Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Daily Times, 11 Mar 1930, p. 5

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i " | PAGE FIVE Srv Tomen's. Interests in 5.5 < ase THE ar DAILY TIMES; TUESDAY, MARCH 10,1930 and the Community ; Tes No. 883, Jet: thig'morning Brantford to 'the provin- fal Grand Rotse of L.O.B.A. Jarrett fs going to : y lege, Toronto, on Wed- esday to deliver an address oun he - Juvenile Court work to the staff and senjor students. Drummond-Hay, only 'of 'the late Colonel Drum. y, Coldstream Guards, of 'Perth, is joining the " Bishop Bethune College A surprise party was given for Siti ene: Warren, daughter Mr. and Mrs. Harry Warren at ne on College Avenue on oe ts. Sod riends Ba ere an a. > happy time, playing cing. Miss Alberta asionisa th og guests « with and Mrs Bako Rowes of n and Mr. Rowes' mother, ted Kine STREET YOUNG GUNG PEOPLE Pp ing street ng People's The young r homes about .very pleasant evening was at the home of Mrs. Robert : of Montrave Avenue on Fri- lay when she entertained the mem- bers of Victory No. 583 of which @ is treasurer. The guests bnjoyed themselves playing euchre: rhe prizes were won by Mrs. J. De- Mrs. Robert Barrett, Mrs. I. Hutchison and Messrs, Robert Bagrett, J. Maynes, and Robert Bint. The hostess was assisted in | = ng the lunch-by Misses Bint jiShelley and/Mr. Lee... 8 very enjoyab evening. was had at ithe home Mr, and Mrs, LV i Aylesworth, 163 Ritson Rd. #8., 'on Friday evening, March 7. y friends when a surprise recep- was held. in honor of a of Mr. and 'Mrs. Garnet ' (formerly Miss Irene Steele i t 'avonmore, Ont.). A - friendly progressive euchre was in- in -by all, followed by re- ote' HO. iE | ous | WOMEN'S MEETINGS | 15. Mrs, A. M: Irwin, p 1 1 Pile -- [ Young Fone Workogs tage |: + ST. GEORGE'S. A, ¥. ~y The regular weekly meating' of St, : Georgo's. Anglican Yous People's was held: in the Parish on Monday even. ing, March fi i , Punkin, vice- COE "Sienna, char rn C.C 0 secured as 'speaker tor the | ing gave a very ATi and in. ve lecture om "Symbolism". ry h vote of thanks was ren- dered to Mr, Stenhouse for his aplelid} d addr The oe closed with the Na~ tional Agghem, NORTH. ibEoE YOUNG. Tha North Simcoe League under the charge of Rufus Clark last eves ay a real I A Servic, The scr was y Mrs. Harold Peever. Master ony Cranfield en- Sertained wi the guitar. Miss Mill ith 8 selections. Frank gave a fine , Mrs. in beautiful solo. The, rath by. 1 was the ry of the This a dressy scription, tr Ei the au speaker her enhan- g 'by Ais clear and to the questions that: {Ema po a = by Leagite met on Monday, March 10, 1930, with-an attendance of 101. It was Missionaty night, the program being red: by Bert Wood, lead er of I "B". Wallace chairman for the evening hg ture. kash was read 'by tru ae Cumme, ollowed with a piano se}- ection by Hattie Lamb, The president, Ed. Kiefaber, cop- ducted the business period, after which the meeting was given itil to Bert Wood. The topic for the evening was "Africa," and was divided into four parts. Jennie Pringle gave a short talk, settingea backgeound for the others to follow,-and describing Af- rica as it was b ore here. Lota gommenced there. 'Leona ned Shel, wou a few minutes Xe eas Ets also the labour. Ida | Comgie. then told of the progress made by our missionaries, medical and educational lines. The last speaker, Beifcs Shortt poke on. "Bringing Lives to Christ," giv- pod short account of the life of Mary Mitchell iSlesgor; hen missionary ng was given Doris: Warburton, following = wi the meeting was dismis.ed with a hymn, and benedicticn by Mr, Cragg. ithe eeting. reprry ing. vened. m sing- ing of a hymn and repeating the Lord's Prayer in unison, Mrs. Ro- bertson read the Bible lesson. The meeting was then opened for the | discussion of business, The Feports '| given by the several group were: very encouraging, It was teresting to note thleplondid work. that has been done by the district Fialtare. Max, Nicholl and Mrs. Rob- indicatea in the ox 1% feived pe pery good i 2 S CORNER WOODEN DISHES £2 -- ations in 'mys! irls_whé tried examin: jose an ig Je. ho tried adios 3 int ond Histo ho Music and first class' honors; Hammond, fwho tried Theory of Music and ob- tained first class honors and Betty Trewer who tried Th of Music and got a mark of 98 per cent, first s honors, Ld LA J a Inter-form 'ice hockey matched have rn. played 'off lately." Form Four beat Lower Fifth, 2-1 and 'then played had Fifth, "This game end- but the replay resdited in . victory for Upper, Fifth 2-0. Upper Fifth then played Sixth form at the arena and 'were defeated 2.1 after a hard game. These inter-form matches are not as unequal as they sound. - Members of ail the forms play. in the school team, either as principals or 'substitutes and the win. ning goal in a recent match against O.LC. {vas shot by, a. member of fourth 'fodm, On Friday afternoon, Februasy 28, all the Seniors whose parents wished it were allowed to go home fur the week-end, returning on Sunday .ev- ening." The Juniors who were not accorded this privilege consoled themselves with a magic lantern show of Old Japan, and-a party with impromptu théatricals. On Thursday last the Seniors went to the Regent Theatre and saw the film picture' "Disraeli" which they all enjoyed fumensely. On Saturday the Tutiors st entertainment for the schocl, spectators declared it to be rate." Following is the Action' songs -- Sh i e "first rogramme : ow March, league Windy Nights. Play--~Thé Armchair, . Action Songs--Vespers. |The evening ended with a trea- sure hunt. MOONLIGHT JOYS Have you ever fastened your smow- shoes on, At the close of a Winter's day? By the moon's biight light, on a sparkling t-- Seen ihe charms 'of the woodland way Have you: ever iraveled unblemished snow Say! Can you understand ? How your heart unfolds what a- joy iv holds I have -- and k-deem it grand. Have you ever thought you were quite alone, ¢ As you tramped that moonlit wa: Then, perhaps, you'd turn, and yr joy discern-- Your dog not far away? Do you own a dog that would follow Whatever might be his fate, Loves to be vou, for friendship true ?-- I have--and | think he's great. Have you ever wandered beneath the stars, where the fir trees grow? ir' Winter dress, with its loveliness -- Of shimmering, shining snow? Have you felt the solace the silence brings Out hen in the lonely wood? Found the gentlg calm, had a heal. mg balm?- I have--and I know it's good. ~Hon, George Henry has 8 iu a perfectly good game' with new markers -- automobile poker. Kit .chener Record. When a girl tells you that she can't sing, let it go at that; it's ten to one that 3he is telling the truth, ~Detroit New Seen hr wooden ware has long le, but now the sim- {or beauty of natural wood is. slow: ly being realized, For 'actual utility the plain unpainted wood cannot be beate.s, and whep it is well tuned and finished there' is nothing that conveys a gréater note of refinenient. The wooden plattér or bowl is ex- cellent for bread ~nd fruit, It can- not be broken, and may be scrub- bed until it is seruplously clean. The wooden toast rack, wooden egg-cups, and wooden serviette rings are other items which call for consideration, cigarette 'boxes, and powder bowls may' beleited, > Most fascinating of all, perhaps; the natural wood furniture, fur the madern kitchen or nursery. Little chairs and tables in light wood are possibly ' healthiest and cleanest things a child could have, There is this about the plain wood too,~you can always paint it your~ self. Scarlet furniture in a grey bed- room is an attractive combination. The thing to do perhaps, would he to start with a lightish shad that you could give different co hy coats when you wanted a change. RECIPES MARMALADE GRIDDLE CAKES (About '18 cakes) 2 cups flour 1 tablespoon Wd powder 1 teaspoon salt 3 tablespoons sugar egg 1% cups milk 3 tablespoons melted butter. Orange marmalade Extra sugar, Mix and sift dry ingredients. Add beaten egg and milk. Beat thor- oughly and add butter. Drop by Jarge spoonfuls on a hot greased iddle. When puffed, full of bub- and cooked around the edges t and 'cook on the other side. Spread cakes with orange marma- ade. Rolf up like jelly rolls. Sprinkle with sugar and serve at once. ° ORANGE OMELET (Serves 4-6 persons) 6 eggs 2 tablespoons powdered sugar 14 teaspoon salt 3; teaspoon cornstarch 2 teaspoons lemon juice ¥4 cup orange juice Sliced oranges for" garnishing. Extra powdered sugar. \ Separate egg yolks from 'whites Mix together the sugar, salt, corn- stich, lemon and orange juice, Beat the egg yolks light and add this mix- ture ta them. Beat the cgg whites stiff and dry. Fold in the first mix- ture and turn into a well-oiled ome- let pan. When done garnish with the sliced oranges sprinkled with the powdered sugar and serve. HOSPITAL AUXILIARY 'The regular monthly meeting of the Hospital Auxiliary was held at the Nurses' Residence yesterday afternoon, Mrs. R. 8, McLaugh, the president, who was absent for the last meeting was in the chair. There was a very good attendance of twenty-five. Plans for redecor- ating the Nurses' Residence were discussed and final arrangements were made for the bridee that is to be held in the Masonic Temple, on March 17, Mrs. McLaughlin reported that she had been talk- ing to Dr: Scammell during his re- cent visit to the city. Dr, Scam- mell' is the Field Superintendent of the American College of Nurses and Physicians with which the Oshawa Hospital is afliated. Al though the official report of his in- spection of the local hospital has nop yet been made out, he stated that the eauipment is first class, and that the hosnitdl 1s being run fn the best of order. Ata ------------ The speaker was enumerating in impassioned tones the evils of the "What we want to do," he Jd, "is to get rid of "Socialism, Radicalism, Bolshevism, Communism, Anarchism and Sovietism." "An while 're about it," chimed in a weather eaten old man, "can't ye throw in Rheumatism." To PUBLIC SCHOOLS TO HAVE CONTEST Final Speeches of Youthful Orators to be Heard at Collegiate On Friday evening at 8 o'clock, the first inter-Public School ora- torical contest that has ever been staged in the city will take place. This splendid enterprize is being sponsored by the Home and School Council of Oshawa, and worth while prizes will be given the winner and also the eight con- testants for the final prize. Practi-J cally all the pupils of the senior forms of the public schools have entered this competition with en- thusiam. By the process, of illimin- ation the representatives from each school will be chosen, until there are eight, that is one representa- tive from each school, to compete for the honor of first place on Fri< day evening, at the Collegiate Audi- torum. A list of subjects that these young orators have to choose trom is as follows: Methods , of Transportation, Famous Canadians, Early Days in Oshawa, Canada in Winter, Aviation, Canadian Bird Life, Camp Life, Canadian Trees and Natural Resourses of Canada. Each speaker will be allowed six minutes for his talk. The list of judges has not yet been completed but it is certain that Mrs. H. Price of Toronto, president of the Home and School Council of that city, will be one. The names of those re- presenting the different schools will be announced later. FASHION NOTES SEPARATE BOLERO Léce and chiffon frocks for spring evenings may have separate bolero jackets, with long sleeves, which are detachable BLACK IS THE COLOR A recent visitor to the Capital says that the most charming even: ing gowns and daytime frocks are of black trimmed lightly with some pastel shade of green, pink mauve or tan, SHEPHERD'S CHECKS A little travelling suit is made old-fashioned ghepherd's checks in black ami ite and uses a sweet band-blotked crepe for its blouse, with black checks on white, GROSGRAIN RIBBON Grosgrain ribbon comes into its own this spring. It trints hats, binds them, edges scarfs, pipes frocks, makes belts and flowers for party gowns. FLARING HEM AND THE NEW SCARF NECKYINE By Annette A black silk erope 15 an exéel- Silhouette of Youth With Moulded Hipline {lent choice for all around daytime occasions, 'particularly with flat tering eggshell silk crepe collar as model fllustrated. This attractive scarf collar {s passed through a "}strap of 'material at end of open Vionnet neckline. The wide loose ends reach to about normal waistline, and tend to break the width through the bodige, The pointed treatment at the front and at the back of the bod. is 4 clever ides to add length to the figure, It also emphasizes the flat hipline, { (~~ The attached two-piece circular) skirt is shaped through the hips with a widening toward, hbm that shows rippling fulness, Style No, 368 rather suggests in sizes 16. 18 30 ears, 36, 38, 40 and '4% inch _ the 89-inch material yh fF 36-inch contrasting for oe profi rd of eh Plain 'propriate. . Patte: 'cents or coin Eg Vi we Vv fe xg Princess silhouette, It fs designed |. medium size, it takes 3% Janda ot |, chiffon. "and Rayou novelties 45° ap-| An bs is health e i r should not. hes te to 5 table, Compound ed ta sample Liver Pills I ld he the package. 1 have oo them every heidi since end : NTE TIL IETITRS Yeoetable Compound WOMEN'S VOICES MORE DELIGHTFUL Towonto, Ont, March 11--A writ- er in the "Mail and Empire" says: We are not aware that any women arc radio broadcasters. Still less are we aware of any reason why they should be, By this we mean that, while there may be women broad- casters whom we do not know of, women are quite as competent for the job as men. - We think that all men will agree that in favorable cir- cumstances women's voices are plea- santer than a man's, And in all cir- cumstances they are more penetrat- ing. If a broadcaster has a pleasant pentrating voice he has about 50 per cent. of what the best broadcaster can have. In the important broadcasts such as great sporting events, it is hard ly likely that women will supplant men than that they will supplant them as protagonists in the heavy- weight championships or the world's series; They will hardly become ime terested enough in sports to become experts, 'In broadcasting the hoc- key finals we should expect Mrs. Me- Namece to be a terrible flop, But in all other fields when women's knowl edge is not necessarily inferior to men's there is no reason why they should: not 'make just as 'good an- nouncers. Wehave a notion that just as they (hetcaraon better so their voices wild record better. We call attention to the generally charm. mg voices of "telephone operators, which are invariably more delighttul than those of telephone linemen, or even the chief executives of the tele phone companies. NO SLUMP IN MARRIAGE 'MARKET Montreal, Que., March 11. -- The stock Market may be down, but: the "Your Vegetable Com-} SPRING TIME IS HERE! And 'that means a considerable 'amount ot work and a lot of extra washing for, the women who do not own a Connor Electric Not purchase that electric washer now. WHY You will buy one sooner or later, } Why go on slaving when a Tew cents a week ~ will pay for one. Here Is Our Offer Pick out any make of electric washer you think is the Conncr Thetos equal, have it sent to your home, We will be only to send you a Connor Thermo. bis en and buy the one wo, Run them botls You Think Is the Better You Will Buy a Connor Thermo Our guarantee protects you for 12 years. Just ask any Con- nor owner for your own satisfaction, A small deposit: will place a Connor Thermo in your home. 18 months to pay. EASY TERMS ) Phone 907 for Free Demonstration Connor Washer Sales 12 Bond Street East, Oshawa Phone 907 N. S; McNALLY, General Merchant, Blackstock, Ont. Sub Agent marriage market, in' this city, at any rate, displayed a firm fone with ris. ing tendency just before Lent. One morning 25 blushing - brides, with their bride-grooms left the city on the morning "honeymoon" trains from Windsor . 'station to OQttawi, Quebec and New York. Canadian Pacific station officjals, under: whose sympathetic eyes the jolly and some- times uproarious leave-takings of newly-joined -. couples © and newly- parted relatives take place, and who can, from their lengthy experience, compare the scasoned fluctuations: of the hymeneal market, state the 25 honeymoon departures in two hours from one station is unusually heavy, even compared with the first week 1m June. WOMEN'S INSTITUTE STARTED IN WALES London, March 11--Miss Megan Lloyd George, M.P., when speaking before the Welsh group of the For- um Club said Welsh women were to be found in the forefront of every progressive movement and sometimes they led tlie way. Where, for instance, nad the Wo- men's Institute Movement started? This enterprise which brought new life to women in rural areas had be. gun inLlanrairpyligwyngylgogerych: wyrndrobwll - Plandysailiogogogoch. This "mouthful" held no terrors for Miss Lloyd-George but a Cana- dian present seemed to think that the: Women's [ustitute Movement was started by a Canadian woman whose birthplace was much easier to remember than all that, and who might later be heard from. TWO NEARING CENTURY MARK Mrs. Sarah Rodenhiger, of Lun- enburg, N.S., recently celebrated her 94th birthday. Mrs. Roden: hizgr possess a wonderful memory and can still repeat poems learned in her early childhood. She is in good health and retains the full use of all her faculties. Accidents win Happen That's all you can say about an accident -- it. just hap- pens. You can be .as care- ful as possible and yet some one else is careless. In short you gan't prevent ac- cidents. Put you can safe- guard againkt serious cou- sequences that ofttimes.fol- low. Keep your medicine chest well stocked with Firstaid Sick Room Sup- plies and you need never worry about infection.' For example, some mem- ber of .your family is cut. You wash the injury with disinfectant, apply Purtest Jodine, swaddle it in First- ajd Absorbent Cotton, Wrap it with Firstaid Sterilized Gauze * and bind it with Firstaid Surgical Plaster, You can"then be sure that you have closed the door to fnfection, / Adhesive Plaster + + + « 10c, 20¢, 25¢, 35c Firstaid Cotton 15¢, 28c, 40¢ Rurtest Iodine sone 15c, 20c, 35¢ Sterile Gauze Pads Nera 5c, 6 for 20c Boracie Acid +» 10¢, 15¢c, 85¢, B00 Peroxide «os 20¢, 85c, B0c Don't wait for accidents to happen --- be prepared ----- stock up mow, Fronr the REXALL STORE Jury & Lovell King E. Simcoe 8. Phone 28 Phowe 68 uet COKE a ib Winter Pests

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