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Oshawa Daily Times, 29 Apr 1930, p. 7

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THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, TUESDAY, APRIL 29, 1930 PAGE SEVEN IN THE WORLD OF SOCIETY WOMAN CHOSEN 0 WANAGE ESTATE Miss Marion Cooper Given Task of Educating Slum Tenants London, April 20.--A vivacious oung woman, not yet 30, with obbed dark hair and a fringe, cheerful eyes, and a determined chin, has been chosen by the West- minster city council as the first woman house property manager on the Grosvenor housing estate, Mill. bank. Part of this estate has been leased to the city council by the Duke of Westminster for redevels ment and the remainder is to rebuilt and -replanned at the entire expense of the Duke hime well, Miss Marion Cooper. who comes from Chesterfield, waa chosen from a number of applicants who responded to an advertisement for women house property managers ---- - You CAN Dvr TRUE mer BLAC SUNSET DYES " over the rebullding is to be spread ants of slum houses and cottages ing proper use of improvements, peace with thelr neighbors, Cooper will have decision as to which family can be trusted to lve next to which without quarreling and lowering the tene of the nelgh- bohood, isolation which causes disseminated paralys. is and one of the commonest chron WITH fe diseases of the nervous system, trained on the Octavia hill system This system fnsists that! Tenants must pay rent regular ly, The estate must yield a satisfac tory return on invested money Repairs must be carrjed out Im mediately they are required The manager must be an woman, who attends to all details, how over small, On the Grosvenor housing estate, where are now nolsome little slum streets in the neighborhood of Horseferry Rd, and Grosvenor Rd, 004 dwellings, in seven blocks, ure to be erected, As there Is no ale ternative accommodation for the existing tenants of the estate, how over seven years, It will ho Mins Cooper's task to educate the ten into living in thelr new flats muk- and keeping the keeping clean, Mins WOMAN'S GERM CLAIM NTUDIED Medical men of Kurope are tak ing much interest in the reported rs Lasso, of the fitrable virus The discovery is claimed by Ming Kathleen Chevassut, a sclentist at Westminister who says she has fsolated the virus from the cerebro-spinal Hospital, London, fluid of Te = ® vil These Strange uns of ------"y Chevassut a large number of patients, announced ery in the Lancet, oMelal organ or Medical SBooloty, if the British discovery, will," says the "eerialnly Peace .; \ explode wheat and rice we Mins | Lancet editorially, rank HON. ANGELA With the possibility that ing will be sufficiently vocovered rom his illness of a yoar ARO to loin the Queen in presiding at alt four of the royal courts being held ot Buckingham Palace in May and | dune, those always lhpressive func tons are expected to take on added brilliance, Among the debutantes to bo presented are: (1) Miss Pam. | ela Wellesley, daughter of Lady Grorge Wellesley, by her first mares | Mlage to Lord Richard Wellesley, | hor present. husband's elder bros ther, who was killed in action in 1014, Miss Pamela is thus «a granddaughtor of the presont Duke of Wellington and a cousin of the Marquis of Douro's daughter, Lady Anne Mand Wellesley, whom rus mor has suggested as a possible b | | | most achlevemont of bhacterlol OF} BILL TO RETURN ITS RESOURCES T0 GREENWOOD, MEMBERS OF the | bride for the Prince of Wales, (2) RETURN OF PENSION ONE 0} LAND'S YOUNGER MANY OLD The Hon, Angela Margo Hamar Groenwood, older daughter of Low | and Lady. Greenwood, Her father, who was for many years a Consors vative momber at Westminster, and who was created a poer last your, Ix a Canadian, being a native of Whithy, Ont, and having at tonded the University of Toronto, Miss Greenwood In quite artiste nid Ix at present studying painting, (3) Lady Mary St ClairsEreskine, daughter of the Karl and Countess of Rosslyn, Lady Mary inherits her mother's good looks and her father's skill with the hounds, hunting with the Ceawley and Hors sham, (4) Miss Ellsaboth Egerton. Warburton, daughtor of the lato Capt, John EgertonsWarburton -. TR ORLERED BY COURT | - | St, Thomas, April 20-<Damages of $2,487.87 and conte were award. ed the Soldiers' Pension Commis sion of Canada against Austin Plo- kell, Wabash Railroad locomotive engineer, by Justice Wright yesters wr 8) a CHARMING ARINTOCRACY and of the Mon, Mrs, Waters, and coshelross with her sister to the Arley Hall ostates, Sho ix a grand. daughter of Lord and Lady News ton, (8) Miss Wilhelmine Hope, daughter of the late Capt George Everard Hope and of the lato Mes, Hope, Miss Wilhelmine ix a grand daughter of Lady Mary Hope ond a Kinswoman of the Marquis of | Linlithgow, (0) Miss Rosamond Villiers, daughter of Lieut«Col, Charles Hyde Villers and of Lady Vietovia Villers, daughter of the Inte Duke and Duchess of Roxe burge and sister of the present duke, Miss" Villlors Is fond of tho hunt, (7) Miss Joan Grenfell, secs ond daughter of the late Brig«Gon, Harold Grenfell and of the late Lady Muriel Grenfell, Miss Joan 1s thus a granddaughter of the fourth Karl of Rosse, (8) Miss Dotty Dee honham, only daughter of My, and Mrs, Alfred Debenham, Miss Botty | Is a good horsewoman and also keon on polities, being a member of the Ladies' Imperial Club, Wf -------------- SOCIAL SYSTEM TO BE MATRIARCHY Noted Tenor Says Women ' ' Will Drive World . Machine New York, N. Y.. April 26 Women are going to drive the ma- chine of world affairs in the not far distant future, in the opinion of Edward Johnston, native of Guelph, Ont, a leading tenor of the Metropolitan Opera Company and one of the world's foromost operatie singers Moreover, he helleves thelr French hoeled slippers are to step into the shoes father occupies now an head of the family, and turn the social system into a matrinrchy, To give his argument bucking, he pointed toward the strides women have already made in the world of politics, business and art, "Women are the real ploneers in this world," he said "They have greater moral and phisienl resistance, they can stand more punishment and they have more courage. When they once net | ¥rance | nature?" M, | | thelr heads, you can't sway them "Women today are the ploneer in art and in the fleld of music If it weren't for women there wouldn't be any musical concerts except in the great metropolitan contro," | The question of mex. according to Mr, Johnston, is gradually los- Ing its importance, Men no longer | | notice or resent a somewhat man nish attire in professional women, nor do they reson) her presence, With her chances®to make good now as good as man's, and will her "'ploneer spirit overlastingly looking for new things," she will gradually outstep her husband und brother, he bolleves, And what is to become of men? "That is a matter of education and adjustment, It will have to come when tho situation arrives, | I don't bellove it will bring a cataclysm, or that women will lose their feminity or happiness thru their advancement. Matters will adjust thomselves.' TE Sr------_ " - Mr, Johnston salled last night nm the Europu for a six wooke' vacation In Florence, where he muaintaing 0 home, He will return in June COLORED NAILS Declaring that American wo mon are hounded toward barbaric fads of nose-rings and lip-plates, Jean Patou, couturier of Paria, miling for I'rance on the lle dé expressed his horror at the rapidly spreading fashion of brightly painted fingernails, Slightly less vehement but equal. ly positive was the fashion author- Ity on his denunciation of dyed hair "Why should women try to force Paton asked, 'Do they not know that the color of the halr is designed to bo a part of an onsomble nature has provided for avery individual? It is therefore the only color suitable for thelr complexion, the color of their ayes and thelr whole personality, "A change will only ereate an faolso note in the latter, yet, even at tho best, the altered color of the hale will not look natural but | will have a deadened aspect, Bee sides, It is never dignified." M. Paton wax alarmed at the dancing habits of young American girls, Having witnessed them daneing with cheeks against the cheeks of thelr partners, with the { lower part of thelr bodles trailing some few feet behind, M, Patou regarded the spectacle as ridieuls ous, POISON GAS TO SAVE CHURCH Custodians of the fifteenth. contury church at Ling, Austria, are trying poison gas in an effort to save the anclent edifice from the ravages of worms, The altar and pulpit are already worm-riddled, and many mothods used previously to save them were in vain, Ree | contly the custodians employed ex- ports to seal the church, Nl jt with poison gas, and leave it uns touched for a week. The church has been reopened and worship re- sumed, but whether worms which had bored far Into the wood are wtill alive 'cannot bo told for some time, It is probable the church will have to be 'gassed ugain soon to kill new arrivals hatched from larvae unaffected by the fums ox, * Giving Puffed Wheat and Puffed Rice the rich nourish. tifa entering action against Plekell | for the recovery of a widow's pons ment of hot cooked cereals 9 (8 hs | sion of $60 a month pald to the Paves Way for Budget and iate Mra. Mabel Plokell, who was | prone Cour, © ee of the manos Passed "EN AN A nnouncement LAVORY! Crunchy! Meltingly 0 eat, That's Puffed Wheat and Puffed Rice Grains , . . "grains shot from guns'! Choice, ump grains of wheat and rice are actually sealed in shining bronze guns, Then the ns are revolved in fiery ovens to develop al} the natural rich grain flavor. When the guns are fired, 123 million explosions occur in every grain, This breaks open every one of the millions of tiny food cells. The grains become as completely digestible as though had hours. That's why been cooked for ed Wheat and Puffed Rice are rated "virtually as nourishing as hot cooked cereals. And these dainty ni all the rich flavor of nourishment have new nut-meats, All the buttery crispness of fresh toast. You never tasted grain foods in a more enticing form, Serve with fruit and cream for breakfast, Asan caiily di in fir digi u a delicious ble luncheon dish for children, Crisp new kind of tn. Order Puffed Wheat and Puffed from your grocer today, Oats Company. The Quaker un O"AKER PUFFED WHEAT .ND PUFFED RICE Copy No. 758-1360 ~nished--112 lines x 3 cols. Canadian News, 1930 J20012 Perhaps Dominion Election Ottawa, April 20<=Legislation for the return to Manitoba of that Provinee's natural resources was given second und final reading In the House of Commons last night, Similar bills dealing with the nas tural resources of Saskatohewan, Alberta and Neitish Columbia ure pending and are to he dealt with forthwith hefore other busi ness 18 proceeded with, The headway being given to the Western nutural resources legislas tion in regarded as a8 make-way not only for the Budget, but for a Dos minton election, Western Canadian Interests and sentiment at the monument are hound up in the hig constitutional rearvangement, The government wan ready last night to go on with the Saskatchewan debate, but at the request of Chan, He Cahan, KC; deferred {t until today, Alberta and Hritlsh Colums bia affatra will follow right on the heels" of tomorvew's disoussion, Homo spem to think seelng vach ; other when you telephone will be ! hoon, but sometimes it may be + ordeal, -- Brandon Bun, = ! Mitchell ¥, Hepburn, M.P,, for !odlgin. West, prophesies an elecs { thon befare September 8, Well, { who's afralde-Hamilton Herald, formerly the wife of Arthur Hawksby, a veteran of the Great War, who dled in July, 1930, His Lordship awarded the full amoun of the claim, He found that Plokel had conspired with his late wife to keep thelr married a secret, that they might benefit from the pension payments, LIQUOR DRUNK ON FATAL ROWING PARTY Wallacoburg, April 29, The Coroner's Jury Inquiring into the cause of the death of Avehibald Little, whose body was recovered from the River Sydenham, opposite the Dominion Sugar Company plant, Sunday, April 20, found that Little "came to his death by drown. Ing resulting from the accidental sinking of the hoat in which he war making the crossing on the night of April 19, accompanied by Thomas Druer and Arthur Loson," Thomas Druer and Arthur Los gon; who were brought in custody from the county jail, where they ure serving termg for intoxication, told of the orossing. Both witnesses admitted having been intoxicated, but did not think that Little had imbibed anything small, but possibly a little wine, Give soma thought to serjour things this Basters=it will do you good==Galt Reporter, Store 8 Nimeoo Street South, RUSSEL PERKINS FLORIST Alter several years proparation in growing perennials, we are in a posis tion to offer for sale a large assortment of hardy perennials and flowering shrubs and is also prepared with capable, experienced help to offer his services for planting same either on a large or small scale. sodded, estimates will be gladly given and our work guaranteed. We will be pleated to give any information regarding the planting of perennials, flowernig shrubs, hedges, evergreens or annuals of every description, We will have 'for sale starting this week, one of the best collections of hardy Canadian Grown Rose Bushes that it is possible to procure in Hybi:d perpetually, Hybi.d tea and climbing rose bushes 8 Simcoe Street South, or at our Nurseries, Park Road North, Three telephones at your service and capable help to do your work, No job too big or too Boost your Home City and help give employment, RUSSEL PERKINS, Florist Nurseries and Greenhouse, Park Road North, Residence, 74 King Street West. PHONES 108, 408) 4108w Lawns graded, seeded or Enquire at our Store,

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