Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Daily Times, 20 Aug 1931, p. 4

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3 PAGE FOUR THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES THURSDAY, AUGUST 20, 1931 «The Oshawa Daily Times Succeeding THE OSHAWA DAILY REFORMER (Established 1871) n independent newspaper publislicd every after. § noon except Sundays and legal holidays at Osh- "a Carada, by The Times Publishing Company. of in imited. Chas. M. Mundy, President A. Alleway, Managing Director. he Oshawa Daily Times is a member of The Cana- Sian Press the Cag Bin Daily J gwspape; Asso- e Ontario vincial ili Audit Bureau of Circulations. allies aml 'the z 5 IPTION RATES "Delivered by carrier in Oshawa and suburbs, 12c. a week, By mail in Canada (outside Oshawa car- rier delivery limits) $3.00 a year. United States We yea, TORONTO OFF . ICE "18 Bond Building, 66 Temperance Street. Telenh Adelaide 0107. H. D. Tresidder, Tenormin THURSDAY, AUGUST 20th, 1931 A NEW ASPECT . The statement made by Professor Harry + Cassidy, director and secretary of the Or 0 Unemployment Research Commit- e, regarding the functions of this organi- 'Zation places a somewhat new aspect on its operations. According to Professor Cas- "sidy, this organization has no connection "with the provincial government, but is do- its work entirely as a voluntary effort on its own behalf, and not for the purpose of co-operating in governmental plans for unemployment relief. This places a different complexion on the . situation which developed in Oshawa the other day when the committee came here to investigate, but found the city relief de- partment too busy taking care of cases of distress and unemployment to make the survey which was required. It clears the air, too, of the feeling that it was somewhat unfair to ask the city to pay some part of the cost of its work, since. It appears that there is no compulsion on the municipali- ties to contribute to the funds of the com- mittee, but that an invitation is extended to them to do so. Under these circumstances, Oshawa did not lose anything, from a governmental aid i standpoint, in not having the survey made the other day. It would appear, and we make this observation with full sympathy for the desire of the committee to be of as- sistance, that the study to be made is to be a purely academic one, undertaken by eco- nomists and other individuals who wish to compile information as to the unemploy- ment situation, its causes and effects. This i8 a worthy cause, but there is no reason why Oshawa should help to finance it, when the city is having so much difficulty in fin- ancing its own relief activities. FOR WINTER USE A reader of The Times the other day of- fered to The Times a suggestion which is worth passing along to some who might be interested in it. During the days of the war, she recalled, church organizations did a splendid work in canning and drying vege- tables in the summer, to be used during the winter months. She points out that, judg- ing from the number of vegetable vendors coming around from door to door, there seems to be a large surplus of this class of . foodstuffs. Rather than allow it to go to waste, she suggests that women's and church organizations secure supplies of it, holding canning and drying bees, and store i it away to be distributed to needy families . during the coming winter months. -. There is a good deal of merit in this "5 .suggestion, and to carry it out would not eg provide supplies which might be used with good effect in the winter time for needy families, but would also help the vegetable 'growers by providing them with a good market for their corn, tomatoes, beans and other vegetables that could be canned or dried for winter use. Prompt action would be required to take advantage of the sea- sonable crops which are available, but wo- men are characteristically energetic when it comes to sponsoring projects of this kind, 'and if may be that our reader's suggestion rl fall-on receptive ears and hearts. » A SERIOUS LOSS p. Id . The sympathy of the community will go to the Arnold Brothers, tenants of the farm, who lost their barn and their ole season's crops by fire on Tuesday 'evening. Loss by fire is always a regret- fable matter, but in this case it is particu- larly so. Just at the moment when they had pr lly completed the threshing of their srops, a spark of flame came out of the er, and set the straw stack ablaze. hin a few moments, the barn was also a of flames, and they had to stand by renin ~~ It is a serious loss to a farmer when his crops are destroyed in this way. They re- the work of a whole year, for only once a year can a grain crop be garnered off the land. And it cannot be replaced by other crop until the next summer rolls a ; and houses can be rebuilt, t it is rain to tide the cattle and other farm ani- : over the winter season. It is apparent that there are dang from fire in threshing, for almost on' the me day a farmer at Seagrave had his 3, and some live stock, destroyed in a e which started in the same way. This ggests the necessity of insurance for ible to raise another crop of thresher outfits, some kind of insurance which could be carried by the thresher for the season, to protect the crops &nd build- ings of the farmers for whom he is thresh- ing from fire caused by threshing opera- tions. This type of insurance would not re- place the lost crops, but it would, at least, provide some compensation for the farmer, who, by reason of fire, is forced to buy feed for his animals through the long Canadian winter, and enable him to restore his de- stroyed buildings. LIFE ON THE FRONTIER W. C. Pollard, LL.B., prominent barrister and former mayer of the town of Uxbridge, has written a highly interesting book deal- ing with pioneer life in the prairie west. Mr. Pollard has produced, in this book, something that is worth while, and on which he is to be complimented. Manifestly, it has been written as a labor of love by one who earned a measure of success in the west and returned to his native province of Ontario to enjoy life amidst the scenes of his childhood. As a groundwork, the book gives a rapid but informative summary of the history of the North-West Territories, once known as Rupert's Land, and under the jurisdiction of the, (Hudson's Bay Company, and this gives you the realization of how a new mi- crocosm was born, and having grasped that, you have the advantage of a very graphic description of the growth, and, so to speak, the maturing of that microcosm, that little world which is not yet forty years old. Who can doubt but that in this there is matter . of great importance, for as you read on you feel that it is not merely boasting or. rheto- ric that says that "ere long the general opinion will be that what the Nineteenth Century was to the United States of Ame- rica, the Twentieth Century will be for Can- dada, and particularly the Prairie West -- known as the Garden of the Desert, and the unshorn fields for which the speech of Eng- land has no name." We can commend Mr. Pollard's book most highly, and particularly since it comes from one who is so well known in Ontario County, and who is so well qualified to write of life on the frontier of the Canadian west. EDITORIAL NOTES Another paradox is that only slaves to art become its masters.--Florence (Ala.) Herald. Early to bed and early to rise means an alarm clock must do the work of flies.-- Robert Quillen. Chicago, Uncle Sam and Mr. Capone will be on trial at one and the same time.-- St. Louis Times. Now, if ever, Americans need a sense of humor. There are so many things waiting to be laughed off.--Toledo Blade. If he is persistent enough, she will marry him. Then she can resume her bridge and he his golf. --Kiwanis Magazine. A baby, says an editor from his own ex- perience, is a portable appetite held togeth- er with safety pins.--Galt Reporter. ~ An average wife is one who loves and re- spects her husband, but still alivays has a feeling she might have done better.--Cin- cinnati Enquirer. BITS OF VERSE THINGS THAT ENDURE Honor and truth and manhood-- These are the things that stand, Though the sneer and gibe of the cynic tribe Are loud through the width of the land, The scoffer may lord it an hour on earth, And a lie may live for a day, But the truth and honor and manly worth Are things that endure alway. Courage and toil and servige Old, yet forever new-- These are the rock that abides the shock And holds through the storm, flint-true, Fad and folly, the whims of an hour, May bicker and rant and shrill; But the living granite of truth will tower Long after their rage is still. Labor and love and virtue-- Time does not dim their glow; : Though the smart may say, in their languid way, "Oh, we've outgrown all that, you know!" But a lie, whatever the guise it wears, Is a lie as it was of yore, . And a truth that has lasted a million years Is good for a million more! ~Ted Olson. BITS OF HUMOR THE SAME FEET He was a stout man with large, broad feet, and although several pairs of boots were shown to him, he refused to choose any of them. ; "I must have square toes," he explained to the clerk. The young man sighed wearily. "But square toes are not stocked now, sir," he replied. "Pointed toes are absolutely fashionable this season." ! may be," he retorted, "but I happen to be wearing last season's feet." : : NO EXCUSE [ . Constable~Fishing is not allowed herp; ve shill- 1 ne, : er--I am not fishing, Iam teachifig my worms Constable--~May I ' bite a. ; sce Jour worms ? line) s come up at end of Constable--But you must pay tle fine. Your worms have no bathing costtmes andl bathing with- out a costume is not allowed i! we MISS NOBODY FROM NOWHERE bv Elizabeth Jordan INSTALMENT XI "I really must be a rather good sport, somewhere under all this," she told herself. For the impulse was the unexpected one of walking in cn Hamilton in all her garish finery when he came to her sitting-room, of making no explanations of it, and of watching its effect on him, "But I won't do it," she stoutly decided; and when his knock fell on the panel of the uter door she haid her excite ment and emotion by making her explanation while they shook hands. "Don't look at me," she begged, trying to speak lightly. "I'm in the chambermaid's Sunday plumage, and it doesn't suit my style." But he did look at her as they sat down together, and that look of sym- pathy and understanding' brought the story of last night from her in a rush ot words which he was careful not to interrupt. "So you see, it comes to this," she summed up: "I'm even more afraid of knowing who I am than of not knowing it. I'm afraid of what's on the other side of my blank wall He's there; I'm sure of that. And I'm sure, with nothing but my terror to back the conviction, that he was the danger I ran away from. And yet, as I think of it, he doesn't look like a man one would fear. 'vnere was nothing cruel in his manner-- quite the contrary. He seemed to be suffering; once he almost broke down, But all the time I was cold with fear." Hamilton nodded. "There's something back of it," he sald. "I've got several pieces of the puzzle to put with yours. We'll talk it all over later on. But first--" he saw the need of temporarily divert- ing her mind to other phates of her problem--"why did you run away from us?" "I seem to be running away all the time," she said, "and to-day I suppose I'll'end by running away again, notwithstanding all I've said." she shivered. "I suppose I should- n't take the risk of being in the same city with that man, whoever he is." She had expected him to protest, but he sald. "they're evidently on your trail, whoever 'they' are, Did Ithis man arouse any memory in you any sense that you knew him .....had seen him before?" "No memory--only a paralyzing fear, Bat of course T must know him, and it was hideously clear that he knew me and felt himself in some sort of authority over me." She was struck by a sudden recollection. "What were the important things you said you wanted to tell me?" He decided she was cool enough now to hear them. ! "The most important this." '! He drew a bill-case from his poe- ket and found in it a small piece of paper which he unfolded and hand- led to her. It was a cutting from a newspaper, and as she read I. ner face whitened. It ran: Wanted: Information about a young lady who disappeared on Aug- ust 30th. Twenty-three years old, weight about one hundred and eigh- teen pounds, height, five feet five inches, gray eyes, small, regular fea- tures, bobbed, bronze-colored hair. When last seen she wore a green dress with gold cuffs and collar a small green hat, patent-leather pumps, and champaigne-colored silk stockings. A liberal reward will be offered for information leading to her return to her friends. Address X 50, in éare of this newspaper. For a moment she could not speak. He waited patiently. "When did that appear?" she ask- ed at last. "About a week after you left" "Did you"--she seemed almost un- able to bring out the words--'do any- thing about it?" "Nothing you would disapprove of," he told her, and added hurried- ly, "That is, nothing that would give you away if you didn't want to be found." It was clear that she breathed more freely, and even as he obser- ved this she commented on it with the insight itna her own situation which had surprised him from the first. "God knows, I need to be found and taken care of by my own people, if I have any," she confessed with a sigh. "Yet, as I've just told you, I'm as much afrald now of being found as of not being found. What I'd really like," she desperately add- ed, "is to come back to myself, and to know who I am, without any one else knowing it till T decide what to do. What I couldn't endure would be to be in any one else's power in my present condition." He understood. "It's a subconscious fear,' he agreed. "The chances are that your 'large friend of last night is back of 'it in some way." "Tell me exactly what you did, and all about it." "I wrote an unsigned letter to X Fifty, saying that you were safe and and that some new friends you had made would like to know all the cir- cumstances before putting X Fifty in touch with you. I signed the note with false initials and gave the newspaper office as the address, got a reply the same night, but it was mighty noncommittal. X Fifty wasnt' showing his hand any more {than we were. He wanted to know (all T could tell him (I'm assuming 'that it was a man, you see), and he was rather high-banded abouu it. That ,0f course, didn't make any hit with Carrick and me. We de- cided that a family circle wouldn't be so cautious. In fact, the whole! situation looked extremely suspic-' fous to us." "I can't see a-family circle, either," she murmured. "But then--God! 'help me!" she broke out with sudden' passion. "I can't see any tihng 'What have I done... what could I {have done........ to deserve this!" : "Bit tight," he urged, and the fam- Aliar Injunction steadied her, Bhe straightened with a quick breath, "I beg pardon," she said in & different tone. "I'm making it harder for you, instead of Hsteniog and helping to think things ou pate go on, and I'll try to do bet- { "Half a dozen notes were exchang- ed in the next few days," he told her, "gach of us trying to draw out the other. Meantime the advertisement kept appearing. It was in regularly is about for a week. Since then I haven't sceen it, or heard from X Fifty, It looks as if he had given up. So I decided to leave town, myself, and had made all my preparations; but for some reason I hung on and-- Jove!--how glad Iam that I did!" "He hasn't given up," Eve said, from the depths of a black abstrac- tion, "He's just going at it in some other way." She had not observed his emotion, but now she noticed his silence and checked herself to iueet his sympathetic eyes. "I wonder why 1 said that," she mused, "It sounds as if, under it all, I had some definite knowledge..." She broke off. "It's lucky I've left the green dress and the green hat behind me forever," she continued in a ligh- ter tone. "Is there any way they can trace me through those things?" "I don't think so. If your janitor-- Smith, did you say?--reads the newspapers, he may have seen the advertisement, But, as I've sald, hosts of newspaper-readers never dream of looking at the personal col- umns, Take the men in this hotel, for example, Even if you haa veen right here, wearing the green hat and dress, they probably wouldn't have noticed what you had on. Your disappearing so suddenly and leav- | ing those clothes may mean, of course that everything you left in the apartment will have a sharp in- spection; but even that wouldn't carry the investigation very far. Your're very well disguised now." "Yes," she admitted, "in my bor- Margaret's wardrobe has given me an idea. 'I've got to buy new clothes, of course, What I'll get will be the plain black dress and plain black hat and plain black pumps of a nice little waitress with quiet tastes. They will be cheap, which is my first reason, and they will be a disguise, which is my sec- ond. But I don't know what I'll do about my hair," she added thought- fully. "I suppose I'll end by dyeing it dark brown." "Oh don't!" "I'll have to do something" she reminded him. "My hair is rather unsual, you know." "It is", he fervently agreed, watch- ing her with eyes so eloquent that she refused to meet them. 'It's the most beautiful hair I've ever seen, The lights in jt--" ' "That one detail might give. me away," she went on, ignoring the compliment; but she made up for this in her next words. "You see, though I say I'm a trifle afraid of you, I'm trusting you with all my plans, as far as I know them, my- self." "I know you are, and T can't tell | you how much I appreciate your | confidence. That reminds me of { something more." | He took a package from an inside | pocket and handed them to her. | "These credentials I wanted for Car- rick got here a few days after you { left. I showed them to him, and I { want you to look them over, too. Please!" he urged as she hesitated. "I trusted you without these." Eve murmured, as she handed them back. 2 "I know you did up to a cer- | tain point. Now I'm going to ask you to thust me all the way. I want you to promise to keep me posted from now on," he rushed along. "I haven't any right to ask, but, some- | how, I don't think I could stand an- | other two days and nights like those |T went through before I got your note, It wasn't alone the sense that I had lost you. "I promised myself I wouldn't | speak till you were normal again. But your leaving that way, and now this new danger and your fear of it changes the look of things, I want you to know that it isn't just the in- terest and help of a friendly strang- er I'm offering you. It's the interest and help of a man who loves you. "When you're well, Eve," he con- tinued steadily, "I'm going to ask you to marry me. I want to devote my life to making you happy, if you will take me. But in any case let me begin to look after you right now. He stopped an instant; then added: I've said it all. I won't again till you're well, or till you tell me I may speak of it." "I don't know what to say to you," she murmured. "I oughtn't to let you speak of such things. You're simply following a shadow, Why don't you keep out in the sunshine Where you belong, and forget about me?" "I like the shadows better, when you're amon~ them," he said quietly. He pressed the hands she impulsive- ly held out and went on in a new tone, csletly matter-of-fact, "That's that, and I won't speak of it again. I just wanted to make it clear to you that some one to whom Joure first In the world is standing y." Eve left the hotel through the ser- vants' entrance, as befitted her ap- pearance, and walked across to Fourth Avenue. There she pioked (up a taxicab and ordered herself taken to the nearest large depart- ment-store, Eve, keeping close to her new role, selected a simple * black one-piece dress of good quality, a severe black coat, and a small black cloche hat. "Could I go to movin' pitcures with the minister in these?" she inquired as she revolved before the sales wo- man in the new outfit. rowed clothes. (To be continued tomorrow) JOHN H. HARRIS, EDITOR OF THE TAMAQUA (PA.) EVEN- INGICOURIER, SAYS: THAT the motor trucks, while providing a more modern vehicle of transportation, are gradually eating away, the vitals of our model rail- road system of the country and un- less there is some definite pretense of regulation, both Federal and State, the entire railroad structure of the country is going to £ollapse. in this respect and take up the bat- tle of the railroads to at least give them a fair shake with motor trans- portation, this country, instead of advancing with advanced transpor- tation, is going to slip back a hun- dred years in economic develop- ment. Railroads must provide their own right of way, maintain it, pay big state taxes, charge a rate that suits the Railway Commission, work its men eight hours a day at a union- set rate. Motor trucks use our state built roads, pay a measley motor truck license of approximately $150 a year for a dual-wheel blunderbus that monopolizes the road and en- dangers the lives of pleasure motor- ists, pay no state tax, can work its employes 24 hours a day if the trip requires it, at any rate of wages, and accept business at any old rate, And we sit by believing we are a wonderfully made nation and allow one of our grestest institutions to gradually totter because of unjust competition, IF WE ARE A NATION THAT LOVES FAIR PLAY, THEN LET US MAKE THE MOTOR TRUCK SUBMIT TO THE SAME EX- ACTING REQUIREMENTS WE DO THE RAILROADS, AND LET THE BEST MAN WIN! by C. H. Tuck, Opt, D, (Copyright, 1828) Your Child and the Eyes Part 19, Jy being constantly a medium whereby much of this knowledge is passed on to the public, I hope to be able to impress you with the value of this great asset-vision, that then you have it, when you perhaps regained it, you will maintain it and do everything in your power to ap- preciate it. There are many ways that this can de done. If you appreciate its value you will not attempt to cor- rect or underestimate it by attempt- ing its correction over a bargain counter or by mail, This is public welfare and if you are competent to assist it by any device of a self- testing nature, why do the leading universities take from two and a half to five years in their courses of training 16 those qualified to ex- amine and correct the eyes of the public. We train the hands, the voice, the eyes and the mind-all of these are fitted with the use of the ill-train- ed. (To be Continued) -- GREAT PICTURES INPRESS GALLERY Journalists' Quarters in British House of Com- mons -- Have Fine Art Collection (By The Canadian Press) London.--The "Press Gallery" at the House of Commons is familiar by name to everybody, but few peo- ple outside political journalism have any idea of the implication of the name. The Gallery itself is only the veranda, so to speak, of a whole suite of rooms and offices, includ- ing dining room, tea room, bar, bou- doir, library reference library, and typing room--a club within a club in fact. Not only that, but the Press Gallery has its own collection of pictures, cartoons, and prints, and a complete catalogue of them gives an opportunity to say something about its features. There are 462 items in all, the pride of the Gallery being the Sid- ney Robinson collection of engrav- ings and drawings of subjects and personages closcly connected with the old House of Commons, before the Fire, and the building which arouse in its place." The collection, representing such artists as Ho- garth, Rowlandson, and Gillray, was originally made by Thomas Vacher, Parliamentary stationer and book- seller, and presented to the Gallery by Sidney Robinson, M.P., in 1922, One reason which influenced Mr. Robinson was the desire to find a home for his collection where there was no likelihood of its ever being dispersed. Presented to Sir Emsley Carr, ed- itor and part proprietor of the News of the World, a former chair- man of the House of Commons Press Gallery, there ¥s a collection of 191 "Vanity Fair" cartoons of political subjects by "Ape" and "Spy"---appropriately hung in the bar--and in one place or another all the many interestests of Westmin- ster, architectural, political; and per- sonal, at various periods, are pictor- ially recorded. There is no reason why such a collection should stop growing, The catalogue is sold for a shilling, all the proceeds of sales going to the Press Gallery Trust. TRINIDAD TO BE BIG EXHIBITOR AT TORONTO "EX." Exhibition Officials Are Of- fering Hearty Co-opera- tion to Island Industries (By The Canadian Press) Port-of-Spain, Trindad, BW.I, -- "Trinidad Goes to Canada" is the heading of an editorial in the Trini- dad Guardian with reference to the Unless the newspaper of the country soon realize thr obligation picture of its own resources before medium of publicity for Trinidad spread as a SANDWICHES ' Mix a Httle with cream-cheese or butter and BOVRIL adian National Exhibition at Tor- onto, The Guardian says: "Trinidad will appear at the Can- adian National Exhibition at an op~ portune time in the history of Ca- ribbean relations with the Domin- jon. The ink is hardly yet dry on Lester Glass's acceptance of the ap- pointment of 'West Indian Trade Commissioner in Canada, and it is therefore an exceptionally favorable time for Trinidad as the chief spon- sor of the new post to put a vivid the Canadian public, "The Canadian National Exhibi- tion appeals to every section of the people of the Dominion, who claim that it is the largest annual show held anywhere in the world. They are proud of it, and every year pat- ronize it in large numbers, A better would be hard to find, and it is probable that adequate participa- tion will have big results. "If ever there is occasion for cor- dial co-operation between Canada and the West-Indies, it is now, Can- adian businessmen are rapidly wak- ing up to the mutually profitable opportunities in these Colonies, and the Ministry of Trade and Com- merce we are told on the best au- thority is ready to assist in every possibly way to increase trade be- tween the Dominion and ourselves. The air is charged with expentancy, and when Mr, Glass sets into work there is bound to be a further awak- ening on both sides of the water, In such circumstafices it can well be seen how big a chance the exhibi- tion offers. "I'he Permanent Exhibition Com- mittee in this Colony is now re- ceiving exhibits for Toronto, and it is satisfactory to learn that there has been no lack of co-operation by individuals and business firms. in furnishing and preparing them. Co- coa, sugar, petroleum, asphalt, fruit, coconut products, timber, bay rum, --these and many other articles will go to make up what it is hoped will be a complete portrait in miniature of Trinidad industries." MORTALITY RATE FOR YOUNG PEOPLE British Medical Officer De- clares Nation's General Health Unsatisfactory (By The Canadian Press) London.--Although great advance had been made in public health this century it was not possible to be satistied with the position of the general health today, Dr. W, G. Willoughby, Medical Officer for Easthourne, said in his address as President of the British Medical Association at the recent meeting in Eastbourne. He said that the in- crease in the average duration of life in the present century, aver- aging more than 12 years, was main- ly owing to the decrease in infant mortality, but was partly due to the general lowering of death rates at other ages. Ten per cent. more of the population now reached the age of 50. There were far too many deaths at early ages, Dr. Willoughby said. In the Registrar-General's latest summary, that for 1928, it was shown that rather over one-third of the deaths of males, And nearly one- third of the deaths of females, oc- curred before the age of 50. Omit- ting deaths of igfants--deaths in the first year of life--there were 40,- of life. * Although the vitality of the na- tion has been steadily improving the expectation of lite is still only 55 years for males and 59 for females. This was one of the points em- phasized by Dr. Willoughby, GOOD ENTERTAINMENT (By The Canadian Press) London.--"In 'These Charming People' at the Plaza Theatre," says the News-Chronicle, "Cyril Maude plays the part of an old Colonel who is an adept at borrowing money from his son-in-law and at consoling himself with alcohol. He does it with the most charming air in the world. Cyril Maude has be- come a film star. This film is based on Michael Arlen's play, the com pany including Godrey Tearle, Nora Swinburne, C. V, France and other well-known players, The story is patchily developed, but is a good entertainment, DOLEFUL WEATHER (By The Canadian Press) London. --Rain--grey skies--more rain; that has been the brief but doleful story of the week-end wea- ther over most of Southern Eng- land for so many week-ends some people have forgotten the count. Of 30 week-ends recorded by the News Chronicle pnly five had heen entire- ly free from rain, and 21 had been decidedly wet, Last word in 'Cabin' Luxury' Sail for Europe aboard one of the four Regal Duchesses or six lower-cost eaibin liners of the Canadian Pacific Fleet. Broad decks . . . luxurious lounges, salons and state- rooms . . . unexcelled cuisine . « » service comparable with that received in the finest hotels. Two glorious days down the short St. Lawrence Seaway . . . time to find your "sea-legs" before you the open ocean. Several sailings weekly from Montreal and Quebec _to 9 British and Continental Ports. Full information from your local agent or J. BLACK MACKAY General Agent . Canadian Pacific Bldg. / "Tourist Third Cabin Reure Fares as low as $185.00 656 deaths of children under 15 and another 20,663 in the next ten years Travel The King's Highway OSHAWA -- TORONTO DAILY COACH SERVICE Single--85¢ LEAVE OSHAWA AM, P.M, 130 astern tandard Return--$1.55 LEAVE TORONTO AM. P.M. 8=Daily except Sunday. b--Saturday, ana Hi . ly Ras ay olidays only. COACHES STOP AT ANY POINT TO PICK UP PASSENGERS. SIGNAL PLAINLY BY HAND TO THE DRIVER. Coach; connections at Toronto for Buffalo. Niagara Falls, Hanylton, Brantford, London, St. Thomas, De. troit, Schomberg, Brampton, Barrie, Orillia, Midland, Jackson's Point and intermediate points. Coach connectious at Buffale and Detroit for all U.8.A. points Tickets and Information al GRAY COACH LINES Genosha Hotel preparations for the showing of Trinidad manufacturers at the Cane OSHAWA Phone 2325

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