Oshawa Daily Times, 16 Sep 1929, p. 6

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' PAGESIX Women's Interests in , the Home - an Social and Personal ® Misses Winnie Tane and Bumice Nicholls spent Sunday in Midland, . . LJ Mr. Howard ' Adair, Colborne street east, is spending & week in Tamworth. : * LJ % Mr. H, Hobarth is spending a few days in Ottawa, where he Is visiting his parents. * * * Messrs. Jack Tane and C. Day- nart were visitors in Midlahd on Sunday. * % *% 5 Mrs. (Dr.) Jackson of Danes- vlile, N.Y., iz visiting relatives in the city. * * * Mrs. Robert Fursey of Cornwall is spending a few days in the city with her brothers and sisters. LJ] - * Mr. Melbourne Turner of Brant. ford spent the week-end with friends in the city. LJ . * Mrs. Jack Flynn and children, Brock street, spent Sunday in Co- kourg, renewing old acquaintances. * * * . Mr. and Mrs, Sabine of Mar- mora are visiting their daughter, MrMs. Bagg and Mr. Bagg, Oshawa Boulevard, * * * Mrs. R. Hobbs, Elgin street west, is visiting her daughter, Mrs. Moon, , in Toronto. * . Mr. and Mrs, Milton Werry, Colborne street east, spent the week-end with relatives in Ennis. killen. * » * Mr. Roy Trethewey and Mr. Frank Pearce of Torontp spent Sunday with Mr, Walter Quigley, Brotk street east, * * * Mr. and Mrs. E. C. Brockman and children, Hillcroft street, mot- ored to and spent Sunday in Co- bours. * * * Mrs. Fennell and daughter, Miss Mary Fennell, of Toronto, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. J, A, Moore, Bruce street, yesterday, * ¥ % . Douglas Conant, Simcoe street south, left Friday for Woodstock, where he will enter Trinity College School, * * * Mr. Colin McDonald of Toronto spent the week-end with his par- ents, Mr. and Mrs. C. McDonald, Robson street. * » Ld Miss Mabel Coedy, Nassau street, has returned home after spending the past four weeks in Chatham and St. Mary' 8 * Miss Vera Drehand of Toronto spent the wedk-end in the eity, the guest of her sister, Mrs. Lorne Ratz and Mr. Ratz, Masson street. * . LJ Mr, and Mrs. John Campbell of Newark, N.J.,, were Sunday guests bodusdords dures ducedeosfoslosfesfosfosfoofoofonfodrriorloede "Learn while you earn".- Night School Starts Tuesday Sept. 17 All day school subjects and general improvement cour- ses. Expert Instruction Call or telephone 3216 for information, Peerless Business College 1714 Simcoe Str~et North ofrforioofoconiedforfecjocfoaforfonfosdechorfecdecionfecdacoris "PINKHAM'S COMPOUND IS WONDERFUL Read This Letter from a' Grateful Woman Lan 2 2 Jon Jae 2 Jue 2 cad 20 ect 2 a BALA LLZ LANL L LB H CRN ICT TN IRI I I WW EO 0 20 ad rie Je Je hod eh at a a) be S20 a 200 a a 63 Vanessa, Ont.--"I think Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Com, d is =swonderful, I have had six children of vhich four are liv- Fomit1n e my friends to take it as they will receive the same ams --MRs. MILTON MULLEN, a Ontario. See Our New Kall Line of Coats and Dresses at the FASHION SHOPPE 84 Simcoe St. South of Mr, and Mrs. R. A. Holden, King street west. +s Mr. and Mrs. J. C, Gartshore and baby, Athol street east, have re- turned from spending a few days at Mr. Gartshore's home in Parry Sound. * * Miss Nina K., Gough of: the To- ronto Hospital for Incurables spent the week-end with her parents, Mr, and Mrs, H. Gough, Athol street east. * * Mrs. Emlyn Volkert of Montreal is spending a few days in the city, the guest of her brother, Mr. A. Coedy and Mrs, Coedy, Nassau street. * * * Through the courtesy and kind- ness of the Kinsmen's Club, the children of the Shelter thoroughly enjoyed 'a drive in the country on Sunday morning. LJ] * L Mrs. A. Burnett, and daughter, Wilma, Colborne street, have just returned from a two weeks' visit with relatives in Windsor and De- troit. - » Ld Mr. and Mrs, R. Davidson, Ken- neth avenue, entertained a few of their friends on Friday evening. The evening was spent in a social manner and refreshments served by thg hostess, * * * in the production of "Humpty- Dumpty" at the Prineess Theatre, Toronto, this week, was the gues! of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Stafford, Ritson road south, vesterday. p * * *- Mr. Harry M. Rombough of Walkerville spent the week-end in thecity with, his parents, Mr, and Mrs. P. S. Rombough, Arthur street, and attended the funeral of his grandfather, the late Pem- broke Rombough, which took place on Saturday, Ld LJ . The members of the General Motors Lacrosse team, Dominion champions, will be the guests of the Ontario Athletic Commission, the Amateur Athletic Union of Canada, the Ontraio Amateur La- crosse Association at dinner this evening in the Prince George Ho- tel, Toronto. SWANKY SPORTS TYPE It's youthfully chic, comfortable and wearable, interpreted in Wales blue printed silk crepe. The | diagonal neckline is emphasized by use of plain blending tone .| silk crepe applied bands. Sleeves | have turn-down flared cuff. Hip- | line is extremely slender while plaits at left side of skirt provide necessary width and flare. Style No. 645 comes in sizes 16, 19, 20 years, 136, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust. It adapts itself to heavier cotton fabrics as pique, ginghams and broadcloths for mornings and sports for beach, country or town, Sprtsweight linen, pastel tub silks, shantung, rajah, georgette, printed cotton voile, wool jersey crepe satin also appropriate, For the business woman, navy blue crepe de chine with chartreuse trim is smart. Pattern price 20 cents in stamps or coin, (coin pre- efrred). Wrap coin carefully. We suggest that when you send for this pattern, you enclose ten cents additional for a copy of our large Fashion Magazine. PATTERN PURCHASE COUPON To The Oshawa Daily Times Patt Department, laws, Hh sens Name Add Town .. Provifes ciiecesseestsinnssensesnresnsesiss Price, 20 cents each. stamps or coin. . Wrap coin carefully. ; were Georgie Wood, who is starring | | Watts of Lindsay. | accompanied | Superior | casion, THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, SEPTEMBER 16 1929' S-------- ------ ( 4 Fala VISIT TO OSHAWA DEF ERRED VISCOUNT AND VIS COUNTESS WILLINGDON Whose expected visit to Oshawa | later date on account of the today has been deferred until a | position of the Governor-general. Mrs. Cecil Br: ai MN Was a RUST Va Mi Alma W at the marriaze of uline, daugh | of the bride, wa a ter of Mr. and Mrs re E. Page, and maid in Orchid Thomas Clyde Clapperton, son of | with hat to maich, and a Mr. and Mrs. Georze Clay orton, | of pink roses. Mr. Lorne in Knox College Chapel, Colborn tended on Thursday evening, and of the reception at. the home of the ang 1 parents, 439 Sherbourne street, | : Follow ing the following the church ecremony. | ceremony reception was # " - | the home of the bride's aunt, Mrs Luke and Migs | W . Warne, Li Mr. and Mrs entort 1 on a motor trip classes and on their return wil 'chool, For teachers ioin the 1 Sat | bride Toronto, | of at the bride Love Mrs. Ernest I? ater Evelyn My members of the Primary King street Sunday which they are the which are shortly to school, at picnie afternoon at the Luke, Colborne afternoon was spent after which hot dog and a picnic supper LJ » of in_ Colborne bride chose 2 frock of with a blue monette hat, of and | | crepe on home street ol . codrives a ma cast. If hard 4 oa ' \ dd have ruined him, were * solemnized | ited A quiet wedding wa at Simcoe street 88] parsonage of ht o'clock. day evening, September 14, 1929, when Lucy Irene, shter of My, | and Mrs.- Sam Lovett Hartley, was united in marriage to Walter | Rev Ernest Mr. 8S. Lovett County, and | of the bride, | Mr. and Mr asay, ch eit Satur- dan of Harston officiatde wraden of Victoria Mrs. Lovett, parents signed the register, Watts will reside in Li Miss Mary Oug cant! appoitned head Bethune College, hterson, re mistress of Bishop formerly of Eton College, England, wa officially | welcomed to the city on Saturda afternoon when a held in her honor at une College (rom o'clock. The guests at the entrance to the hallway hv | the Rev. Mother Superior of the | Sisters of St. John the Divine and Miss Oughterson. They were then escorted to the library by member: | of the Sisterhood. The library, | which is artistically furnished, was {illed with gue and coffee was ception w Rizhop Beth four were to received Miss Mary Oughterson, heads tress of BUB.C, in whose hoaor ; reception was held Saturday at the College. sta indis- cousin charmin georgette bouquet Redfearne the groom. register church held at travelling, navy | into drink, "Just why are you a woman hat- er?" was the first question I ask- ed Arthur Stringer, the once ur- bane novelist who from the shad- ier side of fifty betrays a penchant for psychologizing on the frailities and frustrations of the Fair Sex. I not only happened to hold in my hand a copy of "Christina And I," this misogynistic author's brand new book, made up of a series of Socratic dialogues in which the fol- lies and defects of modern woman are so audaciously held up to the light, but I also couldn't help 1re- membering how Mr. Stringer flut- tered the feminine dove-cotes some ten years ago with his study or '"Barbarous Woman," wherein he rudely claimed that even the most civilized daughter of Eve was, un- der her calamitously thin veneer ur culture, still really a savage. "I'm not," retorted the author vr "Christina And 1,"" "for the Ger- mans were right, don't you think, when they said 'Hassen macks nichts'? No, hate never gets you far. Yet it might be a good thing, in one way, if men could learn to hate women a little more than they do.' "So you want to barbarize heth sides of the fence?" 1 suggested. "Not necessarily," answered patient-eved author. "But New World of ours, remember, pretty well given over to gyneol- |atry. We ffeat our women with a this | tries. And history has taught us {that when any given civilization defers unduly to its womenkind it| invariably slips into decadence. It goes soft. The Feminists have had their fling. It isn't the New Wo- man we need now, but Man, the Musculinists who will have the courage to be honest with women, no matter how it hurts. | Af not easy, of course, for men to be open and above board with them- selves. That persistent tendency to | » | appear something she is not was imposed on woman because dissimi- lation is a sort of final and for- lorn armor-plate of the weak and the oppressed. She could tell you, ) | for example. that one of man's clev- 1lerest inventions was the modesty of woman. She might also tell you! that when the armadillo becomes | 1+as mobile as the antelope 1 longer needs its scales, Since Am- erican women acquired freedom, I mean, there are signs that they are getting a littl tired of that | worn-out sex-chivalry which not | only put them up on a pedestal but at the same time left them a | target for what has been termed | the 'squaw-talk' of men. Chival- ry and the chain-shirt were all [ right in their time, but their time | is over. The old sex relationship | was a sort of dry-nursing, | man or woman wants to | nursed. Man, so ong as he | fied and haremized woman, {afford to be magnanimous. [even the most pious of inclina- | Lions, you may have noticed, oc- asionally lead to deplorable ends. | The old Hebraic law, for cxample. [he's ordained 'Thou shai. have no. graven images," completely | practicing the art of sculptuary | stopped the ancient Jews from that hecame the pride and glory of {| the Greeks. Our later Christian belief in the resurrection - of the body, in much the same way, dis- couraged dissection and for centur- and no | by Ury- could | knowledge. | chivalrous {idealization it seems to me, has true understanding of up and sadly interfered manifest destiny. And man's silly and of woman, postponed a her make- with her "Then how about courtship, served by members of the teach- ing staff. Numerous zu were | escorted through the school, which has been re-furnished and slight! 8 remodelled since last term. i eral sisters of St. John the Divine the Rey Mother | Toronto for the o Sev- from 'Weddings PHIL P--c ARR 1 THERS The Irene, || daughter ruthers and (he ] ers of Cobourg to Charle ¥hilp, son of Mr, I") A. Philp and | the late Mrs. Philp of Colborne which took place in Simcoe streot | United Church on Saturday, i tember 14, 1929, was a wedd | of widespread interest in | and district. Rev. Ernest: Harston | performed the ceremony, Mr. | Charles Warne of Oshawa gave hi | | i Her houquet 'was a shower of marriage of Mrs. Persian Balm is a fragrant, silvery liquid which instant- ly soothes and softens a dry, irritated skin. Try it. 35c at all druggists. Send 15¢ for trial size. the cit The creation and product of Northrop & Lyman Co, Limited 'Toronto, Ontario 7 kai BALY bird Blue georgette and lace, witly, a grey felt hat and grey fox fur. niece in marriage. The bride wore | Sweetheart roses and lily 'of the you're going to scrap chivalry?" 1 | ventured. "If men want a mate land can't be charming to a woman ik suppose they'll have to revert to {{ the earlier practice of stunning || them with a stone hatchet?" | "If we're still morbidly chival- {rous during courtship," retortea the author of 'Christina And 1,' [we must remember that mating is a primitive process. It's some- thing that swings us back, whether we like it or not, to the animal kingdom. Woman, of course, has | betrayed a tendency to perpetuate | the courtship relationship so as te | make it cover her entire career, | since during courtship she is ob- || viously most desired. It's during | the mating season that animals be- { come super-ornamental; woman in- | sists on decorating all the time. | that this deliberated deference of the strong to the weak that és {| known as chivalry is a left-handed gi compliment. It may represent the [ 'differential' of the railway tariff as applied to sex, and stand a sort | of armistice for hedonic ends, but Lt invariably carries a note of con- descension. And now that they are permitted to think for themselves Idealization of Women Deters Tnderstanding, Says Novelist women are getting a little tired of that antiquated sex condescension. They claim that the age of apple- sauce is about over. They'd al- most prefer being accepted as they are. They'd rather stand on their own feet than on the old pedestal where they weren't as comfortable as they pretended. It wasn't 50 long ago that the lordly male used to say: "Shall we join the ladies?" But if there's a smoke and an ex- tra drink and a racy story or two going around, the ladies of this emancipated generation seem to want to sit in on it. That's an off- shoot, of course, of woman's nuw hunger to share in man's world. She's had her share of being shut out of things, and she's tired of it. There's no frustration ,more deadly than the discovery that you're a slacker in life, a mere ornamental outsider." "But every intelligent woman wants to be more than ornamen- tal?" 1 contended. "Of course she does,' asserted the brawny maker of hooks. "Sne not only wants to do honest work in an honest way but as she does 1% s| when her If deference unknown in other coun- | the New | ue | babi- | But | ios held back the clock of medical | if | But' woman is beginning to realize fy she finds less and Jess need of de- | ceiving men. It gives her more | than one string to her bow. ' Un- my | der primitive condition, when wo- 50 much more static, life was almost a vegel- while the male's was animal one, she had for protective cunning. to mate and reproduce, | man was |able one | largely an more need | To survive, | she had to appeal to either mans She had to weakness and exag- That's when pro- in the right sorf pity or his cupidity. | capitalize her | gerate ~ her charm-values. | why the clinging vine, perly togged out | of dissimulative attire, such a wide wize enlightened Man has been [long that it's become organic. | suspects | about fit, | himself. can still cut world but He still in his weakness accentuate {any casual {tends to | strength. That tendency, | brings us to the second modern womanhood, leisure. to be kind to woman, | been cruel to her. ning hides, carding wool, swoking the home fires | i | grain, keeping the burning. | But since he was cunning enough | to make weapons, and then tools, {and then machines, | ally able | drudgery. | being ja drone. He left her | hands. He left her | shut out of life. not only the tragedy | modern women failing pate in actualities, but | sion of all that wasted energy | self-ornamentation. {a slave in- that blindly impulse of his man in idleness. ed of idleness ,at {made world and demanding right to work side by her mate again." '""And getting her now and then," I meekly 'Yes, now and then perhaps,' posing me, "but still failing to get work, that man seems to get. still lets man blaze the trail. her labors, you may ed, pioneering leadership. is still the captain nate male ticoats swarm over: the rail verting to type. | the field her fun through out of her own body, jugation of man by senses. That perhaps explains why a well-known woman once pro- claimed she could wring a consola- tion out of the thought of being well dressed which she couin't get out of religion itself." WIFE LEARNS LATE Toronto, Sept. 16.--Not until 24 Lhours after did Mrs. Frank Bradfield, widow of the pilot of the Skyways plane which crashed Saturday, the accident. She had expected her husband hpme at seven o'clock last night. swathe in this other- of ours. chivalrous for 80 | He there's something wrong he can't quite help likes to regard himelf as the lord of creation. And woman nwn in fact. curse of the course of | Man, who's always wanted | has actually | He remembered ! that she was once the drudge, tan- grinding bear-meat, he was eventu- to relieve woman of her! But in saving her from a drudge he turned her into with empty over-idle and And the result is of so many to partici- | the diver- toi Man works like chivalric to dethrone wo- | But she's so tir- heart, that she's beating againt the wall of his man- the side with fun out of it. suggested. thef undamental joy out of work as Sno For have observ- show a tendency to remain sub- sidiary and dependent on man's in- The of the ship, low as we bow when the pet- So woman evens up the score hy re- She goes back to she's sure of and gets self-expression through dress and decoration and the sub- means ot nis OF HUSBAND'S FATE her husband had died learn of 4 d the Community [Away from home herself, EE ---- call- ed their apartment by telephone, expecting to hear his cheery voice. Instead the kindly voice of Mrs, A. Grimshaw, who lives in the same apartment, told her that an ace.- dent was rumored. All day Mrs, Grimshaw haden- deavored to locate the wife of the dead aviator. Mrs. Bradfield col- lapsed, when on arrival home she was told the tragic details, but courageously prepared to speed lat- er in the evening to the scene of the accident, When seen by a reported in her apartment while she was bravely facing' the situation, Mrs, Brad- field found solace in the outstand- ing record 'of her husband in the air. It was hard for her to realize what had happened, for he was no tyro, she said. Carefree and always jovial though he was, hec arried no blot on his eseutcheon for careless- ness. She had thought that he was going to pilot a small plane, a Moth perhaps. On leaving Leaside field on Sat- urday morning at 10 o'clock admitted the calm-eyed author op- | rag he | as had intended to fly over his fath- er's fruit farm 25 miles out of St. Catharines, to slow the motors or his plane, and take a photograph of fruit trees, On Saturday Frank Bradfield left his wife with the usual good- by. Twelve years of flying had made the farewell nothing out of the ordinary, He was merely gon- ing to his job, something which he had performed hundreds of times since the early days of the war, when he first took to the air. The 0. ly unusual touch this time was the fact that his two ehildren, Sal- ly. 9, and Francis, 12, were at nis destination, St. Catharines, and would likely observe his arrival. It was two years ago that Mr. Bradfiel dhad decided to go back to flying. He had been selling cars, but' there was not enough mouvy in it. And to help out the famiyv budget, Mrs. Bradfield had r1e- turned temporarily to her callinz, that of a trained nurse, Tt is than a so much och easier to love a poor girl h one. There is not nearls competition, rant \- s Childhood! Gibbs Dentifrice guards the Health that makes for Happiness HEN health abounds you'll find bright, healthy teeth--teeth well taken care of since childhood. 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Drayton Dolly SAID SHE WANTED To BE A PRINCESS - SHE WAS TIRED of BEING HER HUM- DRUM SELF SHE HAD SHE WOULDNT HAVE HALE AS MucH FuH - ITS MO = BEING A Blneess BosoY + AND comFY WERE $0 WORRIED AND GAY. ALWAYS BEEN So ConTENTED - WHAT cal we * | Do Asovr iT ? SHE WANTS so To OF A PRINCESS -- WONT THAT BE EXCITING] TWIN =~ -- Comry MET A WIZARD AND "TELO Him ALE) ABouT IT Lesson." THE WIZARD SAID The css Dann) J LooKs ENouGH LIKE Dolly To BE HER SHE IS TIRED Of BEING A FPRINCESS- "WE WiLL EXCHANGE THEM AND TEACH THEM BOTH A Goo ad

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