THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG NEWS AND VIEWS FOR WOMEN READERS LIFE'S SOCIAL SIDE h Editor of Women's Page, Teles K: phone 243. Private 'phone 857w. . . » Mrs. George McGowan, Barrie street, entertained at bridge on : Tuesday evening for some of the vis- {tors in town, when the prizes were won by Mrs. W. Nicol and Mrs. R. N. F. McFarlane. Miss Aline and Miss Ceclly Ruth- ~erford, King street, were the host- esses of a pleasant tea on Tuesday afternoon when Miss Nora Macnee "made tea and Mrs. L. Dunbar Stev- enson (New York), cut the ices at a charnfingly arranged table, gay with golden marigolds. . * . Mrs. Edward Rees will entertain at bridge at her cottage at Dead Man's Bay on Thursday afternoon. - . * Dr. and Mrs. Henry Gordon, who have been with Mre. John Carson at her summer home "Sunny Knowle," 'Dead Man's Bay, left to-day to mot- 'or to their home in Winnipeg. . Mr. and Mrs. William Berming- ham, "Otterburn," accompanied Miss Katie Bermingham, who sails for England to-day, to Montreal. on " Tuesday. Miss Bermingham will spend some time in Parls studying the ari of designing. Miss Florence Emery, who has been with Mrs. G. F. Emery, Bagot street, returned to Montreal to-day. Mr. and Mrs. H. Beadle, Syra- " "euse, N.Y., are spending a few days with Mrs. George Nicol, Frontenac street. They have a cottage at the Thousand Island Park. gx Miss Norton-Taylor, Brookville, at ~ 134 Earl street. © Mrs. M. M. Sims, London, Ont., is with Mrs. W. C. Laird, Alfred street. Mr. and Mrs. B, 8, Denike and 'Mr. and Mrs. G. B. Denike, Picton, '* who motored to Bon Echo for the * week-end, were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Root, Barl street, during their stay in Kingston, Miss Catharine McRae returned to Ottawa on Tuesday. * - : Miss Rayson, Clergy street, leaves I A i sig bers | SALT A LIVER REGULATNAD | Batescourt ~ .. School Cw rn Sept. 10, 1928, 5 ived in al] grades, in- Sas Primary. and Collegiate 'Entrance class, if desired. Pupils moving to other cities take first, second and third places in pri- public schools. x : numuver of boarders taken. 7 "Those In residence last year took | nigh place in examinations Music . Dancing. § For terms, etc., apply to: "ADA J. BATES, 247 Brock Street. - Bom on Friday on a trip which will clude a stay in Montreal. Mrs. Flint and Miss Cogswell, Boston, are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. A. E, Cogswell, Centre street. Miss Crisp and Miss Hattie Crisp, in- Pembroke stredt, are spending a few weeks at '"The Maples." Mr. and Mrs. Perry Mahood, Johnson street, have returned from a motor trip. . Walter Johnston, University ave- nue has returned home after spend- ing two weeks' holidays in St. Cath. arines, Niagera Falls, and Buffalo, N.Y, Mrs. John Smith, who has been visiting her parents, Mr. and Mrs. N. Stanton, Barriefield, has return. ed to her home in Toronto. Mrs. Arthur 'L. Morgan, her two children and Miss Mary BE. Evans, Montreal, are the guests of their sis- ter, Mrs. William Irwin, and Mr. Ir- win, King street west. Mrs. Frank H. Moore, and Miss Madge Moore, Denver, Colorado, are with Dr. and Mrs. R. E. Sparks, Johnson street * "0 Mrs. William Dwyer and her child- ren, Billy and Frances, Hartford, Conn., are spending the summer months with Mr. and Mrs, Davidson, Portsmouth. Mr. and Mrs. Ross Livingston and their little daughter Betty, left to- day on a motor trip to the Maine 'coast to visit Mrs. Livingston's par- ents at their summer home. - Mrs. J. B. McLeod, Alfred street, was the hostess of a charmingly ar- ranged bridge of four tables on Tuesday afternoon, in hqnor of Miss Bawden and Miss Lethbridge, Alta. Each guest of hon- or received a pretty souvenir of the game and Mrs. C. H. Boyes won the prize for the highest score. At the table lovely with flowers from the hostess' garden, Mrs. S. Roughton poured tea end Mrs. Arthur Ling- ham cut the ices. The Picton Golf Club will play the Cataraqui Golf Club on Thursday and will be entertpined at luncheon and at dinner by the Kingstonians. There will be matches between the Picton men and the Kingston men and between the ladies of the two clubs. Mjss . Harriet Gardiner, 5 The Chestnuts," will entertain at bridge on Fgiday. . . . . Mrs. R. E. Kent and Mrs. Doug- las Anglin will entertain at "'Somer- sby House" on Thursday afternoon. . - - Mrs. Z. Davies, Toronto, is with her sister Mrs. W. H. Leadbeater, "Avonmore," and with her, will 'go to Stella on Friday to Join Dr. ana Mrs, W. ¢. Jerdax. who are ssesd, ing some time at this favorite sume mer resort. Mrs. Isaac Allan and Miss Lois John | Lucy Bawden, |' a trip down the St. Lawrence and up the Saguenay. Miss Agnes McCredie, who has been at "Avonmore' while attend- ing the summer session at Queen's University, left for Bristol, Que., to- day. | i . . { Prof. Dunean McArthur has left | tor Lopdon, Ont., to join Mrs. Mc- | Arthur. Mrs. Garfield Cameron, and her | daughters, Isabel and Jean, West- | mount, Montreal, are visiting John : { Laird, Princess street. Misses Elizabeth and Alberta Pe- low, Toronto, are spending their va- cation with their parents, Mr. and Mrs. D. Pelow, Clergy street west. . » . Miss Bellamy, Brooklyn, N.Y. is a visitor who is meeting many old friends in Kingston, her former home. Mrs. Martin H. Ketcheson and son, George, have left for their home in Toronto, after spending the past week with Mrs. Daniel Emery and friends in this city. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Marcellus and sons, Guelph, have been visit- ing Mrs. C. Decker for a few days. Master Fred Decker has gone to Odessa, to vistt his aunt, Mrs. Mabee. Miss Bessie W. Stewart, Bagot street, has returned from spending three weeks In Toronto with her sister Mrs. F. H. Roberts The Editor Hears That the woods along the shores of the lakes and rivers are filled with birds that are ususlly founa further from the haus of men. The drought has dried up the little streams where they bathe and drink, so they! have sought new feeging grounds, -- That visitors from the Thousand Islands find novelties and bargains in the Kingston shops and go home laden with souvenirs of their trip to the oldest city in Ontario. That the first woman lawyer in Scotland was introduced to the Scot- tish court a few days ago when Miss Margaret Henderson Kidd, daughter of James Kidd, former member of parliament, for Linlithgowshire, was admitted a member of the faculty of advocates, That some visitors at summer cot- tages say that the only drawback to camp life is the frequency with which canned meat and vegetanies appear and the table. -_-- / That the pathetic stories of drowning accidents among the young people who spend the sum- mer on the shores of our lakes and rivers should be a warning to our boys and girls. 'There is nothing brave or smart in taking risks for fun or because others are doing it, and it is noticeable~that the most experienced swimmers and sailors are the most cautious, They know the danger and avoid it. & That the Kingston merchants say they have not sold an umbrella for weeks and the dry weather has so Allan, Victoria street, have left on ¥ -- makes the tub snow-white for cleaning and polishing Bathtubs k White Woodwork 3 Aluminium Ware 5 ; White Shoes PS Brass, Copper and The Hands + Nickel Ware . + Limoleum and Glass Baking Dishes Congoleum Have you tried Bon Ami Windows Fine Kitchen Utensils Mirrors Tiling ON AMI B . * the tub a few goes the dirt. ~And it does not scratch the Bon Ami also cleans the pickel faucets=makes them . Spe 3 " +: = ois (ot tub clean and white, but actually makes it glisten. For this soft white cleaning mineral notonly cleans, but hasa real polish - ing quality. Just sprinkle a little of the powder on a damp rag. Give delicate enamel. LIMITED, 8° 8 TRPAL preserved the straw hats, that they Made in Canada not only makes 'the brisk ru and away look like new 'ICED TEA* prepared from the fresh young leaves of "SALADA" is the .ideal drink for Summer. Cool, Refreshing, Delicious -- Try it, Breakfast Grapefruit Cereal ~ Coftes Toast Luncheon RECIPES. ed sugar, overnight, them put them a food chopper, ed pineapples through chopper. sugar, utes and turn into hot, jelly glasses. wi K. "Canning Okra by serving kettle; pour over minutes. seal at once, 'the same way). good okra recipe: "Okra-Tomato by Open-Kettle Method: TOMORROW'S MENU Corned Beef Hash Scrambled Eggs Wholewheat Bread. CONTRIBUTED CANNING Reader friends have been enough to mail me the following canning recipes to publish so that other women might enjoy them. "Pineapple-Apricot Jam; large or four small pineapples, two pounds of dried apricots, granulat- Soak the dried apricots th Also put the par- the Measure the mixture and to ten cups of it add seven cups of Boll this combination chopped fruit and sugar for 20 min- sterilized When cold, cover th melted parafiine wax.--Mrs. E. the Kettle Method: Prepare the okra to cook for canning, and put it in an enamelware or porcelain-lined pre- it half cup of vinegar and enough boil- ing water to cover; add two table- spoons of salt and oook for Then pack it into hot, sterilized glass jars, adjust new rub- ber and glass top, and completely (Green Beans keep excellently if canned in exactly Here is another Mixture Canned Co one gallon of ripe tomatoes with ---- one gallon of okra (both vegetables prepared for cooking) and put the. mixture {nto your preserving ketlle. Pour over. it one cup of vinegar, and add ene-half dozen hot red pep- | pers which have been washed, seed- | ed and cut small. Season with four | tablespoons of salt and boil, in wat- | er to cover, until the okra is very Cocoa Jam tender (about 40 minutes), then | Dinner can as above described for plain | Fried Slice of Ham okra. --Mrs. T. O'R." { Boiled Potatoes "Pumpkin-Chip Preserve: sgel Spinach and halve several small mipe pump- | Beef Salad kins, remove seeds and cut tbe ye | Coffee Prune Whip mainder into thick chips, Weigh, | and for each pound of pumpkin al- | low' two cups of granulated sugar | and one-half cup of lemon juice. i Place the chips in a deep earthern | dish in layers with sugar between. Pour the lemon juice over all. Tet stand a full day, ther turn the mix- ture into preserving kettle and let boil till tender with a little water and lemon rind added to it (allow about one cupful of cold water ror every three pounds of pumpkin, al- 80 one tablespoon of bruised ginger root tied in muslin, and three lemon peels shredded). Turn the tender, cooked pympkin into a stone jar ana i set away for one week in a cool place, covered. Then pour off the sirup from the chips and boil them down, till thick. Put the chips in glass jars and pour the thick syrup over them. Completely seall.-- Mrs. H." ' HL kind Three rough food of Open- Tomorrow: --New ideas In work, Fancy- oney er All inquiries addressed to Miss Kirkman in care of the "Effieisnt Housekeeping" department will be answered in these columns in their turn. This requires considerable time, however, owing to the great number received. So if a personal or quicker reply is desired, a stamp-~ od and self-addressed envelope must be enclosed with the question. Be sure to use YOUR full name, street number, and the name of your city and province, ~The Editor. 15 will mbine the. ing out still. \ ¥. The worl a prodigy. dow, - i will soon have a bargain sae to rid themselves of their surplus stock, as men find their old "ones hold- ficiently remarkable to mark the boy as 8Y. His mother is a blind 'wi- STRENOUS WORK IN NORTH. 3.3¥ tif R it 45 2 15 degrees below zero, to drive over frozen lakes to reach an applicamt in a remote region in Northern On- tario. After a drive of ten miles the attempt had to be abandoned when the horses were buried in snow over their backs, and the in- vestigator had to wade back over a mile to get help to get them out. Later in the year the same trip was made by this investigator oy leaving Sudbury on an early 'morn- ing train on which she fravelleq thirty miles when 8fie was mét by a team With which she drove seven miles to a river. Here she was met by her guide, a Finnish girl, of eight een years of age. They rowed one mile down the river to the first lake, where there followed a three- mile paddle, bringing them to a five- mile trail through the bush to the shores of another lake. Another three-mile Paddle along the shore brought them to the spotless home TIRED, NERVOUS MOTHERS are the direct cause of much unhappi- ness in our homes; their condition ir- ritates and wears upon the husband and often ruins a child's disposition. This condition of the mother is often due to some weakness which makes her entirely unfit to perform her household duties and bear the strain upon her nerves that governing chil- dren involves. Every woman who finds hérself in this condition should remember that statistics prove that 98 out of every 100 women who suf- fer from female ills are helped by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com- pound, and lose no time in giving it a 18 HET = - | | --. A style to flatter a 1 { | | i Y pretty foot, and add charm to an afternogn costume. For Afternoon Wear On the street or at home the newest and Dressiest Shoes are Black Satins. We have four particularly good styles, all entirely different, yet each display- ing good taste in dress. $7.50 to $12.00. Hosiery and Travelling Goods. of the applicant, After complet- ing her investigations, the visitor returned over the same trail, reach- ing Sudbury by ten o'clock the same night, TO-MORROW'S HOROSCOPE BY GENEVIEVE KEMBLE THURSDAY, AUGUST 16. The conflicting positions of the major planets ruling on this- day point to contradictory situations Wihile | affairs may bo Mvely and quite important in development, opening up several channels of op- portunity both in business and otber affairs, yet there may be certain set- backs or obstacles to surmount. The main difficulty may be due to tae unsatisfactory condition of the health or that of the household, en- forcing postponements or creaiing anxiety. Those in the cmployment 'of others may be favored. Those whose birthday it Js may look for a year of checkered experi- ences, with conditions fluctuating. The health should not be allowed to be the obstructing ifactor. Pleasant events 'may take place in the family circle. A child born on this day may have a checkered Career unless 'it is thoroughly trained in early youth. It should be taught to give particu- lar attention to the health. ' A man is more apt to admit that his memory is at fault than his Judgment. Great minds and great forlifes don't always go together. toyou after usi Gourand' Oriental SERVICE DAY AND NIGHT i f s 96 it = In first terms. s class condition and on easy 4 i IE oR 3 bn