Oshawa Daily Times, 1 Oct 1928, p. 5

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{HE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, UL I1UBER |, 1928 PACE FIV SOCIAL and PERSONAL The Times 1 favites the co- operation of its readers in comtributing items to this column. Send in a posteard or phone 35. Miss Avni Armstrong of Janet- ville is the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Norval Ficmin, He Miss Edith Vokes of Walkerville, spent the week-end at her home, Al- bert street, here. x 'Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Henley spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs, E. E. Thompson i in Guelph, Mr. and Mrs. W. Alchin have re- turned from a two weeks' motor trip through Faster Gntatie and Quebec. Mr. and Mrs, Sam Gummer of Nor- ham were the Quests of Mr, and Mrs. Knapp, 12 McGregor street, over s week-end. ' * 3 Mr. Lex. McCormack attended the 25th anniversary of his parents, Mr, and Mrs, James McCormick, Peter- boro, wedding, Thnrsday. Mrs. Maizaye: ". Yonner. Grand Chiei of the Pythian Sisters of On- tario, spent the week-end with Mr. and Mrs. Schwartz, Oak street. * * Mr, and Mrs. James Graham and baby, Jean, of Copetown visited Mrs. Graham's sister, Mrs. A. Pipher, Bruce street, over the week-end. * * Miss Eleanor McLaug! hlin, "Park- wood," one of this season's debutan- tes, is heing entertained at a tea by Miss Viclet Meyers in Toronto, Tues- day, October 2. * * A number of friends of Miss Ade- lyn Duquette surprised her at her home, Church street, Friday last. The evening was spent in games and dancing, A dainty luncheon was ser- ved by the hostess, "The Everready Bible Class of Sim- coe Street United Church had a suc- Common soaps with their harsh action, cause woollens to mat and shrink, Lux safely and thoroughly removes every trace of dist and leaves all woollens deli fully soft and fluffy, They A nicer=-wear Lux is a boon for baby's things, ONLY LUX CAN GIVE LUX RESULTS | shown in homes. cessful corn roast at "Idyle A Wyle," the summer home of Miss Esther Hawley, Lakeview Park, Wednesday evening last. There were about 40 members present. . 303 returned dn Mr. and Mrs. Haversonm, Richmond street, have from spending two months Northern Ontario. . % Mr. F. Boyce and daughter, Ed- na,.ot Collingwood, are spending a few days with the former's brother, Mr. H, Boyes, Oshawa Boulevard. % Mrs. L. F. Palmer and daughter, and Mrs, F, C, Porter returned home Saturday, after spending the summer months at Newcastie Beach, * % % Mr. and Mrs, W. L. Law, accom- panied by Mr. and Mrs, Ivan M. Law of "Fairthorne Farm," Bowmanville, have returned from a motor trip to Windsor, and Detroit, celebrating their 49th wedding anniversary with their daughters, Mrs. Hammond and Mrs. Allen, of Wi indser and Detroit. Mr. and Nee oy L. Ellsworth, "Glenalton," Ridley Park, Toronto, gave a debut tea on Saturday after- noon for their daughter, Miss Betty Ellsworth. Miss Eleanor McLaugh- lin, "Parkwood, was among the season's debutantes who assisted and who were entertained at a theatre party later by the hostess. Among the guests, who numbered 50, were Mr. and Mrs, Jon Pangman, Mr. hillips i this eity. and Mrs. Eric Weddings BABCOCK---ARMSTRONG The marriage was solemnized in Yorkminster Chureh, Toronto, Satur- day, September 22, of Alma Beatrice Armstrong, 76 Brock street east, and Barton Babcock, 190 Bruce street. Rev. W. A. Cameron officiated, Wedding of Coolidge's Son is Expected in December New Haven, Sept. 30.--A White House wedding in December is planned for John Coolidge and Miss Florence Trumbull, it was re- ported tonight, It 1s said that Miss Trumbull has told several friends that she preferred a date some time after Christmas, Acocrding to reports emanating from the general offices of the New Haven Railroad, John Coolidge will resign immediately after his marriage to amept a position with a western railroad with headuar- ters in Chicago, 'SOCIETY BOOTLEGGER' GIVEN STIFF TERM Philadelphia, Sept, 80.--Joel D, Kerper, "society bootlegger," must spend 15 months in the Federal penitentiary at Atlanta and pay a fine of $20,000 for violating the Fed: eral prohibition statutes, The fine and sentence were imposed by Fed- eral Judge Dickenson on Friday af- ter Kerper had entered a plea of guilty Tuesday. In addition Kerper must forfeit a new automobile and all 13 store of 'cut and synthetic" lign is, A pad- lock will be placed co: the establish- ment he operated here for several years, the court ruled. Kerper's trial, which ended when the defendant abruptly changed his plea, was featured by a number of witnesses, prominent in business and social circles, to testify regarding purchases of illegal liquor they made from Kerper. COLORED TALKING MOVIE MACHINES London, Sept. 30.--Martin Harper, an inventor, said today that he had perfected an apparatus which would enable colored talking movies to be He said the device would he marketed in a few months Manufactured CUSTOM SU Woman's Daily Interest LAK KNIGHTS ATTEND ALBERT STREET CHURCH "The Enlightening Christ" Subject of Rev.'R. A. Whattam A re] tative attendance of the Royal Knights joined with the Albert Street United Church congre- gation Sunday evening making an unusually large gathering, Special musical offerings were given, the choir singing "The King of Love My Shepherd Is," with great effect. parts were taken by Mrs. F. J. Wil liams, and Miss M. Hurlbert, and Messrs. Sampson and Houghton. Miss M. Hurlbert sang the solo, "The Better Land," in a sweet voice. Rev, R. A, Whattam gave as his sermon "The Enlightening Christ." He spoke of Christ as the Creator of the world and as knowing the life in it with absolute completeness. He pointed out that Christ revealed to the heart and mind of man the sec- rets and mysteries of religion and of life itself. "Christ is the Light of Truth, the Light of Love, and the Light of Life" stated Mr. Whattam. The sermon was illustrated by incidents from the experiences of the wisest scientists who bowed to the greater Light of Jesus Christ, In closing, Mr. Whattam stressed the reality of religion and commend: ed Christianity in its truth and rea- lity to the members of the Order in the church as the unanswerable argu- ment of their faith, KINGSTON WEDDING CELEBRATED EVENT Richard Cartwright of Te. ronto United in Marriage to Miss Cecil Macnee A lavely autumn wedding of widespread interest took place Sat- urday at 8.30 at the picturesqe home of the bride's parents, Mr, and Mrs. Francis Hil] MacNee, "St. Lawrence Cottage," . King street west, Kingston, when their only daughter Cecil was united in marriage to Richard Louis Cart- wright of Toronto, son of Mr, and Mrs. H, Cartwright of Toronto, and grandson of the late Sir Richard and Lady Cartwright, of Kings- ton. The bride, given in marriage by her father, wore her lovely wed- ding gown of white Carrickmaecross lace and georgette with long sleeves and long bodice of lace, the skirt gracefully made long and full with four wide scallops of georgette jist touching the heels in back. The oval neckline was finished with ghaped bands of lace set in georgette. The train of cloth of silver lined with flesh pink georgette edged with silver lace and pearls was also embroidered in silver and pear!s and the bridal vell of Brussels net hemmed with seed pearls was arranged with a bandeau of pearls. She carried a shower bouquet of Ophelia roses and lily of the valley, Rev, J. BE, Ward rector of St. Stephen's church Toronto perfomed the cer- emony, Miss Gwendolyn Dawson as maid of honor was gowned in pale pink georgette trimmed with a deeper shade of rose and carried pale pink roses, Miss Betty Cart- wright of Toronto, sister of the groom, as bridesmaid, wore pale chiffon with deeper toned yellow applique. Miss Constance Webster, of Whitby, was gowned in pale mauve with deeper shade of mauve, the bridesmaids dresses being alike made with appliqued fitted waistlinep, skirts in point at each side front hound with deep- er shades, Mr, Henry L. Cart- wright, brother of the groom, was best man. The outof-town guests included Mr. and Mrs. Henry Cart- wright, Miss Betty Cartwright, Mr. H. L. Cartwright and Mr, W. B. Cartwright, all of Toornto, Col, and Mrs. Everett Birdsall, Bird- sall, Ont.,, Mr, and Mrs. Lemuel Cushing of Montreal, Mr. T, A, V. Carey of Ottawa, Miss Sally Con- nell, Algonquin, Mr. R. L. C. Cart- wright of Vancouver, Mr. and Mrs. H. H, Horsey and Miss Mildred Horsey of Ottawa, Mr. J. F. Wray of Toornto and Mrs, John Webster of Whitby. { | Household Hints A very greasy sink may be clean { od well 'and without loss of temper the Largest Manufacturer of TING CARMEN, S in the world. Rr on the principle of NATURAL SUP: There is nothing just as good for Style, Health and Comfort, Boned with the famous NuBone Woven Wire | if dusted well with scouring powder apd then sprinkled over with am- monia. A heavy rag and hot water will wipe out all grease and the am- monia will kill the | the Rasty odor, The modern "bathroom has "gone color" as has every other room in the well-decorated house. Linen towels have, for some time, been a feature of the scheme with their col- ored damask borders, These may be pink, green, mauve, yellow, chiefly pastel shades. Another novelty is band-painted designs on linen towels. These are skillfully applied in deli- cate shades and may be laundered with impunity, fr-- One woman who frequently burned herself in lifting puddings, pies, ete., from the oven, now uses a cheap dustpan as a lifter and claims it is a great help, Boiled potatoes will be spoiled if 2 lid is put over them when serving. Let the potatoes cool a bit rather than cover them and make them heavy and waterlogged from steam. INDIAN CARVES NAME ON CHEST OF HI§ SWEETHEART New York, Sept. 30. -- It's just a quaint old Indian custom, this busi- ness of carving your initials upon the chest of a sweetheart with a can opener. At least this was the explanation given by Chief Hawks of the Senecas, who dances and sings in Broadway night clubs, when arraigned in West Side court before Magistrate Mc- Andrews charged with performing that playful love rite on Margaret Ricei, 32, a sculptress, in the Y.W.C.A. Studio Club here. Chief Hawks, also known as Mar- celus Hawkins, wore an injured air as his attorney, Edward V. Broder ick, told the court the Seneca tribes- o | man had caught Miss Ricel in a lie and under tribal law such a breach can only be atoned for by the woman permitting herself to be branded with her sweetheart's initials. The operation was performed last Satur- day, in Hawk's studio, Broderick said, and the sculptress will not pro- secute. Despite this assurance, however, the Indian was held in $2,000 bail for a hearing Saturday on an as sault charge. MISSIONARY GIVES TALK ON CHINA Rev. Newton Boles Preaches at Albert Street Church Sunday Morning A large crowd attended the morn- ing service at Albert Street United Church yesterday to hear a much ap- preciated talk on China Rev. Newton Boles, a missionary in that land, who has been visiting Oshawa as Rev. R. A, Whattam's guest. Two phases of Rev, Mr. Boles' life in China were dwelt upon in his address and his free and easy manner together with the interesting subject with which he dealt made an immediate and lasting impression upon his hearers, Although he used no text, Mr. Boles chose as his scripture lesson, the famous passage of St. John, chapter 21, which proved an excel- lent introduction to his talk. His work in one of the first mis- sionary churches in China, at Chen Du, was dealt with in the first part of Nr. Boles' sermon while in the second part, perhaps the more inter- esting, he told of his activities in or- ganizing a new church in the heart of the city, under the meat difficult conditions, At his first missionary church, Mr. Boles stated he had no trouble filling the church to capacity with all ranks and classes of people, and as time went on, he met with a large degree of success, His task of opening a new church in the heart of the husiness district proved a more dificult one than an- ticipated, and several years of ear- nest labor were spent before any ae- tual results were seen, This little church today, however, hears wit- ness to Mr. Boles' faithful service. Mr. Boles clused with a plea for a greater interest in Missionary work, "Our Daily Recipes STANDARD LAYER CAKE 15 cup butter or shortening, 1 cup sugar, 2 eggs, 2 cups flour, 3 tea- spoons baking powder, 3; cup milk, 1% teaspoons vanilla, Cream the butter well and heat in the sugar gradually, Beat the egg yolks and stir into the creamed butter and su- gar, Mix and sift the flour and bak- ing powder together and add alter- nately with the milk, beating well with each addition. Beat the whites of the eggs stiffly and fold into the batter. Bake in a moderate oven (376 degrees F) 25 to 30 minutes. When cool put frosting between and on top of layers. CARMEL FROSTING 1 cup brown sugar, 3 cup milk, 1 cup granulated sugar, 1 teaspoon butter. Place the sugar and milk in a saucepan and stir over the fire un- til the sugar is dissolved. Boil with- out stirring until when tested a soft ball forms in the water (234 de- grees F). Remove the pan from the fire; add the butter and vanilla, set in cold water and stir until thick enough to spread, CANNED TOMATOES Cook some large, rough tomatoes without removing skins or adding any water, and as soon as they are tender rub through a sieve, putting juice where it will stay hot, Scald, cold dip and peel some small, firm tomatoes. Have sealers sterilized, Pack tomatoes into sealers whole, Add 1 teaspoon salt to each quart, | 811 up with hot strained juice, put on rubbers and tops, do not tighten, and put sealers in boiler with water up to shoulders of sealers. Be sure to baye a rack on boller bottom. Cover boiler tightly and boil for 30 min- utes. Then remove the jars, seal at once and when cool store in a cool, dark place. SCALLOPED LEFTOVERS 2 cups cold meat, 1 teaspoon fniop juice, iy teaspoon og Ai, parsley, 1 teaspoon salt, 1 teaspoon capers, 1 cup bread crumbs, 4 cup stocks, 3 ns butter, Butter a baking dish and cover bottom of dish with breadcrumbs, Mix meat and onion juice, parsley, capers and spread over bread crumbs. Put some butter between the layers. Pour over stock and add remaining crumbs and butter for top layer. Bake 1 hour. ON MONDAY Dresses, Coats and given by | MILADY LIKES PARISIAN FOOD Says Food Cooked in Paris Suits the Taste Better than Any Other London, Emg.. Sept. 26.--The editor of the Women's Dept. in "Overseas," im Paris, has mad? some interesting motes about things. She sald: "It is most en- tertaining for a time to move amongst people who seem to have stepped out of a fashion-paper, or off the stage, who wear the latest colors in frocks, the latest thing in hats, the latest fashion in jew- ellery. I watched the young of many nations dancing under the chestnut trees in the sunshine at the Chateau Madrid, a famous res- taurant close to the Bois de Col- ogne. Many of the girls were ex- ceedingly pretty, and they all wore chiffon or crepe-de-chine frocks with tight little hats to match and had solitaire diamond rings on their fingers. When the dancing was over they slid away in noise- less cars, with fur-trimmed coats, matching their frocks, flung around them. The men were much less attractive, in fact, they were not attractive at all. No man in the world can compare to an Eng- lishman of the best type. "Again, it is pleasant in France 2 == travelling by train or by ear, to know that wherever you go or wherever you happen to be you many be quite certain of getting well-cooked food. 1 shall mever understand why English people as a whole, who are so emergetic in 50 many ways, cannot take the trouble to learn to cook properly. If they did, English food would be the best im the world. As it is, 1 enjoy omelettes and mush- rooms, green peas and carrots, sal- ads and cream cheese, wild straw- berries and eream, and almost everything in Paris infinitely more than I do in London. And frog's legs are to be recommended as am occasional dainty. 1 know a little restaurant in Paris where 1 can sit at my ease and watch rows of chickens being roasted om a spit, where when they are ready they are cut into four with a pair of small shears and a moment after- wards, garnished with watercress, are placed at precisely the right moment in front of Messieurs les Clients to be eaten and enjoyed. Food is a serious matter in France and cannot be treated with levity, But all the time IT am conscious of a feeling that after all there are other things far more important than either frocks or food, and that insistence on a high standard of physical comfort and fashionable clothes can become intolerably bor- ing. "I return glad that T am British and I can live in my own country among my own folk, where more vital matters than the menu of my next meal or the color of my next dress fills the foreground of my to be quite sure, whether you are life." Made by The Canadian Shredded Wheat Co., Ltd. RUSSIAN PRINCESS AS NEW LORD MAYOR London September 30. Vanden is going to have a Russian princess as the wife of its new Lord Mayor, The Russian woman who will now aceupy the ancient house is one of the most romantic figures in Lon- don. She was Princess Alexandra Lieven, daughter of Prince Paul Lieven, one-time grand master of ceremonies at the Imperial Rus- sian Court. During the war she was a Red Cross nurse in Poland and later in Mesopotamia. Her family's huge estates near Riga were lost in the revolution and after the war she joined the Russian exiles in Paris where she devoted her energies to helping the refugees. There she was married to Sir Kynaston Studd, the new Lord Mayor. She is tall, slender and gray-haired and speaks English with a Russian ac- cent. She is known as a elever horsewoman and onc? rode the long rough trail from Mesopotam- iia into Persia. (A = ---- \f cA Message ¥ National ance" ie Logins ¥ 3 eggs. correct gatio. value. It is pot only oe the digestion is im and peryes. In every homes * Health for \ (G1ORrlOUS good health--thc ing known to mankind--is brought within the reach of all by the recent reduction in the prices of "Ovaltine," Health depends upon nowrishment, those health-giving food essentials which are often missing Then, too, "Ovaltine" supplies One cup of *"Ovaltipe" from our daily dietary, concentrated nourishment, plies more nourishment than 12 cups of beef tea or This delicious beverage makes eviey mest complete U gn oy at Lower (ost *Ovaltipe" *Ovaltine" is a perfectly balanced food. It contains ell the fats, proteins, carbohydrates and mineral salts which are essential to health in scientifically correct proportions. The necessary vitamins sre likewise present--zalso in in asily and completely assimi supplics %| --~ xX" 2 < ya I zt bless. Old Prices: 60c 9%0¢ $1.50 $5.25 supe nutritive --even when --but it assists the digestion of severzl times its weight o pins sito ody Consider the constituents from which "Ovaltine" is made, Ripe barley malt, creamy milk from England's richest pastures, eggs, and a cocos flavouring. Milk is Nature's food per excellence, Eggs provide the only relisble source for supplying lecithin (organic phoiphorusy=rtie essential requirement r building wp brain of Sof he civilised world snd in countless thousands of ' is relied upon as the naturel means for obtaining wt Ig Je sslied une bs te + "Ovaltine" within the pus- chasing powers of every home and will enable it to be used regu- lzrly by everyone. It is the most economical as well as the moet perfect form of concentrated nourishment in the world, ERAGE BUILDS UP BRAIN, NERVES AND BODY A. WANDER LIMITED, 455 KING STREET WEST- "3RONTO, ONTARIO New Prices: 50¢ 75¢ $1,25 $4.50 sus Healthful Food in Perfect Form nl. a WA. WD. WL. ---- --

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