Daily British Whig (1850), 24 Jul 1926, p. 8

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THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG £ NEWS AND VIEWS FOR WOM EN READERS S [into one or two of them, but he in- | sisted on going into practically obi jone. THe radiantly happy tenants | 1 | were asked if they would mind show. | {ing the Prince over the houses. Na- | { Reid, presented the bride-eleet with {a basket of lovely gifts, the basket | { being decorated in pink and. white. | The drawing room was beautitully | | {decorated with flowers. f >i { * * . WEDDINGS. Fowler-Merritt. | LIFE'S SOCIAL SIDE ¥oman's Page Editor Phone 2613. Private Phone 857w. . ed Mrs, H. Whiting, Kingston, is vis- Hug friends in Tweed. ". » - : Mr. Fulton Best, Albert .stree' 188 returned from Brockville. > -. » Miss Helen Coutlee, Ottawa, leaves this week-end to visit friends in Kingston. Miss Marion Dowdell and Mr. Al fred Dowdell have .returned from ' Belleville, 1 . . Miss Johnston, Kingston, is vis- iting her aunt, Mrs. J. Wartman, ~ Newburgh. Mr. Alphonsus McCue, Colling- © wood 'street, is spending the week- end in Brockville. 1 . + Mrs, Parsons, Toronto, is the - Buest of Mrs. Etherington at "Fet- tercairn," for a few days, - - - Mr. W. H. Mack, Sr., formerly of - Kingston, is visiting his son, Mr. George Mack, Gananoque. * . - Rev. T. J. Thompson, M.A., and § Mrs. Thompson, Ottawa, are spend- © ing a week in Belleville. * € . Miss Kirk, who has been the guest of Mrs. C. Livingston, Earl street, has returned to New York. - -. - * Dr. Vincent A. Martin left today for Detroit; Mich., where he will spend a week with friends, - . * Miss Spethanie Kaminski, of Mon- treal, is visiting her mother, Mrs. BE. Kaminski, William street. * . . Miss Kathleen Barff and Miss Anne Woods, of the city, are spend- '48g their vacation fn Syracuse, N. Y. ». . > Mrs. Earl Kulpack and famiy, Kingston, are visiting Mrs. Kul- pack's mother, Mrs. A. Rogers, New- burgh. . . Miss Mary Nesbit, Toronto, is spending a week with Mrs. F. R, Fas- ley and Miss Pear! Nesbit, Johnston street, "A LR The Misses Daly, Albert street, ken a cottage at Chaffey's ks, and are spending the sum- there. . . Mrs. Colin Macpherson, University ue, entertained at tea on Friday ternoon, in honor of Mrs. H. worth, Japan. § » * -. Miss Agnes Stanton, Barriefield, is nding her vacation with her sis- , Mra. John Smith, Howard pa. . . nue, Toronto, . Mrs. U. F. Dupuis, University ave- le, entertained at the tea hour, o esday, for Mrs. H.- Woodd- worth, Japan. 3 i . * . Mrs. T. F. Harrison, and Miss Mar- jall, Toronto, are visiting Mrs. Chown at her cottage, for a short time. . - * Mrs. 8. J. Kelly and Miss Dolly ly, Ottawa, have returned from motor trip. 'They visited ds in Kingston, A.W . - Mrs, Alida Jenman, who has been ing a few weeks with Mrs, S. nders, Johnson street, has re- ed to Toronto. . ee . Mrs. Alice A. Kellar, Mrs. 0, W. irle, and Master Homer Searle, leville, are spending the week. in Kingston. . . _ Miss Willa Dusty, a tea and kite shower on afternoon, honour of Miss de Fitzsimmons. - A . . Mrs. G. Cavin, Stuart street, enter. t the tea hour on Thursday, honor of hér guest, Miss A. Cavin, , Switzerland, . . has returned to her on, from Gananoque, * Queen street, | her aunt, Mrs, Walter Wilis Wher she was the guest of her daugh- ter, Mrs. Millicent Scotr. oo . { Miss Nina Emsley, King street, is leaving on Bunday to spend some weeks at Shanty Bay, the guest of on. | Mr. John N. Alexander, Brock | Apartments | } bas returned to King- ston from Toronto where he has been spending the past three weeks. - » - Mrs. D. H Kennedy and her two sons, Ottawa, and Mrs. Woodruff, Sydenham, are with Mrs. Arthur Cal- laghan at Kosey Kamp, Colljn's Bay. Miss Ella Mattiews, 121 Beverly street, has returhed home from To- ronto where she has been spending a few days, the guest of Mrs. E. Rea. Miss Nancy®7.* Doyle, Kingston, who has been visiting Mr. and Mrs, Hugh Lawson, Watertown, N.Y., for 8 few days, has returned home. . » * Mr. Charles T. Chapman, of In- gersoll, is visiting his mother, Mrs. WwW, 0. week. Way, Division Street, for a *« Miss Margaret Craig, Vancouver, B.C, who was the guest of Mrs. Arthur Macnee, King street, for a ow days, left this morning, for Beélle- ville. Miss Kitty Walsh, Vancouver, B. C., gave a luncheon on Friday at the Cataraqui Golf and Country Club, in honor of Miss Margart Cralg, Van- couver, B.C, ' Miss Jessie Dine"and Miss Ella M. Entwistle, Collingwood street, left for Watertown, N.Y. will be the guests of W. Dine, Jr. where they Mr. and Mrs. C; ~ ae Mrs. W. A. Jones, University ave- nue, her daughter, Margaret, and Miss Wood, will leave on Saturday for London, Ont., where they will spend several days. * * - Mrs. William Day and Mrs. Albert Day, of 'Cataraqui, have returned home after visiting the former's sis- ter, Mrs. William Dibble, Maple Lawn, Rochester, N.Y. . LJ wv Mr. and Mrs. Charles Douglas, and their three children, who have been the guests of Mr. and Mrs. W. J. B. White, University avenue, returned to their home in Ottawa, on Friday. . . * Lady Martin-Harvey, who recently under went an operation, in London, has left the nursing home and has gone to her bungalow {in.the Isle of Wight to recuperate. -. . . Miss Mamie Mooney, Attorney- General's Department, Toronto, will return to Toronto on Sunday, after spending the past three weeks with her parents at Portsmouth. Mr. Cyril Hayes, of Yonkers, N.Y.. has returned to his home. Mrs. Hayes and her family will spend the summer with her parents, Mr. and Mrs, John Ramsay, Division street Mr, Thomas B. Angrove. Jr., and little Miss, Betty and Miss Margaret, Kingston, have returned home after spending a few weeks in Oshawa with Mr. and Mrs." Grant Hutche- son. . " » - Principal R. Bruce Taylor, Queen's University, and Miss Leslie Taylor, will leave on Monday for Toronto; and while there they will be the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Wind- ayer. Master Douglas Massie, son of Col. Massie, Toronto, and Master John Pearce, Picton, are visiting with {have made several Master Alfred Chown at his parents' camp at Penny's farm, in Pittsburgh Ftownship. » . - - Miss Mildred Moreland, Forest Farm, Sydenham, was hosteess at a tea and handkerchief shower, on Thursday afternoon, in honor of Miss Gertrude Fitzsimmons. Among the guests were a number of nurses from the Kingston General Hospital, 3 . - - Mrs. Arthur Harrls, and her daughter, Lois, Toronto, and Miss Myrtle Crimp, Toronto, who have been visiting Mrs. J. T. Sutherland, Clergy street, returned this morning | to Toronte. - * - Letters received here from Mr. and Mrs. Charles W. Livingston and Dr. and Mrs. Dennis Jordan, Toronte, state that they have, been enjoying good weather in Paris, They have visited various Europedn cities and aeroplane trips on * + a 'the continent. W. J. Chapman, and his sister, Mrs. | { The Brock Street Club gave a de- {lightful - pienic on Thursday after- {noon at' Lake Ontario Park. Tha children's pri | by Miss Ruth Meliroy, Master. Edgar { Knapp, Miss Elizabeth Ferguson, | Miss Jean Stagg, Miss Helen Stagg, | Miss Isabel Mcliroy. There were {several races for women, such as pea- 'nut races Zz {ing and Mrs. Caton. {Crawford was presented with | beautiful flower bowl. . * - | Some of the guests who have re- | cently been at the Chateau Belvidere jare: Mr, and Mrs. Charles Vallorie, | Buffalo; MY. and Mrs. E. R. Chand- {ler, Buffalo; Mr, and Mrs. 3.3 | Sloan, Detroit; Mr. and Mes. Earl | Glennie, Niagara Falls; Mr. and Mrs. {F, G. Gray, Whitby, Ont.; Mr. and | Mrs. C. H. Schultz, Cleveland, Ohio; [Mr. and Mrs. P. B. Hart, Montreal; | Mrs. D. T. Munroe, Toronto; Miss | MacCleman, Moose Creek; Mr. A. A. Love, Mr. R. W. Kelly, Mr. A. B. | Colerick, Toronto; Mr. F. W. Schultz, | North Olmstead, Ohio, * » a i - | On Wednesday an enjoydble pie- i nc was held, when about twenty-five { sisters of the "Hope of Derry," L.Q. | B.A.,, motored down to Kingston | Mills, and spent the. afternoon and | evening. Dug the afternoon pro- | gressive euchre was played, Mrs. | Matthew Glenn winning | After supper, races were held. Then | the ladies had a game of softball | until the bus arrived to take them home. Mrs. Cassells had charge of [ the sports, while Mrs. Holder looked {after the busses and refreshments. . . . { On Friday afternoon, Mrs. Anglin, | lightful tea and miscellaneous show- er in honour of Miss Jean Chown, a | bride of next week. Mrs, Charles An- | glin poured tea and Mrs. A. E. | Knapp, cut the ices. They were as- I sisted by Miss Olive Chown, Miss | Hiscock, and "Miss Marion Anglin, [ Miss Chown sang beautifully. several | times, After tea, Miss Aileen Anglin {carried to Miss Chown; a lovely box ! decorated with bluebirds, and tied , with white ribbon, full of exquisite | gifts. Among the guests the follow- | ing were from out of the city: Mrs. { T. F. Harrison, Toronto; Mrs. Van- luven, Hamilton and Miss Marshall, Toronto. | : AUNT HET | { | ""Pettin' all the time don't keep a husband happy. You've got to let him enjoy feelin' abused once in a while." i GRANDFATHER'S OLD BROWN PANTS. My grandfather he, at ninety-three, Got. disgustéd and made up his mind to die, He was very well to do, and neighbors that he knew * They all came in from round the town to cry. Of course he left a will, and he left "to Brother Bill His advice to grab whens'er he had a chance, A mortgage on the farm, and the hinges on the barn, And he left to me his old brown pants, - ty How they tittered, how they'd yell, My brother Bill and sister Nell, Give the the laugh when they got the chance, . 'Cause grandpa only left to me his old brown pants. the age of the One day my brother Bill went down to the flour mill, Took off his clothes, jumped in the race to swim, 3 When a female Biljy goat chewed the buttons off his coat x And ate his pants and chewed them up with vigor and with vim, y res hE fed That left Bil in an awful plight, he had to stay all night; girl Maria to the the prize, | | A pretty wedding was solemnized | on Saturday morning, in St. ? i Church, by Rev. T. W. S8avary, when es for races were won | Alma, youngest daughter of Mrs. A. | | Merritt, was united in marriage to | Mr. James A. Fowler, Mount Ches- | ney. The bride looked very sweet in {a simple frock of white georgette, and wearing a white coat, trimmed v von | Wi 8 hite hat and car-) » €te., and these were won| With fur, a small w ! Try Nios Sabah of Ne an {by Mrs. Wells, Mrs, Totts, Mrs. Keat- | ried a bouquet of ophelia roses and fn IIL, whore cations the Prias Mrs. Robert | baby's breath. The bride and groom | | were unattended. Immediately after i but he coaxed her | left on a motor | hands with him, the ceremony, they le into friendliness, | trip to Toronto and other western | points. The bride's going away gown was of green charmeuse satin with | mink fur hat and coat to match. __ ' GOOSEBERRY DAINTIES { The value of the gooseberry as an | ingredient of cookery has been over-| looked by many housewives, says a | well-known dQmestic science expert | in the follow recent article: "When you want to vary an omsie}| make a puree from a pint of goose- berries, after removing the tops and | tails, and half a cup of sugar, Beat the youks of four eggs with a ene. | spoon of cream, then add the stiffly | | beaten whites and the puree. Cook in |a hot pan with a tablespoon of butter fand as it cooks prick and prick up | with a fork until set. Then rol snd | sprinkle with sugar. "If you want to serve gooseberries | for breakfast don't cook them so they | will be pulpy, but so each berry re- | mains whole, The best way to attain | | this result is to pmtTthe fruit in a stone jar with a little hot water and | enough sugar to sweeten, cover the | have | Albert street, entertained latea de. |toP of jar and stand in a sauce- | pan of boiling water. Let boil for {one hour." Batter Pudding. "You will find gooseberries in bat- | ter delicious for a hot dessert. Butter | six small €ifs of equal size and al-| most fill with green gooseberries. | Make a batter of four ounces of flour, one egg and half a pint of milk and let stand an hour. Half an hour before time for serving fill each cup with batter, cover with greased paper and steam for twenty minutes, Turn out of the cups and garnish each with a spoonful of stiffly whip- ped and sweetened cream. Gooseberry Fool. Most housekeepers have mada gooseberry "fool," but here is one a little dMferént. "Cook until soft a quart of ripe berries in just esiough water to cover, press through a sieve to remove the skins and seeds and while still hot add a cup of sugar, a tablespoon of melted butter and the beaten 'yolks of three eggs, and whip the whole together until light. = Pour into a serving dish and when cool set on the ice to chill thoroughly. Before serving spread on top of the liquid the egg whites, which have been stiffly beaten with three table- spoons of sugar. Serve in small glass- of |1y," he said, laughing. "You're only | solemnly 'with large brown eyes as | turally tHey were all delighted tof | have the honor, and were full of ad- | | miration for the way the Prince | lL. wanted to be shown everything, ask- ed all sorts of questions, and chatted | {with the men about their armiy re-| { cords. | Little children, all dressed in the | prettiest clothes, were presented to] { visited first, shyly refused to shake "I don't believe you're shy real- pretending." One tiny little maid looked at him she handed him a white carnation, which he promptly put into his but- tonhole and wore for the rest of the afternoon. It was not the first buttonhole he had been offered, for as he was coming out of the station on arrive. ing a little bunch of sweet peas was dropped on him by a girl in an upper window of the station. The Prince visited cottage after cottage, while. the people in his suite, the officials and distinguished visitors grew more and more anx- fous, Tea was waiting, cars were walit- i {ing, and a special train was waiting, he laughingly replied: but still the Prince was with the war heroes. He went into each department of | the workshops, the treatment hostel | and inspected the prize cattle. | In the workshop, where garden | furniture is made, some one sug- | Shasiind | srs | Tintex TINTS AS YOU RINSE 30 Tints and Colors "At all Drug Counters 5. THOMAS COPLEY Carpenter it 'Phone 987 See us for all kinds of Carpentry work, Estimates given on new floors laid. Have your hardwood floors clean. ed with our new floor cleaning ma. ebine. LI RES WILSON'S A Pudding. A very attractive looking, as well as tasting, pudding is made as fol- lows: Put one pound of gooseberries In a cup of boiling water and cook slowly until the skins are tender, add a8 cup of suzar and when well dis- solved rad through a sieve. Dissolve a tablespoon of gelatin {n a cupful of boiling water and add it to the mashed fruit and stir until it begins to set, then add as much juice of fresh spinach as will give the mix- ture a decided green color. Pour into a wet mould and set away to cool. Serve with sweeténed whipped cream which has been flavored slightly with vanilla. An English Chutney, 3 quarts of goosberries. 8 pounds of onions. 2 pounds raisins. 1 pound currants. 1 pound sugar. 2 ounces green gnger, 34 -ounce chillies, 1 tablespoon salt. 2 quarts vinegaf, Pick the little stalks from the gooseberries and currafts, wash and drain them. Skin and chop finely the onions, stone and chop the rai- sins, chop the ginger and chillies. Place all the ingredients in & pan, cover with a tightly fitting lid, and simmer gently for six or sevén hours, stirring occasionally. When the con- | Fijsieney of a thick jam, seal in storf bottles or small jars. This may be used at once, but it is better if kept a month or two before using. et m----ink e--", | FLY PADS | aa LL N NT | Nh Tre of all Fly Killers=--10c and ¢ per packet Druggists, Grocers and DENTIST Fvenings by appointment. 272 Princess Street. Phone 108 OPERATION LEFT HER VERY WEAK him and fe had a word for all, The!" THE NEW NESTLE LANOIL AND CIRCULINE PERMANENT WAV. ING $15.00 and up. FRANK ROBBS 185 WELLINGTON STREET Whether it is bacon, hot or cold meat, fish, or tomatoes, a little H.P. makes them more delicious. -- . W. Co. ing Wok a Spuisly Douglas & Mcllquham CONTRACTORS 400 ALBERT STREET "Phones 2207F--028W ® Houses of Parliament ) SAUCE Make it a rule always to have H.P. handy. Nn, GALLAGHER'S TAXI _mmows SERVICE 960. BOC Tanna DAY OR NIGHT ALL 7 PASSENGER SEDANS ee D ---- gested giving Nim a garden seat, but "But I haven't a garden." Indian sehds Englana 8,000,000 pounds of tobacco, and South Africa |. 7,000,000 pounds, out of a total of 190,000,000 pounds imported an- nually. 7 Still going strong after 368 years, an old Friesland clock bearing the date 1588 is to be seen in Wands- worth Town Hall, London. Specials For o-night ° Women's Silk Teddies, fine quality, in White and colors. All sizes, for $2.00 suit. Fancy Voiles, Broadcloths and Novelty Dress Patterns--all for } regu- lar price. Children's Fancy Top--} and 3 Socks--all sizes, from 25c. a pair up. _ Women's Cotton Night Dresses > white and colored, for $1.00 each. Girls' Dresses, 8 to 14 years, Broad- cloth, for $1.50, $1.95 and $2.95 each. W. N. Linton & Co. THE IRISH LINEN STORE g | L/ FOR THE ELECTION SPEECHES "Which are of vital importance to all Canadians, buy the world's finest Radio--THE 2

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