Daily British Whig (1850), 27 Mar 1922, p. 8

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Editor of Women's Page, Telephone 1724; Private phone 837w. . . » The Misses Mowat, Johnson street, gave a delightful afternoon party on Baturday when their guests each re- presented a living author, the fav- orites being Masefield, H. G. Wells and Robert Service, Miss Ethelwyn Mowat and Miss May Rosas poured fea and coffee and Miss Anute Tow- Jer cut the ices at the tea tabie cen- tred with yellow tulips: The prize winners were Miss Margaret Por- 'teous and" Mr. Blacklock. The ' guests included Dr. and Mrs. W. Morgan, Miss Marioh McArthur, Mrs. C. C. Gilbert, Miss O. Lavell, Miss Mary Taylor, - Miss Eunice - Simpson, Miss Margaret Fraser, Miss * M. Gourley,' Miss Maybelle Govan, ~ Miss Honora Dyde, Miss Ruth Me- Kinnon and Miss Marion McFayden, i Prof, Prince, Messrs. Blackfoot, J. * H. Sutherland, G. M. is Hay and John McKinnon. A ., . . There was a good turnout of play- ers at the Badminton courts on Sat- urday when the usual play went on. Among those present were General King and Mrs. W. B. Shuttleworth King, Prof. and Mrs. P. G. C. Camp- bell, Prof. and Mrs. T. Callanaer, Col. and Mrs. G. H. Ogilvie, tne Misses Ogilvie, Col. and Mrs. Schmid- lin, General and Mrs. F. W. Hill, Miss Hill, Prof. and Mrs. Keith Hicks, Major and Mrs. Garnet Greer, Mrs. Ford, Major and Mrs. Hugn Wotherspoon, Major and Mrs, H. E. Lafferty, Miss. M. Anglin, Miss Mil- dred Jones, Miss Aileen Rogers, Miss W. Gordon, Miss E. Carruthers, Miss Cicily Rutherford, Miss M. Saunders, Miss Laura Kilborn, Miss Helen Strange, Col. Constantine, Col. Greenwood, Capt. Carruthers, Capt. Dickinson, Dr. McKee. ' » . * % Mrs. C. H. Hall, Albert streét, was the hostess of a merry birthday par- ty on Friday in honor of Master David Hall. Games were played by the small guests and tea at a beauti- fully decked table centred by a birthday cake, whose eight candies were blown out by the master of the feast was an exciting feature of this happy little gathering. . -. - Mrs. RW. Spencer, Gananoque, spent the week-end with Mr. and M#s. James Haydon, Johnson street. Miss Mildred McLaughlin, Osh- @wa, and Miss Frances Harris, Nash- ville, Tenn., who spent the week-end with Mrs. Eric Phillips, Union street, ~ left for Toronto today. Mrs. A. C. Hudspeth, Gananoque, is spending a few days in Kingston the guest of Mrs. L. T. Best, Alfred Col. T. R. Caldwell and Mrs Caldwell left Perth for the soutnerf states owing to the latter's recent ill health, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Jeffrey, who have spent a week with their daugh- el Hill, announce the engagement of | J. Buell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Buell, | Sharbot Lake, Ont., the marriage io | ant, has been spending Butherland, j2ion. Blits, Harold Cross, Eric Cross, Lew- | university, spent her parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Gothard, Trenton. street, has returned from a visit with friends in New York. Hope, is spending a few days with Major street. guests at the Commandant's Quart- ers, Royal Military College. few days with Principal and Bruce Taylor, returned to Toronto today. on Saturday to visit his sisters, Mrs. Charles erts, formerly of Sharbot Lake, Ont, wish to announce the engagement of their only daughter, Miss Iza Lillin, spread to hats, 'and many models 1 Litfe's Social Side | 3]C nc rned retu in ter, Mrs. Norman Millef, to Ottawa today. . LJ » Mrs. Eric Reid and Miss Wetherel | arrived from England today ana | are with Mrs. Henry Richardsops| University avenue. Miss Doris Barcley, left for Mont- Ist real today and will sail for her home | in Scotland this week. Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Norman, Gra - la of their daughter, Margaret, to Allan take place April 5th. * -. . | re Mr. and Mrs. Miss Marjorie Gothard, Queen's | Wednesday with Miss Ida Newlands, 333 Barrie a * . * Mrs. Hugh Wotherspoon, Port Wotherspoon, Wellington! ro Ford are|°P Col. and Mrs; Stewart th Miss Mary Taylor, who spent a ce Mrs. Ross Wilkinson left for Montreal hi McDonnough and Mrs. A. P. Christmas. » » * Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Bright Rop- now residing in Calgary, Alberta, th to Frederic Stanley Coe, of Vancou- ver, B.C., only son of Mrs. O. A. Coe. Juniors on- men played a one-handed game and were not allowed to body-check, as valled throughout. phecy and history were read after number of her tea hour on Friday afternoon. What Queen's Girls Are Doing The annual meeting of the QW. A. was held on Wednesday after- yon, when the new executive was sta Miss Dorothy Sutherland | will preside during the coming ses- | sion. . Many of the girls attended the R. H.A. concert last week, and thor- {oughly enjoyed the music and Miss rathy's dancing. Friday night the L.A.B.C. enter- ined at a social evening in honor the Yale boxers and wrestlers. Each of the visitors was provided with a fair partner who looked after his' programme. provided ' excellent music and The Sympathy Six light served from the freshments were Ross Anderson, platform in Grant hall. Kingston, are visiting thé former's| parents, Mr, and Mrs. R. Anderson, | Gananoque. Miss Bina Gillespie, Point Pleas-|home of Prof. Morison. the week |prjgs MacCallum and Mr. with her sister, Mrs. Flenning, King-| mond were appointed as a commit- tee to re-organize the club fall, The final meeting of the Polecon Mr, Knox, Drum- in the The Eire. Jockey team played the ursday afternoon. The handicap. All the spectators were highly entertained." Arts '22 held its final Year dinner on Thursday evening in the Levana om. A very pleasant evening was ent though a note of sadness pre- The poem, pro- oe dinner. The speeches were ex- llent ard thoroughly enjoyed. Quite a number of the girls at- tended the boxing and wrestling ex- bition in the Jock Harty rink on Saturday eyening., arke entertained a vana friends at the Miss Mary Mrs, J. D. McNeill, eo members of the Q.W.C.A. cab- inet at tea on Friday afternoon. As concerns color, black will al- ways hold its own, and eand and russet are very much in vogue with tweeds, but the popularity of the new French blye home-spuns has to show the delightful smoky blue that has been dubbed "periwinkle." The riotous tangerines and Morocco reds and flames of last year are less prom- inent, tomato zed being a favorite. While the woman who wishes to have that delightful consciousness that whet she is wearing is positive- ly the last word will contrive to be- come the owner of a large graceful dropping hat with some floral trim= ming in orchid shade, if the drooping hat is not becoming, let her acquire one o. the possible variants, a modi- fled Kate Greenaway style, with the brim broad in front and practically non-existent at the back. For Constipated Bowels, Sick Headache, Sour Stomach, The nicest cathartic-laxative in the world to physic your liver dnd bowels 'when you have Dizzy Headache, Colds, Biliousness, Indigestion, or , Acid Stomach is candy-like rets."" One or two to-night will empty your bowels completely by "love Cascarets too. Bilious Liver morning, and you will feel splendid TThey work while you sleep." Casca rets never stir you up or gripe like Balts, Pills, Calomel, or Oil and they cost only ten cents a box. Children sources vegetables young and fresh, cook them just enough to make them ten- der, and remember when you throw away the water in which they have been cooked you are pouring down the sink virtually 50 per cent. . the iron and other minerals, as well as much of the vitamine content. What the Eior Hears | That matchmaking mammas used investigate a young man's pedi- gree, nowadays all that really inter- ests them is the make of his car That pearl necklaces were sent to each of Princess Mary Viscountess Lascelles' eight memento from Viscount Lascelles. bridesmaids as a That bobbed hair is no longer in vogue in Paris and a great deal of half-grown hair is seen, but it takes Frenchwoman to arrange these un- ruly locks with charm ;f for somehow she manages it by curling them and fluffing out the short ends over the ears, and twisting what is left into the semblance of a chignon at the nape of the neck. Old, wilted vegetables are poor of vitamines. Select your of The juice from canned peaches or apricots makes a deliclous sauce for cornstarch or blancmange pudding. It is profitable to wash and dry all silver and steel pleces as soon That a questionalre recently issued to thousands of college women asking what they read brought out the fact that the majority per cent. read the store advertisements? Do You Know What this means to you, Mr. Merchant? It Means ~ That the modern young what she wants and when she wants it, but she knows, and is still learning, where to get what she wants, The young girls just entering college learn to read the stord™Wdvertisements from the seniors, and by thé time they graduate they will know where to get what they want, The graduates, entering into business or home man- agement, will still read the store advertisements. They will take the best paper, it is this paper here, and the merchant who is telling them that he has what they want will get efficient, time and lal . youngsters, and if you want them for your own: you'll have to show them that you have what they want when they want it--and also, that they What you have. Big thing, tsn't it, what these young are read- IMPORTANT TO YOU} ps ing? . } woman not only knows 2 r patronage. They are ving hunters, those want [==] HE plpik _-- entertained | Three Good Home Suppers. The following menus are suitable for either lumch or supper: Macaroni A L'Italienne Oatmeal Baking Powder Biscuits Tea Apple Sauce Macaroni A L'Italienne: Break up one-fourth of a pound of macaroni In short pieces (unless you have the el- bow'" macaroni, which comes. alreaay broken up) and boil until tender. Drain well, then put it into a frying pan with 4 tablespoons of olive ofl and let fry for 15 minutes, stirring often. Then add one-fourth of a cup of grated Parmesan cheese (or | American cheese chopped finely) and | one cup of canned tomatoes (or stew- {club was held on Friday night at the| ed, fresh tomatoes in season) and .ot all simmer together for 20 minutes. | Season withgsalt and pepper to tasts, and serve, - Oatmeal Baking Powder Biscuits: Sift together ene and one-fourth cups of bread flour, one and one-half | teaspoons of baking powder, one-half teaspoon salt and 2 tablespoons ot granulatel sugar. Stir into this one and one-third cups-of dry, uncooked oatmeal and, with the fingertips, run in 3 tablespoons each of butter ang {lard. Add enough water to make a soft dough (about one and two- third cups of water) and roll out to one-half inch thickness on a floured board. Cut with a biscuit cutter and bake for 20 minutes in a greased pan in a hot oven. Cheese-Tomato Toast Boston Brown Bread Cocoa Prune Whip Cheese Tomato Toast: Turn the | contents of a one-quart can of toma- | toes into a saucepan and when hot |add to it '1 cup of diced American | cheese and 2 well-beaten eggs. Seas- lon with 1 tablespoon of grated raw onion and salt and pepper to taste. | Serve poured over slices of buttered | toast. Boston Brown Bread: Mix well to- gether with one cup of rye flour, one T0-DAY'S FASHION By Vern Winston. Blue Crepe de Chine and Pink Bows Form Pajamas for This Small Child. Pajams, whether they be of crepe de chine or flannelette, are a most practical and always-becoming style of night apparel for the small child. The charm of the crepe-de-chingq model sketched above lies in its sim- plicity, relieved only by piguaut pink bows which hold the shoulder open- ings together. . This is a season of the greatest di- versity in underwear materials, and pajamas may be made flowered, plain or checked. If plain, they are sometimes piped narrowly in check- ed gingham. ps and other ian? any of the other is- ds of the Pacific, even if it is she second largest island in the world, and near Australia. X The natives are very primitive, and have changed their customs but little since New Guinea first became known to explorers. Of course, clothes are not considered at all-- in fact, they are not the fashion in New Guinea. The natives only go in ents and numerous string worn in festoons about the neck.' | Here the traveler finds strange | customs of woolmg. The girl of New }% Guinea does not wait for the young men to call on her. and they after ficient ousek BY Laura. A Kirkman cup of yellow cornmeal, one cup of graham flour and ° one-half tabie- spoon of salt. Now dissolve three- fourths of a teaspoon of soda in two cups of sour milk; or if you prefer to use sweet milk instead of the sour, dissolve one-half teaspoon of soda in one and three-fourths of a cup of sweet milk. Last add three fourths of a cup of mo- lasses, stir until well mixed, and turn, all into a mold or can that has a tight-fitting cover. The can 'or mold should not be more than three- quarters filled with this mixture, as otherwise when the mixture rises it forces off the cover of the can. Tie on the cover with string even with the can three-fourths full of the mix- ure. "Set this can or mold in a large pot which is half full of boiling wat: er, and let-the water boil up around it for three hours. It Is then ready to serve. Baked Cracker-Cheese Dish Johnny Cake Tea Preserves Baked Cracker-Cheese Dish: Eith- er cottage or American cheese may be used. Soak 2 cups of cracker crumbs in 2 cups of milk for 80 minutes, then add to this one and one-half cups of finely chopped cheese, 2 slightly beaten eggs, and salt and pepper to suit taste. Turn into a buttered pudding dish and sprinkle the top with more cracker crumbs: Bake until firm in a moder- ate oven. Tomorrow--Answered Letters. 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 Kdigor, watchful waiting sigh with relief when the man of her choice finally "pops the question." Nor does the New Guinea maiden go into a con- vent because the love of her life has not asked her to be his. On the contrary, in this wild and uncivilized country the New Guinea woman is even more progressive thap. the average western woman. The New Guinea woman doesn't wait for a man to woo her. She looks over the village, and then de- cides which young man she fancies for a husband. Then she wastes no time in asking him to marry her, put there's nothing shy or shrink- ing about her proposal. : This young woman knows that when she marries, although she is the one to choose, she automatically becomes the man's slave--absolutely his- slave--to be treated as a slave, to do a slave's work. Perhaps this is the reason--be- cause she is offering a great deal when she asks him to marry her-- that. the entire family of the New Guinea woman are so incensed and vindictive if the gentleman declines her proposal, On this barabaric island the fam- ily of a rejected young lady beat the young man into a state of uncons- ciousness. Left-over canned pineapple will re- tain dts fresh taste for another meal if put immediately into an air-tight glass jar. Left in an open dish pine- apple acquires a peculiar stale taste. Painters and poets have liberty to SA Truly Delicious! LADA" TE A Is Without Doubt "The Best." Sold in Sealed Packets Only. To-morrow's HOROSCOPE By Genevieve Kemble TUESDAY, MARCH 28th. This is to be read as a rather doubtful, if not disappointing, day according to the planetary congggura- tions, The ruling influence being a Saturn ray, the presage is for set- backs, delays and generally-disap- pointing conditions, It may be diffi- cult to overcome these obstacles, which. are in their nature stubborn and resistless, therefore the best ad- vice is to be quiet, and where action is necessary, to work along the linés of least resistance, Those,in the em- ployment of others may feel secure, Those whose birthday it is are ad vised by the stellar seers to work along lines of least resistance, re maining quiet and self-contained, ses cure in their employment, and not endeavoring to run counter to the prevailing regime. -A child born on this day will be popular and gener ous, and may make its best success in the employment of others. It should be equipped by education and train« ing to surmount obstacles in other lines of endeavor, The chances are all in your favor it you use classified adventisements; The largest sponge ever found came from the Mediterranean. {1 was over three feet across and teu feet in circumference. The highest trees have the most pointed leaves. - Perhaps it wasn't Tea that inspired the writing of «"cAuld Lang Syne," but is par gcellence «The Cup of Kindness." CHASE & SANBORN, Montreal. and nuts or cocoanut. 15ca Watch Them Smile When you bring in a Pure Gold Quick Pudding. From Dad to little Jimmy they just love these dainty desserts. And no wonder. They're so pure and delicious. And they're so easy for you to prepare. When you're delayed coming home--are tired and in a hutry--they are the ideal dessert to havein the house. no fuss--a tempting, wholesome dainty dessert ready in a few minutes. Try a combination of chocolate pudding It's simply delicious. Order a selection from your grocer, Tapioca, custard and chocolatey : No trouble-- Pure Gold Desserts QUICK PUDDINGS Pure Gold Mfg. Co., Limited, Toronto | PLUMBING work Plumbing and Heating DONE RIGHT | Equipment, let us give a price on your Contract and Job aa pment, first-class attention, H. APPLETON 417 "PRINCESS STREET Phone 878w. BARNUM'S| Specials | BAKERY | TRY SOME OF THESE: ' CREAM PUFFS, CHOCOLATE CUPS, CHOCOLATE ECLAIRS, AL- MOND WAFERS, MACAROONS, MERINGUE DROPS. THE HOME OF CHOICE CAKES AND PASTRY in Ladies' | or 2 Strap Pumps with high or low heels, in Black fll Kid or Brown Calf Well made Ladies' Oxfords in good taste for all out-of-door oc- FOOTWEAR ALL THE SMART SPRING STYLES fords. casions--just the type of Shoe for well women. Men's Tan Grain Brogue Ox- Men's Brown or Black Calf The Sawyer Shoe Store 184 Princess St.

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