Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Daily Times, 13 Aug 1929, p. 9

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THE OSHAWA DAILY. TIMES, TUESDAY, AUGUST 13, 1929 1 Final Clearing One Rack of Summer Dresses AE - - = - i g ~ - - - - - ih _ Short or Long Sleeves. Sizes 14 to 40. To cleared out on Wednesday morning for "be $1.95 | KNITTED SUITS Sizes from 34 to 40. Regular $10.00 To clear Wednesday Morning .... $4.95 WATCH OUR WINDOWS THE FAIR 7 Simcoe Street South : "RUSH" WEDNESDAY MORNING SPECIAL 1§ Dozen Men's Broadcloth Shirts Regular $1.95 WEDNESDAY MORNING ONLY # F19¢c Each NO PHONE ORDERS Dominion Clothing Store 68 King Street West BRONZE TABLFT WILL BE PLACED + IN COLLEGIATE (Continued from page 3) fume cabinet for physics and chemis- try at $234, totalling $2276, were accepted. Electricity or Gas The question of installing electri- cal or, gas ranges and equipment in the cafeteria in the new school was debated by the board. The architects had recommended that gas equip- ment be installed but many members of the board thought that, in Osh- awa, electricity would be more sat- isfactory. The equipment committee was instructed to compare both in- stallation and operating costs of the two systems, and was given power to act in authorizing the instal- lation of the most satisfactory sys- tem. The tender of the Sparrow Company of Toronto at $846.50 for equipment for' the cafeteria, being the lowest tender received, was also referred to the equipment committee with ;power to act. The board ap- proved a change in the plans, pro- viding for the installation of electri- cal refrigeration in- the cafeteria. The business administration was instructed to have the desks removed from the old section of the Colle- iate, which was demolished, refin- ished and renovated for use in the new addition. Coal Contracts Tenders of the Pixon Coal com- any for the delivery of 600 tons of Pcahanto coal to the schools at $769 per ton, and of W. J. Trick Co. Ltd. for the delivery of 100 tons of grate anthracite coal at $1264 per ton, were accepted. The contract for the erection of a steel fence around Mary street school was awarded to Norman Brown at $425. Ja¢k Marlowe was awarded con- tract for decorating King street school at $1.010, and for painting the exterior of Ritson road school at . * The tender of Miller & Libby for phrhbing of Simcoe south school at $5" vas accepted. The property gow uilee wag instructed to pur- chase a ' portable sink .and mop laundry at $90 for the Collegiate. The business administrator was in- structed to report on the question of installing the Carbo-System of heating in Ritson road school. Janitors Changed Robert Walker, janitor of Mary street school, was trapsferred to Simcoe street south school, and R. A. Fudger was appointed janitor of Mary street school. This move was made necessary by the resignation of the janitor of Simcoe south school. 'The question of grading the Ritson school grounds was referred to the property committee. Teachers Resign Resignations of Misses Frances E. Shirley, Edith McCammon,' Jessie Mitchell and Thelma Gilders from the staff of the Oshawa public schools were accepted, Five aplications for positions on the public schools staff were referred to the mamagement committee, Suggests Violin Classes A letter from a ratepayer of the city suggesting violin classes in the public schools was received and filed, it being considered by the Board that this matter would receive the attention of the new director of music in due time. New Position The management committee re- ported that the application of E. G. Nichol, Sarnia, as physical training instructor for the Oshawa Public Schools be accepted. This is a new the board. He will supervise physi- cal training and inter-school sports, and also the school rink in winter. MANY NEW BOOKS FOR LIBRARY AT (Continued from Page 3) Book: Allen, Stage Antiquities of the Greeks and Romans: Lucas, Adven- tures and Enthusiasms: ~Quiller- Cotich, Mistorical Tales from Shake- speare; Stewart, Perfect Behgvior: Tisdel Studies in Literature: Cun- liffc, English: Literature During, the Last Half Century: Trent and others. Introduction to the English Classics; position which has been created by, | Smith, Industrial THE COLLEGIATE) Odds and Ends Must Be Cleared Completely There's a sale going on this week that includes everything that can come under this head- ding. THE TICKETS IN THE WINDOW TELL THE PRICE STORY. | Keeps Your Teeth White .. Your Breath This one dentifrice does two things thoroughly: milk of magnesia neutralizes weet S The mouth acids. The scientific cleansing ingredients keep your teeth clean and glistening. Use REXALL MILK OF MAGNESIA TOOTH PASTE" for white teeth and a sweet breath, SAVE WITH SAFETY AT YOUR REXALL JURY & King St. East STORES LOVELL The Ice Cream «is Neilsons Ice Cream Wholesomely made of pure cane sugar, lus. scious fruits or choco- late, and pasteurized cream, it is nourishing and exquisitely tasty. Tremendously popular =--deservedly so. Bricks 35¢ -l On an afternoon stroll, after the show, for the evening refreshment or for dessert Neilson's Ice Cream is a recognized favorite among discern- ing palates. Make it a warm weather habit. That Satisfies ' Karn's Drug Store Next Post Office Phone 378 We Deliver Ball, Constructive English; Jones and Yates, Practical and Literary Eng- lish; Hilson and others; Illustrative Material for High School Literature; Carnegie Library School, Mother's Day in Poetry; Thanksgiving in Po- etry, Easter in Poetry, Christmas in Poetry, 2v.; Edmund and others, Toaster's Handbook; Mosher, More Toasts; Phelps, Debaters' Manual; Ballard, Teaching the Mother Ton- gue; Granger, Index to Poetry and Recitations; Miner, Jack Miner on Current Topics: Marshall, English Literature for Boys and Girls; Stev- | enson, Home Book of Verse: Stev- enson, Home Book of Verse for Young People; Henley, Lyra Hero- ica; Teasdale, Rainbow Gold: Unter- meyer, Yesterday and Today; Mod- ern British Poetry; Cohen, 1-act play by Modern Authors; junior play book, Massey, Canadian Plays from Hart House Theatre, 2v.; Leonard, Atlan- tic Book of Modern Plays; Hamp- den, Nine Modern Plays: Knicker- bocker, Plays for Classroom Inter- pretation: Smith, Form-room Plays: Junior, Intermediate, Senior: Barrie, Representative Plays; Galsworthy, Representative Plays; Barrie, Admir- able Crichton; France, Man Who Married a Dumb Wife: Jerome, Passing of the Third Floor Back; Millay, King's Henchman; Dunsany, Five Plays: Gregory, Seven Short Plays: Smith & Knevels, Arrow-ma- ker"s Daughter: Stewart, Bells of Canterbury; Alden, Why the Chimes Rang: Howell's, The Mouse-trap. (These and several other collections of poetry and drama the gift of the Students' Council). story Burpee, Historical Atlas of Can- ada; Clement, Once in France: Mac- kenzie, Story of the Great War; Moncrieff, Rise of the British Em- pire; Wrong & Langton, Review of Historical Publications Relating to Canada (From the library of the late Lyman C. Smith, 4yv. and index vs. 1-10) ; Tryon, Teaching of Historv in Junior and Senior High Schools: Hazen, Europe since 1815, 2v.: Tur- ner, Europe 1789-1920; Bishop and Robinson, Practical Map Exercises and Syllabus in Europea History Since 1714; Scottish Clans and Their Tartans; Harper's Pictorial History of the Civil War, 2v. (gift of Mrs. McAdie); Marshall, Qur Empire Story: O'Neill, The World's Story; Morey, Outlines of Ancient History. Travel : Packard & Sinnott, Nations as Neighbours; Stefansson, My Life With the Eskimos; Lucas, A Wand- erer in Paris; Vancouver Port An- nual: Hudson, Afoot in England: and Commercial Geography: Chisholm, Handbook of Commercial Geography; Vaile, New Zealand: Herbert, Korea: Johnston, ina: Finnemore, Switzerland: Thomson, Denmark: Masson. Edine burgh; Wilmot- Buxton, Wales : Leith, Iceland: Mockler-Ferrvman, Norway : Henderson, Jamaica Growth of a Great Port; Gudgeon, British North Borneo: Clark, Cevlon. Fox, Australia: Omond, Belgium; Finnemore. Italy: Finnemore, Tapan: Kidd, Seuth Africa: Tvnan, Ireland: Fairford, Newfoundland: Finnemore, England: Finnemore, Holy Land: Browne, Greece, Finnemore, France; Grierson, Scotland; Chambers, Tra- ditions of Edinburgh. Biography Henderson, Great Men. of Canada: Marquis, Who's Who in America; Pagan, James Watt and the Pioneer Inventors; Dr. Johnson and His Cir- cle; Elia and His Friends; White, Daniel Boone; Wilderness Scout; Chambes's Biographical Dictionary. Fiction (Novels, Romances, Adventures, Fantasies; School Stories, etc.) Wodehouse, A Prefect's Uncle; Morley, Haunted Bookshop; Conrad, Lord Jim, Nostromo; Kipling,. Kim, Captains Courageous, Puck of Pook's Hill, Just So Stories, Rewards and Fairies, Second Jungle Book: Ballan- tyne, Martin Rattler, Gascoyne, Er- ling the Bold, Dog Crusoe; Henty, 'True to the Old Flag, Wulf the Sax- on, Through the Fray, Bonnie Prince Charlie, Through the Sikh War, With the Allies to Pekin; Alcott, Little Women; Smith, Septima at School, Binkie of IIIB; Jeans, John Gra- ham, Sub-lieutenant, A Naval Ad- venture; Macdonald, Lost Explorers, Quest of the Black Opals; Macdon- ald, Ranald Bannerman's Boyhood: Pollard, For the Red Rose: Wester man, With Beatty of Jutland; Harri- son, Brothers in Arms: Shervill, Ed- gar the Ready: Collingwood, Strange Adventures of Eric Blackburn; Fav- enc, Marooned on Australia; Bush- man, In the Musgrave Ranges: Mar- tineau, Feats on the Fiord: Brereton, How Canada was Won; Blake, In the Grip of the Barren Lands: Cowper, Haunted Trail; Clarke, Chris in Canada; Leighton, Olaf the Glorious: Brereton, With Allenby in Palestine: Westerman, Quest of the Golden Hope: Bennett, Clayhanger, Ricey- man Steps, Conrad, Youth; Hudson, Green Mansions: Aldrich, Story of a Bad Boy: Atkinson, Greyfriars Bobby; Dickens, Tale of Two Cities; Dumas. Count of Monte Cristo, Three Musketeers; Clemens, Connec- ticut Yankee in King Arthur's Court; French, Lance of Kanana; Marryat. Masterman Ready; Muir, Stickeen; Ollivant, Bob, Son of Battle; Porter, The Scottish Chiefs; Verne, Around the World in Eighty Days: Water- loo, story of Ab,' Verne, Twenty Thousand Leagues Under the Sea; Barrie, Sentimental Tommy ; Bulwer- Lytton, Last Days of Pompeii; Doyle, The White Company: Byrne, Messer Marco Polo: Craddock, Pro- phet of the Great Smoky Mountains; Eliot," Mill on the Floss; Garland. Main Travelled Roads: Hemon, Ma- ria Chapdelaine; Gras, Reds of the Midi: Hough, The Covered Wagon: London, Call. of the Wild, White Fang; Major, When Knighthood Was in Flower: Tarkington, Penrod, Pen- rod and Sam: White, The Blazed Ttrail; Wister, The Virginian: Mase- field, Tim Davis, Loti, An Iceland Fisherman; Walsh, While Rivers Run: Oxenham, At School with the Roundheads; Lynn, Knights of the Air; Second Adventure, Tenty-five Swodrsmen, Blair of Balaclava, Tom- my of the Tanks, Reade, Cloister and the Hearth: Eliot,. Adam Bede: Ker. Earl's White Cross: Hogg, Good Deeds of Samuel Dobbie. Taffrail, A Little Ship: Hough, North of 36: and manv others. The following short story collec- tions are the gift of the Students' Council: Campbell, Book of Narra- tives; Heydrick, Types of the Short Story; Smith, Mystery Tales for Boys and Girls; Mikels, Short Stor- ies for English Courses: Wright, Great Detective Stories; Jessup, Best American Humorous Short Stories; Cody. World's Greatest Short Stor- ies; Law, Modern Short Stories; Schweikert, Modern Short Stories. BRIGHTER OUTLOOK SEEN AT HAGUE (Continued from Page 1) would like her troops home from the Rhineland by Christmas if pos- sible, but well-informed quarters in London today believed no new fact or decision had been reached on the question of early evacuation of the Rhineland, in London or at The Hague. The British Government's posi- tion is described as very simple. It would like to evacuate British troops before the end of the year but preferred evacuation to be the result of a general agreement with France and Belgium. Authoritative observers were un- willing to comment on what would happen if no agreement could be concluded between the three allies. If general observers were confi- dent that the Hague conference would reach an agreement on the principle of evacuation at an early date and would reach a compro- mise on the Young plan, It was pointed out that the two matters were being discussed concurrently because the Germans maintained the Young plan depends on evaeua- tion of the Rhineland while the French consider evacuation de- pends on adoption of the Young plan, Cape Town, South Africa, Aug. 13.--~To the chorus of dominions newspapers voicing whole-hearted support of the British stand for an increased percentage of the repara- the voice of the Cape Times today. tions from Germany, was added This newspaper also expressed be- lief that Rt. Hon. Philip Snowden's attitude at The Hague would lead to better understanding between Great Britai nand Germany. "In South Africa at least there will be nothinz but applause for he firmness with which Mr. Snow- den is endeavoring to put the 'Bil- kers' of Great Britain's war- obli- gations in their places," The Times says. 'The newspaper pays tribute to the British chancellor of the ex- chequer for his consideration for the British taxpayer, and refers al- go to hi sattitdue on the question of imperial preference, declaring he intends to impress upon others besides continental Europe that the British taxpaver has had ahout as much as he is prepared to stand. "The British taxpayer has found 3 voice and the voice iz Snowden's," it adds. "It is fairly clear," The Times continues, 'that French, Italian and Belgium dislike of America would be even greater. On the other hand the present crisis seems likely to lead to a better under- standing and closer relations be- tween Great Britain and Germany. Between them they financed the reconstruction of Europe since the war. They are milch cows whose substance has fed and marked the prosperity of France, italy and Bel- gium for the last five or six years. "This new feeling of common Anglo-German interests will doubt- less be accentuated by the fact that upon the issue of the reparations dispute depends the evacuation of the Rhine, which is most close to the heart of the Germans. The en- igma of the present situation is America. She is the only country on the allied side that is ultimately concerned with reparations and ft is therefore to her interest to pre- vent abandonment of the Young plan, What is she going to do?" DARLINGTON WILL NAME COLLECTOR Applications Received for Tax Collector's Post up to August 27 Regular meeting of Darlington council was held Wednesday, Au- gust 7, with members all present, Reeve Willaims presiding. Minutes of the last regular meet-~ ing were read and approved. A number of communications were read from the Northern Elec- tric Company and were ordered fil- ed. } Wallace Miller approached Coun- cil, re road allowance, Lot 7, Con. 8. The matter was laid on. table for one month. Fred Cochrane and Mr. Essery interviewed Council re state of road and culverts at lots 33 and 34, Con. 3. The matter was refer- red to Deputy Reeve Annis and Road Supt. to investigate. J. Y. Kellough, Port Hope, giv- ing notice that rural school fair would be held at Hampton on Sept. 23, 1929, and asking for use of park. Request was granted. M. A. James and Sons presented a tender for printing of voters' list for. 1929 on same terms as for 1928. Tender was accepted. Township treasurer presented his semi-annual report, showing re- ceipts as $19,873.39 and expendi- tures of $19,428.32, leaving a bal- ance on Hand of $445.07, a note having been issued for $2,800 to provide for current expenses. Re- port was approved and accepted. 18, $135.89: No. 19, 20, $807.35; No. 2%, voucher. No. 13123.60; No. } Road Superintendent presented' $965.92, which were approved and ordered paid. Reeve and treasurer were au- thorized to sign a note for $2,400 to provide for current expenditures, Clerk was instructed to adver- tise for applications for Township Collector for year 1929, sealed ap- plications to be in the hands of the clerk by Tuesday, August 27, 1929, at the hour of 7 o'clock p.m. duties to begin on October 1, 1929. Treasurer acknowledged receipt of $465.64 from T. L. Pascoe, taxes 1928; Counties Treasurer, arrears of taxes, $280.76: Orders were drawn on treasur- er as follows:--T. H. Richards, ce- ment bridges, $123.60; T. H. Rich- ards, salary, stamps and telephone, $135.89; T. H. Richards, grading, maintenance, $807.35; T. H. Rich- ards, maintenance, $965.92; Mrs. R. Hatherly, milk supplied, Mrs. Savage (charity) $3.10; €. D. Hodgson, (charity) $12.63; M. A. James and Son, printing and Advt., $28.85; E. L. MacNachtan, 50 per gent maintenance; Douglas Strutt, Sick Children's Hospital, $5.25; BE. L. MacNachtan, 60 per cent main- tenance; Douglas Strutt, Sick Chil- dren's Hospital, $18.38; F. G. Kerslake, fixing sidewalk, $1.75; Arthur W. Annis, sheep damages, $17.00; F. G. Kerslake, work in park, $24.65; T. H. Richards, in- specting cemeteries, etc., $7.70; N. E. Neads, inspector in refresh- ment booth, $4.00; the Workmen's Compensation Board, insurance bridge workers, 2nd payment, $13.- 50; E, Haggith, Deb. No. 6, 8.8. No. 19, $289.45; Bank of Montreal Deb. No. 7, 8.5. No. 6, $407.60: Bank of Montreal, Deb. No. 8, 8.8. No. 8, $424.77. Council adjourned to Saturday, Sept. 7, 1929, at the hour of 10 o'clock p.m. i : LOCAL MOTORISTS RUTH TOWERS Marathon swimmer, who only nowr announces her marriage to Capt. George H. Corsan; Toronto, last November. have collided with a machine driv- en by Frank Gilham, Toronto, at a point west of Port Hope, near Roseberry Hill last Sunday after- noon. Both cars were damaged and Gilham sustained a fractured left arm. 1 & Rn New. York, N.Y., Aug. 18.--Fo?- eign exchange steady; demand rates Great Britain. 4.84 5-16; Canadian dollar % of one per cent. discount, > REGENT NOW PLAYING FOREIGN EXCHANGE WERE IN ACCIDENT Man on Bicyde Knocked Down 'by Car of ° Oshawa Driver Two motorists from this district, "A Dangerous 'Woman including ¥. E. Hare, city, and J. N. Boddy, of the Ontario hospital, Whitby, figured in accidents on the highway near Port Hope during the past three days. Mr. Harew as driving west from Port Hope on Saturday, when fit is said that his car struck a bicycle on which Joseph hreadgold, of Can- ton, was riding. Threadgold and Arnold Brown, another man who vas riding with him, were both thrown heavily to the road, the former receiving severe cuts and abrasions, which necessitated his removal to the Port Hope Hospital. Sek 'New Martin Charlie Chas, Jean Her- 'Modern Love' If "you fike Comedy see Brown. escaped with a shaking up. Mp. Body's car {is reported to This Picture

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