WS AND VIEWS FOR Litfe's Social Side $00ntrn 0 tpn Editor of Women's Page, Telephone 1724; Private phone 857w. - . A On Friday afternoon Mrs. Archi- bald Young, Union street, entertain- ed at the tea hour in honor of Mrs. Harold Hackett, India, Mrs, Hackett received with the hostess in the cosy firelight rooms gay with lovely flowers. In the tea-room under a shaded light the tea table with its centre of great soft 'yellow chrysan- themums was charmingly arranged, here Mrs. T. W. Savary made the tea end Miss Cartwright poured coffee, assisted by Mrs. Kenneth McMahon, Chicago, Miss Janet Porteous, Miss Ruth Martin, Miss Freda Burne, Miss Mollie Saunders, and Miss Janet, Richmond. Mrs, Guy Semsby assist- ed the hostess in the draw#fg room. The guests included Mrs. R. Vashon Rogers, Miss A. M, Machar, Miss Moore, Miss Dupuy, Miss Muckleston, Mrs. Frank Dobbs, Mrs, W. F. Fitz. gerald, Mre. J. O. Crisp, Mrs, W. Jackson, Mrs. D, Newlands, Miss F. Hudon, Miss Betts, Miss Mollie Cart- wright, Miss Constance Cooke, Mrs. . Callander, Miss Lewis, Miss Win- nifred Hague, Miss Wilson and Miss Pa Wilson, Miss Crisp and Miss 8. Crisp, Miss Richmond and Miss Mollie Richmond and Miss Millie Ferris, On Friday afternoon Mrs. J. Pitz- gerald Preston received for the first time since her marriage at her pretty ®partment in the Winston, Shaded Hghts and quantities of lovely chrys- f+ @fthemums, pale pink and soft gold © Were in the drawingroom, where Mrs. Preston, wearing her lovely wedding 89Wn of white satin cascaded with Ghantilly lace, with a corsage bou- quet of deep pink roses, received the €rowds of visitors, who had come to greet this girlish young matron. Mrs. T. D. R. Hemming, wearing a hand- Don't Throw Your Old Carpets Away They make new reversible "Velvetex" Rugs Send for Velvetex Folder R. CANADA RUG COMPANY, London, Ontario. MARTEL'S FKMALE PILLS i FOK WOMEN'3 AILMENTS i: 25 years Standard for Delayed and Paintul Menstruation." Sealed Tin Ackage only, all Druggists or direct Price $2.00. Knickerbocker medy Co., 71 E. Front S8t.,, To. nto, Canada. ; Wr Elethphd bl rR Gouraud's CER SO0me gown of black canton crepe and black hat, received with her daugh- ter. In the tea room at the pretty tea table with its lovely silver ger- vices and more of the lovely flowers of Japan in silver vases on the centre of Venetian lace, Mrs. W. H. P. EI- kins and Mrs. P. G. C. Campbell Poured tea -and coffee, with the bridesmaids at the pretty September wedding, wearing their frocks of pink or mauve lace, - Miss Helen Strange, Marion Ogilvie and ger, as assistants. * Mrs. R. H. Bel Methodist e, received for the first 'ime in Kingston on Friday afternoon and evening, when rooms were filled continuously the members of the congregation by others who took this opporttuniy of | bidding Rev, R. H. Bell and Bell welcome to Kingston. reception room where ceived, exquisite TOSe8 and fer were in abundanee and Miss Helen | 1 Kane was with Mrs. Bell while in "he jaune drawing room where in the after- noon Mrs. R. G. Andrews M. Campbell assisted red carnations were the flowers chosen. At the tea table with i's silver basket of bronze chrysanthe- mums and handsome tea and coffeo eéquipage, Miss Daisy Chown, poured tea and | Inman, coffee with Mrs, M. S. Richmond, Miss Grace Hiscock, Miss Ruth and | Dyes are guaranteed charming | : ee satih and | face, streak, or run. Miss | Miss Doris Fol- | streot, was the hostess of 1, Sydenham street > and Mrs. Ww. | is the guest of Mrs, A, C. the hogtess, | Aberdeen avenue, Mrs. J. G. Ettinger and |bave been with Mr, Albert street, returned 'o | = VED HER BL SHRI AND A Cou "Diamond Dyes" Package Tells How to Dye any Garment or Drapery, -- Any woman can diamond-dye or tint her worn, shabby dresses. skirts, waists, coats, Stockings, sweaters, coverings, thing, even if she has never | fore. Just buy | 00 other kind-- ang follow the simple | directions in Package. Then perfect | home dyeing is sure because Diamond not to spot, Tell your drug- gist whether the material you wish to dye is wool or silk, or whether it is linen, cotton or mixed goods. dyed b | bridge on Friday afternoon, * * * Mrs. H. J. Dawyon, Barrietield, is the | entertaining at bridge this afternoon. * - Miss Muriel Dunn, Ottawa, who is town for the medical dance, is the St of Miss Mae Millan, Earl street, Mrs. Kenneth McMahon, Chicago, McMahon, | Ford 8. Haines, Toronto, is at the | "Chateau Belvidére.". - . - Mr. and Mrs. Fred Inman, and Mrs. W. pF, their home in Dundas on Thursday. R. I. Jones, 'Montreal, is at the Miss Ka'hleen Lyons, and Miss Mary | "Chateau Belvidere." Andrews as assistants. In the even~ ing the rooms were again filled. Rev. R. H. Bell received with {and the men of the congregation came out in numbers their pastor and his wife. Mrs. J. G. Etlinger and Mrs. E. P. Jenkins poured coffee with Miss and Mjss Jean Wilson, Miss Helen to welcome | nue, Margaret | for Niagara Falls, town next week, the guest of Mrs. | Judge and Mrs. Hopkins, Cayuga, are with Dr. and Mrs. Bruce Hopkins, | Mrs. Bell (West street. Mrs, Eric Phillips, University ave- left for Oshawa today. * * 3 Mrs. Twidale, woman alderman Chown, Miss Dora Amey waiting on Hugh C. Nickle, Earl street. the guests. . Queen's Medica] dance Hall on Friday was indeed a lovely * LJ in Grant | pep Dr. H. B. Kennar, Stratford, was | town for Queen's medical din-| in The Countess d' Audifferent, Otta ball. Shaded lights and palms were wa, is at the Chateau Belvidere, » on the platform where Jardine's or- chestra from Toronto played delight- fully, Queen's colors wene every- where in evidence; the light which made a realistic moon for the moon- light dances being veiled in the red, blue and yellow. Mrs. Bruce Taylor in black and irridescent trimming, Mrs, W. T. Connell, wearing mid- night blue net embroidered in silver, and Mrs. . E. Mundell, gowned in black with. oriental embroidery, re- ceived the many guests, Supper was served in the Reading Room, where lovely 'mums were on every table. . * - Mrs. Charles Kirkpatrick, Victoria street, entertained at the tea hour on Friday, when her pretty rooms bright with soft lights, flowers and ferns made a most attractive setting for ber guests smart frocks. At the tea table with its centre of shaggy chrys- anthemums Miss Imlach made the tea and Mrs, W. B. Carey cut the ices, assisted by Mrs. A. N. Lyster and Miss Mildred Jones. . . » * Mrs, W. H. Anderson, Montreal, who has been in Clayton for several weeks Is again with her sister, Mrs. R. Easton Burns, Frontenac street. Mrs, Anderson and Miss Freda Burns leave on Dec. 8th for California to spend the winter with Mrs, Roth- well, * * Mrs. Bruce Taylor asked a few people to supper at the 'Principal's Residence on Thursday evening after Baron Korff's lecture at Convocation Hall, to meet the lecturer who so de lighted his large audience, . » - Mrs. Willlam J. Sowardas, ¢; Frontenac street, will receive for the {first time since her marriage on Wednesday, Nov, 30th, from 4 to 6 p.m. Mrs, Horace Lawson, Johnson' MAN'S Filled Pocket Watch 1s tain merit, in which you It a watch is to be delicately adjusted very low-priced Watches, Practical time keeper, an. watch well sulted to 4 - 100, Princess Street « THE MINIMUM PRICE FOR DEPENDABILITY IN A To pay less than Eighteen Dollars for a Man's Gola- to possess,a timepiece of uncer- would take but doubtful pride. mechanism must be a craftsmanship not found" among the "This moderate priced Watch we are selling is a sturdy, tity the. most exacting taste. Kinnear & d'Esterre JEWELERS WATCH dependable time keeper, its product of good' ornament of real beauty, a: - - « ' KINGSTON x Mrs. J. 8. Stewart, organizing sec- retary of the I. 0, D. E., for the dom- | inion, will be in town next week, the guest of Miss W. Gordon, University avenue, Douglas Elliott, Belleville, is the guest of Mrs. A. H. Fair, West street. D. E. Henry, a Canadian artist, is at the Chateau Belviderg, otanLpjx8--17 . Commissioner and Mrs. Calvin Lawrence, Ottawa, will spend "th: week-end with Mr, and Mrs, H W. Elliott, University avenue. Mrs. E. F. Hill, Regina, is the gues: of her sister, Mrs. E. C. J. midlin, Royal Military College. Mrs. W, 8S. Herrington, Napanee, spent Wednesday in Keéngston. Miss Pryllis Coates is visiting her cousin, Miss Dorothy Smith, Nap- ee. ay * oy Mrs. Botterell, Kingston, is visit- ing her brother, C. P. Allen, Adolph- ustown. Mrs. Staples, Ingersoll, is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Edgar Kelly, Al- fred street. Mrs. Harold Harvey, who has been ih London with her husband, will re- turn to town next week, and will occupy her home on Alfred street for the winter, The 'ladies /4¢ Sydenham street church will hold their annual tea and sale Thursday, December 1st, from 3 to 6, tess) DATE MACCAROONS 3 The whites of two eggs, '1 cup granulated sugar, a teaspoonful of vanilla, 1-2 1h of dates, 1-4 1b, al- monds. Beat the white of eggs stiff add sugar and flavoring, dates and almonds, mix thoroughly, Drop in teaspoonful on well greased paper on a flat pan. Cook in a slow oven, ~ CORNS Lift Off with Fingers hurt a bit! Drop a little on an Ashige corn, fin- stantly that corn , then Dorey Jou Nit 1 Tent of ni fing- Your druggist sells a tiny bottl of "Freezone" for a few cen a su . hard corn. s between t| toes, without soreness or Doesn't "Freezone' draperies, hangings, every-| "Diamond Dyes' -- | a small | . | Miss Nina Embury, Belleville "who | Mrs | Va8 In town for the medica] dance | Ye the in Grant Hal] last night, is the guest po Were ve | Pf Miss Elsie Davidson, Earl street. who Ont., will be in | THE DAILY BRITISH W HIG. i} F | Whether they need it or not. Ing money one has made through tions on making money. Each art | Whig an idea that may bas turned i ! Every summer or winter re- sort. has its embroidery brig- ade, You will see lined up on every piazza the inevitable ar- | ray of fancy work enthustasts | plying their industrious needl- es to the accompaniment of the sad sea waves or the murmur of the pines in the forest. A bright New York woman who { loves to travel interpreted this favorite occupation of summer and winter resort frequenters into terms of a business oppor- tunity for herself. She was not an expert at the work herself "but she had a fair knowledge of the practical side of 'it. What made her so successful, however, was the fact that she had business ability and was sociable and always pleasant, Her work has been carried on entirely at summer and win- ter resorts and is really quite simple. Before starting on a trip, she buys from a wholesale firm in New York City several dozen medium-sized table doilies (white), stamped in the very latest simple and pretty de- signs, and also orders mercer- ized cotton by the box to work with. These doilies are all to | be worked in white and: she does a small portion of each one to show the kind of stitch employed, and: then the cus- | tomer finishes the work her- | self by following the sample closely. The cost to her of one doily and cotton to work with is ab- out thirty cents, and she sells one started doily with cotton to finish for seventy-five cents to one dollar, which are resort- | HOW TO MAKE MONEY. IW women are averse to makiy one's own initiat Zach day there will appear on this pa lcle f No. 35--A Bgpisiness Opportunity, pin money. ere is special It doesn't matter Pleasure in spend- Vé and resources. series of suggés- men readers of The into a moneymaker. prices only. She always choos- es resorts, however, where ma- terials for fancy work eannot be bought, so as to have a monopoly on the business, The first thing she does when she arrives at a resort it to go to the best hotel and engage a room for herself, She makes herself well acquainted with the proprietor and all the lad- fes In the house before she starts at her work. She then leaves her business cards at the office and obtains permission to exhibit her goods in the pub- lic parlor to the ladies at an hour suitable to them. It is surprising the number. of elderly women who like to work simple pieces, often with a view to holidaying gifts for friends. Business would, of course, be better by returning to the same resorts each year, but this particular woman is so fond of travelling that she pre- fers to take in new places. Last winter she toured California, and had both a profitable and pleasant vacation, while the winter before, she took in. the Southern resorts, For a show piece, she carries one doily worked in bright col- ors, and she does not sell*it un- til the end of the season. When at home she visits leading art stores to learn the newest stit- ches and designs in white work and, in this way, keeps up with what is fashionable and does a surprisingly good business wherever she goes, In addition to doilies she now carries oth- er pieces, such as collars and cuffs, waists, ete. These sell at a higher figure and bring even greater profitg, MRS. ELIZABETH D, KIELY Liberal candidate in East Toronto. | Wha the Editor Hears to an Englishman, wounded in the war and the wearer of the D.S.0. and bar and the French Croix de Querre, is popular through- out the empire, thrice That heypeople sho are most firm- Iy convinced that money is the root pi#llevil are those who haven't any. That at the present every smartly dressed woman In Paris is wearing a small felt hat trimmed with a bird at one side, for street. That the cynical bachelor observes tha many a fellow wouldn't know he Wag in love with a girl if she didn't tell him: That the Princess street shops §re. showing many pretty articles to tempt Christmas shoppers. That Queen's Dramatic Club has a 800d caste for the play they arg re- bearsing Nasifields "Tragedy of Man." . That there is a great need of cloth- ing among the poorer members of the community, The charitable organi zations that endeavor to meet the de- mand, such as the Victorian Order of rurses,' Miss Root, the Children of Mary, the lend a hand circle, King's . | Daughters, the relief committee of St. George's cathedral will distribute any articles sent to their care: That the Winnipeg despatch says that in. the rural districts especially, there are more women speakers than men pn political platforms. That British "women should be wary of the femine United States. : That Baron Korff, who gave 'wo lectures on modern Russia in Convo~ pacificists of the | cation hall this week is said to have the greatest command of the Eng- lish language of any lecturer heard In the university for some time, broidered in steel beads in New York. have been jn charge of the Red C teas at Sydenham Lodge this week. That Viscount Lascelles proposed to Princess Mary, in the woods of Sandringham, and that the betrothal ring is a single square-cut emerald. That new little wide-brimmed tur- bans in. seal or broadtail frequently back tightly over the hair, Revival of the Big Sleeve. The big sleeve is here. bas sounded. Last spring dressmakers essayed many new things in sleeves. Foremost among the advocates of big sleeves was Mme. Jenny. She made sleeves which at that time appeared very extreme, but they were modest in comparison with those of this autamn. Designers ous points of attack in their endea- | Yor to make a real change in fash- [fon. First it was the silhouette, put their money fr ' vulnerable | OF litigation. they | wanted, so far as silhouette was con- | {they did not find this point. Women knew what cerned, and refused to accept any- thing radically new, so dressmakerg turned their attention to sleeves as the next most inviting part of the dress through which to work a trans- formation. » A pronounced impression was cre- ated by the pew sleeves in square kimono, pointed bell and scarf ef- fects. - These were adopted to a cer- J tain extent, but it might be said that they were a novelty, rather than a Certainity in fashion. Scarf sleeves of tulle or chiffon on evening dresses were among their successors. The short Kimono sleeve has haa its day. Now the ceremonious evea- ing dress must have its sleeve. Some- times it is a halfsleeve, outending from the elbow to the wrist, Per part of the-arm being entirely bare. Such a sleeve is really a cufr, wide and flowing, like the kimono sleeve, Sarah Bernhardt, . the famous French actress, now past 70 years of age, believes in preparcdness ana has purcitase: from the French gos- ernment a small island, upon which she will have rected her tomb, with a small museum and chapel. Tue museum will house relics of her sage | STROUD'S TEA Phone 849. 109 Princess se. That black satin hats heavily em- | are featured | That La Salle Chapter LO.D.E. | ross | have velvet or satin crowns, and are | velled with matching colored fancy |the forecast of perhaps mesh reaching the nose, and drawn |change or journgy. retained in air-tight a tins of ita Rideau H Coffee NOTHING ADDED NOTHING TAKEN AWAY SOLD IN TINS ONLY-BY ALL GOOD GROCERS PRIMUS TEA has all the essential qualit It is sold i its aroma and flavor, tea; quality, purity, economy. ages that keep intact its purity, of a perfect sealed packe = CHAPUT, FILS & CIE, Limitte, - - MONTREAL (ST RCT] nk 31484 an Tea : ER St XS i i -- < . Ee Zr To-morrow's | HOROSCOPE By Genevieve Kem ble tte ttt sulpay, AND MONDAY, NOV. 27-28. Sunday's horoscope shéws very in- | teresting figures, denoting travel or {removal not planhed or anticipated. | Avold worry and bware of loss by [fire or thert. Those whose birthday it is have & sudden They should be | on guard against 10ss by fire or theft. A child born on. this day may be rest- less and changeable, rash and head- Its hour | Strong, also improvident unless well the Paris | trained in eary youth. Monday's astrological figure holds the portent of worry and anxiety, hut not to a menacing degree, provided Speculation and money risk pe avoid- ed, and new enterprises be postponed till more propitious occasion, - Those whose birthday it is may be have been trying varl- harrowed by: small cares and anxiet- ies, which they may avoid be defer- | ring new enterprises: and Protecting om risk in speclation A child born on this day will be clever and greatly res- Pected, but may at times meet with selbacks in business affairs, Use the classified advertisements to beat a bad augury. Use them to | play a good one to the limit, | the up- fi Miss Alexa Stirling Becomes Business Woman From holding the woman's Cana- dian and United States gold champ- fonships to selling bonds in New York City, 1s the latest step in the career of Miss Alexa Sterling, of At- lanta, Ga. For five years Miss Ster- ling held the United States golf title, This week shé began as a New York business woman, end she sold her first pond almost as soon as she reac her desk on Monday, her day, 3 | Miss Sterling does not intend to give up golf, but she is not sure of getting into future championship tournaments. That will depend en- tirely upon how much time business | may take, Miss Sterling won her first United States championship in 1916, over Miss Mildred Coverly, at the Bel- ment Springs course, near Boston. In 1919 she defeated Shawnee on the Delaware course in Delaware, and in 1920 ghe won from Miss Hurd at Cleveland, This year Miss Marion Holling took the title from her at Deal, N.J. Last summer she played in the British open cham- pionship, being defeated by Miss Cecil Leitch, and was also beaten jin English girl wonder, She also played Mrs, Gavin in the the Canadian championship by - the i in the international tournament in France, It is not generally known that Miss Leitch, while playing one of her last matches in the United States, tore an arm muscle, and has been told that unless she gifes up the bame for six months she never will be able to Play again, \n -------------- Though she. is absoly tely sightless, Miss Ethel Squire, of Toronto, Cun- ada, is a clever and capable switcli- board operator, ard in addition to an- swering phone calls, has a typewriter colse to the board, with which she indexes cards in Braille, $e Clean and 'Sanitary You get better results with less work by using Old Dutch for your baking and cooking utensils, Cleans thor- ER, THE PRIMUS |