2 . Et eins THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 18, 1024 moms 'NEWS AND VIEWS FOR WOMEN REA a LIFE'S SOCIAL SIDE Woman Page Bditor, Phone 2613 - Private, Phone 857W. . * * The official yisit of the D. D. G. M., R. W. Brother C. Crozier to Prince Arthat Lodge A. F. and A. M. Odéssa on Monday evening was marked by a banquet which took place after the business meeting and to which ladies from the city and distriot were invited. The - Odessa ' ladies, who prepared the good things are to be congratulated on _ the success of that part of the eu- tertainment. The party was a merry ome and jokes succeeded one anoth er in rapid succession. A musica programme was prepared by the Kingston visitors and quartettes. duetts, solos and choruses as well ar splendid Instrumental music wa enjoyed. Those taking part in the programme were Miss Fearne, Messrs. A. Fearne, W. Christmas, J Saunders, W. Eva, A. McMahon, C. Cantion and 8. Fox. The Kingston contingent motored home with man pleasant recollections of a happy evening. Major-General Eimsley, King © street, is entertaining at dinner this evening for Capt. Francis MeCul- lagh who is the guest of General and Mrs. Elmsley. The party will go on to Grant Hall to hear Capt. Mc Cullagh give a lecture on conditions in Russta. The other guests will be Major-General Sir A. C. Macdonell, the Bishop of Ontario, Principal Bruce Taylor, Col. Alexander Mac- phail, Col. Matthews, Ottawa, Col. 'BE. B. Sparks, Col. Ww. Y. Mills, Mr. J. G. Bilott, Mr. W. R. Givens and Mr. Lyman McCallum. * . Mrs. A. P. Knight, Alice street, gave a pleasant tea on Monday af- ternoon for her daughter, Mis. Her- bert Wood, Vancouver, B.C, who is with her. . . . Mts. Victor Tremaine, Royal Mil. ftary College, who entertained at mah jongg on Monday is entertain- ing again this afternoon. . - -. Mr. Roy Reynolds, Kingston, was best man at a wedding in North Bay, a fashionable event in Bt. Fat That Shows Soon Disappears rom at which comes and stays ee aot needed is a burden to oe to sotivity, a curb ude You san_leiave the it shows by oa) and at bedtime, one mola on blet. These little tab- y as pleasant and effective as ous ption from which e their name. Buy and try a s 1 arugsiets the world at one dollar for & OX, direct from the oan m Motors Bldg. De ie gap say good-bye tod g, exercise and fat. "THE CAUSE OF CANCER Sir W. Arbuthnot Lane of London, one of the foremost surgeons of the world, has written to the London Daily Mei. and he has also a letter in a t issue of a Canadian Medical Jou! , © g that cancer Is ca by our idiotic refinement of our chief foodstuffs, the grains. He "lays espécial blame upon white flour and fefined cereals. DF. Robt: G. Jackson, of Toronto, of the Dietetic Age of New York City, a journal circulating am physicians, has been teaching 'this for years, and, because he was convinced of this fact and also that food deficiencies cause a lot of other of the diseases of civilized peoples . he invented Roman Meal, a food ma from whole wheat, whole rye, flaxin and bran, these blended scientifically in proportion to make a balanced human food. It supplies the deficien- oles of flour and other refined "ghost cereals" and should be used in some or daily, or at least several times week. It prevents Indigestion and positively relieves constipation. cause of its growth-promoting Prope es, it is especially valuable in , bu and expectant and children from the 10th HD ker of John's church, The parties were Emma Mae, eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. J. Woollen and Harry J. Reynolds, son of Mr. and Mrs, Thomas Rey- nolds, . contracting oe eo" Miss Jean Chown, Toron'o, visit- ing in Resina, where she has Been the guest of honor at several plea- sant parties, including a bridgs par ty at which Mr. and Mrs. D. J. Thom were host and hostess * . . On Saturday the Garrison Badmin- ton Club will give a luncheon in the armouries for the Ottawa players. . . . Mrs. T. B. Callander, Maitland street, will entertain at mah 'johgg on Thursday afternoon, . * . Mrs. BE. J. C. Schmidlin, Royal Military College, will give a mah jongg party on Thursday. * . * Mrs, Victor Anderson, Barriefleld, 's entertaining the Tuesday ' Mah Jongg Club this afternoon. J . . * Rev. W. A. Mclliroy, Hamilton, who preached the anniversary ser- non in Cooke's church on Sunday, s the guest of Mr. and Mrs. William Jackson, William street west. Miss Florence Finn, who was visk- 'ng Mr. and Mrs. Joe Mahon, Water- town, N.Y. has returned to the island. Miss Charlotte Whitton, leaves on December 6th West Indies. Miss Ila Burns, who has spent a month in Toronto with her uncle and aunt Mr. and Mrs, T. Miller, has returned to town. » . - Mrs. Frederick Welsh, Clergy street, will leave in about ten days for California where she will spen: the winter. Miss Alma Robertson, - Queen' University, epent the week-end wit! her parents, Hon. and Mrs. G. D Robertson, Ottawa. She was ac companied by Miss Margaret. Kerr. Mr. and Mrs. W. N. Linton, We ington street, spent the week-end i Toronto. Miss Muriel Gdjmour has return ed to Toronto affer a yisit with he: parents, Mr. and Mrs! C. Gilmour Sydenham street. : . & » Dr, and Mrs. A. I. Armstrong North Augusta, will motor to King: ston for the Davis-Hut'on wedding which takes place 'at 'halmers church on Wednesday, and wli'l be with Mrs. Armstrong's parents, Mr and Mrs. John Davis, Union sireet. Miss Helen Bawden, Lethbridge Alta, is visiting her uncle and aunt Mr. and Mrs. George Bawden, Bar- rie street. Mrs. BE. T. Taylor, who is visiting her sister, Lady Macdonell, Royal Military College, will leave for Mon- treal this week. Mrs. Henry Joseph, Montreal, was In Toronto this week for the Con- servative women's rally, - » - Miss Constance Webster, Whithy is the guest of Mrs. Francis Macnee, St. Lawrence Cottage. Col. Matthews, Ottawa, is a visi- tor In town. Mrs. Bruce Hopkins, King street, returned today from Montreal where she has been the guest of Mrs. Maitland Hannaford. Ottawa for the AUNT HET where nobody is important enough to be bad mannered." _You, personally are the maker or breaker of your credit in the § NN EE ™ The Editor heors | . MAY WED PRINCE : The nineteen-year-old Countess of Seafield is heiress to he $3,000,000 estate of her father, the late Earl of Seafleld. [t is rumored that Queen Marie of Roumania is favorably inclined toward the possibility of the marriage of the young countess and her son, Prince Nicholas, now serving ad a junior officer on a British battleship. not only an artist but an economisi besides. There's undoubtedly a lot for a girl to learn if she is going to keep her home the place of comfort and charm that it can be. GIRL WHO CAN COOK. Jy Cynthia Grey. When a man asks a woman to marry him, this is what he's really saying to her: "Will you love me always, and mend my clothes and have my meals on time, and bring up my children, and live within my income, and be cheerful through it all?" } And the woman, who. is usually young and heedless and terribly in love, answers "Yes"" as a matter . of rourse, For she's obeying a law of nature when she marries, Old Mother Nature, who is an in- corrigible match-maker, doesn't care a fig whether a girl is prepar- ed to be a good home-maker or not, Her job is finished when the min- ister finishes his--at the altar. Of the thousands of autumn brides this year, not many are train- ed for their job. The bride who can beat up a panful of fluffy biscuits and broil an inch-thick steak is as rare as a white peacock. . . .and worth her weight in platinum as well. As a matter of fact, don't train their daughters for mothers the work ahead of them as wives. Girls | are taught to dance and play. the piano, to typewrite and teach school and a hundred other very fine and useful things. ¢ But not one in fifty ever goes in- to the kitchen and the sewing room with her mother to learn the all- important profession of housekeep- ing. A girl gets much advice about be- ing sweet and 'bagging' her man but not much about caring for him afterward. . Almost every young couple has been told that the first year is hard- est--that it's the difficult time of adjusting and adapting yourselves to each other's ways. And so it is. But much of the trouble could be avoided if the bride knew a' little more about making up a household budget or sewing on buttons. i girl who knows how to run her house right from the start has twice the chance of having a happy one than the girl who is just learn- ing. ! For example, there's the pdéblem of entertaining. It doesn't cost much to make a bowl of salad, some rolls and coffee and have a few friends in for Sunday night supper. ng 3 And it's ever so much better if she starts out know even halt as much about the work ahead of her as her husband knows about hi: job of providing the money to keep the house going. We wouldn't think of letting our daughters marry men who didn't have a job &r weren't able to sup- port a home of some sort, would we? \ Then why in the world don't we think more seriously of getting our daughters ready for the Real Ad- venture, as well? : (Copyright, 1924, NBA Service, Inc.) That a housewife asks why, with quantities of beautiful apples sold on the Kingston market, she sees Makintosh Reds sold by the dozen in Kingston shops and only very indifferent apples offered by the peck? giving a series of concerts at popu- lar prices somewhat after the ex- ample of Oxford and Cambridge | where "penny pops" have been the | vogue. The aim is to have the con- certs given by leading Canadian art- {sts and to have the highest class of music given to the public.) Edmund Burke, a MeGill graduate, who for years has been with the Metropoli- tdn Grand Opera and with Convent Garden, London, England, on thé concert stage, gave a recital of song for his alma mater in Montreal, on Monday night. The advance sale of tickets ran over $3,000. That the MecGill Music Club la} 1 i That the Girls' Fellowship Club of the Y.W.C.A. is already preparing for the baskets of Christmas fare the girls intend as usual some of the families who but, for some kindly outside help, would come off badly at the season of re- joicing. These young girls, all of whom work in one way or another, find time to make all sorts of pretty things by the sale of which they buy the food and clothing, for they send warm woollies for the little ones as well as - Christmas fare, in their splendidly equipped baskets. Every- one should be. glad to help them in their good and unselfish work, Perhaps it was the om) windows on .Monday morning: when Jack Frost had left the mark of his fin- gers on the panes, that set all the little folk wondering just how many days it was before Christmas. To them it will seem long, no doubt, put the elders might as well begin to think of it and to remember that there are just thirty-two shopping days before Christmas, Get the shopping over and let the last week pe left to household preparations for 'the family gatherings that are such happy ones at this great feast of the Christian church. 3 Wild 'oats sowing may be recrea- tion, but the trouble comes with the harvest. Hosiery to Match Your Evening Gown { This season the smart- est people must w hosiery and gown of the same shade. Send your white silk hose to us for dyeing. We will bring them to any shade you desire--the new orange, poudre blue, lanvin green, vivid rust, are all very beautiful in hosiery with either black or me- * tallie shoes, sending to ENG's Jor Comstipe- sien, indigession Hesrtburn, Nervous: For Sick Headache and Biliousness troublesome complaints are generally due to a sluggish liver, and are most frequently experienced by those who lead a sedentary life. A tea- spouniu} of ENO's "Fruit Salt" in a glass of cold water will provesoothing and refreshing, and by eliminating harmful waste matter soon restores normality and natural buoyancy. For your health's sake ask your ist for ENO's. Sales Representatives for North America ) OA n + FRUIT SAI ness, Impure Blood, Depression, Failing tempts, Rheumetic Con. didons. 9 bind SOMME NAPTHA SOAP . Sood forrery domestiuse, Laundry kitchen and genera "Hoisehold Wor ARKER'S 69 Princess street, Kingston See Our Sample English Scarfs 'Phone 191. * JUST ARRIVED. All the newest colors. Silk and Wool and Silk mixtures. About 300 in the lot. These are all marked at sample prices. See the window display, W. N. Linton & Co. The Waldron Store LINDSAY PIANOS STYLE "A $445 A high grade Piano at a moderate price, Its tone excels any Piano at a similar price. Sold on easy terms of 10% cash and 'the balanée