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Oshawa Daily Times, 21 Feb 1930, p. 7

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THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1930 PAGE SEVEN T. and D. Champs. Banqueted 8 Oshawa Nats. Presented Soccer Association. | | tario. i 1 1 i during the past season. § their league title, were Ontario re- § presentatives in the Dominion Play- With Cup and Gold Medals | P| capable soloists. W. Strathearn. Gow, E. Espie, and G. Walsh were the entertainers and their numbers were very much appreciated. The evening was brought to a close Ly the singing of "Auld Lang Syne" and everybody weut home feeling that not ouly had the sea- gon of 1929 been completed in a 'very capabld way but that the Club had got off to an excellent start for the season of 1930. McGill Wins Title From Toronto 1-0 Montreal, Feb. 21.---McGill Uni- versity hockey team won their first' Intercollegiate champianship since 1912, when they defeated the University of Toronto, 1-0, before a crowd of over 3,000' people here last night. The game was quiet throughout, except during the dying moments of the third period, when a rocalled McGill goal brought ill-feeliug between the teams. McGill won the champion- ship by one goal. having held Var- | sity to a two-all draw on. the lat- ter's ice last month. Teams Below Form Neither team showed much of championship callbre at any time. George McTeer, St, Germain and Powers, the goaltender, were the McGill stars, while Ames, in the Varsity nets, along with Paul, Stewart and Whitehead, played the | bset hockey for the Blue team. Ineffective passing and poor shooting were responsible for Me- Gill not winning by a larger score, Varsity failed to show much ability in any branch of the game, and came far below expectations. Fine Banquet Closes Suc- cessful Season--Speakers Congratulate the Players on Their Success and Good Sportsmanship At a banquet held in the Rotary Hall. Centre St., last night, the Oshawa Nationals. Major Soccer League Champions of 1929, were Presented with the Dunlop Trophy. to the winners of this league, and with the T. apd D. Championship Gold medals. This banquet was undoubtedly one of the foremost events in the history of Soccer in Oshawa. There were about seventy persons pre- sent, including several members of the city council, all the T, and D. Officers, the members of the vic- torious team and other prominent sportsmen of the city and of One The banquet and presentation of prizes camo as a suitable climax of a very successful year. The Osh- awa Nationals brought glory to themselves and to Oshawa by the splendid way in which they played They won offs and came within an ace of be- ing Dominion Champs. They met and overcame barriers and difficul- ties that would have disheartened many & club but the Nats. kept on trying and their efforts were re- warded. Congratulating phrases, terms of praise and words of encouragement for further effort, formed the nuc- leus of most of the speeches. After having partaken of 2 sumptuous re- past, the program was started by a toast to the King. Ald. Geo, Hart was in fhe chair, in absence of the Mayor, who could not be present. Ald, Hart thanked the Nationals for the honor bestowed upon him and expressed his sincere apprecia- tion for the invitation. He stated OLYMPICS STAGE | SCORING BEE | 'WINNERS Above are shown Jimmy Ball of Winnipeg, (crouching), who was finalist in the 40Q-metre cvent at the Olympic games, and who last night won the 300-metre event at the indoor meet at the Coliseum. Standing, is Leigh Miller, brilliant sprinter of the Hamilton Olympic Club, who led the way to the tape in the 60-metre cvent. G. Simp- son, Ohio, was sccond. Leigh Miller Wins Sprint | dash Event at Indoor Meet Jimmie Ball Wins 300 Metre | 0 cover the journey in 2.34 4-10, . | just a shade the y . Race--Four Titles Leave} . shade trom. the world ou} Canada -- Edward's Fine| Jimmie Ball was bw far the best os . tat the 300-metre distance, the Win- Finish Wins Relay Race | nipes dashet showing his back to ------ | the field, while Phil Edwards, his | team-mate in last Toronto, Feb. 21.--Canuda rve- the tained her supremacy in the sprint | world at the national indoor meet A i held in the Coliseum last night with his graceful style, running like With the diminutive Leigh Miller |® Wel itimed piece of machinery, of the Hamilton Olympic Club edg- | Just forged to the front after two Ing 'out the best in the 60-metre |lape and was never threatened. Art and in capturing the Domin- | Keay, of the Toronto Police, paced ion title he proved a worthy claim [the pack in the 3,00-metro racq for world laurels. In victory, Mil-| while Hank Cieman, of Central, ler, the smallest man in the races, |¥ iggled his way in front of the peds passed the fleet George |to win the 3,000-metre walk, 600 mid-distance test, Edwards that Association Football was the only kind of sport that he had ever played and for that reason, among others. hd had very active interest in the welfare of the Na- tionals, Mr, Hart congratulated the Nationals on behalf of the City Counejl and on behalf of the. Ro- tary Club and assured them of as much assistance and co-operation as it was possible to give. | Jim Miller, tho President of the Nats. introduced the visitors to the others present. J. Swanson pro- posed a toast to the City in a very favourable manner, He pointed out the value of clean sport to a city .and urged those present, "to have | faith ig Oshawa." The toast was replied to by Ald. A. Jackson. J. Morgan, Vice-President of the Nationals Soccer Club, proposed a toast to the Ontario Football As- sociation, which was responded to by R. B. Muir, Secretary, of the O. ¥.A. During his remarks Mr. Muir made. several pointed remarks con- cerning the work done by the local City Council. Jim Miller proposed a toast to the T. and D. Toronto and District "Tom" Hol- land, amiable President of the T. and D, one of the chief speakers of the evening, made a very fitting reply. He congratulated the Na- tionals on winning the league title and expresed the opinion that only hard luck robbed them of the Dom- inion Championghip. He made special _reference to the good sportsmanship of the locals and ox- pressed the hope that they would "stick together' and not only re- tain the Dunlop. Trophy but also bring the Dominion Title to Osh- Detroit, Feb, 21.--Frank Foyston's| flashy Olympics sect a new team-scor ing record for International League hockey last night when they went on| a wild goaling spree and whipped the | Niagara Falls Cataracts, 11 to 1, | The game was all Olympics from | start to finish. Qatman and Yankow- ski, bulky Cataract defenc ved easy. for the flect Oly as they outsmarted t gain to break thro Kitchener Jrs. Eliminated 8-2 Kitchener, Feb. 21.--The Kitchen er-Waterloo juniors slipped out of the O.H.A, picture and with them went the Twin City's last hope for an O.H.A. chanipionship. when the Windsor-Walkerville Alumini. wor last night's game 2-0 to take the round 8-2. Tech will now mect the Niagara Falls Club and a smart scr- tes that should be. Tech deserved the victory on the night's play. The team played a can ny game, paying most attention to defensive hockey and breaking only when real opportunities presented themselves an din the first period the visitors bagged their two goals and from then on were in the driver's seat. Competition Sports For Women Deplored! Montreal, Feb, 21.--While the need for development in girls and women of a more fundamental attitude to- wards expression of freedom through physical culture is grcat, competitive sports along commercial lines do more harm to girls and women than good, Dr. Jesse F. Williams, profes- sor of Physical Education at Teach- er's College, Columbia University, New York, declared, addressing the members of the Quebec Physical Education Association. Speaking on "The Place of Girls and Women in Competitive Activities," Dr. Williams stressed that girl's sport activities should be fundamentally differgnt from those of men-and boys and for this reason he condemned track and field activities for girls and in their stead, suggested sports where ems phasis is laid more on skill than on strength and endurance, tp --------------. wa . "ollowing this, Mr. Holland pre- sented the Dunlop Trophy to Cap- tain Coll, and then each player and other members of the club were presented with the T. and D. Gold Medals. ' Other speakers were L. Jowett, Secretary of the T. and D.; J. Ed- munds, Treasurer, of the T. and D.; Jim Millsip, representative on the T. and D. for Oshawa Nation- als, C. Wilcox," Geo, Munro and "Mike" Bouckley. Leon Frazer, CJecretary of the Oshawa Chamber of Commerce, gave a very interesting speach. in which he stated that in the very near future, it is likely that there will be an Athletic Body known as the Oshawa Athletic Assoclation which will control all sports and zive each sporting organization the support they need and deserve. Between speeches. those present were entertained by a number of It's casy to find fault, but it is hard to tell what to do with it. "When I was a small boy I was left an orphan." bo "What did you do with it?" CANADIAN PACIFIC "Cheerful and Good" {CANADIAN PACIFIC RADIO HOUR Tonight, Friday at 10==11 p.m. CKAC, Montresl=CKGW, Toronto Ba andes Symphany Grenevira with Songs by MARGUERITE NUTTALL treat for alllovers he ligh A rea of [lovee of oh Fad Rol guests of BY. 4 Simple Remedy For Bad Stomach Gives Swift Relief No Need of Strong Medicines or Diet. Safe and Simple. Home Recipe Keeps Stomach in Fine Condition, ---- If you are a victim of Stomach Troubles | as, Sourness, Pain or Dloatisg~you may have quick" and certain relief by following this' simple advice. rt 't take strong medicines, artificial di. gestants or pull down your system with starvation diets, Yor within reason most folks may: eat what they like if they will keep their stonfuch free from. souring acids hat dinder or paralyze the Work of diges- tion, And the best and easicst way #6 do this is to follow every meal, with three or four tablets of Bisurated » a ph harmless, inexpensive, and handy tablet form of Magnesia that proguptly meutralizes acidity and keeps your stomach sweet and clean. " A week's trial of Bisurated Magnesia tab- lets, which any good druggist can supply at trifling cost, should Quickly convince you that 90 per cent of ordinary stomach dis. tress is absolutely unnecessary. Be sure. to | P | sensation. jexpectations, | new female . | times set Bisurated Magnesia, Tablets! Simpson, Aud of Ohio State University, lauded | wy Relay Races Exciting ules as the world's fastest human, and le relay races proved bis popular clubmate, Johnny Fitz- | lights for excitement both in the patrick. men's and ladies sections. A spec- While Canada held the honor: tacuiar da sh by Phil Edwards, race that Percy Williams brought to the | ing as anthor man for the Hamil- land of the Maple Leaf at the last | ton Olympics, won the 1,600 metre Olymple | | force, was not extended to win the | Olympic games, the crown of lad- team test. fes' sprint champion crossed the Parkdale border in the powerful arms of |ing finish Miss Stella Walsh, the Cleveland | metre | Jane Bell : jon thel ast two turns to overcom the Canadian Ladies, The time of flash, and she proved [52 onds flat is close to a record beyond a- doubt her prowess, gett- | Parkdale Ladies also won the jur ing away to bad breaks in almost | ior girls' relay, although Dot Brook- every 60-metre dash, only to put [shaw of the Canadian Lgdies eclos- her fleet rivals at her heels before |ed a wide the finish. | wooden The two sprint titles were the { main features of the program, al- though the varied card of track and field events were mostly all inter- exceptionally fast Records could be made at , but not broken, for most | of the track events were measured in metres and at special distances MI at which there are not | ed world marks The dashes produced sensational time Miller covering the distance in © Cl 8-10 while tl G0-metre | dent hurdles were crossed in 8 2-10 sec. ! eric Four Titles Leave Canada plete Four of the Canadian champion-| 1950 season by engaging two new ships went to entries from foreign | arbiters, W. F. Clayton and Clay- | shores for, heside Miss Walsh 3 | ton Balley. victory in the sprints, Harold Os- Clayton borne added the Dominion: high | Leaguer; fump to. his iworld collection, while | bus, Ohio. E. M. Wells of Boston won the| Six members of the 60-metre hurdles. Dr. Paul Martin | Were retained. They F. R. of Switzerland Jed the field in the | Connolly," Frank Drown, George 1,000-metre run, giving a wonder- | H. Johnson, C. E, Johnston, George ful performance of grace and speed, | Ue and R. W. Snyder. t thrill- 400- and Ladies put on a 5 ladies' re Creamer The crowd, which was far below came mostly to see the | | climbing to 12 feet 4 inches before he tipped the bar | from its lofty brackets The two troit jumpers falling to come hin in his highest mark. | | nole vaulters with ie OL ul the r SELECTED ASSOCTATION IRES' STAVP IN AMERICAN | any «¢ 60-metre | icago, Il Fel Thomas J. Hickey o | an"-Association terday com- | d his staff of umpires for the | Presi- f the Am- seconds, Western Colum- is a f Bailey is rmoer from 162) staff are; This photo was brought frond is a tip-off that might help yoo to New York by Playfair Brown, the [win the hand«decorated radish Shamrock A.C. matchmaker, who |grater--the one that isn't Carnera says that one of the two is Primo [is the featherweight champion of Carnera, allas the Ambling Alp, |Europe,. Primo stands six feet alias the Vast Venethuf, alias the | seven, after seventeen inches of Battling Barge, who is touring the {him have been turned 'up for feet fistic sticks of the United States |--and he weighs 278 pounds. Still knocking over a lot of round heels, | "Young' Stribling. spotted him a and giving a Jot of canvas kissers | hundred pounds and put him down a chance to osculate. Two guesses [in London. But the big hoy pers taging a whirlwind dash | Vie Pickard soared far above the | Kogers-Majestic Model 591 ance. 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If desired, you can buy the "Rogers-Majestic" of your choice on the convenient budget plan of payment. 15 Church St., Oshawa LOVE SHY - » Thirty-seven Janet Burns Her Bridges Janet went directly to She did not, as on a forme sion, glance around her at the shabby house. She had one thing to dosand that she must do quickly, before her courage failed her, and she ran away, leaving Jimmy to return to an empty, house. She went to her room and took out the dream book. It seemed to her that she held a part of her- self, a dream child of her own cre- ating. Slowly she turned its pages, looking for the last time at the things she had planned and dreamed | of. For a moment she was tempted to tcar it across, rip out its pages, hurl them into the wastebasket. Oh, why had she told Jimmy to stay away an hour? Then another idea occurred to he rf She carried the book downstairs, not bothering to _ shut the long locked drawer, leaving it, instead, gaping and yawning, wide open, She reached the living room and sat down to wait, She had thought the time would scem long, but it passed quickly, and with it her dreamy of easy and, pracious living. She 'marshaled these old dreams before her eyes and dismissed them forever. 'They were only dreams, after all, and Jimmy was real. Somchow her dreams and Jimmy nerged and she hardly knew which her. room. occa g with a start of surpprise that she heal his step at the door. "Here Kam, Janet," he said eager- ly, "back just on the dot of 9.30. 1 wanted to setuy watch ahead so 1 could come in sooner--but I kept my promise." "Didn't you go away?" she asked. "Not a step. 1 just waited out in front until 9.30." Janct laughed. It seemed a de- licious joke that all the time she was dréaminy over lier scrapbook Jimmy should have been waiting patiently within call, "Sit down, Jimmy, here by me--no, not. yet. I want to show you somes thing first," He sat down beside her on the shiny sofa, content now to wait her pleasure. "Show ne," he said, "I cau stand anything now." e Dream House Janet opened the book before him and he saw the picture of the big white house that Janet had pasted in for a frontispiece. "A long time ago, Jimmy," she began, "I found this picture of a house in a magazine, You know what our house here is like and I know every corner: of it. I was born in it See the Advanced Models Now on Display at Our Store Toronto Branch Rogers-Majestic Model 597 Highboy Jacobean period cabinet of American walnut. Doors of matched butt walnut; overlays of genuine Australian lacewood on centre panel and fronts of doors. Bronze inserts in the walnut knobs. New Colotura- Dynemic Speaker, Super «selectivity, 855 Bay Street By Barbara Webb began to hate it, hated it the more some thing entirely different. 1 1 found this picture it seemed to me I had found just what I wanted and 1 cut it out and posted it in tl book--isn't it lovely, Jir "Beautiful," Jimmy looking at her, "Some day But she stopped him, * tell my story first, Jimmy, then you can talk. After 1 found my ideal house I thought &f it a lot and 1 began to plan how it would look in- Side. I made a lot of plans of rooms --see, here they are, and I saved some house plans that pleased me, too. They're in this part. And after that I began to think of furniture for the rooms. I watched the magazines and papers and when I saw some- thing I liked I saved it, and after I'd thought about it for a long time, if it scemed to fit my house I pasted it in, too. See this big chair--that was for one side of the fireplace. 'And this little table, that was for a sitting room 1 planned for the upper hall And then all these different ideas for kitchens, oh, I saved a dozen of them, guess," "The Queen was in the kitchen," Jimmy said fatuously. "It took me four or five ycars to do this," Janet went on, "and each year the longing for this kind of home grew stronger. It kept me from having little love affairs with men in the office because I knew they wouldn't appreciate my dream. And I was really happy with just this dream, Jimmy, until, until--" hel when?" Jimmy prompted er, wanted So Ww mummured, let me "The Dream Is Done" "Until you came aleng--no--I'm not quite through--give me just a minute more, Jimmy--=l can't destroy my five years' dream quite so quickly. But after I knew you 1 lost interest in my dream house, "I still looked at it, and T still thought of it, especially when 1 found [ was getting foud of vou. I didn't give it up, but I didn't do any more work on it, Look, Jimmy--sece the date on that last picture I pasted in? That's the date of the night you came and todk supper with us, I | ring haven't been able to paste a thing in since." Jinuity 1aid his check on the pages of the open book, "Bless it," he said, "for keeping my girl just for me, all these years," . She laid her hand on his bent head, the first voluntary caress she had ever given him. "And so, Jimmy, to- night it's all finished. The dream is done, and I'm ready now for--for something real." The book slipped unheeded to the ~which one is Carnera aud here [sisted in getting up Lt and I've lived here all my life. floor. Jimmy's arnrs were around her Jimn vis face was against hers, s had claimed her lips, her Ah, far bet- my's lif arms were around hin "Never, and you?" "Cross my heart and hope to die," Jimmy said sole y. "You're the only girl in the world for and I loved you, the minute I v you and I'l keep on loving you always and always and always." "Always is a long whispered. "Not long enough her, and time," Janet though," Jimmy assured hey laughed to- gether. Then he straightened up and look- ed directly at her shining cyes, het soft hair tumbled about her face, "1's got something to tell you, he began. book lymmg open on the floor, its pages flapping gently in the sununer 'nded his words, iething I want to "Anything in the world," said Janet, "Will you give me this book, Janct® I'd like to look at it. Maybe sone day---" "Take it if you wish," Janet said, "it was only a dream, after all, and | you're welcome to everything I have, wy dreams and everything." An Apartment This precipitated another long sil- ence from which Janet was the first to break free and ask, "Mother and father are going away soon, Jimmy, We'll have to be thinking about -an apartment and all that," "So we will; so we will," Jimmy agreed. "I won't give up my work now; I'll just stay on there--Oh! let's be married soon, Janet, I've waited so long----" "I don't sce any point in waiting myself," Janet said. "I'll be married in a suit; and, since you haven't tak- en a vacation, and Mr. Smithers likes me so well, we can probably get a few days for a honeymoon trip." Jimmy set his jaw. "You can just bet we'll get'a few days--a few days --we'll take all the time we want. And there's just one thing you must understand tonight, Tanet. I won't have my wife working. She'll be plenty busy keeping mic happy and taking care of my home." "But, Jimmys--" "No 'buts.' I'm going to get you a "You'll do pothing of the kind, Listen, Jimmy; I'll make a bargain with you, Tf you'll let me use the money you'd spend on a ring to buy. furniutre for our apartment, I'll give up my work as soon as we're married. Otherwise, I 'won't. So, there!" Jimmy looked at her for a long time; then he bent his head, "I can't refuse you anything, Janet. We'll give up the ring idea now, and we'll start looking for an apartment," His the knew eyes twinkled and danced, as though some tremendously go Janet," | His eyes fell on the scrap- | he wanted to tell, and rt Then that's settled," Janet sighed. 's start looking tomorrow." hen Jimmy left that night it sas 1 that they should start the apartment, and.Janct was so y next evening to hunt for a suit- in having burned all 'her s. and accepted the love of a an for her portion that she iced when Jimmy tucked 1c dream book under his arm and alked away with it. | br 8s Qr t | Ww (To Be Continted iohgild BRITISH VALOR IN NORTH SIAM | Two Courageous Men Saved Many Lives and Averted Panic 1) (Siain)=The heroism of 5) glish "Jungle Wallas" in a cholera - stricken section of the teak forests in North Siam deserves a i -place on the annals of British valor. It is the story of two men, who, along among a crowd of coolies when cholera "descended 'on the camp, by { their great courage averted a dan- gerous panic and the lives of many stricken by the terrible infection. The men are Foster Peg, a Lone doner, and Gene Higgins, who once lived at Rayleigh, Essex. They were in charge of a large party of native carriers and campmen at a forest { which is owned by a City firm with | offices in King William street, E.C. | Fifteen men were stricken, and the Englishmen knew that a deadly panic nught break out among the terrified workers. They immediately broke camp, and sent all the natives to another sec- tion. The Englishmen remained behind with the 15 victims. At any moment they themselves might have fallen victims, Day and night they toiled together in this wild part of the forest. with little prospect of any help reaching them in time to assist them in their gallant fight. Despite their efforts, six coolies died soon after 'the camp had been broken. The Englishmen buried them in the quiet of night Two more died a few days later. There were seven victims still left when these two heroes, working far from civilization and snatching a mere couple of hours' sleep now and again, saw the reward of their ef- forts, ' Other victims showed improve ment, and in time they recovered sufficiently to leave with the two white men who had snatched 'them from the jaws of death, | tw

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