THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG > " WS FOR WOMEN READERS 2 =] LIFE'S SOCIAL SIDE Woman Page Bditor, Phone 2618. Private, Phone S57W. . v - Clear air like wine, blue water rippled here and there by a wander- ing breeze and islands in 'the dis- tance showing a scarlet tree or so among the green -where the fingers of Jack Frost had touched them 1ightly on his first visit, made a beau- tiful setting for the white canoes With a red line and the scarlet coat- ©d cadets at the aquatic gports held at the Royal Military College on Wednesday. Chairs were arranged 95 the wharf for the visitors and tea served from a marquee om the green, The programme was a most interestiig ome and the various events followed with cheers for 'the winners, A dance was Leld In Sir Arthur Currie Hall from 4.45 until 7 o'clock and here Lady Macdonell : presented the wir wa of the recruit Tracers with cakes as their reward. Among those present weve Major- General Sir _irchibald Macdonell and Lady Macdonell, Miss Alleoh Maedonell, Col. and Mrs. R. J. Gar- <iner, Col. and Mrs. H. J. Dawson, Col. and Mrs. E. J. C. Schmidlin, Major and Mrs. Victor Tremaine, Major and Mrs. H. T. Cock, Capt. F. M. Harvey, V.C., and Mrs. Har- vey, Capt. and Mrs. W. J. Finney, Capt. and Mrs. E. J. Harvey, Miss Phyllis Harvey, Prof. and Mrs. Richardson, Major and Mrs. Freder- ick Alderson, Capt. Lee, Prof. Me- Kee, Yajor and Mrs. Leroy Grant, Major and Mrs, Jeffrey, Mrs. H. P. Lowe, Mr. Percy Lowe, Mrs. F. B. Dench, Mrs. W. B. Carey, Lieut.-Col, and Mrs. J. 8. Skinner, Mrs. G. R. Rooney, Mrs. W. A. Sawyer, Mrs. Edward Rees, Rev. A. O. Cooke, Miss Cooke, Rev. F'. W. Archibald, Major Horace Lawson, Mrs. Twiss, Mr. and Mrs. James Haydon, Mrs. Norman Fraser, Mr. and Mrs, W. J. Fair, Mrs. J. W. Robinson, Miss George Robinson (Napanee), Mr. and Mrs. E. W. Mullin, Miss Marguerite Mul- Mn, Mrs. Wartele, Miss Wurtele, Miss Cartwright, Mrs. Henry Wilkin- son, Prof. and Mrs. Douglas Jem- mett, Mrs. Felix Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. H. F. Richardson, MTs. R. W. Rutherford, Miss Ida Martin (Pic- ton), Miss W. Gordon, Miss Harriet Gardiner, Miss Marguerite Carr-Har- ris, Miss Gwen Carr-Harris, Mies Nevada Best, Miss Katte and Miss Nora Bermingham, Miss T. Gallag- Prams i--g--. SIFTO free-running IODINE SALT in alt is recommended by net as a simple Preventative of Goitre Sifto her, Miss Vivien and Miss Sylvia White, Miss Edith Re@S, Miss Pat- ricia Aylen, Miss Langstaff (Kempt- ville), Miss Bat (Toronto), Miss Mary Macgillivray, Miss Jessie Tor- rance, Miss Louise Hill, Miss Mar- jorie Stevenson (Niagara Falls), Miss Anna Mahood, Miss Mary Mor- rison, M Lilian Fair, Miss Doro- thea Sands, Miss Gwendolyn and Miss Doris Folger, Miss Elizabeth and Miss Pat Lyster, Miss Barbara and Miss Peggy Bidwell, Miss Vera Skinner, Miss Vivien McCartney, Miss Flo Cunningham, Miss Helen Steacy, Miss Laura Kilborn, Miss Gwen Dawson, Miss Anelia Minnes, Mise Jean Hamilton (Moosejaw, Sask.), Miss Carine Lindsay (North Bay), Miss Aline Rutherford, Capt. Burns, Mr. Reginald Sawyer, Mr. W. H. Herrington, Mr. E. Steaey. © * . Wednesday was a delightful day at the Oataraqui Golf and Country Club and the friends of Mrs. Arthur Craig, who arranged a dutch lun- cheon and mah Jongg in her honor were to be congratulated on the weather. The clubhouse never look- iN Loy NCH ORGANDIE Fifth avenue, Ottawa, Phior to re- suniing his studies at Queen's uni- versity. Mrs. Robert Meek, University avenue, has returned from a three months' visit in Toronto and Fort William with her son and daughter, - - . Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Brucé and their little son returned to Kingston yesterday from Smith's Falls, where they were visiting Mrs. Ww. H. Bruce. Mrs. Alex. Rosamond and Norah Rosamond, Almonie," are sailing shortly from Montreal to spend the winter in England and on the Continent. -. * Miss j ed prettier and the view from the verandah was altogether charming. | Those lunching were the guest of | honor, Mrs. G. Hunter Ogilvie, Mrs. Ernest Cunningham, Mrs. W. H. | Craig, Mrs. Barlett Dalton, Mrs. W. | i H. Macnee, Mrs. Marold Davis, Mrs. | | A. W. Winnett, Mrs. Travers Hora, Mrs. C. 8. Kirkpatrick, Miss Hora, | Miss McGill, Miss Cunningham, Mrs. i James Third, Mrs. Bruce Hopkins, | Miss Polson, Mrs. James Hamilton, | Mrs. Sandford Calvin, Mrs. James Rigney, Miss Sara Willis, Mrs. H. | C. Nickle, Mrs. James Haydon, Mrs. Frank Smythe, Miss Marion | Leselie, Mrs. Arthur Macnee. | . . - i Mrs. John Carson, "Sunny , Knowle," will entertain at the tea hour on Saturday for her sister, Mrs. Peart Birley, Vancouver, B.C., | and Miss Ethétwyn McGowan, whose | marriage takes place shortly in | New York. | Mr. and Mrs. J. C. Beecher and Mr. and Mrs, BE. A. Geiger and Miss | Geiger, Brockville, are with Mr. and | Mrs. A. C. Geiger, Albert street, for | the Geiger-Bartels wedding today. | Lady Macdonell and Miss Alison Maedonell returned to the Comman- | dant's Quarters, Royal Military Col- lege, on Wednesday from Torento, where they have beén since their return from Calgary. Miss Bate, Toronto, was in town for the aquatic sportg at the Royal Military College. Major and Mrs. Jeftries have re- turned from England, { Miss Jean Wilton, Arch street, | secretary of the Queen's §.C.A., has | returned from the S.C.M. conference | at Bigin House, Muskoka, which | closed on Wednesday. | . . * Mrs. J. H. McLaughlin, Napanee, is visiting her daughter, Mrs. C. L. Gordon, Nelson street. Mr. T. Porter has return- ed from Northern Saskatchewan and is spending a few days with his par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. R. T. Porter, 9 Miss Alice Turcotte, Bostwick Is- land, has gone on a visit to Chicago, In. Miss Lois Taylor will be a guest tonight at Toronto, at Miss Peggy Hearne's coming out dance, Misses Kathleen Campsall and Edith Patterson, Glenvale, left on Sunday by way of motor for Peter- boro to attend normal schogl for the coming year. * * Although Col. G. Hunter Ogilvie is receiving congratulations on his appointment as sergeant-at-arms in the Provincial House, great regret is expressed in Kingston tnat it will mean the removal to Toronto of Col. MRS. G. H. OGILVIE and Mrs. Ogilvie and their family. Mrs, Ogilvie has, since her coming to Kingston, been not only a charm- ing hostess but an exceedingly use- ful member of the community, Dur- ing the war she organized the St. John's Ambulance Brigade over- seas and was superintendent of Mili- tary District No. 3. When the flu epidemic attacked Kingston, Mrs. Ogilvie at once visited the homes, saw the crying need for a hospital for children and arranged for one, which would hold sixty patients. She also organized a band of V.A.D.s and voluntary workérs to nurse the sick in their homes. Mrs. Ogilvie is pre- sident of the Kingston Woman's Lib- eral-Conservative Association, regent of 'Annandale Chapter, vice-regent of the Municipal Chapter, 1.0.0.E., and a vice-president of the lLooal Coun- cil of Women. Miss Marion Ogilvie, her elder daughter, js a nurse-in- training in the Royal Victoria Hos- pital, Montreal. Misg Mary Ogilvie is one of Kingston's pretty society girls And captain of No. 7 company of Girl Guides, Mr. Bdgar Ogilvie, & 1923 graduate of the Royal Mili. tary College, 1s at present at Car- tier, Ont. bd -- | The Editor hears That about three hundred women representing all parts of the Domin- ion, will be in Toronto from Oct. 8 to 15th for the 31st annual meeting of the National Council] of Women of Canada. A civic reception will be held at the eity hall the evening of Thursday, Oct. 9th, Mrs. Phillip North More will present greetings from the National Council of Wo- men in the United States, to which Mrs. Schofield, provincia] vice-presi- dent of British Columbia, wil re- ply. Prof, Carrie M. Derick, M.A., on will give an address oun. the prevention of the causes of war. Sat- urfy afternoon the Lt.-Gov. and Mrs. Cockshutt will receive the offi- cers and delegates at Government House at 4 o'tlock. an art conference will be held in the lecture hall of the Women's Art Galleries. Mrs. 0. H. Thorburn, the official a the council to the conference on Leisure held at Geneva will deliver ng - The Toronts Local Council is entertaining on this occasion. Each day there is to 2 luncheon, with speakers of note. That the Toronto haird 3 e TOMORROW'S MENU Breakfast Oranges Cereal Scrambled Eggs Toast Coffee 'Lamoheon Apple Slump Wholewheat Bread Cocoa Peanut Butter Dinner Cream of Carrot Soup Baked Smelts Tartre Sauce Potatoes Lima Beans Sliced Tomatoes eight sections in all. Fill with cot- ton and sew up. When done, it looks like a melon, with pink and blue stripes alternating. With four strands of yarn held together, cro- chet a chain the desired length (by which this ball is attached to some part of the carriage), and sew end of chain into top of ball. Knitted Striped Play Ball: Ma- terials are one ball each of pink and blue shetland, three-fold. One pair of either size three or size two and one-half bone needles (or, it desir- ed, the three-fold Saxony may be (used with the two and one-half size bone needles). Be gin by casting on 58 stitches. Knit one row. Row Two: Coffee Raisin Pie 1A Knftted Striped Ball For the Baby To' make a Striped Knitted Car- riage Ball for Baby, buy one ball each of pale blue and pale pink three-fold Saxony or Shetland wool {and one pair of size two and one- | half bone or celluloid knitting need- | 1es. Begin by casting on 35 stitches. | Knit one row. Row Two: Knit to Knit to within the twelfth stitch from end, turn. Row Three: Knit to 'within 12. stitches from end. Rows Four and Five: Knit to within 'eleven stitches from end. Continue as described above for the carriage ball, making eight sections in all, stuffing with cotton in the same 'way, and sewing up. This play ball is suitable for little folk of three, four and five years of age. It needs Do at- | within seven Stitches of the end of the row, and turn. Row Three: Knit to within Seven stitches of the end of the row, and turn. Row Four and Five are each knitted to within the 60 stitch from the end of the row. Rows Six and Seven are each knitted to within the fifth stitch from end of row. Rows Eight and Nine are each knitted to the founth | stitch from end of row. Tenth and | Bleventh Rows are knitted to the [last three stitches. Twelfth and | Thirteenth Rows are knitted to last | two stitches. And the Fourteenth {and Fifteenth Rows are knitted to the last stitch. Knit the sixteenth, | seventeenth and eighteenth rows. | This completes one section. Change to the other color. Always change the color at the same end. Make say they cannot get Canadian wo- men to wear colored wigs. It is pleasant to know that our Canadian | women, who are remarkable for! | smartness, decline to make figures | of fun of themselves by wearing hi- | deous travesties of their own pretty | hair. That smart women are winding | their scarfs tightly about their throats these days, particularly in the evening when tulle is used. --- A That the C.P.R. garden, whére as- ters are making a glorious showing, Was the only one to escape the slight frost, that fis coloring the maple leaves and Virginia creeper. This lovely garden is enjoyed by thous- ands yearly. Not only does it Eive a good impression to rs arriv- ing in Kingston but being on the line of the street railway is admired daily by the citizens on their way to and from the business section, That Picton is putting on a his- torical pageant at its big fair, Three hundred people are in the caste and | the John Rogers Producing Co., which directed the Kingston page- ant with their pageant master, Mr. George Miles, and his assistant, Mr. Josef Seabold, were responsible for the production. Mr, Miles and Mr. | Seabold are at present putting on a| pageant at Simcoe, Ont. That the small hat, the bobbed | hair and the elim silhouette are especially designed for the slender | girl. But however they manage | most girls are slender now-a-days. | That especially clever little | Mah Jongg boxes, artistically de- signed and made to stand tne Cana- | dian climate, which the oriental | boxes have failed to do successfully, | are made by the returned men whase | wares are sold in Toronto by Mrs. | Arthur Van Koughnet, The Made. | In-Canada boxes 'with their drawer Spaces are complete as any product of the Orient. That a note says; "The Dally Mir- ror Sports Girl, awarded a first. prize of £500, wears her hair 'unbobbed.' A triumph for long hair, says 'a doc- tor,' writing in the periodical. He believes that men grow bald because they cut their hair, and, and sounds 2 warning to feminine readers. An. cther male correspondent si; tached cord. (Note: It may be possible to make one of these balls from the material left over from the other, although T have never tried it.) Tomorrow--Baking a oard" Cake. ---- All inquiries addressed to Miss Kirkman in care of the "Rfficient Housekeeping" department will he answered in these columns fn tbair turn. This rejuir:s considerible time, hfwever, owing to the graat aumber recsived. So if a Personal or quicker reply is desired, a stamp- +d and self-addressed envelope must be enclosed with the question. Be sure to uss YOUR ful! name, street number, and the names of your city and state. ~The Edito.. "Checker B AUNT HET = Z 'I reckon I can't complain, 1 don't never feel free and easy en- ough to enjoy a new frock, anyway, until after the first time I spin somethin' on it." . WEDDINGS, Geiger-Bartels, fhe marriage took Thursday morning at the the bride's parents, Alfred street, of Annie Lenore (Goldie), daughter of Mr. and Mrs. O. V. Bartels Douglas George Geiger, B.Sc.,, M.E. Rev. J. W. Stephen officiated. The bride entered the room on the arm of her father, wearing a wedding Bown of white taffeta, a veil and orange blossoms. She carried an old-fashioned bouquet. Her brides- maid was Miss Bertha Smeaton, Ot- tawa, who was frocked in tomato crepe and carried a nosegay. The best man was Herwald Geiger, a brother of the groom. Mr. William Mundell, an uncle of the bride, play- ed the wedding music. The house Was gay with flowers and the brite's table centred with a flower decked wedding cake. ; Mr. and Mrs. Teélger left for Mon- treal, where they will make their home, the latter wearing a suit of brown with hat to match. Both bride and groom are graduates of Queen's University and the bride is a well-known Kingston violinist "and has the degree of ALCM.. The out-of-town guests included Mr. and Mrs. E. A, Geiger, Miss Geiger and ids and Mrs. J. C. Beecher, Brock- ville, piece on home of -------------- Old stains may be removed from linen by rubbing them with glycer- ine an hour or go before being put and |4 Motors Bldg. have not tried them, do so. pleasant to take and effeative, Blackheads Qo Quick By This Simple Method Blackheads--bij ones or little ones-- soft ones or Bard' ohooh any part of the body go quickly by a simple method that just dissolves them. To do this &o about two ounces of peroxine powdes from Your oy E5ist--aprinkle a little on a hot, wet cloth--rub ov t blackheads briskly for a few nl and wash off. You'll wonder where th ) blackheads have gone. Pinching and' Squeexing blackheads only open the pores of the skin and leave them large end unsightly--mwhile the simple - plication of peroxine powder and the 5 er udiasolye them right out, leaving Skin so and t ' natural condition. ® Dhras In tele NOTICE CpLAGHERS SERVICE Complies strictly to the city tarife. }| For One Passenger -... B0c For Two Passengers .. B0g For each additi'} person 28¢ Per Hour $2.50 into the regular wash water, All Seven Passenger Now is Children, combination suits Prices. "Phone 191. for heavier Underwear We are prepared with a big stock and large assortment of all the best makes and styles for Men, in separate garments and W. N. Linton & Co, the time Women and at very attractive Very £ classed musical Instrumente. but in the case of the can be as Sonora, there is no question as to its value in this respect. Upright and Period are on display in our store. models, Which will delight you Let us show them to you,