Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Daily Times, 10 Oct 1927, p. 8

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" osAWA DAILY. TIMES, [Hews of Eastern Ontario | HOLY NAME RALLY I The annual rally of the Holy {Name Society at Peterboro was held 'Sunday afternoon, and several hun- red men from the city and sur- {rounding district attended. The ser- ivice was held at St. Peter's Catne- ay where a sermon was preach- Bo Rev. Father Donnelly, C.S. of Amherstburg. a haven IN BROCKVILLE 43 YEARS The death occurred in Brockville denly on Sunday of John Carutn, ive of Ireland, but resident of Brockville for for forty-three years ring the greater part of which me he was engaged in the lumber h usiness. He was in 'his sixty-fourth ear, and is survived by his widow daughter of the late John Wilsor ¢ this town, and one brother, Jame Ireland. At 'one time he was ember of the Town Council am e always took a deep interest i unicipal affairs. He was a Maso! nd an Oddfellow and an elder 01 the First Presbyterian Church. i PEMBROKE WINS FROM ARNPRIOR § By defeating Arnprior Higl chool in both games of a double header played in Pembroke Satur ay. Pembroke Collegiate got awa' 0 a flying start in the Renfrev ounty Interscholastic Rugby Lea ue. The scores were 46--6 in th: senior game smd. 10--1 in the jur or. The superiority of the Penbrok« kfield accounted largely for tne big score In Lhe senior event, the work of Cotie and Wallace standin: ut, with Anderson and Remus equ 1ly effective. In the final period Co ie ran 90 yards for a touchdown Nab and McNeill played well fo: rnprior and the latter secured on b a touchdown. { MR, J. N. PRINGLE DIES } John Nelson Pringle died at an erly hour Sunday morning at his {satdence, 48 North Front street elleville. The deceased was born in ananee in 1845, but had resided n Bel'eville practically: all his life tperating a sash and door factory for many years. He succeeded his father, the late A N. Pringle, in the fnanagement of the sash and dour pears, facior. However, for the past seven years the late 'Mr. Pritigle had been barn from, business. During his lifetime he had employed a lange number of men, and was highly ue- teemed as an employer. The late Mr. Pringle was a member of Bridge Street Church and was interested in all church movements. He is sur- vived by his widow and one grand- daughter, Miss Alice Sulman, MARKET AT PR PRESCOTT Vegetables were the principal of-' fering on Saturday's market ai Pres- cott. Market comditions were favor- able, quite a number of farmers he ing in town. Prices, on the whale, showed Mttle change' Butter, 45c a pound; eggs, 45¢c a dozen; honey, 5c a pound; chickens, 30 to 36c a ound; potatoes, $1 to $.125 a bu- hel; beets, 70¢; carrots, 7Ce; arsnips, $1; omions, $1.25 t= $1.50 'bushel; corn, 15¢ a dozen; ¢ucum- ers, three for 5¢; pickling onions, 0c to $1 a basket; cabbage, 5¢ to 5c; cauliflower, 10 to 20c each; eppers, 20c a dozen; celery, 10c a nch;" lettuce, 5 to 10c a head; quash, 10 to 20c¢; pumpkins, 5 to .5c each; parsley, 6¢ a bunch; to- 1atoes, 35 to 50c a basket; green omatoes, 25 to 40c a basket; ap- les, $1 to $2 a bushel; crabapples 5 to 50c a asket; grapes, 60 t« '5c a basket; pears, 76c to $1 a asket; plums, 70 to 85c a basket; aelons, 10 to 25c¢c each, Hay, $10 o $12 a 'ton. Oats, 60 to When bu- hel. MARKET AT "PETERBORO Produce was very plentiful at the 'armers' market'in Petetboro Satur 'ay. Baskets, crates and rigs were werflowing at a late Hour. Prices were fairly s'eady. fin jtihe upper ections ~hickens were priced from '5 to 28¢ a pound and ducks at 30¢ Zream was 30c a pint; butter, 44 o 48¢c a pound, and eggs 48c¢c a dozen, Headcheese was 25¢ in small prints. Downstairs , Irish Cobbler otatoes were quoted at 30c¢ a.peck and $1.75 a bag. Apples were plent-- iful. Winter Bellflowers selling at $2 a bag, Wealthies at 40 and 0c a ve~k and Wolf Rivers at 35c. Peach- es were $1 and $1.50 + a basket; 75¢ and $1; grapes, b56¢; cranberries, 25¢c a quart; and sweet potatoes 60c a peck; clover honey was 76c and $1.40 in five 'pound pails, and buckwheat honey was 10c a pound; clover sections were 26¢ apiece. Tomatoes were $1 a bushel wild 'grapes 60c a basket and little | miniacure preserving tomatoes 10c a quant box, Melons were priced from 6 to 26¢c each. Little pigs wee $8 a pair. Corn was 10 and 16¢ a dozen. ARRESTED ON CHARGE OF OPERATING A DISORDERLY HOUSE + (By Staff Reporter) Whitby, Oct. 10.--A man and two girls were taken into custody last night by Chief of Police Gunsun acting. with Provincial Constable Geo. Cookman. The trio were found in a house which has been under surveillance for some time. They will appear before the Magistrate today on changes of keeping and being tound in a disorderly house. Man having found a perfect wo- man, marries her. Then he spends years trying to improve her.--Bran- don Sun. Girls! Tell This To Your Skinny Friend Tell him that the quick easy way to put pounds of solid. flesh on his ones is to take McCoy's Cod Liver Extract Tablets. Tell him that besides helping him to fill out. his flat chest and sunken 'heeks and neck McCoy's will make him strong and vigorous and give "im more ambition. 5 Miss Alberta Rogers, thin and run-down gained 15 pounds in, six weeks. MeCoy takes all the risk--Read this ironclad guarantee. If after tak- ing 4 sixty cent boxes of McCoy's Cod Liver Extract Tablets or 2 One Dollar boxes any thin, underweight man or woman doesn't gain at least 5 pounds and feel completely satis- fied with the marked improvement in health your druggist is author- ized to return the purchase price. Ask Jury & Lovell Ltd., T. B. Mit- chell or any good druggist. i---------------- * The Newest Fall Felt Hats OCTOBER COAT SALE at the ARCADE FSSC Rich and Supple Fabrics In the New October Sale Prices $16.95 $26.50 $29.75 Smart Ne Cod NEVER Jiave the Coats of Fall and Winter been so luxurious--so abundantly trimmed with lovely furs--never have such beautiful coats sold at such low prices---come, buy your coat at this Great October Sale. OSHAWA, LIMITED $35.00 'Hospital, Wosdstodk Cound Lose Lives in Crossing Smash While Two-Year-Old Sen is Per haps Fatally Injured -- Passed Another Car Into Path of Radial Brantford, Ont... Oct. 9.--The Brantford and Hr milton radial cross- ing of the Hamilton-Brantford Pro- vincial Highway took another toll of life on Sunday morning, when Mr, and Mrs. Robert Anderson, 110 Mill Street, Woodstock, met death and their three-year-old son serious in- juries, including a fracture of the skull, Their sedan was totally wreck- ed from the impact. The accident happened as the 9.45 radial car reached the crossing. Her- bert Hamilton, Echo Place, and his daughter, were driving east and, seeing the anproach of the radial, stopped to allow it to pass. The An. derson car was following directly behind, and when Mr. Hamilton's car stopped, it swerved and passed on the left directly in the path of the radial. Apparently the radial hit the rear end of the sedan, then ripping the side and top out and hurling the car into the diteh, turning it around as it did so. Help was at once at hand, but Anderson was killed instantly, and Mrs. Anderson. expired almost at once, before medical attention could be secured. The child was rushed to the Brantford General which late this afternoon reported his condition as fair, but with serfons injuries, The view of an approaching radial for motorists going esrt as was the Woodstock car, is obscured by apple trees. The radial ear, it is stated by witnesses, was going at a low rate of speed, put on speed to cross when the An- having sounded its whistle, and, az the crossing, appeared clear, had nut on speed to cross when the An- derson car snddenly anpeared in sight. The motorman had no chance to stop the heavy radial. An inauest will be held under Coroner C. C. Fissette, Two Killed Near Brantford "When Radial Hits Auto ELDERLY MAN HIT BY UNKNOWN GAR AT LYNDE'S GREEK Found By He "Roadside in an . Unconscious Condition IN OSHAWA HOSPITAL Has a Brokén Shoulder .and Numerous Minor Injuries (By Staff Reporter) Whitby, Oct. 10.--Struck down by an unknown motorist, an elderly man apparently about sixty years of rge was found in an unconscious condit'on, lying by the roadside at Lynde's Creek a mile west of Whit- tv. The injured man was seen by the road bv a motorist from Toron- to and brought into Whithy, where he was attended by Dr. MacLaren He was then taken to the hospital in Oshawa by Chief of Police H. (Cpmson. There it was found that he had a broken shoulder in addition to minor injuries. At a late hour last night, the man's identity was not known as his clothing had mot been searched .for anything to iden- tifv him and he was still uncon scious. REMUS PLEADS NOT GUILTY TO FIRST DEGREE MURDER Cincinnati, Ohio, Oct, 7--George Re- mus, once called "the King of boot- leggers," today entered a plea of not guilty to a first degree murder charge in connection with the shooting to death of his wife, Imogene, and re- turned to jail reiterating that he was justified in the killing. CANADA WELL UP INHIGHWAY GENSUS Has 54,611 Miles of Hard Surface Highways--Latin America Behind Highway surveys of "the various countries of the western hemisphere by the world motor transport comniit- tee of the International Association of Automobiles Manufacturers, have just been completed and the results have been forwarded to the headquar- ters of that organization in Paris. The world motor transport commit- tee, appointed at the July 18 meeting of the international motor body in Paris, and consisting of Roy D. Chaplin, pre- sident National Automobile Chamber of Cemmerce, as chairman; Petiet, president of the French Auto- mobile Manufacturers' Association Dr. Georges Hanel, secretary of the Austrian = Automcbile Mz anufacturers' Assoeiation, and Colonel Alfred Hack- ing, secretary of the Society of Motor Manufacturers and Traders of Great Britain, is to institute a campaign to extend the use of highway transport in all 'countries. These surveys are a preliminary step towards that end, and were made in co-operation with the U.S. bureau of foreign and domes- tic commerce ; the Canadian department of highways and the highway com- mittee of the National Automobile Chamber of Commerce. Further sur- vevs will be made of other parts of the globe in conjunction with zuto- motive organizations in those coun- tries, Comparison of highway mileage in 16 leading countries of South and Central America, with figures for the United States and Canada clearly in- dicates the magnitude of the field for highway improvement in Latin-Ameri- ca to bring their systems to a par with those ©f their northern neighbors. These 16 countries, whose total area exceeds that of the US. and Canada combined and is more than double ei- ther of their individual areas, have at present approximately 12670 miles of surfaced highways and 111,900 miles of dirt roads, while Canada has 54611 miles of surfaced highways and 323,- 629 miles of dirt roads, and the US. has 521,260 miles surfaced and 2,484,- miles dirt. It is felt that increased highway mileage, coupled with equitable motor Baren | taxation not burduesome to the indi- vidual, will further motor vehicle use to the added efficiency of all countries, and it is to this end that the commit- 'tee aims to aid in supplying data which will 'provide more widespread know- ledge as to how improved highways and low-cost transportation can be ob- tained. FTE, Most men would be glad to pay a large income tax for the sake or having that kind of income. --Cn- cago News. Every woman is likely to be in the wrong until she begins to cry ~--then she is all Fight.--Chieaso News, Colder Weather. Are you prepared for a sudden change in the temperature? summer is gone and the nights are getting colder. Wise people are ordering their fuel now. Phone us for your next order: Buy reliable fyel from a reli. able firm. , ; COAL-- (Lehigh Valley) Stove, per ton . . Nut, per ton ... COKE-- Per ton, $13.00 Hard Slabs, load . .$3.75 Mixed Slabs, load .$3.50 Soft Slabs, load . . $3.25 Waterous-Meek-. LIMITED Yards Cedardale Uptown Office Phone 1288 66 King W. Phone 660 $16.00 $15.50 Coats at Standards, will be selling on Tuesday. your opportunity. Our large stock of Bridge and Junior Lamps, that comprise Silk Parchment fitted on walnut finished Polychrome and Art Iron and Crepatin Shades offered at a discount ranging from 259 to 50% off the regular prices. See these in our window Monday night, as they will be up for If you require a lamp now is Or -ry, [1411 § 1s 7) / Ket ' Bridge and Junior Lamps at a reduction of LUKE |..-50.. Furniture Company

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