Daily British Whig (1850), 29 Mar 1926, p. 8

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NEWS AND V THE DAILY BRITISH. W "WS FOR WOMEN READERS RR NP Ee SON Ba a HIG pi = 'E 2 ) Editor Phone 201% - ate Phone 837w. i : om ee ; ! The elimination tournament at ihe armouries on Saturday in which Horace Lawson and Mrs. E. _ ¢. Behmidlin won from Col. Sch- diif and Miss Aileen Rogers in be final game, drew many members 5¢ the Garrison Badminton Club to cburts to see the play. Among ose present at the tea hour were ajor-General and Mrs. J. H. Eim- joy, Col. Constantine, ©ol. Harris; _ and Mrs. Schmidlin, Col. and s. Reginald Brook, Col. and Mrs. A. Kidd, Col. and Mrs. R. O. Al- xander, Col. and Mrs. Hertsberg, rs. Norman Leslie, Dr. and Mrs, p. G. C. Campbell, Prof. and Mrs. Pouglas Jemmett, Prof. and Mrs. feith Hicks, Prof. and Mrs. W. P. Igar, Miss Edgar { Montreal), Ma- jor and Mrs. Horace Lawson, Major 'and Mrs. Sheffield Bacon, Mrs. Hol- Howay Waddell, Capt. and Mrs. Ron- 'ald Fortt, Capt. and Mrs. F. M. 'Hurvey. Capt. and Mrs. Horace Westmorland, Mrs. Travers Hora, W. K. Macnee, Mise Mabel Gil-' Mrs. Er iones Miss Cartwright, Miss Go- 'ing, Miss Sara Willis, Miss "Mildred Jones, Miss Nora Macnee, Miss Lucy | Waddell (Montreal), Miss Aline and Miss Cecily Rutherford, Miss Gwen "Dawson, Miss Jessie Torrance, Miss 'Cocil Macnee, Miss Bdith Carruthers, Major Tremaine, Maj. Dobbie, Capt. | Kelly and Mrs. A. N. Lee. » Mr. and Mrs. A. BE. Walker, Mon- street, gave a well arranged N chre party on Friday evening in | "aid of the Orange Fife and Drum Band. Refreshments were served af- | ter the cards and dancing followed. | The prize winners were Mrs. H, Mc- LIFE'S SOCIAL SIDE Tiiroy, Mr. Nicholson, Mrs. Markins and Mrs, W, Wilkinson. . . . The Whig will be glad to have the names of visitors in town and ac counts of various social events for publication in the social column. Such communications should be signed and thé address of the sender given. Write or telephone to the Bditor of the Woman's Page, Tele- phone No. 2613. . . -. Principal R. Bruce Taylor aun nounces the engagement of his youngest daughter, Lois Arnott, to Walter Cunningham Geale Windeyer, only son of Major W. F. N. Wind- eyer, Toronto, the marriage to take place May the first. . . * Mr. Gustave Sauvant of the Royal Military College staff will spend the Easter holidays in Montreal. Cadet Henry McLaren will go to Ottawa with Cadet Teddy and Max Meighen to spend the Easter holi- days with Hon. Arthur Meighen and Mrs. Meighen, B. 8. 'M. Austin Davis, Royal Mil. itary College, will spend Baster In Toronto with his mother, Mrs. Davis. Miss Nancy Skinner, Montreal, is visiting her aunt, Miss Nan Skinner, King street. - Miss Margaret Wilton, Carleton Place, will arrive in town this weex, to spend the holiday season with het parents, Mr. and Mrs. H. A. Wilton, Arch street. Miss Helen Wilton, who is 'on the staff of the Collegiate In- stitute at Aylmer, Ont., will also spend Easter with her parents . - . Miss Bessie Ettinger, Y.W.C.A,, hac left for New York to spend Eas- ter. Prof. Keith Hicks arrived from ! at Double strength King. Secit at any furniture store, $12. NE BEDS + OSTERMOOR MATTRESSES "Bul for Slop by Ns smn New York on Saturday and is with Mrs. Hicks, Kensington avenue, for .a few days. . . * Rev. Ensér Sharp, Toronto, ar- rived in town today and will spend the week with Rev. W. E. and Mrs. Kidd, Wellington street. ; Miss Barbara Merchant, Barrie- field, left on Saturday for Toledo, Mich., to visit her sister, Mrs. Tay-| for Farnham. Mr. John Lowe, General Theolo- gical Seminary, New York, will ar- rive in town this week to spend Easter with his mother, Mr. H. P. Lowe, and Dr. Percy Lowe, "The Winston." Mrs. I. G. Bogart, Divisional Com- missioner of the Girl Guiles, left for London, Ont., today, to attend the provincial meeting of the Guides Council. Mrs. Bogart will also go to Toronto after Easter to attend the dinner given by the Toronto Guides in honor of Dame Furse, England. . * * Cadet Lew Clarke will be at home in Ottawa "this week from the Royal Military College to spend the Easter holidays with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Walter Clarke. He will be accompanied by Cadet Patton of New York, who will also visit Mr. and Mrs. Clarke for the Easter sea- son. Miss Edith Carruthers will go to Toronto next week to. attend the Havergal College Old Girls' reun- fon. - * Cadet James Thornton, Royal Mil- {tary College, will spend Easter in Montreal with Sir Henry and Lady Thornton. : Rev. Dr. John Dow, Toronto, who was the geust of Rev. G. A. and Mrs. Brown, Johnson street, return- ed to Toronto today. (Continued on Page 14.) The man never lived who didn't at some tinle in his life expect to invent something that would make him rich. and long life make Slumber King unequalled for economy ~ 8pread the low price of the Slumber King over -: _ the years it will serve and no Canadian coin is small enough to measure its cost per night. The strongest teel-fabric spring made, it is also the most flexible. Its 26 ribbon strips of steel are cross-tied by four rows of sensitive small coils. They adjust to every body curve. You cannot slide down to a cramped position in the middle. Its riveted pressed steel frame of the game height as.a box spring improves the appearance of the so bed. Sagging is impossible with its reinforced edges. There are no sharp edges to tear the bed clothes. No other spring is so easy to keep clean. at all points where strains can insure lifetime service from every Simmons \ Complete your comfort with an : OSTERMOOR ) A fitting companion to the Slumber King. Unequalled by any other-white cotton felt mattress in Canada for more than 30 years. One. quality, the best; ame maker, Simmons Limited; one price, the lowest at so fine a mat- #25 tress can be sold... Beware of imitations. Look for the Ostermoor label. The Editor Hears That the Girl Guides are prepar- ing for their tests and later the pub- lic will have an opportunity of at- tending an exhibition of these in- teresting productions. Cooking, sewing and all sorts of useful crafts are learned by the guides and their friends will be-asked later to co- operate with them in making money for their summer camp. That Sir Henry Drayton speaking at a session of the executive of the National Council of Women urged the members to assist in the eale of "Made in Canada goods." Mrs. Charles Constantine, Kingston, read a paper on the Yukon in its early days that was listened to with ab- sorbed attention, At the close of the session Mrs. Ninan C. Smillie was presented with a life member- ship. That beauty baths and beauty parlors are being forsaken by Eng- lish society women for health clubs which are springing up in pumbers in and around London. Realizing that health and fitness bring beauty, they are joining clubs which pro- vide gymnasium, Swedish exercises and artificial sun baths. That George Stockbridge, the successful gardener of the C.P.R. gardens that delight the eyes of Kingstontonians and their visitors from April to November, says the annuals in his garden never were nfore promising and he expects a wonderful show of bloom froin them thiz year. Already pansies are be- ginning to show life and the® buds that have lain dormant under the suow and ice are opening to March sunshine even ona frosty day. That flowers appeared on the market in open wagons on Saturday. The florists are preparing a great IesssusasENTRATRETARNB RAS sRER REN ETT TROL CAMPANA'S Italian Balm for red, rough hands after dishwashing. \ show of flowers for Easter, the sea- son when we all like a flower in our homes. The churches, the hos- pitals and our shut-in friends should be remembered at this season. Don't let all the flowers we buy be for our- selves, : That the robins were joined. om Monday morning by a flock 6 of bronze grackles whose hoarse note was heard by the worshippers re- turning from the early Holy Weék services. Looking upwards they saw the beautiful black and bronze plumage of these handsome birds gleaming in the tree tops. That one of the most interesting of the services held in St. Mary's Ca- thedral in comméction with the mis- sion held during the past two weeks was the blesssing of the babies on Saturday afternoon when the large church was filled with mothers and the babies they had brought to re- ceive God's blessing at the hand of the missioner. { AUNT HET eit 4 "Pa knows better than to try jokin' with me when I've fixed a big dinner an' my company don't come." re i------ SEASONABLE RECIPES isi Creamed Sardines, One box large sardines, 2 table- spoons butter, 2 tablespoons flour, 1 1-2 cups milk, 2 tablespoons lemon juice, 1-2 teaspoon salt, 1-2 tea- spoon paprika, triangles of crisp tcast, 2 hard cooked eggs, parsley. 'Remove skin and bones from sar- dixies. Melt butter, stir in flour and slowly add milk, stirring constant- ly. When mixture boils add salt, pa- prika and lemon julee. Add whites of eggs finely chopped and sardines, | whole or broken as preferred. Keep over hot water. Arrange toast on a hot platter, cover with creamed fish and sprinkle with yolks of egg forced through a ricer. Garnish 'with sprigs of parsley and serve. This makes a most attractive look- ing dish as well as an unusally : | . | licious one. Grape Fruit Salad. Two green peppers, I cup grape fruit pulp, 1-2 cup minced celery, slice onion, 2 tablespoons nut | meats, 2 teaspoons sugar, 1-4 tea- spoon salt. Cut peppers in halves lengthwise. Rémove pith and seeds, Remove pulp from grape fruit. Drain, There | should be 1 cup:of fruit after drain. ing. Usé juice in the dressing in place of lemon julca. Rub bowl in which salad is to be mixed with slice of onion. Mix sugar-and salt | and sprinkle over fruit. Let stand | a few minutes and combine celery, nuts and grape fruit. Pour over French dressing and fill peppers with mixture. Sprinkle with pap- rika ynd serve on a bed of lettuce. LIFES GOLDEN RULE. If only thoughtless people want, though, is that the white peo- ple should learn to appreciate their! talents. I say, very emphatically! that I do not yet find the white peo- ple educated to the merits of the North American Indian. That is why I go about singing folk songs of the Crees and trying to make the white race realize more fully that we, like them, are, after all, made by the same God." Good Advice, | ""He is all the world to me. What would you advise ¥ie to do?" "See a little more of the world." --London Tail. TAXI _*uoxs SERVICE 960 25¢ "wan" DAY OR NIGHT ALL 7 PASSENGER SEDANS prove your figure. are truly $5.00 a dozen up. Phone 191. i 'Corubining "style, -' and wear with lowest CLOTHS 2 x 2, 3} yards long, for $4.50 each up. NAPKINS in a 20", 22"; 24" from A Linens for Easter! Beautiful, fine, pure Linen Table Cloths with Napkins to match, in the newest designs warranted to give satis- factory wear. Directly imported at very attractive prices. : 2x24 2x3, and The Waldron Store a er er BRUNSWICK A latest complete selection of models for your inspection at {| You are at liberty to make an inspection without ob- W. N. Linton & Co. | '

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