Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Daily Times, 26 Jul 1927, p. 7

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Rf News of acters Ontario That amputation 'yesterday otuing at ur. Clem- - place at Fosir 4 N THROUGH WINDSHIELD "and Mrs. Broad, who reside 'Madoc Village near Belleville, sustained painful' injuries the ho tading rod of a car, Rel bs was driving, e, causing ar to be ditched. Mr, Broad wa through 'thes 'win falning facial and, scalp. YoyRd% | splendid i} canwEnims nv if 11 of the canning factories in the rg section of Ontario are busy these days. At the Cohpurs ory where the canning of 'peas progress a night shift is em- , One day recently a canning Ty in Prince Edward County up 33,000 cases which was a d for them, exceeding all pre- packs, w---- NO RUSH FOR BEER e sale of beer at'the Govern- dispensary at Prescott which on Saturday did not make noticeable differende in the vol- of travel across the St. Law- River. Very few drossed to le the heer and there was no x of Americans as was antici- ------ -- ly NAGHAN TO TAKE AOTION structions to F, D, Kerr, K.C.,, aghan Solicitor, to begin legal action against the cityiof Peterborg and a refusal to makg agreements with the city for sewer connections for; residents of suburbs were the f] | Radio Electric pr Prince St. Phone 2477 8S. COWELL, Prop. Pull line of Axtures th' sock. " incipal decisions reached he p Council of North n at a special meeting. Mr. err is to take steps to have the nition boghris at the Sonate to av ho Hog the i the . | council .will. not authorize any of its, ratepayers connecting with the' ¢ity's sewers to enter into any agree- ment with the city regarding sewer Service, ¥. RATON.GOMFANT GiVR PRIZE The bX Eaton Company, Toronto, have donated to ie' Lanadowne Fair, Ascii hy Tag a boasts abel AS" teen inches high, to be the proper Y] of the winner, also a prize of ten dollars, It is for the best pen of one cockerel and three pullets, any Breed, owned and raised in the dis- triet. . CONSIDERING THE TROUBLE A special meeting of the City Council was held in the Chamber of Commerce today at which gath- ered civil engineers representing the Hydro-Electric Power Commis. sion, the Canadian National Rall. ways and the Canddian Pacific Rall: way. The meeting was calleq to de- vise some way other than the use of explosives to prevent a resurrence of floods in th Moira River" each spring, It is proposed to build a series of dams along the river. PRESBYTERIAN CENTENARY ORSERVED : Observing the 'ene hundredth an- niversayy of the founding of Pres- hyterianism in Port Hope, large con- gregations packed St. Paul's Preshy- terian church. on Sunday for both services, The preached for the day was Rev, H. BE. Abrahams, Torontp, who was minister at St. Paul's when the present church building was erected,. A particularly fitting fea- ture of the centennial services was the chimes concert rendered during the day. From early morning until the commencement of the evening service, a series of delightful chimes aroerams were rendered in perfect style by R. J. Devey, of Peterboro, RAIN CAUSED TRIPLE DROWNING Recent heavy rains in the terri- tory through which the Rideau riv- er flows are blamed for the triple drowning tragedy which took the lives of three young Ottawa men at Long Island, near Ottawa, Sunday afternoon. The victims were Frank and Allen McGrath and Gordon BHel- ot. ' George Balkombe, lockmaster at Black Rapids, adjoining the scene of the tragedy said yesterday It was undoubtedly the recent heavy rains which had raised the level nf the river and created a swirling eddy which caught the boat in whieh 'the men had gone in search of driftwood pp & , Onde" BS "Sater, pondioag to Mf. Balcombe and oth- ers, who have kmown the river. for many years, the unfortunate men never had a chance, even though the Sete on this spot is hut, a few yards n ARCHITECTURE BEING CHANGED WITH "PLANES Berlin, July 26.--Germany's archi- tecture of the future will be design- ed with a regard to the appearance of structures from the air. Due to the many visitors touring the country by plain, patriots are concerned that the Fatherland shall present an artistic birdseye perspective, : Lufthansa has begun a echedule of trip for architecls over the:larg- er cities with a view to recommenda- tions for improving the aspect' from fe alr, Roof gardens with a profusion of 'plants would help, some designers say, but the general form of build- ings must be changed before sym- metry and order can he obtained, they contend. Dirty courts invisible from the streets musy go, to be re- placed by trim gardens, The architects will. report woth the hope that the University of Cul- ture will take official action, "HUSKY" HELPED THIS LITTLE BOY Pictured above is Mr. K. Louden and son, Billy, 1761 Broad St. Re- gina, Sask. Mrs. Louden says: "ye! is remarkable the way Husky has helped our son, Billy, who was suffering from constipation. I am now giving him the medicine only once in awhile as it Is not neces- sary to give it regularly." the wonderful herb preparation, can te obtained at good drug stores ES SO) PO everywhere, A Better, better--who has something better? we are always O STAND still is to stagnate. We Canadians are not content with what we have; $ looking for something better, We want better and more wholesome foods, We want newer and bet- / ter ways of doing things -- labor-saving devices, short- cuts, We want better educational facilities, better and more comfortable homes, better working conditions. Betterment is progress, "That's why every today is bit: ter than every Avestan is a ocdiv. of pole, y. Through the advertisements we learn of the newest time and labor- saving machines for home and factory, Adbvettiucments posted on progress improve fo, 4 clothes and the every advertised. Sy rtsing better than yesterday. EA Voubiovs but to Wok thioneh the alratluemévind the newspapers to find the article you need new ideas, new materials, new y world. Tt helps to meke today of the new or y necessities of A Rr in or want, ie reading of adiwrsiesments is 6 good Mbit It contributes to more intelligent living _THEOSIAWA DALY} IME » CLERICAL ISSUE CAUSES TROUBLE AMONG GERMANS Public Opinion is Aroused Over Clerical School Cab- inet Bill | POPULISTS OPPOSING. Trial of Spurious Prussian Prince Proves Amusing to + Berlin, July 26.--The Marx Cab. eoclesiastical domination over the country's public schools so. that that species of clericallam which was decielvely defeated by the German Empire might now, under the Ger- man Republic, become an accomp- lished fact. Legislative power, how- ever, rests with the Reichstag. Con- sequently, German liberalism still hopes to keep education in the hands of the State and out of that of the Roman Catholic and Protestant Churches, the two creeds officially recognized by the Reich, The Liberal's success depsnds pri- marily on the People's Party, which Foreign Minister Stresemann heads, standing hy the principles inherited from its National Liberal predeces- sors, The churchmen, represented hy the allied Catholic Centré and the Nationalist 'Minister, won the rst skirmish of 'what promises to he a long battle when the Cabinet form- ally adopted the draft of a measure establishing ° sectarian schools throughont all Germany. The issue immediatély leaped into big head- lines and' préeipitated a lively finale to Governmental activities prior to the Summer adjournment of the Reichstag, Dr. Btresemann and his fellow- Populist, Minister of Commerce Cur- tius, emphatically intimated Inside and outside of the Cabinet their dis- approval of the bill. They sanction- ed Its acceptance, they declared, merely for the sake of getting the whole husiness hefore Parliament, which meets In extraordinary ses- sion in September to hegin debating the question, For the present the Government cogjition is sadly split over the propo- sition, and unless the People's' Party Husky | backslides there is little Prospect of its passage, Public' Opinion 1s Arvtived Meanwhile public opinion "#8 "hotly | aroused. Not only politiclghk ana publjeists, but parents 'and Echiob) childmn everywhere in'"'GéHbahy. are excl over a suBlactl Simple enongh to Nrasped evelby yhune sters themselves, yet of "'$itdl mo- ment to the Matdop's futuitk.')' The inter 5 as keel if the vil- ages asiim fheZchies. 'Indbéd, the smallep thei Tat of he THobé 4th or- tant 8 th, quéstion "Hébdm?' in a setjlement where therd' HH a score of Protestant fanilies 'and half a dozen Catholic chitdth, the latter pinight he 'obliged to' atiend"s Protestant school. Or is 'év¥¥¥ hand- ful of "churezoérs to demand their own. '#¢hool? And who 'Is to decide? . And the offspring of non-believers, of whom, with the Socialist and Communist parties polling one-third of the total nation- al vote, there are many millions throughout the Reich? Answers to these and many more questions will have to be fought out in the committees and on the floor of the Reichstag next Fall. The po- litical crux of the problem at present lies in the seeming affront to the Constitution offered by the proposed abandonment of the so-called *simul- tan," or non-sectarian, schools, no- tably in the free States of Baden and Hesse. The Constitution specially pro- vides that e€ducational laws must take into comsideration those pars of the country im which Christian religions are 'taught withous regard to creed. If, bowever, the Catholic inhabitants of: those sectiops on the strength of the new ligislation de- mand that their children be edu- cated in accordance with the pre- cents of Rome, and the Protestants also insist on denominational in- struction, the Simuitan schools will lose virtually all of their pupils and will bave to close their doors. To camouflage clerical control parsons employed as teachers by the State will be listed as public offi- cials, and not as members of the clergy, and will be subjected to civil service regulations. This expedient is condemned as a paltry subterfuge by the Liberals. ver they may be called the teachers will remain the representatives of the Church they say, and the Church through them will influence, if it does mot absolutely dictate, the curriculum. The result in anti-clerical eyes will be the Ialsing of German children Predict "Monkey Trials" The passage of the school bill by the Reichstag would be the fore- to a C t between the Reich and the Vatican. How far such an agreement would go cannot he predicted today. Certainly, how- ever fit would constitute a funther step in the direction of placing Ger- man education under dom- ination. The Holy See ly would seek 'a weto power, at feast in all matters affecting the fruition welfare of the ve- 9 of be A bertain passage dn modern PR] at EE inet has made Germany's lawa on the i TUESDAY. JULY 26, 1927 at Catholic or the Protestant. The Ger- man courts would be chocked with an epidemic of "monkey trials," and the nation would be thrown back in- to the Middle Ages, iy is asserted. Religious strife among those of op- posite creeds or of no creed whatever would wax so violent as to threaten the Reich with cival war. That in its briefest form as the thesia advanced by the antagonists of the measure accepted by the en- tire Cabinet and approved by all its members save only Dr. Stresemann and Herr Curtiua, ' The opposition, besides the Pep- ple's Party, includes the a, Socialists, Communists and the nomi Union. If, as the Liberal Bok contends, the bill embodies a Con- stitutional amendment for the adop- tion of which a two-thirds majority of the Reichstag is required, the chances for its enactmeny are almost nil. Without the Populist ballots it cannot obtain even a simple major- ty. Ad the Populista are likely to stand by their guns, mot so much because of traditional hostility to- ward church interference in public affairs as for electoral purposes. Their only means of increasing thelr party strength is at the exnense of the Nationalists. The bulk of the Na- tionalists are Lutheran Protestants. If in the course of the next cam- paign the People's party can con: vince these Lutheran voters that the Nationalists have sold Germany to the Pope by legislating for thel creation of Catholic school and sup- porting the Centrists in a drive for a Concordat, it has a good chance of stealing some Junker votes. Spurious Prince is Tried German Ltberalism's anxiety over the schaol bill was offset by gleeful laughs it got at the trial of Harry Domela, a young swindler who tour- ed Thuringia last Winter in a hign- ly successful Inpersonation of Prince William of Prussia, the 'nldest son of the former Crown Prifice. Never since the celebrated Captain of Coep- enick made a monkey of German militarism twenty-odd years ago have the German foes of Hohen- gollernism and all it implies enjoy- ed themselves so much. Domela's story of his exploit told on the wit- ness stant at Cologne stripped the Royalist diehards bare and left them with nothing but their insane craving to cringe and crawl hefore a spurious scion of Prussia's Kings, The humorous side of the imposter's narrative was what chiefly interested the Republican press, of course. But there is a grave significance in the a dere either . 0 mo « Seal, Fuge lui Get Flic bon today. Distributed in Canada by Fred J. Whitlow @ Co., Limited, Toronto willingness, not only of superanu- ated courtiers, but of present day. officers and officials of the German Republic to manifest such amazing sevility toward one who even had he been a genuine Prince, would have been merely a youthful member of an ousted dynasty. "Domelackeys," as the Socialist Vorwaerts call them, convinced themselves without the slightest ef- fort on his part, and, indeed, with- out his knowledge, that Domela was the Kaiser's grandson. And once they were convinced neither his shabby raiment nor his evident lack of funds could affect their eagerness to prostrate themselves before him mentally if not physically. WANTED MAN REC APTURED Matheson, July 26.--Michael La- ronde, who escaped from jail at Sud- bury on Aug. 8, 1926, after felling Turnkey Myers with an iron har, and who has since been at liberty, was recaptured here on Saturday night hy Constables Delves and Craik of the Provincial Force. They found him in a poolroom and took him without a fight. : PARIS DECREE GRANTED TO MRS, GARDNER HALE Paris, July 26.--A divorce - was granted here hy the Paris courts to Mrs. Gardner Hale, who writes under the name '"Marice Ruthledge Hale." Mrs. Hale married Gardner Hale in Paris in 1916. He was her third hus- band. Applications for divorce were filed hy Mrs. James Lawrence Breese, who gives her Paris address as 7 Avenue Montignen. Another attempt at reconciliation was ordered in the case of Lucien Muratore, tenor, and his wife, Lina Cavalieri, Signor Muratore did not attend court when last asked to ap- pear for reconciliation. ST STORE CLOSED | open on Wednesday ay ing during July and August. GREENLY GROCERY we DETIvERT™ *™ MRRoNE 1 wd v p-- DISTINCTION AST and West the story is the same --Dominion Royal Cord Balloons are found on the cars of careful and experienced motor car owners who desire not only to buy the most economical tires, but who also wish to add that mark of distinction to their cars that Dominion Royal Cord Balloons ig give. dar Bowiinion Balloons DOMINION RUBBER COMPANY 1

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