"NOR, Rp ap Sill -it . THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 29, 1931 PAGE FIVE ~ Women's I he Home and the Community Social and Personal Dr, and Mrs, C. H. Tuck and daughter, Patsy, attended Milton Fair last Friday and Saturday and remained in Milton visiting friends and relatives over the week-end, A . Mrs. Eric Phillips of Oshawa is one of the thirteen players for Canada in competition , for the Duchess of Connaught Gold Cup, golf trophy which is internation- ally sought after. United States has seventeen players, and Eng- land two. The matches are be- ing played off at the Rosedale Club, LJ LJ Ld Mr. V. O, Hipwell and Mr, M, N, Gowdy of Walkerville, former- ly of Oshawa, were in the city on business yesterday. * * Ld Messrs. Glenn Mundy and Douglas Maundrell of Oshawa left to-day to commence their studies at the University of Toronto, LJ Miss Mildred Hunt, of Oshawa, left yesterday for Toronto, where she will take a course in Physio- therapy at the Toronto University, Mrs. J. Larocque, of Oshawa, has returned from Belleville, where she has been spending the past month with her daughter, Mrs, George Culbertson who has been seriously ill, LJ LJ Ld Mr, and Mrs. Arthur Gay and Miss Bertie Pollard, of Oshawa, left won Saturday for Atlantic City to « spend several Jays there, The Tennis Club of St. George's Anglican Church sponsored a dance » at the Parish Hall last evening and about seventy-five couples attended, : Dance music was furnished by better with fruits FOR extra delight, put fresh or canned fruits in your bowl of Kellogg's PEP Bran Flakes. Pour on the cream or milk, and enjoy that famous flavor of PEP. A fine all-around cereal. Whole wheat for nourish- ment and just enough added bran to be mildly laxative. At all grocers in the red- and-green package, Made by Kellogg in London, Ontario. PEP BRAN FLAKES Here is a New Pudding for Tomorrow's Dinner! ST.CHARLES MILK Snell's orchestra, Part of the even- ing was given over to the presenta- pions and during which time, Can- on dePeycier acted as chairman, The hall was decorated with the club colors of blue and white, The president, Harold Smith, was con- venor of the committee which made plete and ful arrange- ments for the evening. LOCAL LEAGUE TO BE REPRESENTED AT CONVENTION Members of Catholic Wo- men's League In Toronto Today and Wednesday Women from all parts of the Toronto archdiocese are expected at Toronto for_the two-day an- nual meeting of the Toronto Archdiocesan Division of the Catholic Women's League 'and election of officers, which takes place here to-day and to-morrow. The convention opens with High Mass at St. Michael's Cathe- dral at noon to-day, Business ses- sions, at which Miss Florence Bo- land, President, will preside, will be held in Rosary Hall this after. noon and to-morrow, when re- ports of archdiocesan subdivis- fons will be given, A banquet, at which his Excel- lency Archbishop Neil McNeil wil) be present, is to be given in the King Edward Hotel this evening, With Archbishop McNeil will be his Excellency Archbishop James C, McGuigan of Regina, who is in Toronto in connection with the Catholic Mission Crusaders' Con- vention, which is to take place Friday, Saturday and Sunday of this week. The speaker of this evening will be Rev, Thomas J. O'Hearn of Buffalo, whose radio talks have made him very well known in To- ronto. He will speak on "Some Phases of Women's Work," To- morrow the executives of the four Toronto subdivisions are en- | tertaining delegates at luncheon at the Granite Club, A tea is to be held in the Sisters of Service house on Glen Road, after which benediction will close the conven. tion, The Oshawa League will be represented at the convention by following ladies: Mrs, Frank Robson, president; Mrs. M. Kins- man, Mrs, W, R. J, Irwin, Mrs, John Bawkes, vice-presidents; Mrs. W. L. Morrow and Mrs, L. Gifford, secretaries; Mrs, J, J. Callaghan, Mrs, J. McRae and Mrs, J. Stainton, These mem- bers of the local branch of the League will attend both to-day and Wednesday. Miss Nora Coughlin will represent the Osh- awa Junior League at to-day's sessions and Misses Reta Duquette and Isobel Oatway will go to To- ronto to-morrow, S.S. CLASS AGAIN PRODUCES PLAY The Count-on-Me Class of King St. Church put on {ts popular play, "Mrs. Tubbs of Shanty- town," last Friday evening in the Community Hall at Canton, under the auspices of the Junior Choir. This play, which is produced by Mrs. O. J, Clatworthy's clase of girls. at King Street Church, Oshawa, has enjoyed great popu- larity. Its kindly philosophy and op- timistic spirit are particularly suitable for times like these, and the class certainly deserve the in- terest which they have aroused. ---------------------- -- WEDDINGS WALKER-TRICK A quiet double ring wedding took place on Saturday, September 26, at the parsonage of Simcoe Street United Church, when Evelyn Ade- line, only daughter of Mr. and Mrs, V, J, Trick was married to Arthur Walker, son of Mr, A, Walker and the late Mrs, Walker, of Wolver- hampton, England, The ceremony was performed by the Rev, E, Har- ston. The couple were unattended, Following a short honeymoon Mr, and Mrs, "Walker will reside in Lu- can, Ont, KING STREET YOUNG PEOPLE LEAGUE King Street Youn People's League, held of icnday evening, was in charge of Group 'B". The leader, Madelipe Tooley, presided. The meeting was opened by a hymn, followed by prayer led by Orlin Lint, The Seripture lessons were read by Ruth Cook and Jens nie Pringle, The President then conducted the business portion of the eveni tion of prizes for the tennis cham- || nterests in t J tl Poetry--it's a magic word, a word suggesting laughter, tears, music, bold deeds and wondrous beauty. There's a wealth of all these wait- ing for you on the poetry shelf in the Boys and Girls Library, Have you seen "The Way of Poetry," by John Drinkwater with that Time you old gypsy man Will you not stay, Put up your caravan Just for one day, by Ralph Hodgson in it, Then there's "Silver Pennies," by Thompson; "Peacock Pie" and "Songs of Childhood," by Walter de la Mare that are just full of lovely things. Jonathan Jo Has a mouth like an O And a wheelbarrow full of surprises If you ask for a bat Or for something like that * Junior Library Ed Notes From The He has got it, whatever the size is, This is from "When we were young," by A. A. Milne. "Other Books to Watch for Are": "Poems Every Child Should Know," "The junior Anthology of World Poetry," "Sugar and Spice," "Pieces for Everyday the Schools Cele- brate," "St. Nicholas Book of Verse," "The Listening Child." And now here's some news for the little folks, The story hour for younger boys and girls will-be held for the first time this year on Sat- urday morning, October 3rd, at 9.- 30, There'll be a cozy fire burning in the fireplace and we'll sit around in a circle to listen to stories of funny animals, of pixies and fairies, of princesses and gallant princes, Be sure to remember Saturday morning at 9.30 in the Boys' and Girls' Library. There's nothing harder than sus- pense In moments that are strained and tense, Farmer Brown's Boy sighed with relief when whistler the Marmot darted under a rock just in time to escape 'Talons the Eagle, It was a narrow escape and only the quick wit of whist- ler had made it possible. Had hoe from which he had come Talons would have caught him, Talons awkwardly to the rock under which Whistler | had found refuge, saw that there | was no chance of getting him | out, and with a scream of disap- | pointment flew away, { Farmer Brown's Boy could | hear Whistler scolding angrily. | Presently he poked his head out, ( saw that the way was clear, and scrambled up to his favorite rock waere he sat up and looked care | fully in all directions. Talon: i was flying off and already was a mere speck in the sky. Satisfied that all was well at last | Lie interrupted digner, l He had just finished when vnce | more the alarm signal from hls | ndorest neighbor on the distant rock slide sounded. Whistler | scrombled to his lookout and | gazed across, At once he became | tremendously excited, Shuffling along there in a leisurely manner was a big Brown Bear, For the second time that morning he felt a thrill run all over him, He quite forgot Whistler until a shrill whistle from the latter drew attention to him again, Whistler was so excited that he couldn't sit still, He watched every move that Bear made and talked to himself in an angry undertone, It was plain that he wns anxious as well as excited. The air was so clear that the dis- tant. rock slide seemed much near- er than it was, Of course this was equally true of the hig Brown Bear, His every move could he seen plainly, Presently Whistler becume mere excited than ever, He could scarcely contain himself. The Rear had stopped and begun to pu!l stones and rocks aside. He did it in an unhurried manner but with a purpose that even at that distance was quite evident, Hig great strength enabled tim to pull aside rocks that Farmer Brown's Boy couldn't have moved. Some of these rolled down the slide and smaller stones flew out in all directions. Whistler knew what it meant, but for a time Farmer Brown's Bey didn't understand what the leur was doing all that hard work for. Then it came to him, "He is after that other Mar- met! He is trying to dig him ~Karmer Brown's Boy. | he attempted to get back In the | hopped over | Whistler | | jumped down and went to finish | out!" he exclaimed under his | breath. | | | This was even more thrilling | | than the attempt of Talons the Eagle to catch Whistler, The stones flew and rocks rattled down the slide. Farmer Brown's Boy could picture to himself that frightened Marmot trapped in his home among the rocks and walit- ing helplessly as it was torn open. In a short time a big hole had been dug. Then tho Bear stopped digging and reached .in with a big paw, He was back to Farmer | Brown's Boy and the latter couldn't see just what the Bear wag doing, Presently he backed vay and sat down, swaying a It from side to side and apparen- ly enjoying the scenery. He sat there for some time before he nee more got to his feet and vithout 30 much as a glance at the hole he had dug shuffled For the Tiny | Tots | 6 Months to 3 Yeus LLAMA COATS hese beautiful warm aud practical Coats That Wash so Nicely Come in a range of smart | colors, White, Rose, Pink, Blue, Soft Green and Grey, $3.95 to $5.50 Bonnets and Hats To match from $1.00 CHINCHILLA . COATS These too are smart and practical, Come in Pink, White and Blue, Priced from $4.50. Bonnets and | Hats to match Priced from .. ., $1.59 We also carry a complete | range of Sleepers, Fleeced Waists, Underwear and Stockings for the Tiny Tots fl | omernpgmezre > pray The topic "The Countryman's Point of View" was taken by Doris Warburton, "Trudie" Gomme and Greta Crouse, After singing a hymn the meeting was closed by the Mizpah benedic- tion, - . They were a middle-aged couple in the train, and the wrangle went on until the man noticed that some of their fellow-passengers were bee coming interested in the altercation, "Well, dry up now," he said in a weary voice, "Why quarrel in 'public? What have we got a! home for? Reno Lady--I want to get a mar- riage license, Clerk--You'll have to show your divorce decree. Reno Lady--But I haven't ever been married. Clerk--Sorry then, Madam, but no one but residents can get li- censes here. . Women at the Thames Court -- My neighbour thought I was insult- ing her but I was really only speak- ing to her in a jugular vein, . ~ | GREATER NOURISHMENT | i The CANADA STARCH CO., Limited MONTREAL . SMONEY Serving -------- ty ) '}goods, following directions across the slide and finally dis- appeared down the slope. ") suspect he got that Marmot," muttered Farmer Brown's Boy a bit sadly. "I suppose it was all right, but somehow I hate to think that anyone can't be safe right in his own home." Just then Whistler from his rock whistled sharply. From the distant slide came a faint res ponse, Whistler heard it and there wag a look of satisfaction on his face, Farmer Brown's Boy heard it, too, His face brightened. "That Bear didn't get him after all!" he exclaime. aloud, forget- ting Whistler, And then he wondered what could have sent Whistler scurrying for his home 80 fast, Copyright, 1931, by T. W, Burgess The next story: The Barking btones. WHAT NEW YORK IS WEARING By Annebelle Worthington Illustrated Dressmaking Lesson Furnished with Every Pattern Daintiness bas this little sheer woolen frock--and much charm! It has the modish flared sleeves and becoming draped bodice, And it's cut on extremely slend- erizing lines with its curved seam- ing through the flat hipline, A rich brown print made the original, with plain pastel-red con- trast. Style No. 2997 may be had in sizes 16, 18 years, 36, 38, 40 and 42 inches bust, Size 36 requires 3% yard. of 39-inch material with 34 yard of 39-inch contrasting, Black crepe satin is stunning in this model with pinkish-beige crepe satin contrast, Dark green canton-faille crepe is another interesting scheme in com- bination with eggshell Don't envy the woman who dres- ses well and keeps her children well-dressed. Just send for your copy of our Fall and Winter Fa- shion Magazine. It shows the best stvles of the coming season . And you may ob- taip our Pattern at cost price of any style shown. The pattern is most economical in material re- quirements, It enables you to wear the pew trocks at little expense--~ two frocks for the price of one, You will save $10 by spending 15 cents for this book, So it would pay you to send for your copy now Address Fashion 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, Address orders to: Pattern Edit- or, Oshawa Daily Times, Oshawa, No. 2097. Size .v.ivviiin ve Street Address Prov, The next time we fight a war we should not whip our adversaries so thoroughly that we have to spend the next 20 years helping them get back on their feet, FASHION HINT "How to make my old short skirts conform to the new length was a problem to me until I hit on this plan, I dropped the hems; and as the part that had beeu turned under was darker than the rest, I redyed the ontire dress, after having bleached the in the Daimond Dyes package. "I used Diamond Dyes for the redyeing, of course, I have dyed many things with these wonder- ful colors, They have saved me many dollars and have never failed to give perfect results-- smooth, even colors--fast to wear and washing. Friends think my things are new when I re- dye or tint them with Diamond Dyes. They do give the most gor- geous colors!" " Mrs. G.C., Levis, Quebec ¥ NEW AND MASSIVE STAR DISCOVERED Astronomers at Victoria, B.C., Make Thorough Study of New Star Victoria, B.C. =~ A faint star known to astronomy as H.D, 698 in the constellation of Cassiopia fs the most massive yet discover- ed, according to a recently com- pleted spectroscopic study at the Dominion astrophysical observa- tory near here, . The sun's mass is taken as the unit for expressing the weight of the various bodies, and this re- cently studied star, which js in the form of a binary system, con- sists of two giant suns of 134 and 50 times the weight of the earth's sun, These suns, separated from each other by a distance of 150,- 000,000 miles, revolve around each other in slightly less than fifty-six days, They speed around their orbits at the rate of 53 and 142 miles per second re- spectively. A faint conception of the com- parative mass of these suns is giv- en by the knowledge that the weight of the sun is expressed by 2, followed by twenty-seven ci- phers, tons. Prof. J. 8. Plagkett, director of the observatory, has recently been devoting a good deal of study to the characteristics of these dis- tant gigantic stellar masses, He | finds that their light shows that the smaller component has a tem- perature of 25,000 degrees Fah- renheit, a volume 135 tines the sun, and is {intrinsically about 350 times as bright. The larger star, he finds, has a peculiar spectrum. Besides con- taining the ordinary hydrogen and 'helium lines of a high tem- perature star, it has in addition many lines of the enhanced met- als, such as iron, titanium and | chromium, usually found in cool- | er stare. This indicates that the density is abnormally low and that the star is an exceedingly large one, The computed vol- ume is 3,560 times the sun, the temperature 18,000 degrees Fah- renheit and the luminosity 1,400 times that of the sun, In another respect the star is remarkable, One of the import- ant astronomical discoveries of recent years, in which the obser- vatory at Victoria took a leading part, wag that of an extended stra- tum of calcium gas pervading in- terstellar space and more or less uniformly distributed, The spec- tral lines characteristic of this gas are present in the spectra of all distant high temperature stars, According to Eddington's theory they should be present in the spectra of all distant stars re- gardless of their temperature but heretofore there has been no ob- servational evidence for the cooler stars. These so-called Interstel- lar calcium lines are a striking feature in the spectrum of this interesting star which has the dis- tinction of being the coolest star in which they have been detected, Thus the information supplies in. formation which confirms Edding. ton's theory, Furthermore, the interstellar calcium lines have revealed the distance of this extraordinary sys- tem. According to the hypothe- sis of uniform distribution, the strength of the lines should be di- rectly proportional to the distance of the star. The measured inten- rity of the lines in M.D. 698 in- dicates a distance of 3,100 light years. An additional estimate is obtained from the measurement of the radial motion of the interven- ing gas. The observed velocity We Have Chosen QUALITY --the finest. WIDTH--27 inches. For the Last Wednesday Half Holiday, Brocaded and Plain Rayon Silks 750 Yards have been held from a new import ship- ment for this half day sale event. COLORS--every Color on the Shade Card, THE PRICE--Wednesday Morning, Be Included early morning route tomorrow. The Ideal Food | For Every Age As a builder of muscle and bone tissue for the infant, as a source of energy for the growing youth, as a provider of stamina for the adult, as a vitalizing agent for the aged, good milk has justly earned the title bestowed upon it by the medical profession . . . The Perfect Food, in our milk Phone 700 Beaton's Dairy corresponds to a distance of 3,700 light years, These different methods agree in assigning a dis- tance of approximately 3,400 light years in more than 20,000,- 000,000,000,000 miles. "An actress is not a lady; at least, when she is she i8 not an actress."--George Bernard Shaw. "Good taste is no longer a vir- tue; it is a definite lack of a sense of publicity."--Cecil Roberts. "We believe not that might is right, not in the greatest good of the greatest number, but in the greatest good of all, even of the metnest .of God's creatures,' -- Mahatma Gandhi, "Always thinking of the future instead of the present is apt to become a very continual habit, and {t does not conduce happie ness," --Sir Arthur Thomson, "Nobody with character is vule gar."--A, A. Milne, Eugenics is supported by poll tically mjnded scientists and scientifically minded politicians as an antidote to democracy. '--Ber= trand Russell, Here's another attractive Most women find it difficult to thik up new - RO ideas for attractive menus . . . This gre suggested Ci pete by Miss Katherine M. Caldwel rity of Canadian Home Journal, fore sure to please. LUNCHEON MENU Co Cheese and Vegetable Soufflé with Cream Sauce Buttered Whole Wheat Toast Sweet Pickles Hot Raspberry Biscuits® Chase & Senborn's Tea For afte n tea, there is nothing nicer than Biscuits, shaped daintily it, buttered and Powder is qual d cl Magic proven that it always ing results. these same wa: verry with a tiny cutter--spl| piping hot, with a cup of perfect teal Miss Caldwell says: "Magic Bakin easy to use use its uniform, if ln TULLE gives pri fren better bel | Toronto, is theres ery autho. 2 oups flour teaspoons Magle 1 Baking Be PE into them with a served Look for this mark on every tin, It is a guarantee thet Magic does not contain alum or any harmful ingredient. Try Miss Caldwell's Recipe fou *RASPBERRY BISCUITS 4 tablespoons shortening cup milk 'ea-cubes of sugar Raspberry juice or syrup Mix and sift the dry Ingredients. Cut the hard, cold shortening ife, using a quick, short, chopping motion; or reduce the hard cold fat to tiny particles with a pastry blender or a steel-pronged fork. When the mixture resembles a very coarse meal, add the liquid, mixing quickly and lightly. Turn out the dough on a slightly floured board; pat it down lightly or roll it to a thickness of about one inch. Shape with a small cutter or cut in squares with a floured knife, | Dip.the small lumps of suger into syrup from canned or fresh raspberries. . . Press a lump into each biscuit. . . forcing it well down into the dough so that it will not run down the sides when melted. Place the biscuits on a greased pan or baking sheet and bake in a very hot oven, 450° F,, 12 to 1% minutes.