Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Daily Times, 25 Mar 1929, p. 7

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THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, MARCH 25, 1929 ERUAL NAPPING - OF CANADA GOES: AHEAD STEADILY » souver, B.C., Mar. 25 ada is rom the od at the rate at 66,000 e m a year, In sof Toto to the aerial maps of | an he 'equal to two-thirds of Great Br tain' and Ireland every year, according to N. C. Stewart, Victoria eyor, who has recent- ly returned from Ottawa after studying aerial mapping and gen- eral developments along this line. "These maps are not taken' for any mere scenic record, although they would be well worth while for that alone," said Mr. Stewart. "The maps are used for tracing mineral deposits, oil and timber resources, locating transportation routes, range land and water courses. The airplane is giving Canada the best opportunity she has ever had of studying herself and finding out just how wealthy her resources really are." Aerial mapping is a comparative- . 25.--Can- | king pictures of herself oe soca altho years been made. I eB ae air totalled 66,400 square miles. e. 1597 for. Force made 4,000 photographs from the air under direction from the Jepographical © survey ,depart- "are two methods of air oblique and the ver- kor hos ble in 'coun~ Columbia it will e vertical method, While the accurate production $ibes of maps from aerial photography 'calls for a good' deal of ground control in co-operations with aer- ial pictures are an excellent means of aking quick maps of new ter ritory, a frequent demand in these days of rapid mineral and 'timber development, according to Mr Stewart. He states that new aer- [ial maps of Northern Ontario and Manitoba show how detail may be obtained in this way that would take years of ground work. On some of the Ontario sheets thous- ands of lakes have been mapped that never appeared on the records before the air pictures were made. In the next ten yars Canadian officials expect to have a million pictures of Canadian territory, ac- cording to Mr. Stewart. One quarte: of that number have already been obtained. E mbareassed X02 at case... at ber own dinner table ICK'S 'chief' was pleasant and friendly, but : I knew that he had the fastidious standards of a man of culture and wealth. ; "I was so eager, as Dick's wife, to meet those standards. "It was a little thing which upset me--just the merest change of expression on his face . . . I was pouring coffee, and for the fraction.of a second his glance had rested on my hands. "I knew my hands looked red and rough from housework and dishes--and knew he had noticed them ... . I became self-conscious, ill at ease. "Foolishly, perhaps, I felt the evening was a failure. "Now I know how NEEDLESS it was. Since I have been using Lux for dishwashing, for all cleans- ing my hands have to do--my hands are soft and smooth and white. I'm never embarrassed now by 'dishpan' hands." So many soaps--whether flake, chips, or cakes-- contain harmful alkali which makes the skin harsh. 'There is NO injurious alkali in Lux! Made by a remarkable process--Lux actually SOOTHES the skin, leaves it a little whiter and softer than before.* | Dissolving instantly, before you ever. put your hands in, a little Lux foams up into a mountain of suds--so rich, so cleansing, the dishes seem almost to wash themselves. The big package of Lux washes six weeks' dishes. Lovely hands for so small a price! * Many beauty parlors use Luz in manicuring the nails, to soften and whiten the fingers, Lux keeps lovely * the bands tha: wash dishes in the Dav 2 Sansa: 1 er) s have | ir = m the Last year the Royal Canadian Air} he Make-Believe Wife By Kathleen Norris ' » ' About A Young Girl Who Married Her Employer: Hii resolutely Xx 4 id *Hugh* she aad, rather, changing the subject, or, ike to build a whole Spanish vil- Te some time? I don' t mean just detached Spanish houses, but @& monastery and a church and a os, tle, and masses of quarters, ab grouped together on a hilisjte~-' #741 don't rememper saying that thought I could do it," he agjeg- ed, as she paused. But 1 thin! 1 said that it seemed to me surpris- ing that nobody else does {t-=that some one of those Western archi tects doesn't design the thing on 2 grand scale. Roofs, you know, continued Hugh, warming to the subject ag he went along-- "roois all massed together, on a hillside, apove the sea, jagged little streets, eucalyptus trees: they grow like hi it be horribly expensive, " Hus? yes, it would be expen- sive. Nome of this five hundred and sixty-seven-fifty 8 oth he said, with his pleasant ile. Tr was wondering Ls college would be, Hug TE oon eh?" he asked, not following her. "Well, yes. . mann Memorial? "Oh, 1 see!" i eyes as he looked a mn. Avia his gaze to the fire. 1 gee--" he sald musingly, fitting his finger tips together in a fashion that always indicated he was really king. What about your. auditoriums and assembly rooms, Bee?" he ask- ed presently. Beatrice roused her- gelf from the idle turning of as. azine pages and laughed, an frowned in a businesslike manner 'concentrated. ; a well. Oh, well--you'd have them lke old 'village ehur- ches and big Spanish barns, and all that," she explained hopefully, timidly. after a moment's thought. «tt isn't to be a very large college, it. Hugh?" : » "No, as it happens it's going to be a definitely restricted 'small ,"* he sald. oP eit, then--" she offered, with n eloauent shrug. . Hugh's finger tips were togeth- er again; he was still considering Like the Kreutz- he sald, widening t her, and . "14 would be a freak experiment --'" he mused slond, ' put fun!" Beatrice urged. "on, yes, fun. It would be lots fun!" Hugh agreed. of oma you do it in the office, hh?" No He hag evidently thought of that already. "No, I'd do it -|said whimsically, "No, Vat, my dear--T'm so stup- id; I'm so old and stiff and silent for my lovely, lovely girl! Do you know how happy you make me? Do you know that never in my life have I been so happy? *Oh, I hope so, Hugh." ' happier, Bee?" he asked suddenly. "It's such a quiet life for a girl your age; my friends are almost all older persons. What do you miss --what would you like--1?" "Well, I miss having to put quarters into the gas meter," she as he hesitated, looking at her with anxious eyes. "And, of course, I miss dishwash~ ing. 1 miss going to the butcher. lamb has gome up, and standing there, with my old shoes wef and my back aching from the office, and seventy-two cents in my purse, and wondering if Mummy and Marsh would stand for chopped meat again, or whether kidneys-- or liver--'" v "Then you are happier, Bee?" the man asked wistfully, when her half-grave, half-teasing voice stop- ped, and she laid her cheek affec- tionately against his, "Well, Hugh, use your senses! Mummy and Marcia are growing absolutely gross at that La Cres- centa place, wherever it Is, and myself simply lapped in luxury-- here. Everyone is lovely to me, millions in the bank for me to draw checks against--"" "Only you don't Bee." "Well, give me time, mister, Cars and position and clothes--" "And me, dear," he reminded her, as ske paused, staring Into space, "You, of course, the beginning and end of everything." "Then you do love me, Bee?" "Hugh, don't you know it?" "I suppose I do. But it always seems so astonishing!" "After all you have done--all you do, for me?" "But that"--he sald, looking up to shake his head slowly--"that wouldn't make you love me." "Wouldn't! Why, Hugh, what would I be made of not to love you?" "Perhaps . ' somebody younger, nearer your own age--" he began, with uncertainty, watching her, "Oh, what utter nonsense!" Beatrice commentd easily. There was no constraint, no self-consei- ousness in her clear laugh. "What more could I have, in this world, than I have?" she demanded. "Your baby, perhaps," he sald quickly, In a low voice. "If only } could have saved her for you! You seem such a little girl yourself, to have to face that!" Her face whitened suddenly, and. . the. , gray shadows deep ened in her eyes, but she did not move her steady gaze from his, "You've taken it so magnificent- 1y, Bee!" the man muttered. "Hugh, can you imagine my dis- tressing you about it? Can you im. agine my making a fuss?" she ask- ed quickly. "Isn't it enough that you do all you can--so much more than you need--to make me hap- py? Some day that sorrow--that little, little sorrow that was just your and mine--" Her voice thickened, and she stopped speak- ing, her eyes suffused, and her trembling lips pressed firmly to- gether, { "Bee, it T could help you!" : (To be continued.) (Copyright, 1928, py Kathleen Norris.) draw them, here. I'd take that table and keep the sketches--'" His eyes trayver- sed the room; ' Beatrice's pright greén-gray eyes followed their course, "You mean work on it here, evenings?" she asked. "If you don't mind." Ol, mind! Oh, I'd love it. ra help you", she said boldly. "You 'help me? No, I'd be help- ing you. T'd be working out your suggestion, remember." "Hugh Challoner! You were the one--months ago--" Beatrice pegan accusingly. But the de- lighted color was scarlet on white cheeks, and her eyes shone, "No, 1 thought of a village, 1 never should have remembered it 1gain or dreamed of applying it to this. It we did this, Bee," Hugh went on, with a most unusual ani- mation in his dark, handsome face--"" it we did this, dear, I'd in- sist upon you having your share of It. 'Plans by Beatrice and Houston Challoner' of the firm of Challon- or, Fairfax & Flint, N rth Under- @iill'--that's the way it would read!" ; 1 "Oh, Hugh, no! I don't know one thing about drains and cross- sections, of rear elevations and all the rest of it! I don't know even {how doors ought to swing, on those tittle dotted fans you make!" she protested radiantly, "You don't have to. It's ideas «ideas that count. Hew to man- 'age doorways and steps, and how many rooms to put into dormitor- fes--all that," he said. "And where to put little Della Robbia Madonnas, Hugh, and red tiles and balconies!" Beatrice chanted exultantly. "well, exactly," "Oh, Hugh, but oughtn't you to have someone better--like Joe Flint?" "Let Joe Flint make his own try, i2 he wants to." He came over to her couch and knelt down and locked his arms about her slim waist, in the thin, white, fluffed dressing gown. "Do you know how I love you, | Ing one of his eyebrows with a cool Bee?" 4 "I hope you do," she answered, smiling at close range and smooth- JUDGE. REFUSES TO BREAK LEASE , Quebec, Mar. 25. -- Sitting in the Superior Court recently, Hon. Judge Pouliot refused to"break a lease be- cause cold was complained of in'a certain house in Quebec. J. Verret was the plaintiff in the case, and he sought to have the lease nullified because of the fact that his flat was so cold that two stoves going full blast could not heat it, while an additional witness swore that a bot- tle of milk placed six inches from the stove froze. On the other hand Mrs. Julie Be- dard maintained that the flat was not as cold as all that for an employee of the local health department had in spected it, and had contented him- self by suggesting a few minor changes which had been carried out. Judge Pouliot in discussing of the case, ruled that the lessor was only responsible for defects and that the cold of the flat was not a defect for which she was responsible, but was due to the lessee failing to instal stoves capable of giving sufficient heat in his house. Build Resistance To Prevent Coughs 'or Colds-- Take SCOTT'S EMULSION Rich in ' Resistance-build- ing Cod-liver Oil Vitamins Scott & Bowne, Toronto, Ont, tinger. AR] "What can I do to make you for three chops, and finding that: IN PRIME OF LIFE fargo sop i eta oor as Rheu Ruch Lang ness and other troubles of the Liver, dy en Dowels ire icine, KIWANUANS HELP (NDER-PRIVILEGED ONTARIO CHILDREN Splendid Record of Work Done by Service Clubs Hamilton, Ont, March 25--The Ontario - Quebec - Maritime Kiwanis district has 3,050" Kiwatians engaged in undes-peivileged child work, E. C. Reed, of East Toronto, Ont. chair- man of the under-privileged commit- tee, declared recently, in summariz- ing the work since January. l. "This service is carried on with all the other activities, such as work at SIphanages and institutes, with crip- pled children, health camps, clinics, ind general educations," Mr, Reed said. Andrew G. Gaul, 6f Hamilton, Ont. governor of the Ontario-Quebec-Mar- itime Kiwanis district, announced the following clubs as being exceptionally SEXOLOGY CLASSES 10SE INSTRUCTORS active in this kind of work, in On- tario; Peterboro, Kitchener, Galt, Timmins, Belleville and Brantford; in uuebe: Montreal, Quebec City, St. wrence, and Hull; Saint John, N. B.; and Yarmouth, N.S. "The success of our work depends upon the personal, individual service 4 Kiwanians," states Mr. Gaul, "The spirit of this service should be paren- Professor Who Gave Course, tal. As our membership increases and on "The Family" is Let Out Columbia, Mo., Mar, 25. -- Two professors of the University of Mis~ souri, who are under suspension for methods used in study of the family as a social unit, Friday said good-bye to their classes. Dr. Max Meyer, Professor of Pcy- chology, waved aside the cheers of his students when he walked before them. He asked them the usual searching questions and laughed at the confusion of their replies. Dr, H. O. Degraff, middle-aged as- sistant Professor of Sociology, stood before his class in the "family," a |' course he personally developed after years of study of social problems at the Universities of Chicago and Iowa, and calmly started his final lecture, While he outlined a defense of his work, co-eds wept, Dr. Degraff pro- gressed to a point where he declared in a breaking voice, "I have supreme confidence in the youth of America," He was unable to continue and hur- ried from the room. A sex questionnaire had been for- mulated as a "research measure" by the class and through widespread dis- approval of this came the ousting by executive action of Drs. Meyer and Degraff, who assisted in its prepara- tion. Their final dismissal, along with that of O. H. Mowrer, psycholo- gy assistant, was recommended to the Board of Curators which meets April 6. x "The principles of 'the family' and of modern youth--to these I dedicate my life," Dr. Degraff said. "I am certain that in time even the conseyvative element will come to rea- lize that I have been doing some- thing worth while here and will com- mend me for it. [I feel that I will be vindicated." Dr, Meyer concluded his class with an old saying from Germany where he was born and educated. "It is said," he remarked, "that everything has an end except a sausage, which has two." 'ARMY' EMIGRATION SCHEME IN PERIL Commissioner Lamb Writes Letter to Times on Un- employment London, Mar. 25.--Commissioner Lamb, in a letter to the Times, rel- ative to the unemployment prob- lem, says: "The recent reference to the Lard Mayor's fund in the House of Commons leaves me won- dering why the overseas transplan- tation scheme, providing restora- tive measures 'of recreation and employment, such as. 'you advo- cate, cannot be regarded as a prop- per charge on the Lord Mayor's fund. The Salvation Army scheme contemplating the early transfer ot 200 willing families who will be guaranteed work overseas is in jeopardy, and may force a spec- ial appeal to be made. Maybe the authorities are looking to the pub- lic for a lead for or against the points advocated in the Times." The liner Duchess of York, sai- ing on Friday, carried a party of girls and young women to Saska- toon for domestic work, under the auspices of the British Women's Immigration League, the Canautan Government and the Canadian Pacific Railway, as well as a large party of single men and boys for farm work in Ontario under the auspices of the United Church of Capada. WAN SHOT WHHE FIGHTING BANDITS "Hamilton, Ont., Mar. 25.--Shot through the left thigh by a bandit who robbed him, John Innes, of 54 Sherman avenue north, was left stranded in Woodland cemetery late Saturday night when the gunmen made sure of their escape by kick- 'ing away the gas feed on Innes' auto, Miss Violet James, of 27 Ro- wanwood avenue, was with him at the time and assisted the victim for more than a mile through the lonely graveyard to the home of E. Wilkins on the old Valley Inn road where a call was sent to the police, An electric light company recently dismissed all it$ employees. The dis- charge of the light brigade.~The Passing Show. the organization goes on, our efforts '| will be continued from the time a | child enters the clinic, through the period of Hospitalization, and finally assisting in his getting an education." THREE NEN KILLED INS1,000,000 FIRE Peoria, Ills, Market Destroy- ed and Business District Threatened Peoria, Ills, March 25.--Three men lost their lives and property valued at $1,000,000 was destroyed in a fire which swept through the Peoria Mai- ket, a four storey business block in the heart of the business district re- cently. The Block and Kuhl department store was damaged as the flames for a time threafenied to engulf the en- tire block. The victims were two fire- men, Thomas Connors and Richard Teufel, killed when a stairway and wall collapsed, and the night watch- man, Milton Strayer, who was found dead on the second floor. Origin of the fire has not been de- termined definitely. Fire officials were investigating a report that a gas explosion preceded the flames. The bodies of the two firemen have not 'been recovered. They were buried beneath a mass of timber and twisted steel, B.C. NAY SECURE NEW INDUSTRY Increased United States' Tariffs May Have A Beneficial Result the United States enforce a high tar- iff against foreign oil, British Colum- bia may gain a new industry, accord- ing to operators of pilchard reduc- tion plants on the west coast of Van- couver Island. It would probably re- sult in the establishment of hydro- genation plants for the purification of fish and vegetable oils which are -| now being shipped into the United States for that treatment. It is estimated that 90 per cent of the output of British Columbia fish oil plants was shipped last year to the United States, The present Unit- ed States tariff is five cents a gallon, but it is proposed to increase this to a 45 per cent ad valorem duty which, at the 1928 price for pilchard oil, would amout to 000. : ] At present the United States im- portation of pilchard oil is used al- most exclusively for food purposes. It is shipped to hydrogenation plants eliminated and all impurities removed. Made edible and bleached snow- white, pilchard oil is then mixed with market as the basis of most of the ¢ooking fats used by the public today. Boys' Blouses, Assort- g Fin 49¢ Dominion Clothing Store 68 King St. W. Phone 2141 PHONE 22 For Your Drug Needs THOMPSON'S 10 Simcoe St. S.--We Deliver Em FOR SHOE VALUES A, Victoria, B.C., March 25--Should|' where the odor and taste of fish are] vegetable oils and is placed on the| HAF-HEEL - HOSIERY gives a new smartness, The clever Kayser version of the modern square heel--an exclusive feature shown in Style No. 121x Service weight $1.95 New Spring Shades, LEARSKIN "BEACHSKIN FAIRSKIN {TANSKIN | BARESKIN] ROSESKIN' SUNSKIN SPRINGTONE Trade Mark Regisrered, PAGE SEVEN ~

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