than 
The Latest Frock . g^g^ ^t all kinds of war activities, the 
Overalls ^^j^ weather months always enabling an 
added outburst of energy in this way. For women workers of 
varied descriptions — canteen workers, munition workers, and 
for those doing equally useful things in the household or an 
office, some frock overalls have specially been designed. And 
capital in truth they are, the precise type of thing nearly every 
woman now finds indispensable. 
These frock o%eralls arc really like a coat frock, so com- 
pletely do the}? cover up their wearer. Clad in one of them, 
a \\ oman can do anything without the least concern over her 
clothes. It is really a practical working kit, built upon 
attractive lines, but with its main watchword utility. 
They are made in soft finished zephyr cloth- — a delightful 
fabric for the purpose. .\ feature of importance with these 
particular frock overalls is their most generou'^ width. They 
are tliree yards round the hem. and any look of skimpiness is 
removed from the rest of the overall by the adrc it arrangement 
of box-pleats. There arc two each side of the Iront and three 
at the back. These are not stitched down in rigid lines, but 
go free, giving with every movement of the wearer and being 
doubly successful in consequence. 
Two big pockets and a loose belt complete the matter, the 
overall being made in such a way that it can either button 
{Continued "i( //"ye Z2) 
