Daily British Whig (1850), 14 Jan 1922, p. 8

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EN, - i ] Life 's Social Side ny Editor of Women's Page, Telephone [ con way, left on Saturday on a holi- | phone 857w. ee = = 1724; Private Mrs. Charlés Jackson, Sydenkam ! Apartments. peceived for the first time since éoming td Kingston on Thursday, Wiien her preity rooms were filled wihh visttors, Mrs, Am- brose Shea male the tea at the pol- ished table centred with daffodils and lighted with unshaded yellow candles, the tea room assistant and Mrs. IL, O. Patterson was in the drawing- room with the hostess. . * * The Kingston Bankcrs Athletic Association gave another of their Jolly dances in Ontario Hall on 1'ri- day evening, when the patronesses were Mrs, Philip DuMoulin, Mrs." R. T. Brymner, Mrs. Percy Dorland, and Mrs. G. Brownlee, Treneer"s orches- drat played for the dancory per was served at midnight. > . » Mrs. €. H, Boyes, Alfred street, en- | tertained at the tea hour on Friday for her guest, Mrs. 8S. C. Charlies, Yarker. Mrs. A. A, Connolly, Yarker, who is visiting her niece, Mrs. T. H. Renton, and Mrs. John Donnelly who ds shortly Jeaving for the s=outh : - -. . Mrs. Ernest Sparks, Stuart sre is entertaining at bridge this ¢ ing for her guests, Miss Helens F lick, and Mies Dorothy Grant, Belle ville. Miss Marion Ogilvie, Earl is entertaining af bridge on Monday aftérnoon in honor of Miss Helen ¥c- Kay. . * Mrs. T. Callander, was the hostess of Thursday for Mrs. Bruce Mines, * stree', tea on Birkett, Barrie a small Edward * * - Mrs, W. A. Jones, University ave- mue, was the hostess of a small 'bridge on Friday evening. * * * Garrot Mrs. Charles McKay, street, 1s entertaining at' bridge this | evening. Mrs. R. N. ¥. MacFarlane, Joha- son street, is giving a bridge this af- ternoon. ~o Frank Conway, Yocal agent for the Canadian Pacific Railway, with Mrs. CORNS Lift Off with Fingers Doesn't hurt a bit! Drop a little "Freezone" on an aching corn, in- stantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you Mft it right off with fing- ers. Truly! Your druggist sells a tiny bottle of "Freezone" for a few cents, suffi- cient to remove every hard corn. soft eorn, or corn between the toes, and the calluses, without soreness or ir- ritation. A AA At Pe Psi DR. MARTEL'S FEMALE PILLS © J FOK WOMEN'3 AILMENTS 25 years Standard for Delayed and Paintul Menstruation. Sealed Tin package only, all-Druggists or direct by mail. Price $2.00. Knickerbocker Remedy Co., 71 E. Front St, To ronto, Canada. A SIMPLE REMEDY IR INDIGESTION Thore's nothing complicated about § way REDMAC overcomes stom- ACh trouble. It noutralizes the "harmful acid that's doing the mis- fel, and does it instantly. With stomach frees from this acid, 's no chance of fermentation, bd the digestive organs can do their 'Work unhampered. The following extract' from a lecter is typical of "many written by grateful users: ~ KRedmac has saved me so much ; in, ud 1t 1a 30 siesta feel 1 ean E qu what. ancy instead o Just plain food. (Signed) A, SHEPHERD. It makes no diftfréfice whether Your trouble is 1 , Dyspep- fia, Flatulence, Gastritis or Palpita- tion, Redmac is what yon 'want, and 'what must have if your stomach A put to rights, Miss Marion Wheeler was | and sup- | street, | day trip to Victoria, B.C. They expect to be gone two months. Mrs. C. C. Nash, Albert street, |1s giving Master Chas. Nash and his {school class a sleigh ride this after- I noon. a. . . » Mrs. E. C. D. MacCallum, Bra:k street, is entertaining at bridge this |afternoon and evening, Mrs. Connell, Gravenhurst, is visit- {ing her sister, Mrs. Frederick Welch, | Clergy street. | Mrs. 8. C. Charles, Yarker, 1s tne guest of Mrs. CC. H. Boyes, Alfred street. Major Edward Birkett, Bruce Mines, will spend the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Birkett, Bagot (street, returning home next week with Mrs. Birkett and his Httle dau- ghter Dr. WG { for Montreal on Friday to attend medical convention. 2 Mr. and Mrs. Jobn Dennelly, Jotn- son street, will leave for Florida {shortly to spend some months. -. * . Mrs. W. P. Wilgar - and Master Billy Wilgar, Mack street, who have been in Ottawa with Mr. and Mrs. Edward Low, have returned to towa, Mrs. J. M. Platt, Picton, spent a few days in town this week, return- ing home today. ~ | Mrs. W. G. Anglin, Napanee with Mns. Shorey, | turned to town. Miss Marjorie Uglow, { street, went to Napanee on Thurs- { to visit Miss Josephine Vroo- Anglin, Earl street, left the who was in has re- day man. | Prof. and Mrs. W. Morgan, Prof. and Mrs. Callander, will be Dr. and Mrs. Frederick Etherington's guests at. "'Filtercairn," for the week-end. Capt. and Mrs, Colquhoun are en- tertaining at dinner tonight at the Frontenac club, { Mrs. Hugh Ryan, Sydenham street !was the hostess of a small bridge on| | Friday. i | . . | Mrs. Manley Baker, 45 William| | street, will receive on the third Fri- |day of each month throughout the { season. | Mrs. G. Hunter Ogilvie, Barl s'reet, | (gave a small luncheon today for Mrs. | | Henry Joseph, Montreal. | Mrs. Henry Joseph, who is tha guest of the Misses Waldron, Barrie | street, will return to Montreal early | in the week, | Mrs. H, Alberison, New York city, | who has been visiting her sister, Mrs, ! H. Russell, William street, left for her home today. C. H. Forrester left on Thursday) {for Winnipeg after a two weeks' visit | fruit roll, served hot with a custard | | with his sister, Mrs. Berrigan, Brock | sauce; this was made by sifting two fetreet, He was accompaniedeby his i niece, Miss Lillian Forrester, Seeley"s | Bay. : | , A Winnipeg despatch says when | Miss MacPhail, Canada's first woman | M.P., attends the formal opening of | the) first session of parliament, she | will be gowned in her two-year-old serge dress, which she wore every day during her recent election cam- paign in Southeast Grey riding, On- tario. "It has been cleaned and remod- eled, and I am saving it specially for the occasion, because I have a senti- mental regard for it as it is my cam- paign dress," Mss MacPhail declared in an interview here. | Beng the first woman member is| a great. responsibility, according to Miss MacPhall, because, to a certain extent, it is her duty to break any prejudice or traditions of the past which still exist. "Bince my election, or during my campaign, I have not met with muca prejudice because I am a wophan," she said. "If you have your subject in hand, the electors do not care whether you are a man or a woman, no matter what they say before they hear you speak," she declared. When questioned about her plans, she said she was not a lobbyist, and had no special measure in mind which she wished to introduce into the house. "I believe that a change in the present economic" system is. necessary to give justice to the poor, and will suppo#t this principle at all times," she said." | To Wear Old Serge Dress . Tea Room Salad, A salad made with cranberry jelly is se at one of the tea rooms near the park and'fs made by cook- ing one quart of cranberries with ono cup seeded raising with enough water to cover until tender and rub through a sieve and add the Juice of one lemon, half a cup of sugar, half a teaspoon of cloves, half a teaspoon of cinnamon and one teaspoon of granuigted gelatine dissolved in a Iit- tie 'water and melted over hot water. Pour into small wet moulds and place in the jce box to harden. When wanted unmould on a bed of shred- ded lettuce, place on top of each sad- ad a spoonful , of whipped cream. Serve with a lemon French dressing. It coal is kept in a dry, airy place it will much better than if placed in a close, poorly ventilated 'cellar. Coal that is excluded from the air soon gets rid of its gas, and the absence of this renders it more { how {home if Canada had failed to send J | questions of the day. | where silver, = ADDRESS BY "MRS. JOSEPH | To the Kingston Conservative Women's Association on Friday Afternoon. "It is a joy to me to be in King.| ston. I love Kingston people and I {hope some. Kingston people love me," sald Mrs, Henry Joseph, presi-| |dent of the Montreal Women's Na- | tional Lberal-Conservative = Associa- tion, speaking before an audience of | women on Friday afternoon gather-| ied in Garden Hall under the aus-| | pices of the Kingston Women's Con- | |servative Assocation. Mrs. Juseph,| | who was indeed welcome in her old | home), spoke of the responsibility | {gven to women with the franchise, | of the inspiration the life of Sir| {John Macdonald, one of Canada's] greatesf statesmen, to the women of | his old constituency. "Kingston | | women get what they want usually" | {she said, "I fully expect to see a| woman representing Kingston In | parliament yet." The gift of the | franchise brought its responsibility | to every woman to learn to vote in-| | telligently, and the speaker, though | she made it plain she had never been | la suffragette, said she felt women | | would supply their share to the per- | fect and complete government of the | future. Legislation affecting women | and children would be their special | province and their entrance in to the! arena of politics wouid make for purity in the political world. "With women in the government we will have no more wars, we who | have ' brought children into the! world, cared for them and seen them | | grow to manhood, value life more thap men." Barrie | § Mrs. Joseph has recently returned | | from the devastated area of France| 'where she saw rows upon rows of| little crosses, and said she had] thought how many more rows of} them there would have been, and many more aching hearts. at! !reinforcement§ in 1917, ! Mrs. G, Hunter Ogilvie, who has been re-elected president of the Cone servative Women's Association; in-| | troduced the speaker, who was giv-| of "Danderine." at the! addres, | {en a hearty vote of thanks concluson of her eloquent Miss W. Gordon spoke of the neces- | sity of women studying the political] Tea was served from two tables| china and feithery| primulae lent a home-like air,' Mrs. | Charles McKay, Mrs. W. J. Vince, | Mrs. John Sowards and Mrs, William | | Cook pouring tea, assisted by mem- bers of the association, Luncheon Fruit Roll. 1 For lunch the other day we had a | {cups of flour with three téaspoons of baking powder and adding half a cup of sugar, two tablespoons of butter, one well-beaten egg and two-thirds of a cup of milk. Mix all to a smooth | dough and roll out on a well-floured board to one-quarter inch thick. Spread with half a cup of soft but- | ter, half a cup of chopped seeded | raisins, half a cup of chopped blanch- | {ed 'almonds, three peeled and cored | glish apples chopped very fine and | sprinkle over all the grated rind of | one lemon and one teaspoon of cin- namon. Roll up lightly as for jelly roll and place'in a baking pan, brush with melted butter or milk and bake | in & quick oven, ry i { wasteful when burned. After all, there's nothing worth worrying about, whether they need it or not. Many bright girls who do not enjop working in an office on a salary, find that they can support themselves nicely by opening offices of ther own, where they do typewriting by the piece. Besides having a good education and a fair am- ount of business ability, one who expects to earn a living In this way should attend a busi- ness college long enough to be- come expert in stepography and typewriting. A knowledge of 'bookkeeping would not come amiss, fir one should be able to keep her cwn accounts and to send out bills in a workmanlike Too many undertake typewriting beforefthey learn to spell or punctuate properly. Without doubt they will fail. One woman, who cleared over $100 a month, said that of all the preparatory work she had done she found a year's ex- perience as a proof-reader the most helpful.; She had tried bookkeeping/but could not be satisfied in any line of empioy- ment until she was working for herself. When one is properly eqato- ped from an educational point of view there still remains the financial sidé of the question HOW TO MAKE MONEY. <W women are averse to maki ing money one has made throukh one's own Initiative and resources. Each day there will appear on this tions on making money. Each artic Whig an idea that may te turned { nto a mogeyma. No. 70--Typewriting. | manner, to do. § pin moriey. 4 doesn't matter ere Is spécial Pleasure In spend- es. fase one of a series of su he e will give women readers o Ket. which must be "considered. - First, you must have a first- class typewriter with desk, a comfortable chair or two and a copy-holder. You can often make -a beginning by 'renting desk room in the office of some man who is willing to take pay in work provided you have not money enough to open an of- fice of your own at the start. You should be able to pay your rent for at least three months / Rideau Coffee NOTHING ADDED NOTHING TAKEN AWAY SOLD IN TINS ONLY=BY ALL GOOD GROCERS in advance. You should have a desk, a table, a dictionary and several chairs besides the furniture which you would purchase if renting desk reom only. 4s you see, you would need several hundred dollars for a start you will do best to get into an office building where most of the tenants are young business men for a good many of them have not suffici- ent business to warrant them in purchasing a typewriter and employing someone to operate it, yet they have a certain amount of work to be done. At first you will have to send For best results use EGG-O Baking Powder A trial will convince ORDER FROM YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD GROCER. | | out cards and circular letters soliciting work and perhaps do a little advertising in orden to let it be known where you are and what you are prepared to do. or GIRLS! GROW THICK LONG, HEAVY HAIR WITH "DANDERINE" Buy a 35-cent bottle One application ends . all danfiruff, stop itching and falling hair, and, in a few moments, you have doubled the beau- ty of your hair. It will appear a mass, 0 soft, lustrous, and easy to do up. - But what will | please you most will bo | § after a few weeks use, gu when you see new hair --fine and downy at® first--=yes--but really new hair growing all over the scalp. "Danderine" is to the hair what fresh showers of rain and sunshine are to vegetation. Jt goes right to the roots, invigorates and strengthens them. This delightful, stimulating tonic helps thin, lifeless, faded hair to grow™ong, thick, heavy and luxuriant. meme | What the Er Hears | That a London Gespatch says En- irls are recovering from the masculinity forced on them by the war. The mannish woman was nev- er very popular, and such compli- ments as that of a young man who told his good-looking tennis partner that she played "like a thwarted wo- man' did their work. Eight in ten women in recent days in Hyde Park are declared to have been riding side-saddle. That the French mogdistes are drawing their inspiration from the Orient and the spring will see the straight lines, wide sash, and flow- ing sleeves of the Japanese "Obe," somewhat moderated to suit western ideas, That the Victorian Order of Nur- ses committee is to be congratulated on the election of Mrs, Samuel Craw- ford as their president. Mrs. Craw- ford is herself a graduate nurse, and therefore will bring an understand- ing sympathy to bear upon the work so splendidly carried on and so ap- preciated by the citizens of King- ston of the capable V. O. Nurses, -- That when a certain type of ultra- modern female displays what she calls her "frankness" other persons think she is merely giving an exhibi- tion of her bad bringing-up. That before giving advice ' we should be sure we have made it de- sired. That a New York professor has this sign on his door for callers: "Be brief. Remember the hit the short skirts made." ' That as the girls preity ears em- |erge from their long seclusion ear- ings will be much worn. That duplicate bridge is being played in Kingston, and will be much liked by the card players who some Yours ago were adepts at duplicate whst. To-morrow's HOROSCOPE By Genevieve Kemble SUNDAY AND MONDAY, JAN. 15-16TH. Sunday's actrological forecast is on the whole rather favorable, ai- though it will be wise to beware of treachery and to safeguard "he mo :- ey, especially from extravagant ex- penditura or pleasurable indulgence. Those whoee birthday it is have a rather fortunate year to anticipate, bu' they should not spend their money carelessly. A child born on this day. may be inclined to waste its money on personal indulgence unless well trained. It will be ra- ther fortunate, Monday's horoscope holds figures which advise against important change, removal or travelling. I: also points to the hazard of specula- tion or the free use of money in the pursuit of pleasure, in self-indui- gence or gambling. By keeping quiet | and attending carefully to business | matters may hold their own Those whose birthday it is nave the presage of a year calling for at-| tention to matters in hand, and the | 190% oe as _ The time is at hand for action if you would win one of the eight prizes. Remember, the person suggesting the best name, for the .Ohio Electric Cleaner will receive $500.00. There is no better machine made than tne Ohio Electric Cleaner. Its operation is smooth and thorough. It is less injurious to fabrics than the old fashioned broom--it employs only air suction aided by a slow moving brush to pick up hairs, lint and thread. 4 : If you can not conveniently call on our dealer and obtain our folder giving full particulars about our contest, write us today and learn how you may qualify. The United Electric Co. of Canada, Limited 82 Chestnut Street Toronto, Canada MAMES OF DEALERS ; Public Utilities THE HYDRO SHOP 268 Princess Street avoidance of all manner of risk through foolish expenditure or self- indulgence, Avoid removal, change, travel and speculation, the stellar wise men say. A child born on this day will be industrious, but may be disposed to change and rove about. YOUNG FRENCH HEROINE RECEIVES RECOGNITION Paris, Jan. 14.--One of the young- est heroines of the war has just been honored by France. She is Helene Jacquemin, of Fontherme, up near the Belgian border. When the Geér- mans swarmed over the frontier, Helene, who was then ten years old, and her brother acted as liaison of- ficers between her father, to whom the French commander had confided an important mission, and the French army, The Germans swept through, driving the French on toward the Marne. Helene's father was killed in action. Her brother was arrested and haled before a summary Ger- man court-martial, charged with aiding the French forces, although he was not a combatant. Helene was threatened with death by the Germans unless she revealed the modus operandi of her father. The little girl of the Ardennes refused. Here is what the official citation, "a hordre de l'armee," which has just been published, says: "She refused to utter a word in reply to the questions of the Ger- man officers. In spife of the threats of the prosecuting officials, she did not furnish 4 single plece of in- formation which might have put our enemies on the track of her fa- ther's collaborators." Commander Eva Booth of the Sal- vation Army is well known as an or- ator, but not so well known is the fact that she is a poet and musician as well, and has written and compos- ed a number of songs. 108 Princess §t. Phone S49. The grand jury at La r, Pa. has recommended that better accom- modation be arranged for women forced to attend as jurors. One hundred and fifty-one trades and professions are represented by fathers of young women students at * Radcliffe college, To Stop Falling Hair You can easily clean your head of dandruff, prevent the hair falling out and beautify it, If you use Parisian sage, says McLeod's Drug Store,.wh2 guarantees it, Primus Coffee is a veritable nectar; nothing is more de licious than its aroma, or more exquisite than its flavour; that it why it is the choice of all lov ers of good coffee. Cl PRIMUS COF is for sale by all good grocers, Insist on getting rT TT 20% REDUCTION ON ALL PORTABLE LAMPS 10% REDUCTION ON ELECTRIC IRONS AND TOASTERS Burke Electric Company ] } |

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