THE OSHAWA DAILY. TIMES, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 23,1927 -- i... WOMEN'S DAILY INTEREST SOCIAL and PERSONAL The Times invites the co- uperation of its readers in contributing items to this column, Send in = post- card or phone 38. Success of the kind that speaks clearly of greater things in the future crowned the Oshawa Music Study Club's concert at the Simcoe United Church last evening, in which Mme. Jeanne Dusseau, soprano, and Alberto Guerrero, pianist, were the artists. In point of numbers, the concert ---- Ee --Mr. J. J. Burns was the guest at the Lewis-Comstock wedding, which was held in Brockville, on Saturday. ~--Mrs. Kennedy, has returned to her home in this city after spending a week with her daughter, Mrs. O. R. Stalter, at Omemee. --Mr. Harry Irish, 73 William street, left today for the Orthopedic Hospital in Toronto where he will take treatments. --Rev. Dr. and Mrs. W. P. Fletch- er are teaching this week at the Standard Leader Training School at Bowmanville, where there are over 130 registered students in attend- ance, --We were pleased to have a call at The Times office from Mr. C. J. Horn now of Orillia but for many years a resident of Oshawa. Mr. Horn is in the City visiting his son, Norman, and his granddaughter, Mrs. Plouff at 263 Mary Street, also other friends and relatives in the City and district. Mr. Horn will celebrate his seventy-eighth birth- day on Thursday of this week but despite his advanced age he is in excellent health. He has been a sub- Avoid A Breakdown ! 4 Melancholy, restlessness and worry are sure signs of a nervous break- down, Don't delay--take By MERVINE GUARANTEED) MILES' Sold by Jury & Lovell, Oshawa, Orit. Now no one need be con- tent with unknown, inferior silverware. This 15-Piece Honeymoon Set in the famous TUDOR PLATE Made by the Makers of Community Plate a complete service for four, in any one of the four charm- ing TUDOR PLATE patterris, cased in a striking orange- and-black chest--all for less than a ten dollar bill! Covered by a Replacement Guarantee CONTENTS 4 Teaspoons 4 Forks 4 Korte 1 Tables; 1 Butter Knife 1 Sugar Bassett's On Oshawa's Main Corner set a record for Oshawa. showed clearly that this city has a large and intelligently appreciative body of mus- ic lovers to whom a program such as Mme. Dusseau and Signor Guerrer: gave forms one of the year's hap- piest events. To compare the performance of either artist with each other would be unjust. The infinite variety of music as an art had in both great exponents of the particular fields each had chos- en. The audience showed ecual up- preciation of Mme. Dusseau's amaz ing voice and of Signor Guerrero's amazing mastery of the piano. The program began with the Osh- awa Music Study Club's double oc- tette of ladies who sang Vogt's "In- dian Lullaby" and Offenbach"s "Bar- carolle.," They were introduced by Mrs. C. M. Mundy, president of the Club, as evi- dence of a new activity in the or- ganization under whose auspices: last | night's concert was given. The double octette's performance was one deserving of very high praise. i They were not only musically effective, | but they have that rare thing which | is a composite individuality, They | damatized their numbers, not merely | mechanically, but as an expression of n | seriber for The Oshawa Daily Times "| and previously The Reformer since the first issue came out in 1871, "Weddings HARDER----WILKINSON On Tues a quiet wedding was solemnized at the King street United Church parsonage when Lena May | Wilkinson, daughter of Mr, and Mrs. | Samuel Johnston, of this city, was united in the holy bonds of matri- | mony with Mr. Wesley C. Harder of | Detroit, Michigan. The Rev. C. W. | DeMille officiated. | COLE--DWYER pretty wedding took place lon Saturday afternoon at St. Greg- |ory's rectory, when Catherine Ellen | daughter of the late Joseph and | Ellen Dwyer of Peterboro, hecame ithe bride of Kenneth Wellington | Cole, son of Mr. and Mrs. James Cole of Waterloo, Rev, Father P, J. | Bench, officiating, Inoked | A very | The bride charming in a {gown of pink and mauve crepe. ro- maine and carried a bouquet of [Ophelia roses and lily-of-the-valley. | Miss Edna Cole, sister of the groom, | attended the bride, while James | Dwyer, brother of the bride, attend- lor the groom. | Later Mr. and Mrs. | wedding trip to Toronto, | Falls and Kitchener and on their {return they will reside in Oshawa. MEN'S | RUBBERS . 95¢c 1. Collis & Sons 50-54 King Street West, Oshawa Opp. Centre St. Phone | SPECIAL | Get Your Sopplie -- at the -- Goods Co. Lead 8 Sale is Still Going Strong 82 Simcoe St, 8. | | | | | [ | Phone 740 | Fell Bros. 2 he LEADING JEWELERS | Established 1886 12 Simcoe St. South eo 3 PHONE-- King Street West Argue McLaughlin Coal Co. For Prompt Delivery, Correct Weight, Quality and Service Coal of the Very Finest Quality COKE Hamilton By-Product -- The Faultless Fuel HARDWOOD Good Clean Dry Hardwood, Hardwood Slabs, Soft Wood Slabs Argue McLaughlin Coal Co. 1246 . Opening Concert of Season Auspices Music Study Club Proves Brilliant Success Cole left on a | Niagara : 733W | | their inward appreciation of their meaning. It can be freely predicted that Mus- ic Study Club's double octette will make history in Oshawa. If a sug: gestion were in order, they will not be long in giving a concert of their own and filling it with selections from the romantic melodies of Franz Schu- bert. Mme. Dusseau, with Mrs. A. M. Russel of Toronto as acompanist, be- gan the scheduled program by sing- ing a Spanish song of the seas by Sadero, which was followed by a selec- tion from "Carmen." Signor Guerrero followed and gave Beethoven's Sonata (Op. 57). He scor- ed the evening's first triumph. Musie, again, has infinite variety. It is not merely melody and rhythm, but, in some of its higher aspects, an exer- cise in pure reason. This selection from Beethoven illustrated it. gan with an experimental refrain that a tyro in music, one could imagine, ! would pick out in a moment brushed by the wings of insperation. Then, with those notes as the starting point, the splendor of the sonata was de- veloped into an empire of harmony. Little by-ways were there; rippling detours into hidden country; and at the last the crashing wonder of some imperial highway thronged with the pageantry of unbelievable splendor. It be-; "We could go far enough away from the main street to get a large lot and build the Temple there where it might be surrounded by lovely grounds. Such a buliding would be an inspiration to us in the erection of other public build- ings which the years will require." Grand Officers The banquet given by Cedar Lodge in the convention hall of General Mo- tors of Canada, Limited, marked the close of one of the most remarkable Masonic gatherings in local history The ceremonies of the evening were carried out in the Masonic Lodge rooms with a distinguished muster of Grand Lodge officers present as well as hundreds of visiting Masons repre- senting practically every Masonic dis- trict in Ontario. It was officially named "Industrial Night" and was marked by Cedar Lodge's election of officers for the coming 'year. The after-dinner hour of the ban- quet was initiated by Wor. Bro. Felt who called upon Rt. Wor. Bro. James Moore, M.D, to propose the toast to "The King and the Craft" Dr. Moore was described by the worshipful master as a noble representative of a noble profession whom grateful humanity ever regards with love--the Country Doctor. Rt. Wor. Bro. Moore declared that he pleaded guilty to the charge, when he rose to speak after the hundreds in the convention hall had greeted him by singing "My Wild Irish Rose." The lateness of the hour, he said, forbade his speaking at length; the toast it- self was self-explanatory, witnessing alike the Mason's loyalty to his King and to his ancient Craft. Rt. Wor. Bro. G. M. Goodfellow, district deputy grand master of the local Masonic District, replied to the toast. Tribute of Admiration He paid a tribute of admiration to Cedar Lodge for the splendid way in which its ritual work had been carried out earlier in the evening; and then referred to the Grand Master, Most Wor. Bro. the Hon. John S. Martin, as one who brought more honor to that An encore was demanded and Gluck's ballet from "Orpheus" warded the audience's insistence, Mme, Dusseau returned to the con- cert stage and sang her second group | consisting of "Still as the Night" by | Vaughn, "A La Claire Fontaine," "Hush-a-ba Birdie" and "Come to me." All were splendidly rendered, excel- lent in voice and expression, but Mme. | Dusseau's triumph for the evening was | yet to follow. As an encore she gave "Highland Man" which, while Scotch | in spirit, gave a new interpretation "of the Caledonian spirit which has nothing to do with dialect. Signor Guerrero's final numbers were Chopin's "Ballade in A Flat," Liszt's "Diebestraum" and the Schultz- Evler arrangement. of the "Blue Dan- ube Waltz." re | The music of the latter has been familiar for several generations, but in Guerrero's hands it became a thing | of wonder and delight, | It began with a movement that seemed to involve every note in the scale, a living mossaic of sound, flow- ing with expressive grace. Then the audience realized, It was the spirit of the rivers that was cascading from the instrument where Signor Guer- rero sat as the master and almost as a magician. Testifying their appreciation, Sig- nor Guerrero was called upon for an encore and played a Chopin waltz and bowed himself from the platform. It was now Mme. Dusseau's final appearance, Her three - numbers Brahm's "Miene Liebe ist Grun," Bes- | 1y's "Three Little Fairy Songs," and La Forge's "Song of the Open." The test of a soprano voice's great- ness is volume and purity. In the "Song of the Open" Mme. | Dusseau triumphed in both particulars | and won not onl applause, but the ' pride of a Canadian audience that Canada has produced such a glorious voice, The concluding notes of La Forges song rises like a lance, and up that ascent of rich melody Mme. Dussecau's voice soared with the sheer abandon | of the lark. Up, up, and ever crystal | clear, it seemed that the soul itself | must follow such a flight of beatific sound, MASONIC TEMPLE | { v Continued f from page 1) or of membership in the Order, he! told me that no man could become a Mason and not be the better man for it. In due course it was my privilege and pleasure to take the degree. | "We have heen talking about the | proposed temple for some time, and was glad to hear Rt, Wor. Bro. Rice | of Toronto, in his remarks on 'the building of West Toronto's Temple, touch on some points that have been in our own minds. "I think I may say that we are going to have a Temple and we are going id have a nice Temple. When it is | completed there will be no mortgage | on it. "But what struck me in Rt. Wor. | Bro. Rice's address was his saying that the West Toronto brethren had de- cided that it wasn't necessary for them to build on a front strect. Should Set High Standard "I think, sometimes, that in the | | | | | | we have put too much emphasis on the utilitarian. The new Temple should set a higher standard. | of what it means. | about | trict No. i the toast. building up of this dear old city of ours | he Duchess 'who hid not previously patriarchate of Masonry than, perhaps, any of his predecessors: The King was pledged by the de- puty grand master as one who had | graciously given two of his sons to the Craft, and thercby again demonstrated the high concern 'of British royalty for the Order that forms the bulwark of the Throne. Bro. H. A. Brown was introduced to the craft as a Mason who had but lately been appointed vice president and general manager of General Mo- tors of Canada, Limited, in whom the Order saw combined all those qualities which make the Masonic character, Mr. Brown, in replying, declared that he was no speech maker, but he was certain that he could at least in- cite argument by pointing out the need of a Masonic Temple in Oshawa PAGE FIVE RY'S is known all over the world for its delicacy of flavour. It has a rich '"'chocolaty" aroma---never associ- ated with cocoas of ordinary quality -- which stimulates the appetite and helps you to enjoy the nourishing qualities of this famous beverage. rm --_--= Fry's Cocoa is made from a blend of the highest quality cocoa beans that the market affords, by processes perfected in nearly 200 years of experience. Its Purity is assured. Pa Ag ppl CEL SEEESES KN Get a tin from your grocer today. 208 rr Established 1728 The Oldest Cocoa and Chocolate House (laughter). : "I must confess," he said, "that my | mind was somewhat distracted during the recent ceremony at the lodge rooms. I was wondering if I had suffi- cient insurance to care for my family if the building caught fire. can, however, speak about Ma- sonry in Industry, and this is my idea "I think if you take any three fel- | lows and assign them to a job, and if one of them is a Mason, you would get I am sure that he will be the Lodge. the candidate of the evening { he is related to me. a man of sterling character admission into Masonry ifying to me personally. you know, Col. distinguished service to the He was in London | 1. Pl actually on | very deeply he plann rred upon me dy of che Int a credit to in reply, said: "I am ible of the honor con- on my being admit- is of the greatest and fraternities, I the ink you bottom of my heart," zing of "Auld Lang , known in Masonic "Fourth during the war. when war was decl: his way to Ge to specialize lips, red, rmany whee in the stu Bells "There is little that I 'can say about because too, is and is very. grat- As most of Phillips rendered very Empire But he, a to join listed a "Speci Stiry dlan | ce and was soon in bre awarded h acter of his se sy Lg en banqu as the Master Mason's , came to an end. t once nee ireles 1 il decorations tes to the cha Iree'" interesting replies from - these men about their work. Make Something Better "The first man, if you said: 'What are you working for?' might tell you that he was working for so much a day; the next might be a bit more explicit and tell you what he was ac- | tually doing; but the third man, the Mason, would, in his heart at least, de- clare that he was working to make something better than had ever been | made before. in "I could also speak of the antiquity of our Order, but that might lead into difficulties, I am told that three men --a surgeon, an architect, and a Bol- shevik--were having an argument that same thing, what is the oldest profession "The surgeon declared that man was operated on in the Garden of Eden and that gave surgery the primacy. "The architezt, with a smile, declared that the world" had been built out of | chaos in seven days, hence the archi- tect was the oldest of professions. "The Bolshevik therely asked a question: 'Where did chaos come | from?' H Wor. Bro. Tamblyn proposed the | toast to "Visiting Brethren," stating that actions speak louder than words and that Cedar Lodge's hospitality was evident in the spirit of the occasion. Rt. Wor. Bro. A. B. Rice, district deputy grand master of Toronto Dis- 11, AF. & AM, replied to He, too, was impressed with the lateness of the hour and hesitated to present, as he had been asked, a state- ment of the methods used in financing West Toronto's Temple. "I might, he declared, "follow the system of the young author who took his first book to a master craftsman to get advice on how to improve it. He was told that his novel was really excellent. But there wasn't enough life in it at the beginning. 'You want something startling in the way of dia- logue,' he was told. | "So this young author went away and | came back later with this amendment which began the book: 'Oh, --- said joined in the conversaiion. The speaker, however, told how West Toronto had met the challenge TN Colds at High Speed A single sip of Buckley's Mix- ture brings a surprising sense of re- lief from coughing and soreness. Delights the palate and clears the throat and tubes. Wards off Pneu- menia, "Flu" and other dangerous developments from "a cold", Never be without a 'bottle. AlN deggists sell "Buckley's". For severe colds accompanied by fever, Beadache or neuralgia, take LAXPYRIN and Buckley's Mixs ture and quick relief will follow. CKLE LE Phone 1246 \¢ Acts like a flash -- a single sip proves iz 554 of its Masonic growth, and how. the had 3 justified them in every way. Began In Small Way ] Beginning with two lid and al | Chapter, West ' Toronto's Temple is | now: the home of seven Blue Lodges land a Chapter. One of the Lodge: | being named in honor Major General | Mercer, member of tue original lodge, { who was killed in France, the only | officer of his rank to fall in battle | during the war. The Lodge named for | hin stands as the hignest Masonic | tribute that could be paid to the valor, patriotism, and lovable character of the man. The toast to Col [evenings candidate, was prefaced by | Wor. Bro. McLaughlin, the proposer | {by an expression of his appreciation | jot the kind remarks made by the Wor- shipful Masier concerning Mr. Browu's | appointment as General Motors gen- i eral manager. | "Son ie very | | Years Phillips, as ihe kind things were said rowan," he 'deelared, "and! t cay that § am ery happy | t his appointment. He is a Mas a man of sterling character, and abe on, ild Raspb erries from Muskoka give M Laren's INVINCIBLE Jelly ye Matchless Flavor . GET) IFFERENT", "Distinctive", "Subtle", "Zestful", Delighted women use these and kindred words to express their opinions of McLaren's "Invincible" Raspberry Jelly. 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