THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 23, 1932 PAGE THIRTEEN Be Sure You Come Early for the School of Cooking DAL MIXED UP WITH POLITICS ve Been Associated - in Nova Scotia Since Year 1799 By George C, Murray, Canadian Press Staff Writer) 'Halifax, N.S.--With tne pres- ntation of the report of the oyal commission on mining, "coal" will be the biggest bone of ontention at the annual session bt the Nova Scotia Legislative As- embly, to be formalde opened on eb. 23. Resolutfons ox_the in- Hustry have bhe¢gn forentdr he legislaitve order papers for many years, and it was necessary 0 do a little research work to earn just when coal first entered bolitics in this province. The records. show that it be- ame acquainted with politicians he year after it made its appear- nee in Picton County, In 1798, a ew humps of coal were discover- d near a brook that passed in he rae of one of William Mac- ay's lots, in the eastern section f the county, Willlam Fraser, a urveyor, carried a sample to Gov- nor Sir John Wentworth in Halifax, The governor sent IFrasey o Admiral Sawyer, who ordered small earzo to ha sent to the apital, Thiz was delivered, but did not prove to be of good uality, and excitement over. the {scovery died down. Dr, James Maczyregor, eminent pissionary of {he Church of the discovery of coal to be an im- portant development in the his- ory of the province, and he took advantage of 1799 election cam- ign to impress his views upon the politicians. If was a notable election, mark- Inz the first movement toward responsible government in Nova ceotia, Patterson's History of Pictou County states: 'From the first settlement of Halifax, so- ciety embraced churchmen and d'ssenters, and thus contained all the material for Whig and Tory parties, The American Rev- olutionary War, and the influx of Loyalists, the majority of whom were Tories apd high churchmen, tended to strengthen the hands of power, and repress everything like popular influence, Still there had been a growing feeling of op- position to the irresponsible pow- er of the provincial rulers, and an incraesing desire to bring the government under the control of | public opinion. This state of feel- which afterward swelled to a flood. under the guidance of 8 G. W. Archibald and Joseph Howe, first found expression in this election." The County of ine. Halifax then | embraced Halifax, Colchester and | Pictou. The poll opened at Hali- | fax on Nov, 13, 1799, and closed on Nov, 23, It then adjourned to Onslow, where it continued for two days, Then it wag adjourned to Walmsley (Pictou Landing), where it opened on Dec, 5, in fhe barn of James Macpherson. By consent of the candidates the last day's polling was at East River, Pleton County, where it wag closed on Dec, 13, The three "country" candidates, ¥dward Mortimer, James Fulton and W, Cottnam Tonge, wera elected, kcotland, was a prominent fizure | and the result of the election was the eastern part of the prov- nce about this time, He believed onsidered "a 'systematic attack on the old irresponsible regime." We are proud to be able to tell you that we have the exclusive agency here for these beautiful Irish Table We have been selling 'Rose of Sharen Linens' They are our choice over all other linens that come from Ireland. Always a full range of Linens. for many years, sizes and qualities in stock. pattern. Thompson Has Chosen At the close of the poll, Dr. Macgregor entertained the candi- dates and a number of strangers at dinner and made for them 8 fire of Pictou County coal. The politicians considered the unusual fire an interesting novelty, They sat around it and saw visions of a great industry in its curling, friendly flames; they carried thelr visions into the legislature where their descendants are still talking about "coal," SAYS VIENNESE North Americans Have New Traits According to Artist stein who came over from Vienna looks upon North Americans as "an entirely new race." "As for brains and spiritual val- ues," he said, "I am not in a posi- tion to make comparisons between the old and the new world; but 'in its physical apearance this new race is reminiscent of the ancient Greece known to us through the master pieces of classical Greek sculpture ~it seems the expression of an ar- ti.t's dream rather than anything | emanating from sober reality." Among; several portraits which Mr. Schatienstein has in a current one-man s! it the Marie Stern- er Gallerics is the -H, L. Mencken, the editor, It was during the Snyder and Judd der of Mrs ve Mencken sat i "I would like to attend that trial" Mencken told the artist one of trial of Ruth he mur- 1 that Sharon" TABLE LINENS for her demonstrations Napkins to match every tied dd fd ve Wl PY 44 at Oshawa School of Cooking and Home Economics Other Famous Brands Windsor Table Salt. In handy pack- for Table, Cooking and Bathroom Uses Regal Salt (Free Running) In all your cooking and bak- ing use Windsor Iodized Salt. The tiny trifle of iodine it con- tains is tasteless and abso- lutely harmless... yet it will protect children from goitre. od So Jute is Windsor Salt that t also. makes an ideal mouth- wash; nothing whitens the teeth better and firms the ums; use also for gargle. p a package in your bath- room as well as your kitchen. WINDSOR IODIZED SALT CANADIAN INDUSTRIES LIMITED ; WINDSOR, ONTARIO remarked tenstein, tor, "I would | much | Mr tor, got CO-ORDINATION and Family Welfare Issues Warning Toronto, Ont. 'a more co-ordinated treatment," than exists at the present time ig stressed (n a sum- mary of unemployment relief nieasures In leading Canadlan cities, issued hy the Canadian counell on child and family wel- fare, Soclal work and rollef are at very different stages cof develop ment in different parts of Canada the report points out. And the pity of the whole situation is de- scribed ay 'the greater in the whole great misery should be fundamentally unnecessary--- {dleness, poverty and suffering in our city streets and many a coun~ tryside, with wheat elevators averflowing and warehouses filied with unsaleable goods---the welght of plenty oppressing us into want because we have not learned the secret of effective control and adequate dlistribu- tion of our own genius of pro- duction. "But just as money and inter- est alone poured into distributive undertakings would have been of but partial effect, so the more generous outpouring of relief rnd assistance will not relieve, out of existence, the {lls of un- employment." Mere material relief, it is pointed out, cannot rurtain the character and morale in theso times of need, Unemployment insurance -- a question which has been argued ond studied by governments as a means of curbinb the whole sit- uation -- {8s but ome part of a comprehensive programme, the report suggests, This programme must supply relief provision for the uninsurable dependent, and the social needs of the insurable. As the situation becomes more apparent 'so does the fact that a large measure of the problem i# not emergency in {ts nature, but wears a permanent aspect that traditionally has. heen met by provincial or municipal effort, public or private, This imposed upen us the obligation of de- velcping a truly notional attitude towards the whole question of go- clal welfare to the end that the programme of social assistance may be conceived as a whole, and carried out in recognized, ra. ther than haphazard, parts, as the respective responsibilities of the different parties thereto." "The high hearts and courag- cous spirit with which the un- employed themselves have faced a two-year struggle and the un- derstanding devotion, with which the organized social services, rublic and private, have endeav- cored to minister to them, have lield the trenches of law and or- der and peaceful government in this land as truly as ever those greater battle lines held bravely for democracy throughout the four war years," the report con- cluded. At Tipperary monthly horse fair The need fof '{recently, army mounts realized £20 to £30 and farm horses 15 to 20 pounds, A £238609 contract has been awarded for the foundations and steelwork of the new bridge over the Forth at Kincardine, Scotland. New York, N.Y.--Nikol- Schatten. | several years ago to paint portraits, ! "I would | {liv to find out why a person would | { do such ing." "It is danzerous to be a husband," | | | | It Will Pay to Attend the Times' Cooking School The advertisers who are co-operating with the Oshawa Daily Times in making possible a three day cooking and home econ omics school, in the Masonic Temple Auditorium on Yuesday, Wednesday and Thursday of next week, at three o'clock daily, with Miss E. Frances Thompson in charge, are showing a gen- erous spirit in their co-operition, Every day, there will be general prizes offered, as the list given below shows, Fach day ten prize baskets of various products will be given away, as well three special prizes, while on the last day there will be grand prizes for the housewives who hold the winning numbers, Fvery woman attending the school will receive a coupon, and these will be collected at the intermission. At the close of the demonstra~ tions, the prizes will be drawn, and the lucky winners will take home their awards, The following is a list of the prizes to be given at the school today, at the opening session and tomorrow and Thursday, TEN BASKETS CONTAINING THE FOLLOWING ARTICLES One package Rinso, One package of Lux, One cake of Lux Toilet Soap. One pound Dumart's Bacon, Packages of Kellog's Products, One package Windsor lodized Salt One tin Bokar Coffee One package Orange Blend Royal Yo One 2-0z. bottle of Bovril, One tin Almer Infant's Food. One jar Smith's Jam or Marmalade. One hottle Smith's Ketchup One pound Oshawa Dairy Butter (in five baskets daily) One loaf of Dr, Jackson's Roman Meal Bread, supplied by Bakery. One tin of Mazola Salad Oil One tin of Crown Brand Corn Syrup. One package of Benson's Canada Prepar One tin Old Dutch Cleanser, One tin Gem Lye, One Onliwon Sterilized Towel One seven pound bag XXX Pastry Flour One tin Ovaltine, One aluminum Cooking Utensil (Wear-ever SPECIAL PRIZES The following special prizes will also be given away tomorrow One three-picee aluminuy sausepan sct, supplied by Adams Fur- niture Company Order for marcel and finger wave Parlor, One gallon motor Cakes and Pastries fr oa supplied by Pember's Beauty Ontario Motor Cake Shoppe, GRAND PRIZES On the last day, the following grand prizes w Choice of CLE, Electric Range, C.G.E, Electric large. mode! stand Sunray dridal set t One « sunplied b m Jean Ruth n I Aluminum i Rins ware, SHAKESPEARE IS BADLY NEEDED Canadian Council on Child Returns to Tree's Old The- | production seemed t tional reproduction of the I of pageant-show, BEING REVIVED 2+ = The brought Daily Telegraph atre in London With | with the con "Julius Caesar" took the audience by ho settling down {nto a somewhat conven- | Tre: Godfrey great critic thinks his best effort was not In| the Forum scene but in the scene | RAILWAY CRASH pirators, "for it was | hero that the play came to lite | the plan of that | (By Thos, T. Champion, Cana- dian Press Staff Writer) l.ondon.--Ardent Shakespear- | «1:8, and the theatre-going pub- lic in general have shown the | keenest interest in the produc- tion of "Julius Caesar," at. His | | Mujesty's, This 18 an ambitious cftort hy Oscar Asche to make a | return to Shakespeare in Beers | Lohm Tree's old theatre in the | "grand manner' so clesely asso- | ciated with Tree's memory, For the most part critics speak favorably of the performance as ¢ whole, They are united in ugreeing that the oustanding fig- ure of the all-star cast Is God- frey Tearle, in the part of Mark Antony, Until his entrance the | und | wards relaxed." throat {in a grip that never after- As for the For- um scene, many first-class bhe- holders were doubtful whether it was not carrying realism too far | to have Mark Antony deliver his cech in little more than a brok- | H | en series of rather gasping sent-! vices, his words forced in be- tween the vehement volubllity of the mob, Godfrey. "Vearle at this point had to he a mob-orater from first to last, and at times roared like a football coach, | Tho part of Caesar {8 really a | thin one in the dramatic sense Most people, too, imagine Caesar | but | re- | physically as a spare man, Lyn Harding's appearance minds tional John Bull. Oscar Asche, | who produced the play, is Casen, | one rather of the tradi-|! and according to one commentor provides an fronic answer to Caesar's prayer, 'Let me have mer. about me that are fat," The opening night was certain- ly u great occasion for Shakes- pearians, Mr, Asche in his gpecch at the finish was heartily applauded when he suggested tha' "the spirit of our oid chief, Sir Herbert Tree, was never far FAMILY HABITS BIG INFLUENCE Cause Business "Ups and Downs" According to Economists That hooms and depressions are largely due to the average family's habit of periodically get- ting in' debt and then having to pay off that debt {sg indicated hy the results of a consumer study by Investors Syndicate of Minne- apolis. As business goes from normal into .a boom, and confidence be~ | comeg widespread, millions of fa- milles begin to spend thelr sav- frgs as well as and finally borrow money to swell their buying power. Pub- | fe buying ability then secms un- limited, When the load of debt gots too neavy and the boom breaks, peo- ple not only find themselves with 1educed incomes, but part of this | income must go to pay | reduced 'he debty contracted during the boom. Buying { low normal, | One of the best signs that the | overage family's finances have | become is when the savings be- gin to reach new high records, indicating that debts | mostly pald and that the habits f economy learned during the the | early part of the depression are! applied to building up a When people have this tangible reason for greater con- fidence in the future, buying gradually returns to normal, Re- cent figures showing new high records for savings, the Syndicate concludes, afford concrete of an gradual revival of business this year, FOUR KILLED IN heing surplus, Eleven. Others Injured When Trains Collided on Sunday (By Canadian Press) Summerside, PLE, Feb, 23=Four lead and eleven injured was the toll a wreck at Harpers Station on Canadian National Railway, one e cast of Tignish, early on Sun- morning when a snow train two locomotives crashed rear of a stalled freight twenty-seven snow baggage car and cay lrawn by ito the tran carrymmg hovellers in a ach. I'he first train, running late, was Jd up by heavy snow just outside the vard limits, It was stalled when the second, also behind time, steams ed along pushing a plow. The plow oach and threw the other current income, | then goes far bhe- | are | hope | ti A SRR SRA 2 di TOD'S Delicious +0 FIRM - EVEN - FLAVORFUL Being Used Exclusively by F. Thompson AT THE OSHAWA SCHOOL OF COOKING AND HOME ECONOMICS IN THE MASONIC TEMPLE AUDITORIUM Miss Thompson has chosen Tod's Bread Because it is distinctly better in quality, firmness and flavor, WATCH FOR OUR SPECIAL GIFT IN THE PRIZE BASKETS BEING GIVEN AWAY DAILY TOD'S BAKERY a CORE a? | split the ¢ cars aside, \ relic train was sent from Sum- | merside when word of the disaster reached here. Jt brought the seri- | ously injured to Prince County [Hospital yesterday afternoon. | FRIENDSHIP | -- 1g you walk as a friend you will find a friend wherever you choose to fare; If vou go with strange land you mirth is there; For the strangest part of this queer old world is that like will join with like; And who walks with love for his fellow man an answering love will strike If vou walk in honor then honest men will meet along the way; | But if vou are false you will find men false wherever you chance | to stray. For good breeds good and bad breeds bad, we are met by the traits we show; Love will find a friend at the stran- ger's door where hate will find a foe. For cach of us builds the: torld he knows which only himself can spoil ; And an hour of hate or an hour of shame can ruin a life of toil: And thoueh to the utmost ends eof the earth your duty may bid you fare, If vou go with truth and a friendly heart you will find friends wait- ing there. mirth to a far will find that ~The Mutualist. It ig proposed to install automatic traffic signals in the main streets of Inverness. ; The annual gathering of the Td inburgh branch of the of the Clan MacKinnon Society was well at- tended. . The chief MacKinnon of MacKinnon, occupied the chair, -------- Chief Constable Lamant, Mther- well, states the total number of of- fences during 1931 was 848, a de. crease of 209, as compared with the previous year, For tre first time in the history of the Inverness Gaelic Society of lady has been elected chici--Coun- tess of Cromartie, Baillie M'Lachlan, 'of Messrs. Johu M'Lachlan Ltd, contractors, Oban, has secured the contract for ROVRIL BEEF STRENGTH INTO SOUPS AND GRAVIES =~ Ardgour Memorial Hall, to be ere t.. Th ey ed in memory of the late 71 i Scotland Maclean of Ardgour, Scotland, was 19 per 1,000, the owest ona pul' better acquainted! If you knew Old Dutch Cleanser as do thousands and thousends of Canadian housewives, you, too, would realize thet: "Old Dutch Is the only cleanser you need in your home,"" Old Dutch Cleanser is endorsed and recommended by the leading manufacturers of enamel stoves, electric refrigerators and porcelain ware, because it does not scratch or injure the original finish, Old Dutch by the Oshawa School of Cooking and Home Economics because of its superior cleaning qualities, assuring 'Healthful Clea liness'. Cleanser has been chosen It is the only Cleanser you need in your home, Every day. more and more Canadian house- wives are adopting Old Dutch exclusively be- cause it cleans more things .. cleans quicker . . doesn't scratch . . . is kind to their hands . . . goes further: costs less to use. MADE IN CANADA For particulars of the Diamond Ring Contest listen to tha Old Duich Gir' every Monday, Wednesday and Friday morning ever the Columbia Broadcasting System. Tune In Toronto Station CFRB 8145 A.M. Standard Time. = a ER i GEM LYE i PACKAGE OPENS CLOGGED DRAINS - KEEPS DRAINS OPEN AT ALL GROCERS Ca, (1d Dut ---- "It's no trouble [ J "® ® © I have a Telephone in the kitchen" When you are busy in the kitchen and friends telephone, or you have an order to give the grocer, it is always trouble. some to have to go to a telephone in ane other part of the house. The modern housewife has a telephone in the kitchen where she can use it quickly and conveniently} save time and extra steps, and prevent spoiled cooking and endless annoyance. You can have an extension telephone in your kitchen for only a few cents a day. Any Bell Telephone employee will be glad to give you particulars and see that your order is promptly carried out. ; H. M. BLACK, Manager,