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The Leader-Post from Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada • 9

Publication:
The Leader-Posti
Location:
Regina, Saskatchewan, Canada
Issue Date:
Page:
9
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

THE LEADER-POST, REGINA, FRIDAY, OCTOBER 13, 1933 PAGE NINE Women's Page, Society and Fashion, Club Affairs, Personals Weddings DENZIN- SCOULAR A pretty wedding was solemnized on Tuesday, October 10, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. S. Denzin, Tregarva, when Agnes Scoular and Rev. S.

P. Rondeau, married, bride Arnley Denzin were by was charming In an eggshell satin dress with inserts of lace and wearing a silk net vell with band of orange blossoms. 'She carried calla lilies. Mr. T.

Patterson, Tregarva, gave the pride in marriage. Mr. and Mrs. Wilbur Pallen, of Regina, signed the register. After the wedding ceremony the guests sat down to a wedding dinner.

Later the newly married couple left by motor on a honeymoon trip, the bride travelling in a navy blue swagger suit with matching accessories. On their return they will reside at Tregarva. MARTIN- ADAMS At a quiet wedding which took place on Wednesday, Oct. 11, Miss Ruth Lillian Adams, of Regina, became the bride of Mr. William Henry Martin, of Alsask.

Rev. C. M. K. Parsons, of Alsack, performed the ceremony.

The bride was given in marriage Our Genuine Sheffield Reproductions are true to period and are made on the old dies by English artisans. As we specialize in this line we can offer you added service. Wheatley's Specialty Jewelers 11th Ave, Opp. Post Office Estd. 1908 The Best Place to Buy Dress Goods! SPECIAL! SPECIAL! Striped Satin 38-inch, black only.

Yard $1.49 Waved Satin 38-inch, black only. Yard $1.49 Venora Satin 38-inch. black Yard only. $1.49 Aurora Crepe 88-inch, heavy Yard quality. $1.49 Novelty quality.

Wool Yard inch. 95c Crepe Back Satin 38 inch, Yard beautiful texture. 99c A Yard Better Quality. SILK STOCKINGS Pure Silk Full Fashioned. Semi-Service weight, pair 59c Semi-Service, better quality, pair 69c Chiffon weight, pair 69C Chiffon, Lace Top, pair 89c Georgette Crepe Hose, Irregulars, pair 84c or 2 pairs $1.59 Nippon Silk Products Co.

2405 Eleventh Avenue Between Smith and McIntyre TAKE IT HOME and use it for a week with our compliments The tor, yourself makes how work it. a Mixes Sunbeam MIXMASTER alas Only $29.75 Complete strainer, with tee salad bowls, ca Does tiring marvelous Sun Electrical Limited 1943 Scarth St. Phone 4774 An Interesting Shoulder Treatment By RUTH ROGERS And It is as interesting at the back as it is at the front. The buttoned back closing adds youthful appeal. It's as snappy as can be in vivid red rabbit's hair woolen mixture for school, college or town.

Style No. 382 la designed in sizes 14, 16, 18, 20 years, 36, 38 and 40 inches bust. Size 16 requires 31-8 yards of 39- inch material with 7-8 yard of 39- inch contrasting. Our Large Fashion Magazine is 48, pages. In addition to new pattern styles for women and children, contains valuable beauty articles, some of which are Illusby Norma Shearer and other Hollywood stars.

It is a book every reader should have and Its price will be saved many times for the patterns are nominally priced and very economical in material requirements. Price of book 15 cents. Price of pattern 15 centa in stamps or coin. Address orders for patterns, Pattern Department, Leader-Post, Regina, stating size of pattern wanted. When the pattern is bust measure you need only mark 32, 34, or whatever it may be.

Patterns cannot reach you in less than 10 days from date of application. Age (12 child or misses Measurement (bust) When child or misses' pattern give waist and length measure. Your Baby And Mine BY MYRTLE MEYER ELDRED SPANKING DEFEATS ITS OWN ENDS If painful punishments solved behavior problems there would be no misbehaving children, for it is certain that slappings, spankings, even beatings are the mother's sure refuge when the child 19 naughty. We live within hearing distance of a mother who spanks her child several times each day. Heaven only knows for what.

Why Mothers Spank Mothers give three reasons for to make them mind; second, to spanking their children: First, make them remember not to do the same again; third, to show them who 19 boss. There seems to be no more effective method of getting a thing done than simply to do It. Take the child by the hand and see that he does what the mother has told him to do. Come to bed, leave that alone, come away from the stove, don't touch the plants are ordinary commands, any one of which is far more easily enforced by putting the child to bed, keeping dangerous things out of reach, showing him that none of us touch hot things, and teaching him how to enjoy the plants. Spankings do not prevent a child from perpetrating the same behavior a second time.

They make the child more clever at doIng what he wants to do when mother isn't near. No Question of Superiority The third consideration is that others, being stronger and easily capable of hurting a child, believe spanking impresses the child. It does make him fear the Individual who can deal out such painful blows. But he isn't impressed with the dignity or the tenderness or the understanding of a spanking parent? What child but knows Infancy that the parent has power over him? Bedtime, mealtime, being dressed and bathed, taken here and there, are sufficient evidences that the child doesn't do as he pleases, but almost always as the parent pleases. Why use a stick or a hairbrush or a hand to teach the child how to get along in the home and 50- ciety? There are many more agreeable substitutes, and they are discussed in my leaflet, "What Shall the Parent Do Instead of Spank?" Your request for the leaflet should be sent to this department with a self-addressed, stamped envelope.

Choir Holds Sale The ladies of Knox church choir will hold a cand yand home-cooking sale on Saturday afternoon starting at 2 o'clock at worth's store. The ladies in charge will be: Mrs. H. A. Keown, Mrs.

W. G. Laird, Mrs. Stanley Farnsworth, Mrs. L.

T. Pollard, Mrs. W. J. Mare, Miss M.

A. Ruggles, Miss Jean MacKenzie, Miss Dorothy Tyhurst, Miss Maisie Prosser and Miss Theo. Rosson. ARMY NAVY GROCETERIA Demonstration Saturday of GERBER'S Strained Vegetables, Del Maiz Corn Strained Vegetables For 3 FOR TINS ASSN. MEDICAL AMERICAN Baby 29c DEL MAR DEL MAIZ DEL MAIZ DEL MAIZ NIBLETS CORN Niblets, TINS Tins 32 29cl 2 29c Women's In China Now Progressive "No other women in Asia are more fully emancipated than the women of Dr.

Hu Shih told the Vancouver Women's Canadian club in the course of a recent lecture. Dr. Shih is a noted Chinese philosopher and scholar. He was one of the lecturers at the Liberal summer conference held at Port Hope last month. He confided to the audience there that he was proud to discover that he and the Rt.

Hon. W. L. Mackenzie King had been born on the same day. At the Vancouver meeting Dr.

Shih said that in the Chinese legislature of 49 members, three were women. China had always numbered women among her delegates to the biennial Pacific Relations conferences. Next year, with China as a constitutional democracy, women would have equal suffrage rights with men. "Such social changes In the Orient will undoubtedly lead to mitigation of the possibility of future wars in the Pacific area," was the belief Dr. Hu Shih expressed to his audience.

Women Not Silent Foreign writers on Chinese life had given an erroneous impression of Chinese women, said the speaker. He referred to Pearl Buck's novel, "The Good Earth," saying that in China women are not silent, patient sufferers, but rather vociferous. The patriarchal family of China in reality was not the Ideal it purported to be, Dr. Shih said when telling of the changes in family life. The reasons for several generations of one family living under the paternal roof were essentially economic and gave rise to a parasitic way of living and much jealousy and quarreling.

The breakup of the family had given the young people more freedom and taught them self-reliance. he asserted. Western Dress The westernizing of dress and habits had been more unconscious in character, if a more obvious change. When Dr. Shih left China In 1926 for ten months he left a race of women who dressed their hair in the accepted style of their ancestors; when he returned, bobbed heads were to be seen even in the interior provinces.

Men's shoes In China were formerly Interchangeable and a race of distorted feet resulted. The change to "left and rights" in the western fashion has occurred unconsciously. Divorce has been made more easy in China and is on a recognized legal basis. A national dialect had given place to the old dead language much as EXPERT OPERATORS Wave Special GUARANTEED Marvella STEAM OIL Regular $5.00 Value $1.95 Guaranteed Marvel Process incindes Special Shampoo and Finger Wave. MARVEL SCIENTIFIC HAIRDRESSING 1994 HAMILTON STREET Phones 23775-5008 Latin was replaced several centurles ago in Europe.

change in language had been instituted in China within 16 years, while the European countries took several centuries to replace Latin. Men who joined in an "unemployed march' from the west of advised that they would be Scotland to Edinburgh have, been paid the dole for the time they were away from home. Recital Program by Mr. Arthur Edwards. She wore a royal blue crepe with a velvet hat and accessories of the same shade and a corsage of pink roses.

Mrs. Arthur Edwards was matron of honor. Her smart suit was of a chocolate brown shade, and her J. Stanley Parke, of Youngstown, corsage of pink carnations. Rev.

attended the groom. The groom's gift, a fox worn by the bride at her wedding. Communion was administered at the conclusion of the wedding ceremony, Mr. B. M.

Laubach presided at the organ, played the wedding march, during the signing of the register. Mr. and Mrs. Martin leave shortly for Bath, Somersetshire, England, where they will reside. BIDEN-THOMPSON The marriage was quietly solemnized at Sintaluta on Thursday, Oct.

12, of Miss Laura Lavinia, second daughter of Mr. and Mrs. C. K. Thompson, of Wolseley, and Mr.

Norman Banbury Biden, only son of Mr. and Mrs. George E. Biden, of Wolseley. Rev.

J. MacKinnon officiated. The bride wore a smartly tailored gown of autumn brown triple crepe with hat and accessories to match and for travelling donned a coat of the same shade trimmed with beaver. Mr. and Biden left on a short motor trip to points west and on their return will reside at Wolseley.

NIEBERGALL BUNSE With Rev. Harry Joyce officiatIng, Miss Merle Bunse, of Secretan, and Mr. William Niebergall, of Grenfell, were married Wednesday at 2918 Dewdney avenue. The bride, attired in blue silk crepe with matching hat, was attended by her sister, Miss Ellen Rose Bunse. Mr.

Clifford Oscar Olson, of Jameson, performed the duties of groomsman. Miss Helen Niebergall, of Balgonie, and Mrs. C. Olson, of Jameson, also attended the ceremony. After a honeymoon spent at western points, Mr.

and Mra. Niebergall will reside in Regina. MacKENZIE A quiet wedding took place at the home of Mr. and Mrs. W.

J. Patterson, Moose Jaw, on October 8, when their eldest daughter, Miss Ruby May, became the bride of Mr. John D. MacKenzie, of Fairy Glen. Rev.

E. J. Chegwin offclated. MORTON-WEISMILLER GRIFFIN, Oct. a pretty wedding took place at the home of the groom's parents, when Mary Estelle, daughter of the late Mr.

and Mrs. John Weismiller, became the bride of Paul Charles Morton, the eldest son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles S. Morton, of Griffin.

Rev. F. J. Gardiner performed the ceremony in the presence of about 40 relatives and Intimate friends of the bride and groom. The bridal couple was attended by Miss Marjorie Winfleld and George Morton, brother of the groom.

Miss Jean Masson, niece of the bride, was flower girl. To the strains of Lohengrin's wedding march, played by Mrs. K. W. Blow, the bride, on the arm of her brother-in-law, James A.

Masson, and her attendants, entered the room and took their places. A large window, banked with flowers, formed a beautiful background for the ceremony. The bride was charming in a gown of blue triple crepe, cut on long diagonal lines, with large puff sleeves of velvet, and a smart velvet hat to match. She carried a shower bouquet of sweetheart roses. The bridesmaid wag lovely in a gown of banana satin with blue accessories and a corsage of yellow and mauve spray chrysanthemums.

The flower girl wore a blue and white flowered frock and carried an oldfashioned nose-gay. Following the signing of the register, a wedding dinner was served. The bride's table was centred by the wedding cake and rose tapers in silver candlesticks. Those assisting in serving were Betty Morton, Dorls Anderson, Bob Morton and Blair Masson. Immediately after the dinner the bridal couple left by motor for a short honeymoon.

The bride's travelling costume was an ensemble in black and white. The out- DICK NEEDS A TONIC Give him BROCK'S TONIC SEED MIXTURE no seed like Brock's, sad people whe knew what is fee their Canaries will shea BROCKS BIRD SEED BABY'S OWN SOAP best Best Baby Take Lydia E. Pinkham' Vegetable Compound Have you ever felt that you to do anything that you did sot have the strength to de your work? Women wha weak and run-down should take tonic such Lydia 1 Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Headaches and backaches that are the result tired, run-down condition often Field to this marvelous medicine. 98 out of every 108 women who report to us my that they are benefited by this medicine.

Buy a bottle from your drug. gist today and watch the remits, The recital program to be given on Sunday afternoon at 3:30 at the Sacred Heart academy by the advanced piano pupils with Lorne Daly as assisting follows: Selections from Wagner's operas Geraldine Boyle and A. Matthieu: "Lolita," from "Caprice Espagnol" (Chaminade), Margaret mott: "Rhapsody" (Brahms), Noreen LaBelle: "Etude de Concert" (MacDowell), Maxine Ardell. "Witches' Dance" (MacDowell), Marion Zinger; vocal, Mr. Daly; "Finale," from "Carnival Scene" Vocal, Mr.

(Schumann), Dophi, Bancroft. (Liszt transcription), Doris Bancroft; "Volelk" (Mokrejs), Marion Zinger; "Blue Danubine Waltz" (Strauss-Chasins), Ardell and Noreen LaBelle. WEST OF ENGLAND'S OCTOBER SALE IS Sa OF SALES READ THESE ITEMS! SELLING SATURDAY ONLY! Name 382 of-town guests were: Miss Norma Scott, Regina; Kenneth Blow, Sebeka, Minnesota: Mr. and Mrs. E.

Kristensen; Mr. and Mrs. Dean Webster, Midale, Mr. and Mrs. H.

Whyte, Mr. and Mrs. R. Whyte, Gerald and Mason Whyte, of Innes, Sask. The bride is a 1932 graduate of the Winnipeg Children's hospital.

LINNEN-McCANN NEVILLE, Oct. quiet wedding was solemnized at the home of John R. McCann, Rush Lake, when Margaret Jane, eldest daughter of Mrs. Jennie McCann, Rush Lake, became the bride of Harry eldest son of Mrs. Charlotte Linnen, Spencerville, Ontario, at a ceremony performed by Rev.

Mr. Russell, of Knox church, Swift Current. The bride was lovely in an ankle length gown of brown sheer crepe, with matching accessories. She carried an arm bouquet of yellow mums and wore the groom's gift, a pendant and bracelet of Mexican opals. She was attended by Mrs.

Harry Bakrud, as matron of honor, who wore a pretty gown of rose crepe with eggshell trimmings, and carried a. bouquet of carnations and roses. The groom was attended by Melvin Knapp. Following the ceremony a wedding dinner was served at the home of the bride's brother to about 25 relatives and friends. The table was centred with a three wedding cake.

The bridal couple will live at Neville. Among the guests from a distance were Mrs. Charles Ramage (nee Ida McCann), of Langdon, N.D.; Geo. McCann, of Voss, N.D., and Mr. and Mrs.

James Linnen, Hazlet, Sask. BRISTON-MCPHERSON STRONGFIELD, Oct. the Hawarden manse, by the Rev. D. M.

Robertson, pastor, marriage took place of Roy Bristow, son of Mrs. and the late George Bristow, of Strongfield, and Miss Janet E. McPherson, daughter of Mrs. M. and the late R.

J. McPherson, of Strongfield. Victor O. McPherson, brother of the bride, was best man, and Mrs. A.

Tolton, sister of the groom, attended the bride. After the ceremony a wedding dinner was served by the bride's mother, after which the couple went to Manitoba by car for 8 honeymoon. Mr. and Mrs. Bristow will reside on the Bristow farm south of Strongfield.

ANDERSON-RYCKMAN MOOSE JAW, Oct. 13. A quiet wedding WAS solemnized Saturday at Immanuel Presbyterian church in Los Angeles when Miss Maude Ryckman, formerly of Moose Jaw, became the bride of Thomas E. Anderson, Los Angeles. Dr.

H. B. Smith officiated at the ceremony. The couple were attended by Miss Genevieve Smith and Lewis Allen. Mr.

and Mrs. Allen left on a motor trip after the ceremony and will reside in Los Angeles on their return. KERSHAW- CRUMBLY CENTRAL BUTTE, Oct. 18-A quiet wedding took place in Anglican church, Eyebrow, when Charlotte Crumbly and Gordon Kershaw, of the Pine Lake district, were married. Only the immediate friends of the young couple attended the ceremony.

Town AT 9 A.M. AT 9 A.M. WHILE THEY LAST WHILE THEY LAST Dresses Dresses Regular to $7.50 42 Travel Tweed Tallored Regular $8.95 to $12.50 In Black, Brown, Green, Wine, "Sunday Nite" Dresses, Sport Knitted Dresses. and Sand. Also Celanese.

35 only- Odd size Flat Crepe Dresses, Travel Tweed Dresses, Printed Dresses. All colors, and the Silk Crepe Sunday Nites, etc. All colors. newest Fall styles. Sizes 14 to 20 Sizes: Misses, 14 to 20; Women's, 36 to 50.

SEE WINDOW DISPLAY $2.97 $4.97 SELECT FUR-TRIMMED DIRECT PURCHASE FROM COATS MILL THE SILK ENDS FACTORY Regular to $19.50 Values to $3.00 yard 22 Only Warm Winter Coats. Tailored of allwool crepes. Double interlined. Some with chamois and some without. Sizes 14 to 44.

SATURDAY ONLY DISTINCTIVE MODEL COATS Values to $37.50 Only- -Tailored of all pure botany wool crepes, broadcloths and diagonals. Trimmed with large fur collars and cuffs. Chamois and double interlined. Twoseason guaranteed lining. All sizes.

All colors. $19.95 Silk Rough Crepes, Crepe Silk Satin, Ane Silk Taffetas, Crepe Silk Linings. All in lengths from to value. Guaranteed all perfect yards, quality. 38" Yard wide.

Excellent 97c GENUINE ALL-SILK CREPES Thirty-eight-inch heavy Flat Crepes, Rough Crepes, Cantons, CrepeExtra Special, Satins, etc. Satins, Marquee $1.00 PRINTED TRAVEL TWEEDS AND ALL- SILK CREPES Reg. $1.95 to $2.75. Only a limited- quantity. About 35 designs in latest color new Fall ONLY, yard printa.

SATURDAY $1.39 NEW FALL STYLES HANDBAGS Splendid variety of colors. Novelty styles. All leather and leatherette. Plain and Fitted with mirror and zipper. FOR purse.

SELLING ON SATURDAY ONLY $1.00 WEST Angel Crepe OF ENGLAND SLIPS DRESS GOODS Co. Form fitted. Ex2010 7 AV REGINA LTD. PHONE 4688 cellent quality. All sizes $1.00 There's half a cup of fresh full -cream milk in every 5c CADBURY'S CHOCOLATE CADBURY LIMITED, MONTREAL C12a.

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Pages Available:
1,367,285
Years Available:
1883-2024