Oshawa Daily Times, 3 Nov 1928, p. 6

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FALE SIX Woman's Daily Interest SOCIAL and| PERSONAL ol or phone 35. Mr, H. M, Moore of Deseronto | visited friends here. RR Mr, Bruce Cooper of Fenelon Falls was a guest of friends here gecently, % ! Mr, and Mrs, Dan Black, Fisher twenty-eight guests, Later, Mis : i H | | ; : : ' : oii street, are spending the week-end [nga i» London, LI Miss Wipunifred Chanpon of Oakwood is visiting friends in the eity for a Tov aya, » : Mr, E, Burrus was a recent guest of his parents, Mr. and Mrs, James Burrus, 'akwond. . Messrs. Fred Ball, A. Gladman, fir, Roy Band, and Justin Rogers left today for Haliburton on a twe weeks' mating wip. Miss "Babs™ Dreyer, King street east, is entertaining this evening at a supper dance at the King Ed- ward Hotel, Torento, LJ w LJ © The 3rd Oshawa Troop of Boy Scouts held a banquet last evening in Holy Trinity Church, under the convenorship of Assistant Scout Master Lundy, The basement was decorated in Hallowe'en colors and figures. Rev, 8, C, Jarrett was guest of honor, After supper the evening was spent in games, L I J M Miss Eleanor McLaughlin, "Parkwood', assisted at the "coms fag out" tea, given by Mrs, W, C, R. Harris, Spadina road, Toronto, in honor of her daughter, Miss Jean Harris, at Ryan's Art Gallers les, yesterday afternoon, Mrs, Har. yi» entertained the assistants, Miss Bleanor McLaughlin, Miss Isabel Thompson, Miss Margaret McCaus- land, Miss Grace Matthews, Miss Mildred Eaton, Miss Elleen Page, Miss Freida Henning, Miss Ann Caldwell, Miss Bunnie Lang, Miss Marjorie Morley, Miss Eleanor Morrison and Miss Adele Taylor, t dinner at the King Edward otel, where covers were laid for The "Coumt-O3-M8" class of King street Sunday School held their first supper of the season last evening in the basement of the church, Rev, and Mra, C, BE Cragg were guests of homor, The tables were decorated with horders of orange and black paper with flluminated pumpkin faces light~ ing the table, There were about forty members of the class present. DAUGHTERS AND 'NOTHRS JOIN AT BANQUET TABLE Sunday School Room of the Simcoe Street United Church Resplendent With Color The C.G.I.T. groups of Simcoe street United Church held a Meo» ther and Daughter banquet last evening in the banquet hall of the Sunday School, There were more than seventy-five members and mothers present, The tables were decorated in the C.G.IT, colors, blue and white, and the tabhley were lighted with blue candles, The supper was served by members of the Mission Circle, Toast List Miss Lillian Jones acted as toastmistress during the supper and Betty Lovel proposed a toast to "Our Mothers," which was re- Semoller a $1800.00 INPRIZES FORA NEW JEWELLERY SLOGAN See Sold in Oshawa by D. J. BROWN 10 KING STREET WEST PHONE 189 ole A Selling Metallic Hats of Smart at $28 $3.98 For the more formal occasions of late fall, these hats have the exact appropriateness of style and brilliance, There sre turbans, chic off the face models effects, styled to suit both matron and miss. and brimmed In the season's newest shade at only $2.08 and $3.98. Felt Hats $1.98 and $2.08 Thid group of felt hats represents the utmost in style apd value. Both brimmed and off the face styles are included in the most popular shades of Fall. Only $1.98 snd $2.98 THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 3, 1928 Mrs, Hopley. The toasts were in. terspersed xh Samp and CG.LT, solo, accompan her daugh Margaret. aut "Siring a nl Tolle Jones no duet, plano solo by Muriel Petomact recitation brought the evening to a close, RETIRING ARCHBISHOP 1S CREATED BARON London, Nov, 3--His Grace, Most Reverend Doctor Randall Thomas Davidson, retiring Archbishop of Canterbury, has been elevated by his Majesty to tha peerage. His retire ment takes effect on Nov. 12, when he will be succeeded by his Grace Most Reverend Doctor Cosmo Gor- present Archbishop of The econferment of a peerage on the Archbishop of Canterbury will enable him to remain in the House of Lords, where he has been a prom. inent figure for many years, He is 80 years of age and has served as Archbishop for 25 years. His Grace's new rank is that of Baron, CHARM AND CHIO An unusual effect is created by wrap-around skirt with elrcular fulness with rippling side mover ment, It is attached to a hip yoke, which contrasts smartly with slight blousing of bodice, whose diagonal closing is emphasized by applied bands, Tucks at shoulders are decorative. It is a youthful style that is equally suitable for the woman of average figure. Two surfaces of crepe satin, printed transparent velvet with plain, wool crepe with matching sheer velvet, sheer velvet in black or striking new shade self-trimmed end dul) fat silk crepe with velvet trim are especially attractive for its develop ment. Design No, 301 can be had in sizes 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 38, 42 and 44 inches bust, and takes but 8% yards of 40-inch contrasting to make it for the 36-inch size, Pattern price 20 cents in stamps or coin (coin is preferred), PATTERN PURCHASE COUPON To The Oshawa Daily Times Pattern Department ow -> - -~ sos PIES 2000s s BiZe s500000s props srssssssns PRRs RPIIRRIIRIIILIS PP -_ TTT. TTT TTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTeY PWN) LAL der | heal Household Hints To keep the best tea or coffee ura sweet drop a small piece of of sugar and prop the the lid open with a toothpick. Linoleum will never crack if cleaned with vinegar and olive oil in equal quantities instead of soap and water, nt your bed of parsley t while it is still strong and y. Then you have your kits chen window sill plant for winter and incidentally the always wel- come garnish right on hand. 'When the furpiece is shabby cut it down for the small daughter, ell- minating worn pieces and joining the goods to form a collar for her little coat, toa {sses | Parsley keeps indefenitely Wa the ice-box, Th it saves time and trouble to chop a lot at one time oi put it in a glass jar, near the Add a pinch of salt or sugar, either one, to egg Whites that you are heating, It aids in quick beats ing, A small vegetable brush is inval- uable in helping to force berries, grapes and other amall fruit through a sieve, When chopping chives, parsley, olives or other garnishes for salads use a hoard and cut with an empty baking Bwder can. It chops easuy and well, x A pretty dessert is candy pears, using old-fashioned cinnamon drops to color them, and serve either witn moussex or with soft custard and whipped cream. Deviled eggs served with canapes as an appetizer hefore dinners, are twice as attractive if you put the mixed yolks through the pastry tube in fancy patterns. Silver chains or other silver jewelry can be kept bright by boil- ing up frequently in aluminum pans. Shine with a chamois, Tobacco can be kept moist if put 'n an airtight tin with a slice of raw potato, This is true of cigar- cttes too. If your bathroom pipes are rust- ed a woollen cloth saturated with gasoline or ammonia will clean them up. Such pipes and nickel holders for tawels, soap ete. should be recoated with nickel and kept shining. CLAIMS MARRIAGE FORCED UFON HIM Taronto, Nov. 8.--In a decision at Osgoode Hall yesterday, Char- les Garrow ,K.C., Master in Cham» bers, upheld the validity of a mar. riage into which the groom claim» ed he was forced by false repre- gentations that he was the father of his wife's then unborn child. This decision was rendered by the striking out of several para- graphs in the defense filed by John Moore Bremis, stock broker's clerk, to an alimony action instituted by his wife, Mabel Jane Bremis, Bremis claimed that the mar riage was invalid because he was then only 10 years of age, was alone in Canada, and was forced into the marriage by the girl's friends and relatives ------ Nightly, now, her smile Is win- ning new hearts all over America, She is lovely Corrine Burton, » hose New York home is the New Weston Hotel. Her march to fame includes 8 season each in "The Music Box" and "The Scandals;" and now, und- er Chas. Bowers' direction, she's going up in the movies! "I don't believe in overlooking any point which may help make your presence pleasing," says Miss Burton, "Recently, I learped the method of caring for the hair, which is all the rage among New York girls, now, It's so easy. All you do fs put a little Danderine on your brush every time you arrange your bair. It makes my bair so easy to dress and holds it in place wonder- fully. It has gotten rid of my dand- ruff. It keeps my scalp and hajr so clean and comfortable that I don't shampoo half as often as I used to. It gives my hair such a silky, soft and lustrous appearance that friends comment on it." Danderine is not olly. It removes the oily film from each strand of bair, restores its natural color, giv. es it new lustre. It dissolves dand- ruff, cleanses and invigorates the scalp. It is delightfully fragranced. AM drug stores have the generous 83bc bottles. Lovely, gleaming hair and 2 healthy scalp for a few cents. | | tastefully decorated ee Bly ity Stem and wash the grapes. pour enough water to cover them. Boil until the cooked. Strain and sweeten to taste charcoal im it, or a lump or two wo CORN FL Take 1 cup corn (boiled) the cob and run through the er, or press through a sieve um its like pulp, Then add 1 cup milk, 1 dessertspoon butter and seasom to taste with salt and pepper, Add the well-beaten yolks of 3 eggs, Cook in double boiler until it is soft and creamy, stirring constant- ly, Remove frome the fire and let cool, Now fold in the sti heaton og® whites of the § eggs, turn on Bake In & hot oven for 30 miu: PEAR CONSERVE Four 1bs. pears, 4 1bs sugar 3.4 1b, raising, 2 lemons, 3 oranges, 1 cup walnuts, Peel and core pears and cut into cubes: peel oranges and lemons and put skin through grinder. Cut fruit into thin slices Put fruit into preserving kettle with half cup water and the sugar, When mixture begins to thicken add thé nuts and boil until the pears are transparent, Pour into hot jams, When cold cover with paraffin, FUDGE SANDWICHES Cut thin slices from date, raisin, or white bread and cut in rounds, Spread evenly with warm fudge. Let stand a few minutes and cover with a second slice. Spread top slice with creamed butter and sprinkle with chopped peanuts, CHOCOLATE PUDDING Seald 3 cups sweet milk with 2 squares of unsweetened chocolate previously shaved. Mix together 1-2 cup corpstarch powder, 6 tablespoons granulated sugar ,1.3 teaspoon salt and enough water to form a paste of these dry ingredients, Stir them into the milk-chocolate mixture and cook over a direct flame till thick, stips ring evenly, Then cook over bells ing water for 20 minutes before re. moving from heat; cool slightly and pour onto 2 stiffly beaten ess whites. Beat well together and turn into a mold or custard cups dipped in cold water, Chill and serve. VEGETABLE SOUP Buy a small soup hone with only a small quantity of meat on it, put this over fire with water to cover, and hoil for an hour or until rich stock is formed, Now remove the hone, add 1 quart-size can of tomar toes and cook for several minutes, turn the mixture through a coland- er. Put the liquid back on the range; to it add 1 small (pint-size) can of lima beans (or use the small fresh lima heans in season), Let the soup simmer over direct heat for several minutes, then turn it in- to the top of a double boiler to cook and keep hot until meal time, Sea- son to suit Individual taste with salt and pepper. HALLOWE'EN WAS CELEBRATED AT CENTRE STREET Class of United Church Stage Fine' Entertainment in Keeping With Season A very pleasant evening was ar- ranged last night by the members of the choir of Centre Street United Church, A large number came in fancy dressed costumes, many of which were original, ranging from the grotesque to the artistic, The main Sunday school room was in keeping with the Hallowe'en season. Sir Jack-O-Lantern in life size held sway on the platform, while witches, black cats and §llumin- pated pumpkins were in evidence in various parts of the room, Musical Program A musical program was well re- ceived by the large number who were present. A piano duet by Mrs, Hodgkinson and Miss Ruth Hodgkinson opened the program, followed by a vocal solo by Louise Bennett, Mr. Percy Mercer, church organist, contributed a piano solo which gave place on the program to a humorous male trio, Three Black Crows, rendéred in | ropriate costume by Messrs, Koch, eGuerre and Bennett, aken Miss Ruth Hodgkinson's piano solo was followed by a reading by Mrs. George Webster, while the spirit of the season was further ex- emplified by the dance of the three witches, the accompaping weird music being furnished by a ghost in regulation garb at the plano, A game for the children and two very successful contests brought to a close the program over which Dr. Fletcher pres 2s chairman. Flashlight photographs were taken of those in fancy costume snd lun- cheon was served by the choir members. SHIP BLAZE EXTINGUISHED Buenos Afres, Nov. B8.--After the crew successfully fought the fire in the hold, the Canadian Goy- erpment Merchapt Marine stesm- er, Capadian Ranger heading for Santos, Br, Y today, SOUTHAM FUNERAL TODAY Hamilton, Nov. 3. f ot re ren Bannan ers place from Christ's Chursh Cathe. dra) at 2.30 o'clock this afternoon, cold || "SALAD A" TEA From the world's finest gardens WALL STREET BEEN INFALLILE INELECTION BETS Just One Glaring Exception Has the Financial Centre Failed to Register A Vu Street. peti fo as of national "lction result? is r f A -- been pracucally - there is le The to prove the tance, ith bE EAS A the greater number of 3 es in final count, treet was radi 916 when the final result was not known until several days after the weil voting took place, ng back as far as 1880, Wall Street was betting three to one on Garfield, Republican, to beat Han. cock, Democrat. Garfield wen. He received 214 electoral votes to Han- cock's : In 1884, while there were no elec- tion odds offered on the general res favorite to carry New York State over James G. Blaine, Odds ranged from 8 to 7 to 11 to 10 Cleveland popular vote of only 63,000 plurality, But he got 219 electoral votes to Blaine's 182, prov. ng the odds mathematically correct. n the following campaign, when Mr. Cleveland ran against Benjamin Harrison, the opening odds were § to 4 in favor of Gen, Harrison in the final days of the voting and Gen, Harrison had an electoral vote of Fh» compared with 168 for Clever was elected by a and, In the next Cleveland-Harrison campaign, 'Wall Street odds started 6 to 5 in favor of Cleveland and he remained odds-on favorite to the close, but New York being a pivotal state, the preatest interest in the election centred on the results here and bets of 2 to 1 were made that He did so and got 277 votes in the Electoral College as compared with 145 for Mr. Harrison, again proving the mathematical accuracy of Wall Street betting, ; Singularly enough, in the begin- ning of the great sound money cam- paign of 1896, William J. Bryan was a prime favorite at the start in the betting. But Mr. McKinley hecame a J to 1 favorite and remained so to election, - He received 271 electoral votes to 176 for Bryan. i In the following campaign in 1900, the odds were made at 4 to 1 in favor of McKinley, practically throughout the campaign, and he was elected by a majority of practically 1,000,000 popular votes and got 292 votes in the Electoral College as compared with 155 for Mr, Bryan, Theodore Roosevelt ran away with the election odds in his campaign against Judge Parker in 1904. Start- ing a 2 to 1 favorite, he was a § to 1 choice at the end of the campaign and it was pointed out by a reviewer at the time that he got 2,600,000 ma-~ jority popular votes and all but 140 of the electoral votes, When Bryan ran against Taft in 1908 the betting was 8 to 1 in favor of Taft and everybody knows the result, The victory of Taft was de- cisive. In the complicated election of 1912, when Theodore Roosevelt shifted to the Bull Moose party, Wall Street made Woodrow Wilson a favorite from the very start. As in the pres sent election the odds in the middle of October were 4 to 1 in favor of Wilson and they remained so at the close, MACHINE INVENTED T0 WATCH COLORS Apparatus Known as Re cording Spectrophoto- Washington, Nov, 8.--Announce- ment of 8 machine to take all the guess-work out of matching eolors was made recently at the copven- tiop of the optical society of Amer- fea, By its aid the wife may cable trom Paris asking ber husband to match in the hometown a shade of color that she describes gs striking her fancy, and it can be dope. Fur. he | ther it can be done in less than 8 minute by the machine and so ex- actly 8s to leave po ground for do- mestic argument, ' The apparatus is named the "re- cording spectrophotometre". It was demonstrated before the conven- tion by its inventor, Professor Ar- thur C. Hardy, of the Department of Physics of Massachusetts Imsti- tute of Technology, attached to the staff of the Research Labora- tory of the General Electric Com- pany. Hardy's machine is based on the simplest principle of color that every school boy is taught, namely that color is determined by the num ber and kind of light rays which 8 surface reflects. wi" BI TERND Weiss) ¢ | Ard gm LIJTHORS IRCH LE COX TL S TOROMTO sult, Grover Cleveland was a slight|p a RELIGIOUS JSSUE BAFFLING Washington, Nov, 3.--I have only a dim and misty recollection of my algebra, but I know that in working out a problem you indi- cate the unknown quantity by the letter "3." The problem is solved when you ascertain the number of gallons, the number of dollars or the number of votes which is re- resented or expresged by the let» ter "x which many schoolboys have labor- ed and perspired in vain, In the Presidential which occurs on Tuesday, x" stands for the strength and influ- sue, ers in the United States, says it is the only {esue which greatly inter- ests the people of the United States. Mr. Sullivan is supporting Mr. Hoover, but he is corroborated by Dr, Henry Noble MacCracken, President of Vassar College, who has spoken over the radio in favor of Smith, My own personal ohser- vation is limited to the adjoining state of Maryland, and they are certainly correct, if the situation in Maryland be typleal. Maryland was carried by Hard- ing in 1920 and by Coolidge in 1024, there being a nation-wide Republican landslide in both elec- tions, but Maryland is none the less a Democratic State, She has a Democratic Governor, a Democratic T.egislature, is represented by two Democrats in the United States Senate, and five of her six con- aressmen are Democrats, Mary. land is a fairly wide-open State, one of the few States which still permits race-side betting and has no State prohibition enforcement law. Her popular Governor, Al- bert C, Ritchie, is probably the most aggressive and outspoken wet" in the United States. Mary- land has no manufactures to speak of outside of Baltimore and is not greatly interested in the tariff, the power question or farm relief, RHINE GRAPE CROPS REPORTED VERY FINE Ruedesheim-on-Rhine, Germany, Nov, 8.--Ancient bells tolled at 8 o'clock Thursday morning in dozeus of thousand-year-old villages along the Rhine to announce the heginn- ing of the grape-picking season. Thousands of men and women, whose fathers and forefathers for centuries have been identified in some form or other with vyinicul- ture, marched out into the cele- brated *'winebergs" or vineyards, to plek a crop which is generally believed to be the best on record since 1915 and 1923, FACTOR! United | Republicans Seem Certain| d| of Victory--Camada Wildly Interested That is an uphill job over || election | |! ence of the so-called religious is- | Mark Sullivan, one of the || most trustworthy political observ- ||| Wives and children of Brit: ish Subjects who arrived in fn prior to June 6th, 1 ( Children under 17 years--FREE Apply at once to Canadian Service Cor. Bay and Wellington Sts., Toronto, «0p, Nearest Agent JUST ARRIVED New Evening and Afternoon Dresses, Come and see them, FASHION SHOPPE, OSHAWA 84 Simcoe St, 8, Don't Be Late! One Cent Sale where we have on display over 200 Big Money Saving Specials such as $2.25 Hot Water Bottles 2 for $2.26 at the Rexall Stores Jury & Lovell King BE, Simcoe §, Phone 2 Phone 68 The Best Investment You Can Make Thousands of men and women who work bard to save a little money and invest it, overlook the greatest paying investment in the world--themselves. Don't make the same mistake, Invest in yourself, Maple Leaf Business College Times Bldg. Telephone 3095 R. C, ASHENHURST, Principal "A Trained Mind Wins"

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