" ] : Sli dti Addn Personal | dfer Assi ant ust povisiting his cousin, * of Welland, a ;emplo sof the Oshawa BON WAS, a recent visitor Mr. (W. &..Greene of Sloatsbury, New York, was the guest forthe . past faw days of Mr. and Mrs. Dun- lop, Alice treet. Th * Mr{ and Mrs, H. M. Black, 46S Massoty street left today for a motoy frip ®nd expect to visit Lon- don, Windsor, Detroit, Flint and Saginaw. sy * * Mr! David McIntpsh of Glencove, Long | Island, New' York, was the guest 'for the past few days of Mr. and Mrs. Dunlop, Alice street. Ed * * * Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Morison and son Gordon, of Connaught street, and Mr, and Mrs. Ambrose Trick #nd daughter have gone to Gull Eake to spend a holiday. ¢ x % » Mr. and Mrg. J. T. Noble, Ritson Rd. solith} leave today for Brace- bridge where they join a party which is leaving tomorrow on a camping trip in the Temagami. % * * * i Mrs. ;T. Element of Cleveland, Ohio, if visiting her aunt, Mrs, W. H. Merger, Ritson road south. .. __ * *'% Z Mr. and Mrs. L. M. Powers. of Bruce street are visiting friendg in Picton and Kingston. * * * "" 7 "ph Mr. and Mrs. J. Coard Taylor, Mountelair, N.J;, are spending 'a week with Mrs. Taylor's parents, Mr. ang Mrs, R. 8. McIigughlin. x ¥* % Mr. dnd Mrs. G. B. Spfoul and family 6f Montreal are visiting Mrs. J. W. Caldwell' Bond stréet. IX the has | [| 1aid with 'mother-of-pearl and a tray | and get jve' this month at All waves WAVE SHOP . North T'S folly to suffer long from neue ritis,! neuralgia, or headaclies when relief is swift and sure, . For 28 years the has recom- . Social and The A les D.i Craig and Mrs, Craig w. ing in Haliburton County Jor Ahe past week are, leaving today for Petorborotigh ""whete spend the next week. * * * Friends of Mrs. H. M. Barnes, 54 Albert street who has under- gone an operation at the Oshawa General Hospital recently, will be glad to know that she is gettin along as well as could be Bop Weddings DUNN~--WILSON On Saturday, August 3, a very pretty but guiet wedding was sol- emnizéd at the King street United Church parsonage, by the Rev. C. Craig. .Miss Christina Wilson of Oshawa, formerly of Rawdon town- ship became the wife of Mr. Ar- thur Tresusis Heneage Dun of Hope township. The bride wore a dress of dainty blue crepe de chine and' carried a corsage of roses. After the wedding the couple left on a honeymoon to Buffalo and other points west, On their return they will reside in Hope township north of Newtonville, 3.4 Helpful Hints In washing the feet of silk hose |: or the dirty cuffs and collars of men's. work shits, 'aprons, corsel ettes, etc, how 'many have tried placing, the articles against a scrub board and rubbing with an ordinary hand-brush or nail-brush and a good soapy lather? It works. : ® * * Paint the handle of an old pair of 'scissors a bright color that har- monizes with decorative scheme of the kitchen. Hang them on a nail in that room within easy reach. They will. be convenient for cutting flower stems, twine, paper for shelves and cake tins, and a score of other things. If you have a sec- old pair keep them on a nail in popitlar; demand for 1 i ould = : wrens Tot in use. he LJ . the basement. A pair on each floor ves, many steps. . ' 'Have 'you wondered whether the coffee tables gontinue? It seems that they e an indispensable item homes. One of the newest 0 'Oriental manner, This table a folding stand of pearlwood in- engraved brass which is remov- ] fis 18 very useful for the jse or apartment as it can pt Behind a door or in a closet * Here isa new and tasty dish to try. STUFFED CABBAGE 1 firm. cabbdge. 2 quarts boiling water 2 teaspoons salt "14 teaspoon soda 1 tablespoon melted butter. Speck pepper and paprika. 1 cup boiled rice. 15 cyp chopped nut meats. With a very sharp knife hollow out the.cabbage from the stalk side. Cook it rapidly for fifteen minutes in beiling water, to which has been added the salt and the soda. Drain and press gently to make dry. Mix the other ingredients and fill the cabbage. Tie it in a double thickness of cheese cloth and boil for fifteen minutes without covering the sauce- pan. Remove the cheesecloth, and gerve the cabbage on a platter sur- rounded by white sauce. For a gar- nish cut a pimento in strips and place on the cabbage. Servings, 8. Outlook Avenue, THOUSAND ISLAND PARK, N.Y. On the St Lawrence River. "Home Cooking Rooms with or without pri "vate bath. Golf, Bathing, " Danéing, Tennis. Moderate . prices. L ; Reference. J. B. GIFFORD, PROP. Winter Place, Ine Beverley, &, Children like: are sweet as sugar and so cleanse even the most delicate 'have been holiday- they will |; year-old George Frazer, lina avenue, who was struck by a truck on. Queen street east ' MISS LLULU GOLDEN Daugliter of Mr. and Mrs, John G. Golden, Bracebridge; Ont; who recently . won the Dominion medsl for senior sight singing. _ Miss 'Golden has been a student at the Ontario Ladies' College, © Whitby, for the past two years and received most of her musi- | cal training there, ot 8 ONE-YEAR-OLD CHILD HURT Toronto, Aung. -.10.--Toddling across Baldwin St., one-year-old David Warshafsky, 74 Baldwin St., ran into the side of a motor truck and was badly cut and bruised, He was taken to the Hospital for Sick Children. To the same hospital went 8 86 Caro- near Brooklyn avenue. He was not seriously injured. p designs is fashioned in | CHIC NECKLINE A stunning sports blouse in re- verse dot tneatment. Style No. 587 is white crepe de chine with vivid réd dots, with the unusual yoke that ties in knot at front of red crepe de chine with white dots. The red crepe is repeated in wide crushed girdle and bow tied cuffs. It can be copied. exactly in sizes 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. It is swagger worn with white plait- ed skirt of crepe silk, Flowered chiffon, figured cotton voile, eggshell crepe silk, chartreuse green chiffon, peach handkerchief linen, tomato red georgette crepe, orange rajah silk' with white contrast, yellow # | shantung, nile green jersey and Lake blue batiste are fascinating combin- | Ron is preferred). ations for.summery 'wear. Pattern ioe 20 cents in stamps or coin rap coin care- fully. 'We suggest that when you send for this pattern, you enclose 10 cents ad- ditional for a copy of our Fashion Magazine. It's just filled with de- lightful styles, including smart en- sembles, and cute designs for the kiddfes. PATTERN PURCHASE COUPON The Oshawa Daily Times Pat Department, Oshawa, Ont, "ry Enclosed find «.ovcvnicnnnirnsciines cents Please send patterns listed below: eee Bi2e (iieniiicnnnns To Name «ious Sessecabisanssasiensasitostecserndid coin. Wrap coin carefully. i... PRESENTATION TO BRIDEOF TODAY} Malleable Company Office | § Staff Honor Miss Ivy Burr The office staff of the Ontario Malleable Iron Company, Ltd. gave an expression of their affec- tion for one of the staff, Miss Ivy Burr, who enters thé state of matri- mony today, by meeting yesterday in the main offi¢é, where Mr. Nor- ris, Sales Manager, read the fol- lowing address and pr ted Miss Burr with a Console table and Mir- ror 'on behalf of the staff, Dear Ivy: : You, we know are looking for- ward to the approaching day of your wedding, with the happiness you feel, reflected in 'your happy smile, and with 'which 'we' have grown sp familiar during the years Since you first camo 'to' this of- ce , Our regrets In loosing you, and 'eur desire for your future happi- ness 'we "wish to keep before you in the coming years, we therefore ask you to aceept these articles in the spirit in which they are tend- ered, 'the table on which to (we hope) Yet the only burdens that you may be troubled with in this lite, and the mirror to reflect the snifles which have so endeared you to us. We, 'your fellow employees of the Ontario Malleable Iron Com- pany office staff, bid you God speed on life's journey, and-all the hap- piness possible: in the future yéars, Ry . Sincerely and Affectionately, Your fellow employees of The On- tario Malleable Iron Co., Oshawa. Miss Burr's smile and word of thanks was similar to her service in the Company in that she said little but meant much and her fel- low employees knew it. USES FOR INDIA PRINTS "Again Paris does the unusual. By the use of gold thread a cotton India print is transformed into.a sumptuous fabric of exotic beauty merely by: backing it with a wool interlining and then outlining the various parts of the design with a couching of the gold thread, thus throwing the pattern of the design into relief 'after -the manner of a quilted fabric, and emphasizing the color with the lines of gold," ac- cording to an article in the Ladies' Home Journal. "From a bag of this character, seen on the Rue de la Paix, same the idea for the conversion of an Indfa-print bedspread, with its me- dallion centre and borders of vari- ous widths, into decorative arti- ¢les for use in the home, as well as.the bags which were the origin- al source of the inspiration. "Naturally, not all parts of the design are thus outlined--this would be quite an impossible task ---but the larger motifs and the lines separating the various bands ot color should be followed, and in the case of a vine pattern, the leaves and flowers, as well us tne stem line connecting them, should be done in ohe continuous length of gold thread. The couching thread must be'pliable, so as to adapt -itself readily to curves, and should be sufficicatly heavy to stand out clearly, using . two strands if the threhd 'is fine." A GOOD FIGURE Miss Rita Hendetson, reer by teaching Jouns 'women of good family the difiéult art of the mannequin, bi ; Nevertheless the mannequin Bus-| becoming overcrowded.' Women seem to believe anybody iness is can be a mannéquin, and now that the tendency is to employ stout and middle-aged women as well as "walking lamp-posts,' all agés think there is a chance for them to display pretty clothes and earn a little money. And, * Indeed, it 1s difficult to discourage them when they know that there was a 'mannequin at Newcastle exhibition who weighed 106 pounds, : "A good figure and good apnear- ance are naturally essential for a mannequin," she says. ""But ner function is to sell thé clothes she parades--or rathér, be the means of selling them.' For that reason she must helon#'to the clas, tnat wears good clothes. a "The first attribute of the man- nequin is intelligence and 'dresk sense. 'The art of parading Jroeky and creating an atmosphere fs subtle thing. TI find it hard to de- fine in words. Besides, every man- nequin fis a deparate problem--a distinctive personality." B.A, OF London University, has made a cs- women of, " Women's Interests in the Home - a be on iif the welcome si to sive, ubder all stances, 44 t of a lady having a wonderful time--these are definite rules in the game of being a good little house guest. In addi- tion, however, there are certain fine points that make one a past master in what can be a very pleasant and subtle art, For instance, there is no definite command that the guests arriving for a week-end or longer visit should present gifts to the hostess, but it is a gesture that most persons like to make, particulasly when they are not in the position td extend return invitations. The gift may be pre- sented in person wheén one arrives, or it may be sent dfter her visit, but it is important that it should give definite = indications that much thought and care were expended on the purchase. A The gift should be either novel or luxurious, although it need not be expensive, That is'to say, it is far better to. give her one pound of de luxe salted muts than five pounds of the mediocre sort," even though the latter purchase would cost consider- ably more than the' former. Our old friends, candy and salted nuts, or combinations of the two are always welcome, but the candy should not be just a box of choco- lates obviously purchased at the rafl- road station or at a drug store en route. No matter how fond you or your hostess may be of chocolates they are hazardous purchases during these hot days, particularly when one is concerned about the appearances of the sweetmeats upon arrival, Just now the shops are showing enticing summer candies that not only keep their dainty forms during the most wilting weather but would seem to be much more alluring to the palate than the 'cloying and richer sweets of other seasons. Some shops have a delightful as- TWO BILLION 10ST "BY STOCK VALUES NEW YORK MARKET Wall Street Rocked 'by Sell- ing Orgy Follow Rise in Rediscount Rate New York, Aug. 10.--The top- heavy speculative structure, creat- ed in the securities markets of the United States by the wild specula- tion of the past few months, was rocked to its foundations yester- day by the bombshell of a higher New York Federal Reserve redis- count rate, hurled into the finan- cial district after the close of husi- ness the day before, ' Prices of active issues on the New York Stock Exchange tumbled $5 to $30 a share, with one in- active stock dropping $46, and similar recessions took place on the New York Curb Exchangé and in the stock markcts of Boston; Philadelphia, Chicago, San Fran- fisco, Los Angeles and other lurge cities. The repercussion even was felt in the bourses of Europe. Swift Opening Loss 'Two billion dollars, or more, in the quoted values of United States securities were wiped out during the day, most of it in the first fifteen minutes of (rading. Meas: uréd by the leading stock market 4 | indices, the reaction was the sev- erést on record, although in per- centage it probably fell short of the drastic break which followed the first Federal Reserve warning six months ago, when prices were considerably below recent high levels. - Wall Street had seldom seen such an accumulation of overnight selling orders. On the New York Stock Exchange at least a score of stocks opened with blocks of 10, 000 to 25,000 shares, whilé on the cub there was one block of 50,000 shares of stock and a block of 100,000 "rights". Total sales in the first half-hour on the! Stock Hx- change ran close to 1,350,000 shares, with the tape 20 minutes late, but trading slowed up consid erably later, and the tape was only a couple of minutes behind the market at the close. The day's sales were 5,022,360 shares, the largest in about five months, but well below the record of 8,246, 740 on March 26. y _ THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, AUGUST 10, 1929 -_ of choice animals. for 'Since they take up little space when deflated they are also practical from the transportation standpoint. in the sports department will be found the colorful mew beach blan- kets and pillows of terry cloth, smart accessories for the lolling and tan- ning now so modish. If your hostess is oné who burps and freckles an amusing " jnexpensive gift might be one of the new coolie hats, A new game would be an excel lent chofce * and the hostess of a large and rather mixed party would welcome ohé of the marble games, imported bottle covers waiter whose long white apron éon- ceals the bottle for the nonce and whose grotesquely carved head is the top of the cork. colorful' hard candies. - Some specfa- lize in 'week-end ' boxes--fascinating and practical hampers filled with the assorted "sweets * and delicacies for which they are Tamous. They also have a wide variety of summer can- dies, including the imitation berries, etc, Their sugar petals, made to re- semble flower pefals in varfous pas- tel colors, would be fetching on the most hot and humid afternoon. If your hostess is reducing or you would prefer to give her something other than edibles there are many novel and timely gifts and, inciden- tally, if you have time to shop around, many good bargains to be found here and there. The location of her home, the length of her visit, your degree of intimacy and the con- dition of your bank balance will all be factors in your decision. If the home is by the sea or lake or boasts a private swimming pool JF also dn" toy departments, which' * gambling devices among' the Its. There are 'droll that 'would: be idedl gifts. The favorite is a: MAN SAVES GA ning eargerly along wall in answer to his mother's call for supper, nine-year-olC - Tommy evening in the water of Lock 8 of BEFORE ITWELTS Proprietor Leaves Supper to Dash Into Blazing Office ; Toronto, Aug. 10.--Abgndonin; his supper in a near-by Jandobing when the Ontario Malt Products premises at 57A Colborne street took fire last night. J, H. Winter- bery, owner of the concern, dashed into his smoke-filled office and carried to safety two cash boxes, already hot from the approaching flames, and containing several hundred dollars. Deputy Chief Duncan M¢Lean and downtown sections quelled the |} blaze with damage of $1,000 to contents and $200 to the building, Swed by the St. James Corpora- on. Fireman William Watt of Lom- bard street (No. 5) Hose gashed hig hand in forcing a'door and was taken to 3f. Michsel's Hospital. The alarm was tursel in by P.C. Scott (248). ON WAY T0 MOTHER LITTLE LAD DROWNS Father Nearly Perishes in Attempting Rescue 10.--~Run- the concrete Campbeliford, Aug. McGill, son of Mr. and Mrs. David McGill of Merritton met death last the Trent canal. A frantic father who rushed to the rescue as the small boy stmubl- nd the Community Permanent Waves: That Are Guaranteed ONE WEEK; ONLY K AT THESE EXTRAORDINARY Permeatoil. Reg. $7.50 for $3.75 Lamona. Reg. $10.00 for $5.00 il * Latest American Waves. Do not "harm the hair in any respect, Leaves nice, soft, natural glossy waves, and do not need finger waving Experienced Operators, | 18 Ontario Street Two doors off King St. him his life. Phone 2418W ed and fell over the edge, plunged into the water but his efforts to save his son failed and nearly cost A 'poor swimmer he found himself struggling between two solid cliffs of concrete which there seemed no escape. managed to keep afloat until res- tue came. The McGill family were camping about five miles from this town on the edge of the canal in company with Richard Hewitt of Merritton and two American tourists. Hewitt told of the tragedy, ran at once for ald and 15 minutes later the body of the lad was recovered with grap- pling hooks. from He rm l, . because prices. Fisher Bod field. Luxurious comfort . . _controlled), GMR Cylinder features one wW without biq six ere's no longer any reason why you should pay the usual big six Head and a long Hist of big For Pontiac has brought the power of a Big Six engine . . the sturdy endurance of a big chassis . . the regal charm of ies . . into the low-priced Pontiac has. everything that you would ly pay Dig ad prices for. ntments . . nternal « Sep-senisd wheel Brakes, Lovejoy Absorbers, Tiltray Headlights (foot- Four. uli Shock ion caf The moment you ride in Pontiac Si the moment you drive it, Pontisa a surety there's only one Six quality without paying to Sif rice payin price P-10-8-208 way fo g BIG SIX quality | SBA, IT'S BETTER BECAUSE IT'S Cc ANADLAN | ' Y DIMPLES AND i T JUST HAVE 10 REST DoLLY , BoBOY AND COMPY 60 TRYING TO CLIMD THF BLASS MOUNTAIN BOBBY BOUNCE i fi i COME ON, COMFY- & WE WiLL TRY ONCE ; MORE ey HEY BULD ALITTLE 2D DECIDED To So SHELTER AT THE: FoOT OF THE MOUNTAIN i | THATS PRETTY COSY, sur oT 90 By ivi oa " ' --By Grace G. Drayton a a ipa BY ti Sd Peo ome N INISH EY SAD MAYBE Wes LEAS ons AEC HE MORN A TELL THEM HOw TO CLIMB THE MOUNTAIN zm So THEY CRAWLED IN THB MTTLE ~~ 8ve SHELTER AND WENT To SLEEP, A F]