Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Daily Times, 1 May 1930, p. 16

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PAGE SIXTEEN 5 Fan wy frm Jo BRAN THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, THURSDAY, MAY 1, 1930 oh a an aa Arata aad NURSES GRADUATION, © Kingston Graduation of nurs os from A Kingston w pocond, Nev, Canon | the guest speaker, ° BiG M ONG Lindsay, Api 20==A 10 pound meskinonge illegally # aL Emily cleek was an unusual ex hibit at the polles court where it wis extensively shown, although nu charges have been lodged against the man who speared it, Beveral police court and town olfielaly Jhoutly took turns stand- ing beside the fish to have their pletures taken, then the fish was prowented to' tho Toss Memurini Hogpital, t sliced a Jarge voshey off the und of provinelal constable Ww, Wenthorall's thumb, when le stuck said thomb in ite mouth, NIEAMER SALVAGED Kingston. --«'Chn steamer Sarnia- doc, owned hy the Peterson Com. pany, Fort William, which ran a- shorn Tast November on the Main Ducks Lake Ontario, has been pul fod off under command of Thomas Reid, assisted by Miller Donnelly and Captain Grant, wrogkers, se Ing the tugs of the Pyke and Nin. mie wrecking companies, The craft was pumped out and at the aft hateh, where tho vessel was hroken, she was strapped by enh. los, Tifty thousand bushels of wet grain witl ba removed to Richard« son glevator and later the Rarnia- doo will he put In the Kingston drydock. for survey to astimate damages, After the wreck the owners abandoned the steamer to the under-writers, ON STANDARD TIME Rellaville=<Rellaville" will rontin- ue on standard time (his year, A HAE IS EASTERN ONTARIO NEWS vole af tie electorate at the lust municipal election voting wolidly Lagainet the measure, This city is: w valiway terminal und the employees of the C, N, I, wern "|wery premounced against the, ave coptance, wig ody Is SUDDENLY Polleville,~While sitting In » chalr conversing with her family Mrs, Mary Yoster, 146 Albert street, was stricken with a heart selgure and succumbed before medical afd could be summoned, fhe leaves a husband, two sons In felleville, and five daughters in Toronto, POUBLE ELEVATOR CAPACITY Kingston=~At a meeting of the township council of Kingston, was announced that the proposed elevator which is to be bullt In Attia Oataraqul Bay near the site of the Coverdale elevator now in the course of construction will he i Arid in capacity to 4,000,000 bushels instead of the original esti mate of 2,000,000 bushels capacity, A, by law is shortly being placed before the rate payers of the town. ship asking for fixed assessment tor the company, which is headed by WM, I, Price of Toronto, RECALLS FINNT TRAIN Kingston, An people al Nap: anee watched the fastest train in Canada In service, It was vecalled that Just seventy<four years Ago the frst trald went through that town, It was In 1856 that Kera Pringle, now a veteran vepident of Napanee, watched the fivst pas senger service of tha old Grand Trunk Nallway go through that town, 'I'he engine was of a smal type and wood wax used for fuel, Tha train was made up of three or four coaches and there was no such thing an speed in those days Ef Sha a New Seven-Roomed House For Sale Bargain Price if sold at'onee.. No better buy in the City. For particulars Phone 2354 SET IT AND FORGET IT ¢ + « go out for the afternoon comes 0 moments, You set the Wilcolator, It works automatically, even heat. Prevents baking fallures. No other gas offers such 'a of advanced features. combination 154 INDLAY EATURES b NL oc | Mr, Pringle at the mo walked Jihre miles to woe the frst tral #0 through Nepanoe, t VIIAER PLANT CONTRACT LEY Belleville, == The tenders of the Patterson Construction. Company of Belleyille for #118.008,02 for the construction of a water purl fleation plant for (his elty haw been necepted by the e¢ity council, DOGGY POINONED Trenton Farmers in the distriet horenbouts ure complaining of thelr dogw being poisoned, Heys oral farmers north of Trenton have lost thelr dogs while a few others have noticed the animals to be wlek, bul they have recovered, TRAIN WHITH (CAR Trenton, When (he Junction train, running on the CNR, Line from Trenton Junction to the de. pot in Trenton struck a car owned and driven by Gloseftto Donetin Mrs, Donette was badly cut about the face and received a wevers whaking-up, while the car was bad. ly damaged, Mr, Donetin escaped igh only ® severe bruise on one 08 TORY OFFICERS P'eterboro~=New ofoers of the Wast Peterborough Liberal-Cons wervatlye Association are announes od as follows =Hanorary Presi dontn=T, ¥K, Beadburn, J, WH, Burnham, - R, J, Boden, W, H Bradburn, RK, Denne and Dro J, R, Fraser, President--0, BKB Mut thews, Ist Vice-President J Juby, nd Viee-Prosident Mrs, Howard Vallis, fird Viee«Presi- dent Morley Hmithson Hoere. tary---=John , Corkery Ansistant Beoretary, ~v J WW, Bilevanson, Treasurers Dr Blewart Camer on, MACHINES MENACE (ACE INDUSTRY OF | FRENCH PEASANTS | Thousands of Women Find Living Imperiled by Factory Age a, By JOSEPHINE HAMBLRETON (Canadian Press Mall Corvespons dent) Paris, France, May 1 Daughters of Arachne, the 300,000 Incoemakers of France, are in dis trom In tha mountainous region that runs from Usson-haint-Pol to Craponne-sur-Argon and all along the Upper Loire, needles are idle In villages of the Pyrenees and tha Cavennes, bobbins are ald beside the ancient distaff in the darkest aorners of the, great oaken cup hoards, Thea most artistic of the ancestral industries of France Is in danger, "he making of Ince," mays M Breull, president of the lacemakeys syndicate, "Is a handieraft which seems to spring from the soll fiself po much does it adapt itself to the countryside and fin women In the litle mountain town of Vellay and in the valleys about, 60,000 humble peasant women work In the hours left them from the care of the house, the children and thelr bit of land on the hillside, "Since the 15th century these wild and rugged mountain slopes' ««ho was speaking of the Central plateau of Franee, dominated by the Cevennes~'this ungrateful poll, this isolated country of long, rigorous winters and difficult com munieations. has retained, thinks to iis handievalis, a hardy and vigorous people, lLace-making was the safeguard of the mountain hemlet, because, thinks to what the women earned, she could stay hy her fireside, instead of leaving the hill towns for the factories of the plains," Walk along the streets of Vellay «those streets narrow an a corrid or which go between high stone walls with stone arches overhead, AL every door sits a woman with fnmmumerable minute bobbins, work Ing uncreasingly at patterns fins an cobswab, In the evening, she carries her primitive wooden frame to the village square, reproducing, In exquisite delicacy, the hyacintn pattern of Auvergne; Nut the machinesmade produst Is eutting In; The machine pros duct In new so fine that the uns Initiated cannot distinguish one from the other, And even the ma- ohine lace Industry of France has poen ita output largely affected by the United Siates tariff, Village squares of the moun. tains, with their ehurehes looking aver a Inok vista of distant val leya and hills, wea now only the old women come down In the twi. Hght with their hobblys and their anolent wooden frames, Tho young women are gone, And the old art itself In threatened for ita secrets are handed down from mother to daughter, Thera ix no school ex sept the angestral 'foyer', Until now, as the mountain wo. men made thelr bobbing fy, evol ving the intricate patterns, they earned for themselves and thelr familion, a quiet and tranquil life, Generation after generation, they wove beauty in a world of thread, Today, their pitityl remuneration has fallen from 20 france to fives 20 cents, The Chamber of Deputies has come to their ald hy passing a law which requires all machines made lace to he marked "Machines made" and all hand made to be marked "hand-made," Aut it 1a not so much an dustry AN An age that is passing, WOULD CURTAIL IMMIGRATION AT THE PRESENT TIME wa -------- \ (My Canadian Press Loaded Wim) Toronto, May 1,--X suggestion of eurtallment of immigration un- ti the present unemployment in Canada coaren to exist and immedi. ate inauguration of some form of unemployment insurance oven if the Dritish North America Act res quires amendment," were high pola' of the feature address on livers here by £, J. Garland, { UA, MT, for Bow Rivep, ot the Canadian sonterence on soglal work, 7 Mr, Gavlapd contended unem- ployment 18 a stato responsibity, infuencand by fmmigreation, bank. ing system, railway, the replace ment of labor by sclence, eHimate and the general social order, As sieh, ho paid, the problem should ho, dealt with hy state measures, HORSE IN CHICAGO STOPS BUSINESS Takes to Sitting Near County Building, Paralyzing Traffic Chicago It wan: an horse on Clark street, no less, and sitting down, A performance of this kind I most unusual in Chicago, ¥npecial- ly on Clark street, and particularly In front of the County Building on i huwy afternoon, The horse's nama probably was Maud, But this is purely guess work, Khe was called many names, Kxpervienced horsemen were heard to observe that she was tha sitting: ost nag they aver had peen, b Crowds gathered and gaped, Hustling lawyers halted, Learned jurists vanged themselves "among the hystanders, Ordinary people stood on tiptoes, peering through the crowd to ses whut they could sen, Ntreotenrs wera blocked, Automobles honked without anys thing happening, The windows of office buildings were hung with hu» man heads, All eyes centred on the seated nag, It began to Inok as though flitting Bull was helng challenged for an place in history by Sitting Horses The sxpress wagon driver to whom the horse helonged did a lot of plain and fancy walking around, trying to figure n way to get the horse Into n walking stance, ¥rom | the gathering erowd came fre- auent sage suggestions, Mostly from persons whose only previous aoquaintanee with horses had been In dies games, The crowd grew Lo such propors tions that it was quite a task for anyone to get Into the Clark street floor of the County Bullding, Even It they had wanted to, Finally the humane soclety got busy and the horse was asshsted up No one ever did And out what the creature was sitting down for SEA FLOOR MOPPED FOR STAR FISH IN BIG OYSTER BEDS Bivalve, N.J.=Sea floor mops have been used in an effort to halt an ins vasion of star fish threatening des trugtion of the Maurice River Oyster beds. Large areas of the 32,000 acres anted with oysters have alread) seen ruined by the fish and the fut ure of the $40,000,000 industry, ae cording to. the United States Bureau of Fisheries, will depend upon im mediate arrival of warmer weather and heavy rains to drive the Invaders into the ocean, Since dredging would ruin the beds the mops; made of cotton waste and similar in shape to these used hy housewives, ura dragged over areas upon which the star fish have wet tled. . Several thousand bushels of the fish have been brought ashore by the mops. They will be used as fers tiliger FIFTH SURVEY OF N.Y. WATERSHEDS Albany; N.Y.Plans for the fifth of a series of biological surveys, de signed to cover all the watersheds of New York State, wero discussed res cently at the fourth annual confers ence on hiologleal surveys which was held in the offices of the state eon. servation department in Albany The fifth Held survey in being planned to cover the 8t. Regis-Chat- cangay system, whieh is located in warts of Clinton, Franklin and St, Po de counties, and which em- braces a portion of the Adriendack Lake region, upper and lower St, Regis Lakes, the Chateaugay lakes, Lake Meacham and several others The watershed includes approximates ly 2,500 square miles of territory, with nearly 40 miles of the St, Lawrence River, from Ogdensburg east, as its boundary water, The main purpose of the survey is to develop a stocking policy for streams and lakes in the region, Gas On Stomach Is Dangerous TELLS HOW TO STOP IT Gan, Pain, Bloating and a feels ing of fullness after eating ave: almost certain evidence of excess sive hydrochlovie acld in the stom- woh, Too much aeld irritates the de. leata stomach lning, frequently causing chronle Gastritis and dangerous Ulcers, Food ferments and sours, forming a gan that dine tends the stomach and often seris ously affects the Heart, It In genuine folly to neglect such a condition or to tveat with artificial digestive alda that onus not neutralize the stomach acld, A hatter way is to got from any pes Hable drug store some Risurated hMagnesta (powdered of tablets) and take a little In water after each meal, Risurated Magnesia will atop the worst gas attack quickly and without embarrassment, Tak- en right after eating, It prevents formation of gas Eo acids ao there fa no sourness, bloating or pain, Pleagant and portecty Buriat te use «- Risuvated Magnealn deo mive wonderful relief in nine out ff ten cages, Ask your Doctor or Drugglet. Try It today, { NEW BUILDING OF CANADA LIFE 1§ OF LARGE EXTENT Huge New Structure Has Many Interesting Features Toronto, Muy 1,="1he first unit of the new Canada Life Build, ing will be one of the outstanding office bulldings In Canada In point of sige, architectural beauty and equipment, From sidewalk level to the top platform will he 480 feet, The onst and west facades (University Avenue and Bimeoe Ktreet) will ba YOB feet Jong and the north and south 101 feet, 0 inches, Building specications enll for 170,000 cuble feet of white limestons fo cover Its entire exterior, axeepting the hase and sieps which will be of granite, ' A massive partie over the main antrance will be supported hy ten columng, each 06 feet high, ens closing a balcony at the 2nd floor, The entrance halls and elevator lobby will be richly trogted with marble walls, marble and mosale floovs, decorated collings and hronge doors, Floor space will measures 250,» 000 suave feet and the office floors are being carried wevoss a clear 8pan of over 60 feet there, helng no pillars to obstruct the ght, High gallings and 0 feet high windows will provide almost ideal lighting and ventilating conditions, and special blinds will hide the glare of the sun, but not shut out the day Hight, The tienoval Man The main block will be eight storeys high above mrade, and the executive hlook will rise three storeys higher, The central book, 0 feet wide, forms the 18th floor above which will vise the tows with an observation veom at the top, The maln entrance from Univer Sity Avenue is to be a griple one And will consist of an open porch below tha portien, outer and inner vestihules, with hronwe doors tn each, Heavy metal gates will nro tect the entrance when the. huilds Ing is closed, Separate antrances Avenue, ay well as a central en trance from Bimeoe street, and the main hall will he continuous from University Avenus to Bimeow Mireet, Vine suites of Wxecutive Offices have heen arranged on the th awd 10th floors, and the Board Roow oceuplon a commanding position on the 16th floor in the tower, The main dining room and kitchen will he situated on the 14th floor and Offers' Dining Roam om the 12th, A battery of six high speed se: vators will serve all floovs up to the 12th, and one ear will run to the Observation Room in the tows or, The main bullding will he cons negted hy a tunnel with the new Power House, Printing Plant and Garage of the Canada Life, which Are also heing erected on the wes! side of Bintena street, Accommodis ton 18 provided in the garage for about 00 cars, with open alr parks ing for the same number on the roof, In addition , AN supplies will he recelved at the Vower House and trucked through the tunnel to the main bullding, The erection of healthful ay well us highly efficient workshop for the Inrge Canada Life Head Office sta hus heen the first alm of those who planned this building, "The asoust loally treated callings will minimise noise and racket and aveld con siderable nerve tension: 15 fest eellings and 0 feet high windows will provide as nearly as possible ideal Vighting and ventilating con» ditions, In addition, the bullding will he equipped with a modern ventilating system CHANGE URGED IN MEDICAL ETHICS Reputable Doctors Should Advertise in Campaign Against Quacks New York A revolutionary change In medical othies was ads vocated hy Dr, Bhirley 8, Wynne, Commissioner of Health, when he announced that the health departs ment would ald the foreign langu- age press to get reputable doctors to advertise in thelr columns If the editors will agrees to exclude the advertisements of quacks, He advertised that he could see no reason why reputable doctors should not advertise in English will alse he provided to the north and Kouth wings from University RR SR A SS = -- Iangunge newspapers as well, Dr, Wynne spoke at 0 meeting held here to which forelon diploe mutle yepreseniatives were Invite ed Lo diseuss "nulawful medion) advertising In the forelgn press," OMelnl. representatives from eight foreign epuntries promised (o co operate ith the commissioner tn An extensive campuign to drive tue quack advertiser who made (rans ulent promises of cures, out of Lhe forelgn langunge press, Producing a mass of clippings to show that men known to the health department as "downright takers wevq advertising contin. wily in the foreign press, Dr, Wyn- ne sald that he would rather bring about a change through friendly weting than prosecution, 118 Asks ed the diplomats to use thelr in fluence with the editors, "I realius," he sald, "that (he drop in Immigration has put the foreign language press in a bad way financially, In order that they may not lose money by cens soring fraudulent advertising, the beth department will bullg up on page of reputable medical sd. vertising for thew," Dr, Wynne pointed gut thet fms migrants who cannot sposk Eng. lish and do not know how to veach i good doctor, are at the merey , of the quack advertiser, Advertiss« ments Inn foreign language news paper of good doctors who enn BRonk that, language would theres fdve be of great heneft, he held, Ep REE Kindly Commanding OMeer (ads dressing raw anes, "Now, my man, | want you to vegard tha regiment as a big band of brothers and me ns the futher of the regis ment, You understand?" Recruit; "Yes, dad," -- WITH CARY "Herve!" shouted the station master, "What's the ides of throws Ing those trunks about ke that? The porter gasped, the passengs ove wera numb with amasement, Then he continued; "That's no way to act, Took what you've done to the platform!" C OAL The Best Jeddo Premium in America At Usual Coal Prices Produced DIXON COAL CO. | Telephone 262 Five DirectLines ea Lie a ii EE haa NEILL'S THE STORE OF VALUES BETTER GREAT MEN'S WORK BOOTS Men's Work Boots that will stand the hardest wear $2.79 Big Anniversary Sal MISSES' SLIPPERS Misses' Patent Sandal Strap Slippers All sizes, 11 to 2 welted soles, MEN'S DRESS BOOTS Men's Solid Calf Dress Boots with Goodyear Regular $6.50 WOMEN'S DRESS SLIPPERS Women's Black Kid and Patent Dress Slippers, Regular $5.50 $4.39 | Men's Dress Oxfords, ET ---------------------------- MEN'S DRESS OXFORDS ] | Calf leather, Brown or Black | ; $2.95, $3.49, $3.95 made of good reliable in calf or BOOTS FOR THE CHILD Boots for the child with weak ankles, kid leather LADIES' PATENT PUMPS Ladies' Patent Pumps with or without buckles, Medium dress heels HOUSE SHOES Comfort Shoes for house wear, good comfort last with rubber heels Made on a MISSES SCHOOL OXFORDS Misses' brown salf School Oxfords, In all sizes, || to 2 LITTLE GENT'S OXFORDS Little Gent's Brown Calf Oxfords for the well dreased child $1.49 BOYS' SCHOOL BOOTS Boya' reliable School Boots, made of solid calf | leather with panco soles St CHILDREN'S SLIPPERS Child's Kid Slippers with flexible elk soles, at a remarkable low price Sizes | BOYS' OXFORDS Boya' Dress Oxfords, brown or black " to 5 MISSES' STRAP SHOES Miasea' Patent Strap Shoes Regular $2.50 $1.95 = --_ N.

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