Daily British Whig (1850), 19 Apr 1922, p. 8

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Life's Social Side | Editor of Women's Page, Telephone 1724; Private phone 857w. . sn Mrs. W. P. Wilgar, Mack street. entertained at the tea hour on Tues- day for Miss Mary Strange who is a much-feted bride elect. Pink tulips gave a spring like touch to the prel- ty rooms where the hostess made the tea, assisted by her sister, Mrs. Har- old Drinkivater, Orillla. A blue bas- ket containing a huge Easter egg adorned with a bunny bride and | groom and filled with dainty hand- kerchiefs was presented to the guest | of honor amid much merry laughter. | . The guests included Mrs. H. E. Rich- " ardson, Mrs. J. F. Preston, Mi " Rhoda Wurtel, Miss Alleen Rogers, i Miss Jean Duff, Miss Helen Strange, Miss Cecily Rutherford, Miss Jean EF Craig, Miss Eva Martin, Miss Har- | riet Gardiner and Miss Doris and Miss Gwendolen Folger. » - - Much regret is felt in Kingston at the news that (General King and Mrs. | I W. B. Shuttleworth King are being transferred to London, Ont. Since his _ appointment to the command of this © district General King and his wife have made "The Tower House" a 'eentre of kindly hospitality and on EF thelr departure Kingston will lose a t most charming host and hostess, Miss Gertrude Martin, Balaclava street, was the at a china shower and tea on Monday after- IL moon for Miss Helen Doolan, a bride of next week. Mrs. B. Cousins pour- #d tea at the attractive tea centred with bridal roses. The f Buests were admitted by Miss Elean- or and Miss Winnifred Martin, two E daintily frocked little maids. » . - hostess Among the Queen's professors and their families, who will sail for Eng- land shortly after convocation, are Prof. and Mrs. P. G. C. Campbell, Prof. and Mrs. Manley Baker, Prof. and Mrs T. Callander, Prof. Conach- or, Prof. Simmons, Prof. Prince and t Prof. Brovadani, who will spend the ~ summer in .Spain. - . - Some of the younger officers of the R.C.H.A. have organized a sur- prise party for this evening, to which General and Mrs. F. W. Hill, West Street, will open their hospitable doors. fe . . Mrs, W. T. Connell, Arch street, . §ave a merry party on Tuesday even- ing for Miss Nora and Master Ford Connell, when the young people dan- to Miss Frances Devlin's-splen- did music and enjoyed the delicious * Try a Different BREAKFAST Try Roman Meal -- the delicious whole grain cereal, nut-like in flavor. You'll find it far more nourishing than any other breakfast food--and it's more economical. Appetizing Satisfying Energizing AT YOUR GROCERS 12, qT . | Mrs. HD. Wightman, Earl street; -jand her little daughter, Margaret, table | prepared and other « fun. Miss Virginia Fair and {Donovan Clark being the prize-win iners, | . {supper Itie | Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Pugsley enter- | {tained at luncheon in honor of Miss | Beatrice Anglin and Col. Livius Sher {wood, and thelr guests were: Mr. ana {Mrs. Ashworth Féllows, Col. and Mrs. Reginald Pellatt of Toronto and [Col. and Mrs. "Owen Hodgins of | | Kingston. ' { . . | Mrs. H. J. Dawson, Barriefleld, is iglving a tea dance this afternoon for | | Miss Gwendolen Dawson and her {guest, Miss Constance Webster, | | Whitby. | } . * * | | Mr. and Mrs. George A Palmer | announce the engagement of their, | | eldest daughter Dorothy, to Alfrod | Hughes, 177 Alfred street, the mar- | riage to take place May 1Sth, 1922. { . . » Mrs. Philip Du Sydenham street, is entertaining evening {for Master Theodore Du Moulin, who is in: town from T. C. S. Port Hope { | alin, | this "oe. a | Mrs. Arthur Clark, Albert street, | | a party today ghen her | {guests/will be some of Miss Barbara | |Clark's girl friends, | iis giving Miss Doris and Miss Gwendolen Folger, "Edgewater," will entertain at luncheon on Thursday in honor ot | Miss Mary Strange. . - » Mrs. Philip Du Moulin, Sydenham {street, will entertain at bridge on Thursday evening. | ny [ Mrs. M. R, Davis, Alfred stfeet, is entertaining at the tea hour this afternoon, | "2 a | Mrs. Arthur Ellis, King street, is {entertaining at bridge this evening. 1 . » . Mrs. Trumpour and Miss Gladys | Trumpour, Picton, spent the holiday {with Mrs. Mark Trumpour, Lower Union street. | Dr. and Mrs. W. Jordan, Barrie |street, left for Toronto on Tuesday to spend a few weeks with Mrs. Z. | Davies. Miss Phyllis and Miss Rosemary Burstall, Ottawa, will be among the guests at the Holt-Jeffrey wedding | which takes place in Montreal | Friday. | Miss. Mowat and Miss Ethelwyn Mowat, Johnson street, are the [guests of Mrs. R, A. Watts, Ottawa, [for the Provincial meeting of the Presbyterian W. M. 8, *- * * | Mr, and Mrs. James Minnes, Bag- |ot street, have returned from Toron- | to, where they spent Easter. | Miss Nora Connell, who was with | her parents, Dr. and Mrs. W. T. Con- nell, Arch street, returned to Brank- {some Hall, Toronto, today. | Canon Jones, who accompanied {Miss Mary Jones to Montreal on | Tuesday, has returned to town. Mrs," G. Hunter Ogilvie, Earl! |8treet, returned from Philadelphia today. | Mrs. T. R. Little, who has been | | spending some time in Toronto and Hamilton, returned home today. | | Miss Catharine Fairlfe, street, who is a member of the exe- | cutive, leaves today for Brantford to |attend the annual meeting of the {Ontario Provincial Graduate Nurses | Association. \ Mr. and Mrs. Ww. Noonan, who | spent 'Easter in town, have reurn- {= to Napanee. | * * » Mr. and Mrs. Osborn Cross and their lattie daughter, who have peen In Minneapolis, are now settled in { Montreal. Mrs. Cross, who is better {known in Kingston as Miss Kate | Smellie, has many friends in town. | Miss Anna Mahood, who was with {Mr and Mrs. George Mahood for the holidays, has returned to Branksomo | Hall, Toronto. | Prof. and Mrs. Manley Baker, Wil. {liam street, have returned from | Stratford. . + | Mrs. J. C. Spence, Garrett street, {left today for Brantford where as | president of the Nurses Alumnae As- | sociation, she will attend the Prov- incial Graduate Nurses Association's annual meeting. Miss Norah Sullivan, who spent the holidays with Col. and 'Mrs. Cleaver Sullivan, returned to Trafal- | gar Institute, Montreal, on Tuesday. | ritation, on |, Brock } THE Lift Off with Fingers {An Engagement Announcement Lun-| of "En | | | {love to have you lunch with me on|of us." | Doesn't hurt a bit! Drop a little | "Freezone" on an aching corm, in-| stantly that corn stops hurting, then | shortly you lift it right off with fing- | ers. Truly! Your druggist sells sa tiny bottle of "Freezone" for a féw cents, suffi-| cient to remove every hard corn, soft Cork, or corn bétween the toes, and the' calluses, without soreness or ir- A A A A AAA iat attend the annual meeting in Brant- ford. ao Miss Ardath Hardy, who spent the holidays with Mr. and Mrs. C: B. S. Harvey, Unlon street, returned to Havergal Hall, Toronto, on Tuesday. | | { | | VICTIM OF CUPID Mr. and Mrs. Stanley GQ. Tobin, of Edmonton, whose marriage the other day was the result of a whirlwind courtship in the provincial legislature buildings. Mr. Tobin is M.P.P. for Le- due. When he came to attend the ses- sion at Edmonton, he met Miss Greta Adele Playter, a solicitor in the attor- ney-general"s depariment. It didn't take much persuasion for Miss Playter t« drop her law work and become Mrs Tobin, TO-DAY'S FASHION By Vera Winston. { fare spending this week-end in To-| ronto. | b Miss Troha Bogart and Miss Kit-/ had Alsop, Halifax, who spent the holi- | {days with Dr. and Mrs. I. G. Bogart, | | Wellington street, have returned to | | Havergal Hall, Toronto. Miss Alsop | |leaves in June to continue her! !ctudies at Oxford, England. * - » Major and Mrs. Albert Stroud, and their family, who have come to King. ston: from Toronto, are receiving a | warm welcome home. They are at) present 'with Mrs. 8. V. Samwell, | | Frontenac streft. | Miss Marion Rankin, who spent | [Easter with Mr. and Mrs. Anthony | | Rankin, Collin's Bay, has: returney | Black Cire Brald Offsets the Trim Lines of This White Crash Knicker Suit, oe The much-talked-of knicker sult is being developed in interesting ma- terials for spring, and suits which still adhere to only two pleces are rather the exception than the rule. Ot oyster-white crask' the suit above adds smartness in offsetting its trim lines by black binding. The DAILY BRITI III TITIES, SH WHIG, WEDNESDAY, APRIL '19, 1922. BY Laura. A Kirkman cheon. One of the first things a girl thinks about after accepting "Mr. Right" 1s how to announce her engagement to her friends. Oneway of doing this, Is to give a lun&eon to her girl friends for that pu¥pose. If the announceMent luncheon 1s to be a'very informal affair, the en- gaged girl may send out her invita- agement" note-books with pink silk covers. (These are easily made by the hostess by s ply cov- ering two pieces of card-board with { pink moire silk--or with pink sat: | ribbon covered with gold or silver {net and a lace edging to match: ora- | inary lined pads are pasted inside the two pink covers). A pink flower is folded inside the luncheon-napkin. When all are seated, the hostess === Fes of flavor gathered from mountain deau Hall Coffee | [ NOTHING ADDED NOTHING TAKEN AWAY { | tions, written on ordinary note paper | explans to her guests that "The letter | | carrier has a small envelope for each |? and reading: "Dear Mary: I would Wednesday next at one o'clock. I am asking some of the other girls, too, and hope you can come, with love, Helen." Or the invitation may be de- livered by the engaged girl face to face, orpover the telephone. If the affair is to be a more formal one, however, the mother of the en gaged girl should write the invita- tions, as follows: "Dear Mary: I am asking a few of Helen's f 1s to Tuncheon on Wednesday, third, at one o'clock, and 1 wouid like-to have you among them ing.that you can be with us, Cordial- ly yours, Alice Dean Grey." If possible, the reason for giving the luncheon should not be allowed to slip out in any way. But quently happens that the girl's friends suspect that they have been invited to hear a "deep, dark secret"---and, luckily, this thrill uncertainty often infuses the gathering with so much excitement May the engag 3 of {and delightful anticipation ,that the | luncheon is an assured success from the outset. When the guests arrive they find the dining table decorated most tractively. A small doll dressed as postman stands in the middle of th table, with a small bag on his baex. | From this mail bag hangs as many pieces of pink baby-ribbon as there are guests present; the ends of these | ribbons extend to each guest's plate A wreath of pink arbutus (or other small flower) combined the green of the asparagus fern, s rounds this small mail man. The fa- vors, which lie at each place, consist Hop- | " it fre-, little | | She then asks each ond to pull at the pink ribbon which | tends to her plate. When they do | this, they find that a tiny piece of pa- | per folded in the shape of an envel- fore flies out of the bag on the little man's back. These letters are num- |bered on the back, and the girls-are [asked to open their letters in turn {and read them aloud, in the succes sion which the numbers indicate. | Letter 1, reads "Mary"; letter. 2 con- i tains the word "is; letter 3 reads { the fourth letter says letter, "John." (If than five guests pres- | 'engaged'; [ "to"; the fifth | there are more | ent, the sent {or by adding ia: sur-n Stuffed Olives Chicken a la Kipg Pineapple Salad with Whipped Cream Caramel Ice Cream "Kisses" . Nuts and Bonbons Coffee shall publish an article on | Springtime Shower for | Elect." { Tomorrow- | Menus. "A Pretty the Good Two Supper All inquiries addressed to Miss Kirk- man in care of the "Ffficient House- | keeping" department will be answered in these columns in their turn. This re- quires considerable time, } ver, ow- | ing to the great number re So ii | a personal or quicker reply is ired, a stamped and self-addressed envelope must be enclosed with the question. Be | sure to use YOUR full name, strect | number, and the name of your city and | state.--The Editor. Wha the Editor Hears | That many gay hats and home- spun suits were seen on Easter Sun- day. That Kingston is very proud of Ler own Canadian contralto, Miss Jean Chown, who is always sure of a large audience in her home town. That the bright sunshine of Eas- ter Day was taken advangtage of by motorists, but in the afternoon only, for the churches never had /larger congregations, > That many families will move their belongings to another house on the 1st of May. That the old time waltz is becom- ing very popular in England, This will give the older people a chance | to have more dances at the balls and bring into fashion one of the most graceful dances. That ths sales of home-made cook- ing held by the Girls' Fellowship MISS AMY B. McKOWAN Of Bowmanville, who has been noti- fled of her appointment under the fed- eral department of immigration and Selontsation 8s a worker at the ports of entry. AB tt i ti in. ll Send 15 c. for Trial Stze FERD. T. HOPKINS 1 1 ¥ al Cream [Keep Your Skin Active and Club of the Y.W.C.A., and La Salle Chapter 1.O0.D.E. on Saturday were most successful, | The only supreme court woman mar- | shal in the U.S, Mrs. W. Cheesel Lewis, of Oklahoma City. A ex- | Next Wednesday, in this column. i Bride- | ~~ SOLD IN TINS ONLY-BY ALL GOOD GROCERS IA AAA A A Ae ets a BARNUM'S| [XTRA | BAKERY SOMETHING NEW -- WEDDING CAKES A THE HOME OF CHOICE CAKES AND PASTRY MERINGUE ROLLS SPECIALTY AGENCY VACUUM Phone 441. FOR HOOVER 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. H. W. NEWMAN ELECTRIC C CLEANER 167 Princess Street rr a To-morrow's '} HOROSCOPE | By Genevieve Kemble This promises to be a day of un settled and perplexing conditions ac- cording to the contradictory planet- ary configurations, While the finan- cial outlook is of an encouraging na- ture, at the same time there is a | presage of fraud, deception and con- |spiracy and other abortive and mali- | cious influences. Opportunity for a | beneficial change may present itself, but this should be embraced with the above possibility in mind. In domes- tic, social and affectional matters there is also a threatening augury Those whose birthday it is have the augury of a year, of treachery and subtle attack, although the financial! prospects are fortunate, With can- tion, affairs may be directed into channels. Guard the domestic circie {against danger. A child born on ithis day may have.a rather checker- THURSDAY, APRIL 20TH. the employment of others, where it RUE Asin som nna RY ery and fraud. It will be popular and generous, though disposed to Ye careless and untidy unless carefully trained, | When Renovating Clothes Firs: ments, An colors, Always press before creases are eliminated. Never use a light colored cloth in pressing dark clothes, as the white lint shows and is hard to remove, Wring cloth in hot water, as cold water cools yeur iron too much. Never rub as in ironing, but lay the iron on and move slowly and gently over the garment. The more you rub the more your garment shines, If an old plece of trouser cloth or any worsted Is spread over serge (or other material which shines easily) much of the usual gloss is suppress- ed and the garment pressed has an Unusually satisfactory appearance Wet velvet, 'silk or satin very slightly, as heat and wet 8poil these remove all stains on gar- fron that is too hot fades the first ed career, and and may do best in je be safeguarded against treach- ArmA cn gn. fnaterials. Press lightly till dry Why work of making your own? marmalade flavor ¢f It is absolutely pure. It costs less toe Same quality in fars and ting at your grocers, tn, TS ------r Kid or Brown Calf. Actual experiments provgtthis. 'enjoy the delicious, appetizing due to its absolute purity and the real, original Seville oranges (imported by us direct from Spain) and cane sugar--nothing else. Why make your own when esr cin Well made Ladies' Oxfords in good taste for all out-of-door oc- | for nothing? HY endure the long drawn-out, tedious task x Shirriff's costs less. Why not avor of Shirriff's njoy Shirriffs MARMALADE Other Household Faverites-- : Shirrifi's Jelly Powders, 8hirrifi's True Vanilla Essencés si, ih FINE FOOTWEAR | ALL THE SMART SPRING STYLES in Ladies' | or 2 Strap Pumpe with high or low heels, in Black casions--just the type of Shoe for well-dressed women. Men's Tan Grain Brogue Ox- , fords. Oxfords. Men's Brown or Black Calf \ The Sawyer Shoe Store en a aw---- LL TO -- {jaunty skirt, when removed to re- Miss, M. Abernethy, president of | veal the knickers underneath, may the Kingston.Chapter of the Gradu-' be thrown over the shoulders a8 » ate Murses Association left today to capa. j to Havergal! Hall, Toronto. Delicately fragre + Absolutely hog G3 for Baby- Best for Your 184 Princess St. With Cuticara nee

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