Daily British Whig (1850), 15 Oct 1925, p. 8

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THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG § THURSDAY, OCTOBER 15, 1025. { LIFE'S SOCIAL SIDE 's Page Editor Phone 2613. Mr Private Phone 857w. @ playing members lurched to- Golf ir at the Cataraqui * | Phyllis Knight, NEWS AND VIEWS FOR WOMEN READERS W. M. Nickle, Mrs. S. M. Rob- n, Miss Marion Lesslie, Miss Miss Nora Macnee, Miss Edna Chown, Miss Freda Burns, ert and | Miss Gwen Dawson, Miss Agnes Big: try Club to-day, when the long low (Montreal), Miss Laura Kilborn, with its many guests, present- | Miss Marion Redden, Miss Kath- pretty picture. Those lunching farine MacPhail, Miss Gecil Macnee, Mrs. ¥. H. Macnee, Mrs. W. A. Miss Catherine and Miss Isabel Min- sll, Mrs. T. A. Kidd, Mrs. Keith nes, Miss Doris McKay, Miss Cecily (8, Mrs. W. Bartlett Dalton, Mrs. Mooers, land Miss Janet Roche (Toledo, O.). Miller, Miss Grace Rutherford, Miss Caroline Mitchell Edith Ritchie,"Mrs, Alan Black, SE H. Westmorland, isley, Mrs. B. C. Taylor, Mrs. Mrs. W. B. Kidd, Mrs. P.'G. (. | tional Executive of the Council pbell, Mrs, F. Mahood, Mrs. Re-| Minnes, | © d Brook, Mrs. Halloway Ww. G. Mrs. Waddell, W. R. Giy- Kingston for the meeting of the Na- H. The ladies who expect to be in of | Women to be held here in the middle { November are, the president, Miss A. H. Fair, Mrs. W. H. Her- | Carmichael, New Glasgow, N.S.; Dr. on, Mrs. Philip Du Moulin, Miss | Ritchie England, Mrs. Lyman, Miss aces Du Moulin (Toronto), Mrs. b +. HW) ©. Alexander, Mrs. E. B. Sparks, | ton Smith, St. John. N.B,; Mrs. Frase , J. B. McLeod, rong, Mrs. George Mrs. Thomson, | |C. M. Derrick, Montreal; Mrs. Ather- C. rH. Thorburn, Mrs, J. A. Wilson, | Mrs, Ira Mackay and Mrs. Ninian C. y J. C. Murray, Mrs. D. G, Laid- | Smellie, Ottawa; Mrs. 8. Wade, Ren- Ww. Mrs. Lionel Smith * (Montreal), | ITeW; Mrs. Stammers, Smith's Falls; 8. W. T. Minnes, Mrs. A. E. Ross, |' . George Mahood, Mrs. W. Harty, | a Cold Overnight Irs. W. R. Norris, Peterboro; Mrs. Scott, Pembroke; 'Mrs. Willoughby |Cummings, Mrs. W. Bundy, Dr. Mar- ~|garet Johnson, Dr. Margaret Patter- |son, Mrs. J. N. Woods, Mrs. Dig- {iam and Mrs. Parsons, Toronto; Mrs. | Carpenter, Hamilton; Mrs. 8. Tweed, | waterloo; Mrs. Twidale, Niagara { Falls. | . . . Mr. and Mrs. Thomas McKee, Rothsay, Ont., announce the en- gagement of their youngest daugh- ter, Alice Clarissa, to Mr. Lloyd | Kirkland, Kingston, Ont., eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. William Kirkland, Brockville, the marriage to take | place quietly this month. | { | Mrs. F. M. Cobb, Tweed, announces : There are many ways to treat a [the engagement of her daughter, Lil- nid but only one DIRECT way-- h varors that can be inhaled. . Vapors penetrate immediately in- lian Charlotte, to Robert Christie Hosie, B.Sc.F., son of Rev. John and Mrs. Hosie, London, Ont., the mar- every corner of the dir passages cq to take place early in Novem- lungs, Sootiyng and healing with I y breath. icks is so Yemarkably successful treating cold troubles because it like a 'vapor lamp in salve hen rubbed over f Menthol, Camphor, @ and Turpentine, ; double, direct action often tks the worst cold overnight. | throat and t the body heat releases vapors Eucalyptus, At the same Vicks is absorbed through and lates the skin like a poultice or er. LJ . * Miss Elizabeth Sutherland enter- tained eight members of St. George's cathedral at Mrs. T. D. Minnes' home on Kensington avenue on Wed- nesday afternoon in connection with the chain of entertainments being held by the ladies of the parish. LJ * . Mrs. James Miller, Lower Albert street, entertained at dinner on Wed- nesday evening when her guests were some of the members of the staff of the University, . » . Mr. and Mrs. John Downey, who have been spending some time in Kingston, have returned to Belleville. Mrs. Bernard Mills and Miss Dorothy Neilson, of Kingston, are guésts with the former's sister, Mrs. F. M. Letteney, Maitland street, Lon- don, Ont. . Miss Alleen Folger, Sydenham street, is the guest of Mrs. O. C. Pease, Toronto. Mrs. James Tetro, Kingston, has returned home after spending a week with relatives in Smith's Falls. Dr. and "Mrs. W. 8. Murphy, Smith's Falls, came to Kingston, go- ing from here to Gananoque where they spent the week-end with rela- tives. Mrs. Murphy is leaving from 4 SE EE SS = 3 { "THE KINGSTON 'GENERAL HOSPITAL Services. given and how the cost of these ser- vices is meli-- 1.--NON PAY AND PART PAY PATIENTS -- * 5% (approx.) from Patients. 60% (approx.) from ants. 35% (approx.) from donations, hospital aids and : general assistance, IL--PRIVATE AND SEMI-PRIVATE PATIENTS-- By amt. patients' payments, plus assistance given by hospital aids and citizens in room furnish- ings, dietitians' department, ete. WHY YOU SHOULD ASSIST THE HOSPITAL: the hospital is an asset to and renders a commun« r tivie pride and all the surrounding district. prompts you to assist such an in- , new Fireproof Olinio Building will be offi= "opened at 4 p.m., Oct. 16th, and will be open a the public, Oct. 10m, 17th and 18th {{ Gananoque accompanied by her sis- ter, Mrs. Skinner and daughter Miss Mary Skinner, to spend a month with their sister at Lebanon, Kentucky. Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Hart, who have 'been spending some time in Peter- Boro left for their home in Weldon, Sask., this week. Miss P. Shangraw, Elgin street, is visiting her sister, Mrs.' W. Lyall, Palmerston Square, Toronto. Prof. M. B. Baker, Queen's Uni- versity, will go to Montreal on Fri- day for the rugby game. ¥ - - Mrs. Lawrence Stevenson and her daughter, Kingston, are passing a week 'with Miss Louise Watertown, N.Y. Mrs. T. A. Paterson, Mr. and Mrs. | Bert Kennedy, and Mr. Bruce David- son of Agincourt, motored to King- ston and Brockville, where they will remain for a week. Mrs. Leonard Knott, and Master Gerald Knott, of Windsor, are visit- ing Mr. and Mrs, H. L. McCrum, Earl street. Mr. Jack Ingram, of the Royal Bank, Pembroke, who has been visit- | ing friends in the city, has return- ed to his home. . . * Miss Agnes Biglow, Montreal, is visiting Miss Grace Mooers, Barrie street. Mr. and Mrs. W. Bartlett Dalton; West street, will go to Montreal on Friday for the Queen's-McGill rugby game. Mrs. Lionel Smith, Montreal, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. John McKay, "Argyle House." . * . Dr. and Mrs. Robertson, who were with the latter's mother, Mrs. Charles, Fenning, Pine street, for the rugby game last week, have return- ed to Carp. Miss Ruth Anglin, who has been with her parents, Dr. and Mrs. W. G. Anglin, will return to Montreal on Friday. Mr. and Mrs. J. Russell Stuart have moved into the apartment on Bagot street, lately occupied by the Misses Martin, who are with their aunts, the Misses. Johnston, Earl street. ' The Editor Hears That the ' lefters received from Zhoda School, Alberta, have been read with much interest by all mem- bers of the I1.0.D.E. and also by those of us who through them have had an intimate glimpse of what is being done by the teachers of the west, many of them, as in the case of Miss Dyde, Kingston girls and graduates or undergraduates of Queen's Uni- versity. The letters tell us many things that thrill the hearts of those who look forward to a "greater Can- ada." They show us that these young girls are winning the love of the children of the strangers within our gates who have come to the great open spaces of the prairies from over-crowded Europe. They are set- ting before them the ideals that have become part of every true Canadian's being and through the love the chil- dren have for them the lessons go home'and in time the ideals of the little ones with foreign surnames and English Christian names will be Canadian ideals. To be polite, to be clean and tidy, to help the sick, to work with the Junior Red Cross with its object better health and to un- derstand that their eyes should be examined and that their weight should be up to a required standard are among the ideas that are taking hold of the plastic minds of these children. Then too they are learn. ing something of the history of the British Empire and of that part of it In which their. lot has been cast. They will learn what "British fair play" means and that every man and every woman has a chance to make good under the Union Jack. That Kingstonians who 'motored from Montreal on Saturday say that near Cornwall there were drifts of snow six or seven inches high and except for the leaves on the trees the landscape looked as it does in winter. From some of the New Eng- land States the same story comes, and Canadians who visit there and are used to being told that there is snow in Ontario all the year round, sent back word that we could hard- ly see the snow in Kingston during - Phillips, | Save Time and Money Gillex dissolves the grease that holds the dirt to any surface or fabric. Use Gillex in the laundry and for all cleaning. Made in Canada E. W. GILLETT CO. LTD. TORONTO, CANADA WEDDINGS. Ross-Turner, A charming autumn wedding took place at half-past two o'clock on Wednesday in the Cathedral of the Holy Trinity, Quebec, when Miss Kathleen Turner, daughter of Lieut.- General Sir Richard Turner, V.C., and Lady Turner, Quebec, was mar- ried to Mr. Gordon Ross, son of Mr, and Mrs. John Theodore Ross, of Quebec. The Lord Bishop of Que- bec, assisted by the Dean of the Dio- cese, officiated, and the bride was given away by her father, while the bridegroom was accompanied by his father. The bride wore a gown of velvet palm chiffon, a tHe . veil which was canght up wit a chaplet of orange blossoms, and she carried a bouquet of red roses and lilies-of- the-valley. She also wore a string of pearls, the gift of the groom. The maid of honor was Miss Evelyn Tur- ner, sister of the bride. She wore a peach color crepe back satin gown, and carried a bouquet of red roses. The bridesmaids were the Misses Marjorie and Frances Ross, sisters of the bridegroom, Miss Yvette Laf- ferty, Miss Muriel Smith 6f Winni- peg, and Miss Sarah' Starke, of Montreal. They were gowned as the maid of homor. Mr. James F. Ross was best man for his®brotner. A receptipn was held at the home of the bride's parents. Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Ross will sail shortly for England and the Continent, where they will spend some time. LO.D.E. DOING WORR FOR THE EMPIRE, "Every bit of work you are doing seems to me to be of the utmost value in keeping this Empire to- gether--and God knows it must be kept together. So declared Major- General Sir Fabian Ware, vice- chairman of the imperial war graves commission, speaking of the 1.O.D.B. at an informal luncheon gathering held at the Toronto Golf Club in his honor, at which were present the ex- ecutive of the Imperial Order Daugh- ters of. the Empire. Woman's extraordinary Instinct for searching out essentials and her well known long memory were the two characteristics which made her peculiarly fitted for the task 'of preserving the solidarity of the British Empire, in such organiza- tions as the 1.O.D.E., Sir Fabian said. Miss R. M. Church, national president of the 1.O.D.E., presided, and spoke of the honor of having the sacred mission of Sir Fablan Ware to Canada, arranged under the auspices of the LO.D.E. ------------------ 2nd Kingston Company Girl Guides. The weekly meeting of the 2nd Kingston Company Girl Guides was held on Wednesday, October 14th, at seven o'clock. After enjoying a social evening the week before there| was a little more work. After col- ors the captain, Mrs. R. Secally, gave a talk on the Girl Guide motto, "Be Prepared." This week the 1st patrol gave a fine log, while the 2nd patrol gave a stunt in the form of a play entitled "School Days." There was a very large attendance and all en- joyed the game of * Observation," also other.games given by Lieutenant Miss H. Duncan. The mesting closed At St. George's Mission. % berries and quantities of vegetables were tastefully used as decoration ht "I'm glad them two missionary delegates wasn't here but two days. I had wore a smile so much my face was plum' tired out." 5 \ Girl Guides' Association. The local Girl Guide Association met for the first time this season on Wednesday afternoon in their head- quarters at K.C.I. The president, Mrs. Bogart, opened the meeting with the Guide prayer, after which the secretary and treasurer present- ed their regular monthly reports. Mrs, Diack brought word from Mrs. Volume, a former Kingstonian, in connection with her work of organ- izing the Guides in her new home in the British West Indies, and Mrs. Bogart gave an interesting report of the success of the girls' stay at Camp Oconto this summer and of their in- vitation to camp there again next summer. On leaving this year they presented Miss Halliday's camp with two bird houses, one tor bluebirds and one for wrens. Arrangements were made for securing the services of Miss Jones, a guide from England, to give Kingston one week's train- ing course in December or January. The meeting then adjourned. Tea was served by Mrs. Diack and Mrs. Otto. | "Buy tollet goods." Gibson's Drug Store. so well in this handy FREE--~St.Charles Recipe Book * ege- Ce and Copies, Fuses Cesserts, Jeo Cream, ER ete ea Easy To Gain Weight - With Yeast and Iron New Combination of Yeast With Vegetable Iron Builds Up Weight in Three Weeks Thin, run-down and under- weight men, women and children | can improve their health, in- crease their eMergy and put on from five to twenty pounds of good solid flesh in three weeks. A new combination of yeast vitamines with vegetable iron, renews the action of sluggish blood cells, drives out dangerous poisons, increases ener and endurance and supplies the system with the vitamines that build up weight. ; For years yeast has been known as a rich vitamine food, but not until we perfected "ironized yeast"--which comes in concen- trated tablet form, was it possible to take yeast and iron in the right proportions to build up weight. By Vegetable "Iron" when com- bined with yeast is quite easy to digest, therefore better for the system. And "yeast" when ironized, becomes just twice as beneficial as ordinary fresh or cake yeast. Ironized Yeast tablets are composed of concentrated food ele- ments, therefore they are pleasant to take and free from drug-like effects. It makes no difference how old you are--or how young you are--how long you have been under-weight--or how much under- weight you are, "ironized Jt tablets are positively guaranteed to Pek you right up, and add from five to twenty pounds of good firm esh in three weeks' time. If they fail get your money back. Sold by druggists, at $1.00 for a large B0-tablet package, or sent direct from laboratory on receipt of price. Ltd., Toronto. -- | Harold F. Ritchie & Co., Scarfs Are Very Popular For Fall Wear We have a big variety of all the new styles and colors, in Silk Georgette, Crepe, Knitted Silk and many novel- ties. From ......75c. to $7.50 each WOMEN'S SWEATER COATS in Cardigan and Chappie styles -- all wool and wool and silk. Special at $3.95, $4.50 and $5.00 each. W. N. Linton & Co. "Phone 191. The Waldron Store Selectivity--long range--volume-- true clarity--ease of control. THE NEW MARCONIPHONE See it demonstrated in our store. It will sur prise you even If you are already a Radio owner,

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