Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Daily Times, 9 Oct 1930, p. 9

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

® ' PACE NINE' STAT ARMS INTO U3. . +P ep po Seize Buildings, Gost. Told Los Angeles, Oct. 9.--Leroy S. Smith, anti-Communist enthus told a congressional col la's 'sonret. polger 8 rms into the | A view to f 'e 8 buildings, communie eof a Shenker yi ; (] Sureau of the Befter American Federation, said that 20,000 guns 1ad been "by the sec ork, police. In reply to 8 q Hamilton Fish, Jr. New shairman of the committee, he said the source of his information could be revealed in executive ses. sion only. "We have information," Smith said, "that 20,000 guns have been Imported into the United States with which to arm the Cheka, who ronstitute the fighting men of the Communists." : Smith said that the Communists of the United States plan a gen- _ eral mobilization in' review of lorces on November 24, but that there would be nothing militant in the mobilization. "The Reds plan, when they be- some strong enough in the United States, to seize police departments, Ends Piles Quick Pile sufferers can only get guick safe and lasting relief by removing the cause---bhad circulation of the blood in the lower bowel. Cutting and external remedies can't do this --an internal medicine must be 1sed, HEM-ROID the prescription of Dr. J. S. Leonhardt, a specialist, succeeds, because it relieves this blood congestion and strengthens the affected parts. HEM-ROID is sold by druggists everywhere, and has such a wonderful record of success right in this city that Jury and Lovell Ltd., says to every Pile sufferer, try HEM-ROID at my' risk. It must end all Pile agony or you get your money back. city halls, newspapers, telegraph stations, railways, army and navy arsenals and army trucks," Smith continued. SOVIET PULPW MENACE TO QUEBEC ° Ottawa, Oct. 9.--~Russian pulp wood transported by steamer to Canada and re-exported from Canadian points to the United States was underselling Canadian pulpwood in that market and ser- fonsly injuring those settlers Who. having acquired and cleared tions of bushland, were experieng- ing difficulty in disposing of their cut timber, G. C. Piche, chief for estry officer of the Provincial | Lands and Forest ent of Quebec, told the Board of Railway' Commissioners yesterday. The agaist the imposition of an in- creased freight rate on that eom- modity, transported to United States points. Ban Sunday Funerals Brantford, Oct. 9--The protest or the Brantford Ministerial Associa- tion against conducting Sunday fun- erals has been backed up by publi- cations of the following public no- tice. "On and after November lst, 1930, the members of the Brantford Ministerial Association will refuse to conduct Sunday funerals and hereby wish to notify the public to act ac- cgrdingly. GETS THREE YEARS ON BIGAMY COUNT Simcoe, Ont. 9 -- Frederick Hugh Davis, Houghton Township farmer, was yesterday found guilty after the jury had twice disagreed, of the charge of bigamy, at the assizes of the Supreme Court. before "Mr. Jus- tice Kelly, and was sentenced to three years in Portsmouth. Davis was married in 1906 to this first wife in Ann Arbor, Mich, but they were separated in 1920. In August of this year he remarried, and has been liv- ing in this country. In defence, he stated that he had been shown news- paper clippings of his first wife's death in Niagara Falls and had re- married in good faith. "Fear," says a great business ALAR 7 RR man, '"produces the most extraordinary optical illusions . and causes men to see things and to imagine thing: which have no existence." Just sitting down and thinkin helps make bad business. - NEW quick-vision dial NEW tone NEW tone control NEW beauty NEW engineering NEW ALL OVER EW ease in selecting stations, with the new and. exclusive Quick-Vision Dial. New brilliance and richness of tone quality «the incomparable Golden Voice. New Tone Control, bringing out bass or treble at will. New beauty in the choice and dignified de- signs, matched walnut woods and distinctive = Radio Merchand new escutcheon plate. Model 70. New lowboy. Finished - matched walnut Beautiful, unobtrusive. in genuine NO-MAR. $223.00 Complete with Tubes. . Malcolm & Hill, Limited, Kitchener, Ont., Canadian Licensees . Licensed by Canadian Radio Patents Limited disers Ltd. Toronto g and deciding that business is bad is one of the things that Cartoon by Racey in Montreal Star U5, NAVY GIVEN 18 Destroyers, 25 Submar- ines and Two Cruisers Wiped Out Washington, Oct. 9---Secretary of the Navy Charles Francis Adams nas announced a complete reorgani- zation of the United States fleet and naval district craft in the interests of economy and national defence. The new plan, ordered by the new chiet. of naval operations, Admiral William V. Pratt, provides the Un- ited States with a more efficient war- time navy, at the same time con- forming to President Hoover's re- peated requests for economy in goy- ernment expenditures, naval officers said. About 4,800 men will be remov- ed from the navy payroll as a result of the new program effecting an ee- onomy in personnel expenditures of $1,579,000 this fiscal year, and $3, 428,- 949 next fiscal year. Reduction will bs accomplished by cutting monthly recruiting from 400 to 200. The reorganization pares 18 de- stroyers, two cruisers and 25 sub- marines, totaling 120,000 tons, from the commissioned hist of the navy and lays the groundwork upon which the eventual London Naval. Treaty fleet will be built. It is the most drastic revision of the navy since 11919 when the U.S. fleet was divided into two parts, the battle fleet and the scouting fleet, PROBE ORDERED OF BOND COMPANY British Columbia Firm, With Branch in Toronto, to be Investigated Victoria, Oct, 9--Investigation is to be conducted by the department of the attorney-general into affairs of the British Columbia Bond Corpora- tion, it is announced. The probe, under the Security Frauds Preven- tion Act, will be conducted by C. D. Prior, Victoria barrister as represen- tative of the department. It is reported that all clients of the firm were sold out on the New York market Tuesday and that all clients in Montreal, Toronto and Winnipeg markets were sold out at the opening Wednesday. Offilials of the firm, which has offices at Van- couyer, Victoria, Nanaimo and Dun- can, British Columbia , said it was imposible to estimate the total sum involved. Nock Island, Ill.--Four persons were drowned when a leaking launch capsized in the Mississippi River near here. A fifth passenger managed to swim ashore. UNIQUE GAVEL GIVEN OFFICER OF TRAFFIC SOCIETY Canadian Presented With Gavel Containing His- toric Woods Special to The Times Atlantie City, N.J.., Oct. 9.-- The annual convention of the Amer- ican Association of Passenger Traf- fic Officers, the most important so- ciety of its kind on the American continent, took place yesterday at Atlantic City under the presidency of H. H.' Melanson, assistant vice: president of the Canadian National Railways and 'president of the as- sociation. Following a tradition dating back over thirty years Mr. Melan- son was presented with a gavel, symbol of the authority held during a year. - Mr, Melanson is the seven- ty-fifth president of the association, This gavel, presented to Mr. Melan- son, is made of materials which commemorate his career. Among the woods inset in the gavel is a piece of willow imported from France and which grows in front of the house occupied by Mr. Me- lanson's father, a piece of Acadian apple tree, a piece of wood from the school where Mr. Melanson made his first studies, a piece of the rst desk he had when he came to the railway, and a piece of Michi- gan hickory from along the Cana- dian National lines in that state. His numerous promotions are sym- bolized by a piece of lumber from his first private car, No. 34, of the Intercolonial Railway, All these pieces of wood are joined together and polished. They constitute the gavel itself, which is in a box lined with Chinese silk. It is accompanied by other symbols which, like the silk of the box, are to recall different parts of the world, where the Canadian Nationa) Railways have offices under the jurisdiction of Mr. Melanson. Amongst these precious objects is a piece of gold from Bonaza Creek, Yukon, gathered during the gold rush of "98," jade from New Zea- land; Conemara marble, from Ire- land; Granite, from Scotland; an opal from Australia, and a piece of 'metal from the last sleeping car built by the Pullman Company, in the United States, The gavel and box are the work of Henry Birks and Sons, of Mont- real. Mr. Melanson is the second Can- adian to become president of the American Association of Passenger Traffic Officers. G. T. Bell, former executive assistant to the traflic vice-president of the Canadian Na- tional gystem, was the first one. At the banquet which closed the convention, last night, and at which many railways officials were present, the prineipal speaker was Sir Henry Thornton, president of the Canadian National Railways. SAYS DEPORTATION London Magistrate ments on Case of Officer London.An ex-officer who won the M.C.., but was dismissed by general court-martial, was sentenc- ed to 18 months' imprisonment at London Sessions for burglary at South Putney. The man was Alap Dunbar Leslie, 31, described as a clerk. Leslie, who pleaded guilty, was stated by the police to come of a good family. He had been edu- cated at a gollege at Horsham and enlisted In the Artists' Rifles in 1915. He was twice wounded and won the Military Cross. PACT ONE-SIDED Com. | He was dismissed in 1919 for fraudulent conversion and deprived of the Military Cross, He went to Canada, where he committed an offence and was de- ported. ir Robert Wallace, K.C., the chairman said that it was a one- sided arrangement that while the Dominions could deport British criminals Britain was not allowed to deport "Colonial people" who committed crimes here. SEEK CARNATIONS IN PARIS SHOPS Paris.--The Parisian's pride in the knowledge that fashions for women all over the world are dic- tated here does not make him any the less respectful of the fact that the arbiter of correct male attire is his Royal Highness the Prince of Wales. This was demonstrated the other night when most of the personnel of a smart hotel where the Prince of Wales always stays during his frequent visits to the French capital had been mobilized to comb the city's floral shops in search of deep red carnations. The hotel's florist had long been aware that the Prince must have a flower of this hue for his button- hole when he went out for an eve- ning of pleasure. But the Prince's sudden arrival this time was unex- pected and it took the unhappy flor- ist by surprise. The florist vainly applied to all flower shops in the immediate vicinity of the hotel for a deep red carnation. As the hours passed the situation became more alarming because the desired boutonniere could not be found anywhere on the Right Bank of the Seine. At the last minute, however, a page boy succeeded in locating a generous supply of blooms so frantically sought for in an obsecure little shop in the Latin Quarter, which is patronized al- most exclusively by students. So the dancers with whom the Prince democratically mingled at several Montmartre night clubs noticed the usual deep red carna- tion in his buttonhole. MYRTLE NEWS Myrtle, Oct, 8--Mr. Ed. Whippey visited Mr. Alex. Calder of Epsom, on Sunday. A number from here attended Markham Fair on Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Timms and son, Donald, of Scarkow, visited friends here on Sunday. Farmers are busy harvesting buck- wheat, which is a splendid crop in spite of the hot wave of the early fall, Sorry to report the serious illness of Mrs. Clarence Cook of Prospect. The Ladies' Aid held an afternoon tea at the home of Mrs, T. R. Price on Tuesday afternoon. The presi- dent, Mrs. Wilfred Graham presided and a pleasant and profitable time was spent, Mrs. Gustav Hahn, of Toronto, has been visiting her daughter, Mrs. Harry Hooke. Mr. Wolfe, of Toronto spent the week-end at his summer home here. Mrs. J. A. Carmichael and Mrs. E. E. Mole, visited relatives in Wood- ville on Monday. Owing to the annual teachers' con- vention which is being held in Whit- by on Thursday and Friday of this week the school children will have a two days' holiday. CLAREMONT NEWS Claremont, Oct. 6--Miss Ida Brig- nall spent over Sunday with friends in the village. Mr. and Mrs. D. A. Scott spending a week in London? Mr, and Mrs. Geo. Lee and Mr. B. Madill, of Stouffville, spent Sun- day with Mrs. Esther Palmer. Miss Allie McGlashan and Miss Ethel Little, of Toronto, are visit ing with Miss Margaret Hamilton. for a few days. Miss Eileen Cooper of Toronto, spent the week-end with her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Cooper. . Mr, and Mrs. C. Pilkey and chil- dren visited their relatives over the week-end, Mr, and Mrs. J. McLellan, of De- are troit, are spending a few days with Rev. A. and Mrs, McLellan. Mr. and Mrs. Fred Madill and family spent. Sunday with the for- mer's sister, Mrs. Esther Pahaer. Mr. and Mrs. Hughes, of Peffers --= law, accompanied by Mrs. William- son, spent Sunday with Mrs. Read-" } man. Miss Viola and Georgina Forsyth spent the week-end with their pare ents, Mr. and Mrs. G. M. Forsyth, The regular meeting of the W.M. S. of the United Church will be held in the basement of the Church on Wednesday, Oct. 8. Tea will be serv ed from 5.30, after which Mr. G: H, 8 Hundal, a native of India and a grad-"" uate of Seattle University will give an interesting address, There will be a musical program. Admission, 25¢c to tea. Mr. O. M, Arthur, from the Dept. of Agriculture, Toronto, will deliver a lecture on Horticulture in the Ma- sonic Hall on Friday night Oct. 10th, at 7.30 pm. A good attendance is desired. There will be no admission. ENFIELD Enfield, Oct. 8.--~Mr. and Mrs. El- mer Robbins, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Adams, Mr. Floyd Adams, Mr. and Mrs. Win. Adams and son. Gordon, Mr, and Mrs. Gordon Adams, Miss Rheta and Kenneth Adams, Roches- ter, and Mr. and Mrs, E. Ormiston, Bowmanville, were visitors of Mr, and Mrs. W. J. Ormiston, Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Porteous, Miss, Jean and Billy Porteous, Toronto, J and Miss Helen Pascoe, Wick, visit-_ ed at the home of Mr. L. C. Pascie,, Dr. and Mrs. W. G. McCulloch, -- Orono, Mr. and Mrs. Frank McCul- "2 loch and Mr, and Mrs. Elmer Gib-_ 7 son, Oshawa, visited at the home of Mr. John McCulloch, . Mr. and Mrs. E. N. Pascoe, Brook~. lin, and Mrs. H. Hurlbut, Owen "~ Sound, visited with Mr. and Mrs, G. Ormiston. Mr, and Mrs. Mount Forest, visited with Mr. and Mrs. A. Prescott . Miss Ida McCulloch visited at* ° Newcastle, Mr. John Hepburn days at Harmony, Congratulations to Mr. and Mrs, Talmadge Henry on the arrival of a> son, (Wallace Rae) pod The Ladies of the Aid held their October meeting® at the home of <i® Mr, Edwin Ormiston. The ladies"! enjoyed a very sociable afternoon to- gether, Mr. Murray McCulloch was suge * cessful in winning the highest num« ber of points for this school at the Enniskillen School Fair. Congratulations are extended to Mr. Lloyd Ferguson on his recentiss marriage. The community welcomes Mrs. Ferguson. Miss Ella M. Tamblyn, our teach« :/ er, is attending the teachers' con- vention at Port Hope. Charley Moore, ** me spent a few t Cornwall.--Damage estimated at | $500 was done when fire broke out "/ in the residence occupied by Mrs. Dubeau and owned by Mrs. James Adams on Victoria Avenue. > Explains How Eolatged, Bi Veins Can Be Reduced: Oftentime- Veins Burst and Causeii Much Suffering, Expense and d Loss of Employment pris 8s 3 Many people have become despon« &® dent because they have been led to:+& believe that there is no remedy that' will reduce swollen veins andsiS bunches, 108 1 If you will get a two-ounce orig=in#® inal bottle of Moone's Emerald Oil:.¥ (full strength) at Jury & Lovell Ltd, ~+% or any first class drug store and ap-si& ply it at home 'as directed, you willoZ# quickly notice an improvement 'which will continue until the veins and,u# bunches are reduced to mormal. f Moone's Emerald Oil, which has~{# brought much comfort to worried suf people all over the country, is onexnsf of the wonderful discoveries of re- id cent years, and anyone who is diss, appointed with its use can have theig:o# money refunded. ie AYLMER SOUPS (i < S. )) AT FR Cs . SUPERIOR STORES, OSHAWA AYIMER Beller Because Canadian in Soups are Canadian from first to last + o7» Packed for Canadians by a Canadian Company \. . , from selected Canadian farm pro- duce ,~.¥ the finest-flavored Vegetables grown anywhere . . . No importation charges to increase their price . . . By insisting on AYLMER Brand, you are sure of Finer Flavor at Less Cost. . Are Sold By BR )) "AYLMER PRODUCTS

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy