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Oshawa Daily Times, 28 Jan 1931, p. 5

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y a 'THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 28, 1931 PAGE FIVE "Women's Interests in the Home--- and the Community wake Pins ae EE) shore, of Oshawa, were among the guests, Mrs, David Park, of "Fairview Farm" entertained at luncheon yess terday in honor of her daughter-in- law, Mrs. Wilson H, Clark and little granddaughter, Margaret Yvonne, who are visiting Mrs, Park from their home in Amos, Quebec. Mrs. Clark is the wife of Pilot Wilson Clark, formerly 'of Oshawa. Among the guests at the luncheon were: Mrs. W, H. Smith, Mrs. Arthur Haskill, Mrs. Hillard McGill and Mrs, Rufus Clark. "irwares" | (BURGESSBEDME STORE] | (V3 ] GOOD HEALTH egos Seog (041°C to all who drink .. Social & Personal | Mrs. J. Williams was in town yess terday, visiting her brothers, Mr, Ar- thur Legge and Mr. Norman Legge. Mrs. Hales Barker, Arthur Street, is 'entertaining at tea this alteinoon for one group of King Strect Church Women s Missionary Society, Miss Harriet Swail, Masson Street, is entertaining at a bridge to-morrow yi wd By Annebelle Worthington Mlustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished , With Every Pattern A modish peplum dress of flat crepesilk. graclous and lovely in every 'detail, It favors the youthful plaits across the front of the skirt, They are stitched to a depth just above the knees so as to keep the sil- By Toraton W. Burgess r-------- evening in honor of Miss Wilda Knight, who is leaviig shortly for France. : On Tuesday evening the Daughter of England Lodge, held their month- ly meeting mn the S.O.E, Hall, Some members trom Whitby were among the guests, During the evening Wos- thy President Sister McDonald invit- ed The Grand Worthy District De- puty, sister Sinnons to the platform to assist Past President sister Wil- on intall sister Newman to her office as inside guard, After the close of the lodge session a euchre party was held, Mrs. Glover and Mrs. B, Mor- gan carrying off the prizes, Refresh- ments were served when the guests finished playing. Mr, and Mrs, Elvin Black of Kit- chener, were recent guests of Mrs. George Allchin, Church street, Mr. and Mrs. J. S. Ames of Bow- manville entertained at an informal party at their home in Bowmanville last cvening, Dr. and Mrs. Grant Berry and Mr. and Mrs, J, C Gart- Mrs. Walleyn, Mary Street, enter- tained a number of Loyal True Blue Lodge members and their friends at her home last evening. A very plea- houette slender, The cowl drape of the bodice is soft amd pretty. The long sleeves are also given a soft touch through a frill below the elbow. Social & Personal Any social notes which read. ers care to submit will be print. ed. Kindly phone or send them to the Times Office before 10.30 a.m., the day they are to be pub- lished. [Items of news concern fug dances, parties, guests to and from town will be gladly received, We carry a complete line of GOSSARD Corsets, Solitaires, Girdles, etc. Graduate Corsetiere LAMBLE'S sant time was spent In music, games and dancing. Mrs. B. Hurst was the winner of the game contest. Mrs, A, Coulson and dirs. Follest led in the comic contest. A dainty supper was | served by the hostess and her daugh- ter, Mrs. Brick. Mr, Russell Walley of London, Ontario, who was among the guests added much to the merri- ment of the evening with his comic musical selections. Mr. and Mrs. Hunter, Harmony Inn, were very much surprised on |o Tuésday evening when about forty of their friends dropped in to celebrate the latter's birthday. Although surprised, Mrs. Hunter welcomed her guests most heartily and after all joined in a Grand March and at the conclusion of which Mrs, Hunter was presented with a beautiful bouquet of roses by Mrs. R. Stirling. Mrs. Hunter responded with a few words, ex- pressing her happiness over the event. The evening passed quick- ly with music and much laughter over the games and contests. Mrs. Hammond delighted all with hér readings, as did Miss Pawson and Mr. Brooks with their vocal solos. A buffet lunch was served in the dining room from a table centred with two birthday cakes, ths 'an ond a gift from the hostess te Miss Ruby Stirling, who was cele ...uug her 13th birthday. The party concluded with the singing of Auld Lang Syne. Among those present were Mr. and Mrs. C. Barnes, Mr. and Mrs. R. Storling, Mr. and Mrs. R. Cliff, Mr. and Mrs. J. Cole- man, Mr. and Mrs. T. Crigg, Mr. and Mrs. F. Pawson, Mr. and Mrs. G. Carey, Mr. and Mrs. T: Stephenson, Mr, and Mrs. L. Cor rin, Mr. and Mrs. L. Bone, Mr. and Mrs. Gummow, Mr, and Mrs, N. Mutton, Mr. and Mrs. T. Brooks, ny The Man Who Stole Her Gems This the Glass A society woman in a Western city left her home one afternoon. A robber entered and stole her jewels -- from a safe. He ap- peared to have left not a mark or clue. Whatever he touched, including the safe, had been rub- bed or washed. But he forgot one thing, as robbers always do. A carelessly placed drinking glass on the sideboard showed he had So Do You--on Foods . Dangerous Finger-Prints This true story shows how you leave finger-prints on every- thing you touch. They will not incriminate you honest people but they often go some fearf damage. Those prints are germ- laden. Life Iixtension Institute This the Mark He Left His Mark style after another No. City A light navy blue flat crepe silk made the original model, Style No. 30056 may ba had in sizes 16, 18 years, 36, 38, 40 and 2 inches bust, Printed flat crepe with the sleeve frill of plain crepe in blend- ing tone is attractive. Crepy wolens may also be used for its development. one attractive as you turn ver the pages of our new Spring You will see Fashion Book. Styles' for children or the miss, the matron. the stout--and a ser- fes of dressmaking articles, It is a book that will save you money. Be sure to fill in the size of the pattern. Send stamps or coin (coin preferred), 3005 Price of book 10 cents. Prico of pattern 20 cents. 3005. Size Street Address State taken a drink. The glass revealed a thumb-print. print on record, with a picture of | 8 the man. He wae quickly found, and the jewels were discovered in his room. The owner got all of them back--the man got a prison sentence. All becaus- of a finger-print touck, soap, but with Lifebuoy Soap. That contains a ride powerful that no active germs Territory continuc moose, mountain sheep, and moun- tain goat are increasing in nymbers and bears are very numerous in all parts of the territory, other predatory animals are kept in check by the bounty of $30 for wolf and $15 for coyote, of Canada which Mr. and Mrs. Landon, Mr, and Mrs, Libby, Mr. and Miss Brown, Mrs, Parker, Cliff, Mrs. E. Shaw, Mrs. E. ders, The police had that thumb- | I. Mrg. L. Saun- Alexander and Miss Stirling and Ruby Mrs, Hammond, Mrs. I. Pawson, I. tirling. WILD LIFE INCREASE IN YUKON Wild life conditions in the Yukon i good. Caribou, Wolves and ALPINE CLUB OF CANADA In the history of the Alpine Club holds its annual cxist after its use. Wash your hands with Life- buoy often. Teach the habit to camp cither in the Selkirks or the Rocky mountains in July or August, the twenty-third annual meeting (1928) was the first and only camp which did not cxperience a single storm, Mountaineers from all over Check the stovies that you hear; Only thus is truth made clear. ~Farmer Brown's Boy. It was a queer. story that Red- dy Fox had told. Reddy had sald it was queer and it was. Billy Mink didn't know whether to be- lleve it or not, It is always diffi. cultto believe a queer thing. Bile ly decided to curl up for a nap in that hollow between the roots of an old stump into which he had dodged when Reddy appeared. When Billy awoke he decided that he would go sec for himself it what Reddy had told him was true. He soon found a path that led up into the woods and he followed this, It wasn't much of a path, but Billy knew that it had been made by one of those two-legged creatures called men. He hadn't gone far when his nose told him that there was meat near, and led him straight to it. It was only a small pleco and it reminded him at once of pieces he had secn traps baited with. At once he became suspicious. Very carefully he cirel. ed around it at a safe distance. "It looks like a bait, but I don't see any trap," said Billy. Ho looks ed still more carefully, but.no sign of a trap could he find. He was sorcly tempted to seize that bait but even as he reached for it, he had that funny feeling that Reddy Fox had told him about. Some. thing inside seemed to warn him to leave that alone. Billy backed off, Then wilh a snarl he went on. He hadn't gone far when he came to another bait and near it was the dead shrew Reddy hau told him of. A little farther on he found a dead crow. 'Reddy did tell the truth," muttered Billy, and continued on his way, that funny feeling growing stronger and stronger. By this time he had quite lost his appetite. He found several other baits, but at none did he find a trap. and this seemad to Billy very queer, very queer, indeed. Then he found one of the relatives of Chatterer,.~ the Red Squirrel lying dead not very far from one of those baits which he had started to drag away. The funny feeling had become fear, a very great fear by this time. The finding of a dead owl didn't make him feel any better. No, sir, it certainly didn't 'make him feel any better. In fact, it made hin feel worse. And when at last he found a dog also dead, Billy decided then and there that this was no place for him and the soon- er he got back to the Green Mea- dows and the Green Forest, which Farmer Brown and Farmer Brown's Boy had made safe for all little people the better, Now, neither Billy Mink nor Reddy Fox understood dn the least what they had scen. All they un. derstood that something dreadful had happened to those who also found those scattered baits. Of course, they couldn't was Riding Comfort Hudson-Essexcomfort is not limited to the climination of road shocks, It includes smoother motors, si- lest bodies and con- venient controls. Think of such Rare Riding Comfort at these low prices! Ask your Hudson-Essex dealer to demonstrate, know anything about poison, for it was poison that had Kklled these other little peopie. There was poison in each of those baits and they had been scatterod by one of those two-legged creatures who was even more heartless than a trapper. They had been put out for foxes und other [ur-hearers whose skins that man wanted to get without the trouble of getting traps, and who did.not care how many or what other little pcople might be Killed, It was the hun- gry time in the woods and he was seekifg to take advantage of it. Could anythng be more dreadful? It was against the law to use poison but this man carved nothing for the law. He was just heartless and cruel, I am sorry to say that there are men like that, It was only their natural suspi- clon and their cleverness that had |. saved Reddy IFox and Billy Mink. They had long ago learned to dis- trust anything out of the ordinary, and common sense warned them to leave alone that which they dis- trusted. So they hurriedly left that beautify! woodland which a man had made a dreadful place. Tt is too bad that they could not have learned later that that man who had put out tho poisoned baitg was caught by an officer of the law and shut away in a prison for u long time. Perhaps they yrould have felt better, (Copyright. 1921 The next story: Hunts for a Mou T. W. Burgess) "Mother Brown NEW TABLE CLOTHS HAVE LONG SKIRTS Simplicity First, Says Irish Woman Who Has Made Study of Linens Mrs. Leslie Brown who has just arrived in Toronto to give a ser- ies of lectures on "Modern Table Setting" as a representative of a linen damask guild, said last even- ing that "When the skirts came down, so did the table cloths, No more small mat cflfects on the table. All that severity is gone, and feminity has come into her own. Remember the time when sleeves had great puffs at the shoulders and skirts were all ruf- fles. It seems that table fashions follow the styles in clothes. Tables were heaped high then, loaded down with great quantities of sil. ver. "That day passed. Skirts to the knees followed. Tables were ered with dabs of linen her there, "That time has passed, too. And now we find lovely linen cloths completely covering the tablé, the half-dozen pieces of gilver at each plate -- everything symbolic of "impllelty, grace, dignity and beau- ty," sald Miss Turner-Brown. "There is no overcrowding eith. er of articles on the table or of the guests at the table, No longer do we cmbellish the table," she said. Cov. ana Mcdernist Pieces Miss Turner-Brown against using modernistic glasgs- ware with Georgian perfod furn- iture.. But it was possible to in- troduce a modern note into period surroundings. She handed the ro. porter a pleture of a lovely table cloth embodying the richoldlace of the 17th century, but used in panels with the centre "perfectly plain. ; She spoke of the advantages of candle-lighting. "But it shoud be used only in the evening--tiio romantic evening hour--with Hl cloth of gold or bronze to be ef- fective," she added. Important above every other feature was the expression of the individual self of the hostess, Migs Turner-Brown declared. She would far rather sce a table that did not conform to ctlauette than one that looked just like "some- hody clse." Tho greatest charm of the dining table, she believed, 'ny in that differentiation of char- advised LYONS' RED LABEL 38. = TEA J. Lyons & Co. (Canada) Limited. Toronto 30. Hall pound ' COLUMBUS YOUNG PEOPLE'S BANQUET Rev. Manson Doyle of To- ronto Gave an Interesting Address On Friday evening the 23rd. inst,, a banquet was held in tho United Church under the auspices of the young. people's work of Columbus and Kedron. Mr. 'Gordon Davis very efficiently and in his own geni- al manner acted as toast-master for the occasion. The guests of honour were Rev. Manson Doyle, B.A. of Toronto, and Mr. John ° Dryden, member elect for South Ontario in the Boys' Parliament. After a sumptuous repast, a very hearty toast was proposed to the King fol- lowed by the National Anthem. The following was the prograui render- ed: Toast to Canada, by Burton Terwilligar, responded by Miss Jean Love; reading by Miss Beatrice Mountjoy; Sing-Song, conducted by Stanley Webber; 'Toast, Our Church by Ross Lee, responded to by Rev. LDr. Cooper; Plano Duet by Misses. Bernice Werry and Lorraine Love; Solo, Mr. C. 8. Thompson of Brook- lin; Toast to Young Peoples' Or- ganizations by Marwood Heard, re- sponded to by Rey. Manson Doyle: Duet, by Misses Maude Cooper and Gertrude Webber; Toast, Our Guests, Miss M. Mair, responded to by Mr. John Dryden; Reading by Miss B. Mountjoy; Piano Duet, Migses Mildred Webber and Maude Cooper; Toast, Ladies, Stanley Web- ber, responded to by Miss Ruth Cole; Solo, Mr. Thompson; The inging of The Maple Leaf Forever, concluded the program. Mr, Doyle in his address, brought a fine message emphasizing the nec ssity and possibilities of leadership mong young people. He also com. limented those who took part very highly and encouraged them to continue, Mr, Dryden in a very able and eloquent address described con- cisely the work of the Boys' Parlia. || ment. Both adresses were highly | inspiring and impressive, | The dainty and artistic work of 'he decorating committee was very much admired, the color-scheme bhe-. ing in blue and gold, while the guest-table was further adorned with eilver basket of flowers and | silver candle-sticks, There was an abundance of gcod things to eat, many thanks being due to the ladies | who stood behind the young people in all the preparations for the ban- quet, making it a great success in every respect. ] January Clearance rr. 39.00; THE FASHION SHOPPE 84 Simcoe St. South pn Kayser Chiffon or Service Hose, Silk to top. $1.00 Guaranteed firsts ATKINS HOSIERY AND LINGERIE sHoOpP South TELLS HOW TO EAT | POMEGRANATES | 1!3 Simcce St. Toronto, -- A writer in the local | press comes to the rescue of those | women who don't know how to eat | pomegranates. . They have been sell- ing in city shops at ten cents apiece, | and those who have made the at-| teinpt the suck the juice have been ecstatic over the flavor.r The cxpert says: ! "I come from a land where they are | grown, and where the fruit is used | WATSON'S BEAUTY PARLOR Marcel, Permanent and Finger Waves, 7 Phone 2633. 5 Celina St. extensively, Out in the East the fruit, | when fully grown and ripe, is about | the size of a bread and butter plate, | of a lovely burnt sienna color, with a deep ruby glow through it. The fruit is then ripe and ready to be eaten; the skin is not so hard as the ones we get here, and can be easily cut with a steel knife, We cut the froit in halves and eat the ruby drops with a spoon. They are deliciously sweet and very juicy; the seeds can be cat- en the same as the seeds in grapes, or not, just ag one likes--they act as roughage, so. some should be eaten. The skin of the pomegranate, when dried and powdered, is used in dy- sentery and kindred ailments. It is very bitter and a strong astringent. The following drink is made with the ripe fruit and is most delightful. Take | B the juice of six pomegranates, the | fl juice of three oranges, the juice of haif 1 of blac half COLDS aif a pound o ack grapes, half a | pone or more of sugar, according to and BRONCH TiS, taste, one pint of water, a wineglass / py of old madeira and a liquer glass of Yee my y BUCKLES pu i vik VON (@{0]8] e115) SAMPLE DRESSES INDIVIDUAL STYLES IN THE BETTER GRADE, EXCEPTIONALLY WELL MADE, COLORINGS NEW AND BECOMING Originally Sold at $10.95 to $15.00 PRINTED SILKS, FRENCH CANTONS AND PLAIN SATINS SIZES 16 MISSES TO 42 LADIES 45 acter revealed by different 'host- esses. Providing, of course, that the homemaker attempted to do more than "throw the food" on the table. lists 27 diseases which may be conveyed by such imprints on food. These germs come from touch- ing thi which other people tc. aople ? Who have colds, | perhaps, ve coughed or sneezed in their hands. People with other troubles. We cannot , and handle what they touch. In a card game, for odour on earth, instance, every card may convey 1 jsamo_dangerous g 0 you. bur Wn he buy a Lae | The safe way is to wash your | and test for yourself its remark- hands often, and always before | able qualities? jou eat. Not with ordinary Lever Brothers Limited, Taronte ~~ # Lifebuoy A Luxury Soag Plus a Germicide Ee the world journey cach year to Can- ada to take part in this celebrated concourse. Last year (1930) the Maligne Lake district in Jasper na- tional park was the rendezvous, TLLIE THE TOILER : : TS is BILL ME GRAC IKEA, THAT] io | PRIVATE DETECTIVE | ToLb "ou will come to think it the iby Se MAC a SANS Millions people are off milli of troubles hig way. ns But Lifebuoy isnot s medicinal Aliprices F. O. B. Windsor, duty only paid, ¥ 4 Fi 3 T By Russ Westover SOME DETECTIVE - THAT ME "Ta FIND MAC, FELLOW WHO WAS TUST \N HERS TILLIE « AND TAKE 17] ™M t MET HIM AT A DANCE ONE|l MEHT AND SOMEBORY HAD f LIFTED HIS \WATCH MIHILE HE WAS THERE] You CAN'T dO OH, YEW? SOUR BOSSY HIRED Boone sess | Sek mer ou OFFICE NOW - HE'S (MPORTANT YOURE Exo TILE VED a TYRE SHEER RA dR er a a I REET ris aR dnt

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