Daily British Whig (1850), 9 Mar 1922, p. 8

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THE DAILY BRITI , \ > #CRSDAY, MAM 0 0, 1029 SH WHIG. ee eet Se ~ NEWS AND VIEWS FOR WOMEN READERS "YOUR FRECKLES 1 | Need Attention in March or Face May Stay Covered Now is the time to take special care of the complexion if you wish to look » | well the rest of the year. The March Life's Social Side Editor of Women's Page, Telephone Frontenad street was filled with al S B 1724; Private phone 837w. constant stream of visitors on Wed- brite ut freckles that may Say fon : sv» - |uesday afterncon when Mrs. Martin | yn to use Othine--double strength. There was a meeting of the Bad- | received for the first 'time since! ppg preparation for the removal minton Club on Wednesday at which | coming to Kingston from Prescott. |of freckles is usually so successful the names of some new members | Mrs. Ernest Sparks received with | that it 18 sold by druggists. under were proposed to be voted on at next |the hostess in the drawing room | guarantee to gefund the money if it week's meeting. Among those Yre-| where tulips and daffodils gave a | fails. Get an ounce of Othine--double sent were Prof. and Mrs. P. G. C.;promise of spring and in the tea |Strength, and even a few applica Campbell, Mrs. W. B. Shuttleworth [room Mrs. George Hanson made tho | tions should show a wonderful im. King, Mrs. Beverley Browne, Prof, [tea at the attractive tea table where | PEIVEEICNL, Some -- the smaller and Mrs. Keith Hicks, Col. and Mrs, [lovely American Beauty roses shed | 28 Sven vanishing entirely. V. Stockwell, Col. and Mrs. H. J. [their fragrance. Mrs. 'George | : Dawson, Major and Mrs. Heber [Brownlee and Miss Ida Elliott and Lafferty, Mrs. R. E. Kent, Mrs» Miss Agnes Robinson, Prescott, as-| James Hamilton, Miss Hora, Miss [sisted the hostess fn the tea room. | 3 Cartwright, Major and Mrs. aHoraco | . a 8 . Lawson, Capt. and Mrs, . Ronaid| The first annual 'Badminton meet | (Boudoir Secrets) Fortt, Mf. and Mrs. Hugh Ryan, |is being held in Montreal today at| The judicious use of a Capt. and Mrs. Gourlay Colquhoun, [which Prof. and Mrs. P. G. 3, | Paste insures any woman Mr. and Mrs. T. A. Kidd, Miss | Campbell and Major and Mrs. He- Kidd, Ottawa, Mrs. Halloway Wad-!ber Lafferty are representing the dell, Mrs.. James Miller, Mrs. Garn- | Kingston Garrison Club et Greer, Miss Just Apply This Paste and the Hairs Will Vanish delatone a clear, | hairless skin. To prepare the paste, { mix a little of the powdered delatone NC | with some water, then apply to the and Miss | objectionable hairs for two or three [ Gildersleeve, Miss | Esther O'Connor Queen's Club. Tea minutes. When the paste is removed, Loretta' Swift, Miss Mollie-Saunders, | will 'be served and other gaieties, | and the skin washed, every trace of Miss W. Gordon, Miss Mildred Jones, [ending with a dance at the Hunt !'hair will have vanished. No pain Miss Cicily Rutherford, Miss Nora | Club off Saturday evening, will make | 3ttends the use of the delatone and Macnee, Rev. Alexander Gordon, Col. the meet a"pleasant event in more |it Will not mar the most sensitive Anderson, Col. Schmidlin, Col. G. ways than one. {Ski but to insure results, see that H. Ogilvie. : | -# j you Est rea) delatone, . 8. > | Mrs. .W. J. Renton, University | been staying with her daughter, Mrs. Ross Livingston, Johnson |avenue, entertained at the tea hour | Mrs. Erie Phillips, Union street, street, entertained at bridge on Wed- [on Tuesday for Mrs. Cornell, Grav- returned to Oshawa on Wednesday. nesday evening in honor of Mr. and |énhurst. . | Ww. A. Fairlie, who hasbeen with Mrs. Harold Hughes, who peo- "8 a ple are goin; to miss very mi¢h| Mrs. John Matheson, Alice street, | SOR street, for ten days! when they leave Kingston. | entertained at tea on Wednesday for|to Toronto on Wednesday, The fortunate winners of the |Mrs. Workman, St. Catharines. . a» y ladies' 'prizes were Mrs. Ernest . o» Mrs. Herbert Robinson who has Sparks and Miss Eleanor Phelan, | and the men who won out were | Harold Hughes and Herbert Steacy. | Yellow and green was the spring tke { . » returned Miss Esther Lewis, versity, was visiting at her home at | in Seattle, Wash. Smith's Falls for a few days. Mrs, Moscrip, Y.W.C. A. Albert Doller, Kingston, is the ed -from Hamilton on Tues tints used in the dining room where | guest of Mr. and Mrs. Wellington | Dr. Eaken, Montreal, daffodils, narcissi and ferns were | Loyst, Napanee. jand Mrs. R. J. . used. for decking the supper table, Prof. J. L. Morison, Queen's Uni- | street. - *. sa | versity, has rcturned from London, | The Bishop of Ontario, who went The charming house Mr. and Mrs. | Ont. | to Toronto with Mrs. E. J. Bidwell Charles D. Martin have taken' or | Mrs. R. S. McLaughlin, who has |on ber way to the coast, returned to : town on Tuesday. - . * Mrs. Georye Rudd, Toronto, fis visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs Charles Cunningham, 56 Bay street. Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Chown are for the present at Mrs. Donald Mac- Phail's, King street. Mrs. Cornellp*who has been with hef sister, Mrs. Frederick Welch, Clergy street, left for Toronto to- day on her way to her home in Gravenhurst. . Miss Ida Elliott, Prescott, is the | guest of \her/sister, Mrs. Charles I» Martin, Frontenac street. Miss Ag- nes Robinson, Prescott, is also with Mrs. Martin. : Mrs. Donald MdcPhail, King street, is spending a few days In Picton. return lay. is with Dr. Wilson, Union mn, XS aes Builds Bonnie Babies" "Glaze is sold by Druggists throughout Canade 2 Sole Agents for Canada: ' Harold F. Ritchie & Co,, Ltd., 10 McCaul St., Torente UTLEY 8 A = ES BE £4 | . . . Mr. and Mrs. William Gillespie, Wolfe Island, agnounce the engage- | ment of their youngest - daughter, Claire Lenore, to Hugh Lwellyn Payne, only son of Mr. and Mrs. Geo. | Payne, Johnson street, Kingston. Ont., the marriage to take place this month. To-morrow's ] HOROSCQPE By Genevieve Kemble FRIDAY, MARCH 10, ~ An active and interesting day is forecast from this day's astrological chart. With the aggressive, and sti- mulating Mars in benignant mood, there is promise of initiative, bold adventure and large projects, but these should be handled with the foresight which precludes deception, | fraud and misrepresentation, as the | tion. Old institutions and elderly per- Sons may receive and confer benefits. There may. be some friendly recogni- tion from these. Some slight disap- polntment or inharmonies in the Lome may be possibly. Those whose birthday ft is> anticipate an active and adv urous Year, with fine initiative for new and important projects, They should be On guard against deception or fraud, 1 however. Friendly benefits are pre- !saged. A child born on this day, al- | though clever, industrious and en- terprising, may possibly suffer through intrigue, but will, however, make a success of its life. Back classified advertisements for | all they are worth. - ----------, Miss Lillian Milier, daughter of the American consul-general at { Seoul, Kerea, has Won great honors | as an Oriental artist through her ef- {forts of interpreting, on her many | Wood-block prints, Far Eastern peo- [ple to their cousins of the western + | world, ge : Official records of women's profes- sional work in HoMand show alto- gether four civil engineers, two ar- chitectural, five eléetrical and one mechanical, qualified women engi- neers, A . ay BARNUM'S| 2 soa " © ama SATURDAY "WHILE THE SEASON Le Ti Stason pers : ish Pastry: iy TTY nm | his mother, Mrs. John Fairlie, John- | Queen's Uni- | been in. Victoria is now on a visit | | subtle Neptune is in unfriendly posi-! «allow for a few minutes gossip 1s a i | | How One Woman Solved the Laun- i dry Problem, | This morning I received the fol- | lowing interesting letter from a dis- | tant housekeeper to whom a sub- { seriber of this paper malls clippings {from this column after reading fit { herself. | Efficient Housekeeping has been so helpful to me that I feel myself called upon to pass on to its Readers the solution of one of my problems { which might prove of benefit to the | rest of my fellow-sufferers. One of {the Bugaboos in the life of most | housekeepers is the disposition of | the laundry. She has the choice of | three things: 1. Hire a woman to {do it. 2.- Do it herself, 3, Send | it to a public laundry. I have tried {all three ways an know whereof I i speak. | + To hire a woman nowadays is an | expense, and to find a really compet- ent and conscientious one is not easy. | Then, it means that most of the iron- | ing is left over, and if the day is un- | ' |favurable the housewife must see to | most of the drying of the clothes on the following day. The second day--doing it oneself ----is all right if one has an electric | washing machine--must most of us | haven't! And' unless a woman is | Yevery pound additional, Everything sent to be Rough Dried comes home machine-ironed. I sent to be Rough | Dried all my tablecloths, napkins, | sheets, pillow cases, towels, night- | gowns, childrens' underwear, nap- | kins, handkerchiefs--in fact any- thing that does not need hand-iron- ! 'ing. Ee. "Troma wash goes for ten cents a pound for washing, with an additional 15 cemts per pound for | ironing--making it virtually 25 | cents a pound. However, if flat work | is included in the bundle to be iron- | ed, it is not charged the 15 cents ad- | ditional. The only trouble I found | at first was that, as they require you | to have two dollars' worth of either | one or the other, I had always to | send everything to be ironed, which | Pussy-Foots of course, made my laundry come | / are made for : high. Then I hit upon HioPian: as | .: Te One weelc'I send' only Co ") " baby feet cartons. For the sake of those who drink with you. CHASE & SANBORN. Montreal. . THE STEPPING STONE TO HURLBUT CUSHION-SOLE SHOES as I need hand-ironed, making up the weight required, if necessary, by add- ing some flat wash. The following week I see that I have the required number of pounds, 22, in Rough Dry to make the two dollars' worth. Al- though two dollars seems a good deal tc have to pay every week for wash, it is m0 more than the expense of hiring a women to do the work in your home, and giving her lunch, I eee e----e Soft, comfortable shoes--flexible as the tiny feet themselves, - PUSSY-FOOTS will wear ns long | abundantly healthy sometimes she [saves doctors' bills by not doing her {own washing, Sending a family wash to a public | laundry is out of the question for | most of us becauge of the expense. {But I wonder if many housewives | know of the so-called 'Bundle Wash' which most public laundries now do? {| I heard of this and am now sending [everything except silks to a laundry {that has two kinds of "Bundle Wash." One king they call 'Reugh Dry,' and the other goes under the name of '"Ironed." For the "rough dry," they Shaves ten cents a pound for the first 12 pounds, and eight cents a pound tor | ---- | A SIMPLE LUNCHEON | One of the easiest and simplest meals to which the busy "housewife ican invite her friends is luncheon. It may be, it should be, a very sim- ple affair and admits of far more or- iginality than the more ceremoni- ous dinner. In the first place the cloth may be gray linen, embroidered simply in bright colors. It may be rather small, and placed. cornerwise, (or perhaps diamond-fashion is a clear- er expression),-on the table, the corners of which will show, Charm- ing lunch ¢loths are made of deep blue, also with simple embroideries in white or darker blue, and:it is nice to havé the napkins, which, of! course, are smaller than difner neo- kins, (and may he fringed, hem- stitched or embroidered) to mat:h the cloth. _Bxerything goes 01 the luncheon table at one time, or at least It may at a simpic luncheon, the courses; are few and ®ack courfe should, in] itself, be distinguished by simplicity. | The elaborate, many-coursed lunch- eons, which have davluped of recent years and last from ore to half-past/ three, have becomé a tiresrme fea thre of modern secat Ife, Avoid em. Quite a nice luncheon consists of soup bouillon, or some cream soup--- in cups or on soup plates, jis. as] cu will, coly lif you serve it in cups | you must use teaspoons, and if in| | soup-plates, tablespoons or if you have them ladles, Never uses des- sert spoons for soup, unless you're compelled to. Of course, If it al tase Of not having luncheon' or using dessertspoens, use them--it is bet- | ter to be opephandedly hospitable] than 'perfectly correct. butter, is a splendid second course. ! One capital salad, that a good housekeeper always called her "vul- gar" salad, it was so bountiful, is) made of some cream cheese, rolled into a ball, as large perhaps, | golf ball, or larger, ornamented with cut stuffed olives--it you have no! olives, stick a few pieces of. boiled ! carrot or beet root, here and there to add piquancy to the color scheme. Lay this ball on a lettuce leaf. _ On another leaf place a small tomato, peeled and serve with stiff boiled dressing mixed with whipped cream. Cream puffs may form the Sweet course and with well made tea or all they need for a midday meal. Grape fruit or orange salad with a dressing of «salad oil, vinegar and Worchestershire sauce is another excellent first course, with chicken 'cutlets and puffed potatoes for the "solid" course, . and a meringue made of whipped cream and white ored with a little raspberry or strawberry jam for the sweet. Luncheon is the great absorber of ieft-overs and if simple enough to delightful social interlude. 'Like the Arab, the nh consid ers it unnecessary and even unwise | that. women should learn tc read and A nourishing salad with rolls ana| coffee, you have given your guests of egg and sugar, colored and flav-| write. No girls are admitted to the |° hope this letter may help other wo- men." as baby's feet can go inside them comfortably and then can be enlarged at the factory half a size. Correct in shape, econ- omical in service--the ideal shoes for baby. Sold in the best retail stores. PUSSYFQDT Shoes Ba PATENTED 1909 Tomorrow --Two Dinners for the Week-end Guest. All inquiries addressed to Miss Kirkman in care of the "Efficient Housekeeping' department will be answered in these columns in their turn. =~ This requires considerable"| time, however, owing to the great rumber received, So if a personal or quicker reply is desired, a stamped and self-addressed envelope must be enclosed with" the question--The | Kditor, WRITE FOR * RE-BUILT SERVICE" PRICE LIST AND WE WILL ENCLOSE PUSSY-FOOT JINGLE ~BOOK 'N COLORS. Manufactured only by The Hurlbut -Co.. Limited, Preston, Ont. In Rome girls between the ages of Makers of HURLBUT CUSHION-SOLE SHOES for Children six and ten were chosen as vestal vir- i gins. After thirty years of service | they could return to private life, and | omens | marry, if they chose. Miss Elizabeth Farley, a high | school senior in Amherst, Mass., | earns more than $5,000 a year from | her dairy farm, which she alone | manages, | | Housewives Revel In Furnishings that are New ! : and Pretty GIRLS! USE LEMONS TO WHITEN HANDS In the modern home there is fo place for the closed-all-week room. Every room is used every day and the housewife wants color- 'ful, attractive things in her home. She is going to have them. It is her right to have them. The attractive home is the home of HAPPINESS. Merchants who have a 'stock of mew and attractive furnishings will do well to tell the young hqusewives all about that stock. The just-been-riarrieds and the going-to-be marrieds are interested. They must be told, and as 100% of them read this newspaper, this newspaper is the logical medium through which to tell them. | 4 a bottle cofitaining three ounces of Orchard White, which any drug store will supply for a few cents, shake-well, and you have a quarter- pint of harmless and delightful lemon-bleach lotion to soften and whiten red, rough or chapped hands | | Press thé juice of two rte This home-made lemon lotion is far superior to glycerin and rose water to smoothen the skin. Famous stage beauties use it to bleach and bring that soft, clear, rosy-white comples- iom: because it doesn't irritate. : Pr ------------------ + A NAA AAA A A AANA AA APA tert its OA A NEY PS i Fi a So alluringly fragrant is Intants- Delight--such a mild, refreshin Toilet Soap--you will surely fin a pleasure 1n its daily use, and a constant de- light in the charm of your complexion, JOHN TAYLOR & CO. LIMITED, TORONTO, CANADA. S DELIGHT ITS WHITE TONETSOAP I vs Reabinaastaniiaasiliniise, LY -- LR rN ed A RNY aT WALL

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