Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Daily Times, 8 May 1930, p. 10

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PAGETEN * FORD MEN MUST BE TOTAL ABSTAINERS All Drinkers Will be Sum. Officials Announce i -- Detroit ~~Fvery empolyes of.the | Yord Motor Company. whe is found frinking an alcoholic beverage, whether in his home or in a blind pig tn Dearborn, will be discharged immediately, Harry W. Bennett, chief of Henry Ford's private police announced, At the same time Bennett sald he had offered the nid of his forces to Chief Carl Brocks, of the Dear~ born police in a concerted drive to dry up the suburb Bennett paid he was acting on 'orders from the Yord Motor Company," Not only, will ¥ord w re who are found drinking in arborn outside the ¥ord plant be liable to discharge, but every employee who yeporis for Work with the smell in r on his breath wl be reported, xeeption will be made to the ruling for discharging work. ars who dri only in cases where the man's family is destitute, he sald, After a conference with' Bennet, Chief Brooks sald that every per- gon found by vaiding parties sn drinking establishments will be questioned, If any of the men westioned have a Ford Mptor Com- oy employees' badge they will be reported and their discharge will gellow immediately, Bennett also promised that all letters' received by the Ford frm complaining of the presence of drinking places in Dearborn will he turned over to Dearborn police, Chief Brooks said every complaint would be the signal for a raid, "Dearborn is dry now," Brooks sald, /'with the exception of a cer. tain amount of surreptitious drink. ing in the rooming houses near the Ford plant, Wa will take immediate steps to clean out these places." MODERN GIRLS AIR KNOTTY PROBLEMS Happy and Jolly But Not | Frivolous, Declares ' Speaker Oxford, (Eng) ~= The modern girl became vigorous in her own defence in the course of a confers ence which was held recently at St, Hugh's College, It 'was the conference of the National! Council of Girls' Clubs, attended by girls emploved in face tories, in trade, and in domestic service, The problem of the: modern girl prose during a discussion on the functions of the clubs, @ MI am'tired," deciured Josephine kwoith, secrotary of the Liver WE ~Photograph b Milne Studios APPOINTED FELLOW Allan George, sonioy member Mesprs, George, Moorhouse and King, noted Toronto architects, 'whe has heen appointed a Fellow' of the Royal Bociety, of Architects, pool Union of Girls' Clubs, "of hearing these endless criticisms of the modern girl, The girl of today as seen in our clubs has a sense of responsibility of which any section of the community could be proud, "When you get to know her as we know her at the clubs, you see that she has & very mich greater sense of responsibilty and a desire for service than her Victorian pre- decessor, What is merely a happy and jolly outlook on life is too of~ ten Interpreted hy those eager Lo criticise the modern girl as friv- olity, She takes a pane and healthy interest in politics, hut she has not much time for partisanship," Miss A, Quint, of Manchester, suggested that the girl of today had to do all. her living in her leisure time because her work was so exacting. "Therefore," sald Miss Quint, she seeks one 'crowded hour of glorious life' to make up for the nge-long day at the factory. or shop Clubs are heginning to realize that this is the reason why so many girls seek excitement in the form of pletures, dances, and the streets', In a debate on the ways In witch women may he helped in thelr work by legislation, a num- ber of the girls read short papers which were followed by a general dxchange of views, Miss B, Godfrey (Shorediteh) declared. that a girl should not be turned away from a labor ex- change as "not genuinely seeking work', because she refused to take a floor-mopping job, "It ig unfair to the mistress and to the girl," she urged, "to force unsuitable material into domestic sorviee, When the servant is giv- en every evening, one half-day a. week, and every Sunday free, like other girls, then I will take a floor-mopping job myself, but net before then" Miss: Dorothy Elilott (National A Union of General and Municipal Workers) also protested Against -------- $ J ¥ / / § A 4 | A 4 (NU BR" Y 4 ! 4 \ bi } ik UST four walls. 'In the 1930 home those four walls more than justify themselves by establishing the spirit and decorative motif of every room, As a "basis for effective wallpapers and paints, they are the key to home modernization, Visit our Store and see the large variety Wallpapers and Paints of & PARK W, W. PARK ' PHONE 3082 \ 8 | ' taking unskilled peapla in to dos mestie service, There wis no réas on she sald, why domestic ser vice should not he yegulated by law, as other industries were, RADIO CENSORSHIP TEST CASE PENDS New York Suit Started by Christian Science Parent Church New York--Radlo censorship 1s to have its first test in the eourts here through a sult begun hy the Christian Belenee Parent Chureh, formed by a schism from the Christian BSelence Mother Chureh and the centre of much hitter con froversy, The asking parent chureh Is $16,712 damages from the Colum- | § bia Broadoasting Company on the ground that the pressure of thous ands of letters sent by orthodox seientista led the radio company to break its contract and refuse to als low Sir Henry Japp, one of the sohism's most prominent follows ers, to speak on its hook-up Feb. ruary, 1929, Sir Henry Japp, K.R.E., builder of the Pennsylvania tubes under the Kast river and a tunnel under the Thames, was scheduled for a fifteen minute talk on "Mental Selence" in a national hook-up of twenty stations, The radio company cancelled the speech, although, according te the parent church, represented hy Tihs hetts, Lewis and Rand, a copy of the Josten Was presented hefofe hand to the Columbus studios, The Columbia Studies, far from denying the existence of a contrast, focuses the parent church of almost placing on its hand a controversial apeach through deception of ita real purpose, CASE STILL ON AFTER 100 YEARS American and European Heirs of John Emerick { Still Fighting fit, Louis--~An 80-year-old-gourt battle for more than $100,000,000 from the descendants of John Jacoh Astor has brought the 1,100 Ameri- oan and 240 Huropean heirs of Jahn Nicholas Emerick to an im. passe, They were not quite sure whether the case had heen settled, or whether legal skirmishes loomed for them far into the futuve, Calvin 1, Hoy, chief counsel here for the American Hmerioks, sald he feared the European heirs had jumped the gun en their Ameri oon cohorts to such an extent thai he sought. 8 court injunction to keep them from attempting to make a settlement with the Astors, An injunction hearing to be held in Fedora} Distriet Court 'in New York City next week is the culminar tion of » Aght within the ranks of the heirs, according to Hoy, But the Emericks think thet they may be too or suspicious "goings on" over in Wurope has raised doubt in their minds, The Emerick case dates back more than 100 years, Thely ans cestor, the Emericks contend, was A wealthy partner of John Jacob Astor, earing that death soon would overtake him, Emerick, so heirs claim, entered & H0-yoar trust agreement whereby the Emerick capital would. vemain invested in the business of Emerick and Astor, The trust agreement should have expired in 1008, The Emericks took thelr case tn eourt---and lost, . But informa tion obtained sines then from the European' heirs purports 10 have found and origingl court dewres granted in 1549 to Lynus Emerick of Bau Claire, Wis, ordering the Astors to pay Emerick descendants without' further order, thelr share of the Emerick estate, Lynus Emerick, fearing death would cheat him, the heirs now claim, wold his copy of the deeres to interested parties for $50,000 and then heat them by bribing a court elerk to give him the original decree from court records, The de. cree and other documents relat- ing tn the estate, are the ones re- ported found in Europe, MME. GALLI-CURC] RIDICULES OPERA Pompous, Slow and Obso- lete, Great Singer Declares London. --Crand opera sung In foreign tongues, performed hy plump sopranos and thiek-necked tenors, has. heen condemned at last hy one of the world's greatest operate stars,~--Mme, Galll-Curcl herself, FELEOYED VICE PRESIDENT RM Horning, who was elegled vices prasident of the General Assounts ante Assoriation at the annual meets ng in the Carip-Rite hotel [ast Bight ET "It, 18 old-fashioned entertain ment, pompous, slow, full of m numerahle absurdities, and obsol ole, Mme, Gatli-Curel plates in an interview Bhe has left the Metropolitan Oper Company, where she has starred' for the past alight years Bhe heging a world concert tom abandoning grand operas for the time heing The "Wghbrow"" love of grand opera is an uslon, 1 seems, which has heen shaltered by the grim reason of the "average man,' "He is tmpressed,'"' says Mme Galli=Curel, "hy the and ahsurdities-- the men and wos men who sing while they ave dying, the men who wing at length just hefore carving ona another up "Most people realise thal Slag fried's sword is pot 8 magic weap on, They wre inclined to smile al the thought of the eight well-grown young women who impersonate the Valkyries viding through the ay" Mme, Galll-Curel points to Mimi, the heroine of "Ia Hoheme," usu ally played by a large woman who must he carried, dying of econsumps tion, to her couch by an undersizgad teh ariificinlttion | ® "SALADA" SAME FLAVOUR TEA NOW | SAME QUALITY BROWN LABEL _AT ALL GROCERY STORES "Rudolph lays hey on a couch," the opera star adds, "to breathe her last, singing exquisite passages with perfect clearness as she pass es away, No Hope "Grand opera Is constantly eon fronted with the diMeulty that iis characters must sing at length when dying ov ahout to die! Mme, Galli-Curel not only eon demns the grand opera of the pres ent, hut sees po gleam nf hepée in tha future itis a dead art," she gays, "Lon | don existed with only a miniature peason of grand opera, the ¥nglis) may not have as much musieny knowledge as Continental nations, Lh the opera in London used to ring together all the highest sgels ely, and the fact that they could do without itis significant, We do not know whether Hon John ¥, Brownlee is worrying whes ther after June 10, he will he in the same postion as Old Bol Was for a few minutes the other day r- l.ethbridge Herald | Learn the "INS i OUTS" of | ECONOMY Lob i il {ou knew th de with indi] "IN" to a Loblaw Groceteria Is in Judgment, good values are combined prices plus the pleasure ourself t your confidence of ke note, for this is upon which our permanent made .. customers have been ' These Specials on Sale for Week of May 8th to 14th This week we are featuring LATHER-O SNAP 2 cakes Ric} ™e .. 140 [AL~=Domestic or Easifirst HORTENING Vegetable, the Perfect Shortening for every eT SPECIAL ==Invincible jelly Powde h 29° "For All Fine laundering" LUX Purely ' Flaky Pastry, Frying + + + Richer Cakes, Bon Ami Wn ors had Yor * Sweet Relish SANDY Beant | { CAAT Marmal RIRRIVFS = \ i ange » IEE L Ll) ! 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