PAGE SIX THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, TUESDAY, APRIL 10, 1928 we-- er ---- LUKURY OF 8-100 1S NEW FEATURE IN AR JOURNEYS Greatest Sky Liner Makes Her Debut This Sum- mer ACCOMMODATES 143 Comfort of 100 Passengers Fully Arranged by Builders An aviation venture transcending in importancy all air eterprises of the past will come with the com- missioning of the Brtish trans-At- lantic dirigible R-100 this summer, This giant vessel, and her sister ship, the latter being built by the British Admiralty, are to use Can- ada's mooring mast, which is being erected at St. Hubert, on the out- skirts of Montreal, as the Canadian terminus of the trans-Atlantic ser- vice. The R-100 now is being com- pleted at Howden Airdfome, Eng- land. The ship will undergo her first air trials in June and is ex- pected to cross the Atlantic carry- ing passengers and mails before September. She is twice the bulk of the Shenandoah or Los Angeles, and the only airship in existence of suitable size or strength to carry passengers commercially on the trans-Atlantic route. She is de- signed to carry a crew of 43, ten tons of freight, and 100 passengers, First of 150 While of great size, this airship is about the minimum size that can be sued for commercial trans- Atlantic flights, and is merely the forerunner of a fleet of 150-pass- enger ships, her British backers say. Commander C. Dennis Burney, Member Parliament, who is the designer of the R-100, has discuss- ed with President Coolidge and Secretary Hoover the carrying of American trans-Atlantic mail by airship. The R-100 will cross the Atlantic on the easterly trip in 48 hours and westerly in 60 hours. The later and larger ships will require only 36 hours east and 48 hours west, Commander Burney is now in America conducting negotiations for the dirigible's builders, It has been proposed that of the remain- der of the fleet, half he built in the United States and half in Eng- land. Officially Tested When completed the R-100 will be tested by the British Admiralty and given an air worthiness certifi- cate. The U.S, has agreed to lend Lakehurst Airship Station for the mooring of the R-100 on her first trans-Atlantic flights, Luxury marks the passenger equipment of the R-100, There is a combination dining saloon and lounge in which 50 persons can be served meals at one time. A stair- case connects the ship's three floor levels with the control car, below, CITY OF OSHAWA Tenders for Paving Sealed Tenders addressed to the undersigned and plainly marked "Tenders for Paving" will be received up to 6 o'clock p.m., THURS., APRIL 19. 1928 for *"Standardite'" or As- phaltic Concrete Pavements on various streets (3" Top, 6" Concrete Base) complete with Concrete Curb and Gutter, Specifications and other information may be obtain- ed at the office of the City Engineer, ~The lowest or any Tender not necessarily accepted. W. C. SMITH, City Engineer Perfume Hudnut's Next to Post Office En a 2 2 a 2 2 2 J 2 2 J 20 a Sa a 2 Si i a J J eS J Sh J J a a a ha a Dah hh he dh heheh he edhe the hoih dhe dh hu hehe de tbethelete ede e tech odbuibo hod dh dh dhe Shed heheh dh heh hehe With every $1.00 purchase of THREE FLOWERS Vanishing Cream, Lipstick Cleansing Cream, Compacts, etc., etc, Karn's Drug Store Staterooms open off a Jaltwas surrounding the dining salom, i ways t with the decks. Rich Carpets All furniture and fittings have been designed to provide luxurious comfort with minimum weight. The ship's structural frame, of alumin- um alloy, is covered im the lounge with mahogany veneer. The floors are of five-ply veneer, richly car- peted. There are two promenade decks, one on each side of the ship. They permit lounging, deck games, and dancing. There are lounge facili ties also on the upper communica- tion deck. Observation windows are built into the hull. The wall strue- ture is two layers of specially made fireproof fabric, providing sound- proof stateroom partitions, ALLE | comp promenade JEWEL THIEF 13 HELD Police Question Man in Con- nection with Cleveland Robbery Detroit, April 10.--A man who gave his name as Herman Zeidman, 22, of Chicago, alleged jewel thief, held with two companions in con- nection with an attempted $100.- 000 diamond robery here Tuesday last, was identified by fingerprints as Gordon Chambers, husband of Betty Chambers who was slain in Chicago Feb, 13 last, Zeidman, alias Chambers, also was being questioned in connection with a $60,000 Cleveland jewel rob bery. According to police information, Alex Swirsky, member of the Cleve- land firm from which the §60,000 in jewels was taken, identified Betty Chambers as the lookout in that robbery, Chambers was held for a time in connection with the death of his wife, but was released when offi- cials failed to implicate him in the slaying. The body of the woman was found in an apartment, Death apparently was due to suffocation caused by adhesive tape wrapped about her face, Swirsky identified the slain wo- man after Chambers had been re- leased and officlals have been searching for the latter since in connection with the Cleveland rob- bery, PARLIAMENT REOPENS ITS SESSIONS TODAY Ottawa, April 9.--Parliament resumes its sessional activities to- morrow, Following an Easter re- cess of ten days, the advance guard of returning member reached the capital today. The Senate, though, will not reconvene until April 17, so that the great bulk of Senators will not return to their Parliamen- tary duties for another week, Of the remaining sessional work facing the Commons, probably the most controversial will be the esti- mates, These represent an increase over 1927-28 estimates; and the appropriation for a Canadian Min- ister to Tokio will probably be pro- ductive of considerable opposition. In all likelihood, an amendment to practically strike out the vote will he moved from the Conservative benches, Of the proposed advances to the harbor boards, loans of $5,~ 500,000 to the Saint John Harbor Board, and $500,000 to Halifax will likely meet with approval on the whole, These advances are in line with recommendations con- tained in the report of the Dun- can Commissio of Maritime Rights. LIKENESS OF GENERAL UNVEILED IN GRANITE Stone Mountain, Ga., April 9, The likeness of General Robert E, Lee, carved out of the granite of Stone Mountain, was unveiled here today in the presence of men who wore the blue and those who wore the grey, Sixty-three years from the day that General Lee handed bis sword to General U. 8. Grant at Appomattox, only to have it re- turned hy the victorious leader of the Union armies, his figure was dedicated to a united North and South. At a signal from Robert E. IV,, great grandson of the General, two veils, one the flag of the Con- federacy, the other the flag of the United States, fell away. Ao AAA AA A A A A A AAA A FREE! HUDNUT'S KA "4 Vial-ettes Bedell dee eee desde ., ~~ Toiletries Phone 378 ee HH A A J A JO 2 a a a oe STRAIN OF OFFIGE TELLS ON HEALTH OF AGED PRELATE Archbishop of Canterbury Celebrates 80th Birth- day SUFFERS FROM STRAIN Burden of Prayer Book Crisis Bears Hard Upon His Shoulders London, April 10.--The chief campaigner for the revision of the Church of England Prayer Book celebrated his 80th birthday Satur- day. He is the Most Reverend and Right Honorable Randall Thomas Davidson, Archbishop of Canter- bury. The occasion is a double event in the Archbishop's life, for it also sees the final stages of the Prayer Book Revision, on the success or failure of which ,according to some circles, depends his resignation from the Anglican Church's high- est office. Only a week ago the Houses of Canterbury and York decided to submit the Prayer book in its lat- est' revised form to the Assembly of the Church of England, probably this month, It then will be pre- sented to Parliament for passage. stands on Prayer Book It is said that a repetition of what happened in the House of Commons last year, when the Re- vised Prayer Book Bill met with totally unexpected defeat, would figuratively if not literally be the death of the Archbishop. I"or many years now he has been far from well, a fact which has given rise to rumors from time to time that he was about to resign. It is said that when he left the House of Commons after fierce de- bate which climaxed in the defeat of the Revised Prayer Book meas- ure, he looked a broken man, With tears streaming down his face and bent shoulders, he totter- ed forth on the arms of his friends, a man to all appearances 10 years older than when he entered, Some say another defeat would be too much for him, There is 'a possibility, however, that the Archbishop never wiil know the ultimate results of the Prayer Book, Delay a Likelihood At present every effort is being made both by supporters and oppo- nents to brings the book hefore Parliament this.spring. Should be delayed another year, and even, according to well-informed circles in the House of Commons, until 1930. Those close to the Archbishop are inclined to the opinion that his office much longer, Archhishop Davidson distinction of having holds the been the tory, He was created in 1903 at the age of 55, after having refused the archbishopric before he was fifty. With one exception he has oc- cupied the Chair of St, Augustine longer than anyone, Four hundred years ago, however, William War- ham was Archbishop of Canterbury from 1503 to 1535, Dr. Davidson's Primacy js thus the longest since the Reformation and it has witnessed some of the most remarkable changes and de- velopment in the Church of Eng- land. Among these the most im- portant is, perhaps, the extension of the Anglican Communion throughout the world. The work of Prayer Book re- vision has been the most moment- ous enterprise of the Archbishop's Primacy. He has been intimately concerned with it from the begin- ning, for he was a member of the Royal Ecclesiastical Discipline which resulted in 1906 in Royal Letters of Business being issued to Convocation by King Edward VII. TRAIN STRIKES MOTOR AND ONE MAN IS DEAD Guelph, April 9. -- Jack Doyle of Mount Forest died in the Gen- eral Hospital tonight as a resuit o finuries received when a car in which he was a passenger was struck by hte 5.30 C.P.R. passen- ger train from Hamilton at the Allen Bridge level crossing. Jia- come Carrere, driver of the car, was uninjured, while William An- cell, fro mGuelph, suffered only a slight shaking up. The car, which was proceeding toward the downtown district, was badly wrecked. Coroner Dr. T. H. Or- ton examined the body tonight and ordere an inquest for the morn- ing. Doyle's death was caused by severe internal injuries. INDUSTRIAL CHEMISTRY PROFESSOR GOES ABROAD Montreal, April 9.--Dr. Harold Hibbert, E. B. Eddy professor of in- dustrial and cellulose chemistry, left Montreal today om a trip to Europe, for which he has been granted leave of absence from Mec- Gill University. While abroad he will make a study of the physical, colloidal and organic properities of cellulose, as well as the properties of natural fibres. that are of gen- eral occurrence. RI A ..--.------_~« SASKATCHEWAN CONSIDERS OLD AGE PENSIONS Ottawa, April 9.--Hon. C. M. Hamilton, Minister of Agriculture in the Saskatchewan Government, and Hon. Peter Heenan, Federal Minister of Labor, were in confer- ence this afternoon discussing ar- rangements for applying the old age pension scheme to the prairie province, it | be allowed to hang over until the! autumn, it is feared that it might | health will not stand the strain of | youngest to hold that office in his- | mi e the in foods milk, necessary to make strong bones. Give SCOTT'S EMULSION AT YOUTH DROWNED ON HUNTING TRIP Meaford, April 9.--Ashley Johu- ston, 8-year-old son of Isaac John- ston, a farmer in St. Vincent Town- ship, was drowned in Mountain Lake, nine miles from here, Sat- urday morning. He accompanied his elder brother on a hunt for small game along the edge of the lake. The bigger boy shot a wild duck, which fell on the thin ice of the lake. Young Ashley scrambled after it across the ice, which broke, and he went through into 15 feet of water. The brother attempted to rescue the boy, but his efforts wera futile. Neighbors were noti- fied, and from a boat the body was recovered about an hour later. EGYPTIAN QUEEN'S COUPE Cairo, April 9.--Dr. George A. Reisner of the Boston Museum- tlarvard Expedition has sent the carmying-chair of Queen Iete- pheres, the mother of Cheops, the builder of the Great Pyramid, to the museum here, where it is on exhibition. The wood had shrunk and disintegrated, rendering fur- ther use impossible, But, from the evidences ef the gold decoration and the original wood, reconstruc- tion was possible to the minutest details of jointing, and the effect is magnificent, LOGAL UKRAINIANS " LAUNGH PROTEST Pass Resolutions Opposing Death Sentences Imposed By Polish Court A big mass meeting was held by the Ukrainians of Oshawa at the Albert street Ukrainian Hall last Sunday afternoon. The purpose of the meeting was a protest against the sentence of death pass- ed by the Polish court of Lem- berg, East = Galicia, upon two Ukrainian University students for an alleged killing of a Polish schol curator--Sobinski. The meeting was attended by about four hundred people and representatives of nine Ukrainian local organizations including Greek-Orthodox, Greek Catholic and Presbyterian Churches. Ad- dresses were made by the dele- gates of each organization. Fath- er Chrustanka of the Greek Ortho- dox Church and the Rev. Luke Standret of the Ukrainian Preshy- terian Church were among the speakers. All the speakers stressed the fact of deplorable conditions exist- ing under Polish administration in Bast Galicia and other parts of Ukraine which came under Polish mandate for twenty five years by the decision by the Council of Am- bassadors in Paris. The speakers maintained that Polish Govern- ment violated all rights of the Ukrainians by suppressing Ukrain- ian educational institutions, clos- ing down schools, persecuting and ian educational institutions, closing down schools, persecuting and im- prisoning teachers and prominent men, using old Czarist methods of provocation. Curator Sobinski was the leading figure in the Polish move to suppress Ukrainian schools and as a result was killed by an unknown perosn. To avenge the death of Sobinski Pol- ish police arrested nineteen young Ukrainian students -- men and women -- suspecting them of the deed. Two of the arrested were accused of the killing and sen- tenced by the Tolish jury to death by hanging on circumstan- tial evidence, in spite of the fact that a young Pole, Buchwald, a law i Er e- student, confessed to thé killing. but his confession was rejected by the prosecution. The following resolution was Presented and unanimously car- ried. We Canadian citizens of Ukrain- jan descent, assembled at a mass meeting and representing a thou- sand of Oshawa residents, do uu- animously protest against the biased and unjust sentence of daeth by the Polish Court in Lem- berg, March 14, 1928, upon two young Ukrainians, Ivan Werbychy and Wasyl Atamabchuk, for the unproven charge of killing a school curator, Sobinsky. There- fore, in the name of justice, we de- mand: 1. "That the above stated ver- dict be suspended. 2. That a mew trial be con- ducted. 3. That a mew jury be empan- elled including men of Ukrainian nationality." The resolutions were sent to the Polish President, the League of Nations, the British Government and aCnadian Government. Ninety-five dollars was con- tributed to cover the expense of transmitting the messages. LAKE BOATS IN GALE LOSE MANY AUTOS Milwaukee, April 9.--After weathering a severe storm that stood them on their beam ends at times, and swept 23 automobiles overboard, two steamers reached here last night from Detroit, open- ing navigation from the lower lakes. A 60-mile gale lashed the steamers Sultana and Progress of the Nicholson Universal Steamship Company after they left ice fields at White Shoals and headed for the Wisconsin shore with 300 auto- mobiles on hoard. Captain William McDougall of the Sultana said that one by one the automobiles slid from the steel deck of the Sultana as the wind lashed high waves over the steam- er. The Progress lost none of her cargo, The steamers were undamaged despite the rough weather, MUTINY IN VENEZUELA COMES TO A SUDDEN END Caracas, Venezuela, April 9.--A military revolt occurred in the Venezuelan capital Saturday. It was speedily suppressed, but with Why BARRYMORE popularity grows And Why You Should See the Beautiful 1928 Presentation mari, some casualties, The mutineers sought to gain possession of San Carlos barracks, to the north of the city, but when the revolting forces, accompanied by some uni- versity students, reached the bar- racks, they were received with a rifle volley,, several of them being killed. TMMIGRANT RUSH HEAVY AT HALIFAX Halifax, N.S., April 9.--The rush of immigrants through this port since last Friday continued today Hamil Cover that Old Roof with "ART-BLENDE" TWIN SHINGLES A combination of delicate shades i ii pishii ok i or a choice of solid Ask your roofing dealer. 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