Daily British Whig (1850), 7 Apr 1926, p. 4

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G \ LIFE'S SOCIAL SIDE 's. Page Editor Phone 2018 i + » ' 'The card party and dance given in ® assembly hall of the Eastern \ School on Tuesday evening by Pittsburgh "Women's Institute, most successful. Mrs. W. J. , the pres t, received the and cards ere played for of the evening, Mr. Slater and Lily Matthews winning the first "Dancing went on during the ing to 'the excellent music of Fox's orchestra and supper was ed by a committee of ladies who Mrs. J. J. Wilmot, Mrs. Francis ooks, Mrs. Waller and Mrs. Henry n. rs. E. H. Young,® Gore, street, 1 the hostess of an exceedingly Fight tea on Tuesday afternoon in r of Miss Ruth Martin, a bride inful Sprains, Bruises Restored By Nerviline -- * There is soothing power In Nervi- i that has made it famous for parly fifty years past. It sinks in ly it penetrates quickly, it away. the pain from a sprain brings grateful relief #6 bruised, & muscles. If your joints are and you are suffering from atism or Lumbago; if Neu- ! bothers you now and: again, trusty old 'Nerviline" It works ers, whether the pain is inter- or external. Get a large 35 bottle from your dealer to-day. ; Xa | Women : Find | Greatcomfort in this new hygienic pad that dis- cards easily as tissue-- be! no laundry . » Or many important counts, ES women are deserting the old- y 'sanitary pad." There is a new way. A way that " lies protection. 'A way, too, solves the old problem and ent of disposal. It is called "KOTEX." Ends the r y of the old-time sanitary jad. : times as absorbent! And todorides--ends ALL fear of of- io tissue. No Nad ot any wise = ¢ Ju get it at any drug or depart. ment store simply by saying "K( * You ask for it without 5 Costs 'only a few cents. Right in" 'better-class women employ it, 'oves old ways an unnecessary risk: KOTEX DAY OR NIGHT L 7 PASSENGER SEDANS of this month. Easter lilies and spring flowers were in the drawing- room, and in the tea room the table presided over by Miss Eva Martin, Was centred with- white hyacinths and tall pink tulips in a crystal vase. - . » The Whig will be glad to have the hames of visitors in town and ac- counts of various social events for publication in' the social column. Buch communications should be signed and the address of the sender given. Write or telephone to the Editor of the Woman's Page, Tele- Phone No. 2613. * ,* eo. Principal R. Bruce Taylor has sent out invitations for the marriage of his daughter, Lois Arnott, to Mr. Walter Cunningham Geale Windeyer, at threes o'clock on May 1st at Chalmers church, and afterwards at the Principal's Residence, Queen's University. ~ot * 9s 0 "is . Olive Derry, Kingston, who = # sbloist in Grace Church, Na- Panee, on Sunday evening, was the guest of Mrs. Thomas Symington. Miss Thelma Marshall, Kingston, is the guest of Miss Jennie Coates, Napanee. . . * Mrs. W. J. Gibson, Alwington avénue, will entertain at the tea hour on Thursday for Miss Ruth Martin, LJ . . Lady Surma, Princess Regent) of the Assyrian nation, is spending' to- day in Montreal, the guest of Mr. and Mrs. T. T. McG Stoker. Mrs. Stratford Dawson, who spent Easter With ber mother, Mrs. Ed- win Loucks, Division street, has re- turned to Montreal. Mr. and Mrs. R. H. Davidson and Masler John I, Clergy street, who were with Mrs. John I. Davidson, To- ronto, for the week-end, have re- turned to town. * . * 'Lady Thornton and Miss Anne Thornton came from Montreal in their private car on Tuesday; bring- ing Cadet James Thornton back to the Royal Military College. They will remain in town until Thursday. Mr. and Mrs. Allan Mackenzie, New York, spent Easter with the former's father and sister, Mr. Mae- kenzie and Miss Blsie Mackenzie, Division street. They sail for Sweden this week, where Mr. Mackenzie re- presents the Parkard Motor Com- pany. Mrs. G. H. Leggett, Mrs. George Nicol, Mrs. Charles Mallory and Miss Baillie, superintendent of nurses at the Kingsfon General Hospital, are among the nurses who will go from Kingston "to the Graduate Nurses' convention b¢ing held in Belleville this week, Miss Phyllis Knight, Montreal, is expected in town this week to visit Dr. and Mrs. A. P. Knight, Alice street, Dr. and Mrs. E. L. Bruce are safl- ing from New York on Saturday. Dr. Bruce is one of the delegates of the Royal Society to the International Geological, Congress which meets in Madrid in May. . . * Mr. and Mrs. Stanley Knapp, Mrs. EB. Hart and Mr. Robert Hepburn, who have spent the winter in Ro- chester, N.Y., have returned: to their home at 10 Pine street. General the Hon. W. A. Griesbach, of Edmonton, and Mrs. Griesbach, have arrivad .in Ottawa and are staying at the Chateau Ldurier. ---- Do not miss "Fanny's First Play," a bril:iant comedy by Bernard Shaw, Faculty Players, Convocation Hall, Thursday and Friday, 8th 'and 9th, at 8 p.m. sharp. Reserved seats at Uglow's and University Post of. | tice, 75¢ and boe. C--O ad Rel MA SUFFERED TERRIBLY Taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable A Remarkable Case Found Great | The Editor Hears || That the song sparrow, who Das | arrived early to choose a good house | keeping sife and has selected the | garden of "Amnnandale" as a suit-| able spot, is the most courageous | and optimistic of birds, He sits on | a branch and sings the lovely song | that tells his hearers that id spite of cold, snow and ice, April is here | and that we will surely have real, spring, with soft airs, a free harbor, tiny blossoms pushing their way up| through the dead leaves in response to warm sunshine. It does not seem as if all these things could happen | within a month, but they will, for we have a God who has said that as long as the earth remaineth seedtime and harvest shall not cease. That the medical profession will be strongly represented in the play being put on this week by Queen's Faculty Players. One doctor came across the sea to Gis after the war who is nearly as clever an actor as he is a surgeon, and he has inspired in his fellow medicos a well found- ed belief in their dramatic power. That the various women's mis- sionary societies are holding annual meetings which show on all sides an increase in membership and giv- ires, which means an increase in interest. The education of the wom- 10.03 Butterfly orchestra. Schotter, Concerto. WGBS, New York (816). 7.30 p.m.--Hotel Seville Con 8--Alfred Schootter and Fra Broadeast from © Ballroom, Springfield. DERS vi Mendelssohn's en of the church is largely respon- sible for this increase. Such a book as "The Clash of Color," read wide- ly of recent years by women, shows the world's need for the civilization that is coming rapidly to be a chris- tian civilization. That Mr. Frank Yeigh, who told the story of the condition of the children in the Near Rast so well in Kingston, that a Kingston kit- chen has been established"in Salon- ica, Greece, has recently: been in Saskatoon speakin there of" the need to feed and clofhe these fellow- Christians of ours, 1 such time as they are placed in a Position to care for themselves. The work is going on apace, and already over 100,000 refugees have been settled in Mace- donia, but we, living in our sparsely populated country, can hardly real- iz6 the hundreds more who are still trying to eke out an existence in a country that would hardly be missed, in area, out of Canada. The King- ston kitchen is doing good work dnd feeding many hungry women and children, but it must be kept up and the committee feel sure that the people of Kingston *will not let the building that, in this distant corner of Europe, stands for the hospitality of the city of Kingston, Ontario, be a place from which | mew great interest in the silk scdr. reason of the tendency toward moo ernistic motifs, color has become equally important, inasmuch as the scarf is an accessory wanted in shades to set oft the rest of the costume. The vari-colored scart flaunts a patterd of modernistic tendency, or bold design oftenér than a small intricate pattern. Hand blocked effects, in all the vi- vid shades of red, green, purple ang orange are in demand for some pur- poses, and all the pastel coloring for others. : In some cases the designs are es- sentially tailored, suggesting them- selves as suitable to accompany the two-piece suit or the taggored jum- per frock. A broken plaid blocked in black on color is one example of this. Again thers are striking con- ventionalizsed florals, chiefly in bor- der treatments, and the small de- sign of Persian genre is also a fac- tor. An innovatiton is a short scarf, which came into the limelight at the tennis courts in the south of France, something like the Deau- ville kerchief. It is used in an odd fashion, like a kerchiet at the back and loosely folded in front, in Ap- ache style, These kerchiefs often have a central motif on a plain ground surrounded by a printed border. Others have a broken plafn design in the centre, with plain bor- der. New scarfs of tig "dressy" order reflect the detail of frocks which add a hem of tulle or net to the scalloped skirt. Scarf lengths of flowéry chiffon have at each end an additional quarter of a yard of net or of chiffon in a plain color which repeats a tint in the des- ign. Rose color added fo the ends of a scarf of chiffon printed with clus- ters of roses accentuates effectively the shade of the flowers in the pat- tern, Black material as a back- ground~for flowers in natural tints is particularly decorative and the Lcombinations of bright colors with this is most effective. Scarfs of gauze traced with graceful designs in metal thregd will be worn with the light summer evening gowns, and will form a striking contrast to the solid black of so matly of the new models in sheér fabrics, ---------- Reports from India say that the famous old hookah pipe is disap- pearing and that foreign cigarettes are taking its place, . -----------n will have to turn away from---still starving. 3 -- That after forty years of waiting | at [ast a church for deaf mutes has | been opened in Toronto, and at Eas- ter those who could neither hear | nor see joined their fellows in the | worship of the Risen Christ, Mrs, J. R. Byrne, a deaconess, who has given much of her time to the deaf, was interpreter, The church is open- ed under the direction of the Unit. ed Church. ---- -------- / | womens MEETINGS i ---- Women's League. The annual meeting of the Catho- lic Women's League was held on Tuesday night in the Roman Catho- lic Assembly Hall and splendid Ye- DOrts were received from the different branches of the League in Kingston, It was reported that 4here Had been an increase in the Membership of one hundred and forty during the year, now bringing the paid-up member. ship to three hundred and fifty, Re- ports were also received from the Home and School representatives, the Bt. Mary's report being read by Mrs. C.J. Corrigan and St. Vincent's Academy by Mrs. B. Milne, The edu- cational committee report was pre- sented by Miss 8. Swan and the so- cial service committee report by Mrs. W. J. Logue, The financial report showed a bal- ance of $800 at the beginning of the last term, but since that time there had been many expenditures, leay- ing at the present time a balance of Catholic $21.21. Arrangements for a Ay bazdargo be held were discussed at the edn d following ladies being next term: . President, Mrs. C. J. the election of | officers 'took Sena in the Mrs: F. Pilley; tary, Mrs. M. vo dis AAPALF "DIAMOND DYES COLOR THINGS NEW Just Dip to Tint or Boil to Dye Each 15 - cent package contains directions so sim- ple any woman can ting soft, delicate 4 shades or dys rich, Pa permanent colors Wy in lingerie, slike, / ribbons, skirts, CUA waists, dresses, 7 , coats, stockings, Sweaters, draper- ies, coverings, hangings---everything! Buy Diamond Dyes--nd other kind ~--and tell your druggist whether the material you wish to color is wool or sifk, or whether it is linen, cotton or mixed goods. / a on aig R. be announced. B24 : 2% » + 8% % Xa Miss Steve 2, daar. 8 each {tors is in Ottawa and {town in which the Victoria./Order of Nurses is at work in Bastern On- tario, is in Kingston this week and will go on to Belleville for the meet- ing of the Graduate Nurses' Associa tion, On Tuesday afternoon she met the Kingston V.O.N. committee in the Welfare Station and talked to them of the 'work of the V.O.N. is Ontario in general and of the work in Kingston in particular. In spite of the other branches of {health work, the V.O.N. is as much jheeded as ever, and the call for new branches to be formed shows the pub- | lc want this kind /of nursing service. Miss Stevenson had been in Napanee recently and there the ladies of the committee are most active and the town council had recently granted $500 for the V.O.N. work. Cornwall was another place she mentioned as she read some splendid-and yet amus- ing 'essays written by the children of the Cornwall public schools on V.O.N, work in their city. The prize essay showed in one-way a great grasp of the aims of the Order, the ¢ire of the sick in the homes, the edu- Jt avi and preventative advantages of having such an organization in the community. But the little girl, who was only thirteen and had quite evi dently done the work for herself, got badly mixed as to dates, and said the Order was formed during the Crimean war when Florence Night- ingale went to Lady Aberdeen to get her to help in mursing the soldiers. Miss Stevenson is a great believer in publicity, especially publicity through the press, and told her inter- ested hearers of a drive for $10,000 put on by the Ottawa V.O.N. Ottawa, a city of mang. hospitals, still feels the need of the V.O.N. and the result of the drive, put on with much pub- licity given in the columps of the Ottawa dally papers, resulted in over $11,000, over a thypusand more than the objective. "You cannot afford to save on \publeity," said Miss Stevenson." 'Everyone reads the pa- pers, and if you will prosper you must advertise." Miss Stevenson thinks . there is plenty of work for two nurfes in Kingston. She was greatly delight- ed to hear that a number of Kings- ton women's societies, including the 1.O.D.E,, were servi tea, to the mothers at the Welfare Station and taking a live intefest in «the splen- did work of the order. Plans were made for fhe annual fag day which will be held in May. AUNT HET | "Tea résts me some, but it don't never rest me encugh to make me feel sinful does." lke : blackberry cordial oh §--Radio Franks. 3 #1 WGBS Old Time Minstr enuine 2 -------------------------------- CLL TEA KINGSTON MUS 'Phone 680m. . . IC STUDIOS 258 King Street Plano and Theory ........... teesaieaas JHB. Packer, AT.OM, Violin, Ukelele, Piano . . |. on Telgmann, Res. Phone 1208-w. a "So much rests on 'them ein i BY Joy. check tio. Y y® THE SAFE A GENTLE wisasan-WAY TO END A CORN and a splendid wearing quality atvery . 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