a ir Vernachar with her mother, Mrs. amin === - - i. : 1 | | LIFE'S SOCIAL SIDE i at the Capon-Fair wedding in To- ronto on Monday. Mrs. J. A. Gilmour and Master G. Allan Gilmour and Miss Jean Gil- mour, Napanee, have been the guests of Mrs. A. A. Gilmour .and Mrs, J, A. McLachlin, Ottawa. Prof. and Mrs M. B. Baker, Wil- liam street, are home from a motor trip through the Berkshire Moun- Woman Page Biiter, Phone 2613. Private, Phone 857W. . . » A very pleasant dance was held at the yacht Club on Wednesday even- ing at which a number of the actors in the Historical Pageant Were pres- ent, some of them in costume. The moon shed its soft silver light on the | Water and the air was as warm 4s it is In summer. Garrett's orchestra tains and to Boston. from Gananoque played an excellent | » Mrs. Earl Detlor, Deseronto, is the Programme of dance music. Among' guest of Mr. and Mrs. Matthews, 121 those present were Mr. and Mrs. H. | Beverly street, during fair week. ¥. Richardson, Mr. and Mrs. W. K.! Mrs. Robert Armour, Perth, is Macnee Mr. and Mrs. Hansord Hora, | the guest of Mrs. John Nicolle, Bar- Mr, and Mrs. W. Sherman Hill | rie street. Mrs. d'Arcy Sneath (Napanee), Miss The Dean of Ontario is in To- Gwendolyn and Miss Doris Folger, | rento attending the meeting of the Mise Elinor Mundell, Miss Lois Tay- | Council for Social Service. He will lor, Miss Lilian Fair, Miss Dorothy! go op to London for the meeting of Sands, Mies Cecll Macnee, Miss | the Provincial Synod. Frances Cartwright, (Toronto) Miss | "sae. Mikired Horsey (Ottawa) Miss Anna! Mrs. Philip Blake 'and her sons, Mahood, Miss Elizabeth and Miss Gordon and Victor, Deseronto, are Agnes Bute (Houston, Texas) Miss | spending fair week with the former's 'Flo Cunningham, Miss Virginia | cousin, Mrs. W. H. Matthews, 121 Fair, Miss Elizabeth Lyster, Miss! Beverly street. Kleasor Rowland, Miss Vivien and| Miss Katharine Hart has returned Miss Sylvia White, Miss Katharine from Toromto and is with Mr. and Hart (New York), Miss Betty Mrs. Small, Earl street, Nicolle, Miss Catharine Minnes, Miss; Mrs. J. 8. Asselstine and Miss 'Anne Langwith, Major Larter,| Audrey Asselstine, Alfred street, Messrs W. H. Herrington, C. Whal- | have returned from a motor trip in ley, C. Reynolds, 8. Donnelly, Hew {the Niagara District. They visited Duff, Richard Cartwright (Toronto) | Mrs. Alfred Smith a former King- W. Squire, Jack Samson (Gana-|Stonian at Welland, and while at inoque), R. 8. Rayson (New York) | Grimsby, were the guests of Dr. and {Harold Clark, A. Gardiner, Walter | Mrs. L. L. Buck. 'and Ted Steacy, Ben Cunningham, 'R. Bawyer, W. Anderson, M. Strange, C. 8. M. Simmons, Cadet Peter Fair. » WOMAN'S INSTITUTE. } | Phillipsville. The Woman's Institute at Phillips- ville was held on Sept. 12th and took the form of a quilting bee. On Tuesday, Sept. 16th, the mar- riage took place in Winnipeg of Miss Helen Ethel Keech, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. H, Keech, Portsmouth, Ss. Raymond Don, Tae Mrs. Issac Stevens supplying the ss hm o wi b; L. Stewart, of the Methodist church. | eit, Manse Eaaicn wag bail The bride was charmingly frocked | Jr: Mrs. T. W. Acheson gave a in sand Russianiare crepe, with hat, | splendid description of New Ontario Blige au4 sucking fa Tain. king. | 7H she recently Tiaited. Her e talk of the gold mines and paper Sion, sr yeriug a drums ts |and pulp mills which she bad the match. Mr. and Mrs. Daw- | Pleasure of seeing was very inter- son will arrive on Thursday to visit | ©5tin8. It is surprising how | New the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ontario has prospered and grown in Keech, Portsmouth. the last ten years. Refreshments ' 'were served at the close, consisting . of coffee, cake, sandwitches and sal- brs. Margaret Abbott, New York, | ads. The October meeting Is to be is the guest of her mother, -Mrs. | a social evening under the director- William Spooner, Glenburhie, for ship of Mrs. lssac Stevens, and all the month of September. the members are looking forward to Rev, A. L. Blacklock has return-|a very pleasant time. The booth €d to his church work at Waltham, | at the Chantry school fair will be Mass., after spending July and Au- | looked after by a committee of lad- guest at his home in Glenburnie, | tes. Miss Switzer, Queen street, has returned from Atlantic City. | Miss Olive Bebee, Detroit, Mich., spending two months at-her home ----en. Seek not proud riches, but such 2s you may get justly, use soberly, distribute cheerfully, and leave ocon- tentedly. Candidates for office will piich hay or do almost anything except enter! Was a guest the bathing beauty contests: : G. M. Bebee. : | . . . Miss Lassie Nickle A Clover Lands rom Conada's pen ~y ! Shut a ce tely Prada myrosn hill, pure or drinking the ure cool water froma ubbling ing. Kraft Cheese is unique first bite will captivate your taste, win your lasting appre. ciation of one of the most i economical and nourishing, Ean TEMPTING DISHES Nearly 100 tasty in the Kraft Booklet sent free. Use NEWS AND V FAF REWELL AND WELCOME. A Double Event at Princess Strest Church, That the people of Princess street Methodist church know how to ho- nor its workers Was again strongly evidenced last evening when a large gathering representing the WMS, Sunday school and Q.0.B. met to ex- press its regrets to Miss Mary Gar- diner's soon leaving for the West, and to welcome ford Mcllquham not long since mar- ried in the west. Miss Gardiner hag been the recipient of travelling beg from the of which organization president for a year. The surprise, therefore, of a gold wrist watch, suitably engraved, presented Wed- 'nesday evening to her, was indeed real, ' The fitting address was read by Miss sentation by Miss Emma Peters. At the close of her deeply-feit re- sbonse to the gift and address, Miss Wilder called forward Mr. and Mrs. Mcllquham, Mr, Mcllquham had been a faithful Sunday schooi work- er for years and had married a young lady out west, who with him recelved the warmest greetings from Miss Wilder and the representative 8roup present. Misa Emma Peters presented to them some pieces of cut glass as an expression of the sincerity of the church's wishes. After their reply, refreshments previously a beautiful Ladies' Ald she had been persed, after singing the - hymn, "Best be the Tie that Binds." ---------- School Days. It's lonesome in the stable yard and where the chickens "peep," It's dull and stupid 'round the house, the kitten's fast asleep; \ Old Towser, nosin' everywhere and hunting 'round the place, Comes back to whine and baw my knee and look up in my face; And mother, in the kitchen there, amongst the pans and things, Is busy, but I have'nt heard the song she always sings; There's somethin' missin,' somethin' wrong that spiles the work and plgy-- And don't I know 1t! Well, I guess! He's gone to school today. I try to work and not so think, but tryin' all I can, I stop and wonder why it's still--no drumming on a pan, No rustlin' in the apple splashin' by the pump, ' And no one hid behind the post to "Boo!" and make me jump. And in the house it's all so prim--no scattered book or block, No laugh ory shout, no nothin' but the tickin'-of the clock. I look at Ma and she at me; no need for us to say What alls us both; we know too well --he's gone to school today. . He started out at half past eight, all rigged up in hig best, And with the slate beneath his arm, the books and all the rest: And mother fixed his tle once more, and did her best to smile. And I stood by and praised him up and laughed about his *'style," But, when he marched off dcwn the road and stopped to wave good by, "Twas kind of choky in my throat and misty in my eye. Proud of him? Well, I rather guess! And happy, too--but say! It's mighty lonesome 'round the place--he's gone to school today. --JOSBPH C. LINCOLN. -- The Fairy Slipper. tree, no \, our garden The butterflies I brown-gold wings. Have never carried, little fairy babies To play beside the queer wee fairy rings. . I'll never show them now the fairy slipper That once beside a fairy ring I found. They'd surely say 'twas just curled up petal That drooped from our pink rose- bush to the ground. see with But I who found it know it was.a slipper > Worn by a gold-haired, white winged fairy maid: I guess she lost it when so sally She heard a noise and hurried off, afraid. i --Mary Isabel Houston in "Verse and Reverse." g i -------- The Ravages of (Date: 1940.) The old couple argued. They could- n't recall. Said one: "It was played with a little white bal ! And I'm certain the name was Mah Pong." The other grew scornful and said: "Not at all. . Wé played it with chips which we buift in a well, And' the name of the games was Ping Jong." ! bo On Ironing and cleaning days plan to have your main dish for dinner a baked one so that it may be prepared in a short time aid may cook while you are about your work. : - Rhinestones, pearls, heads and se- quing are used more frequently in narrow bands or in panels than in all-over patterns on the newest even- ine Mr. and Mrs. Clif-| Emma Wilder, and the pre. | were served and the gathering dis-/ The grown-ups say to me that in % TOMORROW'S MENU Breakfast Oranges Cereal Fried Eggs Toast Coffee Lancheon Baked Beans, Catsup Wholewheat Bread Tea Celery "Jam « .Dinner Cream of Spinach Soup ~ Baked Cod Steaks Baked Potatoes Btewed Tomatoes Lettuce Custard Pudding Coffee - Knitting an Infant's Surplice Sweater. The following knitting directions are for a surplice sweater for a six- months-old baby (or » fairly | small baby under a year ld). The sleeves of this sweater are long and the front hae one pointed end fold- ing over an opposite pointed end; a narrow beM is knitted to these pointed-fronts, which buttons in the back, Materials: One ball of pink two- fold Saxony, one pair of either bone or celluloid knitting needles size four, two pearl buttons. Terms: K means knit. P means purl. Sts. means stitches. N means narrow (that's, knit two stitches together as one stitch). R means ridge. B. o. 1. means bind off losely. Begin the sweater by casting on 50 sts. K on, P one for 12 rows. K 22 R (over and back making one ridge). For sleeves, cast on ten sts. at each ond of the TOW; repeat on next row across, add five on the next row EE ---------------------------- | The Editor hears -------- That the Kingston Industrial Ex- hibition 1s bigger and better than ever and the Historical Pageant, in which hundreds of citizens take part, is one of the great evening at- tractions. -- The city is looking its prettiest for ithe exhibition, The parks are still full of flowers, the rich autumn tints and the $07: Wues of the Mich- aelmas daisies accentuating the lovely green of th grass, still as fresh as it was in June. That among the workers and ac- tors in the pageant are many men and women, not natives of Kingston or Frontenac, some of them coming recently from the old land and>oth- south. They have spared neither 'time nor emergy in helping the citizens to put on a representation of the. history of which they are proud, and to them in a ¥e1y spe- cial way is due the thanks of the community, Jem That the display of woman's work at the fair is remarkably good. It is well worth seeing and is a real attraction. Neatness and good taste are noticeable and the articles would be a delight to any woman who was fortunate enough to possess them. --- That ad usual the schoo: tent is an attractive place; The children should all see it and no ome can really be said to have seen the 'Mair, who has not had a peep into the big tent--and those who peep will be Sure to linger among its attrac- tions. That the sword worn by Capt! Michael Grass when he led his band of United Empire Loyalists Lo King- ston, loaned by Mr. Robert Grass, Toronto, is worn by Mr. W. H. Her. rington is in the U.E.L, scene in the Pageant, vy > "I don't mind confessin' that I like to chew gum when I'm in pri- vate where folks can't hear my up- per plate pep." -------------- «Cost of Pamily Ottawa, cost of a weekly family budget of 29 staple foods was $10.19 in the be- ginning of August, according to the reitirns to the Department of Labor, as th $9.91 for July and $10.52 for August, 1923. The slight advance over last month is attribat- ed 10 seagonal ghenge. across, giving 100 in all. K 16 r. For the neck knit 38 sts. and slip onta a safety pin; bind off 24 ets. | for the back of the neck and k the | remaining 38 sts. for one ridge. { For the front: At the neck end | and on the second row of the ridge | increase one of the second st. by | knitting the back and the front of | the same stitch; repeat this widen- | ing each ridge for the entire front. On the sixteenth ridge shape the| second side of the sleeve, bind off | five. On the mext row across bind | off ten. Repeat ten on the next row. | on 26 sts. and K one, P one, for 12 rows for the belt, then B. O. L. Make a second front, beginning | with -the 38 stitches on the safety | pin. Finish both fronts and neck | with a single crochet edging. When | sewing up seam, leave opening for the *belt, which is fastened with the two pearl buttons, For the cuff, pick up 32 sts. and K one, for 12 rows. Then B. 0.1L. This finishes the garment. For an unusually large baby it would be better to use three-fold Saxony instead of two fold Saxony, to make the sweater larger. Tomorrow--Contributed For Fruit Cakes. ---- All Inquiries addressed to Miss Kirkman in care of the "Efficient Housekeeping" department will he answered in these columns In thir tarn. This requiras censiderible time, however, owing to the graat aumber recsived. So if a personal or quicker reply is desired, a stamp- #d and self-addressed envelope must be enclosed with the question. Be fure to uss YOUR ful! name, street number, and the names of your eily Recipes ers from the 'great républic to the |! Budget. . 18.~The average yr and state. ---The Edito.. Glenburnie W.M.S, A very pleasant hour was spent at the home of Mrs. W. Shurtliff, the EWS FOR WOMEN READERS Winnipeg man prefers Kellogg's "If," says Mr. J M. Michols of Win. nipeg, "I had to choose without your bran or a I would much rather million." Mr. Michols is one hundred right. The wealth of the world could not buy the health that ®oked and krumbled, has bh thousands of Canadians, wrote us to ask if Kellogg's Bran.is sold Liverpool as he is going abroad and in did Kellogg's Bran has restored health to legions of sufferers after all else has failed. It is guaranteed to bring relief in the most chronic cases of --permanent relief ' e reason is--Kellogg's Bran is AL bran. Only ALL bran can bring 100% results. That is why doctors everywhere, There Are Poppies in my Garden, At the front end of the work, ©ast ("There are poppiese in my gacien, Banunerets of flame; | Seeing them, I pause and think me Of From the trampled fields of Belgium When the times were ill-- "Just to show you I am sticking, : Sticking to it still." In my far Canadian garden Many blossoms Blow; Bran to Million Dollars recommend Kellogg's Bran, cooked and Kellogg's Bran i tol FYnlike pi unpalatable bran. ogg's Bran Pe delicious nut-like flavor. It is as enjoyable as it is beneficial. Try it with milk or cream, sprinkled over other cereals, cooked with hot cereals or in the wonderful recipes given on every package. Eat at Teast two tablespoonfuls daily --in chronic cases with every meal. It is guaranteed to relieve the most obsti- nate case of 'constipation or the pur- chase price will be returned. Don't delay. Constipation, if neglected, can lead to over forty Setipus Siscajen, Begin eatin, ogg's Bran today. Made in ION, Canada and sold by all dealers. between doing million dollars, do without the rT cent Kellogg's Bran, t to Mr. Michels not want to be without it. constipation if eaten regular] ttt A Etat There are roses for their fragrance, But the poppies grow Just to show I'm mot forgetting But remember, lad-- Proudly calm in my regretting, In my sorrow glad. ERNEST H. A, HOMR. a flower that came Belleville husband left home be- cause she bobbed her hair, but this may only serve to increase bobbing in Belleville, president of the Glenburnie W.MS., on Wednesday evening last. Owing to the threshers being in the neigh- borhood, the attendance was not as large as usual, but those present ! spent a very pleasant and profitble | afternoon. Pr------------------ The harvest moon will make many | an alleged woman hater see things in | an entirely different light, ey You'll Get Rid of 0 Blackheads Sure | There is one simple, safe, and sire way that never fails to get rid of blackheads, that is to dissolve them. To do this, get two ounces of peroxine isappeared. Big , little blackheads, no matter ¥Y are, simply dissolve and disappear. Blackheads are a mixture of dust and dirt and Secretions that form in the pores of the skin. The peroxine powder and the water dissolve | the blackheads so they wash right out, leaving the pores free and clean and In their natural condition. Fifty Appendicitis Cases in Small Town In a small Southern town over 50 cases of appendicits occurred in a short time! Simple buckthorn bark, glycerine, etc., as mixed in Adlerika, guards against. appendicitis be- cause it acts on BOTH .upper 'and lower bowel and brings out all poi- sons. Helps any case gas on the stomach in TEN minutes. Brings out matter you never thought was in your system. T. H. Sargent. NOTICE where the re service 960 Complies strictly to the oity tarifr, For One Passenger :-.. B50¢ For Two Passengers -. 50g For each additi'l person 25¢ Per Hour $2.50 All Seven Passenger Sedans used. -------- ce \ Sale of Sample Silk and Silk and Wool Hose And all Pure Wool Hosiery. Over 600 pairs from one of the best English makes. Traveller's samples, all this season's newest styles, at ONE-THIRD OFF regular price, W. N. Linton & Co. Phone 191. The Waldron Store ------ in THE NEW - COLUMBIA GRAFONOLA We have a complete selection of all Columbia Models-- the mew products of thei Columbia Company. We would esteem it a favor to be permitted to show you and demonstrate these to you. '