Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Daily Times, 5 Nov 1927, p. 9

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The Osha -- a Baily Times The Oshawa!Daily Reformer "All the News While ! I: Is News" | I a VOL. 1--NO. 106 gt en Si EA OSHAWA, ONTARIO, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1927 _ 10 Cents a Week; 2 Cents a Copy. Second Sect.on--Pages 9-14 pi University of Toronto Schools, of Toronto, Canada, were too much tor Oshawa Collegiate Institute, of Osh. awa, Ontario, and consequently there is no more championship rug- by tor the remainder of the season tor the institution at the top of the long grina on Simcoe street, Osh- awa, Ontario. In other words, sometime between now and last Fri. day, a school whose colorg are green, gold and red, were defeated by a 17 10 6 score by a school which flaunts blue and white ribbon and shouts "Toronto, Toronto," every- where it goes, But anyway, it was one grand game of rugby which was requirea to eliminate Oshawa Collegiate In stitute from the interscholastic 0. R.F.U, series, One of those days which are described so nicely in College novels, a crowd that shat. tered all previous attendance rec- ords and the atmosphere of a de cilding game, all held sway las Saturday and the game did justice indeed to the day, the crowd ana the atmosphere. U.T.S. receives the best coaching in Toronto and perhaps in Ontario of any High School team in their class and out of it, and in addition they have an enrolment of over 1,- 000 boys trom which to hand-pick their team, so there is no need to advance any alibi, even if there was one, for the defeat which was hand- ed to the battling aggregation which represented OCI. on Saturday. Every player on the local team played marvelous rugby and even in defeat they won the applause of everyone who saw the game. Scoring his fourth touchdown ol the season, when he raced sixty yards down the field in the opening stages of the first quarter, Bil Gummow proved to one and all whe had not previously seen him in ac- tion this year, that his selection as captain of the team and as Scoti Hubbell"s mate on the half line in lien of his former position at out- side wing, had not been an idle one, Those who saw him play in the game at Cobourg four weeks ago were already aware of the fact. No, O.R.F.,U, doesn't' mean Or- ganized Rough Fellows' Union, but simply Ontario Rugby Football Union. A scrimmage isn't a popu- lar Monday morning pastime, and please remember, girls and first formers' that "a kick to the dead- line" is mot to be taken literally. (The Teck Tatler). After three Saturday's of activity the rugby team will hardly know what to do with themselves today on account of the fact that they are without a game until Monday when they go to Peterboro to re- new acquaintances with their old rivals, although it is a team in the Junior O.R.F.U, and not interschol- astic grouping which they are piay- ing this year. A Thanksgiving game should draw a monster crowd in the Lift Lock City while a like reception should be tendered thesc teams when the return game is played here next Saturday. Bowmanville High School's track- rughy team's battle with the local irack 'men yesterday afternoon was a lively and interesting affair from start to finish and a far better crowd than did, should have turned out to see the game. Bowmanville has a smart team which only lacks in weight and experience, and by next year should be well prepared to en- ter a team in some league, The lo- cal squad, considering the amount of practice they have had, did very well and their 15 to 5 victory was deserved. As was predicted, the Lindsay vol- legiate-Oshawa C. I. girls' basketball game on Wednesday afternoon was & contest well worth seeing and in fact well worth the wait of over an hour which was made necessary owing to the lateness in the arrival of the Lindsay team. Oshawa's victory was again by a wide margin although the game might well be "called a close one, as was that in "Lindsay where it is interesting to pote, a 27 to 17 score was hung up as contrasted to the 28 to 16 result here which was a difference of one point each way, over the previous count, A party of about twenty students and teachers left the bus station by. special bus from Prince street af 12.30 o'clock this afternoon en route for Toronto where they will have the pleasure of seeing the presen- tation of "The Merchant of Venice" by the Mantel players. It is to be jegretted that more could not have made the trip but perhaps at some future date those who are seeing the play will have the opportunity of reproducing some of the scenes in their own acting, for the bene- fit of those who stayed at home Such an idea would work in nicely with the Literary Society program which is promised. Another neat little motto has been introduced into the library and this (Continued on Page 11) BY RAGING NEW ENG FLOODS TO LAND STATES QUEEN OF RUMANIA REPORTED PRISONER London, Nov. 4.--Under the large type headline "Queen Marie as a Prisoner," the Daily Mail prints a despatch from Sofia, Bulgaria, pur- porting to give "thoroughly reliable information" from Roumania that the Bratiano Government will not allow the Dowager Queen and Prin- cess Helen to leave Bucharest for fear they will join the forces of former Crown Prince Carol. The despatch claims that the ean- cellation by Carol's abandoned wife >f her plan to leave for Florence, italy, a fortnight ago, was dae to he Government stonping her. The Premier and his brother, vintila Bratiano, who is. Finance 'inister, are steering between a pol cv of discrediting the royal fam- 'v and one having the appearance f a dictatorship, says the despatch, AGED WIFE SLAIN IN QUARREL, CHARGE Farmer, 70, Beat Invalid, 85, to Death, Police Say Midland, Ont., Nov. 5---Charged vith beating his 85-year-old inval- *d wife to death, Joseph Dettloff, armer, aged 70, was arrested here >on Thursday. Arraigned in the justice Court, he waived examina- don and was bound over to Circuit Jo.rt tc appear November 15. Dettlofi is charged with killing 1is aged wife during a quarrel at heir hone on oMnday. He eame to Midland Wednesday to arrange for her funeral. When an undertaker 'ond Mrs. Dettloff had suffered 12 .ractured ribs, bruises and cuts, he notified the sheriff, One of the broken ribs had punctured her heart, The ac used denied the slaying, but is said by police to have ad- mitted striking his wife. He said she died after a fa'l from a window foi- lowing their quarrel, BIGGER AIR MAIL Over Twenty Lives Already Lost, While Millions of Dollars' Damage Has Re- Inundating Lands and Car- rying Away Bridges Montreal, Que., Nov. 4.-----Two known dead, enormous' propert; damage, and disrupted railroad, tele. phone and telegraph communication, stood tonight as the toll of floods which followed three days of inces- sant rainfall in Quebec. Reports from all dist. icts tonight, indicated that the rains had ceased and that swollen rivers were suhsid- ing. Restoration of communications was being accomplished slowly and full reports from isolated district: were lacking. Sydney Atkinson, 20, was drown- ed at Lavenir, Quebec, late todav when he fell from a warcon on which he was riding from Kirkdale to Rich- mond. The othe» fatality ocenrred near Warwick. when P. Campden, C.N R. section foreman, died from injurier he received when a freight tr-in was derailed owing to a washed-out bridge. Reports from Jastern townshins most. heavily hit bv the flonds, nlaced the damage at over $1,000,- 000. Neath and destruction were tnday riding the crest of angry flood waters that swirled in unprecedented fnrv over five New England States, part of New York. and up into Canada. The cost in human life and in property damage could not yet be counted, for the waters had not re- ceded to reveal the full tracedy of their passing, and communication to manv of the most seriously affected districts was still comnletelv destroy- ed. It was easy to estimate, how- ever, that the loss in property would run well into the millions of dollars and it was feared that when the final count of human life, sacrificed to the (Continued on Page 14) CLAIMS BURNING OF GARAGE WAS MORE OR LESS ACCIDENT St, Catharines, Ont.,, Nov. 4. Emanuel B. McIntyre, Mount Hamil. ton young man, was remanded for sentence after a hearing on an ar- son charge here today. McIntyre admitted entering the garage of Fred Nunamaker on the night of October 7, for the purpose of stealing some gasoline. He said POUNDAGE IN U. 3. Increase Credited to Flight of Col. Charles Lind- bergh New York, Nov. 5--Col. Charles A. Lindbergh's flight to Paris last May so stimulated public confidence in avia- tion that since then the United States air. mail poundage has increased over 50 per cent, William P. McCracken, Assistant Secretary of Commerce for Aviation, said Wednesday night. He was one of the speakers at a testimonial dinner to Raymond Orteig, hotel man, who awarded Lindbergh a $25,000 prize for making. the first flight from New York to Paris. * Mr. Ortieg was decorated with the Cross of the Legion of Honor by the French Consul-General, Maxime Mon- gendre, at the function which was at- tended by Lindbergh, Clarence D. Chamberlin, Lieut. Lester J. Mait- Jand and other noted pilots. FIRE FANS SEE NEW HOSE BURST WALLS Chicago Firemen Demonstrate Appliance at Real Con- flagration Chicago, Nov. 5---The only fire to which Chicago fire fans were able to travel leisurely before it started, obtain good seats, and then watch the excitement was started by fire- men themselves yesterday. Despite the protesis of fire under- writers that the demonstration was. dangerous, the Fire Commissioner today set fire to an abandoned four- storey brick building in Wacker Drive to demonstrate that a new high pressure hdse could squirt a stream of water that would knock the bricks loose. Two upper floors of the building, filled with oil-sodked excelsior, were touched off and the blaze started with a roar. The 5,000 cheering fire fans watched the new hose wagon brought into play. When the water was turned on and bricks began pop- ping from the walls the dodging fans voted the demonstration a huge success, that as he was filling a can some gasoline splashed over his cigarette lighter, which he was using to light his way in the building, The result was an inimediate flareup, his coat catching fire. He then emerged from the burning building as quickly us he could and later borrowed a gai- lon of gasoline to get home. The garage was entirely destroyed, and one motor car, belonging to Super- intendent William Greer, of Jordan canning factory. Mclntyre's story in police court may be discredited by further ,. lice investigation, He admitted mak- ing the confession about setting fire to the garage during his in- carceration in Wentworth Jail, on a theft charge, as he wanted to leave that jail. WATERLOO HISTORICAL SOCIE. TY ELECTS OFFICERS FOR YEAR Kitchener, Ont., Nov. 4 ---The Waterloo Historical Society, at its fifteenth annual meeting here this evening, elected the following offi- cers: President, D. N, Panabaker, Hespeler; vice-president, Rev. J. E. Lynn, Kitchener; secretary-treasur- er, P. Fisher, Kitchener; membérs of the council, Miss B. M. Dunham, W J. Motz, W. H. Breithaupt, all of Kitchener, and W. V. Uttley of El- mira, Local vice-presidents, Galt James E. Kerr; Hespeler, W. H. Weaver; New Hamburz A. R, Smith; St. Jacobs, E. Richmond; Waterloo, Dr. C. W. Wells; Elmira, George Klinck; Ayr, Miss D. Wat- s6n; museum and publishing com- mittee, W. H. Breithaupt, W. J. Motz and Miss B. M. Dunham, Kitch- ener, (tH 0 sulted -- The Storm Also| Sweeps in Parts of Canada| FRANCE REAGHES LONG IMPENDING POLITICAL CRISES Breck Occurs Shortly Afi Opening of Parlia- ment DEPUTY QUITS POST Bouillon Resigns as President of Foreign Affairs Com- . mission Paris; Nov. 5--A leng impend ing political erisis broke with aa few mmutes of the assembly oi tarinament Thursday aiternoon when drankiin Bouillon resigned as presi teni or the Chamber of Deputies co.eign Atfans Commission. His ccason was lus Radical party's re- war to continue its support of Pre- mier Raymond Poin ares "National Jnion" Government. Bouillon simultaneously his resignation from membership in he Raaical group. He has urged consistently tual ms party continue its | vacking ut the Government, Sequel to dp.t Franklin bowlion s 1esignation was a sequel to 2 split over poucies inthe Kduiedl pacty, winch, wan 150 mem- beea the Government's saongest supporting element. acuard caladier, newiy elected chatman of tue parity, inchines toward Jie extreme left or the cuamber. it 15 possibile the fate of Pomncare's overnment may hinge on develop- Jems within the next few days, As the chamber met, Pomcare made scciet of his plan wo 1oice through oelore january 1, the 1948 budget which many members would prefer to wscuss lewsurely., without tne defection of the Radi- cals, politicians haa predicted it would ve successful. The belligerent Premier nad mtended to make each proposal a question ol confidunee in the Govern- ment, thus holding a threat of resig- nauon over the hicads of the Chamber. 'that would be the 'more effective, he tuought, because ot his. tremend- ous success in stabilizing currency af- «er having stalled its decline on what secmed the brink of collapses it was reported Socialists planned to stipe at the Government on its for- eign and domestic poucy, concentrat- img on relations with Russia, Germany and Italy; their demand that ambas- zadors to Italy and to the Pope be withdrawn, the Ligh cost ui uving ana the housing shortage, LABOR MAY TIE UP N.Y. SUBWAYS Leaders Confer -- Will Either | Strike or Go To Courts announced De. s, has i New York, Nov. 5. -- New York faced the possibility of a subway strike on Thursday as union leaders conferred on whether to call a strike immediately or to take their chances in the injunction proceedings with the Iinterboro Rapid Transit on November 11. : William D. Mahon, president of the Amalgamated Assoeiation of Sireet and Electric Railway Employees, ar- rived Thursday from Detroit. He went into conference immediately with local unions as to what action should be taken in the suit of the LLR.T., for an injunction restraining the Amalgamat- ed from recruiting LRT. employees and for the discharge of eight mem- bers of the Amalgamated by the Brooklyn-Manhattan Transit. ADVISES TWO NEW SCHOOLS BE BUILT IN ST. CATHARINES St. Catharines, Ont., Nov. 5--The recommendation of Inspector Greer, of the Department of Education, who recently made a survey of the city, calls for the erection of two new public schools, and provision for Glen Ridge as a solution of the school problem. Acute congestion was found in several schools, The Board of Education has ex- hausted estimates for this year and the enlargement plan can only be launched in 1928. 1 Casa Blanca, Morocco, Nov. 5. -- "Our punitive action will be vigorous," Governor-General Theodore Steeg an- nounced on Thursday in discussing the recent kidnapping of four white women and two white men, including his nephew. "Ould Guerni and his followers had planned to kidnap a rich merchant who travels to the villages and who is known to earry large sums of mo- ney," Steeg said. "While the tribesmen were waiting for the merchant, my nephew and his VIGOROUS PUNITIVE ACTION TO BE TAKEN AGAINST KIDNAPPERS three companions passed in an auto- mobile. Maillet (Jean Maillet, one of the party) shot at a wild bird. At the sound of the shot, the bandits re- plied by firing into the air. Then they surrounded the party. "The fate of the Arnaud girls who had "beer captured previously is just as important for They have no mother or father to look after their inter- ests." The parents of the Arnaud girls were killed when ransom negotiations fell through, Ad JUVENILE DELINQUENCY Praises Oshawa Public Health Department DEATH, HAVOC CAUSED ACT IN USE ONLY IN PATCHES IN ONTARIO David B. Harkness, of Social Service Council and For- mer Judge of Winnipeg Juvenile Court, Who is Making Survey of Condi- tions in Oshawa, Much Im- pressed With Local Nurs- ing System ard Young People's Work -- Would Teach Young Men and Girls Ideas "o Brirg About Safe and Sane Adulthsod With a view to ascerta'ning social conditions in Oshawa David B. Hark- ness, well known throughout Canada as a former judge of the Winnipeg Tuvenile Court and now Educational Secretary of the Social Service Coun cil of Ontario, visited Oshawa Thursday and Friday of this week. Judge Hark- ness, left for Toronto last night and will return later to complete his sur- vey. Considerable time has heen spend duiing manthy hv ludge Hark- ness in visiting the various communi- ues throughout the province in study- ing and gathering data relating to so- cial service work. When a represen- tative of The Oshawa Daily Times called at the Central Hotel yesterday afternoon for an interview, he found Judge Harkness most willing to ds cuss the work in which he is engaged delving immediately into a host of sub- jects, Visits are being made to offiz'a's and those connected with the various so- cial organizations with a view to get- ting in touch with the workings of the departments, The public health ques- tions of the city are being delved into most thoroughly and in this connection the judge commented very favourably claiming that the combined system here represents one of the best in the prov- ince... Children's "Aid Society work is also receiving attention, while the pub- lic school questions are also being noted. The maniier is which members of the public school teaching staff take charge of their work in connection with social. service, the exceptionally large (Continued on Page 14) DUCK-SHOOTING SKEPTIC TESTS "PROHIBITED" SIGNS Niagara Falls, Ont., Nove. 4--A test case will probably follow the action this afternoon of William ("Rcd") Hill, who went down to the Maid of the Mist landing, on park property, and shot two ducks, in defiance of the many notices warning: "No shooting "or carrying of firearms on park pro- Hl's perty." Park policemen took name, and, interviewed tonight, Cap- tain James R. Bond, of the Park Com- mission said a charge will be laid. The case will probably settle for all time what is a vexed question locally : whe- ther it is legal to shoot or whether the rights are vested in the Park Com- mission. RENEWED BOYCOTT OF BRITISH IN CANTON IS IN FULL SWING Canton, China, Nov, 4.--A renew ed boycott of the British by the Chinese is in full swing here, pre. sumably as an endeavor to rally pop ular support to the newly organ- ized Canton regime under leaders of the original Nationalist move ment, The renewed boycott coincides with the return of Wang Ching-Wei T. V. Song and others belonging to the Nationalist government which was responsible for the British boy- cott of 1925. i a ------ ROBBED DETROIT GOLF CLUB LOST MONEY PLAYING GOLF Detroit, Nov. 4--Arrested in Louisville yesterday on a fugitive warrant which charged him with embezzling $2,470 from the Haw- thorne Valley Golf Club, Dearborn, Clifford Shefton, 16 years old, of Walkerville, was brought back here tonight and is lodged in the juvenile detention home. He is charged with grand larceny. Shefton was employed as a clerk at the golf club and had access to the office safe. He told the police he had lost the money playing the races. BOY TRAMPS BEFRIENDED Kitchener, Nov. 4.--Two boy tramps who have made their way from Hali- fax to the Niagara Peninsula, thence to North Bay and finally to this city, are now working in a local factory, as a result of the friendly interven- tion of several men interested in mak- ing good citizens of them. They are known as Dan Harvey and Victor Hartnett. POPULATION OF TURKEY ABOUT 14,000,000 PERSONS Constantinople, Nov. 4--The recent census held throughout 'Turkey, which it was planned would show for the first time in the country's history the exact number of its population, placed the total at approximately 14,000 000 persons, it was indicated today in fig- ures published here, i - SISTERS WILL HANC FOR SLAYING FATHER Ohmiuetz, Moravia, Nov. 5. Two sisters, Theresa and Anna Zboril on Thursday were sentenced to death by hanging for poisoning their father be- cause he would not permit his younger daughter to marry the man of her choice. The sisters who were charged with putting poison in his milk, pought- mourning clothes and ordered a ¢ fin one week before their fath- er's death. BY SUPREME COURT Judgment Reserved in Appeal For Injury And Slander Ottawa, Nov. 5. -- Judgment was reserved by the Supreme Court of Canada on Wednesday in the appeal entered by C. W. Halls from the deci- sion of the Appellate Divisional Cou:t of Ontario which reversed the finding of a lower court awarding Halls $500 for libel and $200 for slander and costs against Dr. J. P. Mitchell, Chief Me dical Officer of the Canadian Nation al Railway, Toronto. The case is in respect of a claim for 'njury sustained by Halls to an eye. Halls went for treatment to Dr. Mit- chell, who remembered having treat- ed the patient some years previously for an infection which might ziven rise to the injury complained f. Searching his reccrds he found that his memory was correct. To substantiate his own records, Dr. Mitchell applied to the records branch of the Department of Soldiers Civil Re-Establishment which forwarded him a precis of Halls' medical his- tory sheet, This showed Halls 'to have suffered from a previous ailment, but later the department discovered that they had made a mistake in spe- cifying the ailment. Dr. Mitchell reported to the Work- men's Compensation Board, showing letters and other documents had dis- closed the presence of the earlier in- fecticn. The defence is that the dis- closures and allegation of the previous infection were made on a privileged occasion. FIRST COURT REPORT FOR DUKE OF YORK | Unprecedented Honor Stirs Nation to Significance of His Status London, Nov. 5.--Evidence that the royal family is facing the possibility of the Prince of Wales dying unmarried was seeit here Thursday when for the first time in history the honor of a court circular was accorded anyone but the King and his immediate heir. A simple statement, headed "145 Piccadilly" and detailing the activities of the Duke of York, the King's second son, for the previous day brought to the attention oi the whole country the frequently discussed fact that the Prince, now 33 years old, shows no disposition whatever to marry and pro- vide himself with an he'r. . Interestingly, it is the first time that a court circular ever has been is- sued from a numbered house. The Kmng's court circulars are dated fro Buckingham Palace, Balmoral Castle, Windscr Castle, or other royal abodes, Those of the Prince of Wales cus- tomarily are headed St. James Palace. TO TEST SHOOTING RIGHTS ON LOWER NIAGARA RIVER Niagara Falls, Ont., Nov, 5--The ownership of the shooting rights on lower Niagara River will probably be decided by a test case following the action of William 'Red' Hill, who this afternoon = disregarded signs warning "No carrying of fire- arms or shooting on park property" and shot two ducks. Park policemen took Hill's name, and, interviewed tonight, Capt. James R. Bond of the commission said that a charge will be laid against anyone greak- ing the by-law on firearms. It may be that the case will set- tle a vexed local question as to { Whether the park commission has i the power to precent shooting along | the banks of the Niagara. PULEY WHIRLED TO DEATH Sherbrooke, Que., Nov. 4.--Gerald Pomerleu, 19. of the Thetford Mines, a bridezroo:n of two weeas, was instantly kil'ed today while at Johnson's concentrating mili at the { Thetford Mines, While Pomerleu was trying to put a convever belt on a pulley his arm { became caught, and before the mo- (tor could be stoped he was dead. | CAUGHT BY have ! + EARLE NELSON WILL PROBABLY KNOW FATE TODAY Case Complete So Far as the Taking of Evidenc: is Concerned DRAMATIC SCENES Specialist States Positively Alleged Strangler is Sane Winnipeg, Nov. 4--Earle Nelsen, 1} man of countless aliases, who trial for the murder of Mrs. Emil Pat orcon of Winnipeg, a crime d scribed by the Crown as "one of t! most revolting in criminal histor: will probably know his fate tomorr The case stands completed exces for the Judge's charge and the verd 4 the jury. . Dramatic Moments The final chapters of the trial t day were replete with dramatic m ments. Beginning with the appearan- | i the prisoner's wife and aunt, whe between them, pieced together strange life story of the man, con tinued by a specialist cn ment)! diseases, the day's developments reac! ied an anti-climax as opposing ¢ un delivered their addresses to the jury, [ Throughout his final stand in d | fense of the alleged "strangler" Jam H Stitt, senior defense counsel, pur sued a plea of insanity, which, h hope ill save the accused from t rallon Foli 1s Of ing evidence in which M Mary fuller, the prisoner's wife, a ! Mrs. Lillian Fabian, his aunt told « | the "maniacal eccentricities" of Nelsg irom early childhood, defense couns a HAVE ROT INPREMIER'S HO (Continued on Page 14) Iron Girders Are Now B:i Installed in Country Ho: | Chequers London, Nov. 5 --Whlle | were repairing the roof of C the country house of th2 ister in Buckinghamshire i they fcund that some of had rotted. It was decided I<atety of the (building thar i | girders must be used to renlace {decayed beams. This work, which 'is now being done. is expected to cunv several months, The maintenance of Chequers in the hands of the.Cheauers True which was formed when Lord Lee of Wareham presented the house to th nation for the use of Prime Minis ters, Not long avo it was found neec»n- sary to carry out underpinnin~ operations at 10 Downing Street, th London house of the Prime Minister. Manv tons of liouid concrete were ramnad into the foundation to nike the house secre, e FORMER RC PREMIER PASSES AT ACE OF "1 Ateroft, BC.. Nov. 4---Hon. C. A Semin aged 94, who became Premier of British Columbia jn 1898, and held that office until 190), died here Thurs- day morning. He had been ill for nearly a year, > Charles Auvustus Semlin was born in Ontario. He came to British Co- Iimbia in 1862. He was elected to the Provincial Legislature in 1871. As a Conservative he held office as Chief Commissioner of Lands and Works for the Province. Provincial Secretary and Minister of Education. His Govern- ment, taking office on Aug. 12, 1898, succeeded the Government of Ton. J. H. Turner. The Semlin Ministry went out of office, and Hon. Joseph Martin formed a Government, which took of- i fice on March 1, 190. M DEANERY ASSOCIATION FOREOR WELLINGTON COUNTY Guelph, Ont, Nov. 4--Representa- "tives of Young People's Associations | from various parts of Wellington i County gathered here and formed a | Deanery Association, The following | officers were elected: Patron, Rt. Rev. Derwyn T. Owen, Lord Bishop of Nia- oara: Hon. President, Ven. Archdea- con G. F. Scovil, Guelph; President, | Rev. W. G. Luxton, Fergus; Vice-Pre- | sident, Mr. J. Car, Guelph; S-.cretacy- | Treasurer, Miss Rita Barber, Guelph. {wo representatives from each Paro- chial Association, with the officers, will | constitute a deanery council. | Arrangements were made for a con- | ference of all AY.P.A's of the district to meet in St. George's Church, Guelph, on November 21. ACCEPTS CALL TO MANITOBA Guelph, Ont. Nov. 4.--Rev. W. A, Wescott, of the Cona and Woodland charges of the United Ch. , La: ac- cepted a call "from the or atom of the United church, Delo.an . . uni- toba. Mr. Wescott will leave | ) braine in November,

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