Durham Region Newspapers banner

Oshawa Daily Times, 20 Jul 1929, p. 6

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

2 THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, JULY 20, 1429 Women's Interests in the Home -- and the Community Girls, Dance!" Says Albertina Rasch; But She Tells Them Not to Drink or . PAGE SIX "Dance, Smoke a 1 Social and Personal 0 Lap gk Mr. and Mrs. John Peters and son of Kingston were recent guests . . of their sister, Mrs, I. Folles!, \ ko Centre, street. : ; : » in ; Y L % Mr, and Mrs. Roy Lavis left to- . day for St. John, N.B., where they are spending their holidays. * * * : Mrs. W. T, Henry, Albert sireet, has as her guests for a few days: Mr. and Mrs, F. A. VanVechtem, Rochester, N.Y., and Mrs. A. R. McLean of Kindersley, Saskatche- wan, Mrs, Robert Marshal and child- | "ren of Kingston visited with their "aunt, Mrs. 1. Follest, Centre street. : CH Mr. and Mrs. J. Mortimer, Jack and Billy, of Toronto are the "guests of Mr, and Mrs. H. M. Smith, Carnegie avenue, * x ko» * Mr. and Mrs, H. McComb and daughter, Gladys, Albert street, and Miss Winnifred Gough, Athol street east, are attending the Met- ropolitan Life Insurance Co. picnic in Cobourg today. Dr, L. E. Hubbell, McMillan Drive, is spending his vacation fu Brandon, Manitoba, where he will represent. the local Kinsmen's club at the Kinsmen's convention there. Dr. Hubbell is motoring to Bran- don. * * * Miss L. K. Bambridge, Simcoe street south, leaves tonight for Sherbrooke, Quebec, where sne will spend the next two weeks with friends. ab Mr. and Mrs. Lorne Hewson and daughter are visiting Mrs, Hew- son's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Ww. G. Gibson in Port Hope. 3 each tart. Bake in a hot oven un- Helpful Hints td brown. The mixture is enough " for eight large tarts. If a flower holder is placed in the center of a howl to hold the first few blooms in a house bou- quet, the remainder can be placed Mrs. Logeman, W.M., Mrs. Hurst, loosely and easily and a delightful P.M., Mrs. Short, D. of C., Mrs. ; informality in arrangement can ve |] Follest, D.D.G.M., Mr. Short, Miss : achieved. Yario Logaman and Me, A. Lavan- : ; Vig : yx | ar attended the meeting, of the I. : If taking plums, apricots or | T.B, lodge in Bowmanville on Fri- other crushable small fruits along on picnics, you can keep them in day evening. 5 * perfect condition by carrying them in egg cartons, * Miss Mary Broomfield of Dun- -donald is. spending a week in the city, the guest of her aunt .and uncle, Mr. and Mrs. Andrew ~ Broomfield. Miss Clara Hawkins of Hobart is spending a few days in the city, the guest of her sister, Mrs. Archie Orton. Chautauqua The Family Upstairs! * = Those from Oshawa who attend- ed the Bay of Quinte Conference Young People's excursion from Co- bourg to Port Dalhousie and' Nia-' gara Falls yesterday were: Mr, and Mrs. C. H. Millard, Mrs. F, Say- wll, Dr. Gatenby, Misses Gladys Britton, Mary Timms, Lewella| McGahey, Viva Briggs, Marjory Sproule, Reta. Taylor, Helen and | Edith Saywell, M. Winter and I. Oke, Messrs. Fred Fordham, Ar- thur Witterick, Howard and Steph- en Saywell, Stanley Bloss, J, C. An- derson. * x 0% Mrs. Edith Williams of Winni- peg, Man., a former resident of -this district, was in the city yes- -terday renewing old acquaintances; * * If ice is rubbed immediately up- on bruises the children get in their play, ittle discoloration fol- lows. The cold keeps the blood from congealing in the sensitive spot and thus prevents it turning |}| First Night--July 23 By Helen Fox : black and blue afterwards. H Davis Property, cw 4 | Simcoe St. North "If I could be a dancer--"' { i A childhood dream; perhaps a H Rub a little common wax, such as one uses for sealing fruit jars, irlhood ambition. What y 4 n at young on the back of the stocking nee: One Piece Frocks Are Not woman, at some period in h , a Bos me ye og iu hoe lite and it will prevent the shoe from rubbing holes in the stockings. * * to be Discarded--Coats Are Rather Long Mr, and Mrs. A, M. Stroud and ' family, 82 Wood street, leave to- - day for fwo weeks' vacation near Brockville in the 1000 Islands. : * Mr. Ed Bish of Pittsburg, Penn., is visiting Mrs. Bish's parents, Mr. 'and Mrs. James Robinson, Cedar- _dale. Mrs. Bish and caughter have been spending some time here. * Season's Tickets: Thompson's, Johns, Conger Coal, Johnston's, Young's Real Estate, or Phone 2354 ENGAGEMENT Reverend and Mrs. John Galt announce the engagement of their daughter Beulah Frances, to Jos- eph Henry Wilkins, son of Mr. and Mrs. Richard Wilkins of Swindon, England, the marriage to take place in September at the Mirst Baptist Church, Oshawa. : Mr. and Mrs. George Harper and baby, May, also Mr. Hiram Cas~ .sidy and his fiancee, Miss Harper, "all of New York city, visited their {eousin, Mr. Thomas Cassidy, 33 . Louisa street, on, Thursday. Yet the dancing career is no pro- verkial bed of roses. It is hard work and little play; it is zealous application and wholesale self-de- nial. We have this on the authority of Mme. Albertina Rasch, whose gra- cious and lovely dancers have neen LEMON TARTS Mix the following thoroughly, but do not cook: Juice and rind of one lemon, one egg, one cup granulated sugar. Line tart tins with puff paste, pour in the mix- TENT HERE NOW ture and put a dot of butter on |= ----_.™ - Mrs. R. Donaldson of Vancouver, ~B.C., is spending a few weeks in "en route to Montreal. f ®x 0% « city for a few weeks, Oshawa, the guest of Mrs. Ww. Gamble, 343 Arthur street, and Miss M. Wigg, 64 William street, * Mrs. S. H. Reynolds, Miss Beatie Reynolds of Windsor, Mrs. Irvin Foster and Harold of Bowmanville, Mr. and Mrs. C. E. Aldsworth of Oshawa, Miss Patterson of Toronto were recent visitors with Mr and Mrs. Frank Aldsworth, Stlina station, * % . Mrs. W. H. James and baby, who have béen visiting the former's . parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. E. Kelly, Division street, left Tuesday night for their home in Regina. Mr. .James, who has also been in the left two weeks ago. * 0% Mr. R. I. Werry of the. Family Herald and Weekly Star, Montreal, is a guest of Mr. W. C. Werry, Agnes street, for a few days. Mr. Werry will attend the Werry re- union in Hampton on Wednesday, next, July 24. * * King's Scout George Allan Greenfield with gold cards, troop leader of St. Anne de Bellevue, Quebec, nephew of Mrs. George Dewbery, McLaughlin Boulevard, sailed Friday on hoard the Anton- ia as one of the chosen scouts from \ IMMIGRANTS ARE VISITED BY OFFICERS Brantford, July 20.--An unoffi- cial visit by Dr. W. L. Hutton, city medical officer of health, to the location of five huts of three rooms each, housing large famil- ies of recent British migrants, and an official visit later by Dr. C. W. Apps, township health officer, were made here today. Dr. Hutton could take no action as the homes are outside the city, although the men are working within the city. The township health officer will report to the township board of health ana 1s expected to stress that outside privies are but 12 feet from the homes and that no water of any kind has been made available for haps it is worth it. Rasch's girls way out of the ensemble to wealth and glory. ed their way to beauty, the beauty that comes from moderate living and training in the rhythmic art of dancing. in an wiched between opening of Ziegfield's 'Show Girl," featuring her dancers, and a flying trip to Hollywood. glorified by Florence Ziegfield, summoned to Hollywood and feted in foreign cities. "The light fantastic toe" must 'trip a rough road to fame but per- Many of Mme, have danced their All of them have danc- But have you the will to do it? Before you embark upon a career as a dancer, consider this: No cig- arettes, hours and dissipation, careful diet --in other words, training as strict as that prescribed for, the football player or the boxer. no stimulants, no late A Famous Dancer Mme Rasch discussed this theme exclusive interview sand- the New ork She discussed the use of the people. R. N. Munroe, assistant commis- sioner of - Otawa today to report to the de- partment on his findings as to the charges of breach of agreement. immigration, left for Canada to attend the International Jamboree at Arrowe Park, Birken- head, England. When your Children Cry _ fort __ Baby has little upsets at times. All your care cannot prevent them. But you can be prepared. Then you ;can do what any experienced nurse would do--what most phy- | sicians would tell you to do--give ' a few drops of plain Castoria. No sooner done than Baby is soothed; | relief is just a matter of moments. | Yet you have eased your child without use of a single doubtful drug; Castoria is vegetable. So it's safe to use as often as an infant has any little pain you cannot pat away. And it's always ready for the crueler pangs of colic, or con- stipation, or diarrhea; effective, too, for older children. Twenty- five million bottles wero bought last year. ZC cA CASTORIA PATTERN PURCHASE COUPON To The Oshawa Pally Pattern Department, wa, t. Coclosed find «.iciciessieerscasesis Cents. Please send patterns listed below: Province ..civceinnine Price, 20 cents each. coin. Wrap coin carefully. it from a wide experience; not on- ly as a producer and famous teach- er, but as an equally famous dan- cer. Of Polish and Hungarian an- cestry she began her training at the®age of 7 in the ballet school of the Imperial Opera at Vienuas and became Prima Ballerina at the tender age of fourteen. She was Premiere Danseuse with the Cen- tury Opera Company and the Chi- cago Opera. "Dancing is strenuous art," said Mme. Rasch. "For this reason, perfect health is the first essential to success. It is also imperative to beauty; and a dancer must have beauty as well as technique and grace, not so?' Her mobile brows arched with the question. Mme. Rasch's eyes are very black and reflect the many moods of an in- evitably artistic temperament, Her speech is animated and flavored with a piquant accent. On the subject of beauty, Mme. Rasch believes that all true beau- ty is healthy. Beauty, moreover, is within the reach of nearly every woman, Not all of the Albertina Rasch dancers have that perfection of fea- tures that usually connotes beau- ty. yet all are truly beautiful girs. The strict rules of health they are CLEARA of Summer Dresses t Reasonable 4: THE FASHION + SHOPPE Mme. Albertina Rasch (in circle), and some of her lovely dancers made to observe is in no small measure responsible for this. "I don't believe the girls think I'm hard-hearted," said Mme. Rasch, "when TI tell them that they must not do this or must do that. They know I am interestea in their careers. Every once in a while I talk to them and tell them how they must live if they wish to succeed. And I don't have to keep an eye on them to see wheth- er they are doing the things they shouldn't be doing. I can tell it at once, in theiy dancing and in their appearance. Five Rules of Health "What is the course of health training I prescribe for my girls? "Well, in the first place, I ad- vise lots of water, both inside and out. Frequent baths and six glasses of water a day, that is my first rule for the would-be dancer, or the would-be beautiful woman. "Second, lots of fresh air and sunlight. If people had enough of both, there'd .be fewer ail- ments, Third, plenty of sleep, at least eight hours every night, and that means in the night, not the morn- ing. My girls go to bed early. They open their windows wide both in winter and summer. And they never sleep with the steam heat turned on. Stimulants Taboo "Fourth, few stimulants like al- cohol, tea and coffee, preferably none at all; and no cigarettes. Stimulants are bad for the wind, and there is nothing charming about a dancer who starts puffing and heaving. They are alto harm- ful to the appearance. Girls who need stimulants to keep them go- ing, lack the fresh skin and bright eyes that are so essential to beauty, and they lack the natural exuberance that is so tremendously important to public appearance. "Wifth, plenty of food but wise- ly chosen. It is absolutely unnec- essary to starve oneself to keep The average man fails to earn a lot of things that experience should teach him.--Chicago Daily News. The first cuss-word was invented when the first bald man missed a fly the third time.--Calgary Herald, "Canadians eat very little lamb" is a heading. Well, look at its price.-- Kingston Whig-Standard. body youthfully slim and 1 don't let my girls stop one's lovely. eating. "They cut out starches and they avoid gorging themselves on pas- tries. They eat lots of fresh veg- etables and for their desserts they stick pretty closely to fruits and flavored gelatins or possibly sher- bets, all of which are non-fatten- ing. They cut down on bread, and drink milk and fruit juices. In other words they observe a few general rules of diet that would keep any woman slim if she had the will-power to stick it out, until the rules ceased to be rules and be- came habit." ITs folly to suffer long from neu- ritis, neuralgia, or headaches when relief is swift and sure, thanks to Aspirin. For 28 years the medical profession has recom- mended it. It does not affect the heart. Take it for colds, rheuma- tism, sciatica, lumbago. Gargle it for a sore throat or tonsilitis, . Proven directions for its many uses, in every package. Every drug store today has genuifie Aspirin which is readily identified by the name on the box and the Bayer cross on every tablet. GASPIRIN Aspirin is a Trademark Registered in Canada Waistlines are in and up again-- fashion says so! It is annoying of that didactical dame to come to such a disturbing decision just when fair feminity thought she was forever free from wasp waists, hour-glass sil- houettes and such monstrous remind- ers of the Dark Ages. But the word has gone forth from Paris, her stronghold, and, though feminine ears have been resolutely closed against foreboding rumors of such, the day of reckoning is at hand. The waist- line has a place, and no mean one, in the autumn mode. Very young women, seriously bent | on being as like one another as are | the little lambs gambolling in the' south pasture, roll their hair into tight little knots at the napes of their necks, and achieve a decided waist- line by tucking in blouse or sweater under a pleated skirt. They are de- lighted with the novelty of it, hav- ing known only the grace and com- | fort of the straight one-piece frock | or a skirt and sweater, with the lat- | ter worn outside. Nothing do they | know of that once universal feminine | pastime of keeping waist and skirt "all present and correct" with no] yawning gaps. But let them learn. However, one hears a reassuring rumor about waistlines. The one- | picce frock is not to be scrapped for the waist and skirt, but the waistline is to be clearly and definitely indi- cated by such means as clever cut- | ting and seaming and by properly placed belts. The coats also will show a waistline, for the most part, for the day of the simple straight coat is al- most past. The silhouette is still straight and simple, but the garment itself is inricate in cut and design. Suits for autumn wear are shown) both in the simple slender silhouette and in onc with a flaring interpreta- tion, though the flare, never exag- gerated, is confined to the skirt. Coats in general are fairly long, drop- ping to within four or five inches of the hem of the skirt. There are mo- dels with shorter coats such as fing- crtip and three-quarter length, and these frequently show a nipping-in at the normal waistline, Coats, as well as frocks, are also showing a tendency toward the Princess line in its modernized form. But belts are important in the autumn mode, for they appear on practically every frock, and, when they serve chiefly to show that there is such a thing as a normal waistline, they are very likely to attract no little attention. Tailored and trim are these new belts, with interesting and unique buckles. Buckles, by the way, have taken a notion that it is infinitely smarter to fasten at the back. Excecedingly chic belts are in leather or suede in two shades and are matched with scarf in silk of the same shades. A purse to match belt and scarf is a smart accessory. has the rig WHITBY ESSEX he Challenger ht fo Challengios Variety at our Color Show A Big, adult-size "Six."' Fine to look at. Roomy and comfortable. ASUPER- SIX motor--challenging up to 70 miles an hour. Hydraulic shock absorbers, 4-wheel brakes, radiator shutters and air cleaner are standard. " »"" Add up yourself the £100 in "extras that Essex provides at no extra cost. Come see the beauty and variety which Essex offers at no extra cost. In every other way open: to proof Essex has proved its right to dare. It challenges the performance, the style, the luxuri.: ous comfort of any car at any price. No other gives you back so much for every dollar you putin. A Wide Choice of Color AT NO EXTRA COSY '840 AND. @OP All pricesf.o.b. Windsor, taxes extra. Your present car will probably cover the entire first payment. The H. M. C. Purchase Plan offers the lowest terms OF lhl. on the Bal ROSS, AMES & GARTSHORE CO., LIMITED OSHAWA BOWMANVILLE PORT HOPE --By Grace G. Drayton LETS HopE THIS 16 GOING TO BE AN EXCITING ADVENTURE © 195, King Peston Syndicate, fur Grows Brits rights reserved 7-20 tl GRAND-MA Cooks GRAND COMEY SAID THE GOLD WAS ENouGR TO K85p THEM IN COMFORT THE REST OF THEW. | jyBG - So THEY PUT IT AWAY THEN THEY LOOKED OUT OF "THE WINDoW TO SEE FE THEY COULD STILL SER "THE FAIRIES AND THERE THEY WERE 50 THEY LOCKED .UP THER LITTLE MOUSE ' AND BoBBY PUT THE KEY IN His POCKET COMFY SAYS "LET'S STOP FOR A SECOND To SEE GRAND-MA AND MY LITTLE COUSIN LADDY KINS - GRANDMA LOVES LS - AND CFF THEY STARTED ON ADVENTURES --

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy