THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG 'NEWS. AND VIEWS FOR WOMEN READERS - 2X Friday, August 6, 1926. J 3 LIFE'S SO CIAL SIDE Ooman's Page Editor Phone 2613. Private Phone 857w. - » - Mr. A.W. CG. McAllister, Montreal, is a visitor in town. -. » - Charles Murray, ing in Renfrew, . Mr. and Mrs. Kingston, are visit - * Miss Ronnie Tullis, "Densmere," has left for New York on a holida trip. K.C., y | the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. H. Stewart, Alfred street, - . Miss Katharine O'Ray, a nurse- in-training, in Rochester, N.Y., is vis- } iting her parents, Mr and Mrs, James O'Ray, Napanee, motored to Kings- ton this week with her brother, Dr. D. 3, O'Ray, - . Dr. and Mrs. Duncan Macpherson, | New York, were with Mr. and Mrs. | Colin Macpherson, University avenue, * | | W% Miss Violet Larrett-Smith, who has * been at Tonto, A L I | Miss Conale Sandwich, Kingston, | Bias been visiting Miss Helen Derry, Renfrew. . * * . Mr. and Mrs. Guy Corbett, New York, will remain at "Densmere' un- til September, . | on their way to Collin's Bay, where nsmere,"' has left for To- | they win spend some time at "Elm : | Lodge." | . * » Miss Dora Casey, Napanee, Ont., Miss E. Casey, Troy, N.Y., Mrs. Stewart Daly and Miss Catharine Daly, Napanee, are guests at the | Smith cottage on Ontario avenue, | Thousand Island Park, . 5 . | Miss Bessie Stewart, Alfred _ Miss Wilma Hayward, Buffalo, N. street, is leaving on Saturday . by - Y., is visiting Miss Helen Saunders, motor for Detroit to spend some Princess street. 3 | time with her sister, Mrs. : * oo. | White and Mr. White, She Mr. Philip 'Thompson, Lindsay, | also spend a few days in Hami Who spent a few days in the city has {and Toronto, left for Montreal, . will . Mr. A. A. Bruton, Glenburnie, { Ont., anmounces the engagement of | his daughter, Ruth, to Mr. William | Ritchie, Orillia, the marriage to take ae | place early in September. Mrs. R. W. Garrett, Johnson | . . street, has gone to the Lake of Bays, | Muskoka, for a few weeks. " 8 | daughter of the late Mr. an Mrs. Rupert Day, Frontenac street, | Thomas Clark, Battersea, an is visiting her sister, Mrs. Young, | orci John Gibson, Sunbury. and Dr. Young, Peterboro, | * es = : LA Miss Gladys Graham and | Mary Hickey entertained |at the latter's home, on Earl street. [ street, . | honor o - . - | 'Mrs. J. W. Forester left for Lind- | say today to visit her sisters, Mrs. Wilkinson and Miss Coates. On August 21st the marriage takes | Place of Miss Ethel Jane d Mrs. Mr. W. R. Wilson, Renfrew, is spending his holidays with his sister, "Mrs. H. L. McCrum, - -. , Miss Annie Biliott, Renfrew, is i visiting at the home of her bro- ther-in-law, Roy Clark, Kingsior. Mr. J. K McCullough and his son, | 2FT308ed jam and pickle shower, on for Miss Kath- | | Thursday afternoon, Montreal, are visiting Mrs, T. S. leen Lockhart, a bride of next week. | . - . " I" Miss Kathleen Lockhart, * e = Miss Florence Mavety, Nelson 'McConnell, at Kingston Junction, * | Clark, | | d Fred- | Miss | hemselves pretty enough to repre-| at bridge | (oppo beauty of the Queen City of | College | Pn Wednsstay afternoon, in| win be in the parade; not only Am-| I erican cities but girls from Australia, | : [ the kindly, courteous welcome of the [tract attention with members of a local branch of the [Other things that look at them." "Mrs. James Hickey, Glenburnie, fihas returned home after 1 in Toronto and Welland. 'relatives in " a . at the Monday visiting There will be a dance Kingston Yacht Club on ning in honor of the 2s. 8 'Miss Sibyl Purvis, George street, as returned home after spending r vacation with Miss Anna Forbes, pronto, . * es Miss Isabel Huddleson, formerly of Kingston, but now residing in Toronto, is in the city this week on visit. Mr. L. L. Henderson, Montreal, joined his family at their cot- tage in Ontario avenue, Thousand and Park. - 9 © Mrs. W. M. Johnstone, with her tle son, Hamilton, is visiting her nts, Mr and Mrs. Richard Elmer, ot street. . - » Misses 'Mary, Peggy and Reta 'ebster, Belleville, are the guests Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Webster, orge street, . . Mrs. J. Asselstine, and Masters irt and Billie Wigg, Toronto, are guest of Mr. and Mrs. Jack " George street. . . * Mrs. J. F. Keyes and her daugh- 5, Rochester, N.Y., are with the ir's mother, Mrs: Bernard fy, Collingwood street. 5 '. . - Mrs. A, H. Fair, West street, and niece, Miss Pat Dowdell, have for Rochester, N.Y., to visit Mr. Davidson and Miss Davidson. . - . "Miss Marion Drew, Kingston ar in London on Monday evening id is visiting relatives and friends for a short Hme, > . . and Mrs. Archie Copley mot- from their home in Detroit to a month with Mr. and Mrs. Copley, Fastview. * CC - - . ¥ Taylor, Montreal, who in Tdronto and Muskoka, in town, on Thursday, and a few days at "Dens. i Pansy and Hilda Cherry, Street, left on Sunday for and Lewiston where 'they guests of Mrs. M. John- . - . * id Mrs. Frank Newman, and don have returned from the summer home of 8 parents, Mr. and visiting | P and her little Gwendolyn Lawlor, returned {io Buffalo, N.Y., with Mr. and Mrs. J | weeks with them. - . | Miss Lizzie Shar | niece, . Dr. and Mrs. Harvey Angrove, St, Anne de Bellevue, Que., and their sons, are spending their holidays with the former's parents, Mr, and Mrs. John Angrove, Clergy street west. . . LJ Dr. Arthur W, Pense, who has been visiting his mother, Mrs. J. P, Pense, Princess street, left on Friday for Binghamton, N.Y., where he has accepted a position on the staff of the State hospital. ' . - . Mr. and Mrs. Frank Grout their daughters, Ottawa, spent a in town at "Densmere' gone to Oakville to v Mrs. Walter Grout. be in Kingston on th Ottawa. and day and have | isit Rev. and They 'expect to eir way bagk to . Dr. and Mrs. T. gE. \ Bell, Petersburg, Fla., who have travelling in Europe for the past three months have returned to their home in the south after a short visit at the summer home of Mr. ana Mrs. | Thomas Copley, Eastview, t . * . ' St. been | Mr. and Mrs. C. G. Yorke, Glen- | coe, have arrived in town to spend the month of 'August with Mrs, Yorke's parents, 339 Frontenac street, where their little son, Ken- neth, has spent the last month, Mr. Yorke is principal of Glencoe High Sehool. - * . Lady Beaverbrook is sailing by the Empress of Scotland on August 7th, | for Montreal, where she will be join- | ed by Lord Beaverbrook, who arrived in New York on Tuesday, Mr, Allan A. Aitken, who has been In England for some time, will accompany Lady Beaverbrook. The engagement is announced of Dorothy, only daughter of the late 'W. N. Holt, Middleton, Co. Cork, Ire- land, and of Mrs G. WwW. Cuppage, Lakeview, Bath, Ont. to Philip Erie Thomlinson, eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Philip Thomlinson, Toronto, the marriage to take place early in Sep- tember. ! A farewell luncheon was given by the Anglican clergy of the city at Queen's cafe, on Thursday, in honor M. Cy who leaves next week for An- Caster, where he will be inducted as rector of St. John's church. Arch- dacon Dobbs presided, and expressed the regret felt by the clergy at the loss of Major Kidd, but congratulat- ed him and his future congregation, and wished him "Got-speed." Rev. tzgerald and Rev. T..W. also spoke, and Major Kidd thanking them for their good of Major Rev. W. B. Kidd, M.A, h took a lively interest in the proceed- | ings and enjoyed the delicious tea | served in the good old way, The Pittshurgh ladies had a short busi- ness meeting first, at which they de- | [cided to ask for affiliation with the | | Kingston Local Council and elected Mra. J. 8. Sibbit to be | | their representative at the | meetings. The snowy table cloth | {was spread on the lawn, although a; slight sprinkle of rain threatened | jthe plenickers, but soon the clouds | | passed and the sum shone on the | |merry party scated on the grass, | iwho were enjoying such a sumptuous | repast. Everything one could think | lof and e lo have been the motto of the Pitts- | |burgh ladies; provided ice cream and raspberries as the crowning dainty. Mrs. KHan- {na, the president of the Pittsburgh | Institute, moved a vote of thanks to [the host' and hostess for their hos- | pitality, seconded by Mrs. C. C. Ab- {bott, and Mrs. F. 8, Ferguson, Inver- (ary, branch president and also presi- | behalf of the visitors expressed {their thanks to Capt. and Mrs. Ma- {lone and the Pittsburgh ladies for [the exceedingly pleasant afternoon flak of the district of Frontenac, on | F. J. | Mrs, Richard Arthur, Inverary, sec- | jonded Mrs. Ferguson's thanks. As Wi Ithe setting sun was dying the river, | men's Institutes were organized by a |gold and crimson, the party left for { home, "For They Are Jolly Good | | Fellows" and "Three cheers and a [tiger being given for the Inverary | [ladies before they left on their re- | {turn trip. | | | The Editor Hears || | That Toronto will be represented | (at the annual beauty parade at At-| [antic City and already over 140} | pretty Toronto girls have considered Girls from Canada. seventy cities | Canada and other countries will com- pete for the beauty prize. Such an | street was the hostess of a charmingly array of good looking girls should | ! bring the men out in hundreds of | thousands to see if among them they | can see their future wife. f That the Crusaders of the Church rmy are receiving a splendid re- fon in Toronto. The sisters spoke | Willi. ames Gowan, and will spend, several seption j 37al am to the nurses. of the Toronto Gen eral Hospital in the quadrangle and | Sister Meredith emphasized the spec- | ial opportunities of the nurse to bring healing to sick souls as well as to diseased bodies. Sister Benniston described the work of the Church Army founded in 1882 by | Rev. Wilson Carlile and now num- bering 500 sisters and many mére | men, She urged the nurses tb use| their opportunities to Sorfat the | wave of indifference which/was sum- | med up in the story of the small boy | who answering the door to a clergy- | man sald "No religion to-day, thank | you, mother says." That the annual complaints are | heard at the Humane Society's Head- | quarters about the cats and dogs who are left to fend for themselves while their owners are off enjoying a holi- day. Why people keep pets and neg- lect them always remains a mystery, In England such things are not al-| lowed. Last year a man and woman were arrested at a fashionable sum- mer resort and taken back to Lon- don to be tried on the charge of neg- lect and cruelty to a dog they had left without food. They were both | sentenced and spent the rest of their holiday in jail. This news was sent around the world in the Associated Press and published in all the lead- ing papers. That Ontario Park is a delightful | place on these hot afternoons and no one appreciates it more tnan the "Kingston Kiddies" who are taken out and back again by the Street Railway Company for the large fare of two cents, That Princess Mary, Viscountess Lascelles, visited the Girl Guides' Imperial camp at Foxlease Park on | July 17th. ' One hundred of the Girl | Guides in camp had come from the | Dominions and Colonies for the spec- fal week, 'and they represented fif- teen countries in all: the other one hundred and fifty Guides were repre- sentatives of the British Isles. It is four years since the Girl Guides As- sociation was presented with the house and estate by Mrs, Archbold, of Washington, "in honor of the oc- casion of the marriage of our beloved president," and it was owing to further generosity on the part of Princess Mary that the Association as been enabled to maintain and equip it. After a number of presen tations by the Chief Guide in the drawing-room, the Princess inspect- ed the various camps, and took tea with the Guides in the barn, - Sam ei Girls, Be Different! London-- Try to be someone who of Women | verything of the best seemed | "She comes as a boon to the house keeping sex. This bright little maid that we call Jane Gillex" L DISSOLVES GREASE AND DIRT Use it for all council | G! Capt. and Mrs. Malone | Cleaning" ish-washin Laundering Your Grocer Sells 16 ! E.W.GILLETTY CO. LTO TORONTO , CANADA | p------ : . | X | WOMEN'S INSTITUTE rrr. | Less than thirty years ago the Wo-, mother in Westworth county and, to- | day, this is the largest women's s0- | |clety in Canada with branches in| "If hell's as hot as they say it is, | it wouldn't do no good to send me | there, even if\I was wicked. couldn't stand it." Ij women of that order. queens: | Queen of the Belgians, decorated | (in 1918. Queen of the Rumanians, in 1919. Empress of Ethiopia, in 1920. Queen of Spain, in 1926. Women Hold Legion Cross, Paris--Four | been decorated with the Grand Cross fot the Legion of F I rank now ust | | | { have {onor, the highest | They are all | 1 | | | | England and Australia. Women in- No French woman holds this rank terested in the Institutes look for the district branches when on holiday trips in various parts of Canada and invariably find a live organization carrying on good work for the com- munity, Ontario, the province which gave birth to the Institutes, has probably | the largest membership, but Quebec | has over one thousand Institute members and a recent visit to the beautiful mountainous country lying north of Ottawa and watered by the Gatineau river, coming down from their the north, fed by countless tiny |ruled rank | then 1s streams, had, for one of its pleasures, | Wear nowadays Is suffice] | out their doing | will cause men to Ottawa district whose headquarters | are at Aylmer, Que. The Institute is | strong there and five new branches, | Grand Officers and tina Cross. The Presi "Grand Master." in their national order. in the Legion is th come Officers, The low at of Knights, | Commanders, | 1ly the Grand | dent of the Republic | Girl Got Three Months. "Women should one of them a junior branch, have |Sale at James Reid, been formed within the year. The | rea New York, Aug 6.--Roll stocking on Fourteenth str off Fifth avenue cost Rathowitz three months in the work- house. stockings in public," "The scanty apparel eet j§ Miss Frances not ent to r---------- Ask to see our $8.50 mattress; on rol the court | they | | est | | ing her | ust | at- | 1 CTT a Championship lawn tennis was re- cently played by artificial | the first time at Queen's C1 on. Ga now on. girls are merry and alive and the | North Wakefield Institute with Mrs. | Fitzpatrick, as president, | and Miss Maude Townsend, as secre- | tary-treasurer, is an active branch, | as anyone who talks to its officers | can see. "For Home and Country" is the | Institute's motto and visitors to Sd tineau distriet feel that the wo- | men who live on the productive | farms lying among the great wood- | ed hills have homes and a country | of which they may be proud and | which they must dearly love. It is a dairy country and every morning the train takes sweet rich cream to Ottawa for the people at the capital to use in various ways, | Fleecy white clouds cast shadows | that chase one another across the | sunlit hills and valleys where the | small fields of wheat, or oats are showing every signs of a bountiful harvest and the hay cocks, still to be gathered into barns, are dotting the | meadows closely. The houses have | gardens of flowers and vegetables, | the breeze blows across the hills and | flutters the white curtains at the | open window and a verandah with- | out a hammock or several easy chairs ! for the family to use when a mo- ment can be found in which to oc- cupy them, is a rage sight. Whether | the Institute is responsible or not, | every house looks like a home. Most | of the families in the district came | from Ireland seventy-five years or so | ago and went into the dense woods | to clear the fertile valleys lying | among the Gatineau Mountains. Fire was their deadly foe and many of the bousés are covered with tin to save them from destruction when the flames, having fed upon the forest on the hills, rush down to the valleys to devour the homes of the settlers, Not only are the farms and gar- dens productive but motorists driv- ing among the hills and finding their Way to the lovely lakes hidden be- tween the mountains, i parties of \berry picker: t filled with blueberries from mountains of red raspberries Brow at the edge of the woods or along the roadside. Such lovely roadsides, where the red elderber- rier glow against the dark green of its leaves, dogbane shakes its dainty pink bells, tall white plumes of mea- dow rue wave in the air, virgin's bower and meadow sweet add starry blessoms to the bouquet and ferns creep out from the dense - woods where the shyest birds find a home. In the woods near one of the lakes are rarer flowers still, exquisite or- ehids whose fame reached even to a's vice-regal home and Lady E: & real flower-lover, came out from the Capital to ses the wonder for herself, and has incorporated a i of the rare plants to be found here in her book on Canadian wild flowers, 3 sn . James Reid's Annuay August Sale | } Women to adopt new hygienic method and retain fresh ness this way; true pro- tection ; discardslike tissue RGELY on medical advice, women are abandoning the old- for a new way inty with posi- | By time "sanitary pad" that supplants uncerta tive protection. Sheer frocks and ill-timed social engagements no longer remain as worries. Lost days are fewer, and health better. It is called "KOTEX." Ends the insecurity of the old-time sanitary pad. Five times as absorbent | And deodorizes--ends ALL fear of of- fending. py As easily disposedjyof as a piece of tissue. No laundry, No em. barrassment. You get it at any drug or de- partment store simply by saying "KOTEX." You ask for it without hesitancy, Costs only a few cents. Eight in 10 better-ciass women employ it. Proves the risk of old ways. ER'S "PHONE GALLAGH T. AXI SERVICE 960 ANYWHERE 25¢ aN 'ory. DAY OR NIGHT ALL 7 PASSENGER SEDANS # a WILSO!} INE Ny » ------ NovEare "Keen Public Sense Rewards the Best." Hence theenormousand everincreasing saleof "SALADA" TE A Brown label 75c¢ 1b. Orange Pekoe Blend 85c¢ 1b, » A Kitchens help you THE NEW NESTLE LANOIL AND CIRCULINE PERMANENT WAV. ING $15.00 and up. FRANK ROBBS 185 WELLINGTON SEREET is || PIANO TUNING Repalring ang Player Plano Adjusting. Norman H. Butcher, 27 Pine Street. 'FHONE 134. Piano Tuning, ight for ub, Lon- SPECIAL FOR SATURDAY SALE OF DRESSES 60 Fugi Silk Dresses, sh sleeves; new colors: Peach, Copen Blue; Yellow, Orchid, Sand, White, Pink, Rose, Green--all for one price . .... $5.95 Each Fancy Voiles and Rayons in short and long sleeves; new styles, for . ..$4.95 each Fancy Voiles, Rayons and Broadcloth resses--very pretty styles, for $3.95 each. Rayons, Voiles and Broadcloths -- a great variety for coven... $2.95 each Voile Dresses in all sizes. Very special rites... $1.95 each Girls' Dresses in Broadcloths and F ugi Bots i $1.50, $1.95 and $2.95 W. N. Linton & Co, THE IRISH LINEN STORE ort and long for HEINTZMAN & CO. THAT MAGICAL NAME WHICH MEANS SO MUCH TO PIANISTS Let us demonstrate the entire list of Heintzman & Co. models -- Upright, Player and Grand--and explain to you how easy it is to own one,