THE OSHA WA DAILY TIMES, THURSDAY, JUNE 25, 1931 WHITBY NEWS (Continued from page 6) the latlies formed a very engag- ing scene. . The tea garden was well patronized and after the supper hour, the games were well patronized, while the strains of music of the Whitby Band en- livened the hearers, The horse- shoe pitching contest was won by Mr, W. Ruddy, while the clever winners of the guess on the bean jar were Mr, L. Dudley, Mr. W. Ayres and Mrs, R. Ruddy. The receipts were very satisfactory and the whole event well justi- fied the efforts involved. Cheer And Welfare Fund Has Expended $744.86 To Date Helping Needy Many Citizens were Helped During Winter and Spring Months--Fund Still Carryi Legion Given: Relief F Expended on -- V.O.N. and very Dollar of Fund in the Stores of Whitby--Letters of Ap- preciation Received by Officers Close on 100 families have been helped, and $744.86 expended .by the Christmas Cheer and Welfare Fund, which was organized late last fall, and which has carried on during the winter and spring months. In fact, the Fund is still carrying on, although the de- mands are few. . Not only has the Fund helped families coming directly to its'no- tice, but money for relief work ha been supplied to the V.O.N,, the Samaritan Committee of that organization, and Whitby. Post of the Canadian Legion. It has prov- en a valuable auxiliary to the Town Council and other bodies carrying on relief work, and every dollar has been expended in the stores of Whitby. When collections were first made for the Fund, the intention of the Committee was not only to supply Christmas relief but to carry on during a hard winter, such as last winter proved to be. It took a little over $200 to supply Christmas NY baskets, and since that time I= has been given in various ways to those in need. Help Appreciated The president, J. H. Ormiston, has from time to time received let- ters of appreciation from citizens who have been hélped. One man in particuar, who had never before asked for relief, and found himself up against it with no werk and sickness in his family, was so thankful that he wrote the com- mittee volunteering to perform free of charge odd jobs for those in need. Another head of a fam- ily wrote to say that the _littie help given at a very critical time ps fl die a blessing to him. Contributors to the Fund can rest assured that only the very, needy were helped. Every case re. ported was closely scrutinized, the officers having the assistance of various organizations in the town. The Committee issues the fol- lowing statement of expenditures showing what the money was spent for, and the names of mer~ chants from whom goods were purchased. There is still a little balance on hand which the com- mittee is keeping as a beginner for next winter when the Fund will be re-opened. A. W, Lynde, expenses re min- strel show, $10.60; A & P Store, _ groceries, $82.89; F. N. Burns, groceries, $137.06; Dominion Stores, groceries, $62.11; William Meeker groceries, $80; H. Wilson, meat, $17.91; T, W. Ross, coal, $28.50; Mundy-Goodfellow Print- ing Co., $5.30; W. BE. Hewlis, meat, $18.74; G. A. Canning 60c; A. E. Stanlick, meals, $2; Wm. Meeker, - groceries, $8.68; V.O.N. Relief Fund, $100; Whitby Legion Re- lief Fund, $25; Samartan Com- mittee, V.O.N., $50; Whitby Le- lief Fund, $25; Burns Cash Gro- cery, groceries, $2.61; Whitby Legion Relief Fund, $50; Hillcrest Dairy, milk, $5.68; William Meek er, groceries, $4.96; Whitby Coal and Wood Yard, coal, $30.25; W. A. Holliday and Co. toys, $1.50; W. E. Hewis, meat, $1; Whitby Dairy, milk, $6.82; M. W, Collins, shoes, $3.25. Total $744.86. So far as the Committee aware, all accounts have been paid, Merchants who may still have outstanding accounts are re. quested to send them at once to John R. Frost, treasurer. CANADA NOT ORIGINAL SAYS FANNIE HURST "] Looked for a Distinct Sophistication of 'Your Own," Says the Novelist is (By The Canadan Press) Woodstock, Ont., June 25.--On a brief visit to Canada to catch a glimpse of the Chatauqua, a fine old institution which she declar- ed was speedily passing out in the United States, Fannie Hurst, the novelist expressed disappointment that Canadian and particularly citizens of Ontario had not sophis- tication of their own or preserved an individuality distinct from her own country. "My impressions have largely been from the out- side looking in," she laughed. "As I rolled into this beautiful coun- try, the stamp of across the bor- der was written across its face. Your main streets are replicas of the worst of ours. "It was the gigantic tyranny of swipe. Machine st{yched objects all about me. The anxious, ossified stare that comes from massed pro- duction. It may not be yours but I looked for something finer. "If I had not been conscious of cross- ing the border, T would have thought I was still in the United States." "You surely did not expect to find us so different--a nation of rustics perhaps?" she was asked. "Oh, no. But T looked for a dis- tinct sophistication of your own," she hastened to explain. "After Pretzeleers Night raiding isn't at all unusual in the homes of those who pretzel. Especially when they're Christie's 0-50-GUD Butter Pretzels. O-50-GUDS are so tasty and so easy to digest that they are a favorite midnight lunch. No wonder, O-SO-GUD Pretzels, baked by Christie's,' are brittle, erispy, crunchy, salty; just as good between meals 2s with soups, salads, sardines, cheese or iced drinks. Children love them, and rightly too. They are good for children. | appointed captain on the active "Old-Fashioned?" "Yes"! Little Joh sions. The pictures show this Niagara Division, , knowledge of first aid enabled them to render immediate help. Qualified instruction in first aid is available to all members of the and over eighty per cent of the Plant Department alone have become qualified first aiders. Shields are presented by the Company for annual competition. Each spring team contestg are held in the different divi- FIRST AID TRAINING PROVES IN J Mahoney fell and cut his hand badly. His mother was out when it happened. Fortunately for Johnny two Bell Telephone ligemen working nearby heard his loud cries for help and ran to see what was wrong. They found that the boy had severed an arte: ry. Their prompt arrival and expert Bell Telephone Company's staffs y year's winning teams. Top left London, Western Division; right Barrie; Central-Northern Division; lower Phd vo. Poe og Toronto Division, right~~ Woodstock, Bamilton. all the indictment or impeach- ment is a soft one, it hardly be- hooves me to say that because you resemble us I disaprove of you." Her previous Canadian experien- ces have been largely in the west, "I saw more of Canada there and less of the United States. I had hoped it would be the same here. But the print of Canadian people is not necessarity a matter of houses and roads. 1 do not know the Canadian people. I speak of externals. I came barging through such magnificence at the border. At Niagara one gets a strange feeling of gigantic, inspiring beau- ty ahead. "Understand, I speak of Can- ada's physical beauty--the finest in the world --yours is a young na- tion and nrilleable, Susceptible to gigantic outside influences ot bet- ter or worse you are exposed on all sides and your beauty and vit ality may be in danger if you do not keep our individuality," RETIRING DEAN IS HONORED (By The Canadan Press) Toronto, June 25.--~Miss M, BE T. Addison, retiring dean of wo- men at Victoria College at a re- eeption in her honor was present ¢ with the Margaret Addison fund, the interest of which will go to her during her lifetime, The designation of the principal is to be decided later by Miss Addison in consultation with the chancellor of the University. The fund is the gift of women undergraduates and graduates of Victoria College In the Chancellor's address to | Miss Addison, he recalled the situ | ation in 1903 at the time of her appointment, when there were only 50 women in the college. The remarkable increase in attendance he attributed to the influence of the dean. SERIOUSLY ILL Toronto, June 26--Dr. Caroline MacDonald, who has rendered not- able service in Japan, is. compelled through illness to relinquish her work there and will return to Canada. Dr. MacDonald had the honor of being a delegate at Gen- ova and has, for her work among the Japanese, been given distin- guished honors by the Emperor, Her many friends in this land re- gret her Yliness which is reported to be quite serious. Sir Arthur Rostron = a Famous Commander (By The Canadian Press) London, June 25.--Captain Sir Arthur Roestron, Commodore of the Cunard Line, who retired recently -after 36 years' service with the Cunard Steamship Com- pany and 46 years as a sailor, has saved more lives than any other commander afloat. It was he who, as commander of the Carpathia in 1912 steamed at full speed for 60 miles to the aid of the sinking Titanic and res- cued more than 700 passengers. Ho 13 62 years of age. Captain Rostron's most famous command probably was the Maur- etania, to which he was appointed in 1915 and on which he crossed the Atlantic 240 times. He was nard fleet in July, 1928, and his last command was that of the Berengaria, the third largest 1i- ner in the world. Captain Rostron probably has gained more honors than any cther captain in the British mer- cantile marine, and his decora- tions include the American Con- gress gold medal, which together with a silver loving-cup and $10,- 000 was firesented to him in New York after the Titanic epic. On his last trip to New York in the Mauretania he was. given the freedom of the city by Mayor Walker. In 1918, Captain Rostron was list of the Royal Navy Reserve. From January until May, 1924, when he retired from the active list of the R.N.R,, he was aide- de-camp to the King, and in 1946 was created a knight. (By The Canadian Press) icned? Yes, the bland music of London, June 25.-- music oi | Sidney Joney and the -inoccuous N appointed commodore of the Cu- [> humors of his librettist are that." says "E.B." in The London edi- tion of The MANCHESTER GUARDIAN with reference to the revival of "The Geisha' at Daly's Theatre here, "The secret of its enduring quality is, of course, that it is a génuine piece of work, It is not only a collection of charming tares but a composition. Muscial -comedy writers in the unhurried days of 'The Geisha' actually thought it worth while learning how inusic is put together, with a sublime disregard of the mone- tary value of time and of the dodges of their trade. They not only invented their melodies but actually harmonized and scored them in person. The result of these devoted* labors was not bound to be a sucess, but it could not help being some measure a work of art, "The Geisha' loth, and a very good little, work of art at that. Its reward i$ that it has endured, and may be prefitably revived in another 50 vears as it is now. The produc- tion is convential, Lut, of course, rene the worse for that, since we went to recall the delights of our schooldays, or holidays rath happened to be | | | | | | | osa, Miss Lorna Hubbard a rog- uirh Molly, Donald Mather a gal- lant Fairfax and George Lane the very reincarnation of the or- iginal Wun Hi. That inimitable siylist Leo Sheffield, as Imari, is, reedless to say, the perfect repre- sentation of fin-de-siecle stage eon- tertainment." PLAN AMBITIOUS ART PROGRAMME FOR EDMONTON Under Direction of Mrs. David Bowman Edmonton | Museum Will Have Tm- portant Exhibitions of Canadian and Foreign Work (By The Canadian Press) Edmonton, Alberta, June 25 er, by every possible means of | Returning from eastern Canada, cast is Miss Rose evocation. The large most admirably filled. Hignell, a pretty singer, is Mim | this, continent's American news of of art, other latest world York with and the New cities cw Sy SERVI POR EQUIPPED... Every room in Hotel Fort Shelby is Servidor-Equipped. This hotel not only pioneered the servidor principle, but is today the only hotel , in Detroit offering this feature of privacy and convenience to every guest. Annoying intrusions and excessive tipping are thus eliminated. 4 No other hotel in the Metropolitan area is so nearthe principal railway terminals, airports and steamship piers. Hotel Fort Shelby's location in Motorists are relieved of their door without service charge. Write for free read map, and your copy of "Aglow with Friendliness," our unique and fascinating magazine. the heart of the motor city's shopping, theatre, financial, insurance and wholesale districts is a happy one. 4 You'll be delighted, too, with the efficient . .. unpretentious service offered by this truly fine hostelry. 900 rooms . . . all with private bath and circulating ice water. Rooms as lew as $3.00 per day . .. suites $10.00 and upwards. at the SCToit Shelb FRIENDLINESS" "AGLOW WITH E. J BRADWELL, Maoneger DETROIT PAGE SEVEN Mrs. David Bowman, director of the Edmonton Museum of Arts, promises an extensive and inter- esting programme for the com- frg Autumn and Winter at the museum. She made arrange- rients for a number of loan ex- hibits of an unusual nature dur- ing her eastern trip. During June an exhibition of | 206 water color drawings of Fiench regional peasant costunies tmaquettes) loaned by the Amer- ican Federation" of Arts is on d!splay at the Museum. The Art season will open in September with the formal opening of the Museum in October, It is plan- ned to have a collection of 300 watercolors by contemparary British artists in Septemper, with a new collection from the Nation- al Gallery and probably some outstanding work by Saskatche- wan artists in October. For November, J. E, H, Mc- Donald of the Ontario School of Art will send an exhibition of student art, it is hoped. In De- cember, Mrs. Rowman hopes to arrange an exhibition of water- colors and wood block prints by outstanding living Canadian art- iste, including Mary Wrinch aed W. E. Philips. January, Feb- ruary and March are left open for possible interesting exhibits which may be available, but ten- tatively it is planned to bring a show from eastern Canada in January, a modern British col- lection in February and a Can- adian exhibition in March. Eric Brown, curator of the National Gallery, is at present in Great Pritain arranging loan exhibir- fcns upon which to some extent Te ke ICED TEA ~- i oavers Brew tea as usual» allow to cool-add lemon and sugar taste pour into glasses half full of cra vy ICED "SALADA" TEA 220 "Fresh from the Gardens" wil! depend what is available to tke Edmonton Museum. In addition there will e home time during the season an exhi- bition of small scclpture in white soap from the seventh annual ccmpetition held in New' York thig year in which Canadian art- ists carried off five out of 102 prizes. For October, it is hoped to arrange a course of lectures on Italian Art to be conducted by Mrs. E. K, Broadug and the usual monthly talks in connection with the exhibitions will be continued. If possible a course of lectures with one Canadian authority and one eminent British art lecturer will he arranged also during the year. About 75 per cent. of the total area of Denmark is under cultiva- tion, and supplies a livelihood to about 34 per cent. of its populae tion. Arabia and Finland are the only countries, besides the United Stat eg, having laws absolutely prohib- iting the manufacture and sale of alcoholic liquors. Doubling the surcharge on in- comes exceeding $500 is being considered in Germany. The sur- tax will be increased under the provision from 5 per cent to 10, The wireless telegraph station in Mexico City has been equipped to communicate with all the coun- tries of the world. Peru is estimated to have 4,500,000 potential horsepower in its waterways of which less than 100,000 horsepower has been util. = Fresh Air Fresh Foods This is picnic time and the 'dyed-in-the-wool" picnicker knows that the ideal combination for a successful outing in the woods or on the beach is a fine day and a host of delicious, pure foods from your Superior Store. Whether you picnic or whether you are a lover of the great indoors you can have the finest foods that money can buy by calling the nearest Superior Store--~free delivery vice. facilities are at your ser- WE SELL THE BEST FOR LESS "Items for Week Ending July 1, 1931 KELLOGG'S TOASTED CORN FLAKES 3 packages 25¢ LUX for fine fabrics Boe 25° Sugar GRANULATED Ibs. 35¢ Crosse & Blackwell's Branston PICKLES 23c¢c Per Bottle Creamery Butter 2 1bs. 49¢ Molasses Snaps 2 Ibs. 25¢ Rice Krispies 2 pkgs. 25¢ PicnicSpecial I Doz. Paper Plates 1 Pkg. Serviettes I Pkg. Drinking Cups for RSC COMFORT SOAP DEAL .10 bars Soap and 6 Etched Tumblers All for 89¢ KEEN"S Mustard 14's ea. 25¢ ¥. GOLDEN WAX BEANS 2+ 29C Seedless Raisins ..... Red or White Heavy Jar McLaren's Jelly Powders, all flavours ....4 pkgs. Genuine Minute Tapioca .....0.cs000. Shirrift's Good Morning Marmalade .. Derby Loat Cheese ......civviivnnne Premier Tea with Premium Free .. Whiz Fly Fume ....covsenversseennes 8 07 size Certo, "For Jams and Jellies" .........per bottle Orisco, "Best for frying, for shortening, for cake making" NO. 1 8126 ,.. oo cvvianrssaseans 25¢ 25¢ 25¢ 23¢ 29¢ 59¢ 45¢ 15¢ 20¢ «3 lbs, +2 pkgs. 16 oz «sper Ib, .voper 1b, Rings ose. .2 pkgs. .25¢ FINEST PINK SALMON Small 9¢ 'Tall 14¢ EGGO READY MIXED CAKE Just add Water Per Pkg. 23¢ Pure Lard ....2 Ibs, 25¢ , Pineapple, Singapore 2's 4 cssssnssessd tins 20c H.P. Sauce, per bottle 27¢ Brooms, Well Made, Med- jum Weight ..each 39c¢ Green Giant Peas, tin 19¢ Parowax ...per pkg. 14c Peas Std. No. 2 tins sassisssse.3 tins Crown Sealers, pints, per doz. .. Crown Sealers, quarts, per doz. «iv... $1.00 25¢ JEWEL Shortening Baking For Better " Phone Your Order Err CHAIN RN -- , We t Deliver