THE OSHAWA DAILY, TIMES, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 13, 1929 YOUNG PEOPLE OF ~SOLINA CHURCH HOLD CORN ROAST ' 'pe About Forty Young Men "amd Women Attend Out: ... ing Tuesday ; Solina, Sept. 10.--Miss Margar- pH 'Kessock. spent Sunday with s Laurua. Hands at Scarboro, The young ladies' and young men's Sunday school class, also by invitation the Sunshine class super- intendent and some of the young married people held a corn and 'roast at Eldad ghed un sday night. Through the kind- ot Mes. A. S. Pascoe and Mrs. ey 'Hockaday. the supplies were etl, and some of the boys wenc wh to Mr. Ivan M. Lavig' farm d procured a supply of water- lony, which all enjoyed. After fynch, games were enjoyed by all, about forty in number. "Miss Ruby Dewell spent several | the city last week. a3 nth Mra. Cain, Miss Berda mn 'Mr. Fylden and Miss Helen mndergon, of Toronto, visited Mrs. M. Dewell. . Mr. Douglas McLaughlin and Verne, of Toronto, visited A, L. Pascoe, Master Verne remaining for a time with his grandparents. . Sons 'of Temperance held their yegular meeting last Thursaay, when new and old business was dealt with. The members enjoyed several mew games after the busi- ness. Mr. Alfred Hardy. of Hampton, snd Mr. and Mrs. Wilbert Glaspel end' family, of Uxbridge, visited Mr, and Mrs, Harvey Hardy: . Mr. Gordon Hardy is down from Lindsay, plowing on the Chant farm previeys to moving here in the spring. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Vire ana Murray, of Celumbus, visited Mr, W. Vire, Misg Winnie Oke, of Enniskillen, i visited Misp V. Shortridge. Mrs. Thos. Baker visited Miss L. C. Snowden on Monday. iss Vera Baker, Miss Lorraine Thompson were entertained at au party in the home of Mrs. Taylor of Hampton. Congratulations te Mr. C. Blan- chard and son on winning fourth prize on shqep and fourth on lax of fall wheat at Toronto. This is ong more -~anor coming to Durham in sueh a large class of exhibitors. Don't forget there is te be a fowl supper at Eldad on Wednes- day, the second of October, and harvest home services on Sunday, Sept. 20. This affair was gova last year, but will be better than ever this fall, and will be held in the sheds adjoining the church, Sunday School session was Iu.urs esting at Eldad on Sunday. Misses Muriel and Helen Baker favored with a vocal duet, "He Lifted Me." Rev. Mr. Bick took as hi subject "Faith," and worked out a thoughtful address. The solo work in the anthem by Mr. Harold Shut- think was 'splendid. Misses Evelyn Tink, Helen Bak- er, and Ruth McKessock and Russ gell Vice went to Peterboro farm, where the ladies of the party auvi~ ed as junior judges. Good luck to all! * ei : Mr. and Mrs. Sidney Hockaday. Mr. Ernest Hockaday, Misses He ie and Rilda Hockaday were a visitors at Peterbero fair. The August meeting of Solina home of Mrs. C, Smith and took the form of a Hard Times dress parade. Most of the members came in 'costume suitable to the occa~ gion, © Those who did: not paid a fine of 10c. The programme Was in charge of Group 4, consisting of a paper, subject, 'Kitchens now and fifty years ago." - music and readings, after which those in cos- tume paraded on the lawn and three judges gave the rizes--1st. Mrs. S. E. Werry, 2nd. Mrs. Walter Cryderman and Mrs. J. T. Rundle for best dressed lady. Mrs. Cooper, Orono district president, was a guest and spoke a few minutes. Hard time lunch was served. September meeting was held at the home of Mrs. H. Tink with the president, Mrs, A. Millson,; presid- ing. After the business was fin- ished, Mrs. T. Baker, convener of Group 5, took charge of the pro- gramme. Canadian programme; Paper, Mrs, Baker, 'Resources of Canada"; community singing and reading, Mrs. A. Millson; vocal du- et, Misses Helen Baker and Eve- lyn Tink. We are pleased to report that Misses Ruby Dewell and Eve- lyn Tink won prizes at Toronto Fair on Household Science compe- tition. Miss Ruth McKessock was one of the teams competing and they had eighth place out of twen- ty-nine. Judge (to old clothes merchant complaining of theft)» "How much was the cdat worth?" Dealer: "Anything from Bs. to "Yes, but it depends on the in- telligence of the buyer and the lighting in the shop atthe mo- ment." i Enthusiastic Angler: "I want to be certain that yeur paper mens tions my hig fish." Reporter: "When did you catch it?" "Next Saturday." . "What does your these days?" "What she likes." "And what about your father?" "Oh, he does what mother likes mother do as well." Children's Hats fe A hat like mother's" is what they ask for. Of course, it cannot be just like mother's, but it iy have all the 'style of mother's hat. There is all the difference in the world between an ordinary child's hat without inspirstion, and what Dorothes suggests for children. And because there are six Dorothea Hat shops, the utmost in style may be had at moderation in price. Special for the week-end --. DOROTHEA HATS Shops tn Toronto, Hamilton, Ochavs, te Galt, North Bay :| edral. They have perhaps felt Women's Institute was held at the. "But that is a large difference." MANY CANADIANS ADMIRE ST. ALBAN Have Felt Sentiment Ex- pressed in Recent Speech by Massey, Washington, D.C, . Sept, 13. Hundreds of Canadians. visiting here this summer have gone to. Mount Saint Alban to admire the great pile which will be the Washington Gath- the sentiment expressed in a recent ad- dress made by Vincent Massey, the Canadian Minister, at the annual meeting of the National Cathedral Association, He said, "To those of us who 'have nurtured in English tradi« tion this corner of your capital makes 's peculiar appeal. As it happens there' 1s & special affinity between your ca- thedral church and that of the dio- cese in which I live because the lat- ter bears thc name which is so fam- liar in your cathedral close--that of St. Alban the proto-martyr of Brit- ain. But apart from that, the quiet gardens, the gray walls with an oc- casional touch of Gothic sculpture and the clustered buildings in medic- val style which are rising. every- where on this hillside, together with the great edifice which crowns the whole--all this suggests the atmos- phere of the little island of the North Sea which we in Canada affectionate- ly call the 'Old Country." The Cathedral is as yet only a beautiful fragment, an apse, three chapels and some choir walls. When it is finished it will be an immense and exquisite temple, ranking in size with' the largest cathedrals of the world with a scating capacity of 7,- 500 and standing room for 27,000, Be- cause of its location on the highest ground in Washington, the central tower, 262 fect in height, will rise 107 feet above the tip of the Wash- ington Monument which is 5851 feet high. Entering the Cathedral through the western portal the gaze of the visitor will be held by a vaulted vista of 500 feet, through the nine bays of "United States js now the nave and five bays of the choir, to the sanctuary, A thousand sculp- tured bosses--the ornamesits placed at the intersections of the Fibs of the roof vaulting--will illustrate the story of. Christianity, Fidst definite steps toward the building of the Cathedral were taken in 1891 and in 1893 Congress grant- ed a charter to the Protestant Epis- copal Cathedral Foundation empow- ering it to establish a cathedral and institutions of learning," for the pro- motion of religion, education and charity." Yet some years will pass before the work will be completed. The whole project will cost $28,000, 000. The Churclr of the engaged in building {four cathedrals, one in Washington, and others in San Fran- cise), hiladelphia and New York. In the course of his address. Mr. Massey made reference to this fact. He said, "there are people, of course, who regard a modern cathedral us an anchronism. They tell us that the age which expressed itself in the great buildings which sprang up in England and in France through the twelfth and thirteenth centuries has passed; that modern life 'is symbol- ized more accurately by structures of another sort, by the great bridges, the dams, the lofty buildings which arc the triumph of the present day engineer. 1 remember a few years ago having some hours to spend in the city of Liverpool when 1 thought 1 could pass the time by visiting the new cathedral which is slowly tak- ing form there under the genius Sir Giles Scott, | knew 1 would find a structure possessing great beauty, but 1 felt it might be found to bear a rather artificial relationship to its community, I discovered to my sur- prise that my apprehensions were ill-founded. One has only to walk through the choir and chapels of this splendid building and see the people of all classes thronging it, and to watch the simple folk from the coun- try and the shawl-covered women from Liverpool, dropping their pen- nies into the boxes as a contribution to the completion of the fabric, to realize that Liverpool Cathedral is a genuine and natural and honest ex- pression of the feeling and aspira- tions of the people of West Lanca- Episcopal shire. Jt is going to be a people's cathedral. Here in the United States you, too, are building cathedrals. Mr. Massey then drew from sev- eral authorities support for his con- cept of the symbolism of the cath- edral quoting Henry Adams on the medieval cathedral as, "from the cross on the fleche and the keystone of the vault, down through the rib- bed nervures, the columns, the wind- ows, to the foundation of the flying buttresses far beyond the walls, onc idea controlled every line," "The one idea," the Minister said, "to which: the aigthor referred, can be said 'to represent the unity for which the cathedral stands as a sym- bol of truth in all its forms--the truth of science aesthetic truth or beauty, and the moral truth which is goodness. We do well to welcome such symbols in our midst." PLEA FOR STRONG NAVAL ARMAMENT IN SOUTH PACIFIC Sea Borne Trade Vital to the Empire, Says Evans Sydney, Australia, Sept. 133.--A striking plea for a continuance of strong naval armament in the South Pacific ag a means of Em- pire defense, was uttered here hy Rear-Admiral ¥vans, one of the most popular heads the Australian Navy has ever had. "We are living in an age of rapid advance in scientific accomplish- ment," said Rear-Admiral Evans, "but because of the insistence on economy the navy is not always able to keep pace. The fleet lags behind to a certain extent and we have to accept it. Some of us waste our time in vain imaginings about capital ships that will fly or submerge, air forces that will devolutionize everything, gas tnat will render great cities like Sydney cities of the dead, and tanks that will completely exterminate the in- fantryman, the machine gunpers and the general staff. But you all know in your hearts that these are but dreams. "The most vital concern of all nations is their sea-borne trade, and this particularly applies to our Empire, which cannot exist as an economic entity without its sea communications, The security of these sea communications depends upon the cruisers, and consequently all maritime nations are thinking in terms of cruisers. Australia is thinking of cruisers, New Zealand is thinking of cruisers and discus- sion among the great powers fis mostly in terms of cruisers--and very much in the terms of 10,000- ton eruisers and long-range eight- inch guns, "Having got out eruisers and thus contributed our share to Im- per nl defense, what concerns us here is how to make the hest use of the material at hand. The an- swer is largely in térms of per- sonnel---hy properly educating that personnel to think public-spiritedly and from the viewpoint of co-oper- ation with the land and air forces of the Commonwealth and of the Empire. There is a great deal more in Australian naval training than the mere preparation for war. Australian naval training is mag- ing the best of its manhood, and fit iz inculcating the best qualities of citizenship into a large body of vir- ile officers and men, and broaden- ing the horizon of their thoughts, and fosterinz the adventure spirit that has made the Empire what ic is." ot » Dan Gillette, the Fair Play ecom- edian tells this one: Judge: "First time?' Prisoner: "No sir; the last time, Fine day, Judge." Judge: $10 fine." Prisoner: "You'll allow me some time to pay it in?" Judge: "Yes--10 days." EXCLUSIVE FALL STYLES Such an array of Loveliness --= Color, Style, Quality--in Dresses, Pullovers, Coats, Ene sembles, Cardigans, etc, with that beautiful sheen that only "Simcoe Knit' can offer you. Slendepjzing lines are featured in the new Fall Moggs -- Made-to-Measure or Standard Sizess--f8, Mddel for every figure, New browms, greens, reds, blues, pastel shad. es and lustrous black, gives you a choice of color for every need, Please note that we have moved to the west end of the Commercial Hotel Building, 31 King St. West, Call in and look over our stock----You will receive courteous attention, The Simcoe Knit Store Commercial Hotel Building. 31 King Street--Oshawa Dr.J.D. Kellogg's old reliable Asthma Rem- edy is a simple but effective relief for Asthma and Hay Fever. It is composed of herbs, the fumes of which when burned, quickly and effective- ly relieve all irrita- tion. Acts safely and surely. ' Manufactured by NORTHROP & LYMAN COMPANY, LIMITED Toronto . . Canada | 4 you are thinking of buying a chesterfield suite now or soon, the Sani- Bilt Week Special Suite, now being featured by Sani. 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PORT HOPE ADAMS FURNITURE CO., LTD., OSHAWA A. L. McDERMOTT, PORT PERRY W. C. TOWN. WHITBY