Ontario Community Newspapers

Oshawa Daily Times, 4 Nov 1940, p. 9

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THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1940 PAGE NINE Tell It - Sell It - Trad edt or Rent It: ry Articles for Sale DALTON BURIAL COMPANY Funeral Home = Ambulance Service 75 Charles Street blished 1889 Phone 401 sia (24Nov.c) . MEAGHER'S FUNERAL HOME. Prcmpt day and night service. F J. Meagher, Manager, S. J. Strow- Funeral Director. 117 King st. E. Phone 907. (18Nov.c) LUKE BURIAL CO. 67 KING ST East. Ambulance. Residence 69 'King St. E Phone 210. sl' FP. ARMSTRONG AND SON, proprietors Oshawa Burial Co. Funeral and Ambulance Service pay and night. Phone 2700. 124 King East. Auditors OSCAR HUDSON AND COM- , Chartered Accountants MOFFAT HUDSON AND COM: , Trustees and Liquidators nant and Annis Chamber. T% Simcoe Street Suuth. Telephone 4 Head Office. Toronto Battery Service BATTERIES CHARGED T5¢ WITH rental $1.00. Called for and de- livered. Stan Bligdon. 20 Mil St Phone 960 Dental DR. 8. J. PHILLIPS OVER BAS- sstt's. Special attention to X-ray work. Gas extraction. Nurse in attendance. Phone 950. House 1312 4 . C. L. KELL, DENTIST, 26 coe North. X-Ray. Phone 1316 Residence 1462W. (1Dec.c) B. W. HAYNES, BUILDER, Ha:dwood floors laid, sanded, finished by experts Latest equip- "'tnént. Phone for prices. 199 Nas- "sau street. tn 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 148. .J..C. YOUNG, GENERAL INSUR- agee. Office phone 793, residence phond 2805. 4% Prince Street. Legal _ B. GREER, BARRISTER, East. Phone 3160. "Residence 3514. Res- dent i W. C. Pollard, "KC. Usbridge, Ontario, GRIERSON, CREIGHTON ' AND Praser, Barristers, etc. Bank of commerce Building. CONANT AND ANNIS, BARRIS- ters, 7% Simcoe St. 8, Oshawa Phone 4. Allin P. Annis, BA, LLB. Emest Marks. B.A. R. D. HUMPHREYS, BARRISTER Solicitor, etc., 24% Simcue North Phone office 814; residence 3207 "Monev to loan, JOSEPH P. MANGAN, KC. BAR- rister, Solicitor. Office 14% King . St. East, Oshawa. Phcne 445 Residence phone 837. W. E. N. SINCLAIR, BA. LLB, KC, and J. C. Anderson, K.C. Barristers, etc. Bank of Montreal Building, 20 Simcoe St North Phone 99. i ", MANNING PF. SWARTZ BAR- rister, Solicitor, Notary. - Money to loan. 11 King Si. East. Phone 282 Residence 3071J. 'A. J. PARKHILL, JSARRISTER efv. Mortgage loans 5'%%. Nation- ;al Housing Act, 5%. 26 Simcoe " St. North. (4Dec.c) Cartage MOVING AND DUMP IRUCKS, sand cinders, wood, coal, etc. TU Colburne Street West. Puone 605 (15Nov.c) Expert Watch Repairing FP. A. VON GUNTEN, EXPERT. Swiss waichmaker. repall shop at 48 King Streét West Your patron- age solicited th Radio Service WE SPECIALIZE IN RADIO RE- pairs For reliable efficient service phone Che rles Wales, 3350) Tubes tested free. (4Dec.c) Shoe Repairing A COMFLETE SHOE SERVICE. invisible .nalf soling, cleaning, dye- ing, etc. Fast Service, Phone 362 We Call and Deliver. Modern Shoe Rep-'r. Jack Read, 83 Simce> Stre-t North. (4Dec.c) LADIES' INVISIBLE HALF-SOLE- ing. All work guaranteed. Call and deliver Phone 2673R. W Allison, 9 Athol West. (1Nov.c) Psychic Reading SCIENTIFIC PALMIST, TEA LEAF interpretation. and cards, by Elsie 46 Kenneth, 2595. (10Nov.c) Lumber DONT WAIT UNTIL ; COLD weather for storm. sash, and com- bination doors. Everything in lum< ber. W. Victor Peacock, 841 Rich- mond East. Phone 3310, (13Nov.c) | BOY'S DARK GREY OVERCOAT, 14-16. Excellent value, $5. Guitar, cheap. 136 Gibbon Street. (87a) HOUND PUPS, BEST OFFER THIS week. One started on deer. Apply 114 Athol St. East. ( 87h) FLAT TOP OAK OFFICE DESK, four section filing cabinet, child's iron cot, Day bed, child's skates and boots size 12, typewriter stand and paper cabinet, Beach Electric stove. Apply 66 Burk St. (87c) GAS STOVE WITH ANNEX, FOR sale. Apply 124 Tylor Cres. (86b) SACRIFICE SALE. HIGHEST quality Gladiolus bulbs. Fall de- livery. Doncaster, 109 Ritson Rd. North. (83e) VENETIAN BLINDS, AWNINGS Estimates furnished without obliga- tion. George Reid. Phone 2104, 66 Bond West. (TNov.c) FURNITURE FOR THE ENTIRE home at pre-war prices. Here's sound investment for those precious dollars you want to make go as far as possible. Put the money in your home and brighten it up. Thrifty people will enjoy shopping at the Topp Furniture Co. Even the most skeptical will be convinced of our great money-saving values by com- paring our price and quality. Our location saves you money. Step off Simcoe and Save. Topp Furniture Co., 10 Bond West. Phone 686. (10Nov.c) RED WING "THE BETTER Apples," also Red Wing Apple Juice, delivered to your door twice weekly. Phone before 5 p.m. Monday or Thursday for delivery the following day. Satisfaction guaranteed. Phone Oshawa 1665. (25Nov.c) LINOLEUM AND CONGOLEUM rugs. Select yours from over 300 patterns actually in stock. You are invited to view these at BRADLEY'S New Furniture Store 156 Simcoe South. (23Nov.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, 156 Simcoe South.' (8Nov.c) BRADLEY'S NEW FURNITURE store opening specials in all new Chesterfield, breakfast, and bed- room suites, studio couches, day beds, bed outfits, inner spring mattresses, wardrobes, bookcases, ete. rooms. We invite you to visit our new store at 156 Simcoe St. South (30Nov.c) Motor Cars For Sale 4 CYLINDER COUPE WITH RE- movable rear lid, good tires, ideal for light delivery. Apply 249 Burk St. (85¢) Bought and Sold USED CLOTHING STERILIZED, cleaned and pressed. We carry a big stock of gentlemen's suits, pants, men's fall and winter .coats, ladies' fall and winter coats. Sold very reasonaily. Samuel Schwartz, 21 Bond West. (17Nov.c) 'Mattresses and Comforters INNER-SPRING AND FELT MAT- tresses rebuilt just like new. Feather beds stripped, made into comforters. Eiderdowns recovered. Phone 2371J. (17Nov.c) Dancing Instruction "DANCE FOR HEALTH". BETH Weyms, Masonic Temple, Satur- days. Tots, children, adults. Latest New York dances. Free health class Dramatic club. (17Nov.c) Personal MEN! WANT NORMAL PEP, VIM? Try Ostrex Tonic tablets. Stimu- lants and oyster concentrates aid to normal pep. Results with first package or maker returns low orice. Call, write, Jury & Lovell in Oshawa, and all other good drug stores. (29Nov.c) Tenders Wanted CLEAN EARTH FOR SALE. AP- ply on job, Oshawa General Hos- pital. (87h) Business Opnortunities GOOD TOBACCO BUSINESS IN Whitby, $500 Cash for quick sale. Box 28 Times. (87a) Lost A SMALL BLACK AND WHITE puppy, male, please return to 20 Prince St. Reward. (87a) CHANGE PURSE IN DOWN- town section, contained receipt of Dr. Cook $6. Reward. 125 Wood St. (87a) KIT BAG CONTAINING SOL- dier's accessories, between Toronto and Scarboro, left on truck, Finder please leave at Service Station. 24 Kingston Rd. (87a) Landscape Designing NEW HOME OWNERS! LAWNS, trees, shrubs, bulbs, flag walks, etc. Fall fertilizing of trees and lawns. Phone 2178J. (11Nov.c) Dire from factory show | you quick results. Use them and see for yourself. CALL 35 AND ASK For Rent ONE LARGE ROOM FOR RENT, near Pedlars. Box 26 Times. (86¢) COMFORTABLE FURNISHED bedroom in good locality, breakfast if desired. Phone 1962J. . (86¢) 1 BEDROOM WITH PERSONAL bathroom adjoining, on first floor, in private home, Select and quiet district. Suitable for business gen- jHeman, $25 per month, Phone 626 (86¢) BUCKINGHAM MANOR, 5 ROOM- ed apartment, all modern conveni- ences. Phone 1718. (10Nov tf) ROOM, FURNISHED OR UNFUR- nished, 612 Sommerville. Phone 1503J. (85¢) GARAGE FOR RENT, 44 Mc- Laughlin Blvd. (85¢) OFFICES WELL LIGHTED, NICE- ly decorated, hardwood floors, hot water heated, well located in mod- rance. Bradley Bros. (290ct tf) SIMCOE MANOR, apartment building, 1 and 1 5-roomed, newly decorated everything modern. See caretaker or phone 169. Wanted to Rent Dec. 1, wired for electric stove if possible, * Adults. Phone 2127W. (87c) Board and Room FOR ONE OR TWO GENTLEMEN, near Motors, all conveniences. Ap- ply 179 Oshawa Blvd. (87d) ROOM AND BOARD, CENTRAL. Phone 2055. (TNov.c) ROOM AND BOARD FOR GEN- tlemen. garage. 1043W. ROOM AND BOARD IN PRIVATE home. 118 Alma St. (86¢) Real Estate Wanted > SIX OR SEVEN ROOMED HOUSE, centrally located, north of Louisa Street. Box 30 Times. (87e) Wanted To Buy HIGHEST PRICES PAID FOR iron, metal, rags, mattresses. Phone 635, Cedardale Iron Metals, back C.N.R. Station. (17Nov.c) WE PAY HIGH PRICES FOR rags, scrap metal and iron. 202 Annis. Phone 2423M. (TNov.c) Phone (9Nov.c) 114 Elgin East. for good used furniture, oil stoves and dishes. Collis Trade-in Store, 56 King West. Phone 1030 (4Nov.c) for large Oriental, Wilton, or Broadloom, in good condition. Box 21, Times. (85,93) Roofing ALL KINDS OF ROOFING AND repairing. Estimates free. J Pigden, - 54 William St Rast Phone 3148. I HAVE BEEN AUTHORIZED TO sell on the farm of Kenneth E. nesday, Nov. 6, at 1 o'clock Stand- ard Time, 20 head of cattle, from 1 to 2 years old, number of young dalry cows, 500 bushel of Urban Oats, suitable for seed. Terms cash. Elmer Wilbur, Auctioneer. (86h) Saddle Horses CEDAR WILD RIDING ACAD- amy, Rossland Road and Mary St. Trained horses for beginners and children. Phone 375J. (10Nov.c) Money To Loan MONEY TO LOAN ON FIRST mortgages on Real Estate. Prompt service Oshawa Real Estate Co. Phone 25, Oshawa. (11Nov.c) Wanted WELFARE SALVAGE DEPART- ment donations wanted. Beds, stoves, furniture, anything useful for needy families. Paper, rags, etc. Collected, Please phone 639. (4Dec.c) ern office building, attractive ent- (5Sept.tf) | 6 OR 7 ROOMED HOUSE BY Every convenience, central | HIGHEST CASH PRICES PAID | RUGS--WILL PAY GOOD PRICE | (4Dec.c) | Courtice, Lot 28, Con. 2, Darlington, | 1 mile south of Courtice, on Wed- | You'll find that the Daily Times Want Ads will bring for all your advertising needs FOR AN AD-TAKER Male Help Wanted 2 MEN TO HELP WITH EXTRA Christmas rush. Good. pay guar=- anteed. If service satisfactory, sermanent employment guaranteed. Apply giving particulars to Box 27 Times. hand. Thirty dollars monthly for winter. Apply Bowmanville, RR. 6. (86¢) REAL ESTATE SALESMAN | wanted, part or full time, with car. | Bradley Bros. (29Nov.c) | Female Help Wanted | housework, hours 8 am. to 7T p.m, Monday = to Saturday inclusive. Telephone 2444J. (85¢) | Caulking and Weatherstriping HAVE YOUR HOUSE CAULKED and equipped with met&l weather- | LOVELY | strip. Guaranteed to stop drafts and | 4-roomed | leakage; including casement wind- | tians have known for years that | cws. Phone 454. T. A. Morgan. | (10Nov.c) Notice To Creditors i JOB TAYLOR LETHBRIDGE | ESTATE | Creditors of Job Taylor Leth- bridge, late of the City of Oshawa, Monument Dealer, who died at | Oshawa, October 14th, 1040, are re- | quested to send particulars of their claims to the undersigned before November 15th, 1940, after which date the claims of which Notice has | not been received will riot be honor- | ed. | Dated First, 1940. ELLEN LETHBRIDGE, 49 Drew Street, Oshawa Ontario. (87,91, 94) at Oshawa, November HOW TO USE THE «At such a time, when the nation- al flag is being used much more than in normal days, questions con- carning regulations as to Its use come up much more frequently. Naturally, it is the spirit of loyalty that prompts the display of the flag that is the important thing, [but it is also very important that | servance of 'the correct procedure, The following concise instructions as to how to use the flag have been published by the Imperial Order, Daughters of the Empire, and will | be of interest to citizens in general: 1. The Union Jack is the offi- |cial flag of Canada, and should be the one flown in Canada. | 2. The Red and Blue FEnsigns | with the Coat-of-Arms of Canada |in the fly, are intended for use {afloat and on official bulldings out- | side of Canada. They are not cor- [rectly used on buildings in Can- | ada, 3. The flag should not be holst- ed before sunrise, nor allowed to remain, up after sunset. 4. In hoisting the flag the broad white stripe in the cross of St. An- drew should be above the red stripe of St. Patrick on the side of the | flag next the masthead; if revers- led, it is an indication of distress, 5. The flag should always be carried upright and not allowed to touch the ground. 6. When placed at half-mast, the flag should first be raised to the mast-head and then lowered. 7. When used for indoor decora=- tion the flag should never be be- low a person sitting. 8. It should never be used as a cover for table, box or desk, ex- cept at a military religious cere- mony, and nothing should be plac- ed upo n it, except the Bible, Doesn't Want Votes Colebrook, Conn., Nov. 4--Lucian Cary finds his candidacy for State representative on the = Democratic ticket "irritating." So the novelisy is going around begging people net to vote for him. Cary says he was nominated without his consent and didn't find out about it until a private organization, informed him. EXPERIENCED DAIRY FARM | M.. L. Clemens, | | CAPABLE GIRL TO HELP WITH | lit is also very dignified by an ob- | That Body of Yours By James W. Barton, M.D, MORE THAN FOOD VALUES MUST BE CONSIDERED IN FEEDING A NATION There has never been a time in history when the quality of the food eaten by nations has receivea the attention now given by govern- ments throughout the world. There have been times when there have been shortages in the amount of foed but today the matter of the foods necessary for man's health 1s considered not only from the standpoint of proteins, starches; and "fats, but also to the same de- gree from the standpoint of min¥ erals and vitamins. Even pet not all because foods that indi duals like, or that make they happy and contented must be img cluded in the government's fold scheme. The Ministry of Foods in G Britain, in addition to giving government funds to enable Boor | people to get' supplies of nreat, | bacon, bread and milk below' eoss, | has arranged for 'the fortifyirg or t of | while preferred by. the majority of | the people, is not quite as nourish- {ing as whole meal bread owing to some loss of vitamins and minerals | in its manufacture. - To overcome the government fortified or [this loss of vitamins and minerals. strengthened the white bread | adding vitamin Bl, and also | small quantity of lime (calcium). For people, living are plenty of fruits, vegetables, ana dairy products, eatinz whole wheat bread or eating white bread forti- fied by vitamin Bl is unnecessary and they can thus énjoy the white bread which is more pleasing ana satisfying to their appetite. When | fruits, vegetables id dairy pro- | ducts are not in abundance, whole | wheat bread and "fortified" white bread should be eaten. Research physicians and dieti- | foods that please the eye, or arouse | memories of previous enjoyment | cause a flow of the digestive juices before these foods are eatén and these fcods are thus more easily and more completely digested. These British food - experts are making sure of a good meat sup- 1 Meat makes | ply for the people. | value. Thus the government has to con- | sider the human man who might {get all the vitamins. he requirod from a diet of vegetables, whole meal bread, milk and cheese, but would be most unhappy. MENTAL OFNAZIYOUTH IS SHOWN IN LFITER German Thought Was First Pilot Taken Prisoner Youthful | He Ottawa, Nov. 4 -- The following is an excerpt from a letter from Great Britain dated September 28, 1940, which reached the office of through St. Francis Xavier University, Antigonish, N.S picts the mental attitude Nazi youth who have been prisoners in England: "Recently a German airman who has been shot down over Dover ask- ed where he was. He was told that he was a Prisoner of war and in England. en he sald: 'Well, after all I am -fhe first plane brought down by the English." He refused to believe that he probably was the 1500th or 1600th or even more. He was 17 years old and flew for the first time to England. Another one who had his leg to be.taken away asked when he was carried into the operating theatre whether they could do it without an anaesthetic. They said it .was quite immnossible and asked why he asked it. He an- swered: 'Because I want to suffer for Adolf Hitler! TI think it is heartbreaking how this fervent longing for faith and devotion is mislead and abused by the crimin- al claim of the evil. Two others im- plored the nurses not to put them into the operating theatre because. they were told the English would torture them there. One: of them even produced a photo of his mo- ther In the hope that they would torture him less. His comrades told him to do so."All of them are about 17 or 18 years old, that means they were 9 or 10 years old when Hitler came Into power. Again another one who has heen picked up by an English mine-sweeper was asked why the German planes dive and machine-gun even the rescue-par- ties though they must realize thev were their own people the British came to rescue, 'Because we are too short of pilots,' was the reply which seems ab least rather satisfactory. But how will these boys ever stand the disillusion, how will they sur- vive it. And what a task for the Church to senq missionaries in order to christianize all these peo- ple again as Bonifatius went cen- turies ago!" | here of the taken ~u by | al |- where * there | | people, happy aside from its food | ATTITURE | today, the Director of Public Information | | young and old, all of us alike, must It de- | | Rabbi Eisendrath. (87a) | strengthening cf white bread which | { bound hand in hand and heart to | and return to their home bases, few | He misphere. .Mrs. N. Gartshore, Mus. F', T. Bunt- CANADA SEEN "1S PROBABLE FIGHTING ZONE Americas Objective of Hit: ler, Rabbi Believes; At- lantic Not a Barrier Toronto, Nov. 4--The danger spots of 1940 have shifted from Burope 10 the Western Hemisphere, "to our very doorsteps," Rabbi Maurice N. Eisendrath asserted yesterday in Holy Blossom Synagogue. "So gallantly and with such matchless heroism have the sons of Britain defended their beloved, gem-like island, that so far as it is concerned it is hardly any longer a danger zone," declared the rabbi. "Fven Hitler, foiled for the first time in his career, looks elsewhere for easier worlds to conquer. His covetous eyes may be turning at this very hour to the - disunited, quarrelsome, unprepared, physical- ly, mentally and morally unprepar- er Americas. "Here is a real danger zone," said "Let us swiftly repair the breaches and man the barricades. Let us dream no longer of far distant perils, but awaken to the menace at our very gates, with- in our very hearts. Only a people heart can hope to repel so avari- cious a foe, so ambitious and power- ful a dreamer of world conquest." Rabbi Eisendrath said that the greatest danger zone today, as he saw it, was the Atlantic Ocean, or rather the reliance placed upon that ocean. The people of the Americas seemed to have learned nothing from the tragic lessons of the past, he said "And yet, in a day when flying fortresses cruise at many hundreds of miles an hour and have a capa- city to range thousands of miles over land or sea, drop their bombs Raid-Free Sunday Night Starts 'Binge' in London London, Nov. 4--Britain's most peaceful week-end in two months ended on a festive note last night, with London celebrating its first raidless evening since the German Air Force undertook to carry out Adolf Hitler's threat to blast it ofr the map. Streets, restaurants and pubs took an air of gaiety that was only a shade paler than the normal Sunday evening life before the war. Nothing resembling {it had been seen in the 57 straight nights of the capital's air-blitz. Driving rain and a thick blanket of mist'blotted "out the Strait. ot Dover, blockading the airways over which the Germans have been carting bombs to Britain since Sept. 7 Early today the only reported ac- tivity anywhere in Britain was from a town in Northeast Scotland. Raiders hovered over it for an hour, dropping nine bombs. Most of them exploded harmlessly on adjacent farmland. Miss Thunder of Bombs The imprint of the air siege was evident on the London celebrations. The merrymakers were vaguely un- easy, and not entirely because of the possibility that the raiders might be back any time, They missed something, and many of them did not realize that it was the wail of roaring sirens, the roar of motors averhead, and the thunder of bombs and defense guns to which they had become ace customed, "It doesn't seem real -- I keep wondering what's wrong," was the way one man puts it, Even during the day the attacks on London and other British obe Jectives had tapered off until they amounted to little more than the "nuisance" visits in which the Ger=- mans persisted for weeks before the all-out attacks began, Only one daylight alarm sounded in London, and that came late in the afterncon. Despite the lack of warnings, however, solitary raiders three times swept low with splite ting machine guns to drop bombs, The Air and Home Security Mine ister reported that a few lone raid- ers appeared over Southern Eng- land, but that few bombs were dropped and damage was slight, ON THIS DATE -- By = FRED WILLIAMS arkar, president of the Hindu Mahe asabha, told a meeting here. Armed defence was the only right and moral method of meeting armed aggressicn, , Thirty years ago today (Nov. 4, 1940), I returned to Ottawa after participating in one of the famous by-election campaigns in Canadian history. Sir Wilfrid Imurier, deter- mined to make a test of the opin- ion of rural Quebec upon his policy of creating a Canadian navy, de- cided that the test should be made in his home constituency, Drum- | mond-Arthabaska. | Louis LaVergne, who had repre- | sented the county for many years, | of us, near though we may feel to | the tragedy of Britain, have yet | awakened to the very real sense in | which this continent, too, can and | will be subjected to similar bom- | bardment and devastation unless we | gird the loins of this Western | "And over the radio all through this most fateful week in the United States, I heard the deluded Ameri- can republic roaring with mocking laughter as the greatest President since Lincoln was roundly ridiculed for seeking, like some big, bad bogey man to fighten the people of the United States into believing any- thing so preposterous as a Nazi in- vasion of the Americas," continued Rabbi Eisendrath, "What does Hitler want with the already overcrowded areas of Eurcpe?" asked the Rabbi "What does he' want with Poland with its starving peasantry, with France with its diminishing birth rate, even with the British Isles so de- pendent upon her trride with the rest of 'the world? But Canada with its resources so great that oven in this day of astronomical figures, they seem almost un- imginable , , . here is a prize worth fighting for, worth dying for. "Canada is itself a' danger zone a danger zone which can- not he adequately protected by granting to our Canadian war effort merely the superfluity of our time, of our talents, of our means and of our energies. Men and women both, rouse ourselves from our stupor and transform this nation into the same kind of consecrated populace as now heroically defends that which is, in the most realistic and challenging sense, but our own front trench." Not all the Trojan horses were at work in the South American Re- publics and in the United States, the Rabbi warmed. There were still many of them in Canada. "And I am not certain," he ob- served, that all our vigilante com- mittees, storming into the ofttimes innocent quarters of foreign groups, know a fifth columnist when they see one, or rather, when they hear one, After all, Major Quisling was not a German refugee, nor was Seyss-Inquart in Austria. It is often the grandsons of the Mayflower who are the spies and saboteurs of toe day." Pickering Church Groups Join In Thank-Offering Pickering, Nov. 4 (Special) --Mem- bers of the Golden Gleaners' Mis- sion Band had as their guests the members of the Baby Band and their mothers, at the annual aut- umn Thankoffering meeting held on Saturday afternoon in the Sunday School room. Numbers on the program included a vocal duet by Murray and Joan Fallaise, a recitation by Joyce Mor. ley and an instrumental by 'Paul Field. A short play, "The Fountain of youth," given by the adults, in- cluded in its cast Mrs. C. E. Morley. ing, Mrs.' L. M. Morley, Miss B Scott, and Mrs. M. R. Jenkinson. The arrangements for the after- oon were under the direction of Mrs. N. Gartshore, leader of the Mission Band, and Mrs, M, R, Jen- kinson, leader of the Baby Band. | theatrical and discreditable. Many was called to the Senate and the | by-election ordered. Joseph E, Per- rault was the Liberal nominee; he | was afterward a member of the Quebe¢ ministry under L. A.| Taschereau and has recently re- | placed Sir William Hearst on the | international joint commission. The Nationalists, headed by Henrl| Bourassa. F, D. Monk, Armand La- | Vergne (nephew of the new sena- | tor), P. E. Blondin and Sevigny | conducted the anti-Laurier cam- | paign, It was throughout an ap- | peal to the women of the riding to save their sons from being made "cannon fodder." = The.. speeches were violent, the canvassing was of the parish priests were active against Laurier, who had himself been defeated in the same riding when he appealed for election after being sworn as minister of inland revenue in 1877, The trend of opinion was evident Three nights before polling I sens to my paper a prediction that the Liberal would be defeated, and when Sir Wilfrid came down to Arthabaskaville to record his per- sonal vote he chided me for my forecast; but that evening an un- known farmer named Gilbert had been elected, the prime minister telephoned from Montreal to con- gratulate newspaper foresight. It was a bad blow for Waurier. Some of the Ontario Tories rejoic- ed in the election of a man who re- presented the most rabid anti-Bri- tish feeling and even sent messages of congratulation, but these men were chided by R. L. Borden, their leader, who, though opposed to the Laurier naval policy, would never endorse any such campaign as had been won in Drummond-Artha- baska, RIGHTEOUS VIOLENCE Poona, India -- (CP) -- Violence is "righteous when used against an aggressor for defence," V. D, Sav- Brantford Roofin and Builders' Suppli McLAUGHLIN COAL & SUPPLIES, LIMITED PHONE 1246 When in Need of Drugs Call FOWELL'S DRUG STORE 35 Simcoe St. North Phones 1360 - 2259 PROMPT DELIVERY ., LET US CLEAN AND POLISH YOUR RING. No Service Charge. Bassolts JEWELLERS On Oshawa's Main Corner WATCH REPAIRING Let us repair your Watches, Clocks, Jewellery, ete. Work Guaranteed. D. J. BROWN THE JEWELLER 20 Simcoe St. S. Phone 189 Karn's Drug Store FOR PROMPT DELIVERY Phone 78-79 NEXT P, O. i Fine Watch Repairing Qur Specialty FELT BROS. Established 1886 12 SIMCOE ST. SOUTH Armstrong Fuels Coal - Coke - Wood PHONE 272TW OFFICE: 59 CHURCH ST. We Treat You [] The Year O mR On Active Service and return to this office: Name in full ...seersnrsrsnrsivess Regimental NOu ..eeoarersnanseinns Rank DE RRR RE REY TP Se Unit CE EEE FREE PRN Place and date of enlistment Birthplace and age ............ Names and address of parents or next of kin .. In order to enable The Oshawa Daily Times to prepare a complete and accurate list of the men and women from Oshawa who have enlisted with any of His Majesty's Forces, the publishers request the relatives of such members to fill in the following form EE I RS PPE I SI VPP Other particulars BERR : : LR TI I I ARP ER REE LE EEE RET a $001 00000000000 00000000800000 0000 RIN LANE IRI REI Itt ERR RS EE (Print Surname First) III IIE I Sy I I SPONSES EE TY

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