Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Daily Times, 15 Jul 1929, p. 10

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- STAGE MORALITY, Si i ' taminated. Plays of the "Young Love" . doming into existence, .ter. Whatever happened to the au- 'THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, JULY 15, 1929 JCA LACKS LONDON FEARS Type Make "Pessimistic New York --About the time Eng- nd was beginning ruefully to accept "fact that America had evolved a i own two theatrical eces have come along to raise the 'disturbing idea that perhaps such ings as a distinctly American mar- fone morality--or immorality--is "This Thing ited Love" horrified many. "Young ¢" seems to have shocked the re- shainder who were callous enough to vemain unmoved before the first of- fering. "Young Love" was banned by the censor. Though he thus saved public morality, at least a small see- tion of the empire was exposed by a private production at the Arts Thea- dience, at least all, dramatic writers seem to'hdve felt themselves con- The frank cynicism with which American = playwrights make their characters assume they will be un- faithful after marriage--in the pre- sent instance Samson Raphaelson has gssumed, that since infidelity is to be _ post-marriage portion it might as well be tried beforehand--appears profoundly disturbing to English laygoers. The general assumption ems to be in England and on the Continent that these things are ar- ranged less shockingly, In France martial infidelity is a staple of the fiction industry. In England it makes blackmail the sec- largest fiction industry, When American playwrights show a tend- ency to experiment with the estab- lished order English pens become righteous. The only favorable thing said of "Young Love" is that Doro- PHONE 22 For Your Drug Needs THOMPSON'S "40 Simcoe St. S.--We Deliver . 845 am, Daily. ++ 6.23 a.m, Daily. 8.40 a.m. Daily except Sunday, +» 4.35 p.m. Daily, 2.34 p.m. Daily. = 10.05 a.m. 'Daily. . 2.04 p.m, Daily, 8.03 pm, Daily except Sunds 1410 p.m, Daily. % 12.03 2.m. Daily. All times shown above are times trains Qepart {rom Oshawa Station. ". CANADIAN NATIONAL RAILWAYS Effective April 28, 1929, (Standard Time) ~ Oo a S38 tx =i= on 223 = 4 2] punpn 4 .m, Daily. X m.' Daily, .28 a.m, Daily. . m, Daily. .03 a.m. Daily except Sunday. .m, Daily except Sunday. m, Daily. Sunday only. ie GRabLE v sno h-J ~® Sy ee) Wm, m. any, p.m. Daily except Sunday. : Whitby, Oshawa, Bowmanville ht BUS LINE WEEK DAY SCHEDULE . (Effective on and after April 28, 1920.) (Daylight Saving Time) [ West Lea: Aerive Arrive 'Whitby Hospital "- - NOX I a BER; amis [VBE PPPOTYPON g3dags 11 -|on the opening night both he and thy Gish makes the sorry part as respectable as possible. Hite. First Mrs, Fraser," by St. John Ervine, has brought back to the London stage in their well remem- bered roles both Henry Ainley and Miss Marie Tempest. Their return is sufficient to make the week mem- orable, 'Ainley, after two and a half years' illness and seclusion on the Isle of Wight, returns to play the part of the self-centered young Scot who deserts his wife to marry into the "flapper generation," The au- dience at the Haymarket found his return very much to its liking, and Miss Tempest were kept on the stage fully half an hour after the final cur- tain, Miss Tempest brilliantly car- ries through the part of "The First Mrs, Fraser," and in the end is tri- umphant over the younger woman. In a sense also the piece may be said to be a "return" of Mr, Ervine, Some of his recent essays into com- edy have not been so well received. The present offering has substance and true sparkle, "One of these days," says Miss Tempest, "there will be a terrible revolt of the old against the young." Those who saw Miss Tempest and heard the lines of Mr. Ervine given here were more than willing to admit that when the re- volt comes, should the older genera- tion number in its ranks many such as "The First Mrs, Fraser," the young ladies of the flapper genera- tion are due for inglorious defeat. In this instance Miss Tempest re- volts for herself and wins her di- vorced husband away from his too modern wife, but just about the time the audience is setting back for an ending in the sentimental tradition Mt. Ervine applied the = accelerator and made the final scene between the first Mrs. Fraser and her returned husband a charming mixture of sen- timent and skepticism. While Miss Tempest's appearance is hardly a "return" in the sense of that of Mr. Ainley, London considers "The First Mrs. Fraser" the first worthy part she has had since the war, COLLEGE GIRLS IDEAL HUSBAND CALLED SCARCE WOMEN TOO ERUDITE Advises Art Courses to In. crease Marriage Figures Chicago, July 15.--~The girl gradu- ate, model 1929, is encountering grave difficulties finding an interesting hus- band, observed the Rev. Daniel A. Lord, S.J., of St. Louis, today. Father Lord is chairman of she Catholic Woman's Sodality convention in ses- |__ 18 Simcoe Street, South. + ree mm ANNIVERSARY SALE SPECIAL Towels 15 Cc I. COLLIS & SONS 30-34 KING STREET W. |i PHONE 738W 1 gi Felt Bres. 7 he LEADING JEWELER . Established 1885 | ng Simcoe St. South | Machinery Repairing NOTHING TOO LARGE NOTHING TOO SMALL Adanac Machine Shop 161 King St. W. Phone 1214 For Better Values in DIAMONDS Burns' Jewelry Store i Corner King and Prince Cash or Terms BEEEEREES SBE esEEss: cicicacpils ERERESY BB PEP Diamonds! Bassett"s On Oshawa's Main Corner = The bachelor girl, with her bache- jors degree, is becoming too efudite or the college boy with his A.B. he said Not that girls.go' to school any longer than their. boy chums, Father Lord explained, but because cultural subjects are slighted in favor of cgm- mercial and professional studies in college courses for men, £ "College women are not marrying as much as they used to," he said, "partly because some of them. want careers,' but 'one of the fundamental reasons is' the difficulty lots of them run against in finding college men whose conversation and companion- ship interest them, "Not a few who do marry young gentlemen with diplomas find thei husbands have _ little care for any mental exercise that is not linked with a business or a profession," Father Lord had two methods for weeding out of the rdce the husband who can't appreciate poetry, sit through grand opera or comprehend art, He would not retreat to the Dark Ages and cease to educate the the women above the approved me- thods of making pie-crust., Instead, he would polish off the lads with a thorough applicatin of the humani- ties and concentrate their education in fewer years, Grammar school time, Father Lord believed, could be cut down in order to afford the boys sufficient time for a liberal cultural college education before their profes- sional or business course begins, "The educated women of America are the liberally educated class of the country these days," he said, "It is they who take pleasure in literature, art, the drama, and philosophy when school days are past. The educated men, as a class, have fallen behind-- they haven't the groundwork for it. "And while the college boys pro- ceed to their technical training, the girls proceed to their educations. It's a situation which doesn't help mar- riage at all" |GOOL BY HEATED AIR SOUNDSMISLEADING BUT REALLY T ISN'T Telling How the Big Picture Theatre Gets Relief New York, -- Air is washed and dried at the same time by blowing it through a shower of refrigerated wa- ter, Theater patrons are cooled off in torrid weather by heated air, If those two statements appear to be hot weather foolishness the appa- ratus in the basement of a modern motion picture house or theater will prove both these apparent paradoxes. The "weather maker" cools the air suddenly in a cold douche to take out the excess humidity, then warms it so that it will be comfortable in- stead of frigid. "It isn't the heat; it's the humidity" that makes man unconffortable in summer. Almost every one under- stands why this is--that in excessive humid air, filled with water vapor almost up the saturation point, the pores of the skin perspire, but the perspiration will not evaporate and cool the body. Obviously, the remedy would be to dry the air. That is just what the weather making machines do to air in summer. In winter they reversc the process, add humidity to air which may be too dry for comfort and health. Oddly, they perforin these reverse functions by exactly the same process; passing the intaken air through a cold water spray. The cold water is kept at 42 de- grees, winter and summer, Before the 'air, coming in from the' of of the building through an intake = pipe, reaches the shower bath, it has passed through a network of oil-coated grids, which catch the heavier dust and soot. The water spray completes the clean- ing, leaving only about 4 per cent of the dust, soot, ash, pulverized pave- ment, unburned fuel particles and germs which adorn the sky over cit- ies, The 4 per cent will hurt no one; beyond that point it isn't practical to clean air, How great the humidity in New York has been at times this summer is shown by measurements. On some days each cubic foot of air passed through the conditioning plants was yielding between four and five grains of excess moisture. Since one of the larger "cathedrals" of the gnotion pic- ture takes in 75,000 cubic feet of out- side air each minute, its cold spray was actually precipitating from that air more than 600 quarts of water each hour, a total of 8,100 quarts, or more than 2,000 gallons, during the thirteen and a half hours the theater was in operation that day, The wa- ter tanks in the air-conditioning sys- tem were constantly over-flowing. In winter, when th eouter air would be below 42 degrees, the reverse would bé true--more water would have to be fed to the prays from the city mains to compensate for the foisture the air would take up in being warm- ed and passed through the spray chamber. Now air at'a temperature below 50 degrees would chill theater patrons. The sudden change from the torrid heat of the street would be danger- ous. So the chilled air that comes out of the cold water bath minus its ex- cess humidity, is heated to 60 de- grees. Blown into the auditorium of a theater through inlets in the ceil- ing decorations the air as it descends mixes with and is tempered to 70 de- grees the warm air around the bodies of the occupants. The mixture of fresh air and stale is drawn off through vents under the chairs and returned whence it came. Thermo- stats near the floor automatically re- gulate the heat applied to the incom- ing cool air so that the range most favorable to health and most comfort- able--between 70 and 72 degrees--is maintained. The final word in efficiency is feached when the apparatus uses, in summer, the warm air drawn out of the building to warm y 3 the air washed, dried and chilled by the re- frigerated sprays. Thus no fuel has to be burned except in cold weather. The age of mechanical ingenuity that has given the public motion pictures in color and with sound effects, talk- ing and singing, has performed a no less ingenious feat, not nearly so well understood and appreciated, in sup- plying artificial cool, dry weather in summer, and warm, sufficiently moist, air in winter. WHEAT 1S STILL BOAST OF CANADA Member of Royal Commis- sion Replies to Fort Wil- liam Editorial ¥ Fort William, July 15.--Wheat was, "and still is, the boast of Canada'and never was there a time when it had been chased off the high seas, de- clared Dean Rutherford, member of the Saskatchewan Royal Grain Coni- mission, Dean Rutherford was re- plying to an editorial which appeared in a local newspaper and which cri- ticized the quality of Canadian wheat. Canadian wheat has a quality of its own, he declared. "Even our num- ber five wheat was quoted at equal and little better than export wheat from other countries," the speakar stated. While Britain will buy Argentine wheat when it is cheaper, Britain also wants Canadian wheat, Dean Ruther- ford continued, A report issued re- cently by the United States Govern- ment quoted the price of the best ex- portable Argentine wheat at 16 ceits less than Canadian No. 3 northern and the best United States export wheat at 14 cents under the same grade, . The commissioner said that lack of rain in the fall of 1926 and 1927 had damaged the crop. The same condi- tion prevailed this year. The farmet cannot be blamed for this, he stated "Our wheat holds its place in the markets of the world with any wheat in any country of ths world," Dear Rutherford concluded. The commission brought its scssior at the head of the lakes to a close with yesterday's meeting. The com: miscioners departed by lake steamer to continue their invesiigztions aj the lower lake ports and the Atlante seaboard ports. 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