THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, AUGUST 26, 1940 PAGE SEVEN A Want Ad Will Tell It - Sell It - Tra de It or Rent It. Try It! Undertaking DALTON BURIAL COMPANY Funeral Home - Ambulance Service 75 Charles Street Established 1889 Phone 401 ¥ (23Sept.c) MEAGHER'S FUNERAL HOME. Prompt day and night service. F J. Meagher, Manager. S. J. Strow- ger. Funeral Director. 117 King St. E. Phone 907. (17Sept.c) LUKE BURIAL CO. 67 KING ST East. Ambulance. Residence 69 King 8. E. Phone 210. M. FP. ARMSTRONG AND SON. proprietors Oshawa = Burial Co Funeral aud Ambulance Service Day and night. Phone 2700. 124 King East. Auditors 'OSCAR HUDSON AND COM- pany, Chartered Accountants MOFFAT HUDSON AND COM- pany, Trustees and Liquidators Conant and Annis Chamber, 7% Simcoe Street South. Telephone 4 Head Office. Torunto Battery Service BATTERIES CHARGED 175¢, WITH rental $1.00 Called for and de- livered. Stan Bligdon, 20 Mill St Prone 960 Dental DR. 8. J. PHILLIPS OVER BAS- sett's. Special attenuon to X-ray work. Gas extraction Nurse In attendance. Phone 959. House 1212 DR. R. E. COX, DENTAL SUR- gean, 9 Simcoe N. Phone 233 Hours nine-twelve, one--five-tbirty evenings by appointment. (11Sept.c) DR. C. L. KELL, DENTIST, 26 Simcoe North. X-Ray. Phone 1316. Residence 1462W. (28Aug.c) Hardwood Floors B. W. HAYNES, BUILDER, Hardwood floors laid, sanded, finished by experts Latest equip- ment. Phone for prices. 199 Nas- sau street. an Insurance PEACOCK"S INSURANCE SER- vice. Consult us for any of your Insuranee needs. Successors to G. L. Nolan, 22% King Street East Phone 2686, residence 145. J. C. YOUNG, GENERAL INSUR- ance. Office phone 793, residence phone 2805. 4% Prince Street. Legal A. W. 8. GREER, BARRISTER, SoMcitor, etc, 6 King Street East. Phone 3160. Residence 3514. Resi- dent partner W. C. Pollard, K.C. Uxbridge, Ontario. GRIERSON, CREIGHTON AND Fraser, Barristers, etc. Bank of Commerce Building. CONANT AND ANNIS, BARRIS- ters, 7% Simcoe St. 8, Oshawa. Pnone 4 Allin PF. Annis, BA, LLB. Emest Marks, B.A. R. D. HUMPHREYS, BARRISTER. Sol.citor, etc, 24% Simcoe North. Phone office 814; residence 3297. "Money to loan. JOSEPH P. MANGAN, KC. BAR- rister, Solicitor. Office 14% King St. East, Oshawa. Phcne 445 Residence phone 837. W. E. N. SINCLAIR, B.A. LLB. K.C, and J. C. Anderson, K.C Barristers, etc. Bank of Montreal Building, 20 Simcoe St. North Fhone 99. : SWARTZ. BAR- Money to Phone 282 MANNING PF, rister, Solicitor, Notary. loan. 11 King Si. East. Residence 3071J. A J. PARKHILL, JARRISTER etc. Mortgage loans 5'4%, Naulon- a; Hupsing 'Act, 5%. 26 Simcoe St. North. (18ept.c Cartage MOVING AND DUMP [I'RUCKE . sand cinders, woud, coal, etc. TC "Colborne Street' West. Phone 605 (13Sept.c) Mortgages MUNEY TO LOAN ON OSHAWA ul other pruperty Mortzages now in 'force purchased. H. C Higgin- butham. 19 Qntario £t. Pnone 328 (28Aug.c) Expert Watch Repairing F A VON GUNTEN, EXPERT Swiss watchmaker. repair shop at 46 King Street West. Your patron- age solicited (tH) Phone 25, Oshawa. (10Sept.c) Lawn Mowers LAWN MOWERS SHARPENED hollow ground for long service 75c Work guaranteed. Parts and re- pairs. Called for aid delivered Slater Brothers, Oshawa. Phone 611W, (2Sept.c) oe Articles for Sale 8 FOOT OAK EXTENSION Table; leatherette covered oak arm rocker; 5 tube mantle radio. Cheap. Apply 217 Celina St. (38¢) STUDIO COUCHES OF QUALITY in velour and heavy repp, featuring walnut on chromium arms, inside spring construction throughout, back support, and large wardrobe compartment. Direct from factory show room. Easy payments if de- sired. Save 20% at BRADLEY'S FURNITURE STORE, 140 Simcoe St. South. (22Sept.c; August Furniture Sale Wilson's Furniture Co. Studio Couches 50 beautiful studio couches tc choose from. Very attractive cov- erings. $1495 up. You can save 40%. Mattresses New spring filled mattresses, gen- uine damask ticking, all sizes, extra special, $7.95. Also felt mattresses, rolled edges, well filled. Wonderful Value, all sizes, $4.49. New Chesterfield Suites Luxurious suites, in the latest styles and most attractive cover- ings, fully guaranteed construction. Sale price $39 up. Liberal allow- ance on trade-ins. Bedroom Suites Thrillingly new, smart waterfall design, lovely selection. Sale price $39 up. Save 40%. Breakfast Suites Choose from a grand selection, all styles and colours. Sale $18.95 up. Floor Covering Specials Inlaids, congoleums, feltols, heavy | linoleums in all widths. Visit our very large floor coverings, rugs, and carpet dept. Save 40%. you money. Wilson's Furniture Co. Our lower prices positively save | RE -- still in good condition. cash" for YOU! 35 if you want to raise some selling articles you no longer use, but which are "extra cash" by An ad-taker will put a small, but efficient salesman (a Times Ad) to work for you--he"ll get RESULTS . .. "extra For Rent | 6 ROOMED HOUSE AND 2 FIN- $32 monthly. 119 Agnes (38b) NEWLY DECORATED VERY comfortable 4 room apartment, central, all conveniences. Immedi- ate possession. Phone 1860. (39a) | ished attic rooms. Possession September 1. St. 10 KING W. 20 CHURCH ST. (25Aug.c) CHILDREN'S Ss Phone (39¢) LADIES' AND dresses, shoes, and hats. 1639W., or call at 314 Alice. NAVY BLUE GONDOLA PRAM, good condition. Apartment 1, 150 | Simcoe St. South. (39b) LINOLEUM AND CONGOLEUM rugs. Select yours from over 300 patterns actually in stock. You are invited to view these at BRADLEY'S Furniture Store, 140 Simcoe South, (22Aug.c) BRADLEY'S BEDDING SHOP special opening offer, everything in bedding, inner spring mattresses, studio couches, cribs, complete, dropside couches beds, tubular steel cots, dropback day couches, angle iron, high riser, and all blade bed springs. Bradley's. 140 Simcoe South. ES (6Sept.c) SAVE ON PAINT AND WALL- paper at Nelson's, 14 Bond St. West. Phone 841. Free estimates on house decorating. (26Aug.c) VENETIAN BLINDS, AWNINGS Estimates furnished without obliga- tion. George Reid. Phone 2104, 66 Bond West. (6Sept.c) Motor Cars For Sale 36 CHEV. GOOD CONDITION. | For quick sale. 333 Mary St Phone 1833W. (38¢) GUARANTEED LATE PONTIAC deluxe coach, Eigateen thousamd miles. New Tires. Reasonable, 281 Simcoe south. ap*. 5. (14Sept.c) Pets and Livestock LITTLE PIGS FOR SALE. ply 127 Gibbons St. YOUNG PIGS FOR SALE. APPLY | . R. Hill, Columbus. (39a) ERO YORKSHIRES | for sale. Sow with 3 pigs. One hog 6 months old. Werry Bros. R.R.1, Hampton, | Ontario. Phone, Bowmanville 2471. | (37c) AP- (37¢) Shoe Repairing A COMFLETE SHOE SERVICE, invisible nalf soling, cleaning, dye- ing, etc. Fast Service, Phone 362. We Call and Deliver. Modern Shoe Repair, Jack Read, 83 Simcoe Street North. (30Aug.c) ATTRACTIVE MODERN HOUSE {on Division St. for rent. Available 'September 15. Phone 465. (38¢) |2 Pos- 137 | rooms with private entrance. | session immediately. Apply | Colborne St. East. 5 ROOM UPPER DUPLEX, HOT | water heating, hardwood floors, el- ectric stove, and refrigeration, sep- arate bath and toilet. Possession October 1st. Apply 55 Drew St Phone 1811J. (39¢) reasonable rent 446 Simcoe St (38¢) good business, Living quarters. South. housekeeping rooms, nicely decor- | ated, heated, central. ences. Adults preferred. Apply 187 Authur. 262 EULALIE AVE, roomed house, all conveniences, with garage. $27.50. Vacant Sep- tember 1st. Apply 102 Roxborough Fhone 1409J. (37c) SIMCOE MANOR, LOVELY apartment building, 1 4-roomed and 1 5-roomed, newly decorated, everything modern. See caretaker | or phone 169. (5Aug.tf) TENTS, BOX TRAILER, AND | double or single brick garage. | Phone 119J. (26Aug.c) BUCKINGHAM MANOR, 4 AND } room apartments, all modern c»n- veniences. Phone 1718, (9Aug.tf) NEWLY | FURNISHED CABIN OR cottage, on Bow Lake, near Hali- | burton, sandy beach. Private. Phone 3224J. 37g) Wanted to Rent HOUSE OR APARTMENT, CENT- rally located, by careful, steady ten- ants, two adults, no children. Phone Sows due to farrow ns . 5 OR 6 ROOMED HOUSE FOR young couple, no children. Reliable tenants. Possession anytime before September 30. Phone 1430M. (39¢) MODERATE SIZE HOUSE, 3 adults. Steady work. Maximum $20. Apply Box 613 Times. (38c) MODERN. 6 ROOM HOUSE, north of King St., by October 1st, careful tenant. Steady employment. Apply Box 620 Times. (39d) LADIES' INVISIBLE HALF-SOLE- ing. All work guaranteed. Call and deliver. Phone 2673R. W. Allison, 9 Athol West. (28Aug.c) Money To Loan MONEY TO LOAN ON FIRST mortgages on Real Estate. Prompt service Oshawa Real Estate Co. Phone 25, Oshawa. (10Sepr.c) Dressmaking DRESSMAKING AND ALTERA- tions done at 130 Colborne East. | West door enters sewing room. | (26Sept.c) Room and Board BOARDERS WANTED. CENTRAL All. conveniences. Phone 2055. 5 OR 6 ROOMED HOUSE, FAIRLY central. Steady employment. Adult family. Apply Box 619 Times. (39¢) 5 OR 6 ROOMED HOUSE, OR 4 roomed flat. Steady employment. Apply Box 611 Times. (37¢) For Sale or Exchange COMFORTABLE 86 RO OMED brick cottage in North Oshawa, con- veniences, exchange for house in Oshawa. Apply Box 617 Times. (39¢) Painting and Pocorabing. PHONE R. LITTLE, 2717TW FOR painting and decorating needs. Prices reasonable. Estimates free. (218ept.c) ROOM AND BOARD -- PRIVATE home, central, bus service, nice lo- cality, 64 Park Road North. Phone 455M. (39a) ROOM AND BOARD FOR gentlemen. Every convenience. Cent- ral. 114 Elgin East. Phone 1943W, Furnaces Saddle Horses NEW, $48 UPWARDS; RECONDI- tioned, $28 upwards; firepots, grates, registers, low prices. © Church St. Phone 758. (19Sept.c) SUNSET STABLES, KING AND Wilson Read. Saddle horses for rire. Lady instructress for chil- Personal MEN OF 30, 40, 50! HEALTH (VIM, PEP) subnormal? Try Ostrex tab- lets of tonics, stimulants, oyster ele- ments to aid recovery of normal pep. If nof delighted with results first package, maker refunds its low price. Call, write Jury & Lovell in Oshawa and all other good drug stores. (Sept, 3c MADAM NEVADA. FALMIST 'svrho'ogist. Phrenologist Hours iren. Phone 2675W, (208ept.c) 11-9. 98 Albert St. (20Aug.c) LARGE BRIGHT FURNISHED; | S10 (39D) | Help Wanted (Female) EXPERIENCED MAID, 20 YE ARS or over, for family with 2 children Apply Box 615 Times. (Wed. Fri. tt) YOUNG LADY OVER charge of counter in one with experience Apply Box 622 Times. Male Help Wanted STRONG BOY WITH GOOD BI- Apply H. M. Gilchrist and Son, King and Ritson Road. (39a) 2 Help Wanted = MAN OR WOMAN TO bake shop, RELIABLE | take charge of regular route in Osh- | all repeest LARGE STORE WITH RUNNING | i 3 LARGE UNFURNISHED LIGHT | All conveni- dition. (37c) | HIGHEST MODERN 6 | (33, [ | awa. Business established: Credit for orders. Fuii or part time Commission and o:nus average $1.50 per hour. Write promptly for details R. S. Semple, 2177 Masson St. Montreal, (29,3439) Wanted To Buy MAN' S BICYCLE, IN GOOD CON- 62 Jones Ave. (39a) PRICES PAID FOR won, metal, rags, mattresses. Phone | Cedardale Iron Metals, back C.N.R. Station. {165ept c) WE PAY "HIGH "PRICES FOR | rags, scrap metal and fron. 202 Annis. Phone 2423M. (1Sept c) HIGHEST CASH "PRICES PAID | for good used furniture, oil stoves | and dishes. Collis Trade-in Store, { 56 King West. Phone 1030. Pmt (88ept.c) | Bought and Sold USED CLOTHING S T ERILIZED, cleanéd and pressed. We carry a | stock of gentlemen's suits, Sold very reasonably. Schwartz, 21 Bond West. pamts. Samuel (83epi. c) Real Estate For Sale 80 ACRES OF ARABLE LAND, | good barn, on point jufting *into | Lake Ontario. Excellent hunting and fishing in adjacent marsh | Apply Conant and Annis.» + (34,37,39,42) | $1450. NEW LARGE 4 ROOMS | 'With' conveniences, Annis St. near | Ritson Road. Bargain 70 acre farm, west of Whitby, . on Lakeshdre, 10 gcres bush. Good building. Might exchange. Jones, 10 Prince. y Caulking and Weatherstriping HAVE YOUR HOUSE CAULKED and equipped with metal weather- strip. Guaranteed to stop drafts and leakage; including casement wind- ows. Phone 2710J. T. A. Morgan (9Sept.c) Financial WE PURCHASE MORTGAGES and agreements secured by suburb- an and rural property. Phone North Shore Realty Co., 80, Osh- awa. (6Sept.c) Notice I Have No Jobs To Offer HOWEVER I AM INTERESTED in interviewing a responsible, am- bitioug married man of good char- acter, between the age of 35 and 60 and discussing with him the possibility of joining me in a busi- ness which popular demand has in- creased by leaps and bounds. A man who will jump into his work with both feet, can, with a reason- able amount of experience, expect to receive a substantial and steady income from our generous discount- bonus arrangement, merchandising an electrical unit which is tops in its field. I will teach the man I select how to be successful if he will work eight hours a day. This man rieed have no previous selling ex- perience and no investment or de- posit is required. Apply Box 62) Times, (39h) (38a | 21 TO TAKE | preferred. | (39a) | ! | assume its share of the Empire hur- teil. {also units of the Canadian _ | units of ex-servicemen , the Riel Rebellion. | front of the iColiseum, and, |mament and an amateu (28ept.) | Business Course SHORTHAND, SECRETARIAL, accountancy, comptometer, dicta- phone. Classes commencing Tues- day, September 3. Oshawa Business College, 18 Simcoe North. Phone Office 1314W, residence 399. (9Sept.c) Auction Sale FURNITURE SALE---I HAVE RE- ceived instructions to sell by pub- lic auction for Miss Ruby Clat- worthy in the village of Hampton, on Wednesday, August 28th, at 1 p.m. (S.T.), her household effects including bedroom, dining and kit- chen furniture, carpets, rugs, dish- es, wood, tools, stoves and many i other articles too numerous to men- Elmer Wilbur, (35a) tion... Terms cash, auctioneer, WARRIOR'S DAY THEME 18 FEALTY Soldiers of Past and Present Wars Paraded -- War- time Attractions Toronto, Aug 1940 Canadian National Exhibition, "Canada Prepared -- For Wau, Peace," began to motivate the fairs features in earnest on Saturday | when more thia 23,000 veterans of the first World War and other wars marched in the great Warrior's Day parade. As the parade "marched past" in front of the Exhibition granastand, in what is always a dramatic dem- onstration of Canada's readiness to the salute was taken by the Hon. James L. Ralston, Minister {or Naticna) Defense, who was also the guest speaker at the directors' luncheon at the Adminis- tration Building t was the greatest throng of vet- erans ever to ma.ca in the parade, according to Charles Brown, presi- dent of the Warrior's Day Coun- There was a markea increase in the number of veterans groups visiting Toronto for the parare, and Active Service Force, the Home Guards, the Royal Canadian Air Force, and the Frontiersmen War Vet2raans. Uaits From U. § As in past years, United States tooX part. Notable among the visitors from the States was a band from Kentucky with 90 musicians and three drum- ma joreties, Warriors Included veterans of the Northwest Rebellion, the South African War, Franco-Belgian and Polish veterans. They were head- ed by the 62 survivors of Canada's oldest veterans' group--the men ot den, Col. Other wartime features of the "EX" include the RC.AF. unt which, in addition to its activities at the Manning Pool, can he seen in a parade through the parl:, later, in the changing of ,the guard in in the j evening, at + thes m ry tattoo hich will be the clesing feature f Warriors' Day Highlights of thegsports program Saturday included the Canadian fifteen-mile tandem canoe mara- | thon champlonship grace, the inter- nafignal swimming meet beiween [ teams frgm the Bahamas Isiands, | New York State, and Ontario, the Barker Gold Trophy race for men | for ther two-mile amateur swim- ming champions of Canada, the Barker one-mile race fomgwohen, the start of the girls' cori tour- owing , Tegatta, featuring the "Joe" Wrigit race for the one-mile singlés cham- pionship of Canada. Hopkins Resigns F.D.R.s Cabidt Washington, Aug. 26. -- President Roosevelt on Saturday accepted the resignation of Harry L. Hopkins as Secretary of €ommerce and it. was announced he would offer the 'post te Jesse H. Jones, Federal Loan All~ ministrator. . 0 Hopkins told + the President - by letter that he was quitting the cabl+ net to recover his health. He has been suffering from a stomach ail- ment for nearly two years. The President, in reply, said the resignation would take effect at a date to be determined later. "You may resign the office--only the office--and nothing else," Mr, Roosevelt said. "Our friendship will and must go on as always." | Eire Press Restricted By Rigid Censorship Dublin, Aug. 26.--Rigid new cen- sorship regulations * were enforced in Eire on Saturday, making impos- sible the publication of war news without the Government's permis- sion. Matters relating to hostilities on land, sea or in the air between the fighting forces of any state must be passed by the censor. One Dublin newspaper was re- ouired to submit its entire issue, in- cluding advertising and editorials, for approval. Ws D, Hudgens, of Luverne, owns what is believed to be the world's oldest biscuit. The biscuit "vas baked in 'Mobile, Ala., in 1862 Loy Joseph Hudgens, a soldier of he Confederate army. 26.--Theme of the | For | | Ethiopian War--an expose JOURNALIST SAYS BRITAINTO WIN Europe's Dorothy Thomp- son Visits City of Toronto Toronto, Aug. 26 -- Britain will win the war, declares Madame Genevieve Tabouis, whom Hitler calls "Madame Know It All" and who accurately predicted the Anch. luss and the attack on Paris. Madame Tabouis, Europe's Doro- thy Thompson and the only journal- ist in the world mentioned by name --and in highly unflattering terms --Dby Hitler, arrived in Toronto Sat- urday on her way to the conference of the Canadian Institute of Eco- nomics and Politics at Geneva Park. She was held up at the border until the immigration service tele- phoned Ottawa and arrangements were made. | Genevieve Tabouis, | close friend of many nations, bases her British victory on three facts. Courage Indomitable One, the indomitable British cour. age, secondly on the unavoidable participation of United States in the war within the next six months, and thirdly on the revolution in France during the coming winter. She stayed in England a month {after her escane from France on a | British battleship in June, and speaks of what she saw. The ten- sion in United States and the trend of thought she hac studied since her | arrival there late July. Of the French people she speaks: | "France will revive. We are the most individualistic of all At the moment we are numbed but it will not last, France will revolt In the middle of the winter. then they will have realized that there is no work, no hope, no money. Full Of Hope "There is a campaign against England already strongly started. The Germans will tell the French to blame the English for their hung- er. But the French are too intelli- | gent for that. not be England's fault. of hope." Slight, tall, with grey hair and sharp grey eves, pretty in a striking way, talléred clothes, except for huge rings on her very small fingers, and a demure white ruffle about her neck. She emphasizes her words with strong gestures, pulling at her lower lip when she paustes to think. She talks fast and convincingly. "As long as Petain government re- mains, Gamelin will be safe" she declared. "Gamelin lived in a com~ who is a leading figures in I am full German arrival. Then he moved to his house in the country. It will people by endangering him. I can give you the assurance that as long as Petain remains in power, he, and the rest, will be safe. To Satisfy Public "The purpose of the trials," she stated, "is to give satisfaction to the | French public opinion, and secondly, to give satisfaction to Germans who are always arguing about the causes and the beginning of the war." "But nothing will happen to the people arrested -- as long as Petain ' | government, remains, Georges Mandel? He Is considered a traitor because he tried to negotiate with after the French government had signed the armistice. Ah, before the war he was the man, he used to know the secrets of every one in France!" Madame Tabouis herself had the unique experience of seeing declara- tions of her arrest in al] the French papers, including the ones to which she herself contributes. "The gov- ernment is going to arrest Madame Genevieve Tabouis , . ." She read in Prench from a ghostly paper she pretended to hold in her hand, for they press in Toronto on Saturday. "It is a strange feeling," she laughed. Urged Preparedness The reason for her arrest was Hitler's extreme hatred of her. She has written for years about the Ger- man preparation for war. "Every day," she spid, "I hammered in through tmy paper, "Prepare for war, France, prepare for war. The Yeople did not like it. I had direct Information from Germany--it was not believed. In 1939 when Hitler 'made his May 1 speech in Berlin, he spoke of me. "There are in Europe." he said, "many warmong- ers and the Head of them is Madame Tabouls. She is writing lies about me." TI kept writing until the day Germans entered France. "In May 'T gave Paul Renoir the plans of the German attack on Paris. TI had it from the same source as the news of the Anchluss which had reached me first. He did not believe me," she shrugged her shoulders. Many Exposes During her vivid career, Genevieve Tabouis has "scooped" the news of the advance of German military preparations and the likelihood of a Czechoslovakian crisis about March 11, 1939. The Germans marched in on March 12. She ex- posed in her paper the plan of France's Premier Laval and Brit- ain's Minister of Foreign Affairs, Sir Samuel Hoare, to partition Eth. iopia as a means of averting the which resulted in thelr resignation. She also announced in January, 1937, that German troops had landed in Spanish Morocco, an article that gave away Hitler's plans on the They know it wil! | fortable flat in Paris right up to the | country and sent the French fleet to the Moroccan coast. She wiil continue to write articles for the English and United States magazines during her present lec- ture tour. She stresses her firm belief in the victory of the democ- racies in the end, BRIDE COMMITTED FOR BABY MURDER Young Husband Knew Girl Mother Prior to Marry- ing Her Trenton, Aug. 26.--Illness of an important Crown witness, Mrs. F. Mountenay, forced adjournment of the preliminary hearing of a charge of murder ageinst Robert MacFar- | land; 21-year-old Frankford shoe factory worker, Friday afternoon. | Mrs. Mountenay is confined to | Belleville General Hospital. * Ma- gistrate E. J. Butler, in postponing the hearing, announced that evi- | dence of Mrs. Mountenay would be belief of | taken at the hospital if necessary. Alice MacFarland was committed for trial at the next court of competent jurisdiction as the hear- | ing of the charge against her hus- | band opened. The court room at Trenton was crowded to the limit, | and police were forced to exclude | tain seats. | case, peoples. | | baby of his By | two-score spectators unable to ob- As the magistrate gave | his decision in Mrs. MacFarland's tears were in evidence throughout the courtroom. Asked if she had anything to ray, the ac- | cused girl shook her head and sat down. She left the court room im- mediately, and was not present when her hustand was arraigned. Robert MacFarland is charged with murdering the 18-month-old | bride of two weeks, Alice Archer MacFarland, on the night of July 25. The infant's body was discovered, by C.N.R. section- men, near the east end of a railway | bridge across the Trent River, lying { fence wire was wound child's body | Madame Tabouis wears strictly | | middle. in 18 inches of water on the after- noon of July 26. A piece of heavy about the There was a loop sug- gesting a stone had been attached to the wire. Statements "Admitted Defense Counsel Ormonde Butler established in cross-examination of Dr. J. W. Farley, that the wire was wound only 'once around the child's Counsel made it clear, in examining the witness, that the wire was not a "band," as describ- | | ip the preliminary hearing of the | | murder charge against Mrs. Mac- | | not be safe to arouse the French | | Farland last week. During the hearing, certain state- ments said to have been made by MacFarland were admitted as evi- dence and identified by Court Re- porter John Tinney Contents of the statements were not read in court, and Crown Attorney 8. Gordon Robertson announced they. were for the perusal of the magis- | | trate only, | England about continuing the war | | ings County Chief Willlam Bain, in charge of the murder investigation, introduc- | ed a flat stone, fourteen inches by six inches, as an exhibit during the hearing Saturday. He declared that | it had been taken from the Trent | River at the point where the child's : body had been found. "It was the only stone of its kind in the river there," he said, "and | was noticeable because it has sev- eral clearly visible scratches. It is not a river stone because its sur- face is not coated." A smaller, round stone was also entered and described as "a river stone" by the chief, because it was coated with | river vegetation and discolored. Consented to Marriage | Capt. T. D. Ruston, inspector for the Children's Aid Society, in Hast- | and Belleville, was called to the stand. He was not called in the first hearing against | Mrs. MacFarland. Inspector Ruston | told of a visit of Robert MacFar- | land to his office on July 5 in re- sponse to the inspector's request. "At that time he asked for per- | mission to marry a girl, Alice! Archer, who had been a ward of | our society," Capt. Ruston testified. | "I asked him if he knew that Miss | Archer had a child, and he sald he did. He gave me to understand he | intended to take the girl and the | baby to live with his parents in Frankford. Consent was given to | the marriage on July 6, and I learn- ed from the mother, Mra Martha MacFarland, that the wedding had taken place on July 12." Asked in cross-examination if he | had been quite satisfied with the | character and background of Ro- bert MacFarland before he married | Alice Archer, Inspector Ruston res plied in the affirmative. Last witness called by the Crown prior to the adjournment was Mrs, Martha MacFarland, mother of the accused. She declared that on July 25 her son and his young bride had been "normal". "On the 26th when they came down to breakfast in the morning, | the radio was playing and they both seemed quite happy," the witness | said. They had returned home for lunch, Police arrested the pair at their work at 4 o'clock the same afters noon. REFUGEE REGIME PLANS TO RESIG Vichy, France, Aug. 26--The refu- ges Boligian government of Premiep Hubert Pierlot plans to resign, ine formed sources here sald Saturday, since jt is impossible to function und2r existing circumstances. The Premier and most members of his Cabinet, which attempted to carry on from unoccupied France after King Leopold's surrerder, pre- viously offered their resignations but the King refused to accept them. Now, Belgian sources said, they were determined on resigna- tion. With the homeward trek of Bel- gian refugees well under way, the Ministers' families have returned to Belgium. The Ministers themselves are said to have deciced to remain in scuthern France after disbanding the Cabinet. OFFER $50 BILL FOR 5c HOT DOG Montreal, Aug. 26 -- A dream came true for this group of five youngsters but the awakening was rude , The dream was every youngsters wish for a trip to an amusement park, with money galore to spend on popcorn, spun candy, rides on the thriller and the merry-go-round, J and a visit to the hdaM of mirrors. The awakening came when one of the youngsters, who are all under 14, offered a $50 bill in pay- ment for a hot dog. A policeman' | was called and inquiries established that, despite their spending spree, the group still possessed a total of $285. The youngsters, who said they had found the money later appeare ed in juvenile court. Brantford Roofing and Builders' oh TR McLAUGHLIN COAL & SUPPLIES, LIMITED PHONE 1246 WE REPAIR ALL MAKFS OF CIGARETTE LIGHTERS Bassotts On Oshawa's Mains Corner Armstrong Fuels Coal - Coke - Wood PHONE 272TW OFFICE: 59 CHURCH ST. We Treat You [] The Year O . WATCH REPAIRING Let us repair your Watches, Clocks, Jewellery, . etc. Work Guaranteed. D. J. BROWN THE JEWELLER 20 Simcoe St. S. Phone 189 Fine Watch Repairing Our Specialty FELT BROS. Established 1886 12 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH Karn's Drug Store FOR PROMPT DELIVERY Phone 78-79 NEXT °, 0. Daily Except Sunday, Aug. 24th to Sept. 7th. LEAVE OSHAWA (Genosha Hotel) Regular Coaches LEAVE TORONTO (Bay at Dundas) Regular Coaches Until Sept. 9th. Specialt REDUCED $1 35 RETURN FARE Includes Exhibition Admission and Coach Transfer te and from Terminal inside the grounds. GRAY COACH LINES