Told In Twilight » (Continued from Page 3.) . Mrs, Edward Stanley, Clinton, N Y., is'the guest of Mrs. R. D, Saath erland, West street. ¥ Miss Amy McGill came from Mont- real on Saturday io spend ten days with Col. and Mes. Sydenham Me- Gill, Gore street. Mrs. W. B. Skinner and her dau- ghiter, Nancy, will go to OriMia to visit relatives. : Mr. and Mrs. Alien M. Jones and their children returnéd to Ottawa on Monday after summering on Wolfe Island. Mes, Alex. Rosamond and her dau- ghter, Miss Nora, the guests of Mrs. Fredéric Brownfield, Wellington street, returned to Almonte on Tues day. "o_o » Professor and Mrs. Lothrop, Un- fon street, have returned to 'town from Boston, Mass. Misses Hentig, Princess street, ar» rived from their summer coftage at Loughbore Lake on Monday. Misses Margot and Isobel Fraser, Union street, are in. Pembroke visit: ing Miss Grace Morris. Mrs. R. W. Barker is at the Y.M. C.A., Johnson street, before' return- ing to Toronto. ' Professor and Mrs. J. K. Robert- son, Albert street South, are ex- pected home from Perth next Satur- day. W. B. 'Skinner, Montreal, at Cat- araqui Lodge with Miss Nan Skinner, was in town for a couple of days-this week, . . » Major and Mrs. W. H. Craig, and Mr. and Mrs. A. P. Christmas sum- mering, with their families, on Gar- den Island have returned. Mrs. Charles McDunnough, Toron- to, has returned from Thousand Is- land Park where she spent a week with Mrs. Samuel Birch. Mrs. A. W. Winnett and Master Bert went to Simeoce Island to-day to spend a couple of days with Mrs. George Mahood. Miss Kathleen Moore, Chicago, is the guest of Miss Daly, Albert street. Miss Mair is spending a week with AA A « " "Oh, You Peach, You For ecaling---and eating, and eat- ing, Peaches were especially made. The kind grown in the Niagara Peninsula by the Vineland Growers Co-Operative, Ltd, are just that kind. See your grocer fo-day. The purple stamp is your protection. Exceptional Millinery Values at : ii MIS, HAMILTON'S. . Phons 1267. 370 PRINCESS ST. Store closes 5 p.m. dur- ing July and August. Her Dang ¥ in Youthful Beauty A well-known society matron whose Youthful beauty is so well preserved that she is regarded as her dauyghfer's rival in this respect--though she does not pose as such--attributes her Fisk ish complexion chiefly to two things e SAYS: "IT am convinced that many eosme: tics, by overloading the skin and pores, tend: to age the complexion. Mercol- ized wax Nas just the opposite effect, It keeps the-pores clean, permitiin them to breathe, and removes dead Jarticlegot cuticle which are constant. appearing and which ve the com xion _that faded 3 Whenever my sioin beging to get the least b't off- color, muddy or tanned, I go to my druggist's for an ounce of mercolized wax: I. apply this nightly. 'Hke cold cream, for a we or so washing it off mornings. ig is what complexton so fresh, walte and velvely, even during the trying days of sum. m er. "The absence of wrinkles an@ fabbi~ ness 1 owe to the uve of a simple facé ' bath prepared by 4 olving one ounce of powdered saxolfte in a half pint witch 'hasel. This keeps the skin 'tight' and firme" --Soctal Register, % . ig | McKay, Syé ~ . James Richmond at her cottage down the river ~ + & =» Mrs. Johg McKay. and Miss Doris PD ia street, returned on Tuesday after spending the past few weeks 'at the A. C, A. Sugar.le-! land, Miss Mabel Richgrdson, "Alwing- ton," is back from Pembroke where she was the guest of Miss Grace Morris : Mrs. D..J. Reid and Mrs. Howard | Taylor, Gananeque, spent Tuesday in ow . a 1 Miss Helen McKay, Sydenhan street, is visitgfe in Montreal. t Miss Ros d Corbett left on Mon- day for 1} isburg to visit. Mrs Warren Henderson for a eouple. of weeks, Mrs. W. Balfour Mudie and Miss Agnes Johnston, Gananoque, were guests in town this week. Mrs. Douglas and Mrs. Thompson, Gananoque, spent Tuesday in town. Mr. and Mrs. 'Frederick Suther- land 'ahd their children, .Rochester, N.Y.: are visiting Miss E. Sutherland, Macdonald's Cove, Mrs. J. 8S. R. McCann, Wellington Street, left~on Tuesday for Niagara 'on-the-Lake to visit her daughter, | Mrs. Austin Gillies | Miss Elsie Saunders, visiting her | mother, Mes. Saunders, Alice street, | left yesterday for Bon Echo tc spend a couple of weeks before returning to Ottawa, Mr. and Mrs. W. Thompson, Ot- tawa, have returned home after vi- siting Mrs. Thompson, Clergy street A Professor Evertt Lothrop, Chicago, spent a few days this week, with Dr. | and Mrs. Lothrop, Union street west: Mrs. Heustis, Philadelphia, and Miss Rose Hopkins retarned to Wa- tertown on Tuesday, after visiting Dr. and Mrs. R. J. Gardiner, Bago: street. rps oo Lieut. Hugh Farthing spent the week-end in Muskoka with his par- ents the Bishop of Montreal and Mrs. Farthing. . Mr. and Mrs. T. McKean Robert- son, Unien street, have returned af- ter spending. the past few weeks at Wolfe Island. Mrs. Arthur Tett, Newboro, is vi- siting Mrs. R. J. Gardiner, Bagot street. ~~ v mom A LATE SUMMER SUGGESTION Chintz a» a. Fabric For Dresses Meeting With Much Favor. a fabric for home decoration, and most of us are well acquainted with the beauties of this dainty fabric. y a clever woman would alli i A Be. Foe ieliity scraps left after the skirt is cut out and made collars and culfs for a last year's shirt waist can be devised. This will give the blouse a new air and will make it correspond with the chintz skirt. If you have a last year's straw hat that looks quite hopelessly old cov- er the brim with the same chintz and edge (it with "ball furniture fringe, which ds 5 cents a yard. The result will be as smart an outfit as gould be desired for a sum hich will not ex- ceed $1.50, ; : NEW AND NATTY BEL Black and White Has Invaded 'main of Beltdom. | WIDER DISTINCTION IN GIOVES GARDENING OUTFIT I AMONG WELL-DRESSED WOMEN | More Atténtion Is Paid Than Former Summer Girl Wears Becom, | ing Clothes When She Works. Many, New and Striking Effects Predivted, sn | + Whila the well dressed woman has} 80 'always paid special attention to the {fit and the color of her gloves, she { has been content until quite recently {to Telegdte these esgential accessor- [les to two classes--day gloves and { evenirg gloves, long and short, wx | Widér distinction is made néwadays. #| Gloves are not merely long or short, | white, brawn or black. There is | the reception glove, the glove for the | dance and 'the tailleur glove, and the | effect of the coftumé is marred a bit {In the gloves worn with it have. not | been carefully chosen. 4 Jt is predicted that within the next few months as many new and strik- ing effects in gloves will be introdue- ed as have béen noticed in late years in connection with modish footwear. Already many of the exclusive shops in this city are showing new désigns | that ave Very attractive and ofien- times in marked 'confrast to the sim- ple effects that have prevailed here- E J } tofore. 'This is particularly toe of - ~The Silk gloves, which have come to ]S recognized as the smartest, most --tousible hand covering for the spring {4nd summer months. Opinion On Silk Gloves Some women, whose taste in dress is unimpeachable, even go further { and declare that the s#k glove should {always be worn with the afternoon | or evening frdék and the kid glove be reserved for the tallieur. What- | éver may be the general opinion on | this subject, the adaptability of the | silk glove for warm weather is uni- | Versally admitted. | The present styles in dress, quaint picturesque, and reminiscent of the | Victorian medes, have had cofisider- {able to do with the increasing vogue { for the smart glove, more particular- v {ly in silk, says The Indianapolis = { News. And as the season advances GINGHAM GOWN AND CAP. [gloves as distinctive as the gowns | The summer girl is following the ex- | they are destined to accompany will ample of her English sister and goes in be much-in evidence, and the woman ly to Article for Various Occasions £ Xie for gardening. Not "any old thing" will 'do for this business. Milady must be clothed iu natty, becoming and up to the minute garments. So gingham {gowns and caps are shown in the shops which just meet her require ments. And one outfit is shown here | built of striped gingham, Now we are quite used t6 chints as | } Don't Tell All You Know. | The little daughter ,of the hostess | looked long and inquiringly at the guest | who she had been told was a very | learned man and a professor. During | @ Jull in the conversation she spoke up, t do you do in college, please. { | am a professor, my dear," was the i » "IL impart my knowledge to th. " i "Then ar you keep on that way." she { sald soberly, "pretty soon you wou't | know anything yourself, win you?' 1 Ladies' Home Journal, Cooling Water Without Ice. To cool water without using ice get a slender glass test tube from any | drug store. Half fill it with nitrate of | ayumonia salts, All up with water, cork | tightly. Shake till the salt is dissoly- | @d. Be careful to wipe the outside of the tube dry in order that all traces of nitrate may be removed. Plage tube ivto a' glyss of water and agi -| tate as you wou'd with a spoon. Th. is rapidly chilled. The nitrate ammonia salts can be bought at any 8 or He Lived as a Woman, John, alias Elizabeth Russell, died at Streatham in April, 1772, at the age of 104. Early in life Russell associated himself with the gypsies and went 'suddenly, Psd rg ----. "to the & 'London Spectator. i ---------- Vice of Earth : I el Et the natives are much addicted. to ge 'ophagy, or earth eating. The injurious Of edrth eating is formed almos quiet a squalling | give of clay pulled from the wall neighborhood". 1 who mades any pretention to good | dressing can no more chobse her gloves in a haphazard fashion in this age than she can so select her neck- wear or her shoes and slippers. *" Delightful Effect. | A trio of mew gloves includes a reception glove in white silk--with a series of tucks stitched in black, extending up 'the entire arm. The effect is delightful, carrying out, as it does, the black and white stripe idea now so popular. The pointing well 'with the daintiest afternoon cos- tume. i Another novelty which promises to be as popular as the quaint ruffled is in black not too heavy to_aceord costumes for which it was designed is a silk. glove of white, the novel | feature being the plaited frill run: ning up the arm from the wrist to) the glove top. This frill "Temes in} black or in All white, -. This makes] an extéllent airy complement to the lingerie dress or 'the popular taffeta the fad for black and white which has seized the fashion makers Nev- er has a season promised such devo- tion to a style or color as this sea- soh offers in black and white. This silk glove is.designed for the travel- ling gown. thé shopping costume or the 'taillenr, : It is of white with black wrist frill and fine blask point- ing, \ 4 SARA The Queen Elizabeth. The Queen Elizabeth, as it is termed, also comes in all 'white, in putty. sand and the fashionable neu- tral tints. It already has attained a pronounced vogue among up-to-date women. There are many new idéas shown in the stitching and pointing on silk gloves. An example is the combina- tion of black and white stitching, giving a mottled effect. This appears on both long and short silk. gloves] - and is a detail worth noting. Hints For Busy Housekeepers. A dessert to be sucgessful must be attractive to the eye, Beans and peas aré too much alike to be used ut the same meal. Pearl tapioca makes a delicate and excelient thickening for soups. Don't use sooty pans and kettles in cdoking--thgy take longer to heat. Apple sance should always be eat- en to counterbalance sausage : and pork. Prunes hidden n a meringe, the meringe browned" in the oven, make a delicious dessert. After scrubbing thoroughly, wake a few slits in the skins of potatoes that are to be baked. Comymon soap, rubbed on the 'hinges of a creaking door, will do away with the trouble. Toilet Hints. Rosewater, eight ounces, B06 ge. ture of benzoin, two drams Make one of the best skin tonics ang yhit- éners, Z 4 For a severe headache a towel wrung out of hot water and applied to the back of the neck will often give instant relief. Of the:"1,345 blind females ten years of age and over, as reported at the last census, 167, or 12.4 per cent. were re. urned * musicians or teach- ers 6 music; 127, or 9.4 per cent. as Tarmers; 192, or 9.4 per cent, as knitters; 86, or 6.4 per cent. as fancy workers, and 56, or 4.2 per Wh. £ The third glove is an example of" a. ber. A hard tea to forget. WINDSOR SPENDS NIGHT ON HOUSE-TOPS WINDSOR, N. S., Aug. 95,--A gigan- tic figure 7° was seen all Jast night in the sky between here and Hantsport. Later it turned slowly into a question mark. All Hants County is on teail of that 7th point. Public mass meeting |' called for this afternoon at fair grounds. PEPPERMINT AND CINNAMON FLAVOURS ., Made ~dmeCanade 1--Cro with flavor 4--Srefling purity 3-Viul bidy--NO GRIT 5--From a daylight factory le-proof ' 6--Uutouched by hands A : @ Weax2 "A man is more apt to love a wo-] When an 01d man courts a young tent. as professors, school principles and teachers. . 4 ~~ man in spife of her faults than be- cause of her virtues. ins woman he soon realizes that all the world loves to laugh at a lover. meng fr For the gf EA 5 CENTS toilet and bath-- laundering better-than or keeping everything in the nursery, -ordinary gar- 1 and clean-- V ¥ ; . 99u% PURE of A - a. rs . a, Gold Soap, P. 4% G.-- The White Noshihe kak By ho Sop and Aros 7] EY RT st LTS gs STs RL Es IS 7 re aw