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Oshawa Daily Times, 27 Sep 1929, p. 6

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' THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 27, 1929 Social and Personal Mrs, way) left yes ture Hors 80 0es Mi oy ing some. hve wi is il, in Frankford, make her caver is spend- 'Wer mother, who Mr. Lorne Wilson of Huntingdon | was a recent guest of relatives in the city, 54.5 310d (sbi . 4 Ld Miss Grace Crawford of Marmora is attending school in the city this!' The marriage of year, TE Mr. a rs. Harold Bell and child, Sones - : gordon, wee rer cent guests 'an rs. "Wes- ley Jenkins in Oakivood. 5. Mr. and Mrs. Reg. I. Taylor, (nee Edith Purdy) whose 'marriage fook, lace on Wednesday, September 18, ave returned to the city after visiting relatives in Bobcaygeon. Ld LJ LJ Misses Mary and Sarah Thorburn wisited Mrs. Levi Sparks in Salem, Mr. and Mrs. Norval Fleming and Mr, and Mrs. Russell McGill visited with Mr, and Mrs, S. McGill in Janegville. » LJ Sympathy is extended to Mrs. George Lanc upon the loss of her mother, the late Mrs, Catharine Green of Belleville, whose death occurred in Belleville, Wednesday in ther ninty-sixth year. : . Mr, and Mrs. Alfred Cameron, of Toronto, entertained at a house dance last evening for Miss Dorothy Stratton, Mr. Gordon Cameron and their bridal party, of which Miss Eleanor McLaughlin is a member. The bridal party algo includes Miss Lillian. Meighen, . - Miss Narsatl MeCp d, Miss Betty Elsworth, Miss' Bfleen Prge, Mr. Churchill Mann, Mr. -Bdward Anglin, Mr, Tan | Stith (nee Elsie Hallo 3 Lh d, Wilson," Mr. Leighton Mclihenny and Mr. Edward Ganong. iw. Miss Eleanor McLaughlin * and rs. Edward Heney were Oshawa itors at the Woodbine, Toronto, yesterday. 4B 3 . Mr. William Willis has returned to his home in New York, after spending a few days with his mo- ther, Mrs. Willis, 123 Nassau St. Miss Allison Macdonald, daughter of Sir Alex- ander and Lady Macdonald, of Kingston, to Lieutenant Walter Ed- mund Gillespie, R.C.D., will take place at 12 o'clock at the cathedral, Kingston, on October 2. Mr. and Mrs. J. P. Owens, of Tor- 'onto, formerly of this city, are 'At Home' this afternoon in Toronto on the occasion of the thirtieth an- niversary of their wedding day. A number of friends from the city will attend. : LJ L . Rear-Admiral A, R. and Mrs. Parker, of London, England, and Toronto, have sent out invitations to the marriage of their daughter, Dorothy Chaplin Ramsey, to Mr. Dana Harris Porter, in St. Paul's Church, Toronto, on Saturday, Oct. fi, and afterwards at the Royal York, Weddings ROBINSON=~COLBERT A quiet wedding was solemnized at Centre St. United Church par- sonage, Athol street east, on Thurs- day, Sept. 26, 1929, when Rev, W, P. Fletcher united in marriage El- zabeth Colbert, daughter of Mrs. A. Wright, Cromwell Ave., and the late William J. Colbert, and Earl A. Robinson, son of Mr. and Mrs. Dae TY! For autumn--the new--is that hat-- Sigs gsy FEL LS YEE aess EXE (EER IRN FRR IARER Shops in Toronto, Oshawa iL Hosiery « $1.95 Value; full-fashioned COLORS: sun blush, dove substandards. On DOROTHEA BE a FE faa d Bat Full Fashioned $ 'ido. tera that flares over the ears--and folds up from the face--and fits closely at the nape of the neck--Dorothea has it--early--tomorrow--at the moder~ ation in price. made possible by the conduct of six shops-- TWO AND THREE . DOLLARS DOROTHEA HATS Hamilton, Oshawa, St. Catharines, Galt, North Bay 3 King St. E. 1 heel; soiree, naive, suntan, gunmetal; slight silk to top; HAT SHOPS John Robinson, Tichborne, Ontario, The couply were unattended. Fol- lowing the wedding ceremony, Mr. and Mrs, Robinson left on a wed- ding trip to Tichborne and on their return will reside in Oshawa. McCLENNEN---ROMBOUGH At Bridge St. Parsonage, Belle- ville, Ont., on Thursday, Sept, 26, 1929, Edythe Rombough, daughter of Mr. P, 8. Rombough, 231 Arthur street, to WilllameA, F. McClennen, son of Mr. and Mrs. Fred McClen- nen, 63 Avenue street. KIRK--MAIEL The marriage was solemnized on Wednesday, Sept. 25, 1929, at the home of Mr. and Mrs, W. C. Malel, 121 Montrave avenue, when their daughter, Barbara Atkinson Rosel- la, became the bride of Robert Al- bert Kirk. Rev. G. W. Irvine, pas- tor of Cedardale United Church, performed the ceremony. The bride wos lovely in a gown of white flat crepe with a long white tulle vell, and carried a bouquet of roses and ferns.' She was attended by her sister, Miss Lydia Malel, who was a charming bridesmaid in blue vel- vet and carried a bouquet of pink dahlias. Little Misses Marion Ma- fel and Doris Harman were win- some flower girls, in pink silk, Lit- tle John Maiel, brother of the bride, was train bearer. The groom was attended by Mr. Charlie Ed- wards, while the wedding music was played by Miss Blanch Goyne. Following the ceremony a reception was held and a buffet luncheon served by Misses Burtie Goyne, Kay MacEachern, Katie Arnolds, Miss Alexander Mainer and girl friend of Orillia, all girl friends of the bride. Later Mx. and Mrs. Kirk left on a wedding trip to Orillia and points north, For travelling 'the bride chose a navy velvet coat, with hat, frock and shoes to match. The out-of-town guests includea Mrs. Robert Mainer, grandmother er, Miss Alexander Mainer, all of Orillia; Mr. and Mrs. R. G, Mainer, Mrs. F. G. Cawker and son, of Tor- onto. Those from the city attend- ing were: Mrs. G. W. Irvin, Mr. and Mrs. Moody, Mr. and Mrs. A. Stone, Mr. and Mrs. H, Mackie, Mr. and Mrs. L. Goyne, Mr. and Mrs. C. Harman, Mrs. E. Jackson, Mrs. Clark, Mrs. Bert Robertson, Miss Eileen Clarke and Mr. Ritchards. ANNOUNCEMENT Mr. and Mrs. Frank L. Mason, Harmony, announce the marriage of their youngest doughter, Mary A., to Harry C. Nobes, only son of Mr. and Mrs. Georze Nobes, King- ston, on Friday, July 26, 1920. \ JESSIE PANTON AUXILIARY HELD MONTHLY MEETING The Jessie Panton Auxiliary of St. Andrew's Church held their monthly meeting at 7.30 o'clock Tuesday evening in the ladies' par- lor of the chureh. Work was fin- ished on the baby's layette, which is to ho given to a needy family in the city, Tha Auxiliary will interest them- selves dn the city's necds. A rum- near future. At tho cloce of the meeting refreshments weve served by a number of the ladics. INTERESTING TALK GIVEN ON AFRICA Mrs. Banfield, of Afries, Spoke at Joint Meating of W. M. Choosing «3 her very nam: of which ; ture, myoicriougness and attraction, Afiica, Mrs, Banfield attracted a lars audience to St. Andrew's Un- itedwc ureh last evening and held them soelibound during her entire tall. The occasion was a united mecting of the Women's Missionary 2ovieties of the shurches in the city. '. R. Crozier, president of King United Society, was chairman, Ly Mrs. B. J. Gay, president S'maoe street Society and Mrs. G. W. Irvine of Cedzardale vho cone ducted the worship, service, There was a large assembly of members and friends present and all were enter- tained by the delightful address, which it was their pleasure to hear. Prior to the address the male quar- tette of King street church, Messrs. Trencer, Walters, Staples and Hare, contributed an cxcellent number. Mrs. Jamidson of St. Andrew's in- troduced the speaker of the evening and during the introduction mention - ed that Mr. Ranfick! had been a mis sionary in Africa for twenty-five years, It was first-hand informativ: which the large audience réceive last night, from a woman who ha: experienced the joys of teaching God's words and the heartthrobs and aches from the darkness oi Africa. Mrs. Banficld is a charming speak- uggests adven- { RN of the bride, Mayor and Mrs. Main-- maze sale has been plinned for the | Interests in the Home -- The Women's Corner For Anything of Interest to Homemaker and the H There are several ways of vary- ing the everyday kind of toast. There are so many ways in fact that one might serve toast in var- fous forms at every meal and scar- cely become tired of them, Some recipes for varying the toast are given below and hope they may prove useful to many. Cinnamon Toast Cinnamon toast, that associate of hoarding school and college days, never seems to lose its pop- ularity, If made by the folowing recipe it is even more enjoyed than when the cinnamon and sugar are sprinkled on the buttered toast. It is "gooey-ier", and yet there is less danger of sprinkling yourself with the top dressing during the eating process, One quarter cup butter, 6 table- spoons powdered sugar, 1 table- spoon cinnamon, Mix the sugar and" cinnamon, crushing all lumps carefully, Add butter, thoroughly mixed. Toast bread on one side and spread the untoasted side with the mixture. Place the bread on a broiler and' put under the flame for two or three minutes, This mixture may also be spread on toast which has been toasted on hoth sides and will still be superior to the buttered toast sprinkled with sugar and cinnamon. This spread may be made in advance, for it will keep for several days if put In a cov- cred jar in the ice box. Two table- spoons of ground nuts make a welcome variation, Savory Milk Toast Two cups milk, 2 tablespoons bitter, 2 tablespoons flour, salt to taste, % cup diced or gratea cheese, 6 slices toast, Make » white sauce of the but- ter, flour and miik, Salt to taste and add tha chease, stirring unti! it is melted, Pour the sauce over the toast, Serve with cole slaw and a dessert of fresh or canned fruit and gingerbread or cookies. For milk toast whizh is really ¢eserving of the name, the toast should be freshly made, the milk should be piping hot and the two combined just before one starts cating. I'or sedsoning, add salt, repper, if you like it, and a gen- cous gpoon of butter to the milk while it is heating, The toast may bo buttered or not as one prerers. Bacon on (Meese Toast This is a supper timo favorite. Grate cheese over slices ol bread: lay.a slice of bacon over each and "ul In a pan in a hot oven until the bacon is crisp and the choese melted. The pan may t un- cor tha broiler il preferred, bgt net tco pear the flamo, Lav on ep hot serving dish and garnish with parilev, A dish not quite so well known cr, speaking fuently, but distinctly aud througa the entire address scar- ccly a cough or murmur interrupted he toll, roeving the interest all ma- cd. Mrs, Banfield described the : 'nt of Africa as " a huge shackled with supersti- es 4 . She explaineg! AL 4 il yet scarcely any evident opment has been made there. told of the different tongues Spence, vhieh naturally meant dif- «rent 'he, castes and ideas amd of the durknecs of several parts of the country, where in spite of the gicat cliosts of missionaries, the Word of God has never reached, In 1481 Portugese nevipators, sail- ing in an attempt to discover India discovered Afra and since that time there Lave been wonderful changes in that cowitry. Numerous great rivers have been discovered and it is these rivers which form the main means of transportation in the con- tinent for there are very few railways and 'the roads are not of the best. Mrs, Banfield spoke in detail of the modes of living in the dark country, of transportation and of the great promise of this country with their various valuable 'resources, Africa is an impressive country and is further enhanced by the de: scription as given by Mrs. Banfield. She described everything of interest to Christians in the gountry and showed that the only way Africa would become a. continent in which Christianity was widely known as in Canada and that her resources would be worthwhile would be by the spreading of the Gospel. She asked jor the co-operation of all Christians in aiding in this great work in that great 'country, New Fall Line of Coats and Dresses at the FASHION SHOPPE DOLLY DIMPLES AND BOE IF You DoNT BRING IT To ME BY MOoN- SET YoUR LIFE WILL BE 84 Simcoe St, South d 191,000,000 people in|: is apple toast with bacon, which is equally good for supper or break- fast! For an individual serving stew a peeled and quartered apple in one tablespoon of butter, two of water and one of sugar. When ten- der, arrange on a round of fried bread and lay over the top two slices of erisp bacon. Dessert Toast Two ripe bananas, 2 slices toast, 2 teaspoons sugar, 1 teaspoon salt, 2 teaspoons butter, Peel and scrape thé bananas. Wash and spread on the toast. Sprinkle with the sugar and salt and dot with the butter, Place in a hot oven for about five minutes. Serve with cream while hot. Invalid@'s Milk Toast One cup rich milk or thin cream, 1 tablespoon butter, 1 tablespoon flour, 2 slices toast, quince jelly. Make a cream sauce of the but- ter, flour and milk--if the cream is used, mix the flour with a' little cold milk and stir into the cream, omitting the butter, Pour the sauce over the toast and serve with quince jelly, . Honey Cinnamon Toast A delicious tea toast is made by mixing hot honey and hutter to- gether in the proportion of 2 parts honey to one part butter;"add a generous sprinkling of cinnamon and spread very thinly on toasted white bread, At the other end of the scale from these rich--and for some of us, at least, all too enticing toasts --1is melba toast, which has be- come an integral part of most re- ducing diets. This toast is very hard and of wafer thinness so that one gets as few calories as pos- sible yet has a sense of eating something substantial, Melba Toast To make melba toast, slice the hread as thin as possible and allow it to dry for one hour, Then bake it in a hot oven for about five min- utes, It ghould be brown all the way through. " Enelish muffins, toasted, are well known, but English muffins, split, toasted, well buttered and snread with anchovy paste are an- other exciting discovery. Perhaps the best go-with for a vegetable plate which we have met vet is toasted' English muffins, lightly buttered. heaped with cheese ond cet under the broiler flame to melt the cheese. Helpful Hints If a cork falls Inside a. hottle, nut enotith ammonia on the bottle to fiont the cork and put it away for a few days, The ammonia will cot or destroy the cork enough to permit its removal, . . LJ Prepare a quart of cream celery goup and to~son to taste. Poach eggs and put on slices of buttered toast, Place in soup plate and pour a soup over and serve, This is an excellent dish for an invalid or the children, . Prain pipes should be cleansed frequently hy dissolving copperas and lye and pourinz down them. This also acts an a disinfectant. LJ THE ICE BOX When you stop taking Ice in the fall, give the lce-box a good renovating. that it may be in the best condition next spring. Remem- ber that the circulation of air stops when there is no ice in the box and without fce, it is not a safe place to keep food. Remove all the food from it and wash it thorough- ly with hot soapsuds and wipe fit dry. Clean the drain with a brush and a solution of washing soda. Leave the doors open for a few days that it may completely dry and air, If the box needs painting or var- nishing do it now and the oder will be gone for next season. Look the box ver to be sure the hinges and aprings are in good repair. If the box over to be svro the hinges and them now snd have them ready when the new ceason opens, LJ LJ LJ PACKING BUTTER Butter, for pacing, should be thoroughly sweet and washed and worked enough to eliminate all the buttermilk. on which bacteria thrive. If well salted with a good grade of household salt, butter 'will keep sweet longer: Wash and scald and air a stone Jar until you feel sure it is sweet and clean, Pack the bugter solidiy into this; cover it w a white cloth which has been sterilized by boiling. The cloth should extend over the top of the jar about two inches all around. Cover the cloth with a layer of salt about one-six- teenth of an inch deen. The cloth is merely an aid in lifting the salt and the Comm from the butter when a portion of the butter is taken for use, The cellar is the best place for storing the jar, but it should be closely covered with a plate in or- der that the butter cannot absorb odors from fruits and vegetables stored pear. ITINERARY ISSUED OF PREMIER'S TOUR Nominations in Riding of ... Grenville Set for & October 7 YL Toronto, Sept.' 27.--Definite addi- tional speaking arrangements in the campaign tour of Premier G. Howard Ferguson were officially announced last night. The dates made public will carry the prime minister through the constituencies of Bruce South Simcoe east, Grenville, Brantford and Durham. Resuming his itinerary on Monday afternoon next, Premier Ferguson will address a meeting at Ripley. This meeting, which likely will prove one of the biggest rural gatherings of the campaign, was announced or- iginally for Oct. 2 but this date was made two days earlier by an announ- cement yesterday, On Oct. 5 the pre- mier will speak at Midland, returning to Toronto immediately after the meeting to entrain the same night for Kemptville where he will spend the week-end at his home. The Grenville Conservative associ- ation, on Oct. 7, will hold their con- vention and nominate the prime min- ister, as a matter of course, as fhe standard-bearer for Grenville. Fol- lowing this engagement, Premier Ferguson will return to Toronto. His next speech will be before the Mac- donald-Cartier club at Brantford on Oct. 9. On the succeeding day, the prime minister will deliver an ad- dress at Port Hope in Durham riding. i ----r ad unity Ask for Salada Orange Pekoe~it is the finest . A' T ia A 'Fresh from the gardens' Will Discuss Speed of Earthquakes Pasadena, Cal, Sept, 27.--More accurate measurement of the gpeed of earthquakes and of their wave rays are the most pressing prob- lems to be discussed by a small but select group here beginning October 4. Two of the seismologists come from Europe and the rest from this country. The seismological laboratory of the Carnegie Insti- tute of Washington and the Cali- fornia Institute of Technology, which rests on the bed rock of the Annandale hills near here, will be the meeting place. Dr. Harry Wood is in charge of the sessions, Among the scientists who at- tend gwill be Dr, H. Jeffreys of Cambridge university, England; Dr. Beno Gutenberg, of Germany; Prof, Harry F. Reid, Johns Hop- kins university; James B, MacEl- wane, St, Louis university; Dr, L. H., Adams, geological laboratory; Carnegie insttitute; Dr. Berry By- erly, University of California, A new penny-in-slot machine in London dispenses phonograph needles, BROOKLIN BRIEFS Brooklin, Sept. 20--~Mr. and Mrs. W. White who have been on a trip to Vancouver have returned home. Mr. W, Dryden and Misses Mary and Jean attended 8 wedding in De- troit, Mich, A very enjoyable fime was spent by all at the young people's corn roast which was held on Tuesday night, Miss Mary Dryden has accepted the leadership of the C. G. I. T. and they are all looking forward for a very interesting time during the sea- s0n's meetings, Mr. and Mrs. A. Boyce gave a dance on Thursday last in honor of her friend Miss M, Tait from New York. There was a very large crowd attended. The music was provided by the Port Perry Orchastra. A goodly numb - of women of the W M. S. were invited to the Rally of the ( nwood W, M, S. held at Kinsale, where they listened to a most interesting talk from Miss White, one of the British Columbia missionaries. The presbytery of Oshawa district met here on Tuesday. There was a large attendance of ministers and laymen. ness, dull rooms BRING colour, bright- cheer indoors. Tone up your floors with Dominioz Inlaid Lino- leum. Finish. necessary. mellows it. Long- now. Dominion Inlaid Lino- leum is permanent. colours go right through to the stout burlap back. Light mopping or brush- ing keeps it spotless. No soap or cleansing powders An occasional polishing enriches and Enjoy its beauty in every room. A host of designs to choose from . . . each with the added loveliness of the soft-lustre Domolac Its Quick and easy to lay. Moderately priced. 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Of ARE FieLD Of STONES-THE "MAN HAD ©ISAPPEARED = AND Dolly SAT oN A GLASS - Of Some WAY To cLimB UP THE MOUNTAIN Of GLASS » ALL BY HER LITTLE | ONE SOME SELF G27 Never cuimB UP THAT MounTAIN But I JusT GoT To, SoME How ROCK To THINK a) DAG! SAD THe OLB MAN: JX {

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