THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, WEDNESDAY, NOVEMBER 11, 1931 PAGE SEVEN, EASTERN ONTARIO NEWS Eganville.--Fire of unknown ori- gin destroyed the home and adjoin* ing bakery of Frank Welk here. Mr. and Mrs. Welk and family were out of town and by the time the alarm was given and the fire brigade arrived the bakery, in hich the fire broke out, had suffer 'considerable damage and any effort to save it was hopeless. Attention was then concentrated on the house but the firemen had been working only a few minutes when the fire encine went out of commission, ren- dering them practically hopeless and the buliding was destroyed. Killed by Truck PPembroke--David Gunter, of Pet- awawa township, aged 26, sustained yatal injurics when struck by a mo- tor truck driven by Melville Mc- I cod, Pembroke, on the Trans-Can- Ja Highway near Thistle's siding The injured man was rushed to 4 Pembroke hospital, but died before reaching the institution, The vic- iim oi the accident had been work- ing with his brother, William Gun- ter, Ottawa, who was surveying in the Petawawa military reserve, and was walking up the road to get their automobile, which was about a mile and a half from where they were working. Secing the truck, one of the machines used for haul- ing stone for hizhway construction, which' was owned by James H. Chil- derhose. of Cobden and driven by Melville McLeod, he hailed the driver for a ride, McLeod slowed down, but before-he came to a full stop Gunter attempted to board the truck but was pulled un- der the ymachine. River Dangerously Low Pembroke.--Low water in the Ot- tawa river is seriously hampering the operation of some of Pem- broke's industries and members of the Chamber of Commerce were in- formed of the danger which threat- ens the town if present conditions continge. H. A. Rudd, general man- ager of Eddy Match Co., and Can- adian Splint & Lumber Co, drew attention to the difficulty the latter company has experienced through logs being lodged on bottom and some stranded high and dry, while he also intimated that the lumber companies had experienced similar difficulty, Protest Rural Taxes Pembroke.--Convinced that they are being taxed beyond their ability to pay, and that the condition was ge neral with rural land owners throughout Ontario, a gathering of farmers, representing the four townships of McNab, Horton, Ad- maston and Bagot and Blythfield, that filled the Glasgow Station Community Hall to overflowing, drew up, discussed and gave their unanimous approval to a slate of re- solutions to be presented in circular form to every rural municipality in the province of Ontario by a com- mittee appointed jrom this meeting, for their approval. Embodying rem- edies for the relief of what they claim as a burden of taxes, it is proposed that the resolutions be presented to Premier Henry by 2a delegation representing every mun- icipality so affected at the coming session of the Ontario Legislative Assembly. Home Made Clock Pcterboro. -- Constructed al- most entirely from odd pleces of metal and wood and representing seven months' patient work without the aid of proper tools, an electric grandfather clock bas been made by Ernest Brad- bury of 99 Rubidge street. The creator of the timepiece hopes by this means to call at- teation to his skill as he is de- sirous of commencing a watch and clock repair business here.. An ex-service man, he has for a iongthy period been out or scea- dy employment and is at the pre- sent émployed on city relief work. Peterborough Stores Close Peterborough. -- Peterborough stores will close on Wednesday (Remembrance Day) to lend to that day its proper significance as the thirteenth anniversary of the signing of the Armistice, it was decided unanimously at a repre- sentative meeting of the Retail Merchants' Association. Plane Crashes in Marsh Belleville. Pilot Officer Thornber of the Air Training base at Trenton while executing advanced flying manoeuvres with a Fleet Aircraft machine, cragched in Murphy's Marsh, Prince Edward County, four miles south of Belleville but for- tunately escaped serious injury. A passenger in the plane Instruc- tor Pilot Officer Elliott was not injured. Both men were rush- ed to the Bellevillé General Hos- pital in the field ambulance of the air corps and attended by the medical officer of the squadron. It was learned that Officer Thorn- ber.was cut badly about the fuce and mouth, apparently being thrown aghinst the front of the machine, when it buried itself in the soft earth of the marsh. Bqua- dron Leader H. W. Hewson and Adjutant O'Brien Saint were soon on the scene and the squadron leader stated to the press that the exact cause of the crash was not known nor would it be known unti] an enquiry had taken place. Jalled for Frand Belleville. -- Jonahan Rob- inson, alias John Matthews, was sentenced to two years less ome day determinate in the Ontario Reformatory at Guelph by Magis- trate Mikel, when he appeared on a charge of obtaining goods on false pretences to wit a motor car, by means of a worthless cheque. This man has a record according to the authorities in Ottawa, he being given a sus- pended sentence in Woodstock in 1921 on a charge of forgery. His record was read in court before sentence was pronounced. Awarded Damages Picton. -- Dr. Morley Currie wag awarded $120 damages as a result of the action arising out of a motor car accident, when his car and. one owned by - George Anlthouse and driven by his son, Elson Aulthouse, collided on Fast Main Street. Dr. Currie wa¢ making a left hand turn into the fair grounds to the Curlf Club there, when Aulthouse's car hit him. Both cars were badly damaged. Renfrew Reeve Resigns Renfrew. Reeve W. Moore, of Renfrew, has decided to resign from the town council end will superintend the econ- struction of the new storage dam being built at Lake Clear by the town. The construction of two dams, one at Lake Clear and one at Golden Lake, is part of the town's program to relieve unem- ployment and at the same time increase the efficiency of the lo- cal power plant, arm Buildings Burn Ottawa, -- With the loss esti- mated by the owner at $3,000, covered by $1,600 insurance, a fire of unknown origin broke out in the home of Richard Murphy, Chelsea, and destroyed his home, garage, ice house and stable, It was a spectacular blaze. So great was the glare that people for miles around were attracted and many motorists hastened to the epot, congesting the highway for hours. Suicides by Gas Ottawa, -- Mrs. Lillian Titus, 16 Pansy avenue, wife of Garnet A. Titus, was found dead in the kitchen of her home, with two jets 'of the gas stove turned om, Awakened by the smell of escap- ing gas, Mrs. A. Blackwell, a roomer with the Titus family, came downstairs to investigate and on opening the kitchen aoor, discovered Mrs. Titus' body ly- ing inert on the floor. Good Hunting Claimed R Havelock. -- Word has been received in the village from some of the hunter's camps that game is very plentiful north of here. In the Forsythe camp at Beaver Creek they had secured four deer on Friday. Three fine speci- mens were bagged by [rank Spinks and party just north of South Lake school, on the Stony Lake road. Mr. Harold Spinks rade an especially .good shot, bringing down a young buck with a shot through the head from a distance of about two hundred yards. The deer was on the bound and dropped right in his tracks. Mr, George Hull, of Stoney Lake region reports a wonderul season or duck hunting in that locality. During the pre- sent season there has been three hundred ducks bagged by hunt- ers whom he has been guiding. The road into Hull's has been greatly improved during the past summer, which adds greatly to the comfort of motor travel in that locality. Big Still Seized Lindsay, -- When Charles Mc Naney, 23-year-old "moonshiner" of Victoria Road, walked into his still three miles east of Victoria Road, a 48-hour vigil was ended for Preventative Officer I'. J. O'- Connell who arrested him and, with the aid of Provincial Con- stable A. Lawrence, proceeded to break up what is thought to he the most complete illicit liquor distillery ever uncovered in thi county, With MeNaney' finis i8 written to a long-drawn- out battle of wits waged between the preventative eervice and the operators of this still, Over 300 gallons of mash, which wa 1caay to be run off, was found by the Officers in 45-gallon barrel cver pits dug in the ground in which six lanterns to a barrel | provided the heat necessary. for fermentation. In police court Me Naney pleaded guilty and wa viven a entence by Magistrate Jordon of a fine of $300 coets and one month, 3 arrest, | Crashed With Waggon Fenelon Falls. -- Mr. Geo. Wilson, Jr., of Fenelon Falls, had bis automobile damaged when he collided with a wagon-load of gravel on the Highway near Greenbank, Mr. Wilson was en- route from Toronto, when ihe accident happened. The rear of the wagon carried no tail light and was quite invisible, it was said, The glare of lights from 'a car going in the opposite di- rection complicated matters, "Thirst Saves Family 'Trenton. -- Awakening his fa- ther for a drink the 4-year-old son of Robert H. Robinson,, Sid- nev street, saved his two broth- ers and two sisters, as well as his father, from almost certain death, When Mr. Robinson rose to an- swer the child's request about one o'clock in the morning, he was horrified to see the whole room was ablaze. The entire famnily was sleeping in the kit- chen where the stove was, the mother heing in Kihgston Hos- riral, - Hurriedly escaping from the blazing house, Mr. Robinson calied the fire department and the house was partly saved. The is thought to have started from an overheated pipe leading from the stove in the kitchen. fire Quota From Trenton Trenton. Major L. F. Green, superintendent of Employment Serviee at Belleville, was in Tren~ ton Saturday afternoon in the in- terest of the unemployed who are registered for work on the Trans-Canada Highway. Through the efforts of Mr. W, H. Ireland, AM.P.P., Trenton "was allowed to send fifteen men. Dr. WW. J, Tolinston examined the quota and all were accepted, "They are a fina lot of fellows," ald Mr. and IT hope that more men be choren from Trenton in Green * will later drafts." Jay and |, worry thet i " | India | nances--and the army. sent? I INDIA NOT READY FOR HOME RULE This Is Opinion Bf Native Ruler Now in Canada Montreal, Nov. 10. «= The round table conference on Indian self government is not a failure and will not be; it will result in the finding of some agreeable solution. The extremists will probably lessen their demands to meet with those of the moderate indian Nationalists. These are the opinions of the Maharajahira Bahadur of Bur- dwan, senior Hindu prince of the great and rich estate of Bengal, and descendant of a long line of rulers who have controlled the destinies of the 1,000,000 people of Burdwan since the days of the Mogul Emperors, The Maharaja, well over mx feet tall, enormously broad- shouldered and with a physique that made one think of a foot- ball back, arrived at the Windsor station this morning. He is to speak on Sunday night to the I'eople's Forum on questions of India's political problems and Soviet Russia's threat to the In- dian. Empire. He was willing enough to dis- cuss the Indian problem in the few minutes that the reporters were wit him, And he did so with a fofce of expression and a choice of English which indicat- ed his mastery of the tongue. Unwise to Weaken "My « point of view is that the cent ity in India must not be weak- ened," he declared, without men- tioping that this is also the point of view of most of the Indian princes, "It is too early yet to rive full power to those elected o the Houses," He referred to the fact that even now the central Govern- ment had only a few things to administer, but that"each one of was of great importance to a8 a whole, and that ft suffer if the central aua- lost its power. t has it,' he said, "but the railways, the customs, the fi- Would ft be wise to hand over the control these .things to party politi- clang of the type we have at pre- think not,. I think it would thority of governmental author- | would be most unwise." Provincial autonomy, with some control of the actions of the Houses maintained in the hands of provincial governors, through their appointment of ministers from outside the ranks of the elected representatives, would provide the solution of In- diaz moves for self-government for many years to come, in the opinion of the Maharaja. "This would, of course, be with a corresponding control of the two proposed Chambers of the Central Government at Delhi, achieved also by the appointment of ministers or members of what you would here call the Senate, by the Governor-Gener- al," he explained. Voting Restrictions The ruler of Burdwan was pro- foundly distrustful of any claims that there should be a fully rep- resentative government in India at once. "You can't very well do it," he doclared. "Our average standard of education is too low, or rather, the mass of our people is too ig- ° norant to use the vote with au thing lke discretion. "We have already a wide mea- sure of suffrage. It is true that it is not the manhood suffrage you have here in Canada -- we have certain standards of educa- tion and property ownership which have to be met by the voter." -- Two Cars Smash Port Hope.--Two cars were damaged in an accident at the corner of Ridout street and Ti ronto Road in a collision between a car driven Montreal,. and a second cax driven by J. J. Morgan, Toronto. by John Macks; % Both cars were travelling west,' Mack's car in the lead with Mog- gan following close behind. A riving at the turn on to the T: ronto road from Ridout street, Macks apparently tion and drove across the inter- section toward the Lakeshore road. Change of "Address 33 Simcoe St. North Phone 168 Russel Perkins Florist ON AND AFTER TODAY OUR ADDRESS WILL BE 33 Simcoe Street N. We will carry a complete line of cut flowers, potted plants, ferns, etc. tended to all lovers of flowers to visit our new and permanent hoine at the above address. WATCH THE PRESS FOR FULL PAR- TICULARS REGARDING OUR 8TH ANNIVERSARY NEXT WEEK Russel Perkins FLORIST An invitation is ex- edding and Floral Designs for every occasion W. A. DEWLAND LTD. STOCK 100 GARMENTS LINGERIE Silk crepe de chine, Fugi silk, etc. Lace trim garments which sell to $4.50. 04d lines. Bankrupt Sale Price, 32¢ Crepe De Chene Georgette Silk Taffeta Bankrupt Sale Price, CHILDREN'S FLANNEL AND JERSEY DRESSES Up to 14 years. Bank- rupt Sale Price, asc { 'Only a short period of time is at our diiposal This Big Sale Is Going On At The W. A. Dewland Ltd. Store, Simcoe N. collar and cuffs. Sale Price, g | "Seeing Is Believing" EVERY DAY HAS BEEN A SMASHING SALES RECORD. PRICES HAVE BEEN SHATTERED TO 50% BELOW COST. WE MUST CLEAR THE STORE IN THE NEXT FEW DAYS, REGARDLESS. PRICES THAT CAN NEVER BE DUPLICATED AGAIN, OR WILL EVER AGAIN BE SEEN IN THIS CITY FOR SUCH HIGH GRADE MERCHANDISE. COME AND TAKE ADVANTAGE OF THESE ASTOUNDING VALUES. REMEMBER JUST A FEW DAYS LEFT, DON'T BE DISAPPOINTED. N BANKRUPTCY Has Now Developed Into Oshawa's Greatest " Reversible Rugs Bankrupt Sale Price, = 1 Only to a Customer LADIES' TWEED RAINCOATS Values to LADIES' EIDERDOWN Bath Robes All colors. 1 Only to a Customer "PURE LINEN Cloth and Napkins some are i damask quality with color= ed borders. $1.38 9? AM A 22 x 44 29¢ $10.00. Banke rupt Sale Price, $1.98 Bankrupt Sale Price, 98c¢c SETS Bankrupt Sale Price, AC 3 UBS BT Be lost his direes 5 13