SOCIAL and PERSONAL The Times invites 'the co- operation of its readers in contributing items to this column, Send in a postear~ or phone 35. i Mr, Gerald McCabe was in Lind- say on Sunday. LI I Mr, I. A, Shantz, Kitchener, was fa town Tecontly on business, Miss Mildred Miller visited friends in Youngs Fotnt recently, Mr. Gordon Cook spent the week-end at his home in Lindsay. Mra, James Moffatt will visit friends and relatives in Myrtle for a few weeks. . LJ . LJ Mrs. Janson and children, of this city, were recent visitors in Via- mede, LJ . 0 Miss Sadie Thorburn, of . To- ronto, was a week-end visitor with her parents, Mr, and Mrs, J, IH. Thorburn, Kenneth Avenue, * » ¥ Miss Arlle Barrowelough, who is Attending the Toronto Normal School, spent the week-end with her parents, Mr, and Mrs, J. W. Barrowclough, Brock street east. Weddings -- TUMS-PRESTON At 8t, George's rectory on Sat- urday afternoon, the Rey, C, R, DePemcler officiating, the mar- riage was quietly solemnized of EI- len Irene, daughter of Mr, and Mrs, George C, Preston, 105 Cel- ina street, to Willlam Thomas Toms, son of Mr, and Mrs, Albert James Toms Nassau street, The young couple were attended by Mr, H. J, Dearborn and Miss O, M, Dowson, Mr, and Mrs, Preston will reside at 143 Nassau street, MYERS=-HAZLEWOOD A wedding of interest to both Oshawa and Bowmanville residents took place Saturday evening at 8 o'clock at the hom: of Mr, Ernest Rehder, = 'vmanville, when Aileen Louise Hazlewood, B.A., daughter of Dr, and Mrs, Brenton J, Hazle- wood, - Oshawa, formerly of Bow- manville, became the bride of Gor- don Conant Myers, son of the late Mr, H, Myers, Ba rie, and Mrs, Myers, Oshawa, The ceremony was performed before a bank of spiraea, hydrangea and roses by Rev, Dr. Dougall, pastor of Simcoe Street United Church. The bride, who was given away by ber father, looked charming in ivory crepe and silk net gown with a Princess lace and tulle veil, trimmed with a coronet of brilliants, The bridal bouquet was of sweetheart roses and Jily- of-the-valley, Mrs. McNairn, To- ronto, sister of the bride, was mat- ron of honor, wearing a sapphire blue silk net gown and carrying 2 bouquet of red roses, Miss Yvonne Hazlewood, as bridesmaid, wa¥ gowned in rose silk net and also carried a bouguet of red roses. Miss Barbara Rehder made a pretty little flower girl, Mr, Jack Pearce, of Toronto, did the honors as best man. Mrs. Hazlewood, mother of the bride, wore a peach heige lace groom wore lack lace over flower. ed georgette, "Mrs, Harry Adaskin played the wedding march and dur- i+ th signing of the register Mr. Harry Adaskin rendered a violin sclo. The groom's gift to the bride was a diamond pin, to the bridesmaid and matron of honour brilliant necklaces. After a short honeymoon Mr, and Mrs. Myers will reside on Simcod street south. Among the out of town guests were: Mrs. MeNehrin, Mr, and Mrs. Harry Fletcher, Dr. and Mrs, Wal- ton Ball, Mrs. Fletcher, Miss Baker, Mra, and Miss "Severn, and Mrs, Pearce, all of Toronto; Mr, and Miss McCarthy, Brantford; Nn, Smith, London; Mr, Woodham, Ot- tawa; Mr, Kingsmill, Montreal; Miss Margaret Burns, Orillia; Dr. Mitchell, Toronto, FINE ADDRESS ATB.B. COLLEGE Mrs, Cosgrave, Trinity Col: lege, Toronto, Talks on League of Nations Mrs, Cosgrave, from Trinity Col- lege, Toronto, visited Bishop Be- thune College . on Sunday after- noon to give an address on the work of the League of Nations, Mr, F. L. Fowke, who acted as chairman, reminded those present of a meeting in the preceding years and referred to Principal Hutton's visit in 1927, advising all those who had not read his latest book, "Many Minds," to do so without delay. Mr, Fowke then itnroduc- ed the speaker, saying that he had heard thdt Mrs, Cosgrave was an even finer 'orator, than her hus- band, the Provost, Mrs. Cosgrave's most illuminating, She spoke of the organization of the League and of the part taken by Canada in the deliberations at Geneva, She spoke' also of the great value of the League, not so much as a law- court, hut as a peace promoter, She reminded her audience that it was possible to dispense with war- fare, and spoke of the successful experiment made by the Quakers in establishing the colony of Pen- nsylvania without any fighting, us- ing only peaceful methods in their dealings with the Indians, She also reminded the meeting of" the message of the angels on the first Christmas' morning, 'Peace on earth, goodwill towards men," and hegged everyone to suppert the League and to help forward tle spirit of world-friendship by put- ting away their own national pre. judices against foreigners, Mrs, Cosgrave then showed Some lantern. slides--pictures of the Lea- gue's buildings at Geneva, por- traits of some famous statesmen connected with the movement, and statistics showing that the amount of money spent on the Great War would maintain the League for 30 centuries, The meeting con' ded with a vote of thanks t» rs. Cosgrave, followed by the siuging of the Na- tional Anthem, Although dots and spots ane cirrles that rival dinner plates in size are so popular, they are not without rivals----candy stripes have for instance, the cachet of Paris and are the last word in smart- gown, while the mother of the ness, CE -- ee -_ Were YOU terday? hundreds who visited 'Hills and Dales" yes- one of the Special One Week Only MAY 14TH TO MAY 21ST Your teeth are Ivory Castles GBB DENTIFRICE 2 for 29¢ LARGE IZE--REGULAR 40c 2 for 49¢ DON'T MISS IT! For Sale at THE REXALL STORE JURY & LOVELL LID. sing E.--Phone 28 Simcoe S.--Phone 68 address was good Sup half and half water. sift flour and salt together, put in shortening with pastry blend- er. Take out half cup of this mixture and put aside. Now add enough water to 'hold the paste together. Roll out and sprinkle the balance of mixture, fold in re- frigerator to chill. Roll and line pie plate. » Take 10 or moree peaches, place them with the certres up and fill wih this butterscotch sauce: °° ¥ One-quarter cup peach syrup, thsp, flour, 6 thsp. butter, cup hrown sugar. 2 tsp, lemon wuice, 1.8 tsp. mace. J Rub the butter and flour togeth- er and add the syrup, sugar, lems on juice and mace, cooking until thickened. This pie has flaky pastry, To clean a gas stove first re- move grease hy rubbing with a parafin rag. To polish, mix a little turpentine with blacklead and apply with a brush, ---- Always stir sauce with a wood- en spoon, Paraffin is useful for cleaning windows, giving them a beautl- ful polish, Rub a little over them and finish with a soft dry cloth, To remove grease marks from brown shoes, rub some French chalk well into the marks and leave for a day, Then rub off and polish, Repeat if necessary, Bones boiled for stock purposes will appear full of tiny holes, and have a dry epparance when all the goodness has been 'extracted, MAN'S INHUMANITY (Ohio State Journal) If man doesn't know how a wo- man suffers, we finally managed tp get an opportunity to remark to one of our neighbor women yesterday when she was about half through telling us about her cold, it must be because he doesn't listen, HS i Pr rT || | JPN ne Bin 0 p ave mun mis Are 4) rep psa namie sien DIES woasse LEE A EE OTE FEE EET F Xi IE FFE FE EERE EN AAAress ,.. sossprmmismmenns fown PRI PEE EE rT Price, 20 cents each. stamps or coin. Wrap cola .|which Includes Osha THE O5riawA LALLY TIMES® MONDAY, MAY 14, 1928 SEVEN YEARS ON BURGLARY COUNTS Harold Stone Sentenced in the Bancroft Police Court --------- Belleville, May 12.--Harold Stone a red before Magistrate Jarman Bancroft Friday on charges of breaking and entering and theft, was given seven years in Kingston peni- tentiary, He pleaded not guilty to every charge that was preferred but B, C. Donnan who prosecuted pro- duced sufficient evidence to establish guilt, The accused whs not repre- sented in court. Sergt. Roy Clarke of the Provincial Police attended for the police. Stone was arrested two weeks by Provincial Constable Percy Cc. Coy of Madoc after the large general store of Hubbel Brothers at Paudash had been burned by fire. The man with his wife and small babe had hiked to the woods where for over a week they subsisted on berries and food they could forage in the bush. The nights were spent under trees and abandoned shacks in the woods without fire, Both were scantily clothed,. Stone was armed and every precaution it seems was taken to pre- vent loss of life, After a stem chase by Provincial Constables Me- Coy, Thompson of Napanee and Pro- vinelal Officer Grey of Bancroft mo trace was found and the two officers left leaving McCoy to fight the bat- tle alone, The constable had with him an Alsatian police dog and af- ter two days of trailing the man through the bush he was met on the rallway track, He showed fight but the dog 'well trained by his master jumped at the man and the con- table soon pinned his arms and ar. rested him, SECTION NO. 6 W.M.S, PRESBYTERY MEETING THURSDAY The annual sectional meeting of the W.M.8. of the Presbyterian Church in Canada for section 6, Whithy, Ashburn and West Hill, will be held in Knox Presbyterian Church on Thursday May 17, with both morning and afternoon sessions. The morning meeting will start af 10.30 a.m, and lunch will be serv- ed in the church at 12.30, for 35 cents, The afternoon session will bezin at 2 p.m. An interesting program has' been arranged for both services, LADIES' SOFTBALL EXECUTIVE TO MEET An executive meeting of the La- dies' Softball League will he held in the Y.M.C.A, tomorrow cvening at 8 o'clock, ' SPAGHETTI AND OLIVES Cook half pound spaghetti In salted water and drain. At serv- ing time take 1 pound cheese, 2 teaspoons sauce, 2 tablespoons catsup, half teaspon salt, little pep- per, 2 eggs heaten with half eup milk and mix all together. Heat ad stir constantly and add spag- hetti and three-quarters cup chop- ped oilves. Serve immediately, A SONG OF SERVICE (By Marguerite Few) If all my pain, And all my tears, And all that I have learnt Through all the years, Could make one single perfect song To right some wrong: To lift some fallen head, To light some darkened mind, I should feel that not in vain I served mankind, If all my joys Le And all my laughter, Could give one single soul Faith in hereafter; If all radiant things I see Known but to me, Could give a. half-life strength, Lend sight to stricken eyes, I should know I helped the world Glimpse Paradise. --The Sunday Times (London). will pot coughen nor redden your bands if pou mee Lux. : A fittle goes #0 far -- in fact jit costs less than a cent a day tose Lux for all your Sigh washi LL X For your protection Lax is sold only in packages, meser in bulk. Lever Brothers Limited. Tosonty: 1837 ABBEYS For Biliousness EIGHT KILLED AS TRAINHITS AUTOS Motorists Racing to Railway Track Ignore Train-- Another May Die Erie, Pa., May 13. -- Eight per- sons were fatally hurt and five in- jured, one perhaps fatally, when two automobiles, believed by en- ginemen to have been racing, crashed into a Pennsylvania pas- senger train at a crossing at Hs- pyville, near here today. Among the dead were Mr. and Mrs, Clare Hays of North Shen- ango, Pa., and their four sons, aged 10, 7, 4 and 3,years. The others were Ward Thomas aged 60, of Pennside, Pa., and his son Willlam Thomas, aged 32, of Al- bion, Pa. Mrs Ward Thomas suffered a fractured skull and was not ex- pected to survive at an Erie hos- pital, The others, slightly hurt, were a 2-year-old daughter of Mr and Mrs, Hays and Mrs, Willlam Thomas and her two young child- ren, Monnie Thomas, aged 21, son of Ward Thomas, was unhurt, James Pilmer of Erle; engineer on the train said the crossing was free of obstruction to the view in all directions, and that he had been the two cars approaching the tracks at high speed. He added that the car drivers ap- parently did not see the train, and that both machines crashed into his locomotive before he could stop. Six of the victims were killed instantly, some of tne bodies be- ing thrown under the wheels of the train. Ward Thomas died on the way to Hrie, the injured hav- ing been brought here on the train, which was running from Pittsburgh to Erie, Mrs. Hay died in a hospital after the train's arrival. The locomotive was damaged by the double impact of tne auto- mobiles, and proceeded here with difficulty, Espyville is 85 miles southwest of Erie, Our Daily Recipe DATE PIE Ono cup white sugar, eggs, 1 cup sweet milk, chopped dates, Line. ple plate with paste, put.a layer of chopped dates in bottom, then add above mixture and bake. Beat whites of eggs stiff, sweeten with sugar, spread over top and brown in oven. This pie will keep sev- oral days. yolks two eream or PIGS IN-BLANKETS One-half pound small smoked frankfurters, 2 cups flour, half teaspoon salt, two and a hall teaspoons baking powder, 2 tea- spoons shortening, about 1 cup milk, 4 Sift flour, salt and baking pow- der. Work in shortening. Add milk'eonugh to make a soft dough. Roll quarter of an inch thick, and cut in squares. Lay a frankfur- ter in each square, roll up and fas- ten by pinching the dough togeth- er. Place in pan and bake till brown, in moderate hot oven (abopt 30 minutes, temperature 400 degrees). Brushing the frankfurters with mustard before baking improves them, Recipe makes about 6 rolls. CARROT FRITTERS One cup cooked mashed carrots, 1 cgg, 2 level tablespoons sugar, teaspoon cinnamon, same of ginger, salt and nutmeg, 1 tablespoon corn- meal, 1 tablespoon bran, about 1 cup flour with 1 level teaspoon baking poyder mixed therein. : The dought should be thick when finished. Drop by dessert spoonfuls in hot fat as when making dough- nuts, fry crisp brown on both sides. They should be well done inside. This makes fifteen fritters, Serve with sauce. PRAYER OF MOTHEHROOD "So short a time at my command, These children that I hold to- night, God give me grace to understand, Wisdom to guide their steps aright, That J may be throughout the land A lamp unto their feet for light. 'So short a time do small hands With confidence of babyhood, Let me not idly dream the thing, But live the noble part I should, That henceforth from such moth- «ering They shall instinctively seek good. "So short a time for my embrace For love, cheer, comfort, lulla- bies, God help me hallow the brief space That turns to gold each sacri- fice-- So surely does 2 mother's grace Build her soul's mansion in the Eleanor Robbins Wilson. "Eye Care and Eye Strain" By CO. MH. Tuck, OPT.D, Before entering upon the series of articles under this heading 1 will endeavor as an introduction to show some reasons why sight sav. ing classes are necessary and what they may accomplish, All cases ot error in the 'general routine show that diseased conditions are only a small percentage of all the exist. ing conditions of error, This means then that the majority of cases are at one time susceptable to a cor- rection. For certain reasons of reference I work on the percentage basis that 15 per cent will represent the diseased conditions and high de- fects 25 per cent, making bad cases 40 per cent, It is easily seen that 25 per cent require special atten- tion because some of them may eas- ily graduate to the other 15 per cent of worst cases. And likewise with the proper attention in time some of the 15 per cent may be- come those of the ones listed in the 25 per cent, The other 60 per cent are the ones coming in the ordinary routine requiring assis- tance for strain at their work. It is always well to consider that some cases if allowed to run may grow better, it is also true that should they, by neglect, become members of a more serious condi- tion their correction might he im- possible, t NORTH OSHAWA North Oshawa, and iron pipe are piled at the read side and other equipment is being brought for the new cement road to be laid here, Work will com- mence almost at once, we under- stand, The Home and School Club met last evening. A very small num- ber were present, but a most en- joyable evening 'was spent by those who did come. At the conclu- sion a nice cup of tea and fancy biscuits were served by Muriel Phillips and Edie Rouston, There will be a plenic for the children in June, } Mr. and Mrs, Dave Warren were in Toronto, on Thursday. Mrs, Will Powell and Mrs. Vie Ireland went to Toronto on Tues- day. ' Mr. Bunner had tea with Mr, and Mrs, Fred Tonkin Sunday evening. The Misses Vallant entertained with a dance for the young people on Monday evening, y Mr. and Mre. Ed Fiece enter tained with a dance on Thursday evening, They moved into their new home today. Mrs. Parker, Sr., visited at her son's, *and also with Mrs. Tonkin on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. W. Powell and two younger children, spent . Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. J. Vallant, Port Whitby. Mr, and Mrs. Mrs, Thos. Solomon Toronto, on Tuesday. Miss I. Rathwell will spend the week-end in Toronto. England announces that in 50 years she will be free of her debts. A great many small debtors might be inspired by this example.--Mon- treal La Patrie, A. L. Gerry and motored to *BOWMANVILLE BROOKLI to get it for you, f May 12.--Tiles the Local operator * .» 25c TORONTO = + ALE x f--------------g nda OD = ....that should be yours Here isa ran mare hours of play. designed to bring you more hours of leisure... Lib o" of floor space. Has large. i Waa inset eep, with removable elements and rack holders, every inch of which is available for baking and roasting, The cooking elements are hardy, fast i caning, It's a simple task, indeed, to prepare meals on this range. Write to the Happy Thought Foundry, Brantford, foe illus. FREE booklet. ah Also Gas, Coal and Wood Ranges and Warm Air Furnaces | Sold in Oshawa by CLEVE FOX EAS Y TERMS IF DESIRED A British Empire Product ------ INQUIRY WITNESSES ASK FOR BODYGUARDS Vancouver, May . 13.--Georgie Chow: and Joe, Chinese, who are prominently mentioned as witness- es in the Vancouver police inquiry, have applied at the police station for bodyguards or other protection until they have appeared on the witness stand, Joe told officers that he had been beaten late Friday night in Chinatown, and threats had been made by other Chinese against his life. He identified his principal as- sailant as & member of the Shue Mey gambling faction, Joe also claims that they had warned him | against testifying regarding pay ments of money, Georgie Chow declared that b had been offered a considerab sum to leave town and refuse t testify, THEY BROUGHT THEIR TRU) Hoboken, N.J., May 13.--Tw baby elephants, each weighing ap proximately 1,700 pounds, arrive at Hoboken on Saturday abroa the steamship Waukegan, in transi to Halifax, N.S. The infant pachy; derms were purchased in Frane by a New York zoological eorpor, tion for an individual of Halifa and are not at present destined fol any zoo. Just Like a Local Call ---you need not ask for Long Distance To telephone any of the points listed below say to 'Bowmanville 67 (or whatever the number may be) and hold the line while con- nection is established. 10c - UXBRIDGE ....... 20¢ 10c *WHITBY ............. 10c . 25¢ The * 10¢ rate is for a 5 minute talk; others 8 minutes This speedy inter-city service is available only on calls where you ask for the number rather than a person. If you do not know the number "Information" will be glad