Oshawa Daily Times, 31 Mar 1932, p. 5

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THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, THURSDAY, MARCH 31, 1932 PAGE FIVE Women's Interests in the Home cad the Conimunity Social and Personal Readers are invited to sub mit social and personal ftems for publication in this column. Kindly send or phone them to Fhe Times office. Phone 85 or after office hours to Miss Lois Mundy Phone 812. On Tuesday night a party was beld for the Daughters of Eng- land at the home of Mrs. Hall and Mrs, Sturch, Buckingham Avenue. Cards and games were enjoyed. Mrs. Herring, Mrs. Mears and Mrs. Read, were the prize winners. A dainty lunch was served after the games, .. . Ld Mrs. J. Davenport and Mrs. Potts, King Street West, were in Toronto on Wednesday attending the Ontario Educational Associ- ation Convention as delegates from Westmount Home and School Club. y - * » On Tuesday, March the twenty- ninth a most pleasant evening was enjoyed by the members if Mrs. A. BE, Murdock"s group of Simcoe Street United Church, Ladies' Aid Society at the home of Mrs. Coedy, 71 Nassau Street. During the business meeting which took up a short time in the early part of the evening, it was decided to hold a rummage sale in the basement of®he church on April the fifth. A jolly social time followed the business ses- sion and Mrs. Coedy presided over the serving of delicious re- freshments. LJ LJ * Miss Helen Hutcheon and Miss Audrey Sonley are in Ottawa at- tending the annual convention of the Registered Nurses' Associ- ation of Ontario being held there this week. Mr. Chas. Moore and Mr. Harry Moore of Toronto are guests of Mrs. Sydney William- son, College Hill. » . LJ] Mrs. C. A. Vermoen, Burke Street, entertained the officers and members of L.T.B. No. 55, at a social on Tuesday evening at her home. Dainty supper was served, games and dancing fol- lowed. » * Geen, of this city, organist of Simcoe Street United Church, attended the consecration of the new Bishop of the Diocese of Ontario in St. George's Cathedral, at Kingston, on Tuesday. En route to King- ston, Mr. Geen paid a short visit to his parents, Rev. A. L. Geen and Mrs, Geen, of Belleville, - . LJ Ll Mr. Reginald Mrs. George W. Henley and family, Simcoe Street North, are guests of Mrs, Henley"s mother, Mrs. E. Hicks. and her sister, Mrs. W. B. Deacon, of Belleville. * L Miss Jean Scott, of this city, has returned after spending the Easter week-end at her home in Montreal. LJ] LJ . A delightful affair of Tuesday night was the bridge given in St. George's Parish Hall, under the auspices of the Guild of the Church. Twenty tables of bridge were played in the main neve re the hall, festively decorated with blue and white spring flowers. Guests were received hy the president, Mrs. Clayton Downey and the two vice presidents, Mrs, George Norris and Mrs, J. B, Cummins. Mrs, W, W. Bickell and Mr. Barnhart were winners of the special prizes, Charming little nosegays of spring flowers were given to the holders of the high scores at every table. Sup- per was served after the bridge games, LJ LJ J The annual dance for the staff of the local branch of the Bell Telephone Company will take place on Friday evening, April the eighth in the Genosha Hotel, 1S YOUR DAUGHTER FLAPPER OR ANGEL Chancellor Wallace Says Movie Idol Has Bad Effect on Girls The following paragraphs which appeared in the Toronto Globe this morning are from the speech delivered last night to the delegates to the Home and School Clubs' Federation ses- sions at the O.E.A. Convention being held this week in Toronto. Mrs. R. 8. McLaughlin presided and introduced the speaker, Chancellor E. M, Wallace of Vic- toria College, University of To- ronto. "Which is you daughter--an angel or a flapper?" Chancellor Wallace of Victoria College put this question to several hundred delegates of 'the Home and School Section of the Ontario Education Association when he addressed them following dinner at the Granite Club last even- ing. "She is a little of both, you will say, but if a choice is to be made you will have to admit she is a flapper. Young men used to speak of all younz women as angels. Mothers used to call children especially other people's children--Ilittle angels. But today the young man does not believe in angels. And moth- ers, likewise. have given up thinking of their children as an- gels. Instead, she reads all about modern psychology, and stands like an organist before the in- strument knowing what stops to pull out and what stops to press in; and even if she cannot pro- duce harmony, she can at least play scales on her unfortunate child, But somehow she misses the angelic quality, and the child becomes bewildered and shy at the pulling and pushing of the angel per." "Flapperism," Dr, Wallace de- fined, *is the normal condition of a young girl in her last years of high school and her first vear at college. A flapper is a young zirl who is not yet perfectly at home--who has not found her- self. She is overemotional, over- critical, and her desires have not become balanced and unified into a will or personality. There is nothing wrong with flapper- fsm. It is a peridd to be out- grown. Tt is a transition period from childhood into womanhood, "But it is ohjectionabla only when it is unnatural; when it is premature, or when it is pro= longed. That is the most objec- tionable thing ahout the movies, The movies overemphasiza the flapper world. They set it on a nedestral and bow down before it. There are fathers and moth- ers in Toronto as repressing to their children as Edward Barret of Wimpole Street. In the very name of liberty, they are confin- ing their children to chains Mothers, the speaker advised. should watch for the spontaneous expression in their children, and zive it freedom, with direction. All the exuberance and restless- ness of the flapper, he said, was only the forcing of her to explore life. The girl of 14 or 15 should we have the flap- New Wonderful Face Powder Prevents Large Pores-- Stays on Longer For a youthful complexion, use new wonderful MELLO-GLO Face s Colc's Best treated without dosing -- Just rub on | | dorful face Powder. Hides tiny lines, wrink- les and pores. New French pro- cess makes it spread more "moothly and stay on longer. No 'more shiny noses. Purest face powder known. Prevents large pores, Ask today for new, won- powder, MELLO- $10, that suits every complex- on. By Appointmentto Her Majesty | Have timid people of the stops. Therefore, in place | Blended For Flavou r--Always SALADA TEA "Fresh from the Gardens" By Thornton Through all of time, since days of old, feared the bold, --0ld Mother Nature. | | | Boldness has nothing to do | with size, There are timid big people and bold small en | The hold are those who know no | fear. If they have known fit they | have overcome it, They do | things which others fear to go | and by their boldness often get | what others desire but fear to try | for. So, boldness, guided by good | judgment, often gains its object where lack of boldness would | fail. It was dreadful news . that | Whitefoot the Wood Mouse had | bro t to Mrs. Whitefoot in the new home in the syrup can in Farmer Brown's sugar house, It was the worst news possible, Whitefoot, who had been outside the su~ar house, hed seen Shad- ow the Weasel searching through the woodpile where they former- ly lived and then running over to the door of the sugar house. He was hunting Mice and White- foot knew it. Shadow had been driven away by the opening of | the door hy Farmer Brown's Boy, but Whitefoot know that he hadn't gone far. Mrs, Whitefoot shivered at a thought that had come to her. "Whitefoot,"" she whispered, "I thought it was a dreadful thing when our home was taken away from the woodpile and brouzht in here, but it wasn't, It was the best, the very best thing that onld have happened. Shadow the Weasel would have found us Qur ba%les would have been kill- ed by this time. Oh, T do so hone re will not dare come in here." "He will if' he gets the chance," raplied Whitefoot. "For hig gize I guess he ig just about holdest person in all the Great World. The worst of it is we are helpless There isn't a thing we can do. In this new house (he meant the syrup can) we are safe from everyone but | him. He can come through that doorway as easily as we can. All we can do is to wait and hope for the best. There is mo other nlace for us to go." "If only Farmer Brown's Boy will keep that door 'shut Shadow may give un and go away" said Mrs. Whitefoot. Then she shivered. "Oh dear," she wailed in, her saueaky little voice, 'it is dread- ful to be so helpless." Shadow the Weasel, still in the be allowed to be a real flapper, and not a grown-up flapper who indulges only in adult amuse- ments such ag dancing and mov- fes, "Do not let the emotional lives of your daughters be over- stimulated by the books they read and the shows they see. Movies may be all right for the adult, but not for the flapper," Dr. Wallace said. College comes to the aid of the flapper, the speaker con- tinued. It gives her freedom from over-indulgence and over-repres- sion, and from the paralyzing conventions of the adults in her home. She is quite often to be found in the first year of college. Then she is brought into con- | dodged [] W. Burgess his white winter coat with a black tip to his tail, had visited that part of the Green Forest just by chance. The instant he aw that woodpile outside the sugar house he went over to in- vesticate it. Almost at once he got the Mouse scent, It was faint and he knew that it was some time since the ones who had left it had been there. He also knew that they were not likely to be liking. He snarled again when he once more approached that door only to find it closed, "Do they think they can shut fe out that way?" he snarled. "I'll: get in there now if only to show them that I do as 1 please, I'm not afrald of them and I'll show them so." But Shadow didn't get in that night, That door wasn't opened again and there was no hole, The one under the edge of the roof which Chatterer the Red Squir- rel had used to get out and Whitefoot has used to get in had been blocked on the inside. So Shadow curled up in a retreat of his own and slept the remainder of the night. He was wide awake at the first sounds in the sugar house the next morning and slip- ping out of his hiding place crept to where he could watch the door of the sugar house. "The first time that door fis left open 1 will walk right in | there," declared the bold rascal. And he meant it, (Copyright, 1932, T. W. gess). Bur- | The next story: "The Broken | Egg." EASTLAND FOX FURS Grey, Beige, White $7.95 Girl's Coats Sizes 2 years to 16 years. $9.95 . $1 250 PRINTED RAYON DRESSES Sizes 14 to 48. WOMEN'S MEETINGS Wash quality, BABIES' SILK COATS white, pink, sky. Non Run. $3.50 SILK BLOOMERS 39¢ May Belle quality. On sale TRINITY WOMEN'S AUXILIARY At the regular meeting of the Vomen's Auxiliary of Holy Trin- HOLY KIDDIES' REEFERS Navy blue serge. 2 to 6 years. .... $1.98 Black, grey, ity Church held on Tuesday af- | ternoon, final arrangements were | made for the annual party cele- far away, He sat up and looked across at the old sugar house "That them," thought the place they will look around inside there. So he started over to the sugar he. "That is just | house and just as he reached the door it opened and out stepped Farmer Brown's Boy on his way far an armful of wood. Shadow out of sight as only he can, He did it so quickly that Farmer Brown's Boy didn't see him at all. "Humans! Those two-legged creatures called Humans are liv- ing in there!' he snarled to him- elf. Shadow has a way of snarl- ing when things are not to his WHAT NEW YORK IS WEARING Daughter and You'll Be Thilled as She! The softened neckline is a darling . vogue. And isn't the partial belt effect smart the way it ties so youthfully in bow at the back? The circular cut trou- legs are moderately full as the younger set wears them, A crepe 'de chine print with pink motifs on pale blue ground is. decidedly French and exceed- ingly dainty in effect, as the orig- inal. It can also be carried out in crepe satin, rayon novelties and flat washable crepe silk for bed- time, For lounging you may choose ser is the place to look for | would go to. I | brating the birthddy of Holy Trinity Church. This to be held | on Tuesday, April bth at 7.30 o'clock in the Parish Hall, JESSIE PANTON AUXILIARY The monthly of the Jessie Panton Auxiliary | of St, Andrew's Church was held Tuesday evening in the ladies' regular meeting navy. Pair .... KID GLOVES, $1.49 Dome or pull-over styles in a quality worth much more. $1.49 Many Styles to choose from, Millinery weight. PENMAN"S SILK HOSE Full-fashioned, light service 79¢ pair parlour Thi wag the usual Thankoffering meeting, The d¢ votional period was led by the President, Mrs. H. Brant. Pamph- lets prepared by tha W. M.S, were | used. They consisted of hymns, | responsive readings and prayers DEWLAND'S BE TRE. Tn a SR Mrs, Norman White, of Myrtle, addressed the meeting in a most | impressive manner, using the let. ters of the society W.M.S,, as her text," Mrs. White interpreted them to mean, "We Must "We Must Share", Her message |' another work, and dia for | Missionary | My Neorgi and | . served refre Serve' geven At the hments, year of | ance Trinity Young | es elected to fill will long he remembered by | those who heard it. A vocal duet by Misses Greta Maxwell and Mary Fletcher was much ap- preciated An article from the Missionary | Revue entitled "A Spirit of Sac- | Y ung People's | Societies | Martin, who recently | Mr. all the meeting ixth, next at his April the MASSIVE rifice and Service" was read. If | told of the return of the Rev D. J. Davidson, B.A, and Mrs. Davidson, M.D., to central In- HOLY TRINITY YOUNG PEOPLE'S CLUB | [ay There was an excellent attend- | just across the | Saskatoon, Sask tour near at the meeting of the Holy People's Society Mrs, Baird | on Wednesday night, Harry Amey position of secretary vacated by Miss Jean resigned. Amey extended an invitation members to hold home on the the MOLAR A massive mo- Rosenheim, Alberta-Saskatche- Alta, wan border, is attracting considers able attention. Nine inches in dia- meter, the tooth is believed to have belonged to one of the mammoths existing in the country in the gla« cial age. Edmonton, Alta. -- Alberta made $1,132,442 from natural resources in 1931. This sum included $79,390 from land ; $302081 from timber and grazing; $501,437 from mining; $22,+ 222 from fisheries; $226,752 from school lands and $566 from sundry revenue, FF: stocks of the newest patterns, many of them never before shown « + . special low prices for the seven big days of selling . . . every paper a genuine Sunworthy quality. Surely all these inducements are too 229 og SUNWORTHY WALLPAPER WEEK -_ Low Prices on Genuine SUNWORTHY Wallpaper during seven days of special selling. Note the Special advantages of re-decorating now. HOW LITTLE IT COSTS! The entire cost for sidewall ders for a room 12 x 12 x 8 feet will bei-- per and bore Using paper from the 25 cent group Using paper from the 30 cent group $4.36 the 35 ee group $4.86 $3.69 Wallpaper which fades readily is not worth the cost of hanging. Sunworthy Wallpapers are printed in sunfast colors which retain their the Queen MAKE THE LOVABLE important to pass by. The pleasure you will get from your fresh, new walls foted in spake db it : orig re! auty. s true will be greater by far than the few decorate with Sunworthy Wellpnern: Then . special Sunworthy Wallpapers are semi- dollars they will cost. C08 : trimmed, thus saving time and expense in tact with personalities richer than their own, with personali- ties who have, unlike them, found their clue to living. Then suddenly she, too, finds herself ~--maybe in a sunset or perhaps in a quiet hour in chapel." YOUR of what hanging, O other perfume in all the world can greet you with the tenderness and refreshing touch of the Yardley Lavender. In 162 years none haspre- sumed to takeits place as Fashion's t= loved companion; and none ever will. Make the Yardley Lavender your perfume~--for the solace: that it brings when you are tired and for the fascination that is Yardley alone. In stop- pe ttles at '35c--and cases from 85¢c to $10, at all good drug and depart- ment stores. YARDLEY LONDON Toronto, New York, Paris Lerfume YARDLEY LAVENDER "Do not be too sure stop to pull. But let her experi- ment with the better things." MOURNING WARDROBE "A Jeph occurred in our fam- ily and 1 had to go in mourning. I could hardly afford to buy all black clothes, so decided to dye what I had. 1 consulted our drug- gist and he advised using Dia- mond Dyes. Everything came out beantifully;~ goats, wool dresses, stockings and "all. 1 have since leArned to appreciate the excels lence of the black Diamond Dyes. I tried another black dye ahd the results were impossible. I had to get Diamond Dyes and do the work over. Recently I have tinted my curtains a beau- tiful raspberry shade and dyed a rug a lovely garnet with Dia- mond Dyes, They are real money savers--the finest dyes money can buy--I truly believe," Mrs, G.K.L.,, Montreal plain or novelty wool crepe, woal jergey and crepe silk in plain or print. Style No, 816 is designed for sizeg 12, 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 36 and 38 inches bust. Size 16 re- quires 3% yards of 39-inch ma- terial with 4} yards of binding. Spring is the most important, the most colorful season in fash- fons. All the more reason why you should have an authentic guide, such as our new Fashion Magazine, to show you the way in design, colors, etc. Of course there are styles for afternoons, tof stouts, for home wear, lin- gerie, children, ete, Price of BOOK 1 cents, Price of PATTERN, 20 cents in stamps or coin (coin ig prefer- red). Wrap coin carefully. Address orders to: Pattern Ka- itor, Oshawa Dally Times, Osh- awa, Ont, do. WM. W. PARK 82 Simcoe Street, South DARE YOU MOVE YOUR PICTURES? i ES

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