Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Daily Times, 14 Nov 1927, p. 7

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PAGE SEVEN | Screen News by "Old Bill" ) | h and Reviews -- "What Price Glory" Opens _ at Regent This Eveni ip -- "What Price Glory" the massive road-show film production . reaches an Oshawa screen for the first time, when it opens at seven o'clock this evening at the Regent theatre for a limited engagement of three nights and spécial Wednesday matinee. An augmented orchestra under the dai- rection of Jack Watson will height- en the action of the sensational film during the engagement, «What Price Glory" ia a wonder- ful picture, stirring entertainment and, above all things, vehemently interesting, It has been picturized from the successful stage vehicle written by Maxwell Anderson and Lawrence Stallings. It has all the ringing spirit of the play with a pic- torial impressiveneas that no stage production could ever possess. It is a cripping story of two men and a woman with a background of war MEMORIAL SERVICE AT, 57. ANDREWS Rev. F. J. Maxwell Takes an Appropriate Text for Sermon VISIT MEMORIAL | Lay Wreaths on Garden of the Unforgotten as a Tribute | to War Dead Impressive service marked the atten- | dance yesterday morning . at St. An- drew's Presbyterian Church, of mem- mers of the Qgange Lodge, accompan- told in startling realism. Raoul Walsh, who direeted the big picture | has kept faith with the authers, for | he has with uncanny skill, translated | these humans to the sereen, not mere pieture puppets, but pulsating men and women who live and breathe, laugh and ery, fight and love--a veritable maelstrom of emotions. There is the background of war, of course, but "What Price Glory" em- orges on the serean as an epie of Jaughs behind the lines, It is a drama of life, fierce and ugly, beautiful and rapturous, and the whale etched with bits of comedy, so naturally funny that it wakes the visibilities to a newer and finer sense of humor. Two sereenines each night will be siven commencing at seven and nine o'clock. Prices to the evening per- formances for children wil be twenty-five cents. and fifty cents for adnlts. The special Wednesday ma- | EY POLORES DELRIO a "WHAT PRICE GLORH® WILMLAM FOX ATTRACTION DPELORES DEL RIO Featured feminine role in the mas- sive screen production "What Price Glory" opening at the Re- gent theatre tonight for a limited engagement of three nights and special Wednesday matinee, An augmented orchestra accompanies the big picture. SWAM 18 MILES IN LAKE HERE Thomas Nisby, 19 Celina St., Planned to Enter C.NE. tinee will commence at two-thiry, . when children will he admitted for Swim fifteen and adults thirty cents, The -- ie amusement tax is included in all | Another addition has been made prices. & he "to Oshawa's athletic population in ! STORK ARCADES TO SOIVE MONTREAL TRAFFIC PROBLEM | Montreal, Nov. 13. --Cutting a-| way existing sidewalks to add 16, feet to the roadway, and acquiring sround floor arcades in stcres on hoth sides of the thoroughfare, may Ive the untown traffic problem on (Oatherine streat, city hall engin- cers believe, Loi They point to the system under which some Eurdpean cities, notab- the person of Thomas Nishy, 19 Ce- lina street, and who was formerly of Fort William. Nisby is a swim- mer who has been in training for some time and had intended enter- ing the Canadian National Ekhibi- tion swim, but was forced out when he could find no financial backers, Diligent training has made Nisby in the best of condition and now he is in a shape fit to enter any long distance race. Recently he swam the distance from Oshawa to Bowman- Iv German, have succeeded in plac-| ville and back, a stretch of 18 miles, ing sidewalks within the street | without a stop, Considering the building line. As an alternative, a | condition of Lake Ontario water, subway for street cars under St. |this is a real feat. That the C.N.E, Catharines street, running from | course of approximately 21 miles Westmount Station on the C. I. R. could be negotiated in about twelve to Maisonneuve, is mentioned. Both, of eoarse, are schemes of the fu- ture, KILLED IN ELEVATOR Winnipeg, Man, Nov. 12,-- Caught in the doorway of an auto- matie elevator in a downtewn build ing, Thomas H, Cairns, 70, a resi- dent of Winnipeg for 45 years, was crughed to death, and a half hours was one of Nishy's firm convictions, That Nighy is in earnest over his swimming ventures is founded by the fact that since January 1 until within a few days ago, he has swum and trained daily. In the water jaunts which Nisby takes, he does no less than a four-mile stretch, . CHAMBERS OF COMERCE NEW MARTIN THEATRE CLARA BOW Rl "My Lady of Whims"' "COLLEGIANS" Comedy "BUSTER'S HOME EXECUTIVE AT MONTREAL Montreal, Que., Nov, 13,--An 1m | portant meeting of the National Ex- | ecutive of the aCnadian Chamber of Commerce takes place here to- | morrow under the presidency of A, \ M. Dollar, of Vancouver. {| Among the main subjects on the 'agneda is that of the arrangements "in connection with the calling to- gether of a joint council of Agri- eulture industry and other commer- cial interests in the Dominion, EARTH SHOCKS FELT AT PALLS Niagara Falls, Ont., Novy, 13.,-- 'Niagara Falls was distinctly shaken twice Saturday evening about 7.50 o'clock, and the supposition is that the cause was an earthquake. The shocks were so violent in some sec- tions that that the occupants of | houses rushed out into the streets | as windows rattled and pictures fell, ' The shocks were close together, and the general belief at first was that explosions were the cause, Careful check failed to show an explosion | sufficiently large to cause the earth tremors. No damage has been re- ported. | » Epilepsy Overcome! | by taking this simpjle remedy at | home. Ask your druggist today for Ses MERMINE L | MILES Sold by } | | Fury & Vovell, Oshawa, Ont, t yd : At 7 and 9 o'Clock By |Evoningse, 25¢-50¢| Wed. Mat. 15¢-30c| Tonight, Mat, 2.30 p.m. itics Everywhere J FHim and His cress, and so we leave tour dear ones as we ied by members of the ladies lodges. {Several hundred were present. The {service was conducted by Rev. F. J. | Maxwell. Prior to attending church service, the lodges proceeded in a body to the | War Memorial where wreaths were {placed in memory of those members "who have départed and who gave | heir lives that others might live. Rev, Mr, Maxwell took his sermon from the text found in John 15:13 "Greater love hath no man than this that a man lay down his life for his friends" and from John 14:16 "And I will pray the Father and He shall give you another Comforter that He may abide with you forever." Commenting in the course oi his ser- mon about the many lives that were lost in the late war the pastor com- mented on the fact that the numbers of the Orange ranks were thinned considerably. "It is surely fitting that vou should have a memorial service in commemoration of loved ones who sacrifice their lives in the field of battle and surely fitting for you to gather thus, for perhaps no organiza- ticn lost more heavily than you," he said in part. "It is impossible for us to break away from the remembrance of the Great War. It meant so much in loss and suffering, in strained effort in jangled nerves, in desolyte homes, in broken hearts. It is surely fitting that we should have our memorial services | in commemoration of loved ones who sacrificed their lives on the field of | battle, and surely fitting for you thus! to gather for perhaps no organization | lost more heavily than you; and it is] also desirable that we should gather | together for the purpose of bringing | the most effective comfort to those | whose thoughts turn with such timid pride, such regretful love towards the graves across the sea, for. there are doubtless many in this audience this morning who lost dear in the Great Conflict. "To you who have lost--I know; | know; The ceaseless ache; the empti- ness; the woe; the rang of loss; the strength that sinks beneath so sore | a cross; hecdless and careless the world | wags on; and leaves me broken, "0 | my son! my son." Yet think of this, | yes rather think on this. | | | | | ones He died as! few men get the chance to die. Fight- | ng to save a morld's morality, He died the noblest death a man may die, fighting for God, and Right and Lib- erty. "And such a death is immoralit) So says one of our modern poets, and | surely one finds comfort in such sen-| timents. I have no intention this | morn to glorify war for along with vou I hate it with a perfeet hatred, and I fecl there ought to he a better | way of setting national and inter- | national disputes than by the "rough red way." As long as this is God's | world and not a devil's world, so long | will the sons of men thunder out! against the poisonous miasma of war. | But surely a war like that we have, so recently passed through means morc than mere loss of life, and sorrow of heart for those that are left to mourn | the loss of those who died--" The | speaker here quoted Edwin Markham's | poem and Dr. J. L.. Hughes' answer to! it, and showed that one cannot satis-| factorily scttle these great headed complicated problems with a mere catchy phrase or two else they | would have been settled centuries ago. | These bright God-fearing lads, they went the way of sacrifice, and greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends. And that is the comfort and consolation of many today. It 'is not true that in the great crises of life--in the strain and stress of thing--in the agonizing hours when the heart is burdened beyond all earthly solace, There is a tendency for us all to turn to Christ Himself the great burden hearer of humanity, and the consolation that Jesus offers us "not in" forgetfulness but in remembrance. He shall * teach you all things and bring to you remembrance whatsoever I have said unto you, and it is His teaching about pain and suffering, about sorrow and loss, about the eter- nal home divinely prepared, and about the way of access to Him and through Him who is the way, the truth and the life, that brings comfort and con-| solation to all grief-stricken souls, | Real consolation is always found in| Christ's cross. "I am not one of those who believe that because .a man lays down his life on the battie-field that he is necessarily given a passport to the Eternal Home. We must guard against degenerating into mere Mp- hammadens . It is one thing to lay one's life down on the field of battle for one's country, It is quite another thing. to atone for one's own sins. When God chose a sin-bearer He sel- ceted His own son--the perfect man-- the innaeent Jesus, "There was stone other good enough To pay the price of sin He only could unlock the Of Heaven, and let us in" "We must cver keep our cycs upon : Fate leaye ourselves in Christ's hands--haunds that were ierced for the world's sins, for His' cross still stands. "Mid all the horrors of ways The thunderous nights, dreadiul days The cross still stands." Yes, love triumphant stands, and siands the reddened ihe A rk and ' THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES. MONDAY. NOVEMBER 14, 1927 | Swimming Association has | in heayy- | --_-- -- coca --_----y ---- Settle Dispute te 2) spute oc'n' Right i Assoo'n' ts A long standing controversy be- tween the Amateur Athletic Union of Canada and the Canadian Amateur. been definitely settled through signator- ies being attached to articles eof | alliance by officers of the respective | organizations. What has been term- | ed as ome of the wars of spertdom ; was brought about in connection | with Canada's particination im the | Olympic games of 1924. It was maintained at that time by the swimming association that they had the right to select Canada's repre- sentatives for swimming events, | while the A.A.U. of C. also made a bid for swimming evenis --and a rumpus culminated, It has taken all these years to bring about a recon- ciliation couched in specific terms in the form of an official alliance, in which the A.A.C. of C. concedes to the C..AS.A. ts supremacy as the governing body in the phase of sport including amateur swimming, diving, and water polo. The articles further provide that the C.A.S.A. will maintain its own registration system and it is provided that the amateur cards of the Y.M.C.A. Ath- fetic League and the Canadian In- | tercollegiate Union will be recogniz- | ed; by the C.A.S.A., which 1s con- | ceded the exclusive right to sanction | all open swimming, diving and water | pola meets, while the A.A. U, of C. | holds the right to sanction open meets, other than championship or international contests, in provinces where there is no branch nor direect- | ly affiliated club of the C.A.S.A, The A.A.U. of C. on its part under- takes to assist in the formation of provincial branches of the CASA. | where not organized, or have exist- Ing swimming clubs become directly affiliated with the C.A.8.A, Pro- visions are included with resnect to privileges granted to the C.ILA.U. and Y.M.C.A. for helding meets. While the Governors of the A.A. U. of C. by an overwhelming ma- Jority authorized the officers of that organization to sign the articles of alliance, a small degree of opposition was manifested, particularly in view | of the fact that though the A.A.U. of C. pronounced a policy of univer- sal registration as one of its obhjee- | tions, the articles provide merelv | that *"the C.A.8.A. and A.A.U, of C. agree to accept the principle of universal reeistra'ion as soon a mutnally satisfactory arrangement on he agree upon." | There are those who are outspoken their opinion that the time has arrived for the AAU, of C. to put into effect its declared policy in favor of universal registration, which means in a nutshell only one recog- nized amateur card, ostensibly to be | that issued hy the A.A.U, of C. The Alberta Branch of the A.A.U, of C., | at its annual meeting, held in Ed- monton this month, passed a resolu- tion which will be presented to the annual meeting of the A.A.1, of C., to he held in the same city in De- | Plain Mr. York makes a hole in one! Says Plain Mr. York: "To dccom- plish this feat You'll find "twill be helpful if Plain York you'll eat 1} it's not down in one You'll at least have the fun Of enjoying Plain York--you will find it a treat." Plain York adds to anyone's enjoyment of life--for it is the finest chocolate life has to offer. A wonderful chocolate bar, not too bitter, not too sweet, the triumph of 200 years of fine chocolate making, Rowntree's Plain York chocolate is always better than par, Its velvety. smooth truly chocolate taste will rove a really delicious treat-- ust try it! as Sold everywhere C. 706 Also in larger sizes ea BREAKS UP GAS IN THE STOMACH onside kick, fumbles, a blocked field goal and finally a touchdown to even "the score whipped the silent stands in- to an ecstasy of excitement in the last premptly fainted. VETERAN RESIDENT OF COBALT KILLED IN CROSSING CRASH cember, calling for the immediate | S€Yen minutes ol he second period. Don't suffer from dangerous gas application of the policy of universal | With the ball resting on McGill's | 1) essing around your heart, from Cobalt, Ont., Nov. 13--Joseph registration, and a highly interest- eight yard mark Queen's attempted 101 iourness, acidity, bloating or pain of Waterson, for many years a resident ing debate is promised. However, | Plunge through the wings. Twice the | jh ai 0stion: Stop worrying. When-| of this camp, but who had heen it is reasonable to anticinate that 1ed defence hurled them back. Sut-| oo you need quick stomach relief, | working for a month past at the the action of the A.A.U. of C.|!o0 lifted an onside kick but St. Ger- | 1 00 "ite Bisurated. Magnesia-- | Alderson Mackay property in Rouyn, main snatched it and ran it out of his 15 yard line. A snap out was fumbled and Queen's had possession in front of Batstone attempted a field officers will be ratified by the an- nual meeting of that body, and that Canada's representatives for swim- was fatally when the injured horse-drawn there Friday vehicle on which he was riding was struck by powder or tablets. It hreaks up gas, neutralizes acids and keeps the stom ach sweet and strong, and digestion | ming and diving events at the Olym- the Foe Laverne bloeked The | Perfect, AL good drug stores every- | 2 train. One of the horses also was pic games next year will be selected vio di 3 or 3 of to i "€ | where. Not a laxative. killed and the driver was seriously y the Canadian Amateur Swimminz McGill man dribbied the ball, ut yas injured, the report reaching here sta- | Association, without anestion of | herded over to the touch line and the) "= | ted. Mr. Watterson was a carpenter {authority heing raised. | ball went out of hounds at midfield off | ie , i by trade, and had made his ho: L deing il | his foot, giving Queen's possession, tieth anniversary meeting of the ; by trade, nade his home ' | athe Chemical Industrialists' Protective here and at North Cobalt since Co- Queen Ss Battle | KILLS BOOTLEGGER GETS SIXTY | Union. balt's earlier days. a DAYS Rumors have been current for a | sess Tm ---- rE -- - Out qa Victory | Annapolis, Md., Nov. 13.--A fa- long time of the developmeni uv: » } new synthetic rubber process by the dye syndicate, "I. G. Far- benindustrie," but the first official admission of tangible results was given in the speech of Dr. A. von {ther of 17 children, convicted of | manslaughter in the killing of a | bootlegger in a card game, Saturday Under ihe | was sentenced to pay a fine of $100 | and serve 60 days in jail. The nor- German Over McGill Kingston, Ont., Nov. 14. shadow of their own goal posts, z f Weinberg, a privy councillor and di sorely harassed foothall machine hear- | mal sentence is from one to 10 eetor ry F p ind i ing the triple barred livery of Queen's | years. Judge Robert Moss told the | YECLOF Oo Ah ening usirle. . y. wueens | r p : Powle p A Jr. Von Wei 2¥:4 itt battled desperately against an aerial | Prisoner, James Fowle, that the i n einberg committed himself to was as follows: "By means of contact man he killed was a bootlegger, and barrage that was steadily pili $4 y piling up 3 5 Pe or 5 y 1 B UP |.lso the size of his family. points for McGill. Seven minutes re- mained to play until half-time and the | synthesis we shall, moreover, succeed in pro- Tricolor were in possession on their | SYNTHETIC RUBBER SOON gucing by a simple progess the own ten-yard line when "Bubbling | TO COME ON WORLD MARKET | fundamental eomnponerte or syn- Bubs" Britton whipped around a |. ¥rankfort-on-Main, Germany, | thetic cacutchouc and gutta per- drawn-in Red end and raced into the | NOV: 13.--Important progress hy ch, open field. He sped forty yards to- | the German chemical industry since J soa - -- i wards the McGill goal, then slipped | the war, including the development | AL ROBATIC i 00K BB REPORT- For a Delightful Treat! the ball over to Harry Batstone, who | ©f commercial synthetic rubber, was ED AS HAUNTING ENGLISH w 'S NIPS sqquirmed through the tacklers until {described Saturday before the fif- VILLAGE RIGLEY Preston, England, Noy. 13.--The story of a mysterious ghostly figure that glides cver roofs and leaps over walls comes from a nearby Lancashire village of Whittingham. Delicious after smoking-- sweetens the breath, soothes the throat and makes the next smoke the ball rested eight yards out from the McGill citadel. This play will go down in McGill history as the attack which swept away Of course you want fresh, | their hopes of an Intercollegiate Union title and inspired the Queen's machine to come fro mbehind to win the decid- ing game of the college race here yes- terday afternoon by 11 to 5. For 23 minutes of play the Red smothered the Tricolor wing thrusts and end expeditions, while St, Ger- main and Tremaine waged a highly successiul aerial duel with Batstone, The tiery-haired master of the mole- skins was thrown heavily after getting a punt away in the first few minutes and his chest and kicking leg were injured. Queen's appeared to wilt after Batstone's usefulness was temporarily dulled, and he hobbled a- long in the wake of his plays, Ins face drawn and colorless with pain. He re- fused to leave the field because he saw the Tricolor cracking under the pres- sure of the McGill kickers' long liits. Queen's were bottled up in their own end of the field and McGill moved in- to the lead when Two singles and Tre- maine's placement kick piled up ave points. Foiled wing thrusts, an unsuccessful of play for more In our great meed than eer it stood before His cross still stands. "Let us get under the shelter of that cross, and let us all be good soldiers of | Jesus Christ, following the captain of our salvation, on through the conflict iup to the hills of God. I "iet us scorn to live as Pagans. Make recom for God in vour life, make room for His church, make room fo 1 His eross, and you will find io the | true God a comforter and a consoler! that will abide with you forever." fragrant tea, Then see that it is put up in Aluminum. Aluminum does not absorb dampness, or cause of flavor and pungenty, Red Rose Tea is packed in Alumi- num every package carries 2 '"money~back" guarantee of satisfaction, gp The stranger was first observed cn the roof of the laundry at the insane asylum and though a cor- don was drawn arcund the building the man disappeared. Next night he was again seen on the roof of the bath block, only to vanish. again in the same puzzling fashion. One night a nurse came face to face with the roof walker and she' ma : 6 20891 & WEDNESDAY Gluten Feed $43.00 ton HOGG & LYTLE, Ltd. ' ed a » r yiBiLzaol ai taste better, Tort . NLY = BB

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