Daily British Whig (1850), 12 Apr 1922, p. 8

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8 decked the luncheon fh ening in honor of Mrs. J. 1724; Private phone 857w. Edmonton, Alta, who is a much feted and Miss Lilian Fair, West street. i -------- * Life's Social Side | Editor of Women's Page, Telephoae . -. * Miss Anna Mahood, University avenue, gave a bright little luncheon for Miss Florence Emery on Tuesday when the guests were nearly all old Braulesome Hall girls, Daffodils table and an Easter chick marked each place, The guests were, Miss Florence Emery, Miss Jessie Wright, Toronto, Miss Clara Farrell, Miss Nora Connell, Miss Vivian White, Miss Anella Min- nes and Miss Marion Kirkpatrick. - . . Miss Marjorie Hopkirk, Frontenac street, was the hostess of an exceed- ingly pleasant bridge on Tuesday ev- ening when Mrs. J, Howard Box, Arnprior, was the guest of honor. . - . Mrs. D. G. Laidlaw, Earl street, gave a small bridge on Tuesday af- ternoon for Mrs. A. B. Campbell, visitor in town, . v - Mies Alice Moore, Earl street, en- tertained at bridge on Wednesday ev- Howard Box, Arnprior. + Mrs. John Donnelly, Earl street, is entertaining on Thursday evening for Rer son, Sidney Donnelly, ¥ . . Mrs. T. Callander, Barrie street, entertained some of Prof. Callander's students on Monday evening. - - - be given next Strange, who Several teas will week for Miss Mary Js one the April brides. . . . Mrs. Victor Williame, Brock street, is entertaining at bridge on Thursday evening. ~ * * * Miss Florence A. Stewart, Toron- to, is spending the Easter holidays with: her parents, Postmaster and James Stewart, 130 Bagot t. : Major Alderson, R.C.H.A. has re- turned from Ottawa, A, H. Fair, who Yas spent some months in Singapore and other in the far East, will return to Kingston in May to join Mys. Fair a ~ Miss Efa Denison has returned from St. Agnes College, Belleville, and is with Mrs. F. Denison, "Dens- mere." Norman Wormwith, who spent the week-end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Wormwith, Earl street, returned to Toronto on Tuesday Miss Marjorie Hopkirk and Miss wild® spend Easter with Napanee, and will be Jean Duff, Mrs. Briscoe, THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG. --_---- | Lift Off with Fingers S | | 1 guests at the big ball given by the] Masons of Napanee on Easter Mon- day, *® - » Miss Ruth Ziegler, nurse-in-train- ing at Toronto General Hospital, is visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Clugston, Brock street, Mrs. W. T. Minnes, who was at Atlantic City is now with Dr. and Mrs. Charles Abbott, Dunn- ville, Mr. Minnes has returned "to town. » Dr, and Mrs. James Third are ex- pected home from Bermuda on S8at- urday. : Mr. and Mrs. 8S. D. Urquhart, Ot- tawa will spend Easter with Mr. and Mrs. Peter Devlin, William street. * LJ . Mrs. Jeremiah Doolan announces the engagement of her youngest dau- ghter, Helen, to Raymond .H, Hutch- ings, son of the late George Hutch- ings and Mrs. Hutchings, Grafton, Ont, The marriage is to take place quietly the latter part of April . W. M. Nickle, Earl street, asked a few men to come in after the Cana- dian Club meeting on Tuesday even- ing to meet Hon. H. H. Stevens, Van- eouver, B.C., the epéaker of the ev- ening. Miss Evelyn Nickle, Earl street, leaves for Toronto on Thursday to spend Easter with Miss Tait, Avenue Road. Prof, and Mrs. Manley Barker, William street, will leave on Thurs- day for Stratford to spend Easter. a a Miss Jessie Hutton will return from Toronto on Saturday and will be with Mr. and Mrs. J. O. Hutton, Alfred street, Mrs. Ernest Cunningham, West street, who has been viisting = Mrs. Pat Hunter, in Montreal, has re. turned to town. Mr. and Mrs. Sandford Calvin and A i cy Why work and worry? HY make your own? After all your hard work, anxiety and risk, it costs you more money for fruit, sugar and fuel than for Shirriff's. Why slave and ony for nothing? Use Shirriff's." It is made abso- lutely pure in the most cleanly sunlit factory you can imagine. It contains nothing but hand- picked imported Spanish Seville oranges and cane sugar. It is absolutely pure, wholesome and ious always, Same quality in jars and tins -- at your grocer's. 1\ Pl 0S It costs less to enjoy Shirriffs MARMAL E Other Household Favorites-- Shirrif®s Jelly Powders, Shirriff's True Vanilla Essence. n f§ BARNUM'S| For Friday HOT X BUNS. PHONE 1321. A i, tn | BAKERY ORDER NOW, a Po, * : : anitar y-- Do you get your Milk delivered to your home in bottles ? PRICE'S DAIRY bottle all their Milk at the Dairy, In sterilized bottles, and it is delivered ; home in a sanitary way. Why not call PRICE'S TARY WAY" PRICE'S DAIRY and try "THE SANI- to your . DAIRY | "*Hilleroft" Doesn't hurt a bit! Drop a little "Freezone" on an aching corn, in- stantly that corn stops hurting, then shortly you lift it right off with fing- i ers. Truly! Your druggist' sells a tiny bottle | of "Freezone" for a few cents, suffi- | clent to remove every hard corn, soft | corn, or corn between the toes, and | the calluses, without soreness or ir- ritation. The Runner on Your Living Rooom Table "Show me a person's living-room table cover," says a friend of min2 (she is a professional interior deco1- ator) "and I can instantly gauge tne degree to which that person's artis- tic taste has been developed.' There is no doubt about it, the cover on our living room table is a bit of evidence which may either condemn or acquit us of the charge of decorative crime. If, for instance, this eover is of bright red plush with golden birds hand-embroidered upon it (this describes a cover I have ac- tually seen!) then the possessor 1s undeniably "guilty". If, however, her living-room table cover is of some dark, good-looking tapestry, velour, or brocade, she is "not guilty." It would be interesting to collect, in one room, all the table covers ot |my Column Readers and compare |them, wouldn't it? Ask yourself if {your table-cover would stand this test. If your answer to yourself is in the negative then, by all means, Plain, dark colored velvets ana velours lined with sateen and bouna with gold galoon are also much in| favor, as are the heavy satin finish- ed about the for edges with long stitches of sglf-color wool. Sunfast chenille is another fabric | worthy of consideration---especially if the housewife buys guimpe of the same color to run around the four! extreme-edges. When poplin, damask, China silk | or rajah silk in sorhe dark color have | been used for over-drapes at the win- jdows, any of these materials may ve | {used, with excellent taste, for table | runners. { And snape and size. "Do living-room tanle runners hang over the ends of the table any more?' asked a Column Reader in a personal letter to me, not long ago. Yes, they do but not {as deeply as used to be the fashion. They need not necessarily hang over the table-ends; they may be quite narrow and come only to the edge of the table at each end. Am memes | S61 ADOUt making yourself a new and | may exactly fit the surface of the Miss Lilla Callaghan arrived home Irom Atlantic City on Wednesday. J. D. Craig, Ottawa, will spend the week-end in town. Mrs. Van Rensfelier, New York, 1s the gupest of Col. and Mrs. Valin- {tine StoCkwell, Alice street. . * ». | Mr. and Mrs. R. N. F. Macfarlane, {Johnson street, have returned from Toronto. { Capt. Morton, . R.C.HA., |spend Easter in Toronto. | + Mrs. W. G. Craig, who has spent |the winter in California with Mr. and Mrs. Hamilton Mackerras, will arrive lin town on Saturday. " | Mrs. BE. J. Adams, "Park View" re- | turned from Atlantic City on Tues- | day. will . * . Miss Myra Dyde, University ave- nue, left today for Hamilton to spend | Easter. with Dr, and Mrs. James | Moxley. | Miss Jean Chown, Toronto, will | spend Easter with Dr. and Mrs. A. P. | Chown, "Edgehill." | Mrs. E. B. Orford, Renfrew, will | spend Easter with her sister, Mrs. A. |'P. Chown, "Edgehill." | Miss Ruth Campbell will arrive | from Toronto on Thursday for the Queen's Alumnae Executive meeting and will be with Mrs. Norman Miller, Edgehill avenue. - . . Rev. Robert Laird, who was in | town for the.Theological Convoca- tion of Queen's University, has re- turned to Toronto. Miss Margaret Mackintosh, Otta- wa, will be the guest of the Misses Mowat, Johnson street, for the meet- ing of the Executive of Queen's Alu- mnae Association. Miss Helen Chown has arrived from Toronto to spend the holidays with Dr. and Mrs, A. P. Chown, "Edgehill." Mrs. Charles Smith, Bagot street, left for a visit in Toronto on Tues- day. . . * R. J. Edmunds, Ottawa, will arrive in town on Thursday to spend Easter' with Dr. and Mrs. A. P. Chown, "Bdgehill." Misses Mowat, Johnson street, will leave for Ottawa on Monday to at- tend the meeting of the Ontario Pro- vincial Woman's Missionary Society of the Presbyterian church, Mr. and Mrs. Douglas Anglin, and little Miss Pamela Anglin, Montréal, will Be with Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Kent, "Somersby House" for Easter. Miss Helen Wiltow will return from the College of Education, Tor- onto, to spend Easter with Mr, and Mrs, H. A. Wilson, Arch street. Remember the kiddies of the Or- phan's Home by buying a tag, Satur- day. La Salle Chapter, 1.0.D.E., Home- made Sale, Saturday morning, April 15th, Island Market. ------------------ Silk Stockings. "Silk undergarments or silk stock- .; Ings-- any silk coming in constant contact with the body--should be washed after every wearing, other- | wise the body soil will in some de- gree rot the silk. If this rule is ob- served an astonishng amount of wear can be got out of a pair of good silk stockings or socks. Why not double the wear of either of these by the simple process of washing them out every night? _ All stockings need frequent washing and should be mended before they are washed. If both these things are done there will never be great, gaping holes to darn." ' A bad daughter-in-law is worse than a thousand dévils. He who buys what he needs not, sells what he needs. Birth's good, but breeding's bet- ter. 'Death defies the doctor. | more tasteful one. | It is not necessary to go to great expense in acquiring an artistic table cover. We all have some suitable ma- terial on hand which may be put .o this use. A piece of Oriental em- broidery would, for Instance, make a lovely cover; if it is not large en< ough in itself, it may be used as the centre of a runner of plain-colorea, dark silk, the entire runner being then edged with guimpe the same {dark shade as the silk. Scraps of Oriental silk may be used in the same way. If these scraps happen to "be oblong .in shape, they may be appliqued on ei- ther end of the plain silk runner, as bands, then the entire runner edged with guimpe. Cloth-of-silver and cloth-of-goid, backed by a more solid material, make most attractive runners. Thera are especially effective in a living room where there is mahogany furn- iture which is upholstered in tapest- ry or velvet, | What the Editor Hears | That the beauty and variety of the flowers shown in the florist shops this week has never been surpassed in Kingston. No doubt as a result of this fine display, the churches will be beautifully decorated and the sick in the hospitals dnd the '"shut- in's" in their homes, will have a fragrant reminder of their friends loving thought for them. That there are two things needed in these days; first for rich men to find out how poor men live; and sec- ond for poor men to know how rich men work, That Kingston will have the usual Easter sales several already being announced for next week. That the London Dally Mail de- clares that while most men cross- channel] air passengers seem stricken almost speechléss, the women seem quite unperturbed and converse as usual, That one New York store is em- ploying a returned soldier to give art embroidery lessons in its fancy work department. I ---------------- "WITS" OF HISTORY By Mark Stuyvesant, Att b ttt Std ir -- | table--an excellent shape to choose {in cases where the polished surface {of the table has been marred. Again] the cloth may be little more than a | | mat, not reaching to the edge of tne | table on any side. | . Above all remember that the tab: {runner or mat should never be so conspicuous as to signal the eye of a person entering the room; nor so in- harmonious with the other colors mn [the room, that it jars on the nerves of the beholder, : Old-Fashoned Tomorrrow --- An "Boiled Dinner. All inquiries addressed to Miss Kirk- {man in care of the "Efficient House- | keeping" department will be answered in these columns in their turn, This re- [quires considerable time, h®wever, ow- ing to the great number received. So if a personal or quicker reply is desired, a stamped and self-addressed envelo must be enclosed with the question. Be |sure to use YOUR full name, street number, and the name of your city and state.--The Editor. Jeotor for spring and it {is seen in models for street wear, sports, after- noon and evening. Of soft yellow kasha cloth, the three-piece costume above introduc- es a striking effect in its black.stitch- ing, which appears in three-row hor- izontal stripes. The slip-on dress is a simple affair with turn-back lapels flanking a white vestee. Monkey | fur in solid effect trims the cuffs and | forms the chin collar. | The simple, tailored hat is cover-| ed with black silk and faced in leg-| horn, . | Many Canadians at Atlantic City. | On Saturday night the boardwalk | at Atlantic City was thronged with | thousands of visitors from many cit-| ies there for Palm Sunday. The | boardwalk yesterday had the "petit promenade" that held a hint of what | ie to be expected on Easter Sunday, | when the disciples of Dame Fashion will blossom forth in all their spring- time radiance, Many have arrived with modish gowns and smart millinery that will brighten the otherwise sober hued procession. There is an impatient class that must do everything by an- ticipation, and some of its members flock their annually to appear in the Palm Sunday assembly on the wood- en walk, Every boardwalk hotel will be fill- ed at Easter. Several already have] discontinued making reservations. | But there are many hotels off the boardwalk that are prepared to ab-| sorb the beach front overflow. Still, | have ceased to make further book- ings, ---------------- While thy shoe is on thy foot tread upon the thorns, Woe be to him whose advocate be- comes his accuser, now comes the question of | Or they | several of the avenue houses also |R WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 1922 of Public Service of the hi every pacKet sold. v To-morrow's HOROSCOPE By Genevieve Kemble THURSDAY, APRIL 13TH. | A very impqrtant day is forecast {from this day'S\ astral operations, There is prospect of a sudden visita- | tion which may involve a radical up- heaval in affairs and a hurrfea {change in the place of business as well as of residence, Whatever the | occurrence, it may be abrupt and un- { foreseen. It may bring travel. While there may be many annoyances ang perplexities, yet the general fore- cast is for success and financial re- turns. In domestic, social and affec- tional matters adverse conditions may hold sway. Thoes whose birthday it is may {look forward to an interesting year | with important change, removal and |travel, which may result successful- {ly and with financial return despite, | possibly, many annoyances. A child 1 | Sn ~ est order, stands behind "SALADA" El .A BlacK-Mixed-Green-Sealed Packet Only, | born on this day will be original in thought and action, but may be in- clined to be careless and deceitful unless trained carefully in early life, "The classified advertisements pave the way to success." ------ Shoes. "Shoes should be kept cleaned and polished or treated with whatever preserves best the material of which they are made, and trees should be put in them the moment the shoes are taken off. When rubber heels wear down or leather heels wear off or go crooked they should be repair- ed or straightened. B8hoes of good material, of course, pay best, and if the soles wear out while the uppers are still good--as will happen with most people who walk on pavements --half-soling will be a justified econ- omy." As if a man that is killed should come home upon his feet, That city is in a bad case whose physician hath the gout, It the dog barks, go in.__if ths female dog barks, go out, AAA AA AA At i sii | Carefully selected and blended coffee-beans expertly - roasted and ground produce delicious Rideau Hall Coffee NOTHING ADDED NOTHING TAKEN AWAY SOLD IN TINS ONLY--BY ALL GOOD GROCERS "PLUM work. your H. APPLETON 417 PRINCESS STREET Phone i \ i AGENCY FOR HOOVER VACUUM CLEANER \ Reduced in price Special Hoover from $75.00 to $69.50. Baby Hoover from $62.50 to $57.50. | You will not have to take up your rugs or car- pets if. you have a Hoover, I an Phone 441. H. W. NEWMAN ELECTRIC (0. 167 Princess Street ~ DANDERINE Stops Hair Coming Out; Thickens, Beautifies ' rine" at any drug store. After one application of this delightful tonic) you can not find a particle of dandruff! or a falling hair, Besides, every Lair shows new life, vigor, bright. ness, more color and abundance. Times Do Change And Isn't It a Good Thing? oy » Compare a newspaper of to-day with one of ten, twenty, fifty (as many as you like) years ago. Isn't the change good? Would a fifty-year-ago newspaper (or a twenty-year-ago one) meet. to-day"s demands? No it wouldn't! How could it? There are hundreds of times as many readers as thers were even a few years ago. There are thousands and thousands of opportunities offered the readers through the newspapers --be- cause the newspaper is the logical medium. The classified ad- vertisement column of the average to-day newspaper takes more space than the whole newspaper because the great need Is to rn a few years ago. That is the greatest number of peo- ple, and the success of this newspaper as a medium for reaching the greatest number of people is established. It is ss near and convenient as your telephone. Remember that. Immediately upon finding a need for HELP, turn to our Classified advertisement, or, send us the facts and through these Classifipd Servers you will get what you want. How much eas- fer that is than it was a few years ago, YQUR newspaper has grown up to meet your need and Isn't It Good? SER you. 5 a R----

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