Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Daily Times, 9 Jun 1928, p. 16

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TO FACE COBOURG CHARGE Wanted = Cobourg; charge © se pretences a cheque for $25. W. C. terday by Detectives Chisholm: WANTED IN BELLEVILLE At the request of the Inspec in Broc yesterday mor the theft of a silver watch in ville on Monday last. '4 : MONEY BY-LAWS DEFEATED Rat ers yesterday defeated two Wei sand at polls at Barrie, one $55,000 for 3 projossd gd. dition to the Collegiate Institute by a 355 to 303, and the other, to raise for the remodelling of the 'Town Hall. The vote on the to provide vote of latter was 422 to 227. SWALLOWED FALSE TEETH Ont, on a involving Dakien t, Toronto, was arres Youge SH h Hill and t tor of covincial Police at Belleville, George DE of Los Angeles was arested i or elle- Curran, News-Letter, Orillia; C. E. Lundy, Banner, Aurora; A. V. Nolan, Tribune, Stouffville. BELLEVILLE MOTOR OFFICES At the annual meeting of the Belleville Motor Club held yesterday officers for the year were elected as follows: President, J. W. 3 Ist Vice-President, T. D. Raston; 2nd Vice-President, J. D. McMillan; Sec- retary-Treasurer, J. O. Herity; Dir- cctors, John Leigh, J. G. Skelcher, C. E. Hanna, F. B. Smith, G. S. Smith, Mack Robertson. LIBERALS OPEN CAMPAIGN Although they were second in the field, the Liberals are firing the first gun in the North Renfrew by-elec- tion. Three meetings have already been arranged by them, while the Conservatives have yet to make a move in this direction. A meeting has been arranged for Pembroke next Tuesday night, at which one of the speakers will be Dr. George Mc- When Miss Agnes Mulholland, em- 'Quibban, M.P.P, for Northeast Wel- ployed at the O'Neill House, Kempt- ington. ville, was eating dinner recently, a a plate of 'false teeth broke in her mouth, three of the eth being Iogg. | Mrs, Catherine Dawley celebrated ed in her throat. diately rushed to the Civic Hospital, Ottawa, where physicians were suc- their efforts to extricate cessful in the teeth. PRESS ASSOCIATION MEET There was Barrie . President C, E. Eedy of The St. Argus. C. B. Smith, The Star, Creemore Secretary-Treasurer, O. M a good attendance at the annual meeting of the Simcoe and North York Press Association, held in the Public Library hall in Lundy of Aurora Banner presided. The chief address was delivered by Lorne A. Mary's Journal- Collingwood was chosen as the next place of meeting. Officers were elected as follows: President, Seim, Witness, Bradford. Executive, George CELEBRATES '101ST BIRTHDAY er 101st birthday Thursday at the ome of her grand-daughter, Mrs. illiam Buskey, on East Hatfield frost, Massena Springs, near Corn- all. | Mrs. Dawley was born in Coteau u Lac. She lived there for several ears, and then moved to Williams- burg. She is mother of eleven children nine of whom are still living--Henry awley of North Dakota, Clarence awley of Clayoquot, B.C, Walter awley of Victoria, B|C., William Dawley of Hamilton, Mrs. Margaret Pillar of Russell, Mrs. Effie Whit- taker of Iroquois, Mrs. Lillie Whit- taker of Theresa, Mrs. Mary Wood ofl Ottawa, and Mrs. Isabell Pea- cock of Ogdensburg. Mrs. Dawley, in spite of her advanced age, is very active, and takes a keen interest in the affairs of the day. She is inter- PHONE 22. For Your Drug Needs THOMPSON'S We Deliver 10 Simcoe St. 8. ested in all the current happenings in the world, and likes to talk about changes since her childhood days. She enjoys all the conveniences of modern times, likes to go motor- ing and enjoys the radio greatly. Modernism: To be able to trans- port one's home by aeroplane. Don't Drag Around Half Dead With Pain! "Last Kall, when showing inthe local Horse Show, I was with severe pains in the small of the back. I w. pelled I was of pain, as to £210 bed. A friend 20somumended oi Pills e to ride ut Gin Pills are wonderful." om, any. J. 8. Russell, 1370 Davie St., Vancouver. Pills have a way of soothing and healing strained, weak, sore or inflamed kidneys, bringing immediate and lasting relief. 50c at all druggists. he PILLS FOR THE KIDNEYS 1 EE -- ' The Best the Nut Coal Stove .......... Egg Coke .. Phone 230 and 157 SCRANTON COAL 2,000 pounds to every ton Let us fill your bins at summer prices (070 0 0 020,80 2 0 0. 0'0:0 sintse moze 0 315.00 io ss tele efaie sie) (0 atelezele eZee] e etare ee] 15.00 Pea........... soe ve snes ema e: 12:50 Factory wood cuttings, loa W. J. TRICK Co., LTD. Mines Produce cesses 15.50 JOUR] 12.50 4.00 [S30 COOTER 25 At-rt St. THE OSHAWA DAILY, TIMES, SATURDAY, JUNE 9, 1928 THAW HAS BEEN GRANTED VISE T0 LAND IN FRANCE British Authorities Show No - Inclination to Change Attitude STILL HAS HOPE Millionaire Believes Action Taken as Reprisal for. London, June 9--A visa has been obtained for Harry Thaw to enter France, and he will go there if Brit- ish authorities persist in their refu- sal to permit him to land at South- ampton, E, M. Pendleton, who came here to take up Thaw's case, told the United Press Thursday. "I cabled Washington Wednesday and called at the American Embassy Thursday," Pendleton said. "I was told that nothing could be done un- til the Embassy heard from Wash- ington. Looks Like Reprisal "If Thaw is refused admission, Thiw and I will continue on to France in the Aquitania. "I do not know what to make of it all. It looks to me like a reprisal for the Cathcart affair. (Countess Cathcart for a time was denied admission to the United States, though never accused of any crime, because Ellis, Island, N.Y, immigration officials held her previ- ous elopement with the Earl of Cra- ven--also married--to be evidence of "moral turpitude.") Whitehall Undisturbed London, June 9.--Harry K. Thaw, batred out of England by the im- migration authorities, is not likely to get much help from official quarters in his desire to enter the country. Various official quarters which might act in his behalf had not in- dicated any intention of doing so Thursday. The incident has not been brought to the attention of the For- eign Office and is not likely to be, as it is the business of the Home Office. It would only come before the Foreign Office if the United States Embassy should raise the ques- tion and this is understood to be extremely unlikely. The Home Office confirmed pre- vious statements that Thaw was bar- red under the Aliens Restrictions Law o" 1920, as an undesirable and that seems to end the matter as far as Whitehall is concerned. Thaw was puzzled, he told an in- terviewer. He has interviewed the British Consul in New York and had his passport vised and therefore sup- posed everything was in order for his visit. He wished to go to London to see Westminster Abbey and also to re-stock his wardrobe with the latest fashions in men's clothes. After wards, he intended to go to Paris to sec his sister and then to Vienna. Thaw said he could get an Eng- lish steamer to take him to France, but that he was not even allowed to cross Southampton harbor for 'the purpose as he could not leave the Aquitania, The same limitation pre- vented him from crossing in an air- plane, which he has considered. SESSIONS CONCLUDED BY MANUFACTURERS Montreal, June 8--The fifty-seven- th annual convention of the Canadian Manufacturer's Association officially closed today when the steamship St. Lawrence docked at Montreal, con- cluding a voyage which had carried the delegates down the St. Lawrence and up the Saguenay River as far as Bagotville, Que. Convention sessions were held on board the ship. More than 400 persons attended the sessions, including delegates from all sections of the Dominion and their ladies. ' A presentation to the ship's offi- cers, made as the boat entesed Mont- real Harbor, concluded the conven- tion program. Business sessions con- cluded yesterday. 2 CALCUTTA STAKES WINNER IS BABY London, June 8.--An 8-months-old baby is the real owner of the $1,- 310,000 first prize in the Calcutta Sweepstakes on the Derby, accord ing to a despatch to the Daily Mail from Bombay, India, While the tic- ket was issued to W., H. Webb, Eng- lish employee of a Calcutta firm, it developed that Webb bought several tickets for a timber merchant, Ibra- him Daweed Kazi, and. members of his family, including the baby. The infant's number drew Felstead, the horse which galloped home in front. This Is The Opportune Time to Purchase Your , Winter Fuel Supply Let our experts tell you the most economical way of op- erating your furnace. The information will be gladly supplied without charge. By arranging for your winter supply at this time you are guaranteed the summer price and the supply can be delivered either now or later, which ever is desired. In fact there are many advantages in ordering your winter fuel supply now, and let us explain the situation to you, DIXON COAL CO. Telephone 262--4 Lines to Central Call us Under the general title of "Fa- mily Allowances" the Reverend FatHer Leon Lebel, 8. J. of Mont~ real, has just published a little book of sixty-four pages, in which he introduces a subject that can- not help but hold the interest of those who have given any thought to the problem of the large work- i class family, the solution which, according to the writer, would mean so much to the pro- gress of Canada. Father Lebel has in the present work--a successor to his "Les All- ocations familiales"--taken up the case of the large family as a fac- tor in the development of the eco- nomic life of the nation, and as much a real asset demanding care- ful consideration at the hands of society, and those who make the laws of the country. "Family Allowances" is divided into sixteen chapters, each one a complete analysis of some phase of the subject based on actual con- ditions in Canada, and what is be- ing done in other countries in the matter of taking care of the fa- mily life of the workers. For in- stance one chapter is devoted to the causes which render the prob- lem acute for the laboring classes in Canada. Another chapter deals with the origin and spread of fam- ily allowances in Europe; a thipd takes up the allowance system as it is applied in Australia. So far as family allowances may be applied to Canada, Father Lebel offers no revolutionary method by which the large family should be served at the expense of society; but he does show in very convinc- ing arguments that Canada's eco- nomic future is very much wrap- ped up in her family life, and that her success depends very largely on how far she is prepared to 'encourage that family life, the greater part of which is supplied FAMILY ALLOWANCES, IS BOOK "JUST PUBLISHED BY FATHER LEBEL by the workers. ' In the chapter on Canada's pop- ulation as it is affected by immi- gration, the reverend writer, witer pointing out that immigration from the British Isles is steadily decreasing each year gsks the per- tinent question if "it be prudent to introduce into this country each year a contingent of foreigners larger than our own natural in- crease, and-which it is practically impossible to assimilate? Would if] not be the risk of intro- ducing here 'colonies foreigners, whose language; customs and affin- ities are not ours, and thus en- danger the present complexion and unity of Canada?" In giving figures to show that Canada lost by emigration from 1901 to 1927 about 2,650,000 citi- zens, and that her annual increase in population was not keeping pace with her natural growth, Father Lebel suggests that "unless a means can be found to maintain and even to increase our birth- rate, there is mo hope to see the prophecy of patriotic optimists, realization of the often-repeated that the twentieth century would be Canada's century. To bring about its realization, it would be necessary to render the lot of large families better by putting them in a position to live in com- fort.. There would then be some hope of stopping in great part the flow of emigartion to the United States, since large families con- tribute a great part of the con: tingent which is leaving us every year_there would even be a chance of séeing an increase in the aum- ber of such families, and thus ob- tain for our country the soundest kind of immigration: that of birth. The future and the prosperity of Canada are thus bound up in the solution of the problem of large families." PROROGATION TODAY EXPECTED AT OTTAWA Ottawa, June 9.--As the House of Commons adjourned at 1.30 o'clock this mdrning Premfer King announced the expectation and hope of the Government that Par- liament would be able to prorogue by 6 o'clock today (Saturday). This, he said, would only be pos- sible if members today showed a disposition to clean up the remain- ing items of business. The House struggled throughout the afternoon with Department of Immigration estimates and cleaned them up this evening. Then railway estimates had headway, but the House in Supply became hopeless- ly deadlocked over the Halifax Hotel project and Maritime mem- bers' controversies thereon. If the House is to prorogue this evening, it will have to clean up the Department of Justice, Finance and Labor estimates all in one day, with a fair measure of agricul- tural estimates thrown in for. gooa measure. ELGIN COUNTY WILL CONTROL CONNECTING LINKS IN VILLAGES St. Thomas, June 8--Elgin County Councillors this afternoon unani- mously passed a resolution providing for the designation in the county road system of village streets, up to the business sections, that are known as connecting links, The passing of the resolution is a victory for the village representatives who have fought for this for several years, Arrangements were made to have the Roads Committtee confer with the Councils in Rodney, West Lorne and Dutton next week and to report at a special meeting of the Council called for June 19, Save Your Eyesight You simply cannot do your best with defective sight. Why not consult W.A. Hare OPTOMETRIST 3 KING STREET WEST Hundreds of people wear with utmost comfort Hare's Faultless Lenses a. Industrial Sites A few hundred feet only re- maining 'of ideal Factory and Warehouse Sites, hav. ing good depths off Railway trackage alongside, Power, Water and Sewer available--adjacent to the proposed mew OC.N.R. Car Barns in the northeast sec- tion of city, off Simcoe LOOK AHEAD--PLAN AHEAD . Industrial and warehouse sites extremely limited in Oshawa -- Consult the owner. 3. G: CARNELL PHONE 1766) OSHAWA RETIRING SCHOOL INSPECTOR HONORED BY HURON COUNTY Goderich, May 8--At the morning session of the Viren County Coun- cil here today J. E. Tom, who re- signed this week from the position of Inspector of Public Schools, was presented with a handsome engraved cane, in recognition of his services. Mr. Tom served as Inspector in this county for 42 years, Reeve Hugh Hill of Colborne Township read the address and Reeve E. Klopp of Hay Township, made the presentation. Mr. Tom replied briefly, thanking the Council for the gift. BURGLARY ATTEMPT AT CHA- THAM SENDS TWO MEN TO PRISON : Chatham, June 8--Stanley Shannon of Dayton, Ohio, and Lloyr Orton of this city were today sentenced to the Kingston Penitentiary and On- tario Reformatory, respectively, on Meharges of being found by night with d=naerous 'and offensive weapons, with intent to break into the Water- wouse jewelry store. he former drew a sentence of two years, while the latter will spend from three months to two years less one day at Guelph. The young men were found. at 'the rear of, the Waterhouse store on the night of May 5 and subsequently pleaded guilty to the above charges. Still, it's a good sign when na- tions begin to quarrel over who started the peace negotiations.-- Troy Times. The Mutual makes it a principle to incor privilege that is into its contracts Standard Bank Building 7 Simcoe St. N. - with safety. ------_ -- -- Arcade Daily News TO-MORROW, SATURDAY STORE HOURS, 9 a.m. to 10 p.m. Special for Saturday Morning Shoppers Dress Voiles at 19c yd. Novel Swiss voiles, English printed voiles, novelty printed voiles, light and dark colored grounds, large and dainty, small designs. Values up to $1.00 SATURDAY SPECIAL 15¢ yard Wherever You Go You See The Exclusive and Distinctive Durant Radiator is ico Strikingly Conspicuous on Canadian Highways. e new Durant Car - - in all models - - has re- Li y enthusiastic reception from the Canadian Public. The demand is the great. 'est in the Company's history. Each new Durant owner becomes a *Durant Enthusiast" and with that enthusiasm creates ceived an un other sales. Your nearest Durant dealer willbe glad to demonstrate any model without on bligati Budle by DURANT MOTORS OF CANADA, LIMITED TORONTO / CANADA Rugby Trucks, Pour and Six Cylinders; Capacity 1 ton and 13{ tons / -~ New Durant Cars THICKSON MOTOR SALES--9 BOND ST., WEST PHONE §33

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