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Oshawa Daily Times, 26 Jun 1931, p. 5

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' THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, JUNE 26, 1931 cnn mem a = Fr "| Women's Interests In The Home and The C SoialcPersonal day they are to be pub- lished. Items of mews con- cerning dances, parties, guests to and from town will be gladly received. Mr. ad Mrs George F. Edwards and family, are visiting at the home of Mrs. Edwards, William street east. . "Mr. and Mrs. M. Sutton are leaving today to spend two weeks' vacation with friends and rela- tives in Washington, D.C., and Lynchburg, Virginia, Mr. and Mrs. Jack Crockatt and Miss Henry Dean, of Toronto, are guests of Mrs. S. Williams, Cdllege Hill, Oshawa. * Mr. George Hill, who for thé past two years has been with the General Motors of Canada in Re gina, has been transferred hac to Oshawa. Mr. Hill leavve Re- gina on July the eighth and will NOTICE THE FASHION SHOPPE which is one block south of the Library has no connec tion with any other shoppe in Oshawa. Managed by Murs. S. A. Engel, Jr. il Kayser and Gotham Gold i | Stipe SILK SIERY $1.00 to $2.00 All Shades. LAMBLE'S WATSON'S BEAUTY PARLOR Marcel, Permanent and Finger Waves Phone 2658. 5 Ce St. immediately take up his new du- ties at the General Motors in this city. 3 * LJ] * Miss Dorothy VanLuven of the Oshawa Collegiate teaching staff, is spending the summer vacation on the Bruce Penninsula. Mr, and Mrs. T. B. Reid of Tor- onto, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Alexander, 185 Church Street, on Thursday. Mr, and Mrs. Reid are interested in the bowling and played several games with Osh- awa players yesterday. LJ Ld . Miss Gertrude Moore, of Osh- awa, is spending the summer holi- days at Lion's Head, Ontario. Miss Maudie Everson and Miss Greta Maxwell have been chosen as representatives of the Canadian Girls in Training of Oshawa and will go to the G.C.I.T. camp at Nor mandale from July 31 to August 10. . - - . Adjt. M. Kettle, Capt. H. Bar- rett and Lieut. Breden, the new officers for the Oshawa Corps of the Salvation Army, were given a reception at the citidel last even- ing. There were many present to meet the new officers, and words of, welcome were spoken by Bros, Badley, Borland and Mrs. J. Walk- er, Mrs. John Crawford and Serg. Maj. Coull. Ensign and Mrs. Dixon left yestereay for their 'new post in Toronto. CEDARDALE UNITED CHURCH W.M. Mrs. L. Courtice presided over the monthly meeting of the Cedardale United Church on Wed- nesday afternoon. The meeting opened with a hymn, 'Jesus Saves" followed by prayer. A few items of business were dis- cussed, among them, plans for the weiner roast that Mrs. A. Singer, Mrs. J. Flintoff, Mrs. L. Courtice and Mrs. T. W. Kaiger will give at the home of Mrs, Kaiser, 736 Cedar street on Wed- nesday evening. July 8. Admis- sion it was decided, would be twenty-five cents. A vote of thanks was extended to Mrs. Kai- ser for the use of her home for the tea that was held on Tuesday of this week. A talk on '"Out- going Missionaries" was given by the president, after which the meeting closed. Tea was served and a social time spent. i § i ft Now you can. . wear the new . styles...; Sori 5 1 i THE new pure lines demand 4 diferent 5 foundation for proper molding of the * astural gure, for fashionable shimness, | ond for perfect comfort. This new type ; NuBone Corset now introduces the comect foundation for wearing today's fashions] perfect frocks. You will delight in the marvelous comfort and ease in which: these. NuBene Corsets achieve the gow On, # you prefer, peppy rbiepism| se ~ MISS J. McGREGOR District Manager 47 Colbourne St. Oshaws Business Phone 2119, corn flakes by name. Imitations never equal the flavor and crispness of genuine Kellogg's. Convenient! Economical! Delicious any meal! Always oven-fresh! To specify Kellogg's is to buy CORN FLAKES : "Look for the red-end-green pac Mei br Eso i. Loner, rire By Annebelle Worthington ILLUSTRATED DRESSMAKING LESSON FURNISHED WITH EVERY PATTERN No wonder Dame Fashion has taken so kindly to this new cape collar! ; This neat moulded-to-the-dress collar keeps in place better, and is generally becoming, It offers splendid theme for the the use of a contrasting color or fabric. Today's modeé¥ is dusky-pink plaided flat crepe silk with plain crepe in matching shade. The new plaited skirt effect is decidedly smart. The printed seaming narrows the hipline. Style No. 3055 may be had in sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 36 and 38 inches bust. Size 16 requires 2 7-8 yards of 39-inch material with 1-2 yard of 39-inch contrast- ing. In plaided gingham, pique will be nice for the collar. Shantung, linen, pastel jersey, pastel cotton mesh, plain paste: flat crepe silk and novely pique are lovely materials for its de- velopment. Vacation Days are here again! So nearly here, at least, that it's time for you to be thinking about your Summer wardrobe. We've prepared a book to help you plan for the most colorful fashion period of the year. A book that offers the best selection cf styles for the season for the adult, miss, stout and child, and helps the reader to economize, You can save $10 by spending 15 cents for this book. The edi- tion is limited so we suggest that you send 15 cents in stamps or coin today for your copy to Fa- shion Department. Be sure to fill in the size of the pattern. Send stamps or coin (coin preferred). Price of book, 15 cents. Price of pattern 20 cents. Pattern ed- Osh- Address orders to: itor, Oshawa Daily Times, awa, Ontario. KX No. 3055. Size RIEERIER MILK A BONE BUILDER Scientific research finds anoth- er good reason for the liberal vse of milk, especially in the diet of the growing child, and that is in its capacity as a bone builder. The human body contains mors calcium than it does any other mineral, and the best and cheap- est source! of supply is milk. Dietitic experts assert quart of milk daily ensures the growing child of the best storage of caleium for the manufacture of bones and teeth, It is equiva- lent in calcium content to 10 large oranges, 10 large he'pings of cauliflower, 24 helpings of car- rots, 32 eggs, or 20 pounds of beef.--Dept. of Agriculture, Ot- twa. wens Lady Tulleken Addresses Women of Lyceum Art Association "We live in an era of the reai- ization of relations of all kinds, said Lady Hoogenhouck Tulleken of Toronto, when she addressed the Oshawa ranch of the Lyceum Women's Art Association yester- day afternoon at the Genosha Ho- tel, on the subject of the "The Re- lation of Dutch Women to Dutch Art." "History and biography have been rewritten in the last 10 years in the light of this new con- sciousness of relative value of the facts which formerly were con- sidered to be the chief claims of history and biography to consid- eration." Here the speaker quoted a characteristic evnresgion of Dean Inge, that: "Facts that have no value are not facts and values that are not facts have no value," ""Catacysms of war, and suffering said Lady Tullenken, "have forced us frond our snug refuges in our- selves or in others and compelled us to look at things from outside ourselves, that is relativity." 0) Lady Tulleken, who lived for many years as a Dutchman in Hol_ land, admits that she did not ap- preciate the relationship of the Dutch women to the art of the country until only a few years ago, since she has been away from Hol- lahd. A history of the women of the country was necessary before the speaker could proceed with her subject of the art of Holland. This she made most interesting. The sea has always been a foe of Holland and men and women to- gether have had to fight it, Hard work and thrift became unques- tioned conditions of their exist- ence. Having protected their coun- try from the sea they have also had to protect it from covetous eyes and attacks of the powerful neighbors and have had to put up a hard fight for their religious freedom. The women stood shoul- der to shoulder with the men in this struggle and they have reap- ed the fruits, as the speaker put it, "The women through the exi- gencies of their every day life were continually compelled to meet the men on their own level. That level may not have been in- spiationally a very high one, but at least it was a common level and made for common interests which was added strength in such trou- blous conditions. The history of art in any coun- try up to a certain point had been the history of the church or the history of the country. But the Dutch were pioneers in the matter and were the first to break with the classical traditions of painting only religious or historic sub- jects. They were the first to be in- spired by the workaday world, and the everyday life of their women and children and indeed themsel- ves in thenr trade quilds and pro- fessions. Theirs was the first art to be truly national. The Dutch artists chose simple subjects of their people and their familiar surroundings. Their pride in their religious and civic liberty is evi- dent in this chose of subject. The women had no ambition to paint pictures but they were proud to inspire the subjects, admire them and buy them, and it has been said that at one time, art, in the form of painting was at one time a stan- dard of exchange in Holland. The speaker mentioned such names as. Ruysdael, who painted trees and meacows, Cuyp and Pot- ter who did the cattle, and the portraitists headed hy Rem- brandt, Hals and Bol, who paint- ed their own faces and those of their wives and children, Ter Bor- ch and de Hoogh who painted the aristocratic ladies in their elegant KEEP THE Children Healthy When they're "off colour" sive them Dr. Carter's all vegetable Little Liver Pills. Safe, acting gently on the bowels and liver, Shey toon bring back smiles and irits hat healthy young sters ol d show. 25c & 75c red packages Ask your druggist for that a |. interious and Jan Steem who por- trayed the peanuts in their merry making. Particularly interestjng was the speaker's mentionidg of the Queen and yne Queen Mother of Holland. Queen Emma's watch word was 'Let us be great in everything in which a small coun- try can be great" and in the 30 years of her reign, Queen Wilhel- mina has never made a false step or a single mistake either of pol- icq or judgment. The queen is an ardent patron of art. She herself, has taken lessons in painting. Drawing a very pleasing com- parison of Canadian women to the Dutch women who with their men folk strived for their country's freedom, the speaker said that the women of Canada had the same opportunity of influencing the fu- ture art of this country in just the same way as the womeén of Hol- land did years ago. 'Let out art be rather an expression of our courage under hardships endured, than the expression of our succes- ses in the luxury we have attained and the ease we enjoy." The audience which Lady Tul- leken addressed was fascinated by her talk and no doubt will remem. ber it as one of the highlights of the club's activities in future years, Mrs. F, L. Fowke moved a vote of thanks to the speaker, and it was seconded by Mrs, A. E, O'Neill, Mrs. Charles M. Rogers president of the Association, pre- sided at the meeting. Lady Tulle- ken asisted in the formation of the different standing committees. Names of committee members will be announced later, STEAMBOATING ON THE MISSISSIPPI Saint John, N.B., June 26.--Mark Twain in his writings of the Missis- sippi and of the personalities who commanded the inland paddle-wheel steamers as they ploughed their way up broad expanse of the might- iest of rivers, did much to win un- dying fame for these ships of a by- gone day. But many of his stories could be applied with equal signific- ance ta the Saint John river and its steamboats, for here, during the halcyon days of the nineteenth cen- tury, side-wheel river boats steamed slowly up this picturesque New Brunswick river having experiences similar to those related by the hum- orist in his Mississippian sketches. The latter half of the nineteenth century was the golden age of steamboating on the Saint John river, and the very names of these white, low-draught, paddle-wheel steamers conjures up a host of memories. Every river boat acquir- ed an individual reputation, but the entire Saint John river fleet had a history which gives it a fascina- tion all its own, Some of these river boats had the reputation of finding their course by instinct from St. John to Fred- ericton and along many of the larg- er tributary streams. Others, for no good reason at all were forever in trouble no matter how good their engines or how experienced their pilots, The Soulanges was one of the most famous of the early river boats that did such a flourishing business in pre-railroad days. She could keep her nose to the wind in the most trying squalls, could steer a nerfect course, and could always be depended upon to arrive at her destination on time. She had one fault, however, that of being death on woodboats, and it is said that these boats developed a bush- man's sense of spoor and could dis- tinguish' Soulanges' smoke from any other. Tt was disastrous to the hap- less hull caught undefended, and a single whiff of this smoke serit them scurrying to the protection of some friendly island or sand bar, Sou- langes was know far and wide for her unethical traits, and perhaps no steamboat on the Mississippi has had a more enviable record, In her later days the Soulanges was rebuilt and named the Oliv cette, and one of the first exploits of the rejuvenated craft was to assault the Fredericton bridge. In this encoun- ter she came off second best, in- juring the bridge not in the least and receiving a badly battered pad- dle-box herself. Thus the Olivetts, together with such famous river boats as the Rothesay, David Wes- ton, Star, and May Queen did much to develop the industrial and com- mercial life of New Brunswick by transporting the. materials needed in the building of the province be- fore the day of the railroad. LAW SCHOOL TRAINS STUDENTS FOR ay PENAL HEADS Boston, Mass., June 26. -- The Harvard Law School, one of the foremost institutions of its kind in the United States, will undertake a new project next fall when it opens a special field t8 train students for work as heads of penal and correc- Are You Visiting Over the Holiday ? If 50, now is the time to get in readiness! Here are a few of the many neces- sities at amazingly low prices. ; i taste. ' men s. Ladies' Genuine Tv Celanese Dresses In the latest pastel shades. designed to suit any Misses' to 44 Wo- $3.95 LADIES PANAMA HATS Of the better grade with colored and black or black and white combination bands to choose from. Hats pure white or natural colors. Special ........coniniiiiis - $2. 95 Ladies' Full Fashioned Pure Thread SILK HOSE They are substandards of one of our best makes. Regularly sold at $1. 50 0 Pair In all the newest shades. (Imperfecticns very, very slight) Pure Wool Bathing Suits In a great variety of col- ors and combination col- ( ors. . All sizes and prices. Beautifully Sizes 14 7 ZN have others one White Chamois Suede Gloves Slip on style. Some have straight cuff. Plain and fancy stitching. All sizes. Priced at 15¢, 89c, $1.00 $1.25 Children's and girls' spe- cially priced at $1.00 $1.49 $1.79 Ladies' Bathing Suits In many new combination col- orings and trimmings. Specially priced at, $1.79 $295 $3.50 $3.95 $4.50 dome the tional institutes, it was stated at Cambridge. The first step of this nature ever attempted by any law school, the work will be carried on under the direction of the Institute of Crim- inal Law of the Harvard Law School, an organization hitherto de- voted primarily to research in the fields of criminal law, procedure, crime, causation and crime treat- ment, Harvard authorities feel there is an urgent nced for training and professionalizing those who dre to administer penal and correctional institutions, departments of proba- tion, parole boards, and other pub- lie and private agencies dealing with delinquency and criminality. The Harvard Law School Insti- tute has developed an experimental curriculum for administrators, de- signed to prepare men of charaeter and special capacity for positions of leadership in correctional work and for research in the, field of crimin- ology. The course will cover two years of intensive and practical work, consisting of study both at*the law school and in other departments of Harvard University. According to present plans, the first class will comprise a small group of selected college graduates whose records promise success in the correctional field. Encouraging responses to the plan have been received from out- standing correctional administrators im different parts of the country, it was said at Harvard, Harvard educators appointed to act as an advisory committee arc: Dean Roscae, Law School; Protes- sor Francis B. Sayre, director of the Institute of Criminal Law; Profes- sor Joseph Beale and Professor Sheldon Clueck, Law School; Pro- fessor James Ford, Department of social ethics; Professor Earnest A. Hooton, Department of anthropol- ogy; Dr. George B. Magrath, in- structor in legal medicine, and Charles Macfie Campbell, professor of psychiatry, A GROWING INDUSTRY The increasing demand for vegetables in the diet is probably largely responsible for the rapid expansion which took place last year in the vegetable canning in- dustry throughout Canada. The increase in 1930 was 64.8 per cent as compared with 1929. Total production amounted to 10,066,614 cans. -- Dept. of Ag- riculture, Ottawa. GET THIS INDIAN REMEDY Everywhere you can hear people say: "That Indian Remedy brought me right back to health." It is sure to help you too! 64 Doses for $1.00 BELFRY'S DRUG STORE 48 King St. W. "Phone 354 MRS. AVILA DUPAS "lI was a complete wreck. Nervous, no appetite and could not' do half my works My mother suggested Lydia E: Pinkham's Vegetable Com' pound and I was amazed at the results from the first bottle. I took eight bottles in all: I am well now and fit to do all my work and look after five chil dren which keeps me quite busy." -- Mrs. Avila Dupas, Box 213, Pilot Mound, Manitoba. MRS: M. W. LOCKHART "My trouble is the Change. I was so weak I could hardly walk. I kept a girl to do my work: I would lie awake all night and I often wished I could die. I saw Lydia E. Pink- ham's Vegetable Compound advertised and tried that: The first bottle helped me. Il amnow on my fourth and [ am gaining strength all the time." -- Mrs. M. W. Lockhart, R.R. No. 1, Plaster Rock, New Brunswick. 98 out of 100 Women 28 30 5400 280 BI 24 SHAM OF 28 0 BR 08 1402 Lydia E.Pinkham's Ve thie 'ompound TILLIE THE TOILER as SE gE SSRs) J MEA LPRIN RyBoy.. ly "THE | C lars SALOTING ¥ ME « > NA N ne WATHOUT z 5.

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