Daily British Whig (1850), 21 Aug 1923, p. 8

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

THE DAILY BRITISH WHI x G TUESDAY, AUGUST 21, 1928 Aish NEWS AND VIEWS FOR WOMEN READERS That Gleaming Hair Comes From Using Olive Oil Shampoo Today you see beautiful hair everywhere. Hair that gleams. Women who have it have learned an important secret. They use the famous olive oil shampoo Hair ex- perts say that hair should never be washed without olive oil in the shampoo. For they say that dry, brittle hair results. And dull hair is never beautiful. have the olive" oil shampoo in its most delightful form. Cheaply, at home. Just get a bottle of PALM- "OLIVE SHAMPOO. At any drug store or department store. It quickly, brings back the lovely sheen to your hair. Leaves it beautifully soft and glossy. You will marvel at the ime orovement! --- | new reci for : f Graumber Pickle. Perfect Seal, Crown and iid Jars on sale at all stores. Send book of tested 1S RT shouk: ot eighty ts tos rs Will Vanish After This Treatment (Toilet Helps) You can keep your arms, neck or free from hair or fuzz by the oc- easional use of plain delatone and in it you need have no fear of ing or injuring the skin. A thick le is made by mixing some of the dered delatone with water. Then lead on the hairs and after 2 or 3 utes rub off, wash the skim and traces of hair have vanished. Be ful, however, to get real dela- and mix fresh. Pity is love when grown Into ex- Now you can | LIFE'S SOCIAL SIDE | | Editor of Women's Page, Teles phone 248. . Private 'phone 857w. . . . Miss Wallace, who has been with Lady Macdonell, at the Command- ant's quarters, Royal Military Col+ lege, left for Montreal on Monday. Miss A. N. Everett, New York City, isa visitor at the Y.W.C.A. Mrs. Logie Macdonnell, Winnipeg, is vigiting her parents, Rev. John and Mrs. Macalister, Barrie stroet. Miss Jennie Shaw, Earl street, Is at Collin's Bay with her sister, Mra. William Skinner. Mrs. J. Collins, Montreal, is Visit- ing her sisters, the Misses Abbott, 378 Division street. * v * } Mrs. Percy Borland and her chil- dren, who are at Lake of Bays, Mus | koka, were fortunately not at the | hotel Wawa. | Mr. and Mrs. Sanders, who were { with Dr. and Mrs. W. Morgan, Bar- | rie street, have left for Lynn, Mass. Prof. Robert Watt, Ottawa, is with Mrs.. E. J. Bidwell at her camp at Cartwright's Point. 2 Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Cralg, To- ronto, are in town for a week, and are occupying Mr. and Mrs. W. KH. Craig's house on Gore street. : Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Dyde ahd Miss Dorothy Dyde, University av- enue, (have left for Elgin House, Muskoka, to spend their vacation. » " - Miss Hora, Wellington street, is entertaining at bridge this after- noon. Mr. and Mrs. W. Bartlett Dalton and Mrs. W. H. Craig motored to Old Orchard Beach to spemd a few weeks at the seaside. Col. and Mrs. Everett .Birdsall, Birdsall, Ont., are with Mr. and Mrs. R. E. Kent, "Somersby louse," Col. Birdsall will return home short-- ly but Mrs. Birdsall and her chil- dren will remain ih town for a visit. Gemeral and Mrs. F. W. Hill, Gore street, have returned to towm from Niagara Falls. Miss Charlotte Mann, have left for (Wind- sor where Mrs. Lee will visit her mother, Mrs. Frank Manh. Miss Cunningham, Miss Barney and Miss Kelly, have returnea from a two weeks tiip to Lake George. Miss Madeline Angrove, Syden- ham street, left yesterday for .Osh- awa, Toronto and other Western cities to visit relatives. Mrs. B. 8. Johnston and her ohil- dren, Kingston, are visiting Mr. ana Mrs. D. A. Johnston's, Tin Cap. - * * Mr. and Mrs. H. O. Webster, Lansdowne, announce the engage- ment of their daughter, Bvelym Joyce, to Lloyd Foley, Kingston, lg EET a son of Mr. and Mrs. W. B. Foley, Lanedowne. The marriage takes Place on Aug. 29th. ' -. * * Rev. J. E. and Mrs. Lindsey, Mise Dorothy Lindsey and her bro- ther, Ottawa, are with Mr. and Mrs. W, H, Moutray, "Farnham," Stella. Dr. Charles Abbott and Mrs. Ab- bott, Dunnville, Ont., are with the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. W. T. | Minmes, "Hillcroft." Miss Murphy, Montreal, who has been at the Y.W.C.A. while attend- | ing Queen's summer school, left for the country to spend a few weeks, on Monday, - *- = Miss Joan McMullen has return- ed to Toronto after spending two weeks 'at her home in Seeley's Bay. Miss Bawden and Miss Lucy Baw- den, who have spent some time with Mr. and Mrs. George Bawden, Barrie street, will leave fr therr home in Lethbridge, Alta., on Wed- nesday. Mrs. W. B. Dalton, Johnson street, has returned from Toronto. Dr. and Mrs. Morgan, Barrie have no idea how to manage it. If the hoat is unseaworthy and over- loaded, the = case is so much the worse. That this week many lives have been lost by carelessness, which em- phusizes the necessity of the trais- ing of our children in the efficiency and alertness taught by such organi- zations ag the Boy Scouts and Girl, Guides. Caution with them is not looked upon as cowaraice. That many homes in our district are threatened by bush fires and day and night men fight the flames that creep mearer hourly to the houscs and barns. TO-MORROW'S HOROSCOPE BY GENEVIEVE KEMBLE WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22. Rather complicated conditions are forecast from this day's astral rul- ings. While there is some prospect of a removal, change or journey, which should be crowned with suc- cess, yet theré may be necessity for wise manipulation of affairs towara this culmination. Those in the em- ployment of others are cautioned not to put their positions in jeop- ardy and all are urged to beware of street, are with Mrs. Frederick Etherington at "Fettercairn." . . * Mrs. George Macnaughton her children, Sydenham, left Tuesday for a trip down the Lawrence and up the Saguenay. Mis Tyrhitt, masseuse of the General Hospital staff, hes return- ed from a pleasant visit at Oak- ville and other points. Miss Becky Anderson and Miss | and | on | St. Grace Houghton have returned to Kingston after visiting Mrs. T. H. MacDermott and other friends in Brockville. Mrs. A. N. Lee, Villa St. Claie | "[ apartments, and her sister, The Editor Hears | That Miss Hester Farewell, Toron- to, has been chosen out of a num- ber of beautiful Canadian girls to fill the role of Cleopatra in the nightly spectacle of the Nile at the Canadian National Exhibition. Miss Norma Niblock has been chosen as her lady- in-waiting. That the Red Cross are giving a picatc this afternoon for the soldiers who are still in the hospitals. The men will be taken to the shore of the Bay of inte beyond Collin's Bay, in Ts by Kingston friends of the men for whom the war is not yet over. -- university girls are doing a service to That many false friends. The health should be given attention lest: it prove a detriment, Those whose birthday it is may have a year calling for the exercise of keen judgment and precaution against betrayal. Those in the em- | ployment of others should be careful and the health should be attended to. There is a forecast of success- tu] change or journey. A child born on this day will be ambitious, stu- dous and original, but it should be | well directed in pleasures and com- panionships., It will be successful. SHOULD DRINK SIX QLASSES WATER should drink at least six glasscs of water every day, preferably qne upon arising in the morning, one at meals ana one between meals. Ten slasses would do evem better work. Exces- sive water drinking has no merit as a curative or preventive measure and should be avoided, especially where heart or kidney trouble exist. (By "excessive" is meant twice or three times the normal quantity.) But it is by no means focessary to limit any one to eix glasses. A healtiy thirst luduced by exencise can safcly bo slaked at any time, bearing in ming the caution that copious "drafts of very cold water when overheat.» are Lo be avoided. Water is always easily available almost everywhere, themselves and their country by picking fruit in the Niagara dis- trict. But for these girls even more of the abundant crop would rot oni the trees. That there is a feeling that inex- perienced boatmen should be protect- ed against themselves, and it should be made an offence, punishable by and any one who neglocts to take his proper quantity has only himself to blame.--From the July Delineator. Debt to Dr. Rutherforq. The death in Ottawa of Dr. Rutherford, an international au- thority on tuberculosis in animals, has brought to the attention of Canadian mothers the debt tney law, to rent a boat to people who | Cfficient ANSWERED LETTERS TOMORROW'S MENU Breakfast Bananas Cereal Coffee Boiled Eggs Wholewheat Toast Luncheon Vegetable Soup - Cream Cheese Sandwiches Iced Tea Cookies 3 Dinner Beefsteak "Pudding" Boiled Potatoes Beans «Lettuce wo Coffee ' '~ Raisin Tarts) Mrs. W. "Please tell me how \to keep eggs for winter use." ° Answer: Eggs should be preserved during March, April, May and June, as spring eggs keep better than sum. mer or fall eggs. Only strictly fresh eggs shoilld be preserved. Eggs that are not clean and have to be washed, should not be used. A water-glass so- lution is an excellent method to The name "water glass" is a substi- tute for the techmical term, "solium silicate." Water owe him for his unceasing work to A eA mu irng Answer: Thank you for correcting this error. T.S.: "Can any of your readers give me a recipe for a saltless butter filling for cream cake? The one I have refer- ence to was coffee-flavored and con- tained roasted peanuts. It was used on a chocolate cake." ; Answer. I am sure all of our, col- umn readers would appreciate it if some of our housekeepers who happen | to have this recipe will write it on a 'post card and mail it to me (in care 4 of this paper) to publish here. Most '| recipes differ in some slight degree, at least, -s07a variety of them would be interesting. , A Busy Mother: "How can I clean white silk hats which are soiled from the hair and from fingermarks?" Answer: There is only one really successful way: give them a gasoline bath. Do the work out of doors, as the gasoline is so inflammable. Im- merse the hats and let soak a few mi- use, | nutes, swashing up and down. Then rinse, in a fresh basin of gasoline. Hang on line to dry for several days. the brim with a warm stuff crown to press it on top. If, however, the wire frame pre- vents pressing, you nut finish, panels of Simmons cane. Also in mahogany, Kyonix and special finishes. All widths. Prices are moderate. As a general rule every person will have to clean | * - | J { Some sleep so soundly they do not hear even the crash and roll of a thunderstorm. Others start awake at the flapping of a curtain orthe honk ofa passing motor car. Thesound sleepers get the kind of rest that renews vigor and stores fresh energy for the coming day. | Theyarethe "men who dothings" -- the women and girls whose vi- tality is equal to every opportu- . nity of social or business life. | Thelightsleepersseldom "let go" and dip down to the strength- | restoring levels of deep, dream- of t Seady who BUILT FOR SLEEP VV 2 wr 0 n NN and Ostermoor mattress. a night pay for their years of service. the "Banner". Examine the e line of Simmons springs, They are economical--do not sag and keep their life for They are priced, like Simmons beds and mattresses, to fitany pocketbook. Look for the Simmons Label. Bewar Write for your copy of "Restful Bedrooms" to Simmons L SIM Bed Spr MATTRESSES AND BEDS i D 6 7 ) N = ETO Vv . % oN = 5% * What kind of sleep satisfies you? less rest. As often as not, it is only a sagging spring or alumpy, worn- out mattress that cheats them. Simmons "Banner" § Why not give your bedding ful study it deserves tonight? Then 80 to your furniture dealer's and compare it with the cradling comfort Ie Simmons "Banner" spring pring the care- Two cents many Years. e of imitations imited, Montreal, Quebec ONS by x \ prevent infection by bovine tuber- culosis. His Interest in this par- ticular form of community help came through a sorrowful experi- ence wf his own. The Iittle son on which his hopes were centred, contracted the disease from a cow. which had been bought by the doctor with the special design of giving the chilg the benefit of one cow's milk. This was' long before the days of testea Cows and this beautiful animal that was supposed to bring life and strength to the little child brought death instead. Out of his own sor- row and loss came Dr. Ruther- ford's resolve that other children should be protected and in years when many people were not only careless, but regarded the danger of infection as more or® less of a fad, he worked and spoke unceas- ingly of the need of protecting both children and adults from this great danger, ------------ SWALLOW SONG. O, little hearts, beat home, home, Here is no place to rest; Night darkens 'on the falling foam And on the fading west. : beat pear Love may no longer roam, Ob, Love has touched the fields of wheat And Love bas crowned the corn, And we must follow Love's white feet We Handle Only Simmons Beds, | 1emon, JAMES REID 1% cup cooked pineapple, fresh or canned, 2% cups sugar, 1 cup diced peaches. Combine all the-ingredients. Cook rapidly until the mixture is thick and clear. Pour into clean hot jars and seal. Springs and Mattresses, PHONE 147 FOR SERVICE. GALLAGHER'S service 960 DAY AND NIGHT co TRA SPECIAL BARGAIN GRAFONOLA LUMBIA $50 This offer represents just one-third off the cata- logue price, just because it has been : If you are in need of an extra fine instrument, do not delay but see this bargain at EASY TERMS ARRANGED. STYL "D' ¢ Is regularly priced at $75.00. Read below, very slightly used. once. y T901087 S80 LL IT A TRI TRINITY - WV IwY NALS SB

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy