Nr JULY 26, 1023. | ~ Lite's Social Side 21. Woman's Page, Tele. Private phone 837w. » . . ¥ditor of phone 243. Kingston d' an interesting visi- tor at the Y.M.C.A. this week in the person of Mrs, Mackenzie Canndff, St. Paul, Minn., who, coming to Ot- tawa recently, felt she must come on 10 Kingston, where she was born and spent her childhood, leaving with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Groh, for Winnipeg in 1878. Mr. Groh was a furrier and began busi- ress in Kingston on the corner of Wellington and Brock, streets, wlere for so many years Waldron's dry goods establishment has stood, re- moving later to the corner of Wel- Kpgton and Princess street, to the stone building now occupied by W. H, Cockburn, hardware merchant. Little Laura Groh attended Syden- ham school when it was) a frame SBUNdNg as agg daily lived on Wel- lington "S¥ré{™™~ Mr. .and Mrs. Groh were members of St. George's cathe- dral and Mrs. Canniff sang in the ; choir, then in a gallery over the 'sults are instant. Highly antiseptic. Exerts a soft and soothing action. Over 73 years in use, Send 15 c. for Trial Stze FERD. T. HOPKINS & SON , Moatreal Gouraud's Oriental Cream WILSON Kill them all, and the gers Ivo, 14 a packet a uggi rocers and Fhe Stores, - Fe -- RE Ch ( Montmorency) Arriving daily in 6 gt. and | | gt. baskets and prices are very reasonable. Leave your order here. Hen Feed 100 bags in, to sell at $2.75 Bag Lemons Large juicy. 29c¢. doz. Libby's Rose Brand Red: Salmo n 11b. tins . ..... 25c. Bananas Large, ripe. Only 29¢. Dozen Robinsons "Stores of Better Value" William, Whole Crains Vegetables Fruits QOD scientists: advise 'these for hot 'Weather as ideal foods, 'becalise they alkalinize and, ficool 'the blood." eX Roman Meal, because of {ts Flaxose, is the only alkaline cereal sold. Very delicious. It "cools the blood," clears the a door, the late Miss Mafildda Suther- {land being her teacher and the or- jganist. She also was in the choir |when Pref. Oldham was the organist. The late Den Lyster was rector and [the late Rev. Henry Wilson, whosa | Eible clase Mrs. Cannift attended, | curate of the: parish, Though she | [sees great changes, Mrs. Canaiff says { {she is delighted to find so many of ! {the old: landmarks, the old stone | buildings, unchanged in forty-five » years. When Mr. Groh and his family went to Winnipeg in '78 there were | Bo railroads entering the prairie ily and life 'was difficult in many | | ways. Here Laura J. Groh met al nephew of Hon. Mackenzie Bowell | Mackenzie Canniff and their mar- | jriage took place in Winnipeg where they lived eleven years before re moving to St. Paul, Minn ~ . . * | relieves constipation. Saves you : money, keeps you fit. GROCERS aa Miss Betts, "Kewaydin,"' was tha hostess of a charming verandah tea |ANt Week, the guest of Mrs, E. Steacy on Tuesday, when the tea table and Miss Helen at their summer {where Miss Edith Van Staubenzee home, Woife Island made the tea, was gay with fragrant! Miss Jessie, Willard, {sweet pea blossoms, the same lovély |1and, left on Tuesday for Rochester, flowers being about the house. Dur- N Y . ing the afternoon Lady Twining | Elmer Davis, who has been spead- sang delightfully, playing her own ing the last three weeks in Alberta accompaniments. The guests in- and Manitoba, returned home yester- cluded Lady Macdonell, Lady Twin- | Cay ing, Mrs. <h F. Foulkes, Mrs. Norman Mrs. Herbert CC. McIntyre and sons Leslie, Mrs. Stafford Kirkpatrick, James and John, Toronto, are guests Mrs. Guy Gamsby, Mrs. Herbert of Dr. and Mrs. Richard Cartwright, Robinson, Mrs. Bernard Browne, University avenue. Mrs. R. W. Rutherford, Mrs. W. B. rs Carey, Mrs. Constantine, Mrs. J. R | C. Dobbs, Mrs Ritchie, Miss Ritchie, | € | Miss Twining, (Halifax), Miss Lil- ! {la Callaghan and Miss Alison Mae- donell. > * + The Misses Mowat, Johnson street, asked a few people to come in at the tea hour on Monday, fo meet their guest, Mrs. Graham 6on, Portsmouth. { Thompson, Toronto. | W. J. McGall left Wednesday for .- sw | Rochester, N.Y. to spend a few days {with Mr. and Mrs. W. G. Lawa, be- Amherst Is- ess street, and their family, have eft on a motor trip to Toronto. Miss Grace Taft and Master Regin- (ald Taft are at Tweed. General Hill, West street, relurn- ed from Petawawa on Tuesday. ! Mrs. M. G. Davison, Oitawa, is visiting her father, Thomas Nichol- | 'Mrs. W. H. Craig, Gore street, is |giving a children's party at Collins [fore returning to his home in New {Bay this afternoon, in honor of Mas- | York City Iter Billy Craig's eighth birthday. | .*. * * N | | - Dr. and Mrs. A. W. Winnett and | their son, Bert Winnett, have gone jor a fishing trip to Buck Lake, F. C. T O'Hara who was with his {mother, Mrs. Robert O'Hara at Co!- | Dr. R. 8. Richardson and Freder- !ick Mauthie, Toronto, are the guests {of Mr, and Mrs. A. E. Hunt, Albert | street. Dr. and Mrs. Abraham Shaw, Phil- |adelphia, who have been visiting the |lin's Bay, returned to Ottawa todey.|former"s mother, Mrs. A. Shaw, Uni- Mrs. Mackenzie Canniff, St. Paul, | versity avenue, have returned home. |Minn., left for Ottawa on Tuesday | Mrs. Ratcliffe/Toronto, who has Lady Twining, who is with Mrs. | been at the Girl Guide camp at Ritchie, Elmhurst Apartments, and |Leak Island, {3 now with Dr. and for whom several informal teas and | Mrs. 1. G. Bogart, at their summer Ginpers have been given, will leave | home at Loughboro Lake, and will for Halifax on Thursday and sail for return to Toronto on Thursday. England shortly. Miss Georgia Conway, R. N., New wv ws es | GRIST BLEACH SHI WHTE WITH LEWON Squeeze the juice of two lemons | into a bottle containing three ounces | of Orchard White, which any drug | store will supply for a few cents, Primrose, Miss Louie Cunningham |shake well, and you have a quarter | (Toronto), Miss Frances Sullivan |Pint of harmless and delightful and Miss Marion Redden. {lemon bleach. Massage this sweetly "ow | fragrant lotion into the face, neck, | ee TS ov. o |8rms and hands each day, then i Miss Frances Sullivan, Villa St. shortly note the beauty and white- {Clare Apartments, has asked a few | pesg of your skin. people to tea this afternoon, to meet | Famous stage beauties use ' this her sister, Mrs. Charles Crookall, | lemou lotion to bleach and bring that INew York. | soft, clear, rosy-white complexion, al- a | 80 as a freckle, sunburn, and tan The Cataraqui Golf Club is a very | bleacn because it doesn't irritate. to-day, A pleasant luncheon was given at the Cataraqui Golf Club on Tuesday, by Mrs. Arthur Cuntingham, with | Mrs. Charles Crookall, New York, as | ithe guest of honor. The other guests | were Mrs. H.W. Richardson, Mrs. | Sandford Calvin, Mrs. O'Rielly | (Cornwall), Mrs. H. E. Richardson, | Mrs. Carhart (Detroit), Mrs. John place indeed as the ay he golfers are being Enter. Don't Squeeze Black- heads-- Dissolve Them Squeezing and pinching out black- Miss Kitty Torrance, Alfred strect, | heads make the pores large and was the hostess of a merry tennis | cause irritation--then too, after they party and tea at the Country Club on | have become hard you cannot get Taesday afternoon. {all of them out. Blackheads are s | caused by accumulations of dust and a dirt and secretions from the skin Mrs. T. Ashmore Kidd, Stuart! .g there is only. one safeand sure street, is entertaining at the tea hour | wav and one that never falls to get on Friday. f rid of them--a simple, way too--that ..s . {is to dissolve them. Just get from Mrs. D. Funnell, Kingston, who any drug store about two ounces has been visiting in Aylmer, Que. | Of peroxine powder---sprinkle a littl with Mrs. James Sayer, hes returned | On. a-hot, wet sponge--rub over the home. blackheads briskly for a few seconds Hon. Dr. Beland and his bride | -- Wash off and you'll be shrprised to see that every blackhead has disap- have left for a trip through the Cana- | yo.red. and the skin will be left soft dian west. On their return to Otta- | ang the pores in their natural condi- wa they will take up residence at the | tjon--anyone troubled with these un- Roxborough Apartments. sightly blemishes should |try this Mrs. Hugh Fleming, Brock street, | simple method. has had for her guests during the past her neice, Mrs. J. A. Toole, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Underhill, Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Underhill and their son, Syracuse, N.Y. Mrs. W. Harty, "Roselawn," has returned from Lake Simcoe. David Ireland, Toronto, is with his sister, Miss Ireland, Alice street. . . . = Mrs. \J. Hiscock, Barrie street, has a family house party, consisting of Mr. and Mrs. W. H, Hiscock, Mont- real, and their baby, and Rev, W. Moore and Mrs, Moore, Amherstburg, Mrs. Graham Thompson, Toronto, is the guest of the Misses Mowat, Johanson street. Mr. and Mrs. Roy Peaker and their baby, Ottawa, are visiting Mr. and Mrs, W. J. Chapman, Garrett |. street. Mre. LiMe Perry, Camden East, spent Tuesday In Ringston. - - Mr. and Mrs. W. J. Nicholson, Spencerville, are visiting the form- tained at luncheon, tea and dinner. . . . Corner Princess and Barrie Sts. Cor. Montreal and Raglan Rd. Groceteria: 175 Princess Street 3 Z er"s father, Thomes Nicholson, Potts | reouth. a Margaret Davis returned yesterday, after gpending a pleas- Norman §, Wright & Co, Ltd. Sales Agents Toronto, Ontario -------------------------------------- skin, aids digestion, positively "Si for both of them: or Mr. and Mrs. Percy Graham, Prin- | Canning Peaches and Plums. Peaches and plums are so delicious jon the home table in wintertime, that [tow housekeepers feel that they can g #tord to 'neglect canning these two | fruits. The following sirup is right | | | Put, {nto your preserving kettle five pounds and eight ounces of gran- ulated sugar and add to it one gallon "jof cold water; bring to a boil, then et continue: go boil until the sugar Hsidissolved. Strain at once, for use. [.iTo Can Peachés: Bort the fruit, se- {lecting, firm, sound, uniform peaches fae canning and putting aside the 80ft or broken ones for jam. (A few very, large peaches are often canned {Whole in a heavy sirup and are call- ed "Melby, peaches," but I assume |that the average housekeeper would rather put up the ordinary variety, for which I am giving directions.) "Blanching" is the first step after selecting the peaches. This removes the skins, and consisis of lowering Ithe fruit in a wirebasket, or in a | cheesecloth bag, into boiling water until the skins slip easily (about one minute __possibly two minutes), then |""cold dip" the. fruit by plunging it at once into cold water for a few | seconds, drain, and rub off the skins. {Cut the peaches In half, remove | stones, and immerse the fruit at once {in a hot sirup made by the above- given recipe. The peach-halves should stand' in this cooling sirup |until thoroughly cold. Then pack |the fruit in quart jars which have {been sterilized (that is, jars which [have been boiled, empty, with thei | glass covers beside them, in a pan |of clear water for ten minutes), and {pour more of the same, strained |sirup over them. Slip a "paddle" {down the inside of the jar gently | (that is, a bamboo or smooth, slen- |der stick of wood), to remove air- bubbles, remove the paddle, and put on new rubbers which you have dip- |ped quickly in and out of boiling | | York, is spending her 'vacation with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank | Conway, Union street James Rutherford and wife, have to Rochester, | returnel from a visit | N.Y. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Hewitt, New York, are visiting the former's par- ents, Mr. and Mrs, Thomas Hewitt, Union street. \ » * . \ Mrs. Browett, who has removed from Collingwood street to Queen street, will be glad to see all her old friends at her studio, "Sunrise Flow- er Park." Mrs. W. C. James is the captain of the Brockville golfers, who are play- ing the Kingston women at the Ca- taraqui golf links to-day. Mrs. Walter N. Gordimnfer, Tacoma, Wash, (formerly Miss Grace Greaves), and her two daughters, are vigiting Mrs. R. J. McClelland, Clergy street. . Rev, FF. W. A. Street, Mrs. Street and Miss Birdie Street, Stoney Moun- tain, Man., are the guesis of Mr. and Mrs. Hiram Heech, Frontenac street. Miss Rose Joyce, R.N., has return- ed from a holiday at Ohaffey's Locks. * - . Mr. and Mrs. Mike Joyce, Detroit, Mich., are visiting the former's moth- er, Mrs. M. Joyce, Charles s'reet, Dr. McCann and Miss McCann, Tona, Mich., are the guests of Mrs. M. Joyce, Charles street. Rev. Ernest Saunders, Rhinebeck, N.Y., is visiting his sister, Miss Lois Saunders, Earl street. R. E. Genge, Cergy left for Toronto and St to spend his holidays. Mrs. Edmund Tett, (formerly Miss Ethel Herchmer) will arrive in town on Friday, to visit her cousin, Miss Mabel Gilder- sleeve, Gore street. street, has . Catharines, Newboro, BRAN RECIPES. Bran Muffins: --1 cup of Kellogg's Bran, 1-2 cup graham flour, 1-2 cup white flour, 2 tablespoons sugar, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 1-2 teaspoons bak- ing powder, 1 tablespoon butter or butter substitute, 1 cup milk, 1 egg. Mix and sift dry ingredients. Add egg slightly beaten, and sugar. Add milk and melted butter. Mix all well together. Bake in well ased muffin tins 1h a hot oyen a 25 minutes. This will make 12 muffins. At Mirneapolis, Minn, recently the death cccurred of George Howe, a na- tive of Lake Eloida and a son of the late William Howe. He was a bro- ther of Mrs. Lucy Everts, Toronto, who was with him when he died, and a brother-in-law of Mrs. Ida Soper, Miss Msigaret Johnson, Frank John- son and avid Johnson, Athens. In the death of Edway E. Ingle at Brockviile cn Saturday, - Brock- ville lost a loyal and esteemed citizen in the prime of his life, thirty-seven years. Taken {ll on Thursday, July 6th, with plecurisy, he was thought to be making fair progress toward re- coverey until pneumonia developed. By the first of November a new up- town theatre will be erected in Belle- ville on the site purchased some years ago by the ciwy for a fire hall. : { | | water jars on a wooden rack in your wash- gin counting time after water begins to boil. minutes, in this way means simply letting the water boil around the jars). Remove jars from water, completely seal, cool, test and store. ; To Can Plums: The green-gage. yellow-egg and Lombard are the var- teties of plum used most for canning. Gnly sound, uniform fruit should be chosen, Stem, wash, and prick the skin of each plum with a needle (this prevents bursting in the jar), and pack them as firmly as possible, with- ed glass jars, Cover with a sirup niade by above-given recipe, adjust rubbers, glass tops, put wire up, and process in your wash-boller canner for 15 minutes, to completely seal Cool, then test for leaks as follows: Press up side wire, remove top wire is completely sealed. If it should back into boiling water for four or and cold, try the test again. till successful. Shower." All Inquiries addressed to Miss Kirkman in care of the "Efficient Housekeeping" department will answered in these columns in thel turn. This requires considerable time, 'however, owing to the great aumber received. So # a personal or quicker reply is desired, a stamped and self-addressed envelope must be enclosed with the question--The lditor. . What the Editor Hears 1. Sigmams That raspherrics are plentiful-- and dear. - That Lake Ontario Park is a de- ightful place just now, the rain has prevented the grass from being Purnt, daistes, buttercups and blue- vetch grow among the tall grass, and Kingston's only bit of country within reach of the poor man's fam- ily is enjoyed by children and grown ups. . That the tourists who fill the cars and shops at this season, sometimes also fill the inhabitants with "won- der. They are so determined that every one shall know they are tour- ists, they shout at each other across the street, seven or eight of them will appear to think they own the street railway service, they effect to consider our historic city a village and then we find they came from some small*town across the border with an ice cream parlor and a dance platform as its principal attraction. Theat war widows are given the preference over single girls for gov- ernment jobs in France That the girls of Queen's summer school make use of the bathing house In Macdonald Park and enjoy the splendid bathing. That if you want to be absolutely boiler in very hot water that comes | not° quite to the top of the jars. Be- | 'Process' the jars for 20 | ("processing" | out crushing, in quart-size, steriliz-| i from over top, and pick up the en-| tire jar by the glass cover alone; if! the cover does mot come off, the jar | | come off, then you must put the lar | five minutes (just as you did ir be- | | fore), and when completely sealed | Repeat | i | Tamorrow--Suggestions for a "S%rk | be | A Re elation in Green Tea IT'S SO SWEETLY PURE, CLEAN AND DELICIOUS ; Adjust Blass jar-covers, put | top wire up over them but do not | press down side wire, and place the | Japans. "SALADA" TEA HX is sold on merit and merit alone. Try it once and you will never go back to At all grocers. - ---- BARNUM"S nr FRESH BLUEBERRY PIES CHOICE CAKES, always fresh. Try them! my BAKERY | BAKER | 24 FRONT ST. W., TORONTO | Go to the firm that GROWS: it LIPTON'S | If you want the BEST tea | Sold in Sealed Packages From 55c to $1.00 per Pound. \ - Canadian Chief Offices assured that marriage is a failure ask the people who have never tried it, A A am a For hard work there is nothing so susta 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 has that delicious 'homemade' taste. TRY A LOAF TO-DAY, LACKIE'S journeys fortune. HOROSCOPE To-morrow's ities. TEA The Man In Overalls Depends Upon Bread portant business until ious conditions prevail is the advice of the stellar seers. more favorable in ie realm of do- mestic, social and affectional actlive ining and stimulating as not only healthier, but age of sudden changes, removals or that bode but Shun little good these and defer im- more propite The outlook is By Genevieve Kemble Di ii RA I THURSDAY, JULY 27. Adverse conditions hold businass in sinister rule, according to the planetary government of this day. There is a menace of disastrous lit-' leaning to pleasure and company un- Those whose birthday it is are urged to avoid change, travel and 1it- igation. They will find domestic and affectional affairs more happiiy aspected. _A child born on this day is likely to be restless, unsettled, fond of adventure and with a strong igation, and also for some the pres- less trained in early life. Grape-Nuts ------ A AAA A A A AA PA In the open or in the office, this food helps XPLORERS and hunters have taken Grape- Muts as one of their principal foods--because Gra er Nuts contains much nourishment in sm . Office workers find that a breakfast or lunch Grape-Nuts is much better for them en a gy meal--because starch Nuts digests I ee for the taste. An order to your grocer today will bring this splendid food to you. to eat from the pack- age--add a little cream or milk in the dish. of Grape-Nuts, that "food, have a ions THE ODT BULDER "There's a Reason" Made by Canadian Postum Cereal Co., Ltd., Windsor, Ontario