THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, THURSDAY, JUNE 23, 1932 PAGE SEVEN List of Promotions of Students at the O.C.V.1I. (Continued from page 1) neth Hann, Lloyd Harding, - Xath- leen Harper, Russell Hayward, Vic- tor Henkelman, Bernice Higgins, Frank Hoffman, Josie Holick, An- gus Hood, Edith Horton, Tony Huckan, George Hunking, William Janson, Iris Ivey, Marion Jackson, Morley Jeffrey, William Keetch, Muriel Kelly, Evelyn Kilbank, John Mathews, Jean Mazurk, Allister McKean, Daniel McTavish, Harry Medland, Donald Meredith, Dorothy Mollon, Flossie Morris, Jack Moun- tenay, Rhoda Naylor, Marion Pal- mer, Hazel Penfound, Beatrice Perry, Earle Phillips, Albert Phil- lips, William Pipher, Murray Pow- ell, Roy Purcell, Gordon Rae, Henry Richer, John Robertson, Martha Rabertson, Ted Robinson, Doris Rundle, Mary Sabat, William Shortt, Ruth Simpson, May Sking- ley, Ross Small, Donald Smallbone, Margaret Smith, Cecil Sproule, Ruth St. Andrews, Mary Stanton, Leslie Stevens, William Stevens, Madge Tosland, Joan Townsend, Genevieve Turner, Earl Veitch, Sheila Wallace, Archie Whitelaw, Rita Wilkinson, Desmond William- son, Glenn Willson, George Wilson, Yvonne Yourth, Joseph Zak, 'Wil- liam Zaleschook. Students promoted provisionally from First to Second Year: Herbert Bathe, [IMloyd Bradd, James Canning, Roderick Connolly, Ethél Grigg, Thom: Johansen, Arthur Kearney, Yick La , James Law, Ellsworth Leggott, Wil- liam Mason, Robert Matheson, Irvin McCulloch, Rita McDonnell, Phyllis McMahon, Charles Papineau, Helen Raby, Phyllis Rice,-Harry Robert- son, Audrey Rombough, Ralph Serimgeour, Aubrey Thompson, Harold Thompson, Eileen Trull, Grenville Williams. Students Promoted from Second to Parker, Philip Ethel Rein- Esther Rita Queenie O'Donnell, May Perry, Lulu Reeson, koester, Iris Robertson, Sathrang, Mabel Smith, Stacey, Harold Sykes, Trott, Doris Wheaton. Students promoted provisionally from Second to Third Form: Nancie Collis, Alice Jackson, Jane Johnson, Florence Leavitt, Helen Ross, Ivan Wheelan, William Wil- son, COMMERCAL GRADUATES Herbert Katharine Bradley, Braun, Irene Branton, Ena Brooks, Bryce, Alan Cameron, Betty Chal mers, Milton Chapman, Madeline Clarke, Sylvia Clarke, Helen Coedy, Stanley Cook, Donald Courtice, Olive Curtin, Samuel Dime, Gerald Edmondson, Jean Ellis, Donald Ew- ing, Harold Farrow, Ralph Fergu- son, Bernice Fuller, Keith Glecoff, Margaret Goold, William Goyne, Marjorie Gray, Clarence Guy, Jean Herring, Kathleen Hopkins, Lucy Horton, Jean Imeson, Genevieve James, Warner James, Frank Jen- nings, Donald Johnsc Jean Kemp, Glenn Lander, Everitt Lovell, Peter Malachowski, Jean Matheson, Jack McGibbon, Mary McGill, Keith Me- Intyre, Nellie McLaughlin, Merron Mech, Irvin Merrick, Fred Merrin- ger, Harold Merritt, Isabel Mor- rison, Thelma Morrison, Patricia Murphy, Hazel Perkin, Howard Powell, Mabel Raike, Gladys Rode- sky, Nellie Saunders, Helen Say- well, Joseph Sharpe, Vera son, Gerald Solmes, Floyd Thornley, Percy Tresise, Hazel Trew, Mar- garet 'Watts, Kenneth Williams, Laura Williams, Malcolm Young. For Secretarial and Accountancy Diplomas: Jean Battle, Seymour Bigwood, May Clarke, Lorraine Drew, Mil- licent Elston, Phyllis . Hamilton, Helen Hodgkinson, Jean Kettle, Fred Lokiec, Ruth McLean, Mary Nott, Stanley Ogden, Mary Rudka, James Smith, Margaret Wallace, Fred Wilson, Stephen Wotton, Ron- ald Wragg. For Accountancy Diploma Only: Alex Blythe, Grace Branton, Ste wart Burke, Mabel Canning, Muriel Fisher, Claire Hayton, Lorraine Knowles, Katnarine rack, Myrtle Taylor, Catharine VanHuizen, Elizabeth Wallace, Zella Wesson. For Secretarial Diploma Only: Mazo Blake, orraine Brown, Helen Burns, Helen Burrows, Helen Chapman, Helen Mista, Nuva Frise, Sydney Hopkins, Margaret Johnson, Marion Johnson, Mary Knibb, Mar- jorie Legge, Sadie Local, Mildred MacDonald, Eileen McBrien, Mary McClure, Grace Pierson, Bertha Stephenson, Nellie Watson, Ruth Whiteoak, Verna Williams, Students promoted provisionally from Second to Third Year: Annie Allen, Harold Colvin, Rob- ert Dunford, Rene Gillette, Douglas Hinton, John Holick;, Leland Love, Clarence Perkin, Isabel Pierson, Inez Roy, Earl Salter, Florence Scott, COMMERCIAL DEPARTMENT | BOYS TECHNICIL DEPART. Students promoted from First to Second Form: Bellingham, Jack Benson, Burke, Keith Carter, Manr- | ret Conlin, Vincent DuQuette, Edith Elliott, Jean Heard, Helen Holmes, Lily Johnston, Marie Kal- ynl Viola Keeler, Peter Kushnir, Students promoted from First to Second Form: Ashby, John Ayling, Wil liam Baldwin, Andrew Barclay, Peter Barron, Kenneth Bickle, Vic- tor Bigwood, Joseph Bone, Arnold Broadbent, George Bryson, Regin- ald Burr, Sydney Chandler, Ian Mary een Bi Bert 3 Third Year: Alger, Gordon Armstrong, Jean Gwen Ballantyne, Mary Beamish, Eileen Birchall, Alexan- | Baird, | James | | Louise | Elvina Margaret der, Jack Reva Ball, Barron, Bennett, Low Daily Rates. Special Weekly. Finest Food. Comfy Rooms. Relaxa tion, Homelike Comforts. Fine loca tion, one Block to Ocean. Breathe Deep the Bracing Ocean Air. Cour- tesy, Politenessand Serviceare Yours for Less Than You Think Write now. BEAUTIFUL STATES AVENUE AT PACIFIC LANTICERTY -- - | Melva ' gomery, Ma ret Law, Ella Leckie, Voitto Lehti, Lorraine Loveridge, Alice Mainds, Florence McGahey, Marie Milne, Jean Nugent ,Mary Peleshok, Florence Pratley, Reuby Smith, Titley, Audrey Trevail, Helen Wilson, Dorothy Wright. Students promoted provisionally from First to Second Form: Irene Adams, Phyllis Armstrong, rnice Bulmer, Margaret Bulmer, Marie LeRoy, Ruth MecDonald, Cal vin Norton, Gertrude Smith, Jack Spencer, Clements, William Cooper, Lorne Craddock, Melville Curran, Curry, John Drewniak, Jack Kenneth Farrell, Stanley F Walter Fry, Paul Galenchyn, Clar ence Garton, Ernest Gomme, James Griffith, Thomas Gri Adam Ham- ilton, Jack Hayes, Elwyn Hayton, Robert Heaslip, Mervyn Jenkins, Aloysius Kush, George Kuzmeliuk, Joseph Laurie, Samuel Mann, Wil- liam Mason, Charles McDonald, Harold McKay, Joseph Miseresky, | Herbert Ovenden, George Puckett, | atry Richards, Harold Robinson, 1 ge, Clyde Saunders, Don- Michael Sworiak, Ray- William Taylor, Garnet Weatherup, Harold Wood, Ross Woolacott, Gor don Wragg, William Yourkevieh, Joseph Zubkavich, Albert Zufelt. Be Students promoted from Second to Third Form: Bellingham, Irene Bone, allison, Winnifred Carter, iy Alfred Copeland, | Copeland, Violet Corbett, word, Doris Doidge, Helen Ida Flinders, Veronica 1, Doris Gibson, Lenore Glass, Lillian Hold vy, Violet Hooper, | Doreen Hu ack Jackson, Pa-| ricia Matthews, Oressa Mont Marguerite McGrath, Helen | nie 1 Annie Sinn Walker, Students promoted provisionally from First to Second Form: Michael Bezener, George Ed mondson, Bert Jay, Henry Kober | nick, Hayward Murdoch, Pearce, Lorne Proctor, You can Red Rose Tea Orange Pekoe 387 The lowest price it has ever been sold at. now buy Students promoted from Second to Third Form: Robert Bar- Carson Cameron, Lorne Cory, Lorne Dalton, Lorne Doreen, Eldon Es- sery, Reginald Evans, Tony Fect- ichshen, Joseph Graboski, Keith Guiltinan, Roy Jackson, Leslie Johnson, Burton Jones, Eugene Kearney, Murray Kirby, Alfred Laird, James Laurie, Paul Loge- man, Peter Makarchuk, Jack Mal- achowski, "Bert Martin, Patrick O'Donnell, 'William Perkins, lowen Perrin, Henry Price, Michael Rud- ka, Talbot Ryan, Cyril Sawyer, Jos- eph Senecko, Robert Skelton, Thomas Twine, Hedley Wesson, Ronald Wilson, Stanley Wood, Peter Yourkevich. | | | | Walter Alexander, ber, Alex Bruce, Roy Cornish, : 1b. A delicious recipe in every package Cra Wafers Your favorites . . . Christies Graham Wafers. . . now put up, for your protection, in @ new package which keeps. them fresher, crisper and "| Smithsonian Douglas | Students promoted provisionally from Second to Third Form: Charles Chinn, Ross Dubrick, Clifford Johnson, Wilbert Raby. Students promoted from Third to Fourth Form: Harold Bateman, Russell Batten, Aubrey Broadbent, William Clark, Clarence Dearborn, Stanley Gomme, Stanley Hill, Jack McAdam, Donald Miller, . Tan Muir, James Nemis, Ralph Nixon, Harry Rose, William Sampson, Ernest Stacey, Joseph Victor, Kenneth Whiley. GIRLS' TECHNICAL DEPART- MENT Students promoted from First to Second Form: Doris Ballan, Jean Bowman, Ada Canfield, Louise Dionne, Sophie Hreczuk, Mary Hunt, Florence Kirkpatrick, Phyllis Langford, Joan Muir, Rose Olenick, Neta Reddick, Madge Seaver, Nellie Shestowski, Mary Siblock, Velma Solomon, Helen Starr, Dorothy Stevenson, Doreen St. Thomas, Victoria Yus- kiw. : Students promoted from Second to hird Form: Isla Barker, Alma Canning, Evelyn Cheetham, Mona Dickinson, Beth Gay, Beatrice Jackson, Esther Logan, Mary Manilla, May Read. Students promoted from Third Form: Stella Lopuk. CHILDREN LIKE ANIMALS FOUND 3 MORE DAYS | KARN S| | il i | 1c | SALE | Thurs., Fri. Saturday Next P.O. | i Phone 78 hi : i -- tributed to this unusually big | shipbuilding programme. | The new vessels are the Lwo Italian superliners Rex and Conte di Savoia, the French liner Cham plain, the White Star liner G gic and the United States liner Manhattan, eor- | Professor Comments on Strange Behaviour of Children Washington Evidence there exist children who believe | they are animals was offered recently in a spectal report of the Institution as a re- sult of studies by Dr. Ales Hrd- licka, distinguished anthropolo- gist. Such children, usually very young, identify themselves 80 closely with animals such as dogs, cats or pigs that they seem to forget they are really human, says the report. "This strange behaviour so far," says the report, children seem to speak and derstand the 'language of mals', imitate their gestures in such minute detail that it is dif: ficult to beligve that the be- haviour is purely imitative, and consider themselves mals rather than human beings." [Sa behaviour no indication "that un- is of inferiority, says Dr. Hrdlicka | He tells of a small boy and a | pig once found wallowing togeth- 'unting at each other in |a mud puddle in the yard of a { lonely western farm house. The child. who had ne human play- | mates, with parents too busy 'o give him much attention, ered himself a pig and hehaved like one in every way. The two seemed to understand each other The boy now is an honor student at an eastern college, NEW WEAPON OF jer and gv oNew York.--A device which its ipventor claims can drop high explosives, phosphorous fire and Lewisite gas on a city 1,000 miles distant will be taken to Russia next month for submission to the Soviet government as an argu- ment for disarmament. CITY PLANNING NOT MODERN IDEA Mesopotamia F Ruin Con tains Earliest Plan for Town Layout Philadelphia.-- City planning," more delicious than ever. ¢ usually considered a modern de- velopment, is not so new, after all. Evidence that cities were "planned" almost 6.000 years ago has been uncovered in north- ern Mesopotamia "by a joint archaelogical expedition from the University of Pennsylvania and the American Schools of Oriental Research, University authorities have made public a report that excava- tions have resulted in the discov- ery of a town which, according to evidence found by the ex- pedition, dates from 3700 B.C. and is the oldest town ever un- covered by archaeologists, The town lay beneath the huge ! mound of Tepe Gawra, not far from Teil Bilia, where the ex- pedition has been carrying on work for two years. "In spite of its unusual anti- ouity," said a report from Dr. E. A. Speiser, field director of the expedition, 'the town was built according to a carefully conceived town planning scheme, and within it have been found many architectural features whose existence at so early a date have not hitherto heen sus- pected." The report said that the true art in 'huilding occurred at Tepe Gawra for the first time in his- tory. FIVE NEW LINERS FOR OCEAN TRADE New York.--Five new passen- ger liners, totalling 186,000 goss tons and having combined accommodations for about 8,000 passengers, will enter the trans- atlantic trade between June and November, according to informa- tion recently made public in the latest sailing lists of the Ameri- that goes | ani- | as lower ani- | | | | | | | | | | consid- | HORROR INVENTED | | bot, DEPICT HISTORY :- | Ancient Centres Hold Pag- eants of Historical Incidents (By Thomas T. Champion, Canadian Press StaffWriter) London More than one of England, justly ancient past, is history in summer Leicester, which nine-day page th plenty of histe al which to work The cit jans claim it was found 1 20 years after the Crucifixion | The early inhabitants, it is re | corded, were dominated th | Saxons and Danes. The pageant will people did not fare der King John Pr cident in Leicester past which i enshrin clearly in English hi cerned with the coming there King Henry's Wolsey At with came to Leicester, Abbey; where th with all convent, honor ably received him; To whom gave these words, "0 father abh- bot, an old man, broken with (1 storms of state, is come, to lay his ( proud of i tting forth pageant form ti holding n na mate by show the a better erhaps the memoral ed mo is. co tory broken Chancelior, last easy roads, he Lodged in th reverend ¢ a his he a ! make a | mor ENGLISH CITIES weary bones among ye; give him a little earth for charity." Granted fine weather bey Park will make a'fine setting The part of Car- for this scene. dinal Wolsey is to Canon Winkley. as Cardinal {known all over En Hastings, where | ontine landed, ing memories of 1 summer. Here grounds of g¢plendid th bers of families w descent almost Duke William living in the in neig many of them wil assume charac- ters of their ancestors. the health Scarborough, pleasure resort Coast, is giving duction of Germar "Merrie England." The Duke and D have consented commenioration of niversary the Fountains A Abbey, Yorkshire, one of tiful-of the monast country, whose unique gnificanc and religious deve north of England. Eig on ol ht hundred years disgusted which prev tine Abbey and founded h ailed 1 at Yo Fou mhla Fou Irom it monastery one the lest houses has only tl ] 1e) at of in to ob appear today ources must al poegal of the Ab of hs worldly glo yr caused to forget and H Today the suppre 1540 variel vie from Norman to Wolsey ,000 years this, Battle to the landing of 1066 are an open-air to greate the erve the have perpindi the Ab- be taken by His features are aneady gland, Wiliam is also the revi.v- again, the Abbey wiil oatre. Mem- ho trace their still hhorhood and | JOCKEY RIDES year when her Victoria, B.C." Academy, "Peonies, was hung in the Royal London, Eng- | land, the yne canvas hung thig year in the Paris Salon annual © spring exhibition progress, Her work is to all patrons of art in and the rich, yet deli- colorings of her representa- BAREBACK TO WN { HANDICAP =o: of zinnia peonies, roses and dahlias heen greatly |? admired. 16- | The operation has been under painting consideration by the Department of National Defence for some time in an effort to secure closer co-operation between Canadian naval and military forces, by having at its now in familiar | Victoria ate have London.----Fred Rickaby, year-old apprentice jockey, Mittagong to victory in the Twickenham handicap at San- down after his saddle slipped go far back that he wus riding bare- Yorshire pro- opera the 1's light uchess of York attend the the 80Gth an- foundation of near Ripon, the most beau- relics in this story 18 of Aa In civil lopment of the C the ago '13 | by the laxity n the Benedic- rk, - left ntains foundation intains heca t and wea country. Onc ruins to realize been at in the ry Pros perity the monks the there Abbey the as what the ay hey ( the enry uins of ture archite ilar. ARMY AND NAVY PLAN MOCK SEIGE fir oa fare n of m of A harkatic wed by ( under Andrew INvVoiv n attack upon on n for war st occasic 1de i Similar at Hal militiamen e engaged this ax t ha hay of type troops, disem ndrews and re- | landing | 11 constitute | tactical | of the tood. Change of Ownership Sale The Entire Choice Stock of KINLOCH'S LTD. Must Be Liquidated In a Limited Time Everything has been marked down, many lines being Bp a and sold at a fraction of cost.' MEN 'S SUITS on One and Two Pant $16.75 -- $21.75 and | ing back at the finish. Rickaby"s saddle started slip- | ping a furlong from the winning | post and until he piloted his mount by the judges' stand a | head in front of his nearest rival (oe struggled frantically to re- tain his seat. 1 After the race, he carried the i [fy 8, BRIDES." | saddle to the weighing enclosure | jy y 400 HA £5 5 ER TROUS to an outburst of cheering seldom HEUMAT!S otf! equalled at the track. 0 rode | | | | SUCCEEDS B.C. ARTIST | | Victoria, B.C Mrs. Kelita Aitken, well- known Victoria ar- | + | tist, has added to her success. last | STYLE Without Extravagance? Quality merchandise at popular prices--a feature that Fox's Ladies' Wear are ever keeping fore- most in the operation of their business. A most complete line of Ladies' Ready to Wear that really is exclusive in design. Our staff of experienced sales people are anxious to render service and make every purchaser a satisfied customer. 2 ' LADIES' WEAR \) 7 SIMCOE ST. S. ~ etc. cam, British, French and Italian shipping companies that have con. GENUINE BARGAINS on MEN'S TROUSERS including TWEEDS, KHAKI, FLANNEL, COTTONADE, Boys' SPORT PANTS, SHORTS, SPORT SHIRTS, WASH SUITS, SOX, BATH- ING SUITS, etc. ALL AT GENUINE SAVINGS COMPLETE NEW RANGES of 'Men's JERSEYS, POLO SHIRTS, NECKWEAR, HOSIERY, BATHING SUITS etc. Shop in the morning for best service. D. & K. CLOTHIER C. W. DETENBECK DON KINLO