Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Daily Times, 24 Feb 1930, p. 3

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THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, FEBRUARY 24, 1930 ny Ah I PAGE THREE 1C€ Oddities of 1930, in Aid of Kinsmen Kiddies Welfare, to Be Snappy, Sparkling Show Dazzling Costumes, Melodi- ous Song Hits, and Funny Comedians Will Provide Fine Bill at Kinsmen's Midnight Show ENTIRE CASTE IS OF OSHAWA TALENT Entire Proceeds of the Show * Will be Used for the Wel- fare Work Conducted Among the Kiddies of Oshawa by the Kinsmen HERE WEDNESDAY Citizens of Oshawa will open their eyes and gasp in amazement when the curtain ascends on "Oddities of 1930," the second annual Kinsmen's Midnight music comedy, which this Oshawa service club is presenting on Friday night at 11.15 p.m. in the Re- gent theatre. Scene after scene or dazzling cos | tumes on beautiful dancing girls that | the feminine eye will enviously covet, | glorious scenic and lighting effects that will carry the audience into a mythical fairyland, melodious song hits, that will be hummed for months, funny comedians to relieve the REV. J. W. NETRAM This brilliant representative of In- dia will speak in St. Andrew's Church on Wednesday evening | at 8 o'clock, His subject will be "The Problems and Hope of In. dia." MARVELOUS SPEED OF a0 MILES PER HOUR PROPHESIED 'MADE PREDICTION CENTURIES AGO Evangelist Moffett Declares Modern Speed Sign of Christ's Second Coming "1 predict a marvelous increase in the speed of transportation on the earth. I believe in the provi- dence of od though the nrethod now be entirely hidden men will yet travel on the earth at the rate of fifty mjles an hour." Speaking at Masonic Temple OL "Signs of Christ's Coming last night, Evangelist Mofreti © quoted this prediction made two centuries ago by the famous discoverer of the law of gravitation, Sir Isaac Newton, who based his prediction ou the prophecy of Daniel 12:4, shall run to and fro and knowledge shall be increased," and on the prophecy of Nahum 2:4 that in the day 'of preparation for Christ's coming the chariots "shall rage in the®streets and run like the light nings." The &peaker then quoted the brilliant French infidel Voltaire's sneering comment that 'the study of phophecy has led the prince of philosophers to make a fool of him- S0Y REMOVED TO | TORONTO HOSPITAL haunting beauty of the spectacular portion of the mammoth entertain- ment is only the entree on the menu Roars of laughter will greet Norm Walker, funnyman of last year's pro- duction in his uproarious number "Singin' In the Bathtub." Kinsman Jack Hoover will make Ethel Waters of Brodway fame, blush with shame when he croons "Am I Blue" in front of a vivid singing and dancing cho us of boys and girls. Doris Kenned "Breakaway," will certainly go 10] your feet after watching this viva-| cious little local star do her stuff in front of the footlights. Then fbr a dainty little romantic |S number nothing could beat, Miss Al-| from ice Aspinal and Bob Shivas acting|to the and singing "Little White House," | Billy supported by -the girls and Bert] between Clarke doing comedy. Mrs. Dr. Grant | he is not considered to be in a seri- | Berry's beautiful soprano voice will| ous condition. His removal to the! be heard to advantage, 'Jack Reid's| Toronto Hospital was special offeirng "Vagabond Lover," and Mrs. | treatment! J. Clark "Mighty Lak' A Rose," and| according "Carolina Moon" will, no doubt, draw | The Times by the*boy's tather, the | igh I Sher Solas Sn accident occurred when Billy was esides era a Viti' 'near or or 5 song routines, too numerous to men- Javine » BE « the highway with an tion here, the book of the entertain- ment is funny to the extremes, bring- ing before the footlights such tal- ented Oshawa people as Norm Walk- er, Hilda Bailey, Dr. Lou Hubbel, Mrs. Dr. Berry, Dave Fowler, Jack Reid, Clifford Palmer and A. Walk- ilo the principal voles, the ieittes knocking him down. He was then | 8 O - nier- tainment is Tghy of the Kinsmen"s + toute Opliawa Genera! Hap Kiddies Welfare Fund. All seats are!" This was the second accident which | reserved and the plan opens at the has suffered within 'the last] Regent box-office tomorrow morhing | few months. Last summer he was | at 10.30 a.m. . : struck by an automobile, which pas The committee in charge are en-|eq right over his body but left him | deavoring to arrange with (he Osh-| with only a few bruises, from w hich | awa Railway to leave two street cars| pL. soon recovered in waiting at the Theatre at the fm remiss ei -------- time of the lowering of the curtain] GORED TO DEATH BY BULL | to facilitate transportation ror those| Sarnia Ont. Feb, 24.--William Ste who 'will be attending the frolic. One| yens, 43) a Moore township farmer of the street cars will go to the north | was 'gored to death by a mad bull ern section of the city and the other | which he was attending in his farm yard early Saturday evening. His to the south. . mangled body was discovered by his Piles Go Quick: ni Stevens' delay in returning to the house, The animal was still evidenc- ing rage and fifteen shots from a gun were required to- despatch it. Piles are caused by congestion of blood in the lower bowel. Only an| RUM- RUNNERS GET READY internal remedy can remove the| Niagara Falls Ont, Feb. 24.--Ela- cause. That's why salves and cutting | borate preparations are being made, fail. Dr. Leonhardt's Hem-Roid, alit is reported, by rum runners on harmless tablet, succeeds, because it| Lakes Erie and Ontario to provide relieves this congestion and streng-| United States citizens with Canadian thens the affected parts. Hem-Roid| refreshments as soon as the ice has given quick, safe and lasting re-|clears. out of the lakes and rivers. lief to thousands of Pile sufferers. It wil do the same for you or money back. Jury & Lovell, Ltd, and drug- Many new and powerfully built speedboats are reported to have been gists everywhere sell Hem-Roid with this guarantee. built or are in the course of con- ia Pickering Lad Suffered Frac-| tures of Both Legs in | Accident i Spencer, four-year-oid Pick- boy, injured on the high- | near his home: about noon on| l was yesterday. removed the Oshawa. General Hospital| Hospital for Sick Children. | | red fractures of both legs | the knce and the hip, but| tor to information given to and |}, {other boy, highway re ached the pay driving a truck the boy darting tow suddenly applied his truck slewed on the and the rear end of it struck Billy,]| darted out towards the | ped just before he | ment. Harold Firth, | along the road, saw | ards the road and | brakes. The slippery road, | Billy struction for the forthcoming busi- ness season. You'VE NEVER SEEN ANY- THING LIKE IT BEFORE /. Second Annual KINSMEN'S MIDNIGHT SHOW 'Oddities ; 1930' : F A Musicomedy of Color, Dance and Song Presented in Two Acts Gorgeous Gowns Beautiful Girls Funny Comedians Smart Dances Entire Procceds in Aid Kinsmen's Aiddies' Welfare Curtain, 11.15 p.m. FRIDAY February 28 t | ure-seeking. {of ms coming, voir hilate Time and Space Cana the evangelist point- ed out that after nearly six thous- and years of travel by camel and horse on land, and coast-wise sail- ing vessels on water, men sudden: ly harnessed steam and elec stricity and sailed on the wings of the | wind, and by means of the ocean liner, the railroad, the automobile. and the aeroplane, telephone, tele- graph, cable and radio, have al- most annihilated time and gpace and redneced this world of ours tu one small neighborhood making possible the evangelization of the world 'in preparation for Christ's second coming. "While Christ taught, |ed in Matthew 24, that the "gos- {pel of the kingdom would be preached in all the world for a wit- | ness to all nations," he also. made | it plain that so far from the world's being converted, it would be as Ig Noah's day. completely carried | away with the spirit of material- ism and money getting andV¥pleas- Again the speaker read from Luke 21:25 the' words of Jesus, 'There shall be signs in the sun, and in the moon, and in as record- | tress of nations with perplexity; the sea and the waves roaring, men's hearts failing them. for Jan? and for looking after those thing that are coming on the earth," and referred to the unparalleled law- lessness and crime waves, the per- plexity of statesmen as the world drifts steadily towards another | world war which threatens to en- gulf civilization ,along with the rising tide of nationalism as the ! populous Orient prepares to chal- lenge the supremacy of the white race, Capital and Labor Evangelist. Moffett also quoted from the fifth chapter of James' epistle which predicted a final con- flict between capital and labor which, millions of unemployed and the spread of communism. Emphasiz- ing "the words of Chriet that no man knows the day nor the hour the speaker also called attention to the additional words of the Master, that when these signs come to pass his dis: ciples are to know that his coming is near, even 'at the doors, and that when men are no longer able to cope with the conditions that threaten the overthrow of civill- zation, Christ will come to establish His eternal kingdom. It was announced that a special bible study will be conducted on "The True Priesthood," Wednes- day night and that "Court Week in Heaven," will be the subject of next Sunday night's discourse, Duchess Dies of Injuries Naples.--The Ditches Flammetta Carafa I)' Andria with the pilot, Cas- taldo, died today in a hospital here after a crash in the plane RP-5 at Capo Dichino aerodrome, They were flying at a height of about 140 feet when the plane went into a spin. YOU POOR KID WHY ARE YOU SO SKINNY Don't your Mother know that Cod. Liver Extract will put pounds of good Yiealthy flesh on your bones in just a few weeks? Tell her every druggist has it in sugar-coated tablet form now so that in just a few weeks she can help you get back your appetite--make your body stronger -- your cet nim- ble and vour mind Keener, Tell her if they don't help greatly in 30 days she can get her money back. Tell her that McCoy's Cod Liver Extract tablets are chock-full of vitalizing vitamines and are the greatest flesh producers and health builders she can find. One sickly thin kid, age 9, gained 12 pounds jn 7 months, She must ask Jury & Lovell, T. B. Mitchell, W. H. Karn, or any good druggist for McCoy's Cod Liver Ex- tract - Tablets--G0 tablets--00 cents --as pleasant to fake as candy, SIR ISAAC NEWTON that in "the time of the end many | WAS INTOXICATED Robert Hale was assessed $20 and costs when he appeared in police court this morning as the solitary drunk of the week end. FINED $100 FOR B.L.C.A. John Gordon, charged with having liquor in an illegal place, was fir $100 and costs by Magistrate Willis in police court this morning. He was represented by Louis Hyman. 55 NEW MEMBERS Fifty-five new members were ree ceived into the congregation of King street United Church yesterday at the morning service. Fourteen were received by letter and 41 by profes- sion of faith. An unusual feature is that the majority were adults, 28 be- ing the heads of familics, 21ST CLUB TREASURER The treasurer elected by the new- ly-formed 2lst Battalion Club on Friday evening was Jack Morgan, Jr., not G. Morgan, as stated in Sat- urday's issue of The Times. SPEAKS HERE WEDNESDAY Rev. J. W. Netram, famous prea cher of India, will speak in this city at St. Andrew's United Church next Wednesday night, It was stated in error by The Times that Dr. Netram vas appearing Tuesday night and readers are asked to note the cor- rect date. This native pastor of a great and mysterious land has been touring Canada extensively and wherever he has preached large au diences have heard him. W. Dryden Sells Shorthorn for Rosclight, a ten- onthe: old bull| Shorthorn calf, was sold for $1,000 by W. A. Dryden, Brooklin, at the Shorthorn Congress Show held in Chicago on Feb. 19 and 20 I'he animal was bought for shipment America, 'The price receiv hest paid for any Can the second high msideree to South 1 was the | wnimal at the a distinct compliment to the mer the entry. PRAIRIE PREMIERS FIND WHEAT POOL. and \ + show and was cc tC today is causing grave con- | | | | | | | | | | | the stars; and upon this earth dis- | | | | { FINANCES 00D Uniform Logldlation Has, Been Drafted Supplement. | ing Provincial Guarantees Satisfactory the wheat which at Regina, Teh. 24, financial conditions of pools of Western Canada, present have on deposits with the | bank that finance the Co-operative Association's advances to the 140,- 000 farmer members of the prair- les, 'collateral valued, at prices, at more than 15 per cent. in excess of the total of loans to the pools," is stressed ment issued here last night by Pro- vincial Premiers. At a conference here Saturday between Premier J. T. }. Auderson, Saskatchewan, Premier J, E. Brownlee, Alberta, and Premier presentatives of the central gelling agency of the pools, uniform legis- lation was drafted the guarantee given banks by the Provincial Govern- ments recently, and to edequartely finance the balance of the crop of 1929. the satisfled with the results of ' the conference," sald the joint state- ment, "We found, as we expected, that the pool has been operated in conformity with the aims and ob- jects of the organtzation. The legls- lation" agreed upon will be intro- duced into the Legislatures at an early date." Recently, following announce- vinces would be available to back the pools and protect business in- terests from general depression, joint action was taken by the pro- vincial governments of the W: A to guarantee that the 15 per cent. the wheat pools would be maintain- ed, Official statements, issued from pool headquarters in Winnipeg, have congistently maintained that the margin was well maintained, no call had been made .upon the governments for immediate finan- cial assistance, and the guarantee sought 'was of a protective nature only. The Premiers issued the follow- ing joint statement: "We encountered no difficulty whatever in arranging uniform legislation covering the guarantee to be given the banks for their ad- vances to the pool up to the pre- sent time and to adequately finance the balance of the crop of 1929, The central selling agency gave the Governments the fullest infor- mation concerning their financlal and sales position. The Govern- ments are perfectly satisfied with the results of the conference. "We found as we expected that the pool hag been onerating in con- formity with the aims and objects of the organization. The legisld- tion agrepd upon will be introduced into thd Legislatures at an early date. "In the meantime. the Govern- ments desire to make plain that this action is only in order to sun- plement the undertaking already arranged and not be cause of any impairment of the pool's margin with the hanks or because of any doubt of the pool's financial posi- tion. as the pools have at present on deposit with the banks colla- teral valued, at current market nrices, at more than 15 per cent. in excess of the total of the banks' loans to the pool." Broker Takes Poison Oakland, Callf.--Phillip bie Lewis, 37, prominent ment Lroker and amateur artist, killed himself by drinkinz poison fn lis home here last night after he administered a similar dose to his #-yeaol-rd son, Phillip, Jr., in an unsuccessful attempt to take I"rigs- invest- the lad's life, $1, 000, Chicago) and Sale| in a state- | John Bracken of Manitoba, and re- | "The Governments are perfectly { ments that the resources of the pro- | margin required on bank loans to | Heavy Mist Made Highway Travel | Very Dan gerous { | | | | | A heavy mist prevailed th | this district for several hours yester day. Motorists found it neces ' Idrive with caution but a serieus ac | cident occurred on the Whitby- Lind highway, north of DBrool has been b 1 1 say | vision {1% torists wl of Dunbart they mist awd | through Chautemps Has Policy Ready Will Face Test of Strength in Chamber of Deputies Tomorrow (By Canadian Press Leased Wire) current | f to a full meeting inet this accordance w twill be read ton | ber of Commer norni | question of confide Pres Don {acquainted wit lent other T0 FINISH THRANE SPEECH TOMORROW supplementing | leading | | Price Expected to Close De-, bate With Reply to Attacks | | on Brokerage Situation "el. 24 Tomorrov 1 wind th debate on Speech from 1 Throne when Hon. W. H will deliver the concluding dress. It is expected that attorney general will have something to on the broke situation has been the chief subject course by both Opposition and Government members, Vindication of 'the Government's acti through the recent crisis ang d fal of Opposition attacks will fe ture the last stages before the divi- sion, which will take place in the afternoon. | On Thursday Hon, Dr, Monteith, provincial treasurer, will present his budget report, the first of the eighteenth 'Legislature. A financial condition even better than that first intimated some time ago is being predicted ly Government members, W. E. N. Sinclair, Liberal lead: er; 8. C. Tweed, Liberal member for North Waterloo, and D. J, Tay- lor, Progressive member for North Grey. will voice the main criticisms of the Opposition benches, it Is ex- pected. Several items will come up for strong comment from the farm members of the Opposition, the plea having been gtrongly advanceq by them that taxes of rural hold- ings are too heavy. Parks Car at Depot Meets it in Tavern Toronto, Legislatur the wi up he 0 the Montreal, Que, Feb. 24.--Charfes Ross left his ¢ar on the of Windsor strect while he saw a friend off in the nearby station. When he returned the car was gone and he was about to notify police when a crowd down the hill drew atten tion. He found his car occuying a po- sition amid the debris of a basement tavern, having coasted down hill and entered by way of a plate glass win- dow, The tavern was closed for busi- ness at the time. slope .18 Nearly three centuries avo the Canadian timber export trade began bv shipments of spars from Quchec for the use of the French navy. To- dav square timber for the Royal Navy is being cut in Algonquin Park. Ontario, on the lines of the Canad- ian National Railways. tary | drew's mornine, The | ed think ; | able | women | Hudson whieh | of dis- | | will | the United Church, late | HARDSHIPS MET BY MISSIONARIES GRAPHICALLY TOLD ENDEAVOR TO SERVE 500,000 PEOPLE IN HINTERLANDS Rev. R. B. Cochrane Tells of Home Mission Work of United Church a An inspiring account of the ef- forts of the missionaries in the mining camps of the far north, of their toil to bring the gospel to lonely communities on the Pacific coast, of work among the Indians of hardships patiently endured 'In order that the church might min-| | ister to the necds of thpse who are | | pioneering fn the distant and wild- [ erness places of this great young | country, was given by Rev. R. B.| ('ochrane, D.D.. of Toronto, secre- of home missions for the Un- | ited Church of Canada who preach- ed congregation of St. An- Church, yesterday service was conduct Maxwell, the pas to the United | by Rev. I. J | tor | Valuah! Yioneering } g in Instinct pion rm int rane 1 Canada. | I think that we in they' and gi ta good tin fs measured | man can yundance of to our boys too much to belive that f money zed by the ¢ he possesses yen which he has | of home missions, ated that he had beer to visit many parts of | 0 neces terms t he in no judz irh "" the 8 retnpy ' ker st ealled 'anada We in Ontario sometimes hat ours is a much more than any of the others | but every province seems to be | ed with something of peculiar | ere is the majesty of the Rockies and the sweeping, ex- ansive grandeur of the prairie." Debt to the Pioneers Cochrane stated that newly led parts hrou a keener the it debt which founders of Canada cleared homes often fac- think beauti- 11 province le aut) Th a visit of the| reais we Dr the Dominion ation of owed to the fore! to the 1 Os "Our od were bush and e themselves. ed with seemed unsurmount- difleulties but they brought them faith in God and no ner had little community cared than they set about to build house of worship.' The spea paid addlebag preachers ttlers to thi ministered to them. did forget the 300,000 in Outposts At the time, he e: ed that there were 500,000 'anadians employed in a , fu lumber camps, and in fisheries, church was endeavoring to reach these men even as the circuit rid- rg attempted to preach the gospel to those who first settled in Upper Canada, Ins ungelfish what with ap- 800 a p | tribute to the who followed new land and! The church, pioneers, ker not stimat- | young | present in The | tion mining camps instance of the of the men and serving in the| parts of the Dominion were | Dr. Cochrane. He told [the pastor in a pleasant |} town who the call of board established al t the end of steel on the Bay Railroad, three hun-| dred miles north from Le Pas. This courageous man went to C hurchill | last summer with the assistance of | two others had built a little! church and in the spring he will be | brepared to welcome the men who into Canada's newest | there were Mcleod and | two theological students of who alter grad- | nating with the degrees of B.A, and | B.D., left their comfortable homes in Toronto to preach the gospel to them jnerg of the Klin Flon in nor- thern Manitoba and are still con- tinuing in this work. These were but a few of the instances of devo- tion to the cause which were men- tioned by the speaker, The difficulties which were faced because of the multiplicity of races found in Canada were outlined by Dr. Cochrane, Sixty-Three Nationalities "There are at least G3 nationall- ties in the Dominion," he claimed, "and the United Church preaches the gospel iu 28 different lang- uages." The speaker for those who newcomers to ers. "These people have a real cons tribution to make to Canada n they dare treated kindly," he con- fended. Dr. Cochrane's concluding mess- age was to urge that in view of the courage and . self-sacrifice. of the mission workers that the peo- ple of the United Chur would not fail to freely support the great work of home missions, i Dr. Cochrane also preached at Simcoe Street United Church last night. ince after tion who were remote cited by Martin Manitoba mission the post a pou port. Then Burns, had little regard looked down upon Canada as foreign- Soviets Helease Rabbis Washington, Senator Borah has received a message from Max- Im Latvinoff, actine ecdmmissar of foreign affairs at Moscow, stating all but three of the fourteen rah- bis reported arrested and threaten- ed with execution have been re. 1ond an | later in the evenir jd ipo m at a meet | wher construce- | p | September, | film colony lin Hollywood of his wife's Jam Again Threatens Serious Flood at Pickering Creek CITY AND DISTRICT NEWS | Water Overflows Highway And Thick Fog Combines to Make Situation Dangerous Sorina Was in The Air This Morning 1s in the. air this morning, the sky of Spring wi: The atmosphere was balmy, blue and the sunshine suggestive warmer days. Oshawans have made a great saving in fuel during the past weel: and the furnace is no longer the greedy monster which it has been, devouring fuel with no thought or consideration for the family purse or budget. KINSMEN TO STAGE SHOW FOR KIDDIES FRIDAY AFTERNOON 4.15 special schoo n's 1 ill be 1tine 1 's * w, which is general public was decid- to be offered to th " mitt 1021 0. 4 The pice for this spe any at the regul: ERRATIC STREEN CAREER ENDS FOR MABEL NORMAND { Former Popular Actress Dies --Connection With Two Murders Forces Re- tirement |! Angeles, 1° Normand, once on widely known and the screen, in public paid stars of for the last. five ment, forces 1 by of her connection with Hellywood scandals and |-illne died early yesterday {sanitorium at Monrovia, near her she had been confined with losis for more than a year. her bedside when death, at terday morning, closed th and pathetic car- vy her secretary, mi < ard a night nur Nor mand' 8 husband, with whom she elog 1526, to surpri with a 3 a.m. marri ra dus tice of the peace at Ve ¢ 'alifornia, himself physician's care for , and it was with some trepidation that the sanitarium au- thorities informed him at his home death. Mrs. 25 St. Staten i later in tubere At 2.30 ¥y¢ actress' eer, Julia Miss Cody, has Normand's mother, G. Normand, of Place, . St. George, § , and her sister, No: mand, word here night that they are on their by airplane, and directed that rangements for the funeral postponed until they arrive. actress' father died in the home on Staten Island three weeks Miss Cc laude sent ar-| be 'the | ago. It was a murder, perhaps the | most sensational ever to centre the unfavorable attention of the nation {on Hollywood, that paved the way for the decline of Mabel Normand from a beloved and brilliant com- edienne, with a following that as- sured success for her every appear- ance in moving pictures, to tragic retirement. The murder was that of William Desmond Taylor, film director, who was found shot to death in his elaborate bungalow in Hollywood the night of I'eb. 2, 1922, soon after Miss Normand, the last per- son known to have seen him alive, had concluded a visit to his home. Enmeshed in the notoriety growing out of the tragedy, which also spelled the end of another prominent film career, that of Mary Miles Winter, Miss Normand's name for weeks was carried on front pages all over the country. Her explanation that 'she had only been a "dear pal" of the murdered home that fatal uight merely to retrieve some letters that she had written to him, failed to rescue her from questioning again and again by investigators. The damage grew to the pro- portions of personal disaster two years later when the actress again attained publicity through the shooting and wounding of Court- land S.. Dines, wealthy oil opera- tor of Denver, in his apartment here at a party at which Miss Nor- TOO LATE TO CLASSIFY LOST---SUM OI: MONEY SATUR- day between Post Office and ark Road. Finder please leave 52% Drew Street. Reward. (46a) FOR RENT---THREE SEMI- FU R- nished rooms. Phone 2059. (46Gb) FOR SALE -- MODERN SIX rooms, brick residence, nearly new first class condition, paved stree!, best residential section. Price leased. The three held are in no danger of execution, the message said. $4700. Terms can be arranged. Ap ply Bradley Bros. (461) Ice Jam Has Formed Abowv¢| Bridge, and F'-cd Is Im minent If the Dam Breaks Dynamiting May Be Nec | _ essary OSHAWA CREEK WAS HIGH YESTERDAY been | sev- | Miss Gladys | family | | Waters Receded Without | Doing Any Damagz--N¢ Trouble Reported Today From Harmony or Bow manville Creeks p.m again threatening a jam having forme night. in Duffin's was running over night, and dyna necessary to cleat the stream. The was also gwollen, not overflown its | A flood i Pickering, an icc led again last | Creek. Water {the highwe last | miting may be | the ic from | Oshawa ereck r has subsided dynamited morning witn k vas Pickering c¢ jce jam ht. and Sunday docile appearance at a fairly low level, noon yesterday, ice be- having floated dowa upper part of the creek, o'clock a serious jam just above the bridge. rose, and by sun at was vi over the highway 0 depth of about sixeinches, This condition prevailed for sev= ral hours, About nine o'clock last 1ight the began to receds and by this morning were down 3 foot leaving tha | hig collect, the | ter | | from | {and by four | was forming Ea waters dawn almost ay clean I'og Increases Danger During the night watchmen with lant directed traffic and ed mote 5 to go slowly. The sft- ation made more serious hy the dense fog which ni , and which made it very diffl- co or motor of the high flowing over Althouz the morning above rns 18 to see where the water it. waters had reced- the bridge, and a imminent when the and the water is re- is possible that the jam to be dynamited if the ¢ continues to swell, Two mea tioned at the bridge today traffic and keeping a close which may break y time if the sun has suf- nt effect on it. Oshawa Creek Rises 1 Oshawa Creek was terday and it seemed like- the stream would overflow This morning, has dropped several in- thus removing danger of a for the time being. 'The creeks immediately | Oshawa were not presenting alarming aspect today. The Har- creeks were not excentionally and the Bowmanville creea not sufficiently to any is gives away leased It i have ilood The water high ye ily that its hanks the creek ches flood east of swollen cause trouble. way { mand and Edna Purviance, another | 8C actress, were the guests. ireer, admitted the [but lined to explain it, althougu | police declared themselves satis- {fied he was prompted by lot Dines' attention to his employer. | After this incident protests [Asam the showing which Miss Normand appeared | were lodged all over the country, [ana resulted in their banning in | several states. The following | year the actress attempted to re- | deem herself on the stage under the direction of A. H. Woods, He starred her in the farce, "The Lit- tle Mouse," but declined to bring the play to New York after a few try-out performances because Miss Normand's acting was "not of Broadway quality." Miss Normand's early educgtion was received in a convent in Mont- real, talent Forced work at to New obtained an artist's model, city capturing the attention such well-known artists as James Montgomery Flagg, Charles Dana for painting and musie. to quit school and go to the age of 16, she came York with her Coming Events 3 Cents per word each ine sertion, Minimum charge for each insertion, 35c. ATTENTION THE JH. social gathering is to be held on St. David's Day, Saturday, March 1st, in Welsh's Parlours, at 6.30 p.m. For further particulars call Mrs. H, Matthews, Westmount. Phone 1416M. 5 COMING---~HARMONY ity Hall, Tuesday, February 25, "Tompking' Hired Man". Admis- sion adults 25c¢., children 16ec. (44-460 PALMIST, appoint= 46-48) on "MADAME Ross Corners, ments, 2804, NEVADA. phone warn=-j prevailed all} the ice jam still} jam § of films in = the limits § however, | any % i yrmand's chauffeur, Horace # shooting © jealousy = i 3 i Born in Quebec, Nov, 10, 1894, § $ f where she showed a distinet ' family and | itinerant employment as ', her bright viva- | of | Gibson and the late Coles Phillips. | (dhe) COMMUN-=- 7} { Aw

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