ian trade sarosment with the united y the election campaign and Jampered Shout. the late vey title to oy will pi proceed wi god early. in the new year. = baal pre ei LE to c 3 . during the last five years, i bi 5 Fs )} The new Gove nent. has also taken prel ney, otek. ward rest ay Javanes bn from whith 1a8 been sia stopped a LE ine : tion of currency sii uties by ik Japan, iY 34 he of { kidnaoping and armor ob very of | lohn August 14th, 1934. : Sos J ustice G. F. McFarland, ho ata Portioh Labatt Kidnap wi imposed a fifteen-year sentence on Daivd Meisner, Covington, Ky., _ gambler, in less than five minutes after. the jury. reported, sent ~ Bannon to Kingston. Peniteniary for fifteen years. The sentence is the same on both Barton charges, but is to run concurrently. ot d guil on w a8 eri 'Thomas. McDonnell, Riinontor's 8 ugtone: man'; is dead. The |' 'end came to the 56-year-old 'native of Ontario on October 22nd "Safter he had suffered for more Jan fifty years from muscular ossification, 'McDonnell lived for. some time in Hamilton and Kitchener, Ont, First stricken with the strange malady when a child, he gradually turned to stone. until in later years he was forced to remain. rigi iY 3 one 'position. Doctors said he s was al- ~ most, "brittle", and d t ey were baffled by his ailment. 'Chorley, Park, Roi of the isotinant-Covitnge of Otato ; will. not be offered. for sale until the present numnency term is ended. 3 na ff ivy Hi aie z A Liberal dovernment of sixteen 'members; headed by Ww. L. Mackenzie King, Was sworn in to office to succeed the Conservative Administration of R. B. Bennett. 'With several Departments merged as an economy move, the Liberal Administration will consist of only sixteen men, compared "with twenty-one for the Bennett Cabinet at the time of dissoluton. Immedately after the official ceremonies 'the new Cabinet held its first Council meeting. "The Mackenzisé King Cabinet was sworn in as follows: ii "Prime Minister, President of the Privy Council and-Secretary ~~ of State for External Affairs, W. L. Mackenzie King. Minister of Mines, Immigration and Colonization, Interior and "Indian Affairs, Thomas A, Crerar, Winnipeg. Minister of Justice, Ernest Lapointe, Quebec. Laem Minister of Public Works, P. J. A. Cardin, Sorel, Quebec. ~ Minister of Finance, Charles A. Dunning, Montreal. Postmaster-General, J. C. Elliott, London, Ont. Minister of Trade and Commerce, W. D. Euler, Kitchener. Secretary of State, Fernand Rinfret, Montreal.. . Minister .of National Defence, Ian Mackenzie, Vancouver. Minister of Pensions & National Health, C. G. Power, Quebec. 'Minister of National Revenue, J. L. Tisley, Kentville, N.S. 'Minister of Fisheries, J. E. Michaud, Edmundston, N.B, Minister of Labor, Norman Rogers, Kingston, Ont. Minister of Railways and Canals and Minister of Mating, "Clarence 'D. Howe, Port Arthur, Ont. ~*~ Minister of Agriculture, J. Gardner, Saskatchewan. Minister without Portfolio, Raoul Dandurand, Montreal. 3 : '88 The welfare of more than sixteen hundred. people in the Blind River area now rests upon a five-million dollar lumber deal * about to be negotiated by the Ontario' Government and American financial interests, it was learned at Queen's Park. "Behind the scenes in the huge financial Aransaction are 1,600 ople who are living on direct relief, but who will be put on a ps? sustaining, wage-earning basis as soon as the deal is put through, Blind River is a Northern Ontario town of about 2700 people; nearly two-thirds of whom depend upon relief for their existence. - Near by are the non-operating 'Carpenter-Hixton | lumber- projects, about which the Government and Wall Street financiers are negotiating. ~~ Out of those negotiations, it is confident; believed at Guicen' 8 Park, will come a settlement which will clinch the deal and which will take Blind River out of its hazardous financial position and make ita prospering Jumber: pow. : Some Comments. Is war yet "declared" between Italy and Ethiopia? If. not, why not. .. uF » Noise is becoming Scorn as'a mas to health; ut the recognition is by. no means general, i ' ! a $v it If we 'must g0 places, ak gee ils we 'ool not tbo surprsed if cash is lacking for what is needed at home. Sidney Smith, creator ot "Tho Gumps" died in an automobile crash near' Haprard Illinof e pile had just renewed his contract with the syx oi ' product--five years at $160,000 a year, Curio hi it "orion writers Trsquently et very Title. Iti g to ugh. eid Pkt Tom ol cal sea-gicknes: th brighter prospects of a gré has developed on both| + abroad that Fresdeny ; y fe millionaire-London Irene, on nat Atemut th dedertbe te, rounains, 1 three years ago when you took your trip, you so very graphically" de- _ houses. . 'fine sight, Vancouver, B.C., October 23, 1935. You a asked me oto send you a letter while 1 was away, so I will do it "now. SE 'We had a ory. pleasant, trip from Toronto to Vancouver. a Swiss young lady who read one of Zane Grey's books while coming ; through the Rockies, to show her indifference to our little peaks. We had snow around 'Lake Superior, and at White River saw a team of 1. huskies hitched to a dog sled. The dPrairies were interesting: with their © straw stacks dotted all over the landscape. as Winnipeg, Indian Head, Calgary, but my greatest thrill of the trip was on Saturday morning, October bth, when approaching the mountains, 'which youcan see for fifty or sixty miles distant. The sun was shining "and the. air. clear '80 that everyone in the car was on the alert, We came closer and closer until at'ldst we entered the Cascade Range. I shall I would not do them justice, then scribed the grandeur of the. scenery. It 'is inspiring 'though, to see the massive rocky, on hills, turreted with bare sharp peaks, and all seemingly thrown in one behind the other, only a little higher up. Then the gorges were gorgeous. , Just to-day I visited Capilano Canyon, where Vancouver gets most of its water supply. 'There is a suspension foot bridge over this can- yon over 300 feet high, and farther across. We also visited Horseshoe Bay where from the water's edge you can gaze up 4000 feet to snow- clad summits. Some. of the finest sights were the Three Sisters, Mount Cathedral and Mount Stephen, which towers to 10496 feet above' the Kicking Horse River at its base, ~=-Farther West is Moupt Goodwin, 11,600 feet, and Chancellor, 10. toy feet, aristocrats in mountains, The C, P, R. tunnels under Catheftral Mountain for 3206 feet, turns 'almost.a complete circle and passing under itself, emerges 48 feet lower. Then the track runs East to- enter another tunnel of 2900 feet, passes 'under itself again to pome out 46 feet lower, These, two tunnels are one 'of the world's greatest engineering: feats, I think your readers may be interested to know Something of this beautiful city of Vancouver, Where I have. been staying with my brother for the past two weeks. . He lives in West Point 'Grey, on a hillside. From my bedroom windows, I can look north across the famous English Bay (a big steamer is in sight as I write), and sée the snow-clad heights on the other side of Burrard Inlet, some ten miles distant. Then from.my East window I can look over a great part of the city, see the sky scrapers, down four miles distant, and streets and streets of - The lights of the city at night from this East window--are a "~~ Across from Vancouver is North and West Vancouver reached by ferry five miles across Burrard Inlet, This is a coming residential section as plans are drawn for a bridge across. There is a railway and motor bridge across the second narrows some miles from the business section. / Vancouver's population of 240,000 is very mixed. There are about 22,000 Asiatics. You see them everywhere, even in the country districts --the Japs are numerous, and a Jap made up my room this morning. Vancouver, as you know is a seaport city, having 96 miles of water frontage--two drydocks, 59 berths for ocean vessels. For 1934 the water borne commerce was six and a-quarter million tons, with a total foreign cargo of 3,900,936 tons. Total number of vessels inward, 16,785. There are three daily papers. and transportation by Street Railway and Bus Service here and in Victoria. They have some $66,000,000 invested in power plants, lines, ete, " English Bay is a great resort in the warm weather, There are many parks--Stanley Park being the finest. Here Pauline Johnson is commemorated with a moss grown stone, to mark her grave, Her ashes were scattered over Siwash Rock. "The University of B, C,, which I visited the day after arriving here, is on the west tip of Point rey and is built in the forest. The library is especially fine. They have an agricultural department and five gardens-and orchards, They have a Japanese monument set in a small Japanese garden as a mark of respect to a departed Jap Consul in B.C. We saw several' Japanese' and Hindu students. I had the pleasure of visiting one of the Public Schools where they have the platoon system, where all teachers are specialists in their sub- jects and the classes go from room to room for the different lessons. These rooms are equipped especially for the subject taught in that room. For instance the Natural History and Geography class rooms were practically small. museums; containing many things, such as nuts, weapons, pictures, tools, shells, fossils, etc., and dozens of pictures _pifined on the walls mostly taken from our pictorial magazines and Sun- day pictorials. They use all kinds of devices for bringing the subject in a practical way before the eyes of the pupils. Last Saturday {ve went across to Victoria on the Princess Joan, "under the auspices of Radio Station CKCD. We had the announcer, Mr. Hassel, and. the studio artists on board. They gave a concert both going and coming back--a long one on the return trip. - We had dinner at the Empress Hotel, supper on board and a 160 mile water voyage, all for the small sum of $3.26. tlt was worth it. . Po To show you how cosmopolitan we 'were, besides Ontario residents, I had across | the aisle from me a lady on her way home to Australia after seven Ei months of 'globe trotting; behind me a New Zealander, and on the car, Thére were fine cities such The B. C. Electric Co.,, of which my _brother is an engineer, supply and own all electric heat, light and power HULLS REAFFIRMING NEUTRAL is going up. STAND FAILS TO CHECK U. 8. - ~ TRADE Credit lines between American concerns and Italian cus. : So. long as Italy has the cash it can buy anything from "Ametica save actual guns and such, as export fig- ures prove. Latest reports show ships 'ments of copper, cotton, and other es- gential raw materials are steadily in- creasing on Money-down basis. The Administration's effort to dls- courage trade with belligerants--re- affirmed in the recapitulation of policy 'addressed to the League of Nations | by Secretary of State Hull o | of invocation by the Lea, the eve of sanc- not| tions--has failed dismally, according Bot} i a study guide by eorseupundanty ot of of | The Christian Scien in all lines except' actual Agtiting tools . Weis y P tomers -rémain practically unaffected. The only restraint imposed upon Italian buying in the American mar- Ket, it is plain, is the state of the Italian pocketbook, not the Hull pro- nouncement; not any business qualms about trade with war makers. If the effort to discourage trade has fuiled, the effort to stay aloof from war or tacitly to promote peace--ac- cording to how America's neutrality policy is interpreted--Hhas likewise failed. There is no aloofness from war, And, according to the philoso-| 'phy responsible for the neutrality 'policy, that is the road to American Trade | participation in war. ~Christian Science Monitor SUN DERLAND BASEBALL TEAM ARE CHAMPIONS of C. DIVISION On Thanksgiving Day, at Galt, the Sunderland Intermediate C. Baseball team won the Ontario Championship by defeating Courtwright team in.the final game by 6 to 8. The Courtwright team were the winners of eight districts. Sunder- land were the wihners: of eight dis- tricts. In the final series: Sunderland won the first game at Sunderland in 18 innings by .8 to 2. The second game was won 'by Courtwright - at Courtwright on their home grounds on the St. Clair river, 17-to b. The deciding game was played at Galt and won by Sunderland. The Courtwright team lost their game by errors in the first inning, when Sunderland scored 65° runs. After that lapse the Courtwright team played perfect ball. Junkin, the pitcher, and. Cliff Mec- Gill, the catcher, for Sunderland, won high praise for their stéady and bril- liant performance, The Sunderland team played without an important error, . ; Roy Thompson, of Sunderland, was hit on the head by a pitched ball and was unconscious for some time. He was sent by. ambulance to the Galt Hospital, but recovered and went home to Sunderland to receive the plaudits and entertainment of the Sunderland citizens. Sunderland won their own district by defeating Beaverton 2-3. They al- so won from Cambray, the winners ot an adjoining district, They next won from Coe Hill, winners of two dis- tricts to the north east. Finally at '| Barrie they won from Huntsville by a score of 3-2, a NOTICE } No open season for Pheasants in Ontario County. In view of the nature of the further representations .which have been re- ceived from various sources in the County concérned, announcement is made by the Department of Game and Fisheries that the open season for the.-shooting of English ring-necked cock pheasants on November 1st and 2nd, which originally included Ontario County, will not be effective in this County. Arrangements are now being made to cancel the Regulation in so far as it applies to this. County and there will, therefore, be no open season for the shooting of pheasants in the | County of Ontario during 1935. D. J. TAYLOR, Deputy Minister. Toronto, "Oct. 26, 1935. BLACKSTOCK Mr. and Mrs. Russell Willan, of Port Perry, spent Sunday with Mrs. | Willan's parents, Mr. and Mrs, Wm. Steele. Miss M. Wright, of Toronto, spent the week end.at her home. . Mrs. John Marlow and Doris, visit- ed in Toronto, last week, with Mr. and Mrs. Henry Forbes. Miss G. Ferguson and friend Miss Wilson, of Toronto, with the former's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Foster Fergu- son. Miss E. Kemp, of Toronto, visited last week at the home of Mrs. Robt. Crawford. Miss Ruth Marlow, Miss Caroline Sims, and Miss Partica Marlow, ali of Toronto, spent the week end with Mrs. Jas. Marlow. Mr. and Mrs. Carl Wright, Mr. ana Mrs. N. S. McNally and Verna, spent a few days last week at Bancroft. Mrs. Henry Graham, of Toronto,' visited last wéek with her parents Mr. and Mrs. Henry Mountjoy. Mr. and Mrs. J. Joblin and Rev. F. G. Joblin, of Scugog, were recent visitors of Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Layton. "The regular meeting of the A. ¥. P. A: was held at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jos. Archer, on Thursday last. A large group were in attend- ance. The programme took the form of a Seth Parker. hour, under the di- rection of Rev. Mr, Harcourt, and in- .| eluded solos by Mrs. R. Archer, Mrs. W. A. VanCamp, and duets by Mrs. A. L. Bailey and Mrs, W. Crawford, and Messrs. Jack and Robt. Smith, Rev. C. C. and Mrs. 'Harcourt sang two duets in Eskimo, entitled "Don't Stop Praying" and "No! Not One". Lunch was served consisting of weiner, cake and coffee, A hearty vote of thanks was extended to Mr. and Mrs. Archer and family for the hos- pitality shown to the A.Y.P.A. / $1.50 per year in advance § cents single copy Watch your label; it tells when your OCTOBER GOLD (In Cochrane Street, Port Perry) By ANNA B., LUNDY There is a corner in a liltle town, Just half way up the hill--and half way down; ; Where, turning from the trafflck'd King's Highway, We entered Autumn's secret realm to-day. Beneath an archad 'avenue of gold, Guarding its portals, sturdy trée- trunks stand, Like genii grim, in story books of old, Held poor Aladdin from his fairy land. Tall, stately maples borderteither side, 'In brave October uniforms arrayed, Seeking as if to show, in conscious pride, Their glorious, golden ghislany on parade. Inn lofty tree-tops, slender branches ~ meeting From side to side, they weave an archway high; Like friends who stretch out hand to hand in greeting,-- A lacy lattice 'gainst a smiling sky. Soft as a gently mocking lover's wooing, The whisper of a tiny, wandering . breeze, : Stirs through the leaves--and to their "sad undoing," A golden shower falls from the mur- muring trees. - October's quiet sun is softly dreaming, Through inter-fretted boughs it filters down, Filling the air with magic amber gleaming, We tread upon a carpet tawny- -brown. In spendthrift loveliness the world around us Spills treasure rare, as if gome Midas hand Had cast its glittering "Golden Touch" and bound us To worship all this wealth at his command. A first, faint shadow o'er the bright- ness falling, The closing sweetness of the day betrays. The pungent smoke of bonfires--child- ren calling-- Come muted through the slumbrous Autumn haze. cross the lake, where still the sun is shining, . Slowly the azure waters turn to rose. Holding the last red glow, as if repining That gay October--like the day--must close. With soft, insistent hush of parking glory, Or haunting melody of an old NP, So Nature turns the page--of Autumn's story, Vale! October--till you come again. Miss Dorothy Medd is visiting her sister, Mrs. Russell Lane. Mr. Frank Welch of Courtice, call- ing on his cousin, Mis. H. B. Mec- Kercher. Miss Ruth Payne® wend the sil- ver wedding celebration of her aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Philps, Toronto. Mr. and Mrs. E. Kendall, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Kendall visiting in Bow- manville last Wednesday. A number from here attended the various Church Anniversaries last Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Ward have pur- chased the house of the-late Mrs, Jas. Hortop. Mr. Fred Ackney is working in Midland. Mrs. Bert Murray of Calgary, visit- ing Mr. and Mrs, E. Kendall, one day last week. Mrs. Walter Asling spent last week with her parents, Myr. and Mrs. Fred Ballard. RAR IRAP A I TY re El A OFFICIAL" ELECTION RETURNS The Official figures issued by A. W. Jackson, returning officer for Ontario Riding, for the election of October 14, shows very little change from the first reports. The total figures were: Hall, 7300, Holtby 1412, Moore 10228, Noble 1847. Moore's majority over Hall, 2829. HE YEE ; § { UTICA || South Ontario County Plowing Match From far and near competitors came to display their plowing art. There were 74 entries in all classes, the largest in the history of the As- sociation, when the annual competi- tion was held on Monday of last week on the farm of Howard Malcolm, near Brougham. The land was very dray which made plowing very difficult. However, com- petition was never keener, and the match ended in good time, with the following results: Class 1 Sod-- (High Cut)--1 W. Timbers, Stouffville; 2 F, Thompson, Stouffville; 3 E. Timbers, Milliken; 4 Lloyd Marquis, Sunderland. Class 2, Sod (Open to all)--1 E, Timbers, Milliken; 2 L. Turner, Stouffville; 3 John Medd, Port Perry; 4 D. J. Tran, Claremont; 5 A. Mark, Cameron; 6 W. Hooton, Ida; 7 H. Ormerod, Greenwood; 8 D. Sonley, Port Perry, Class 3, Sod--1 John Lister, Horn. "by; 2 I. Raymer, Milliken; 3 C. Ball, Uxbridge; 4 W. Booth, Whitevale}. 6 L. C. Kennedy, Agincourt; 6 Robert Webster, Agincourt. Class 4, Stubble--H, Devitt, Bob- caygeon; F. Tweedie, Whitevale; 8 W. Tolascott, Milliken; 4 W. Hill, Green- bank; 5 F. Ball, Uxbridge; 6 C. Pax- ton, Locust Hill. Beath Farms; 2 B. Dunn, Brougham; 3 T. Brown, Stouffville; 4 W. Chan- non, Sunderland; 6 w. Gates, White- vale. Class 6, Stubble--1 Jas. Lee, Green- bank; 2 F. Webster, Woodville; 3 D. Timbers, Milliken; 4 R. Jarvis, Milh- ken. - Class 7, Boys 18 and under, Jointer Plows--1 M. Jarvis, Milliken; 2 C. Tran, Claremont; 3 O. Wiley, Oak- wood, 4 Ross Marquis, Sunderland; 6 IE. Down, Oshawa. Class 8, Stubble, Boys 16 and under, Jointer Plows--1 W. Allan, Ida; 2 R. Marquis, Sunderland; 3 A. Thaxter, Uxbridge; 4 L. Hockley, Uxbridge; 6 John Millman, Port Perry; 6 H. Hooton, Ida. Class 9, Stubble--1 V. Beaton, of Blackwater; 2 C. Worsley, Lindsay; 3 E. Wetherall, Oakwood. Class 10, open to farmers or farm- ers' sons of South Ontario-- 1 A. Meyer, Claremont; 2 F. Draper, Clare- mont; 8 G. Tran, Whitevale; 4 W. Bacon, Uxbridge. Class 11--1 Elgin Walker, Mark- ham. Best team and equipment-- 1 F. Ormiston, Beath Farms; 2 C. Down, Oshawa; 3 H. Ormerod, Greenwood. Best. Going team--W. Jarvis, Milli- ken. E Best plowed land in Sod by South Ontario Plowman-- F. Ormiston, of Beath Farms. Best Plowed Land in Stubble, South Ontario Plowman--F. Thompson, of Stouffville. The presentation of the prizes was made by President Forsyth and Sec.- Treas. Croxall, at the banquet held in the evening. BE Port Perry Wins Rugby Game From Uxbridge After the Literary Society meeting on Monday afternoon a Benefit Rugby game was held on the School Grounds, between Uxbridge and Port Perry High Schools. Although a new game in Port Perry, a good number of fans turned out and saw Port defeat the Uxbridge squad by a score of 16 to b. Points were scored as follows:- Bill Cawker, 2 touch downs, M, Harper, 1 touch down on a forward pass from Nasmith, and one point scored on a kick. indicates, however, and the question in the minds of the local players is, "will we be able to repeat our win in Uxbridge on Thursday night?" The Port Perry line-up: Snap N. McCrea, Insides McCrea and McPar- lane, Middles Moase and Farnell, Outsides Gilroy nad Denshane, Quart- er M. Harper, Halfbacks R. Oke, A. Crozidr and Wi Cawker, Subs. B. Kent and M. 'Nagmih, : = tig. t J mir elit Ag wig CEL seed stiles tie Some Wa Ia Class 6, Stubble--1 F. Ormiston, - The game was closer than the score' oN I on nd Ana STE - >, A a Yi Sow ~ oC) Se v = oh rb