Ontario Community Newspapers

Daily British Whig (1850), 8 Jul 1926, p. 6

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THE DAILY BRITISH WHIG -- NEWS AND VIEWS FOR WOMEN R EADERS J LIFE'S SOCIAL. SIDE 'Woman's Page Editor Phone 2613. Private Phone 857w. we LE * © Miss Abbie Judson, Napanee, is ¥isiting Dr. and Mrs, C. C. Nash, Ibert street, - . * Miss Margaret Geer, Brookl [n, 'N.Y. Is visiting Mrs, Hugh C. Nick! 'Barl street, 2 ». » . Mr, and Mrs. G. H. Milligan are siting Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Mooers, { Barrie street, y . . . Mrs. David Jackson, Toronto, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Charles Jack- som, Johnson street, . » . Mrs. Young and her children, See- ley's Bay, are spending the summer at their cottage at Portland. : . * . Judge and Mrs. H. A. Lavell. Ear] Street, have left for their summer home at Thousand Island Park, - yc: . . . Mrs. 8. H. Birch and Miss Ada Birch, Bagot street, are at their sum- mer home at Thousand Island Park. - . » Mr. and Mrs. 8. Royden Birch, Buffalo, N.Y., will be the guests of Mrs. G. F. Emery, Bagot street, this week, LJ . Mi Dr. James Kirk and Mrs. Kirk, Brooklyn, N.Y., are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Livingston, Earl street, \ ( J - - 3 Mr. and Mrs. Maftin Filtz, Chi. cago, Ill, are visiting the former's parents Mr. and Mrs, P. Filtz, 79 Elm street. \ * * =» Mrs. * Percy Cooney, Montreal, spent the week-end with her par- *nts, Mr. and Mrs. Robert Keenan, Bagot street. Mrs. M. G. Webber, Miss Bishop, Ardoch, and Miss Madeline Appleton, Toronto, are visiting Mr, and Mrs. John Kelly, Odessa. . * . . Master Harold Brais, King street, has left for Toronto to visit his grandmother, Mrs, Gorrie, George street, formerly of Kingston, -. . * Mrs. D. Whelan and her daughter, Mrs. Donald K. McDonald, motored + from Cleveland, Ohio, and are spend- ing a few days In the city. wr . - » . \ and Mys. Harry Bridger, Miss _r. hi B hy Miss Pate Swaine id Mr. Victor Swaine, spent the Week-end with relatives at Oso. . * * * Miss Doris Spackman, Montreal, sailed for England on Wednesday on the $3. Regina, and will spend ome time motoring through Scot- land. BA Mr. Paul Putman, Ottawa, motor- 8d up on Wednesday and is with Mrs, "I. G. Elliott. His sister, Miss Irene Putman, is attending Queen's Sum- mer school. ' . - * Mrs. J. Coxhead and Mrs. J. Long motored from Toronto and are visit- ing their brother and sister, Mr. W. G. Frost and Mrs. H. B. Savage, Col- 'borne street. * ® -. 4 : Miss Goldie Hazlett, nurse-in. training, at Kingston General Hospi, _- lal. is spending the holidays with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Haz- lett, Mack street. . . ; Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Bailey, . Stephen street, gave a motor picnle to Buck Lake, in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Martin Fitz, Chicago, Ill., who arp visiting in town. " . * Miss MecHarrie, who is speaking do. the W, M. 8. of the Unitted Churches to-night on the work in Central India, is with Mrs. R. O. oliffe, Wrontenac street, k: . - - . Miss Jean Baxter of Buffalo, N.Y., who has been the guest of Mr. and ter, and Mr and Mrs. £5. --what a difference! lustard is aly its best when M. P. Buck, Rideau past three weeks, returned home on Wednesday, " * . Miss Jessie Senior, Kingston, is the guest of Miss Doris Smith's Falls, - . . Rev. W. R. and Mrs. 'Tanton, Napanee, will spend a month's holi- days at Thousand Island Park. . . * Col. A, P. and Mrs. Deroche and their family, Ottawa, are occupying taeir summer home at Bogart"s, . * - Ms Muriel Shannon, Toronto, is spending the vacation with her par. ents, Mr. and Mrs. Ww. J. Shannon, Napanee, " . * - Mss Elizabeth Sheldon, B.A. Brockville, is here to pursue a post graduate course in political economy at Queen's University. » . * Judge and Mrs. J. |. Madden and their family, Napanee, are spending the 'holidays at their summer home at Thompson's Point. - Mr. Leslie Wilmot has returned to Buffalo, N.v., after spending week-end with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. J, Wilmot, Kingston. . . . Mrs. 8. Hitsman and her sons, Kingston, are the guests of Mrs. Hitsman's parents, Mr. apg Mrs. J. H, Mackay, Smith's Falls, - » . little Mr. Raymond Lloyd 1s visiting his paremts, Mr, and Mrs. J N. Lloyd, Napanee, after an absence of eighteen years in Alaska and Call- fornia. * * . Miss Ryth Muldoon, training at the Hotel Dieu Hospital, is spending holidays with her par. ents, Mr. and Mrs, W;J. Muldoon, Brockville, nurse-in- Rev. Samuel Sellery, 'D.D,, and Mrs. Sellery, Toronto after a month's visit with Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Taylor, King street, are leaving for home to-morrow. -. - - Mr. and Mrs. B. Pp. Davy, Mr. and Mrs. F. §. Boyes and family; and Mrs. W, A, Grange, Napanee, have gone to their cottages at Bart- lett's for the holidays. * * - Mr. and Mrs. Georges Osborne Driv- er and their daughter Hildred and Mrs, R. C. Baton and her daughter, Toronto, who have been visiting Mr, and Mrs. John Driver, George street, left.today for Montreal. " Ld - - Miss Helen Salisbury, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. F. J.'8. Salisbury, Sixth street, who lately graduated from Rockwood Hospital, has Teff to take a position in the Cleveland City Hospital. » . * Mrs. Charles Armstrong. Toronto, and her soh Billie are visiting Mr, and Mrs. Garnet Jeffrey, Yarker. Mr. Armstrong who spent the week- end with Mr. and Mrs. Jeffrey, has returned to Toronto. . . . Mr. A. E. Calnan, editor of the Picton Gazetle, Mrs, Calnan and Miss Marjorie are spending a day or two with Mr. and Mrs. Rupert Davies, Albert street. They are on a motor trip through the Rideau Lake dis- trict. . . . The Whig will be glad to have the Dames of visitors in town and ac counts of various social events for publication in the social column. Such . communications shoudd be signed and the address of the sender given. Writey or telephone «10. the Editor: of the Woman's Page, Tele- phone No. 2613. Ld - * It is with very deep regret/that the Kingstonians who knew the late Col. Georges Roy, when he. was stationed here with the R.C.H.A., héard the sad news of his sudden death at qt street, for the Stilwely, | -- Quebec, About a month ago widow, Madame Roy; was a visitor in | town for several weeks with Col. and { Mrs. C. F, Constantine, the | mandant's Quarters, Royal Military College, . . . ! The Kingston ladies who were en- |tertained by the Watertown ladies jat their Golf Club on Wednesday Speak in highest terms of the hos- { pitality extended to them and of the beauty of Watertown and the charm- ing clubhouse where they were giv- len the daintiest of luncheons. The Kingstonians won 7 to 14 and Miss {Caroline Mitchell, the captain of the (team, made a 90, quite a record score. Mrs. Halloway Waddell and Mrs. Bartlett Dalton accompanied the team on their trip, which was a most enjoyable one. > . . . | The presence of the party of Ki- wanians from Syracuse, N.Y., who had come across the lake in the beautiful motor boats anchored at the Yacht Club and are going up the Ridean to fish, gave a zest to the Wednesday evening dance at club. Two of the Kiwanians sang delightfully and they were all ex- cellent partners, the Kingston ladles say. Among those present were Mr. and Mrs. Hansord Hora, Capt. and Mrs. 8. A. Lee, Mr. and Mrs. C. 8. Kirkpatrick, Mr. and Mrs. Hollo- way Waddell, Major and Mrs. Hor- ace Lawson, Mrs. Varhum Davoud and her sons, New York; Mr. and Mrs. A. N. Lee, Mr. and Mrs. Bart- lett Dalton, Mr. and Mrs. Ww. K. Macnee, Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Taylor, Mr. and Mrs, Herbert Steacy, Mrs. Philip Du Moulin, General and Mrs | F. W. Hill, Miss Katharine MacPhail, Miss Harriet Gardiner, Miss Vivien | and Miss Syivia White, Miss Frances | and Miss Betty Murray, Miss Nora Williamson, Miss Marguerite Smith Miss Dorothy Porter, Miss Kitty Walsh, Miss Dot Rigney, Miss Nevada Best, Miss Florence Bibby. Miss Margaret Macdonald, Mise Edith Rees, Miss Esther Mahood. Dr. Howard Folger, Dr. Reginald Third, Mr. Howarl Rees, Cadet Innes Fraser, Cadet B. Cunningham, Cadet Ted Du Moulin, Mr. Whalley, Mr. Steven, Mr. Ww. Macdonald, Mr. A. Glover, Mr. Ww. Rigney, Mr. Charles Parker, Mr. Gordon Macpherson, Mr, Kenneth Bibby, Mr: Bert Win. | nett, | . . . | White caps were on the blue waves | of Lake Ontario on Wednesday af- ternoon, so only a few people en- joyed the fresh breeze on the veran- dah of the Yacht Club at the weekly tea. In the clubhouses tables were arranged in every available corner for bridge and mah Jongg. Mrs. Norman Fraser and Mrs. James Hay- don made tea and among those pres- ent. were Mrs. J, C Ponsford, Mrs. F. W. Hill, Mrs. Ww. Bermingham, Mrs. Malcomson, Mrs. R. 8. Waldron, Mrs. W. Rupert Davies, Mrs. John Carson, Mrs. Thomas Sheron (Phila- delphia, Pa.), Mrs. Manley Baker; Mrs. W. P. Elkins, Mrs, Frederick Carson, Mrs. Bruce Hopkins, Mrs. Travers Hora, Mrs. H. J. Dawson, Mrs. W. F. Casey, Mrs." Hamblin his | | Soe] i | f The Editor Hears | old | That Kingston is a sleepy place. Well what of it? If we like to sleep surely it is our own business. But sleep is good. It gives health and vigor and men have gone out into | the world from sleepy Kingston who | have made names for themselves and | Kingston that are to be found on | Canada roll of honor. In politics, in statescraft, in the army, in educa- tional institutions, in the church and | in the world of business. Kingston- | lans- have brought honor to their grey old city. But when it comes to | touching the things Kingstonians | hold dear they say "Hands Off" to strangers. We can remember ener- getic visitors who said, "Clear out your gardens amd square in the heart of your city. Build a big hotel on | Clarence street, never mind whether | the members of St. George's Ca-| thedral like it or not. They will soon | get used to it." But roses and | peonies still bloom in the gardens and St. George's still stands where it has stood for a century. We will have a good hotel in a better place. We don't want to stand still but we want to know that every change is for the better and above all we want to make out own chehges. Not "to have them made for us, | That amazingly pretty summer frocks can be bought in the King- ston for a low price. It is easy to have a change when for a com- paratively few dollars You can buy a dress for morning or afternoon wear and for a very few dollars more 1 one for the evening. If you happen to be a stock size you can have it sent home in a few hours and save all the trouble of visits to the dress- maker. But if you are very ghort and stout or very tall then you will have to try the old way of the measurements, the matching ribbon and buttons and the standing to be fitted. Perhaps in the end the re- sult is worth it but those of us who can buy a frock 'from the peg~ should be thankful it we are busy and like to see just what we are go- ing to wear. That two Kingston ladies, who | have just returned from abroad, said recently to a stay-at-home: "We néver tell anyone about our travels for we find they don't like it and say we are trying to let every- one know we have been overseas. What a pity that anyone should be made to feel they must ke Pp the con- versation at the low, some imes very low ebb, of afternoon tea gossip. Surely an intelligent person who has not'been able to travel would be in- terested in hearing at first hand from friends who have been on the Spot, of the lands and Scenes they hope to see one day. Perhaps there is a certain jealousy at the bottom of the mind of the person who ig uninterested. But --there. must be many people who would enjoy hear- ing a detailed account of a trip taken by the acquaintances . ang friends. Dinsdale, Mrs, T. G. Bishop, Mrs. Arthur Walsh (Edmonton), Mrs, G. F. Emery, Mrs. Herbert Robertson, Mrs. Edward Rees, Mrs. W, J. B. White, Hrs. Varham Vovoud (New York), Mrs. Allan Black, Mrs, Hugh Ryan, Mrs. Hugh Nickle, Mrs. B, H. Young, Mrs. C. 8. Kirkpatrick, Mrs. 8. Roughton, Mrs. J. B. MacLeod, Mrs. Everett Townsend, Mrs, Pp, H. Smalm, Mrs. 8. 8, Smidt (Wheeling, W.Va), Mrs, W. J, Gibson, Mrs. Ernest Malone, Mrs. George Wood (Montreal), Mrs. R. J. McKelvey, Mrs. George McGowan, Mrs, Charles Parker, Mrs. Cuthbert Gummer, Mrs. Harold Davis, Mrs. Wendling Anglin, Mrs. David Jackson (Toron- to), Mrs. G. A. Robinson, Mrs, R. E. Burns, Mrs. W. Linton, Mrs, A. Mackenzie, Mrs, Charles Jackson, Mrs, W. A. Sawyer, Miss FitzHugh (New London), Miss .Sutherland, Miss McGill, Miss Austin, Miss Emma Pense, Miss Beatrice Lambert, Miss Thelma Donnelly, Miss Sibbald Ham- fiton, Miss Mollie Saunders, Miss Louise Kirkpatrick, Miss B. Ireland, Miss Margaret Greer, Brooklyn, . Bk: "much longer, Ces a d "than ' k That an innovation in railroad travel is a recreation car designed and built by the Pullman Company, and among the car's features is a gymnasium, twelve feet long- and equipped with a mechanical riding horse, medicine ball, punching bag, chest weight and rings. BEACH SHADE Grandmother's umbrella, remodel- led for the beach and motor! It is covered with blue and rose cretonne and the handle is jointed, det tn THE TENNIS QUEEN AT COURT. London, July 8.--Mlle. Suzanne Lenglen is to be' ted at court this week at Buckingham. The Mar. quesa Merry del Val, the wife of the Spanish 'Ambassador, will pre. sent her. : Buzanne's dress is a white crepe georgette with diamond ebads. It is| siniply made. The skirt is sl I am used to y What is Dangerous Age For Husbands? Margaret Mooers Marshall in the New York World has been disagree- ing with N. J. Judge, who declares the dangerous. age for husbands is between 50 and 60. She says: What, then, IS the dangerous age for husbands? It comes, we believe, between thirty- five'and forty-five, And not then for ALL husbands! The one who finds that decade dan- gerous-- And whose wife may find it fatal for HER--- Is the advancing husband who is married to a stationary spouse. We've seen it so often; The keen; intelligent, ambitious man, with a brain still developing, And a business or professio political future beckoning. We've seen this man tied tragically To. the girl he married in his twen- ties, . The girl who hasn't grown up with him, 1 or Who has lost her youthful prettiness And found no attraction to take its place. Sometimes it's hard to blame her, When little children have worn her out When, to be their mother, she has sacrificed her growth as her hus- band's comrade, And yet--the Woman who puts even her children before her husband Forever risks finding That HE doesn't put HER before all else! As for the childless woman Who is too lazy or selfish or sure of her "rights" To keep step with the ries-- One can hardly even pity her When, in his early maturity, he looks at her stolid smugness, And looks into his own heart, And thinks: "Is this al] I am evar going to get out of life?" Nowadays of course, he doesn't stop with thinking. If he can pay alimony He buys ofr, If he tan't, he runs off. It may be very deplorable, but that's how it happens. So we can only advise wives To remember that 1926 is a "danger. ous age" for them-- Unless they can live up to their job! ----e A pretty wedding took place June 30th, in Iroquois, when Beatrice Madeline (Trixie), daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Strader, became the bride of Mr, Russel B, Link, son of Mr. and Mrs, James Link, River Road, east of Morrisburg, man she mar. 5 . grants Ly ot wr of test- pes for and economical shes, Write The Borden Lis ione 10. RESTORED TO 0D HEALTH of Eleven Children 60 Praics Lyd | | | | Time for strawberries and 4 SHREDDED # *a beter than soggy shoricake e, i -- READ THE ADVERTISEMENTS They Lighten Work / =i KINGSTON'S LEADING: | BEAUTY PARLOR Bus fof Cataraqui Cemetery daily except Mon. and Sat. at 2 pm. Godkins' Livery rt i111 if GALLAGHER'S T A XI 'PHONE SERVICE 960 25¢ ANYWHERE IN cry DAY OR NIGHT ALL 7 PASSENGER SEDANS Silk Undies AT VERY SPECIAL PRICES Vests in all the popular shades -- fine make, ay $ 1.00, $1.25; $1.50 each. Bloomers in knee and bobette lengths; all shades. $1.00, $1.25, $1.50 and $1.89 a pair. ) Step-ins at $1.00 and $1.25 a pair, Teddies--the 'popular garment--in extra fine quality, at $2.25 a Suit. Slips from $2.25 up. Pyjamas in pretty combination of colors at $5.95 a'Suit. Night Gowns in an extra heavy quality at $3.75 each. W. N. Linton - THE IRISH LINEN STORE Things we do and do well MARCEL WAVING WATER WAVING SHAMPOOING HAIR BOBBING. FRANK ROBBS, 185 WELLINGTON STREET i 'Phone 578-J. Quality and Value Unexcelled for Sold terms, $25 cash and .

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