------ Life's Social Side *rttrtmtntuted | ~~ Editor of Women's "Page, Tele. phone 229; Private phonc 837w. A pleasant dinner dance was heid at the Cataraqui Golf Club on Sat- urday evening, when a delightfully cool breeze from the lake was nmost grateful after the heat of the day Among those present were Mr. and Mrs. Charles Taylor, Mr. and Mrs, T. H. Scott, Dr. and Mrs. A. W. Win- nett, Mr. and Mrs. Philip DuMouylin, Dr. and Mrs. W. T. Connell, Miss Ford, Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Mitchell (London, Ont.), Mr. and Mrs. Herb- ert Steacy, Mrs. Van Wren, Miss Caroline Mitchell, Miss Harriet Gard®ner, Miss Doris McKay, Miss Gertrude McKelvey, Miss Kirkpatrick, Miss Miss Isabel Minnes, Dr. Howard Folger, Messrs. Mitchell (London), Rigney, Hubbell (Watertown, N.Y.), D. Chown, H. Scott, J. Hickey, Pan- | et (Ottawa). . A luncheon was given at the Cat- araqui Golf Club to-day for Mrs. E. C. Mitchell, London, Ont. . * -. Mr. and Mrs. T. M. Banner, Pitts- burg, Penn., will arrive early in Aug- ust to visit Mr. and Mrs. D. G. Laid- law, Earl street. Canon and Mrs. Jones and J. W. Miss Winnifred Jones, Albert street, | spent Sunday at Stella, Amherst Is- land. Mr. and Mrs. Botterell, Toronto, are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. R. A. for over 75 years has relied upon Gouraud's Gouraud"s Oriental Cream eke ay 1 ars, 10e per et a ts, Grocers and General Stores [ GET IT REPAIRED Sewing Machines, Phonographs, * Guus, Rifles repaired and refitted. Parts supplied. Sawg fled, knives, scissors and edge tools ground. Leeks repaired. Keyy fitted (o all kinds of locks, All makes of Lawn Mowers sharpened and re- phired. We can repair anything that is repairable. J. M. PATRICK 140 Sydenham Street, Kingston Phone 2056J. Marion | Eleanor Phelan, | A od. | Wolfeville, N... this week. ad ft rte |Fowler, "The Amherst Island Mrs. Earl C. Sherry, St. Louis Mo., and her little son, are spending | the summer at Stella Point, (guests of Mrs. Sherry's parents, Mr | {and Mrs. S. G. Sutherland. Cedars," Emerald, 8 a Eugene Beaupre, who visiting his mother, Mrs. H Beau- pre, Johnson street, has left to join | his family at Notre Dame due Port- | age, Que. | Col. H. T. Skinner, D.S.0., is stay- | ing with his sister, Miss Nan Skin- | ner, at "Cataraqui Lodge." Miss Skinner's nieces from Montreal are | also visiting her at her home in the Thousand Islands Mrs. (Dr.) F McKelvey Bell, New | { York, has arrived to spend the sum- mer with her mother, Madame Cas- | |grain, at Aberchalader Lodge Glen | | Walter | Admirers of Dame Clara Butt, | (Mrs. Kennerley Rumford), will be interested to hear that her daughter, Miss Joy Kennerley Rumford, has | been presented at court lately. Her | parents have just returned to Eng- land from a successful tour in Aus- tralia and Canada. * -. Mrs. N J 0 citia | i Irs eale ampbellford, is witn {said for the moderately short skirt.. | | For walking, sports or office, a long | gether one cup of cornmeal and one her daughter, Miss Aberdeen avenue Reginald Chown, University ave- jnue," visiting Mrs. G. B. SN Mumiel Neals, | Lyndhurst. | Mr. and Mrs. Noel Gill and Linton Gill, Aberdeen avenue, are at thair | summer home near Campbellford. 1 | Miss Lilian Fair, West street, lef: | | for Belleville today to visit Miss | {Alice Lazier. | | a 9 » | | Miss O'Neill and Miss Emma | | O'Neill, Port Colborne, Ont, wh {have been on a trip down the S! | { Lawrence, arrived in town on Sun-| {day and are at 189 Earl street. I" Mrs. Frank Cooke and her soa, {Los Angeles, Cal., who were with Miss Cooke, St. Mark's rectory, Bar- riefleld, left for Whitby today, to visit Mrs. John Webster. . > - Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Hughes, Uni- versity avenue, left for Syracuse, N.Y., on Sunday, to visit Mr. and Mrs. Harold Hughes. Mr. and Mrs. Oliver Chown, Uai- versity avenue, are at their cottage on the lake shore. C. R. Tait, who spent the week- end at Stella, left on Tuesday to spend his holidays at his home in Preston. Mrs. H. Hembry and Miss Janet {Hembry with Mrs. WwW. H. Kim- | merly and her daughter Cora, Na- | panee, with Miss Thelma Sager, To- ronto, motored to Toronto to spend a few days with Mrs. H. Sager. Miss Constance' Webster, Whitby, Is with her uncle and aunt, Rev. A. O. Cooke, and Miss Cooke, St. Mark's rectory, Barriefield. Mr. and Mrs. Alan Brooks, Wel- land, will arrive this week to visit Mrs. Francis Brooks, Barriefield. Lady Twining has decided to spend the | has been \ Do You Awake "Tired and Weak? Know the Joy of Restful Sleep by Taking Ironized Yeast . Do you arise in the morning as unre- freshed as when vou retired? Are body, brain and nerves all run down? This terrible weakness which afflicts $0 many may be blamed on the lack of vitamines and iron in modern foods, | Supply these invigorating elements by taking two pleasant tablets of Ironized Yeast three times a day. Everyone knows that yeast 1s a wonderful build- er of strength and energy. But Iron- ized Yeast embodies a new secret pro- cess, knowmyas "ironization," which enables the yeast to produce its results twice as quickly. It tones up the great vital organs, soothes the worn-out nerves and makes you feel like a new person. Get Ironized Yeast today and take a new lease on life, or to try it entirely free, simply mail postcard for Famous 3-Day Trial Treatment. Ad- dress Harold F. Ritchie & Co., Ltd., Dept. 96, Toronto. Ironized Yeast is recommended and guaranteed by all good dealers, Pe choice figure skirt, Fashion allowed an individual on this matter, so if one is a of fun in an extremely short {one can't blame it on the powers that [wilk, and stir Mghtly. b> any more, our own sense of what is fitting will have to have the brunt, Extremes are always bad taste, but who can deny there is much #6 be skirt, such as was worn twenty years ago, is untidy, unsanitary, and to our eyes ugly, still there is no ques- tion in many minds that the six or seven inches from the ground will save us from dust and germs, let us walk with such grace as we possess, and yet disguise in a measure the de- feots of badly shaped legs. though leaving the ankle and feet free for a display of pretty shoes and stock- ings. For dancing too, a skirt that clears the floor adds much to its wearers pleasure, and though the gowns made en train were most graceful garments in whieh "to enter a ballroom, they were anything but graceful when the train was held up while dancing. For formal recep- tions, dinners; etc., the long skirt is the most dignified and lends itself to handsome materials, and especially tv the classic folds of the present vogue, But after all it is a question of lines, what {is more distressing than the eight of a tall girl who vould be called slim in a frock with long draperies, in a skimpy short skirt out of which thin arms' and legs appear, unless it 'be the stout lady of uncertain age, in a white ab- breviated ekirt and doubiful shoes and stockings.- Many noted actresses are wearing the long skirt on the stage, but at the race meet at New- market, England, most of the skirts were three-quarter length. Lady Tree favors long skirts. "I am tired of the battalioms of artificial silk legs, and am praying for long skirts again. I consider the bad manners of the day entirely due to the short skirt vogue. "Except on very young girls, I like long dresses on the stage. Many of the modern plays have been quite marred by their skirts, and dramatic situations have been ruined." {several days of this week in Napa- |nee with Mrs. H. Daly and will come to Kingston on Thursday to] | visit Mrs. Ritchie, "Elmhurst." | Miss Laura Kilborn and Miss | Helen Strange will leave at the lat- | ter part of the week to visit Col. | and Mrs. Everett Birdsall, Birdsall, Ontario. - . Mrs. William King has arrived from Lowell, Mass, to spend the summer with (he Misses Clark, Un!- versity avenue, and her son, Prof. William King, at Wolfe Island. Mr. and Mrs. John Ritchie, Mon- {treal, are with Mrs. Ritchie, Elm- | hurst apartments, Centre street. Mrs. Arthur Turner and her chil- dren, Hamilton, are with Mr. and Mrs. Th Slater, Barrie street. Mr. and Mrs. John Nieolle, Barrie street, have returned from a visit to Mr. Nicolle's sister at Lake Scugogq. - * Miss Jean Young, who has been with her parents, Mr. and Mra. Archibald Young, Union street, left for Toronto today, to resume her training at the General hospital. | Miss Anna Langwith, Albert street, left on Saturday to visit Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Nach at their sum- | mer home on the Gatineau river. Miss Crocker, Toronto, is with Mrs. Kearney Jones, King street. { Mrs. W. Claxton has arrived from Montreal to spend the summer in Kingston. Rev. T. W. Savary, rector of St. James' church, will. return from A recital of sacred music will be given in St. George's cathedral, on Friday, July 21st, at 8 p.m. by Lady Twining, England, assisted by R. R. F. Harvey, the cathedral organist. Collection in aid of the cathedra! choir fund. oy } A men asked the other day, "What are Kimgston women doing about the burning question of the length of the skirt?" Well, as far as ome can see they are for the most part exercising toeir usual good taste and common i Each One to Her Taste. sense, and are much relieved to find they can do this and yet be emart, for with unusual consideration Dame 1 TO-DAY'S FASHION By Vera Winston. Whether cne plans to travel or to remain at home, a go top- "¢oat which is as as 'it is at- tractive is a very worth-waile pos- session. : The one here is stunning in cut and in material. It has that equare- 'ut, mannish look which is so desir- able, and it is of soft, thick 'wool on which black and gray make a smart-looking shadow plaid. The lining is of jockey red. It borders the coat and forms s Nae NA ar | | When Your Milk or Cream Sours, A Column Reader has asked me to {Publisti recipes calling for sour milk I cream. On these worm days, when milk is apt to sour, it is well to keep |some such recipes as the following in a handy place: | Sour Milk Griddle Cakes: Beat well" !together ome egg, one cup of thick |sour milk and one-half cup of eny |kmd of cooked cereal. Sift together | three-fourths of a cup of flour and |one-fourth teaspoon of salt, and add jthis to the first mixture. When ready [to drop the cakes on the griddle, add one-half teaspoon of baking soda to the batter, and bea" vigorously. (This | batter should look like thick' cream. If too thin, add a little more flour, |and if too thick add more sour milk {or water.) | Emergency Biscuits: Sift together | two cups of flour, one-half teaspoon lof soda and one-fourth teaspoon of isalt. Rub into this one tablespoon of |shortening, add one cup of thick sour The dough should be soft. Drop it by spoonfuls [nto greased muffin-tins and bake in {a hot oven for 20 minutes. They are | delicious. Boston Brown Bread: Sift to- lcup of graham flour. Dissolve one | teaspoon of soda in a very li'tle hot [vater and add this to one and two- [thirds cups of thick sour milk or lcream. Combine the wet and dry | mixtures and turn all into a greased {mold (leaving room in the mold for {the bread to rise); cover with a | greased cover, tying it on tightly, and |sink this mold (an empty baking powder can is a good ome to use) into boiling water for four hours. Then take off the cover of the mold and bake in a moderate oven for one hour, Chocolate Loaf Cake: Sift together one and one-half cups of flour and one teaspoon of soda. Melt two squares down either shoulder seam. The i close-fitting little hat is of suede tm the same tone. 4 For Beauty. It is not generally known that ladies who are unable to vieit beauty specialisis can obtain treatment in their own homes for positively no expense. Dr. Northey Du-Maurier, D.D., M.E., H.A., the eminent French skin and beauty specialist and found- er of the famous beauty clinics throughout the world, has been per- suaded to meet the demands of the general public by putting on sale at all drug and departmental stores, the preparations prepared from his French formulae that have been closely guarded and have made his name famous for twenty years. The preparation'in question con- sist of hair tonic, face astringent, face powder, skin food, vanishing cream, cold cream, massage cream, tooth paste. One of the only simple, effective and rapid removal of pimples, liver spots: and freckles is Dr. Du-Maur- fer's Astringent Lotion. Hints of the Mode. In Paris bags carried in the even- |iny are flat envelope affairs of bro- cade or velvet which match the gown. , - Shades of crushed strawberry and rose mauve are new colors which French women have taken up. New types of earrings are dull gold or silver in intricate scrolls set with semi-precious stomes. Large collars of ostrich in match- ing color appear on evening wraps of satin and chiffon. A petaled side drapery is a feature of an attractive dress of orchid linen. There is at present a strong pen- chant for all shades of caramel and pale brown in simple frocks of crepe of georgette. . A machine gun made in the 17th century had 64 barrels. 'Waste nothing--all their uses. things have NA aS I1LY BRITISH WHIC. of unsweetened chocolate, add to it | butter size of an egg, ome cup of | sugar, one cup of sour milk or cream, and one beaten egg. Combine the wet with the dry mixture, and bake in two layers. in a hot oven for 30 min- utes. Fill with the following: Sour Milk Nut Cake Filling: One | cup of chopped walnut meats mixed | with two tablespoons of sour milk or cream, and one-half cup of powdered sugar. Flavor with one-fourth tea- Sour Cream Cake Filling: (When | the cream which you intended for | | Whipping, goes sour, try this recipe.) | | Sweeten and chill one cup of "double | |cream," then whip it until stiff (keep- | ing it cold as you whip). When stiff, | fold in one cup of chopped walnut meats. If the cream does not become stiff, for any reason, add ome teaspoon of dissolved gelatine at the last, and place it on ice. Spread this filling between the layers of any kind of cake. Ohocolate Drop Cookies: Cream to- gether one-fourth cup of butter and | one cup of sugar, Add two beaten eggs, ome teaspoon vanilla, two squares melted chocolate, and three- | a pinch of salt. Last add one cup of | walnut meats chopped, and drop by | teaspoonfulls on ea buttered pan. Fake ten minutes in a good oven. This recipe makes two dozen cookies, | Tomorrow--Answered Letters. All Inquiries addressed to Miss | Kirkman in care of the "Efficient ne Housekeeping" department will answered in thes8 columns in thelr | turn. This requires considerable | time, however, owing to the great | 2umber received. So # a personal or | quicker reply is desired, a stamped and self-addressed envelope must be | enclosed with the question--The | Kditor, | To-morrow's | HOROSCOPE {| By Genevieve Kemble | TUESDAY JULY 18. This day's planetary movements bespeak lively and happy conditions in all affairs, in business as well as | in the household activities. All the | astral testimonies point to prosper- | ous and harmonious conditiuns, | with auguries for advantageous | changes, removals or journeys, anda | with young people under the most excellent auspices for courtship or matrimony. All socfal, romantic and artistic activities should thrive under the gracious offices of Venu trine Luna, > Those whose birthday it is have an excellent prospect for a success- ful, prosperous and happy year both In their business and domestic af- fairs. Affeotional matters are under the happiest auspices. A child born on this day will be talented, versat- ile, original, artistic and affection- ate, and will rise in life. | | spoon of vamilla. i. fourths of a cup of flour sifted with silppers. The |Ing fragrant hedges, through which What do you want? Get it through the classified advertisements. EL te dedi | Wiat the Eior Hears | That the Church of Rome has taken a very decided step in re- gard to.extremely short sleeves and low necks. At a corporate ocom- nunion of the Daughters of Mary at Rome, this week, Cardinal Marini refused to administer the sacrement to those whom he considered impro- perly dressed, telling them after- wards to go home and sew yokes and sleeves onto their frocks. That this is a gingham summer, ten out of every dozen women you meet on the streets are frocked in this popular matertal. That the hide of a huge lizard, the cabrogova, found in Ceylon, is being MONDAY, JULY 17, €p ------ utation is a guide to the future, because it is a record of the past. The Salada Tea Company has earned for itself an enviable reputation as a result of supplying to the public, for more than thirty years, the highest quality of Tea and never varying from that standard. The reputation for reliability has built the greatest Tea business in North America. "SALADA" 1022 1 used for making women's shoes and [sible Canadian girl do for a consort skin is beautifully | for his majesty? marked and when tanned is tough and waterproof The engagement ig Miss Hazel Hubbell B.A cf Mrs iam H. George A atoon, Sask place shortly, That the crop of sweet clover which borders the country roads is a wonderful one, in some places join- Hubbell, Bonney, B.A., the motorist drive for miles, That the Gananoque golfers have a nice airy links, but the Cataraqui Golf Club has them beaten in the matter of a beautiful view and new club house. y That King Boris of Bulgaria wants an English queen. How would a sen- The Americar Antiguarian ety was organized up He is wise who knows when to wait. \ i\ & Pour the liquor off Keep on ice the leaves and until cold w to cocl Pour the beiling water lea NICE TEA Serve with lemon and for ICED TEA sugar to taste CHASE & SANBORN"S ZANT Steep for five ® on the ves NE AN A A NA Ar Ariss Bf BAKERY a l FRESH BLUEBERRY PIES BARNUM'S | Engagement Announced. announced of , daughter Hubbell and the late Will- Smith's Falls, Sask- , the marriage to take soci- in 1812, having headquarters at Wooster, Mass. Don't wait for something to tur go after it and turn it up. how and freer rr CHOICE CAKES, always fresh. Try them! ~~, The Man In Overalls Depends Upon Bread For hard work there is nothing so sustaining and stimulating as MALTANA BREAD It makes muscle, and for brain work it is equally stimu- lating and strengthening. MALTANA BREAD is made from whole wheat flour and is not only healthier, but . has that delicious "homemade" taste, TRY A LOAF TO-DAY, LACKIE'S SPECIALS | The Sa Phone 159 LADIES' WHITE CANVAS, tan trimmed, made on sport last, with low, flat heels. Special Price 52.75 wyer Shoe Store 184 Princess St. J