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Oshawa Daily Times, 26 Mar 1931, p. 7

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Be le pa----_-- ak * THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, THURSDAY, "ARCH 26, 1931 Just A "Bachelor Girl" Says Ishbel MacDonald of Herself London, March Shi talibey Mac- Donald's assertion that she doesn't Intend to enter parliament has stirred more interest than ever in the future career ot tho official hostess of No,. 10 Downing Street, who was 28 years old recently, More and more her interests centre in social welfare and home tasks. She indicated sho had no plans for marriage when she de- fended recently the right of young women like herself to be called "bachelor girls," and chafed at people who 'don't seem to realize that a girl, just because she is a alice girl and has common sense, lan't going to become the wife of just any one." And she say¥, "I'm neither poli- tielal nor business woman." Slfe de- eliged to become parliamentary canditate for the constituency em- bracing Lossiomouth,' where she has a vote, Eldest of Premier Ramsay Mace fdonald's three daughters and her father's hostess, tho shy, capable, rogy-choeked and blue-eyed Ishbel, with her tumble of rebellious brown hair, is a popular figure in Dritain and in America, No flapper, she is often deserib- ed as a typical English girl, though her rebust womanhood is more Scottish than English, She isc a capable, often witty public speaker, Introducing Gooree Bernard Shaw at a great Loudon meeting, she said she had read his guide to-soclalism for women * and Tam still a Socialist." Sho isc an apt golfer, musician and dancer, and she has a bent for scientitic study, which she honestly prefers to housework, But in all branches of housewifery a thorough competence is hers. At the Lossiemouth cottage where in the summer she and her sisters, Joan and Sheila, have some. times done all the housework she makes the scones for tea on her own Scottish "girdle." The welfare interests of her long dead mother, rather than political concerns of her father, engage Ish. bel's talent, Soon after she was 21 she became secretary of the Volun- tary Care Committeo to sick child ren on East London, Later she was & member ol the London County Council and enlarged her activities in public health work, finding in loeal government more opportunity for service, especially to children, When political tides sent the daughter of Britain's first labor premier to Downing Street as of- ficlal hostess one of London's grand dumes, a stranger, wrote to sug vest clothes and deportment at court. "1 have chosen 'my frocks," re. plied Ishbel, "and I think 1 shall know how to behave at court," Queen Mary passed the judgment: "A perfectly charming girl. Wintry blasts cannot pierce the home protected with DONNACONA Brick and plaster walls properly insulated with Donnacona Board will keep chill winds outside. In Donnacona's closely pressed texture, millions of tiny dead air cells are imprisoned. These are the most efficient heat insulator known to science, And remember -- a Dénsacond; insulated roof stops the loss of 25% of the winter heat heough the roof, and keeps the upstairs cool in summer, Line your attic with Donnacona, cut down fuel costs, and add an extra room Of two to your house. Write your local dealer for descriptive booklet, THE CAREW LUMBER COMPANY LTD. 74 Athol St. West Oshawa Phones 12 and 13 NT EARERD REDE: fot "How do you get him to chew his food?' "I give him Shredded Wheat and it's so crisp he has to chew it-- the more he chews it the better he likes it and the more nutriment he gets out of it. Many children bolt down their food without chewing -- that means imperfect diges« tion, poor teeth and une healthy gums. Shredded Wheat with milk makes a perfect food for grow- ing children, and it's perfectly delicious with bananas or stewed fruit." THE CANARIA JREDDED WHEA » LTD, At SHREDDED WHEAT WITH ALL THE BRAN OF THE WHOLE WHEAT | MANY USES FOUND FOR SEALSKINS Can Become Lea'her, Oil or Resplendent Fur Ruff St. John's, Nfid.--TIn the good old days a Newfoundland geal had three possible destinies, Ho could re- main seal, becomo seal oll, or be- come seal leather, Now he has four choices; seal, oil, leather, and fur, - Although the geal's private inclination may be to remain seal, after seeing the wonderful fur pure chased by the Queen at the British Industries Fair you will feel he is a little selfish, This new and important use for pelts is the result of a new process by which, after the inch-thick layer of fat underneath the hale is ro- moved, the gkin is split. It is this splitting which makes it possible to use the skins for fur, On March 8 or 9 every year, about twelve big ships with a crew of about 250 men each set forth for the Seal Patches. The seal's "Twelfth of August" is March 13, up to which date they may preen their own fur 'coats in safety. This date is chosen because the sealer wants the first white coat of hair before the seal begins to shed, which he does aut the age of about two months, growing a darker coat, with marks on it which, by some stretch of imagination, may be described as harp-like, They are then called harp seals, The fleet is usually back by the middle ot April with about 200,000 pelts, averaging about 66 pelts per man. These are first subjected to a process by wheh the thek layer of fat is taken off by skinning ma- chines and rendered into oil, which may ultmately be consumed as mar garine! The, pelts are then sent to Eng- land, formerly to be tanned into Would Abandon Canberra Capital of Australia Canberra,--Abandonment of Can berra, Australia's federal capital dream city, which cost $66,000,000 fs being urged by many leaders in public lite and business men, Described by some politicians as "the nation's syiubol of unity," and by others as 'a running ulcer of finance," it would be returned to the sheep which ones grazed on its broad acres i a widespread move- | It is isolated and fts maintenance is costly. Its roads, gardens, public' buildings, hotels and homes are amongst the best in Australia, but because the city was designed to eventually pe comodato na hig population, its buildings are scattered over H00 acres, There are no street cars and to buy ou tube of tooth paste one has to walk a mile or more. Water supply, drainage, sewerage, and everything was designed on a grand | scale and at a grand cost, A (em. porary ment prevails, parliament house cost $3, produced Satires and much lyrical poetry; Ben Jonson guid he wrote all his best pieces "ere he was years old." In 1609 Donne was cngaged in composing his great controversiunl prose treatise, the "Pscudo- 3 are Mr. Dos fy" printed in 1610; this was an uth Wales , | attempt to convince Roman lh i National Party, says: "I doubt les in England that they might, | whether the results of Canberra are without any Inconsistency, Hie the 'he | 00th of allegiance to Jame Donne did not take ¢h eh ou) fders until 1614, after many at tempts to induce him, and he was first u curate in Paddington. He | was =oon appointed royal chaplain | : » "Ww 4 HO ot of: St. Paul's in Spencer Watts, says: Ww hether | 308, became: de an on Beil 2 | ro deuito jt OF NOt We Wil have to! DOWers us reacher 'but his aus abandon Canberra, » puwers ns u preacher bh [a | _-- ------ tere mode of living greatly weakens ed his health. He lelt a singulars | CHARTERGRANTE i hei ERE REA 110 YEARS AGO 01D TINERS RECALL NAUTICAL HISTORY 0 20 serapping of Canberra." [Nat leader of the New So | commensurate with the costs." 1 acting-Promier of Western Austra- lia, Mr. Latham, says: '"Unques- | tionably, it should be abandoned." |The vices president of the New South | Wales Chamber of Commerce, kins, another FANNY S FIRST PLAY' [3 STILL | McGill Came Into Being on | March 31, 1821 Prevents That Sinking Feeling BovRL reached a Carbonear , but the other | six boats und LIKED IN LONDON 20 000 were built, three of them have The palatial hotel Canberra is fro- quently without a single & the parliament fis hig staff, has nohody to serve. the government many of countryside is littered with founda tion stones marking the spots where great buildings are to arise in the dim future, gilt letters the names of po Canberra was inter-state jealousy; that since apparent fs and will be, all would 'ho satisfied | it the federal either says: 0,000, Ive hotels costing over $3,000, but for two years been PQ. are Montreal, land ten yonrs | University closed, | ter, on the Jumes MeGill who sUest When | gin ite founda recess, Its England, in brought from od with MeGill, Five million dollars was spent by on houses, hu are empty, The | tant colleges in M In 1862 McGill {and enlarged 1865, when Dr. J. of Pletou, N.S, them All the stones bear in | itielany Those who would abolish ft built only because of it is | what a burden Canberra The present cha | Beatty, K.C., presi {adian Pactfie Rallw Currie, Commande parliament sal Melbourne or Bydnoy. Premier McPhee of Tes pani "I would agree wi mn leather, but now, after being well washed and preserved {n salt, they ure sent over for this new treat. ment, resulting in the very beaut). ful golden brown set of fur collar and cuffs bought by the Queen at the British Industries Fair. | SAYS CANADA AND W. INDIES S¥OULD BE MUCH CLOSER Sir Robert Falconer in Inter- | view Favors Closer Trade Relations Port-of-Spain, Trinidad, B.W.I.-- Sir Robert Falconer, President of the University of Toronto, during a visit here recently was interview- ed by The Trinidad Guardian on the question of commercial union between Canada and the Dritish West Indies and also on the ques. tion of the West Indies having thelr own University and School of Medi- eine where disease s peculiar to the Tropics could be studied. Sir Robert said there was consid- | orable talk in the Dominion about | the yearning for closer commercial intercourse with the West Indies, and he thought this was a good thing but how far it would involve political modifications was another question, "I have heard the gues tion of West Indian I"ederation dis- cussed in Canada, also in the West Indies," Sir Robert sald: "The question is the more difficult of so- lution becauge the West Indies are divided up with Jamalea away off from the other islande. That, 1 suppose, will always be a difficulty in the way of the federation of these Colonies." The Guardian quotes Sir Robert Falconer as follows: "I think that our people in Canada should endea- vor to bring about a closer commer cial association with the West In- dies. We produce what you want, and you produce what we want. have often spoken publicly in Cane ada about this. Our people are now realizing how much they can get from the West Indies, and how much the West Indies can get from them." Sir Robert referred to the fine steamers plying between the Doe minfon and the West Indies and suid this was going to assist large- ly in developing the relations be- tween the two countries. fpeaking of the question of a University and School of Medicine Sir Robert Filconer, according to The Guardiary visualized a West Indian University as an expensive proposition, more so in view of the industrial depression in which all the Caribbean Colonles are sharing, The Guardian says Sir Robert Yale coner dreams of a day, tot in the distant future, when West Indian students pursuing thelr medical stu. dies will no longer be elbowed In the packed American and Canadian Universities, They will pursue pre. liminary scientific work in medicine at the Queen's Royal College of Physicians and Surgeons of London, Sir 'Robert Falconer left Trini. dad for Barbados, B.W.L Aerial Mapping in ( 'anada During the year 1930, 54,100 square miles wero photographed by the Royal Canadian Aly Force in connection with the mapping of Canada by the Topographical Sur- vey, Department of the Interior. Of this area 21,300 square miles were photographed for vertical, and 32, 800 square miles for oblique ple- tures, With the exception of Prince ithe Edward Island all the provinces of Dominion and the Northwest Territories are represcuted in this | work for the year. f Tax Rate Down Half Mill. Kingston «Kingston's fax rate | tor the year 1921 will be 4115 mille | on the dollar on ordinary assess | ment with a rate of one-half mill on the dollar for the collection and disposal of garbage. This Is the same general vate us in 1930, with | the rate for garbage collection nau vn, ent down one-half willy 4 "FOR SALE EVERYWHERE 25 fe fox When You Feel A Cold Coming On! Stop it at once by taking ZUTOO TABLETS. Remember that Grippe and Pneumonia begin with a common cold. These tablets stop the pain and fever | Immediately, and assist nature in throws | Ing off the cold. Taken in the begin. ning, the cold 1s often stopped overnight, [) utoo John Donne London.--Three 120 to-day Hsh Doct and divi | Paul's a lingering fllness. Donne, a precoc 8% [o ame | and renounced th | trines in favor of rereived its royal char foundation er institutions have become afiiliat. ine ultural colleges and four charter, became its principal, the university began to prosper, cipal Licutenant-Gener al She {dian Corps in the Great War TRICENTENARY OF POET CELEBRATED Was Prominent Divine John Donne, , dled at the age of 58 Stor ed Hart Hall, Oxford, at tlie age of When ho eame of age he also into n considerable fortune OF NEWFOUNDLAND - One hundrod y today MoGill Hou 'Twenty- four. Sealers Were Lost in 1868 luding two agri- Protoss | John's, Nd 1 olatell bots frences from © Newfoundland's Yo most Hmitless history of ccafuring aro coming to leht with increasing fre7tu ney i Ride 4 tke the 4 | "this is, in London, one of the least pens: ih land to enlighten the reac | yar of Mr. Shaw's plays. ers of the St. John daily papers, ! {tar from being the mest ambitiously | ncellor is E, W,. [recent letter in the Telegram from x 1 dent of the Can-| Thomas Wells of Little Day de- Proreand on lis ¥ ors, but Yo saa v, and the pr geribes the loss of 24 men from the Ro 5) age ay, and LLY pom. pe eet Lite: Lomond on |i yeire Hie marks of its age, hut | the Cana-! Spy" Wadnesday, April 8, 18685. 4 Fe t ind The Deerhound was in command of hol 'older and to be | Captain John Bartle tt, great uncle honor { costumo to {ot Bob Bartlett who hi Peary Pu v ? of died in 1813. tion several oth Staged in 1911 somo reason not | rays The "For understand,' Lonhon. St easy to ontreal. obtained a new and after William Dawson, | here of George Bernard I play, 'Fanny's First Play,' .1911) r of appear as Shaw Production Was First | Times eritie with reference to the! one speech that contrat recent revival at the Court Theatre {gjncerity all the nonsen: Shaw's | pay thrust upon her. It is} an cnterigining | only to become a | awarded the "" ywhat it Is--a ~brilllant . occazional with tho fascination of an old found in the bottom: of piece newspaper a drawer, "In the present performance hy the Macdona Players the Taduction moves heavily because with the ex- of Miss Joan Harkoer's which is pleasantly eager and gay, the movement is too slow; |but the play itself is admirable, Here as elsewhere Mr. Shaw some- times protests too much, He bur- [dens Mrg, Knox with the kibd of repetitive humor that becomes shallower and less amusing with | each repetition; then, suddenly, he redeems her, as he alene is. .cap- able of redeeming characters | has cheapened, by giving coption Fanny : that he "In the rest of the play @ Mr Shaw has forcunately little need for these violent and brilliant aets |of repentance. To the Gilbey's, to {Jugginsg, the footman, to Margaret Knox, and the others he .applies consistently hig formula of comic reversals, and thelr entanglements |are thus given an appearance, and a delightful appearance, of unity, to the Polar regions, "On that day twelve hoat four Lie nto a boat-<left the Litlle Deer hound. The vessel was in a large | lake or bay of water under sealing | | canvas when the hoatys were put out. The ico lay in gkirts, on which Al the « young scals, after dipping, 80 | would enjoy themselve in the! warm sun, and could be easily cap tured. "The day was warm and fine up | snow sud- fleet lke he Lit- | when wind and hundred years to noon, whole great Eng- | denly burst on the of St. {a bolt from the blue tle Deerhound beat up to the skirt | {while the water wae smooth. But fous child, enter: {tos boats were not there. Evident 1¥ they had run for the vessel while the lay to leeward of them. Cone sequently they missed each other. 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