Oshawa Daily Times, 7 Dec 1928, p. 6

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LIN -. PAGE SIX Woman's Daily Interest SOCIAL and PERSONAL columii, Send in & postcard or phone 85. Mrs. C. J. VanGesen and Mrs. G. Miller of Picton were the recent guests of Mrs, A Clarke. Mr. and Mrs, Clayton Dyer have teturned to their home in Picton af- ter spending a week with relatives ere, h * * * Mr, and Mrs. Milton Werry, Col- borne street, Wednesday 'celebrated their twenty-eighth wedding anniver- sary, A Mr. and Mrs, Guy Snider, and children, Hugh and Wilma of Pic- ton, were the recent guests of Mrs, Snider's parents, Mr, and Mrs, Char les McNally. . x 2» "Miss Sceburn Essery has returned home after spending the past two months with her aunt, Mrs, J. J. Gay, in Detroit, Michigan. Rev. Ernest" Harston, LLB, of Simcoe street United Church is at- tending convocation at the Emman- wel and Victoria University, Toronto, this afternoon. * * Miss Catharine Guthrie, Ottawa, was hostess Wednesday at a delight- ful luncheon given at the Ottawa Country Club in honor of Miss Eleanor McLaughlin and Miss Ruth Cowans of Montreal, two of the out- of town guests at the Royal Winter Fair which is being held this week in Ottawa, Covers were laid for ten. * The Ryerson and Trafalgar Chap- ters, Ontario Ladies' College' Alum- nae Association, gave an enjoyable "at home" yesterday afternoon at Sherbourne House, Toronto, for Dr, C. R. Carscallen, new principal of the Ontario Ladies' College, Whitby, and Mrs, Carscallen. The local mem- bers of the Castle Chapter, who at- tended, are: Mrs. W, A. Hare, Mrs. W. H. Karn and Mes. R. Leo Gray. One of the oldest members of the Daughters of England lodge, Mrs. C. Tanton, was surprised at her home, Elgin street west, last even- ing by the members of the Daugh- ters of England lodge, on the occa- sion of her seventy-fifth birthday. The evening was spent in a social manner, and refreshments were ser- ved. The table was centred with a large birthday cake, which was ser- ved to the guests. The congratuld- tions and best wishes for "many happy returns of the day" were ex- tended to Mrs. Tanton, who thanked . the lodge for their kindness and for Me. Muir with a fitted case of mili- tary britshes. In replyitig Mr. Myit thanked the donors for their gift and said that it was -but little that he had been able todo in connectio with the society, The Young Pe le's Society of Knox Presbyterian hurch was organized last May and Mr. John Muir was the first presi- dent. Refreshments were served by the young ladies. LAST SERVICE IN ALBERT $1. CHURCH ON SUNDAY NEXT Special Program, With For- mer Pastor, Rev. H. M. Manning, Preaching r---- Next Sunday will mark the last Sunday of services in the old Al- bert street Church and thereafter services will be held in the Sunday School auditorium of the new church: A very interesting day is prom- ised on Sunday for the congrega- tion and its friends, when Rev, H. M. Manning, a former pastor of the church will be present, assist- ing at the Communjon Bervices in the morning and preaching .in the evening. Sunday will, therefore, he a day of tender memories for those who attend the last services in the old church, All old friends who took part in the early history of the old church have been invited, and several will take part in the evening program. Special music will feature the services, the fine plant they had sent: her. * * * A happy gathering of the members [ of the Young People's Society of | Knox Presbyterian church was held last evening at the home of Mr. and | Mrs. George Roy, 309 Alice strect.! After music and games the president of the society, Mr. John Muir, 294 French street, was called forward and an address was read, expressing the appreciation of the society of his work as president and the sense of loss on his approaching move to Hamilton, where he has accepted a position, Miss Madge McCallum, on behalf of the society, then presented The Famous Stoo! 'With The Folding Step _ strong as steel, sanitary, compact. Handily convenient for housecleaning and reach- ing high shelves. Stan- dard height. Allows a woman to rest at the iron- ing board or peeling veg- etables and preparing meals. In thousands of homes, offices and. stores. Finished in all colors to match kitchens. Makes an ideal gift. Priced from $3.75 up Phone your order to PHONE 2692f NOT SOLD IN STORES Handsome, i Bd EXQUISITE DETAILS A swagger sport dress with air of formality, leaturing the new sunburst eftect in blouse, laid in plaits under bow, tied in"knot with loop and loose end. It closes at leftside to affect diagonal line. The collarless neckline is piped in same fabric as bow. The skirt a wrap- around type, huttons smartly at left hip. The circular skirt is attached to hipyoke, which is stitched to the blouse. The dart-fitted sleeves have circular cuffs. Style No. 346 choose of sheer tweed, crepe satin, canton- ter dot with faille silk erepe con- trast. The pattern for this charm- ing affair can be had in sizes 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 in- ches bust. It is equally smart made of sheer tweed, srepe satin, canton- faille crepe, wool crepe or plain vel- vet. The 36-inch size takes but 314 yards of 40 inch material with 3% yard of 40-inch contrasting. Price 20 cents in stamps or coin (coin {is preferred) Wrap coin carefully. Sb debbie ch hhh hy 1 PATTERN PURCHASE - COUPON To The Oshawa Daily Times Pattern Department Oshawa, Ont. Enclosed find .......... cents. Plessy send patterns listed be ow; sassssssnsssssss BI20 4uusiass ss. Bi20 sassseas AOGTEED ...cisanansisransisis TORR uss nsnnssiansnsis PIOVIBE '3.02k0sincsnisnssons Price, 20 cents each. Send stamps. or coin. Wrap coin carefully. : HONE LEAGUE TAS BIG ATTENDANCE AT ANNOAL SALE Booths Well Patronized and Proceeds Amount to $120 The anndal sale of work and home- made cooking of the Oshawa Home League was held on Tuesday, Decem- ber 4, in the. Salvation Army citadel which was a splendid Success: The sale was . opeiied by Mrs. (Major) Richie of Toronto, assisted by Mrs, (Major): Osborne. The hall, was decorated by the members of the league in the Salvation Army colors. The booths, which were well-patron- ized during the afternoon, wére in charge of: Mrs, Jack Short, home cooking; Mrs. J. Cooper and Mrs, W. Saunders, fancy work and pillow slips; Mrs, Drinkle underwear; Mrs. Ww, Brophey and Mrs, W. Short, aprons; Mrs. A, Martyn and Mrs, Foote, handkerchiefs and fancy work; Mrs. Gurney and Mrs, Dah- iels, parcel stall; Mrs. Walker and Mrs, D. Owens, candies; Mrs. Burk, fish pond. The House of Nonsense, under the supervision of Mrs. Burge, provided fun and amusement for many. A splendid supper was served by a number of the ladies of the league, under the convenorship of Mrs, Me- Naul, Mrs. Salisbury and Mrs. Tweedie, Program of Music The following musical program was given in the evening! Song and prayer, Major Osborne; song, Mrs. A. Holmes; instrumental, M, Smith and A. Sargeant; solo, Eileen and Beverley Ogvens; song, Mrs. A, Hol- mes; recifation, Mrs. Burge; har- monica solo, M. Smith; solo Captain Osborne; vocal solo, Mrs. W. Twece- die; solo, Mr, T, Coull, The proceeds of the sale amounted to $120, which are to be used in the work of the army. LADIES' AID OF ALBERT STREET PLANS PROGRAM . The Ladies' Aid of Albert Street United church held-the regular meet- ing in the Sunday School room, yes- terday with Mrs. D., Cameron pre- siding. The meeting was opened in the usual manner, after which the secretary,, Mrs. C. Knight, read the report of the previous meeting and called the roll, which was responded to by a greater number of members than usual. Much business was dis- cussed and excellent financial re- ports given by the society's treasurer and the conveners of the various groups, Plans for future work were made and group No. 2 announced that they will hold a homecooking sale on Saturday, December 15. Also group No. 4 reported planning a miscel- laneous. sale; including a lunch coun- ter and homemade candy and pop- corn stand, on Tuesday, December 11 in the Sunday School room. The various officers for the com- ing year were unanimously «elected. Several new members were enrolled. There wete also a number of visi- tors present. The committee served a dainty tea, which brought a pleas- ant meeting to a close. Catarrh--Soothing Remedy "Nostroline" is the finest thing for Catarrh or Cold in the Head, Pleasant and instant- ly effective! Rid yourself of this complaint with England's famous remedy. Get your "Nostroline" now, 50c, From Karn's Drug Store, next Post Office, King Street East, Oshawa, Your Nose Needs 'Nostroline" Special Values | in Ladies' Coats and Dresses, at the Fashion Shoppe i he oa Christmas 1 Recipes MAITRE Db'. SAUCE 1 tablespoon lemon juice, 3 table: spoons buttér, 1 tablespooni ¢hop- ped parsley, % teaspoh salt. Mix the lemon juice with the melted butter and parsley, then add -the salt. CHICKEN CROQUETTES 1 cup corn meal mush, 1 cup -{ chopped chicken, few drops onion juice, 1 egg, salt, pepper. Mix in- gredients together. Make Into cakes, roll in flour. and saute in a frying pan, or shape in balls, roll in crumbs, egg .and erumbs again, and fry in deep fat. Time, 2 min- utes each. Temperature of fat, 376 degrees Servings, 8. GRILLED ALMONDS 1 cup almonds, 1 cu tablespoons orange juice, spoons lemon juice. Ve Boil sugar and fruit juices until th syrup forms a long thread when dropped from a spoon. Add alm- onds and let cook to hard crack stage. Remove instantly and stir until it sugars. Cool and separate the almond to which the sugar will cling irregularly. CORN, CALIFORNIA STYLE 2 slices bacon, 2 tablespoons flour, 2 tablespoons bacon fat, 1 table spoons chopped green pep- per, 2 cups corn (canned or fresh), cup milk, 1-2 teaspoon salt, 1 1-2 1 cup soft bread erumbs. Cut bacon in half inch dice, cook until begin ning to color. Add flour to fat, stir in milk and cook until thick- ened, add salt and green pepper. Mix corn and crumbs with the sauce; put in baking dish, sprinkle bacon over top and bake in mod- erate oven until bacon is crisp and golden brown. Time in oven, 30 minutes. Temperature, 400 de- grees, Servings, four. ROAST GOOSE Hold the goose firmly and move about over a hot flame in order to singe off all the hairs. With a small sharp knife remove all the pin feathers. Wash the goose iu hot soapsuds, scrubbing with a small brush. Rinse again in cold water and wipe. Stuff with pota- to stuffing, truss, sprinkie witu salt and pepper place in a roasting pan and bake in hot oven, As soon as the fat begins to fry out from the goose use it for basting and baste every ten or fifteén minutes during all the time of cooking. Place on a hot platter, cut the strings and remove them and the skewers. Garnish with watercress or parsley and bright red cran- berries. Time in oven, 2 hours for medium size goose. Tempera- ture, 400 degrees. . FRUIT CAKE 1 cup butter or margarine, 1 cup sugar, 3 eggs, 1 cup molasses, 3 cups flour, 1 teaspoon soda, 2 tea- spoons cinnamon, 1 teaspoon nut- meg, 1 teaspoon clove, 1 pound raisins, 1 pound citron, 1 pound currants or small raisins, 1 cup strong coffee. Cream butter and sugar, add beaten eggs and molas- ses. Sift dry ingredients, add and beat © thoroughly. Add chopped fruit and beat again. Any combin- ation of dried candied fruits may be used. Bake slowly in a mod- erate oven. Keep in a cool bu. not too moist place, as age improves this cake. The coffee should be' poured or sprinkled carefully over the cake as it is taken from the ovan. If baked in a covered roast- ing pan with the cover on until the last half hour, no coffee will be needed to soften the cake. Time in oven, 21-8 hours. Temperature 300 to 350 degrees. Servings, 24. There is' an agitation on hand to abolish the federal income tax--at least there was until Finance Minis. ter Robb said it would stay.--Chat- ham News. is When water is heated to a high temperature by electricity in a tank of European invention the heat {8 radiated so slowly that hot water JS 54 Sumove St. S. Oshawa is available all day. ' GENERAL MEETING OF THE McDonald-Cartier Club Wednesday December 12 WELCH'S PARLORS, 7.30 P.M. For the purpose of electing officers for 1929, All members are requested to be present HE OSHAWA DAILY Ith. SOUTH AMERICA JAY, DECEMBER 7, 1925 CALLED WONDER LAND OF FUTURE Untold Wealth in Mineral "Resources, Forests and Waterways TRADE EXPANDS Interest in Continent Heightened by Visit of Hoover Washington--Interest in South America is heightened by the good- will tour which President-elget Hoover is making among the na- tions to the south of the United States, . A resume of the remarkable con- tributions South America hns made to civilization and the unusual geo- graphical features of that continent are contained in a communication to the. National Georgraphic So- ciety by Dr. John Oliver Le Gorce, its vice-president. "In Peru originated the potato the world's greatest crop; Chile contributes the guano fertilizer whieh rejuvenates the soil in many lands, the pampas of Argentine be- stows meats and wool to millions outside her borders. Brazil helped make possible the automobiles by teaching the use of rubber, to nrain- tain only a few of the important economic services of the contin- ent,' Dr. La Gorce writes. Good Customers "The United States and South American countries have always manifested their friendship by their trade. In a recent year Argen- tina bought three-eights of her im- ports from our country. Brazil gpent in the United States approxi- mately one-half of her expenditures for imports and Chile gave the Un- ited States practically the same proportion of her fereign purchas- es. Colombia was an equally good customer in proportion to her tot- al importations, while Peru gave the United States nearly two-thirds eof her total foreign orders. More than two-thirds of Venezuela's foreign business was done with Am- erican houses and in Ecuador the proportion was 45 per cent, "In our turn we bought more than half of the exports of Chile, Colombia, Peru and Venezuela, nearly a third of those of Argen- tina. "To the geogranher these fiz- ures tell far more than a profitable business relationship, they betoken a mutual dependency based on nrut- ual needs. It is a hanpv geozraphie fact that our two contirents, thrown into close proximity, need each other and in so many ways comple- ment each other. Georgranhy Uniaue "The physical geo~raphy of South America is fascinating. It is distdn- guished by the ahsence of cleafly defined watersheds between ils great river basing. Fromi"the Orin- ico delta to the Rio de la Plata estuary: there is almost a contin uous overlapping of these basins. In Southern Venezuela, where that country thrusts a nolitical pen- insula into Northern Brazil, below the town of Esmeralda, the waters of the upper Orinoco suddenly de- cide to part company some of them reaching the Amazon and the sea throuzh the Brazo Casquiare and the others forcing their way to the lower Orinoco over the ranids of the eroded mountain barriers at Maipures and Atures. "Although the communication betwen the Amazon and the Rio de la Plata basins are not so marked as those between the Amazon and the Orinoco basins, there are num- erous place where the flip of a bird's wing, the direction of the wind, the abundance of local lanes, the formation of a sandgar or the slipping a bit of land may deter- mine the destiny of a drop of water. whether it shall flow past Para or Buenos Ayres. Long Rivers a Boon "Nature has been ptodigal of her blessings to South America ~---- blessings which, in some instances, are just being revealed. "A rich asset of our Eastern sea- board of North America has been its rugged, indented coast line, which affords sheltering harbors from Maine to Florida. South Am- erica's coast line is more regular, but she has what now is proving an even greater boon navigable rivers of enormous length-----nature-made canals which of eady transpor- tation to regions of some of her richest products. "Our Mississippi and fits tribu- taries have 17,000 miles of navig- able waters, the major portion of them exceedingly shallow. The Amazon and fits tributaries have twice as nrany miles capable of ac- commodating ocean-going steam- ers, which, for example, ascend 2,300 miles to Iquitos, while ves- sels of fourteen-foot draft can as- cend nearly five hundred.miles beyond that point. and Waterways South America takes that for granted, but we of the United Stat- es marvel whén we tealigé that it] is as though one could travel on a ship of fourteen-foot draft from New York direct to Salt Lake City by. way of Chieago and Cheyenne, A glance at a map of South Ameri- ca reveals that it. hag the finest system of inland waterways in the world. "This map also reveals the won- der tale of South Ameriea's future --her futu . commrericial im- portance, because she holds so much wealth in natural reseurces which the world needs, "There are delineated the vast extent of the rubber forests of the Amizon basin; the regions whence Argentina; Paraguay, Uruguay, Colombia and Venezuela draw their valubale exports of cattle, hides, mutton and wool; the nitrate lands of Chile and Peru; the rich coffee, sugar and cocoa plantations of Brazil, the Guianas, Venezuela and Colombia, and the silver, eopper, gold, iron and tin deposits of var- fous countries. THE LESSON OF LIFE Alas, we do not know our measure, When we are young and without ° care. It takes hard knocks for us to mea- sure The real worth of pleasure fair. But there is a thought.areaching, Into my mind to-night, And I give thanks for the teaching Of my mother "God is right." Yes, Altho' we oft forget it, In the rush of busy life; When we waken, we regret it; It will wound us, as a knife, If in Him we put our trust And ask for help to guide us; Away from all our sinful lust. We know that He'll not chide us. L. F. BTINGEL Written as a compliment to his Polish experts have heen having success with experiments to deter- mine the practirabilty of using al- cohol mixed with liquid fuels in in- ternal combustion engines. Two Toronto men have won the horsrchoe match at the Roval Win- ter Fair. Who said this harnvard wolf was a rural sport?--Peterboro Examiner. nnounce the Opening Of a Hosiery Department | Featuring ( Pure Silk Full Fashi For our opening we present oned Hosiery , the following Specials: First Quality Pure Thread Silk $1.00 An extra fine augdfi~hose priced specially "for our opening. All pure silk 10 the hem in the most fashionable celors: cedar illusion, cedar, black chateau, patio, cham- pagne, rose taupe, Sizes intg Ln $1 00 Fine Silk and "Vool ior Aalto | | Extra fine "yuality sil and wool hose, ome with the silk plated on wool, others fine mixtures of pure silk and wool. In Fr. Nude, Beige, Camel, Oxford, Pongee Drab in sizes 8 1-2 to 10. ; 3 al dais wee 8c | Kayser Pure Silk Fashioned HOSE Slipper and Square Heel, Service and Chiffon Complete range of colors and sizes. Attractively wrapped in boxes of three pairs for Christmas Gifts. $1.50 $1 $7.95 All Hats Reduced 98c, $1.49 $1.98 To make room for our eep QMARTHESS in design.... every race in every line... Heating colors for ev: ble.... Miner Shu-ettes have a "style rightness" Glove ike in St, Nght in/ wy dh the Feet Smart 4 or Pe op Ppp i Dolly and Bobby IDonT inTenp To BITE THE PRiNcess~ Tonly STole . HER BEcAusE : © So awpuL | WAS ONESOME LS AND T WANTED SOMETHING PRETTY To Leek AT: Even) sony RUNS AWAY FRoM MF -causE 30 FIERCE «Looking (OH-PooR DRAGON. we DIDNT Know You WERE LONESOME AND SAD=~ WE THouGHT You WERE NASTY AND CRUSLe A AP AND 1NTHE MEANTIME THE KING AND HIS COURTIWRS START Off To Rescue. The AL i] Princess AND Do x-Besey AND Cony Teo By Grace Drayton -®

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