THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 26, 1932 PAGE FIVE i Women's Inter ests in the Home cad the Conimunity, \ Social and Personal Readers are invited to sub. mit social and rsonal items for publication in this column. Kindly send or phone them o The Times office, Phone 85 or after office hours to Phone 2443. Mr. Stephen Saywell, Celina Street, president of the Bay of Quinte Young People's Confer- ence, will be the guest speaker .of the Rotary Club in Campbell- ford today. Mr. Saywell will speak on "The Youth Movement of the World." This evening Mr. Saywell will address one of the Young Peoples socteties in Campbeliford. The Mission Circle of King Street United Sunday School held a sale of work and tea in the bas-ment of the Sunday School on Friday afternoon and even- ing. The rooms and booths were gay with the Christmas colors of red and green. The returns from the sale and tea were particularly gratifying. The following wer conveners of the various booths: fancy work, Mrs. H. S. Myers; candy, Mrs. Sills; samples, Miss Christie: home cooking, Miss Flo- ra Hawkins. The tea-room was under the supervision of Mrs. Orland Orr and was well patron- ized. All the members of the Mis- sion Circle assisted in the booths and the tea-foOR. Miss Aura "Toots" Brooks, of Lockwood Clinic, Toronto, spent the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. S. S. Brooks, Cour- tice. * . LJ Mrs. Tom Millar and sons, of Toronto, ave spending the week with the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Fulton, Clarke Street. LJ - * Miss Marzaret Anderson, of Toronto, spent the week-end with her parents, Mr, and Mrs. C. M. Anderson, Division JSreet LJ Misses Helen Burns and Reba Preston, formerly connected with the Peterboro branch of the Excelsior Life Insurance Com- pany, have moved to Oshawa, where they will reside in the fu- ture. The move was caused bv the amalgamation of the Peter- boro and the local branches of the Excelsior Life, with the branch office being maintained in the Alger Building here, Mrs. B. Babcock, Brock Street, is visiting friends in Belleville for a few weeks, LJ * LJ Mr. and Mrs. P. Palmer, of Carmel, are visiting their daugh- ter, Mrs. M. Sutton, and Mr. Sut- ton, Grooms Avenue, for a few weeks. * . * Mrs. E. A. Rutherford, of Col- borne, spent the week-end with her daughter, Mrs. Clinton Rice and Mr. Rice, Buckingham Ave- nue. " LJ -. Mr. and Mrs. E. Kiefaber and small daughter, of Toronto, were the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Cas- sell Larmer, Roxborough Avenue, for the week-end. we» Mr. and Mrs. M. Sutton and Miss Rose Evans were the guests of Mrs. Sutton's parents, Mr. and Mrs. P. Palmer, Carmel, for the week-end. $e 8 Mrs. A. Crooks, Miss J. Crooks, Mr. and Mrs. J. Hilton and three children, all of Toron- to, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. W. Jackson, Burke Street. Mr. and Mrs.» Harold Arm- strong, Brock Street, spent the week-end with the latter's fath- er, Mr. Heath at Stirling, Ld LJ LJ Mr. Fred H. Parsons, Rich- mond Street East, sailed from Montreal yesterday for England, where he will join Mrs. Parsons, who has heen spending some time in England. Mr. and Mrs. Par- sons will make their home In England in the future. LJ LJ » In the account of the marriage of Mr. W. H. Robinson, account- ant at the Bank of Montreal in the city, the bride's maiden name was erroneously printed. Mrs. Robinson's name was Boul- ter, and not Boultbee as stated in Saturday's editTon, of BL Madame Phillips Roy, of Paris, France, who is a guest of his Honor the Lieutenant-Governor and Mrs. Herbert A. Bruce, was entertained on Saturday by Mrs. A. L. Ellsworth, Toronto. Mr. and Mrs. R. 8S. McLaughlin, Sim- coe Street north, were among the guests. Today Mrs. I'. W. Cowan is entertaining at tea for Madame Roy in Toronto. . LJ LJ Christmas Dance of the Royal Military College, Kingston, is to be held at the college on Friday, December 16, * The annual Miss Isobel McLaughlin enter- tained for Frederic Manning, Kathleen Irwin and Winifred McMillan following their recital in Hart House Theatre on Sat- urday evening. WEDDING SHEPHERD--McCALLUM The marriage was solemnized in Laidlaw United Church, Ham- ilton, on Saturday, November 19, 1932, of Mary Elspeth, eldest daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frank McCallum of Hamilton to Alan C. Shepherd, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles Shepherd, 39 Park Road South, Oshawa. Rev. F. C. Over- nd officiated. The bride, who was given in marriare by her father, wore a becoming gown of saps phire blue French crepe with in- sets of blue chiffon velvet. A French hat of matching color and pearl gray shoes completed the wedding ensemble. Her bouquet was Butterfly roses, fern and white h-ather. The bride was at- tended by her sister, Miss Beth McCallum, 'who was' becomingly gowned in midnizht blue Jericho crepe with trimming of ezgshell cut velvet, velvet turban to match and carrying ab ouquet of Ameri- can Beauty roses, The grooms- man was Mr. Frank McGoun, of Toronto. There were guests pres- ent from Toronto, Oshawa, Guelph, Islington, Bartonville, Hamilton. After the ceremony a reception was hcld at the home of the bride's parents, 26 Edin- burg Avenue. Mr. anu. Mrs, Shepherd left on a wedding trip to points east, the bride travel- ling in a black and white wool crepe dress, a coat trimmed with kolinsky fur and hat to match. On their return they will reside at 846 Davenport Road, Toronto. Times' Classified Ads. Get Results FALSE TEETH Can Not Embarrass | teeth | Most wearers of false have suffered real embarrassment because their teeth dropped or slipped at just the wrong time. Do not live in fear of this han- pening to you. Just sprinkle a little Fasteeth on your plates. Makes false teeth stay in place and feel comfortable. Sweetens breath. Get Fasteeth at any good drug store. GRATEFUL MOTHER'S LETTER "With my last baby," writes Mrs, Java : family of eight children, ut four months, and then naturally turned t, {! | along. He was a normal infant all the Eagle re ol io Eagle Brand he 0 ing regularly between feedings, bring him starting him on tented little fellow. Hi, had a sick day since. "Whe , a ha; is teeth wi i Wo ie i iE withont difficulty = ask me how William McLean of Elors, "and I was only able to nurse him for gave me little or no trouble, | and grew to be such ae py, con- has not ple admire him and say --- By Thorton W. Burgess CHATTERER MAKES THE BEST OF THINGS Your tears won't bring back milk that's spilled, But work will get the pail refilled. --0Id Mother Nature, Chatterer the Red Squjrrel thought his eyes must be playing him tricks when .e first saw that old stump which he had been using as a temporary storehouse torn all apart and his store of nuts gone. But they hadn't been playing him tricks. What he scemed to see he did see. The pieces of that stump were scattered all about. Chatterer didn't even have to guess what had happened; he knew. He knew as well as it he had been there and sce it done, "It was that big black robber, Juster Bear. He did this," snarled Chatterer and his little eyes were red with rage. "He thinks that be- cause he is so big he can do as he pleases and rob honest folk of the results of their hard work, the old thief." Chatterer was forgetting entirely the times he had' robbed his cousin, Happy Jack the Gray Squirrel, when he had chanced to find one of his storehouses. He polied around in the remains of the old stumn but all he found was one little nut that Buster had looked. Then he noticed that the Black Shadows were beginning to steal into the Green Forest. Even if he hurried it would be dark by the time he reached home, There was nothing to be gained by staying here, So, with bitter thoughts for company, he started for home as fast as he could travel, fearful that Hooty the Owl might already have begun his nightly y nting, as indeed he had. Buyt he didn't come Chatterer"s way and "e.reached home safely, "A whole day wasted and all (osc nuts lost," he muttered as » cu'led up to sleep, for he was tired The next morning he felt better, He could ¢ven grin at his own mis- fortune. "I hope that black old thicf will keep away today," he muttered. " He ought to be satis- fied after cating all those nuts he robbed mec of besides those he found. I wonder if he found that stump just by chance. Anyway he found it and got the nuts and prob- ably has been laughin» at me ever since. I suppose I would have done the same thine had I been in his rlace, It is t'¢ law of the Green Forest that each may take what he smart enough to find and can I've. ge lentv of food even hut T guess I f 1 work hard. ] that tree likely to get can get some 1 I'here are man nd no ne lse is those. 10 hope the Merry Little Breeze vill stay away today. If they should happen g it would he just like them to shake all-those nuts down." As he exvected he found Lizht- foot the Deer, Mrs, Lightfoot, I'hunderer the Grouse, Mrs. Grouse d their two ywn children al- there This morning he did not quarrel with (hem, He didn't rv to drive them away. He was satisfied to *t them have what nuts hey con'd find on the ground, First he had to find a new store- house, tor he must have some place y store those nuts, a place near uzh so that little time would be wasted in running back and forth [Te found it almost at once, and where do you think he found it? In that beech-tree itself, He found a dead, hollow limb that he hadn't noticed at all the day before when he was so busy quarreling with his neighbours. Chatterer chuckled. Then he went to work. "Buster" Bear won't get these,' aought he. Later in the day Buster himself appeared. As before, the others hastened to leave, all but Chatterer, He was up in that trec where the nuts were and he was safe from Buster, He even grinned down at Buster. "I left some nuts for you in an old stump yesterday; did you find them?" he asked, Buster grirned up at him. "Yes, thank you," said he, "Did you hide away some more for me today?" "Not today," replied Chatterer, "but I will shake down a few for vou" He did, bat it was only a few, very few, just enough to be tantal'zing, So Chatterer made the hest Colds Rub well over throat and chest VicHs OVER 21 MILLION JARS USED YEARLY eady best of things and got his share of nuts after all. GETS HIS TROPHY WITH BOW, ARROW Montreal.--Out in British Col- umbia every hunting season there is a big game hunter who still retains some old-fashioned ideas which he claims are just as effective as modern methods and who spends his hunting holiday north of the Canadian National Railways iine between Jasper and Prince Rupert armed only with a bow and arrows. He fs Forest Nagler, hydraulic engi- neer of Wauwatosa, Wisconsin, this for several years and always gets his moose. This year near his headquarters at Longworth, B.C., he brought down a hull moose at 47 yards. He registered a hit with his first arrow at 25 yards, missed with his second at 40 yards and brought down the big animal at 47 yards. He be- lieves that bow and arrow hunt- ing will become popular when hunters find out how effective it is, coupled with the sportiness of the art, He saw plenty of caribou but could not get within proper range, Times' Classified Ads. Get Results. ALBERTA SELECTING EXHIBITS FOR 1938 SHOW To assist farmers, particularly junior farmers, in the prepara tion of exhibition samples for the World's Grain Show next year, the Field Crops Branch, Alberta Department of Agriculture, will hold a number of seed cleaning demonstrations throughout the province this autumn. Demon- stration materials will include small type fanning mills, and hand screens, The meetings will also include suitable lectures and lantern-slide talks, Approximately forty junior seed fairs will be held in Alberta during the next two months, At these fairs the junior farmers of the province, numbering approxi- mately 1,000 will exhibit their grain and seed. - An effort will be made to have the better sam« ples entered at the World's Grain Exhibition and Conference which opens at Regina on July 24, next year. DEAF AND DUMR BOYS BECOME SCOUTS Mackay Institute for the Dear and Dumb now has its Scout Troop. The troop is sponsored by the Scouts of Trinity Memorial (C=) + \ MADRE Wg | LIVER SALTY i Log i Nahi a «Other Sizes 29¢ (0) RET] sige 49c 39¢c--2 for 75¢ STAGES GREAT GLEAN SWEEP SALE Christmas with all its joys will soon be with us once again. To most of us, it seems to creep up almost surrep titiously and catch us unawares. But, we, as § firm, are made well aware of its close proximity by the tremend ous and daily increasing piles of holiday merchandise which now almost overtax our warehouse. Hence this Great Clean Sweep Sale of our regular stocks--Patent Medicines--Drugs--Soaps, etc., which must be moved from our store: to make room for all the beautiful gifts which it will be our pleasure to show and, we hope, yours to view and examine. But, right now, this week, we bend every effort towards clearing the way--making a clean sweep of all the more or less humdrum items to make room for the new. So here is your opportunity---a wonderful list of values--none of which will be repeated again this year after the completion of this sale--all in all a most alluring list of "Listerine," an artistic con. tainer for bathroom or dress. With each large bottle of Price Complete 9c Dr.West's Tooth Paste Reg. 26¢ 2 for 39¢ ABS &C. Tablets Reg. 25¢ 2 for 25¢ Salotyn Tablets Santax Throat Pastilles Reg. 25¢ Kolynos, 29¢ and 39¢ fren Pills Ipana Tooth Paste -33¢, 2 for §5¢ . 28¢ 1 21 36 2 A Sse Peroxide Tooth Paste Reg. 25c, 2 for 25¢ Aspirin is the trade -® ed Canada) 100 98¢ . odicating Bayer wesvfaciare of soety) elaine 124, 22¢, 24% 39¢ BARGAINS FOR THE WHOLE WEEK| Special Combination Offer Listerine and Bathroom Bottle Vaseline Yellows Bottles 7c and 13¢c White Bottles Oc and § Corson's Tooth Paste Reg. 50c, 2 for 49¢ owder (New) Prices 22¢ and 39¢ wv AN Ee Tu Kirk's Castile Soap Fairy Soap § for 19¢ Calay Soap 4 for 23 ¢ C Cashmere Boquet Soap . Reg. 25¢c .... 17¢ 3 for 50¢ 3 fi i i fi i Fruitatives § Reg. 50¢ BRITISH Floor Wax~=Reg. 50c 34c, 3 $1.00 § Lemon Oil--Reg. 28¢ BN 18¢c, 2 for 35¢ Almond Cream, reg. 25¢ .-.18¢y 2 for 35¢ Witch Hazel Cream, 2 for 35¢ Analgesic Vapine Balm Reg. 50¢ Cc 2 for 78¢ 2 for 685¢ al, EA i fi Pompeian Face Powder 39c¢, 2 for 75¢ Bloom 39¢, 2 for 78¢ Lip Stick 18¢, 2 for 35¢| Face Creams 39¢, 2 for 75¢ T y Cough Syrep 19¢ Clearettes Reg. 28¢ 18c Extra Special One Tin of PALMOLIVE TALC, Value 28¢c, and One Tube of PALMOLIVE SHAVING CREAM, Value 35¢c 60c Value 27c-4 for $1 a) Emulsion 39c¢. 73 SEP, Cream SHE i . Hi kif iN 2 for 38¢ Ree. Soc Rum, Honey and Cod Liver Oil Reg. 28¢ S78, Reg. 1.00 69c 69¢c Tamblyn Santax i Mennen's Talcum C Skin Balm 9c Shaving Cream 27¢ and 37c Dyspepsia} Remedy 39¢ 18¢-2 for 35¢ Price 2 for 49¢ FRE PIECE JIGSAW 30C PUZZLE saith each Prices 1 ] Reg. 50c 9c Reg. 1.00) 77c¢c Tamblyn Triple Lysol 24c Reg. 1.00 4c Sentax Absorbine Beech. am's Pills 17¢ and 29¢ Viek's Vapo Reb 33¢ Jad Salts S4c 2 for 65¢ 17¢ 33c¢c and Witch Hazel Cucumber 4 Cream. Reg. 25¢, 1 8¢ 2 for 35¢ hats M Cold Cream Barley Tene Reg. 1.00 3 for 2.00{2 for 38e DENTALINE Reg. 50c Rew. $1.00) Tamblyn "Special" Medicinal Atomizer Rex. 31.28 Value MILTON 22¢ 39¢ and 69¢c SEPTOL Reg. 28¢ 19c¢ Reg. 50c Fig Syrup ae Tamblyn Liver Pills Regulax 2Se 18c--2for35¢c Enlargement 3c 2 for 68¢ Reg. 15¢ ...... 9¢ Reg. 25¢ 10000, 16¢ Reg. 45¢ ......' 29¢ Theatrical (House. bold) Cold Cream Conde Freoh Importation Small Cakes Large Cakes Large Bar Castile Soap 6for 23¢c 12for 48¢ 3for23¢c 6for40c¢ % Wb, 24c iW, 39¢ Sponges Fine and Soft, But Durable gg 14c 2 for 4c, 47 'What a lovely baby,' and feed hi i highly thought of in our h 8, Sue Brand i ing a satisfactory Rey aud commen B10 Svmy worker see] Every photograph and letter is voluntarily sent us by 27¢,4 fr $1.00 and 79¢ 27¢ Bed Pans 37¢ Toilet Paper Purex oo A GENIUS o o R. R. V. Pierce, whose picture . . appears here, Lo a Reg. 18¢ Size 5x7 From Your Own Negative for feotoun] stuart of & Cd » 3 9c Mounted on Beautiful Calendar Mounts ; nn ties of Nature's MES 2 2d Forde Roby Complete With Envelope El Prices PALMOLIVE SOAP . hn > 1 it or 1, $149, 5248 | 39c--2 for 75c |4for23c-8 forse [Fill Windsor to Oshawa published by the Borden C a grateful parent or other pi FREE! Wonderful Baby Booklet! # wi IN IN AN a The Borden Co. Limited, 115 George Street, Toronto, Ontario, Cw.?2 12 for 69¢ \ Golden Medical Dis- | covery has been sold in the drug stores of Canada. If you wish to have pure blood, and a clear skin, free from pimples or annoying eruptions, try this "Discovery". It enriches the blood, aids digestion, acts as a tonic, corrects stomach disorders. If you want free medical advise, wring to De. Plares's Clialy in Buftels, N, Xy Gentlemen: Please send me f; : 64-page edition, "Baby Weltarerr p19. your ww 59 STORES |G, TAMBLYN, LimiTep years Dr. Pierce's IN ONTARIO Free Delivery To All Parts of the City