Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Daily Times, 20 Jun 1929, p. 14

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pe gen THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, THURSDAY, JUNE 20, 1939 (0-OPERATION SOLVING SCHO 's Institue Con- bas venti : Saskatoon, Sask, June 20.--Co- Speratton in' solviiig' school pro- blems was, urged in the report of Educational Commiftes presented by Miss Dora M, Baker, Truro, N, 8., convenor, before the Federated Women's, Institutes convention here -dRy. 2, » "i is significant of the en- larging vision," sald Miss Baker, hat provincial 'reports itrolk less the surface improvements accom- plished, and deal more with root evils of educational policies." New Brunswick had reported that better equipped schools could not be se- ured ' under present conditions 'whete tural depopulation Teft' soife @hetfons unable to fimance thelr wehodls- Ontario advised "that it Is 4 'safer 'and saner method to in- "terest school 'hoards in providing dohool' equipment. Albertd urged 'eosopération between Women's In- 'stitutes and school boards in every- thing which would tend to better akhools--=not a' taking over of thelr prescribed. duties. "t Help: given schools throughout Canada by: Women's Institutes in- wiuded supplying every kind of ne- cessary school equipment such as playgrounds and books; advocating .and, where possible, seeing that su- 'pervised play is carried out; ar- yanging for teaching of music in sehools by special tuition, and fol- Towing this up with musical festi- wals Aesthetic' development was stimulated: by presentatons-of ple- tures, Empire programmes, obser- vation of - national holidays and beautifying of school grounds. Health and sanitation had been 'placed high among school objec- tives. In conclysion Miss Baker advo- wated:- (1) Getting up national con- tests to +link the provinces more dlosely In educational work: (2) «Holding a Women's Institute Na- tional: Day or Week, when a con- centrated time would be set to fo- cus the eyes of the community on this: work; (3) Getting. up a pageant before the next biennial meeting of the organization .to de- plet the. Institute's history and Meals. ; Twelve-year-old Lydia ' Gilbert . apetently jumped into a lake at Lel- cester, England, and rescued a whree-year-old boy, took off his solothes, wrapped her coat about Him," put: him into a baby buggy. svheeled him to a policeman, and left him in the officer's care, 2. 2 Le a C.P.R. TIME TABLE. Effective April 29, 1929, (Standard Time) Going - West + 8.45 a.m. Daily, .28-a.m, Daily: 40 a,m, Daily except Sunday. 35 'pom. Daily, 34 pom. Dail _ 10.08 9.m; Daily, i * 2.04 pe Daily, * t+ 8.03 po, Daily except Sunday, +, 1110 pm. Daily, ' 12.03 a.m. Daily, All times shown above are times trains depart frome Oshawa: Station, : CANADIAN NATIONA L RAILWAYS : Effective April '28, 1929, ! (Standard Time) Eastbound jencept Sunday. nly. East nbs SSE am, Dally a.m, Sunday o am, Daily,* pm. Daily except Sunday. py, Daily except Synday, p.m. Daily except Sunday. pam. Daily, ' p.m. Daily except Saturday. Pp a toe - mom ILRZBB22 BA38SE : om, Daily, m. Le 39 a.m, Daily. a.m, Daily, i am, Daily excépt Sunday. a.m, Daily, am, Daily except Sunday. p.m. Daily except Sunday. pi, Daily, p.m. Sunday only, 7 pom, Daily except Sunday, 8.42 p,m, Daily except Sunday, Whitby, Oshawa, Bowmanville = BUS LINE "WEEK DAY SCHEDULE (Effective on and after April 28, 1920.) (Daylight Saving Time) ¥ 'Arrive § 'Whit, Pore oN 5 4 S. 5. 6. r B a 4 7 7. EN Lea , orth 615 am, 7 amt DN ps 8S 90 Hit 5 acy : TNS pm, 6.50 p.m. J m. Hp arked Whitby Hospital, L : SUNDAY AND HOLIDAY S! td 5 -- CHEDULE Arrive 'Whit 9.45 oy : 100M ni Caton = 5 00 a 23BussscE3 PETE ATELY PPTPPOPTETAS SS SP3BEPARPRABEE M10 12,00." © "busses. to . ve wa Arrive 930 am, oro! 12.18 p. 1.25 p. pep BR JE R25 0. | Pm, 1045 pom. 14,00 pam. Hast aD ple Arrive Arrive wa Bowmanville 10.30 a.m, S100 pom, WU pom, Going al Ve -- Bi y KT "1015 aan. 12.0 pon $85 pans 2.45 pm, 4.45 pm, 6.45 pom, 845 pe 11.00 pei: "fds, Tinie marked Whitd; Hospuat, R LA | Ushawa Waiting ONES IN CARAVANS COTTAGES SCARCE i$ 1» How Londoners are Spending Vacations on Rural 1 1 3 Roads : 1 Loa f--So many people who ar nfaged in London during the week Nave bought country cottages within an hour or so of the metro- polis that the supply has become 'practically exhausted, a situation which, parenthetically, may be sald fo have been the cause of much dissatisfaction among agricultural workers, The Londoners as a rule, only use the cottages for week-ends and for holidays, Th :searcity of cottages has caus- ed many town-dwellers, to turn to the caravan as a substitute, They prices, and farming has been such a: poor enterprise in the past two farmer is only too glad to rent a space on his land to caravan own- ergs. + 4 . Such caravans remain stationary most of the time, but when the summer holidays of the owners ar- rive a horse is rented and they take to the road Not the high road, as in poetry, for the motorcar has practically pre-emptied those thor- oughfares, but there remain hun- dreds of miles of delightful wind- can be had over a wide range of or three years that the average || PLUNGES BUT FLIER ESCAPES [ammonton, N. J, June 20, ~ Donald Darby, 27-year-old aviator of Merion, Pa., escaped with burns on. one arm yesterday from an airplane. that plunged.2,400. feet in flames so fierce that they started a swamp fire among pine trees and Pathy does not know what hap- pened exactly, but his plane burst into flames over the abandoned vil- lage of Anatol townsite, used by war workers in 1918, The plane dived into a swamp nearby, Edward Campanella, a road su- pervisor, was at police headquart- ers when a report was received of thé crasah, He raced to the swamp Tailor made Toe meas $3500 Scotland Woolien : Mills 8. Rotish, Mgr., 11 Simcoe 5. | icy : oe © on Sand + S------ W. A. HARE OPTOMETRIST "23Y; Simcoe St. North Hundreds of people wear with utmost comfort Hare's Faulticss Lenses ing lanes all over the south of England which attract the easy- going caravaners. These lanes are not favored by motorcar drivers because speed is almost out of the question, and thus the slower traf- fie 1s generally left to share what smal] space there is with the gen- une farm traffic. It is said that careful planning will enable a car- avan occupant to travel clear across the south of England without hav- ing to dispute with the huge char- a-bancs for right of way, BIT DOG'S EAR T0 SAVE FIANGEE Dundee; Scotland--John Camp- hell, a young clerk of Dundee, was out .walking with his' fiancee near her home. . They both espled a friend passing in the street and in looking back they failed to see a large Alsatian dog sitting half hidden In a garden entrance, The girl. accidentally trod on the animal's tail and it turned and buried "its 'teeth in her leg, She gsereamed with pain tried to kick the dog away without success, Campbell, finding nothing handy with which to beat off the dog, tried to pull it away. At his wit's end, he stooped over and bit the dog's ear. The animal set up a howl and ran off. ro Sar "$650 | ROSS, AMES & 4 - GARTSHORE CO. | \ 9 Pituce St., Oshawa Phone' 1100 s Hudson-Essex Distributors Felt Bros. Established 1886 ; | [12 Simcoe St. South li 13 Simooe Street South - Machinery Repairing NOIHING TOO LARGE G TOO SMALL Machine Shop St. W. Phone 12 For Better Values in DIAMONDS Burns' Jewelry Store Corner King and Prince : Cash or Terms \ 3 | i Diamonds! - Bassett's On Oshawa's Main Corner Boy's Balbriggan Combin« Ae :- 'Dominion Clothing Store '68 King St. W. Phone 2141 ee 1 [© EYESIGHT SPECIALIST 7 he LEADING JEWELER | a -- A a 4 > For Your Dxug Needs THOMPSON'S 10 Simcoe Sv. 8.~~We Deliver in his automobile, and plunged through the marshland for ten minutes to reach 'the fire that had heen started. He found Darby standing near the blazing plane, Campanella took Darby to a hos- pital, halting on the way to direct policemen and volunteer fire fight- ers to the scene, His burn dressed Darby returned to the swamp to watch the fire, Darby had taken off from Lower Bank to fly to Crescent airport, Philadelphia POINCARE PRAISES U. 3. DEBT EXPERTS . Believe General Goodwill Will Result From Settlement New York, June 20~In his first puble opinion of the reparations sattlement, Daymond Polcare, Prime Minister of France, writing in the July issue of "Foreign Af- fairs" published here yesterday, said that the moral advantages of the settloment 'promises to create a new atmosphere in Europe, lo promote a feeling of confidence and trust, and to re-establish a perman- ent basis of collaboration hetween the nations." Speaking particularly of Owen D, Young and J. P. Morgan, Poincare wrote that the American experts "who had the highly ungrateful task of serving as arbitrators be- tween debtor and creditors, wero able to keep alive the general goodwill and to inspire every one with a strong desire not to let the conference fall." The floor of a new saloon in Ha. vana is tiled with silver dollars. 1M -- -- Seats on Sale Circus Day JURY & LOVELL Drug Store Same Price as at Grounds In commemoration of Beethov- en's centenary, the city of Berlin granted an annual stipendium for needy and gifted students of mu- sie, and as the prize was not award- ed last year 20 students were yo- contly awarded an annual stipeno of 1,000 marks each, TRAGIC DEATH OF FRENCH EX-PREMIER Fight With Poverty Eased by Pension -- Forgotten | Politician | Paris, June 20.--~M, Mons, aged 83, a Prime Minister of France 20 years ago, and a prominent politi- cian until shortly before the out- break of war, has died suddenly. He was found endeavoring to live on an ex-senator's pension ui $7.60 a month at the beginning of 1927. The Government {initiated a Bill, which was rushed through, granting him an annual pension of $1,000, M. Monis was appointed Premier In 1911, one of his principal cuse leagues being M, Caillaux, hut the Ministry lasted only four months. He was present with M, Bertaux, the Minister of War, at one of the early aviation meetings at Issy-les- Molineaux, when an airplane crashed into a group of officials, killing M. Bertaux and injuring M. Monis severely, M. Monis was then unable to ap. pear in Parliament to support the Government's policy, and his Cab inet fell soon afterwards, He was defeated at the senatori- al elections in 1920, He had once been one of the leading members of the Bar, and when he was de- feated he returned to the courts thinking to rehabilitate his posi. tion. He had been almost forgot- ten, however, and he could ohtaln cases only at small fees, It was found on inquiry that the little money he had saved in the days of prosperity had been spent on preparing his son for the law, Good-bye, Flies and Mosquitoes! i? Unless you're a Flit user, you have no idea how soon you can rid your home of every fly and mosquito. Flit kills quicker, and is easier to use, in the handy Flit sprayer. Spray [into ks and ies to kill roach bed bugs, ants. Flit vapor does not stain. Try the quicker Flit method today! FLIT Copyright 1929 Stanco Ine, "The the rE HANDBAGS TO MATCH SPORT Feminine lovers of sports in Eu. rope are carrying handbags to show thelr favorite recreation this season. The most popular bags are of natural wool or tussore, Tennis enthusiasts have tennis rackets em- broidered in bright colors on the flaps, Golf followers carry those adorned with crossed niblicks In brown and silver, and fishermald- ens show their preference with trout leaping from a fisherman's hasket, HAPPY FAMILY IN STABLE Animals of many kinds and dis- positions are living happily in the stable of a London milk distribut- Ing company. They are not only on friendly terms with the 100 horses, but with one another, In ieluded in the private zoo are two Indian monkeys, a wild hare which has been tamed, a fox which ac- companies her owner on walks about the city, and a number of rabbits, pigeons, canaries and for eign birds, ' BPECIAL SPECIAL, Men's Black Oxfords ,,. $2.49 I. COLLIS & SONS 50-54 King St. W, 'Phone 733W ee A url ii ELLA CINDERS--Bliss And Happiness | ZU Glin (hs " [Bb a bd By Bill Conselman and Charlie Plum BRINGING UP FATHER i where i | cd MOTHER? SHE WILL BE DOWN WW A MINUTE THAT WAS AN ARIGTOCRATC GENTLEMAN YOU WERE TALKING TO TODAY = NOT LIKE THOSE LOAFERS YOU GENERALLY GO WITH S HE ? YOUD BETTER CULTWATE HIS ACQUAINTANCE AND GET WN WITH HM- WHO sPecTATOR'S . Cus | HO TOMMY, df wuncheon il i cuss Awe not [i \ KINO ARTHUR'S "N= ROUND TABLE [roses THE LEGENDARY STORIES OF KING ARTHUR'S KNIGHTS OF THE ROUNDTABLE } STARTED THE LUNCHEON CLUB IDEA. CCORDING TO RECORDS LUMCHEOH CLUBS WERE WELL ESTABLISHED | IN THE DAYS OF JOSEPH ADDISON. MODERN LUNCHEON CLUB WHY DOES DADDY WAN) T0 BELONG TO SOMEBODY TO _{ TALK GOLF WITH! A LUNCHEON CLUB, TOMMY ? DAY FLOURISHED UNDER RULES THAT (NCLUDE.: "NOME SHALL BE ADMIT "TED INTO THE CLUB THAT 1S OF / THE SAME TRADE WITH ANY MEM: BER OF OR CURSES HIS NEIGHBOR MAY GIVE HIM A KICK IN THE SHINS, 1929, by King Features Sydnee: ox. Got Britain rights reserved. IT; \F ANY MEMBER SHEARS "TWO WEERS ONLESS You ONE NO. ONLY TAKE WEEK (mr HAVE MY TWO WEEKS, TILLIE - ; NEED THE REST COULL GET YOUR TWO WEEKS ONLY ONE WIL MUST BE IN AUGUST] yy 3} HAVE \'T LL. AVAQUST wr} MAG 1S ALL =| LET SAP ME hy | 1 DO IT 4 WON'T THAT LA\TTLE SET | THE , OF By Russ Westone E. Lg 8

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