. 'NEWS AND VIEWS FOR WOMEN READERS Life's Social Side | Editor of Women's Page, Tele- ' phone 248. Private phone 857w, n . » * * Mrs, W. G. Jordan, Barrie street, Was the hostess of a pleasantly in- forme) tea on Thursday afternoon, in honor of her daughter, Mrs. Z. Davies, Toronto, who, with her husband, will femain in town for another week. ¥ #9 hostess made tea in the drawing- sm, where people sat in groups, #%d of this opportunity of meeting their hostess and her daughters and Smith, A party ola 3 went out In five cars lent by the friends of the returned soldiers and spent the earlier hours gathering sticks for a big bonfire. A sing-song followed the roast and the happy |. party drove home by moonlight Those assisting were Mr. and Mrs. James Haydon, Mrs. W. 8. Her- rington (Napanee), Mrs. Travers [Hora," Miss Kathleen Daly, Miss | Doris Donnelly, Miss Norma MecFed- | eridge, Miss Rita .Green, Miss Jessiz 1 out- one Ruokhey after mn rr |enham hospital drove out later ba: ings, . Jordan . | _ ame in later for a few minutes to ex- |Still.in time tor tae tuz, tend their welcome to the guests. Among those present were Mrs. J.| Amongst farewell entertainments F. McFayden, Mrs. W. Morgan, Mre. (8/ven in honor of Mrs. Duncan Mac- John Watson Mrsr. G. M. Macdon- |Arthur, who is leaving London to Il, Mrs, Andrew Drummond, Mrs. |\n8ke her home "In Kingston, was a ae J Wilson Mrs. W. F. Jackson |SuPper party, of which Miss Gertrude . J , LW. PF. (Brockville), Mrs. G. W. Mitchell, Buttrey was Bostess, . , Mrs, T. G. Smith, ig pg Ty Miss Drum-| Mr. and Mrs. Z, Davies, Toronto, mond, Miss Muckleston, Miss Annie |¥DO have been at Stella, are now with Fowler, Miss Mowat, Miss May Ross, Pr Me, jonas, Bare stieet Miss May Mac- ' a, Miss Katie Fowler and Miss May han Gn aR re ED donnell. Barrie street, left for Montreal on | Thursday to enter the Royal Victoria {as a nurse-in-training. Miss Hilda Wright, Leeds, Eng- land, who has been visiting Canon and Mrs, J. W. Jonés, Albert street, has left for Winnipeg. Mrs. J. F. McFayden, Albert street, and her daughter, have re- turned from Mackenzie Island. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Davis, Syd- enham street, have left on a motor trip to Toronto, where Mr. Davis is attending the general conference. General J. H. Bimsley, Kingston, is spending some time ¢n the capital. . * . What Queen's Girls Are Doing They have been coming into King- ston by every train this week, In order io register by Friday to be ready to begin work next week. They are getting settled in their new quarters, finding a good board- ing house, wondering where in the world they are going to put all their belongings and who is going to be in the house with them. . * \ A pleasant family re-union was held recently at the home of Mr, and Mrs. Jacob Shibley, Harrowsmith, Mr, and Mrs, Charles L. Lake, Brooklyn; Mrs, Charley Lake, widow of the late Dr. Charles Lake, Ridgetown; Dr. Charles Lake, Detroit; Mrs. William Lake, Kingston, and her daughter, Mrs. Richard Bamforth, Deseronto, were out-of-town guests. Mrs. Shib- ley ds a sister of Mrs. Bamforth, et * = The freshettes are wondering how they will like it and the good na'ur- ed older girls are seeing that they are not lonely, They are admiring the tennis courts and the campus and planing ground hockey and tennis during 'he autumn months, and the new comers are greatly impressed by the Harty Arena and are looking forward to skating and hockey, They are all fine in their new aut- umn hats and look with scorn on the Kingston people who are still wear- ing straw omes, In honor of Sir Henry Burstall and Lady Burstall, who are leaving for England shortly, a number of their friends entertained at dinner at the Country Club, Ottawa, on Wednesday evening. The "able was attractive ka with autumn leaves, C. Berkley cous, Ottawa: DIdoBh Sava: Powell, the president of the Sin, I Miss Dorothy. Susann ize sera cation and Proveca oped , [Lewls, Smith's Falls, Miss Elizabeth ore raaire gathering of the Smith, Ottawa, Miss Maybelle Gov- ; _ jan, Williamstown, Miss Dorothy ad of Sir Henry and Lady Bur Sutherland and Miss Agnes McKer- : . * . cher, Wroxeten, Ont. The motor drive to Collin's Bay| Mrs. W. F. Jackson, Brockville, on the glorious September sunshine is the guest of her cousins, the Misses @nd the corn roast on the shore of Mowat, Johnson street. $he Bay of Quinte was a treat ar- v . » Miss Anna Neflson, Stella, has re- Panged by Miss Isabel Ross, conven- ' @r the Red Cross hospital committee turned to Queen's University, Segs- r seventeen men of Sydenham hos- Mr. and Mra. Walter E. ital on Thursday afternon. 'he men ' Among the student girls who have arrived at "The Avonmord", Will- street, are Miss Margaret Port- -- Those who have spent the summer in Inland places, on the prairies or in the mountains are longing to go out canoeing or sailing on Lake Ontario. What the Editor Hears | OS That the article on another page worth, Toronto, are in town for the {in Wednesday's Whig said that Howell-Murray wedding. Mrs. H. A. Lavell, Barrie street, prestient of the Dominion Board of the Methodist W.M.8. isin To- ronto, returning to Kingston on Tuesday . Miss Carol Go , Ottawa, will spend the week-end in town. Dr. and Mrs. J. H. Howell and Miss Doris Howell, Welland will ar- nive this evening and will be the guests of Mrs. D. Murray, Front- enac street, : | * * * Sir Clifton and Lady Sifton are re- turning to Toronto from "'Assiniboine Lodge," Brockville, on Monday. { Dr. James H. Howell, Galt, ar- | fived in fown to-day. Mr. and Mrs. Francis King and Miss Marion Lewis, King street, will spend the week-end at Wolfe Ts- land, . Mr. and Mrs. John A. Pearson, Toronto, are in town for the Howell | Murray wedding. i s 8 Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Foster, Hast- ings, are with friends in Kingston. | = Mr. 1. Gelfin returned to her 3 ome in Parc Terminal, Montreal, | Castile Soap after spending a few days with Mrs, 7 bars ... .....25¢. ||| 1. Webber, Regent street. iy 'Canon and Mrs. Dealtry 'Woodcock, to the V.A.D. girls who learned it | Robinson's Stores Money Savers Pastry Flour-- 24 Ib. bags . .87c. | Honey--Combs 22¢. | 51b.pail ....79. | vice to their credit, Never mind girls, it was a man's point of view anyway. That once more wo can get good home grown apples on the Kingston one should lack for apple ple. That an inspiring story was told at Indian women at Skidgate, B.C, whose. members found themselves so number of baskets and sold $170 worth, a $100 over their last year's givings, 4 i Fresh Assorted Cookies ..... . 18¢. Ib. » That everyone who is unforiunate lenough to possess a motor or a boat up health for the long winter days, That there is a persistent rumor that short fur colts are to be worn, "smoking was by no means confined during the war," meaning that many women smoke who have no war ser- market at a reasonable price, so no the annual meeting of the Board of Managers of the W.M.8. of the Cana- dian Methodist church held in To- ronto this week, of an auxiliary of poor at the end of a ecant fishing. season, that they were unable to ful- Wil their pledges and rather than let the missions suffer they made a large shoul be out in the country storing | - Brockville, are with Rev. W. E. Kidd I "Tea-Pot" Tea-- and Mrs. Kidd, Wellington street. Pound ......42¢. [||ser® 5. Hooter Ogilvie snd Miss Currants . . .20c. Ib. Mary Ogilvie, Gore street, returned on Wednesday from Victoria, B.C., _ Pound ......20c. where they apant te Summer, Dr. and Mrs. Arthur Neish, Wel- lington street, have Teturned from Rolled Oats -- New York. 6 Ibs. for . . . .28c. Prof. and Mrs. Norman Symons, and their little som, have returned from England and are in their house on Gore street. Mrs. R. Young, Peterboro, is visit- ing Col, and Mrs. Douglas Young, King street, : . Mrs, Minnie Dedman, Montreal, is visiting Mrs. James Doyle, 113 Pat- rick street. - Country Club on when tie Tennis Club for the Leslie shield. | | ------ ; ji. Try as hard as ome may, it's | mighty difficult to injure a character| {ness and honesty. x 1 || Corsets are not nice for us men to | {talk or write about, but women say that in hot weather they are even worse to wear. : ol and Raglan Ra. am g | BAKERY More Pickles and Relishes. India Relish: (Contributed by a Reader.) Four quarts of green toma- toes, one quart of onions, one pound of green peppers, one cup of flour, one cup of sugar, two tablespoons of | sal, four tablespoons of dry must- ard, one tablespoon each of mustard seed and celery weed, and one quart of vinegar. Grind the tomatoes, on- ions and peppers and let stand over- night sprinkled with the salt. Press dry in the morning in a cheesecloth bag. Now mix the flour, sugar and spices and put these, with the vege- tables, into your preserving kettle. Bring to a boil, and continue to cook for 45 minutes. Turn into hot, steril- zed glass jars ad seal airtight at once." Easy Way of Putting Up Dill Pickles (Contributed by R.. A.) Wash 12 cucumbers six inches long, and let them stand in water over night. In the morning pack them in jars tightly (sterilize jars by boil- Ing for tem minutes) and sprinkle dill seeds between them generously. Put three quarts of water into a saucepan with four cups of vinegar and one oup of salt and bring to boiling point; let boil ten minutes, then, while boiling hot, pour this over the plokles in the jars. Seal air- tight at once and store. Be sure to keep the jars hot, after sterilizing them, or else they 'evill crack when the boiling liquid is poured imto them. I keep them hot bw wrapping about them dishtowels dipped Into boiling water." Another Good Indian Relish: Put through your meat grinder three me- dium-sized onions, one red pepper, nine green tomatoes, seven large ap- "THE GAMBLERS" AT GRAND A Splendid Production Is Given by the Rex 8tock : Company. That the Rex players can play melodrama as well as they can play farces was evident during the pre- sentation of "The Gamblers' before a crowded house at the Grand Opera House on Thursday evening. The 'T6F forceful acting, and the Rex players took every advantage of the chance and gave a splendid perform- ance. It was a story of the crooked side of big business. Wilbur Emerson, president of a national bank, had borrowed on his bank's capital, con- trary to law, and had entwined him- self and his associates in the clutch- es of the federal government. John Darwin, a former rival who had won Wilbur's sweetheart for his wife, proceeds to conduct the prosecution and seeks by every means, fair or foul, to imprison Emerson. Betray- ed by one of his associates and with the danger of incarceration of his father, Emerson steals into Darwin's home to get some necessary papers and encounters Mrs. Darwin. She refuses to give up the papers even to Wilbur, but upon the return of her husband she is accused of intim- ate relations with ber former sweet- heart. Eventually Wilbun shoulders the blame for the whole affair, Dar win proceeds to get a divorce from his wife and the curtain falls while a promise is being made that Mrs. Darwin will weit for Wilbur until Rex Snelgrove did himself proud as Wilbur Emerson and had just en- ough dash to put the role over play itself gives a rich opportunity) ples and one pound of seeded raisins. Put these into the preserving kertte add one cup of granulated sugar, three cups of vinegar, one-fourth cup of salt, three teaspoons of ground cinnamon, two teaspoons of ground ginger and one-half teaspoon of ground clove; bring to the boiling point and let boil for 30 minutes. Turn it into hot, sterile glass jars and seal airtight at once. Fine Chow Chow: Take two quarts each of green tomatoes, . pickling beans and white onfons (seid the oniom by themselves); add one doz- en green peppers, ome dozen gherkin pickle (or six large ones chopped) and one head of cabbage. Put the green tomatoes and orions through the meat grinder also. Cut the beans small. Season these prepared vege- tables with one tablespoon of celery seed, ground or crushed, and one tablespoon of dry mustard. Then cover with vinegar emd bring to a boll. Let continue to boll for two hours them, while very hot, add two tablespoons each of sweet oil and white sugar. Turn at one into hot, sterilized glass jars and seal at once. Tomorrow -- Helpful Contributions From Readers. All Inquirfes addressed to Misy Kirkman in care of the '"'Hfficient Housekeeping" department will be answered in these columns in thek Sturn. This requires considerable time, however, owing to the great pumber received. So # a personal or quicker reply is desired, a stamped and self-addressed envelope must be enclosed with the question--The Kditor, sweetness and determination to make one appreciate the versatility of her talents. Jack Conley as John Em- erson, father of Wilbur, was clever in his work, Joe Kelly as a business associate was amusing and William Seymour as George Cowper, a dis- tracted business man, gave an ad- mirable presentation. Rex in his "entr'acte" speech let the audience into the secret that he has a splendid vaudeville team on the way. If Rex says it's goodesdt must be. To-morrow's HOROSCOPE By Genevieve Kemble SATURDAY, SEPT. 80TH, This promises to be a very inter- esting and progressive day, accords ing to the active conditions in the stellar operations. With Saturn and Sol under Lunar trine, there should be steady progress and advancement, with increase of business and good fortune, especially for those in the employment of others, or who labor for their livelihood. Obstacles should give way to substantial improve ment, and promotions are in order for those who are undeniably deserv- .| should, however, make a substantial ing. Change and benefit, with pos- sible journey or removal, are pre- saged. Those whose birthday ft ts have the forecast of substantial progress and increase of business and oppor- tunity. They may make an advan- tageous change or journey. The phy- sical condition or accident may give concern for a time. A child born on this day will be clever, persevering and industrious, but may exhibit some contradictory or paradoxical traits unlees carefully trained. It success and rise In life. -------- A good many, times there are weak links in the chain of a quickly form- ed friendship. : 'and Sophie, on the left of the lay- been forced off the ancie s abdicalion was made in favor of 'who is seen with his of Boumania, on fhe right, . v f : » ancient throne of (H CLEANS \ " EVERYTHING For tarnished silverware, put a tablespoon- ful in an aluminum pan,of water, boil for a few minutes then immerse silverware. 15¢ and 25c¢ at all Good Grocers ~r Driv n oul oPuetiaion oy Get away from the dangers that confront you and every member of your family if you are neglecting constipation or constipation condi- tions! Bat Kellogg's Bran, cooked and krumbled, every day; and you will be astonished at the improvement in your health and spirit! Bran's value as a constipation cor- rective is wonderful. It is heartily indorsed by physicians because Bran is the natural means of relieving con- stipation with the food you eat! We guarantee that Kellogg 's Bran, eaten regularly--at least twe tablespoonfuls daily; in severe cases with each meal --~will tly relieve the most stubborn constipation! It does won- derful health work for &ildren, mak- ing them strong and robust. You realize what constipation means when authorities state that 90% of 9, with Kellogg s Bran! all illness ean De attic tion! It is or mos a of diabetes, Bright's disease, rheumatism and hardening of the arteries. It dulls the brain, makes the sufferer sli and causes head: aches, bad breath, pimply complexions! Kellogg's Bran, as nature's cor- rective food, sweeps, cleans and puri- fies. It regulates the bowels naturally and does mot cause irritation or dis. comfort like and cathartics, which cannot aff permanent aeiief 2d only aggravate dangerous conditions! 'You will like Kellogg 's Bran, cooked and krumbled. "Its nut-Jike flavor is delicious. Eat it as a cereal, sprinkle it over your favorite cereal, or use it in countless delightful ways in bak- ing, such as in pancakes, gems, raisin bread, muffins, etc. Buy Kellogg's Bran st all grocers. Its wrapped "WAXTITE." "l To Have and to Hold "Nature's Own Remedy" for Scalp Troubles--eradicates Dane druff, stops the hair from f; and restores its natural health and beauty. W. E. AUSTIN~--T. H. BARGENT--F. J. HOAG HTH THAT ET Our Mest Nourishing Food Milk is our most nourishing food. Cleanliness in all food 1s most essential, but in milk it is more so than in any other food. Price's Dairy has all the latest clarifying and pasteurizing machinery, which is necessary to cleanse milk of its impugities without disturbing the nutritious qualities essential for health building. PRICE'S DAIRY HLT HT TRAIT THE CHAIN OF STORES . THE SMART WOMAN"S STORE Here you will find what you want for the gay season -- Top Coats in the new shades of Brown, braided or plain -- Coat Frocks in Tricotine or Poiret Twill, trim- med with Rodier's new galloons and braids or bright Persian embroideries--A fternoon Frocks.in Crepe de e new wool Sinbioideries giving the latest Parisian touch. : Among the Coats is a stunning one of Bolivia Cloth, its rough surface heavily em- broidered, its lining satin, and its collar and futfa of Coon, completing this study in rown. . : 'wife, the daugh- go *- FE 3