NEWS AND VIEWS FOR WOMEN READERS _ LIFE'S SOCIAL SIDE Woman's Page Editor rnone 2618 lot Mr.'A. B. Lambe, has returned to Private Phone S837w. | Toronto. . 5» * . . Miss Dorothéa Sands, Alfred street, is in New York, visiting Miss : Douglas and her niece, Miss Chris- | Mre. Wiliam Harty, "Roselawn," tine Diack. , : will return from England next week. * + =. . 8. Mre. ©. M. Kindle and Miss Kindle, Ottawa, for the graduation Capt. Irvine, Queen's University, Bas sailed for England. . - Ed Dr. and Mrs. Ross Allen, Olean, N.Y., were in the city on Saturday. $80 Kinkle, Ottawa. W. Muirhead, : . Mrs. Guthrie and Miss Margaret Guthrie came from Ottawa to-day for the graduation of the latter. They are at Ban Righ Hall. . Mr. and Mrs. Carleton Place, are in town for Con- . * . Miss Georgina Gonklin and her parents will come from Brockville for convocation. Dr. and Mrs. Armstrong, Wark- . worth, will be in town on Wednes- day for the graduation of their daughter, Miss Helen Armstrong. - . . Miss Halpin, visiting friends in Kingston, has returned to Prescott and expects to leave soon for Detroit, Mich., where she will in future' re- . side. Dr. and Mrs. A. R. B. Williamson, King street, are spending a couple of weeks in New York. . 'General and Mrs. George Cart- wright, Toronto, will spend the sum- mer in England, 7 - . 'was Mrs. Reginald Brook who has with Mrs. Claud Hill, Ottawa, returned to town. i . . . * . Prof. and Mrs. R. O. Jolliffe and Mr. Leslie Jolliffe, Frontenac street, . spend the week-end in Brockville with Rev. Frank M. and-Mrs. Woot- ton. _ Mrs. Halloway Waddell is enter- * taining the Tuesday mah jongg club this afternoon. «se - * . Canon Woodcock, Brockville, who is Miss Allne Rutherford, King in town for the meeting of the di- street, was =a Monday afternoon |ocesan executive, 18 with his daugh- ~ bridge club hostess. ter, Mrs. W. BE. Kidd, Wellington . "0 street. Major and Mrs. Victor Tremaine + "have returned to the Royal Military College from Ottawa. . + Rev. James and Mrs. Taylor, Brae- side, are in town for Convocation, when their son, John Blyth Taylor, B.A., will receive Master of Arts. . . . ~ Mrs. 1. G. Bogart and Miss Thelma Bogart, Wellington street, have re- turned from Toronto. ss Miss Katharine Mackie, Denver, who was with her sister, the late Mrs. R. M. Douglas, Nelson street, will remain in town for some time with Miss Douglas. Mrs. Kirkland and Miss Mary Iya tue land i Riskian ke SBte, 416 a1, Ban RIED | pe Duchess of Atholl and her Sa 8 : niece, Miss Morley Fletcher sailed by the Montrose to-day for their te ama ei bred Sumed home in England after spending the remain in Paris for some time. last month In Cayata. . : Rev. BE. J. Rattee and Mrs. Rattee, Joliette, Que., are with the Misses Jack, University avenue, while in town for the graduation of their Mrs. R. O. Alexander, Royal Mili- daughter, Miss A. E. Rattee. tary College, entertained at mah . jongg on Monday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. E. de Ranzy, Brae- : . ea. side, will be in. town for the Con- vocation when their daughter, Miss Helen de Ranszy, B.A. will receive the degree of Master of Arts, t . . Ld Mr. and Mrs. George Hague and Winifred Hague, University avenue, left for England to-day. . * . Mrs. R. §. Wilkinson, Stella, who has been in town for several days, returned home this afternoon. - * -. © Miss Kathryn Charette, Ottawa, B the week-end with Mr. and s, Ambrose Shea, Union street. . . . Mrs. B. BE. Board, Hamilton, is in town for Convocation, when her executive of the dioces of Ontario. |gon, Mr. H. K. Board, will take a 3 . 9.0 degree in Arts: She is the guest of Mrs. Ross and Miss Helen Argue, |Mrs. H. M. VanLuven, Nelson street. : a, are In town for Convoca- « sv tion and ate at Ban Righ Hall. Mrs. Stock and Miss Marle Stock, : Tavistock, are at Ban Righ Hall for Miss Ruby Walsh and her sister, 'Winchester Rev. A. H. McTear, Trenton is in town to-day for the meeting of the + the latter's graduation. Miss Dora , are in town for Convo-|gtock a Queen's graduate, who is in cation and are at Ban Righ Hall. Hamilton will also be in town for ae ee Convocation. Miss G. M. Johnston, R.N., Kings- « ss , is visiting her mother, Mrs. G.| Mrs. Hallett and Miss Georgina ¥ Johnston, 1 Road. Brockville. | Hallett, Ottawa, ard with Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Harper, Nelson street, Mrs. John French, who was with | while in town for convocation when rs. Alexander Macphail, Clergy | Miss Hallett will' receive an honor motored home to Picton on | degree in Arts. - - . Mrs. H. D. Wemp, Bath, is spend- ing & week in New York City. While there she will attend the commence- ment exercises at the Presbyterian Hospital where her daughter, Miss Gwendolyn Wemp is graduating. ? - * . Rev. W. M. Loucks, who has been 'Ottawa the past week, the guest Shampooing Spoils the Halp If you want to keep your halr look- "Ang its best, be careful what you wash 'with, not use prepared sham- poos or anything else that contains too much free al- kali. This dries the scalp, makes the hair brittle, and ruins it. The best thing for steady use is Mulsified cocoanut oi 1 shampoo, which is pure and 1 , and is better than 'Oareless Mrs. F. H. DuVernet and Miss Du- Vernet, of Prince Rupert, who spent the winter in South Carolina, and have recently been in Montreal and fn Kingston have arrived in Toronto and are at the Selby Hotel, - . . The Prime Minister, the Rt. Hon. W. L. MacKenzie King and the mem- bers of the Cabinet entertained at dinner on Saturday at the Country Club in honor of Sir Esme Howard, Pritish Ambassador at Washington. . . . Mrs. R. A. De Hart, Barrie, who is in town for the graduation of her daughter, Miss Nora De Hart, last year's president of the Levana So- clety, is the guest of her brother, Mr. Arch Thomson, University ave- nue. ». . * Mrs. George Chanfherlain, New- burg, Oregon, has arrived to spend some time with her sister, Mrs. Ormond Green; JAthens, Ont, whose husband died recently, and later will come to visit her sister, Mrs. W. J. Berry, Kingston Mills. water and rub abundance of in Arts of Mr, Cecil and Mr. Leroy | the degree of | ed one of the Carter scholarships in {1923. . i - LJ . . 4 | .A pleasant party was given on {Monday evening at the home of Mrs. {M. Harper, Johnson styeet, in_honor {of Miss Jean Jackson, who is leav- {ing to make her home at Windsor {Bridge. The supper table was lovely {with daffodils and the prize was won 'by Miss Kompk. Miss Norah Brooks {sang charmingly and Mr. J. Lindsay {read an address to the guest of honor, {expressing the regret {felt at her leaving the city and their 'hopes for a happy future. { Lady Bg Travels 80,000 Miles n Parsuit of Hobby a eed i Lady Byng of Vimy has travelled 80,000 miles by train and boat, ex- clusive of many miles by motor, dur- ing her five years residence in Can- ada as the wife of Canada's Gover- nor-General, and in all this travel- lidg has-constantly pursued a hobby. That hobby is the collection of Can- ada's wildflowers. Telling the story of what is probably the most re- markable collection of Canadian wildflowers ever gathered in the Do- minion, in the May issue of Cana- dian Homes and Gardens, Lady Byng reveals "The human side" in the life of the King's representative in Can- ada. She says: "The Governor-Gen- eral has to tour officially in places as far removed from one another as Prince Edward Island and Vancou- ver; the Niagara Peninsula and Daw- son City; and 'official visits' mean- ing receptions by mayors and cor- { porations, Lieutenant-Governors, or | provincial legislators, do not always | square--either in garments or sea- sons--with 'a plant hunt!' still I have been amazingly lucky. «Canadians, who are the kindest | people in the world, and the most hospitable, realizing my craze, have, wherever possible, helped me to at- tain my dreams of grubbing in the wilds; and the moment the reception ends the kindly and helpful | Allen, manager of the Goverlior-Gen- {eral"s train, congenial autocrat of | our daily lives-upon it, has, if pos- | sible, 'parked' our perambulating | home in good 'hunting .grounds.' | crowded stations left behind, waving Mayors and Mayoresses, school chil- dren singing 'O Canada' and the Wa- tional Anthem being no longer in the offing, I fly into old clothes and by the time we are 'parked' in our siding am ready for the fray. Arm- ed with spades, forks, and other gardening impediments, off we go, my secretary, a luckless A.D.C., and 1, into the woods or across the sun- scorched prairies, to seek for treas- ures that will eventually be housed in wooden boxes filled with various kinds of soil that form 'Her Excel- lency's Garden' In one of the bag- gage wagons, where they renidin, either till they have died down enough to send home, or till we reach Government House, where they are grown on. "The~windows of the observation "Let the Crark Kitchens help you™ 313 Delicious CLARK SOUPS INCLUDING Tomato Julienne Oxtail Jolicne Vegetable Chicken Nery sonicSshid, one i. of nourishing flavory soup. At oll dealers W. CLARK MONTREAL. ST. REML, P.Q. AND MARROW, ONT. Packers: Clark's Pork Beane ete. ald AVOIDED ~~ AN OPERATIO her friends MT Yeast for health? If so, use ROYAL YEAST CAKES --the standard of quality for over 50 years. Soak a cake of Royal Yeast, with a little sugar, in tepid water over night. Stir well, strain and drink the liquid. Flavor is im- proved by adding the juice of an orange. ROYAL YEAST CAKES mt! your car also play a useful paft, and, to the curiosity of station crowds, are hung with muslin bags of ripening seeds, so that I sometimes wonder if people seeing these bags thing them part of the gubernatorial laundry!" Lady Byng has pursued her hobby in the swamps of the Maritime Prov- inces, across the wind swept prairies Manitoba, Saskatchewan and =:- berta, up the foothills of Western Al- berta and at many points on the side of the great mountains of the Rocky chain. She has travelled extensive- ly throughout British Columbia in search of the rare flowers of the Pa- cific Coast province and she has gone up into the sub-Arctic cover- ing the North West territory and the Yukon up to and just beyond Dawson City, and on all her trips she finds time apart from her official duties to seek out treasures of Can- ada's floral world. Finally, she tells us in her article, she finds the ut- most joy searching the Gatineau Hills, which skirt the Capital City wherein she spends, of course, the most of her time as the Chatelaine of Rideau Hall. She confesses to rare joy in the Canadian autumn about Ottawa. "No wOrds can de- scribe the glory of October days," she writes, continuing, '"'under sky translucently blue, white clouds above masses of dark hemlock, Wey- mouth pines, Scotch firs and snowy stemmed Dbirches, dripping their golden leaves on the ground, maples clothe the Gatineau Hllls in every tint of crimson, scarlet, ruby, russet, gold, amber and. bronze that the mind of many cdn conceive, but which very few artists have the courage to try to portray." + GONE BEFORE. Though he that ever kind and true, Kept stoutly step by etep with you Your whole long gusty lifetime through Be gone awhile before. Be now a moment gone before, Yet, doubt not, econ the seasons shail restore. Your friend to you. He had but turned a corner--still He pushes on with right goodwill Thro' mire and marsh, by heugh and hill That self-same arduous way--- That self-same upland hopeful way, That you and he through many a doubtful day, Attempted still. He is not dead, thie friend--not dead But in the path we mortals tread. Got some few, trifling steps ahead. And nearer to the end. So that you, too, once past the bend Shall meet 'again. as face to face, this friend You fancy dead. Push gayly, strong heart! The while You travel forward mile by mile He loiters with a backward smile TiN you can overtake. And strains his eyes, to search his wake whistling as he sees you through the brake, or, | The Editor Hears That the boys and girls and the older people who are interested in birds should be on the lookout for a small bird who is paying Kingston a visit' at present. On Sunday he was on a tree on Clergy #reet and lis name is the brown creeper. He is a bird about five inches in length with rather a long bill, brown back with' dark spots and streaks, a white breast tinged with yellow, His tail. is not long, his legs, too, are short and he runs up the tree trunk as a nuthatch does, searching for insects. He is ap industrious bird, and' few msec gaeape his shasp eyes. He will, p& ps, although not likely, build a nest here in a hollow tree, and his little wife will lay her eggs there. But it is more likely that he will go farther om, or ' at least to the woods, where he and his mate will be undisturbed in the housekeeping. That tonight the Old Boys and Old Girls of Queen's will meet each other once moPe in Grant Hall when the annual "Conversat" will be given by the Principal, staff, Alma Mater So- ciety and Trustees of Queen's Uni- versity. This function is unique in its own way. Old and young, fathers and mothers coming for perhaps the first time to the University to see the boys and girls graduate; the fathers and mothers who felt that there was no place like tNeir own Alma Mater for their sons and daughters to take a degree; the staff of Queen's and their wives, the clergy, the military representatives and the honor graduates who to- morrow will be privileged to add several more letters after their names, will all be in the crowd and will all be enjoying themselves. Every kind of dress will be worn. Kingston women and girls will wear evening frocks, but the visitors who have perhaps motored to Kingston for the évents at Queen's will wear afternoon dress and many men will not be in evening. dress. That already the boarding houses are booking guests for the June ball at the Royal Military College. As this is the fiftieth anniversary of the founding of the college many of the old graduates will be present and the ball will be a memorable one. That many of us have old silver has iy mended by 1 i oh erty - since . nurse baby use Eagle Brand. Write The Bor- den Co. Limit- ed, Montreal Ba Jor fies by ADDS NEW RELI and gold padlocks, or padlocks set with jewels that have come to us from our grandmothers. This is the | time to bring them out for this; quaint fashion has been revived and the padlock is much in vogue as a trinket. ¥ A BIT OF HEAVEN. There's a bit of heaven about you If you'll only look around; You needn't search among stars-- You'll find it on the ground. It may be at your own fireside, If you have eyes to see; In fact, it may be anywhere, Whenever you may be. the If you should fail to find it, You will miss of life the best; For that little heaven about you Is love, and home, and rest, You need not think you've miss'd it Because your means are small, For this little bit of paradise Is in the reach of all. BF ~ "None o' my folks believe an was a monkey exceptin' Ed, an' he got a lick on the side of his head when he was young." ec \ The London zoo has a white el i A. B. C. phant. ¥ Children Cry {WT ANNAN ' MOTHER: Fletcher's " Castoria is especially pre- pared to relieve Infants in arms and Children all ages of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhea; allaying Feverishness arising therefrom, and, by regulating the Stomach and Bowels, aids the assimilation of Food; giving natural sleep. To avoid imitations, always look for the signature of Absolutely Harmless - No Opiates. Physicians everywhere recommend it SPECIALS in Curtains and Curtain Materials Nottingham Lace Panels, full 36 inches wide and 2} yards long with dainty patterns. Very special for $1.19 each. Marquisette in White and Cream--- good, strong wearing quality. Special for 19¢c. a yard. W 4 ] | White Curtain Nets, a big variety of patterns--all new, for 25¢. a yard, Drapery Chintz in the new colors and designs, wide width for 25¢. a yd. W. N. Linton & Co. i Phone 191. The Waldron Store i' 'with children take more milk and cream D 11 tely : 3 80 {eli . in fa ur; Quaker Corn Flakes give additional relish to whole milk or cream. The flavour is so enticing that it induces children to consume more and more of the whole milk or cream so necessey to growth. Every package of Quaker Corn Flakes is. you buy corn flakes, look for it. of