Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 29 Aug 1924, p. 4

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\ THE DAILY BKITIS 'NEWS AND VIEWS FOR { LIFE'S SOCIAL SIDE fs. maid of honor, and by Misses Fay Black, Thelma Dover, Clara Morris, Bee Rubin, Minnie Betcherman and Gertrude Freidman &s bridesmaids. Little Miss Sarah Levitan will be flower girl, Big » . . Mrs. Bert Glaser and her family, Portsmouth Terrace, Rochester, «w+ Who have been visiting her 'parents, Mr. and Mrs. R. M. Fergu- son, 97 Chatham street and her sis- ter, Mrs. George Henderson, 306 Bar] street, left by the steamer Kingston Jast night for their home. » * . Miss Kathleen Lockhart, B.A., has 'deft for Toronto to visit her sister, . Mrs."A. E. Elmer, She will go on .%0 Hanover where she has been ap- Pointed to the stall of the Collegiate Institute as a teacher of French and Latin. Pn vw ~ Mrs. R. W. Brigstocke, Toronto, 'Who is with Capt. and Mrs. William Lesslie, Maitland street, will give a roast for her daughters, Miss d and Miss Dorothy Brig- #tocke at "The Maples" this even- . * * ® Mr. J. R. Dargavel, of Elgin, an- ces the engagement of his je anddaughier. Jean Dargavel, to ey Cole, B.8c., of Windsor, the marriage to take place September the tenth in St. Paul's church, El- x . ® . _ Mrs. Henry Joseph, Mountain street, has returned to Montreal from St. Andrews-by-the-Sea. Miss Ethel Olive Joseph has remained there until next week, when she will re- turn home. : es ¥e Mrs. William Bermingham gave a family dinner at the Cataraqui Golf @nd Country Club on Thursday even- ing. £ * . LJ © Mrs. J. F. Preston, George street, 18 entertaining at mah jongg this afternoon for Miss Marion Ogllvie, Montreal. . * . * Miss Carrie Waldron, Barrie t, entertained at mah jongg om i ay afternoon. 4 s $d Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Chown, Mile va me Chown and Miss M. A. Shaw ) returned to the city from a y spent at Muskoka Assembly, Canadian Chautauqua on Lake 5 u, Muskoka. , | Misses Sarah and Pita Grehan, Albert street, returned home on Thursday after attending the To- 'Tonto exhibition. | « Mr. Jack B. Kelley, Bay street, Bas left for Saskatoon and western on Thursday James Dev- Saunders, Mr. Saunders and their 'Mrs. Buxton and touring from Cleve- land, O., were recent guests of Mr. and Mrs. Will Day, Bath Road. Mrs. Saunders will be better remembered ag James Emma Abrams, daughter of the late Mr. and Mrs, James Abrams, and a cousin of Mrs. Day. . * * Dr. Allan M. Bateman and Mrs. Bateman, New Haven, Conn., arriv- ed in town today to visit the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. George Bate- man, University avenue, Miss Kay Eliot, who has been visit- ing Miss Hilda Calvin, Garden Is- land, returned to Col. Eliot's sume mer home at Fernbank, Brockville, today. Mr, and Mrs. James Devlin and their little daughter, who have been with Mr. and Mrs. Peter Devlin, Wil- liam street, left for Winnipeg today. Mrs. Guy Gamsby, King street, who has been in Toronto with Miss Marjorie, has returned to town. Mr. and Mrs. Russell Stuart, Al- fred street, have returned from their cottage on Lake Erie, » . . Mrs. Norman Fraser, Earl street, Lag returned from a motor trip to Prescott and Ottawa with Mrs, F. S. Evanson and Miss Ruth Evanson. While in Prescott for the week-end she was the guest of Mrs. Evanson. Mrs. Carmichael, Smith's Falls, is at the Y.W.C.A. Miss Annie Fowler, Albert street, hag returned from Thousand Island Park where she was the guest of Judge and Mrs. Lavell. Mrs, H. F. Richardson, Stuart street, has returned from a trip down the Saguenay. Miss Helen Strange, who was with her, will spend the week-end in Montreal, Miss Marjorie Fair, street, who spent the abroad, will return this week. William summer Miss Doris McClelland, Miss Jes- sie Dyde and Miss Mildred Sherj- dan, Brockville, three of the Queen's graduates who have spent the sum- mer in Europe, will remain in: Paris until after Christmas. Miss Hattie Chown is in Devon- shire, England, with her cousins. She will return to Kingston in Sep- tember. Major-General 8ir Archibald Mae- donell, Lady Macdonell and Miss Ali- son Macdonell, who have spent the summer at Calgary, will return to the commandant's quarters, Royal Military College, this week. Col. Victor Anderson, Royal Mil- tary College, returned from Calgary on Thursday. 3 The Editor hears That Miss Elsie Ferguson of 'St. Thomas, epoke on "Girls and Ap- ples," at the Woman's Institute sec- tion of the C.N.E., Toronto. Miss Ferguson has 25 acres of apples and finds it so interesting and profitable 8 pastime that she would encourage other girls to do likewise. Graduat- ing from Toronto University in 1922, Miss Ferguson looked around for something to do, and her fa- ther having an "orchard to spare and the outdoor work appealing to her she took up the raising of ap- ples, To prove she has made a suc- cess of it we have only to state that home of her apples are in the On- tario exhibit at Wembley. -- That the day when it is safe to w by. However careful the motorist may be, he cannot be expected to be on his guard against people who dash out hurriedly from behind an- other car in the middle: of the street or across quickly to speak to a friend on the other gide. The crossings are to be respected and here it is the duty of the motorist to care for the foot passenger. Wise people, however, will keep an eye out for cars, for motorists do not always fulfil the obligations of the road. A traveller from the Pacific coast says the traffic regulations in Vancouver, B.C., are excellent. The motorist keeps his eye on the street, and the pedestrians obey the laws made for their safety. That a guest at a banquet given fast year at Calgary for the Prince of Wales was impressed with the fact that the Prince in conversa- tion, referred to his brothers as merely "Henry' or "George" and to his sister as "Mdry."" Even the King and Queen were just "father" or "mother." The westerner had evidently not been brought up among well-bred people who would consider it the worst possible form to speak of the members of their family by their title even if it were only a plain "Mr." That when the 19th open tourna- ment of the Canadian ladies' golf tournament opens in Hamilton in September, noted players from al | parts of Canada will visit that city, and enthusiasts of the game will | witness brilliant play. Neither will | the social side of the game be | overlooked, and there is expected to | be a great deal of entertaining by { Hamilton hostesses. The Tamahaac | club will be headquarters for a | number of the visiting notables, and there will be various festivities there during their stay. from England}g "The degree of a fool girl's in fatuation seems to be in exact pro- portion to the degree of the feller's no-accountness." d Champion Speller. . Mrs. Anna Welhart, mother of five children, recently was proclaimed champion speller of Cincinnati, in a contest in which thousands of men and women participated. In the course of the matches she spelled 15,- 000 words without an error. The finals, in which the winners of the district elimination contests took part, lasted three and a half hours. Mrs, Welhart's last opponent was a sixteen-year-ald girl. Shortly before Mrs. Welbart won, her opponent tripped on "melancholy." Atoms made of Space, © Anatom is mostly empty space, for the electrons that make up its sub- stance are like flies in a cathedral compared to the size of the atom. - "Jay" across the streets is gone] Special fo New Fall Arrivals r Saturday Big Girls' Oxfords, Round Toe and Low Heels with rubber top lift--Patent Oxfords, Black Calf Oxfords, Patent 1, Strap. Size 2} to 7. CHOICE |, ;.isoniinisinisnriossioues $3.48 SCHOOL BOOTS, SPECIAL ! A good Lace Boot with extra good qual- ity soles and upper. Size 11 to 2, $2.98 For Boys, size | to 5 .................. $2.98 For Boys, size 11,12, 13 ...........$2.48 GOQD SHOES AT LOW PRICES AT Lockett's ' TA ww 9 \ J - x LT - { BK Sd le Bee Bus 17° NJ e NJ J ETT ] BEI Coffee Breakfast Pineapple (left-overs) Cereal 1 Griddlecakes, Maple Sirup Coffee Toast Lancheon Soup from Left-over Beans Dinner Hamburg Meat Balls Boiled Potatoes Carrots Green-Pepper Onion Salad Stewed Prunes Your Own Tomato Catsup. There is no doubt that house- keepers to-day can buy some very Joliciens_boitied :>tumate there are many hold that the. varieties he 2H 31 mixture for one hour, then add to it one quart of Vinegar and let sim- mer for one hour longer. Turn in- to hot, sterilized bottles (that is, bottles which have been boiled, empty, in clear water for 15 min- utes) and cork at once, dipping the corked neck of the bottle into hot, melted paraffine wax to seal air- tight over the cork. #0la-Fashioned Tomato Oatsup: Stéw four quarts of ripe tomatoes till soft, then press through a sieve. Return the strained tomato to the preserving kettle and add two cups of vinegar, two cups of granu- lated sugar, five tablespoons of salt and two tablespoons of mixed 6pices tied in a small square of cheesecloth, Cook till thick--about fwo hours, then remove bag of spices, bottle, and seal as above di- mony during the course of that day: and one feels that when H.R.H. left the embassy and became the Barl of Chester, he indeed deserved lis rest from royal duties! and polo, and lunched and dined with his friends like any ordinary Young mea, "As luck would have it, the sky Was overcast om the first might he dined at the Chateau de Madrid in the Bofs, with Mr. and Mrs. Bate, General Trotter, and some friends, #0 the crowd went elsewhere, and the most popular young maa in the world was able to dance freely and amuse himself, as do the most obscure. "Afterwards he went each evening to dance ches Seymour, a haunt made fashionable a short time ago by the Dolly Sisters, which was in their ab- sence almost deserted. Here the Prince danced to a perfect orchestra in absolute quiet, while the curious crowd hurried from one more popu- lar resort to the other, seeking him Aaa, "He rode In the Bois, played golf ve always, but pever finding, "The proud proprietor, with stiper- human self-control, kept gllence about the presence of the ftor--antil he had left now all the crowd flock to Wag last week!" -------------------------- ' Lamb, : Persian lamb, caracul and mole, are seen to excellent advantage in the short fur coats that are seen in the August displays. S If everything got lost as easily as a good pipe, everything would stay lost.most of the time, Labor Day Celebration at Grounds, Monday, 7" FF i i i 13, each. 191. i ¥ & ! i ang Linsosmimin ForSaturday Men's Pure Wool Cashmere Sox in Tan, Covert, Grey and Black. Ali sizes. English make, for 50c. a pair, Bath Towels, Christie's best make, full large size, in colored stripes, for 50c. each. ~~ Unbleached Pattern Table Cloths, strong wearing qualities, 1x14, 13x 2x2, 2x24, at $2.50, $3.00, $3.50

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