Oshawa Daily Times, 8 Aug 1927, p. 8

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CHEESE ' rig horn meeting of the Cornwall Cheese Board 608 boxes of 'white and 1370 boxes colored . oh were boarded, and all sold at 18% cents, in iil BELLEVILLE OHERSE BOARD At Saturday's meeting of the Belleville Cheese Board 1,964 boxes of white cheese was offered and sold 'at 18 13-16 cents, and 222 boxes colored cheese offered and +s0ld at 18% cents, MAN RESCUES LAD Jumping into the water with all his clothes on, R. Dougall, Custod- fan of the Richardson Bathing ravilion, Macdonald Park, King- ston, saved the life of a 14-year-old boy, Jack Beverly, who was beyond his depth, BROCKVILLE DATRYMAN'S VI oARD At Saturday's meeting of the Brockville Dairymen's Board of Trade, there were 1,276 boxes of white and 1,076 boxes colored chee boarded, for which bids of 18% cents were refased. LIFELONG RESIDENT DIES Frank Purvis, a lifelong resident, died suddenly while unloading hay at his farm at Kingston. Deceased was 71 years of age, the eldest son of the late Mr, and Mrs. George F. Purvis. He leaves to mourn his loss three sis- ters and on¢ brother, Misses Henrietta, Evelyn and Winnifred Purvis, and Dr. John F. Purvis, Brockville. PORT HOPE MARKET The following 'were. the prices at Port Hope market Saturday: But- ter, 40c 1b,; eggs, 86¢c dos.; honey, 26c comb; chicken, 45 'to 60c¢; duck, 16¢c; potatoes, 60¢c peck; black currants, 16¢c box; beef roast, 18 to 20¢; beef steak 822¢; beef sirloin, 26¢c; pork ham, 86¢; pork shoulder, 26¢; veal loin, 26e; veal fillet, 26c. DIES FROM INJURIES George Vance, who died in the Belle- ville General Hospital Thursday, as the result of injuries sustained on Wednes- day while working on a hay mower at his farm near Roslin, was 48 years and nine months old; The deceased was a member of Ros- lin United Church and is survived by a widow and family. The funeral was held Saturday afternoon from his late home to Thomashburg Cemetery, where the interment will 'be made. KINGSTON MARKET On Saturday prices at Kingston remained as the previous week on practically all. produce. There was no shortage of raspberries and the usual prices were quoted of 10e for pints, 20c for quarts for purples, while the red sold at 20 and 25c. String beans sold st 16c a quart basket or two for 26c. Other prices: Butter, 40¢c per pound; eggs, 36 to 4hc a dogen; cucumbers, 60c and $1 a dogen; beets, carrots and ons, 50c a dogen; cauliflower $1.50 to $2 a dozen; potatoes, $1.25 to $1.76 a bushel; cabbage, 10c a head; lettuce Bec 8 head; chickens $1.50 to $2 a pair; lamb, 30c; beef, 8 to 13¢c; pork, 17¢; live chickens, three for $1. THROWN FROM CAR Harold Tabbert, 16-months-old son of Mr. and Mrs, Fred Tabbert, Pembroke, ' was accidentally killed yesterday morning at 9 o'clock when he was thrown out of the car which his father was driving, and the car, swerving, turned over on top of him. Mr. Tabbert was driving his car in AMce Township yester- day morning, and his wife in the front seat with him. An uncle, with three of Mr, Tabbert's children, was in the back seat, and Master Har- old was on the mncle's knee. On rounding 'the corper at Falberg's Hill there Is considerable loose gravel, and when the car unexpect- edly swerved the youngster was thrown out. The car lost balance and fell on its side on the child, killing it instantly. Dr. Grabam, Coroner, Pembroke, was called, but considered an inquest unnecessary. Nope of the other occupants was injured. 13H et ons, $1.25 to $1.50 each; blueber- | -rles, 20¢; blackberries, 20¢; rasp- 'berles 22¢; black currants 20¢; red 'currants, 16¢; white currants, 16¢; gooseberries, 16¢ a box each, Cher- 'ries, $1.00 to $1.60 a basket; peaches, 30 to 60¢; re, 26 to 40c; plums, 16 to. 26¢ 4 dozen. Hay, $10.00 to $12.00 a ton; oats 656 to 70¢c a bushel. 4 ORGAN OF VATICAN RAPS U.S. FILMS Education Movies' Deeried By Italian Journal in © . Editorial Rome, Aug. 7.--A warning 2o Europeans to defend themselves against the influence of educational moving pictures from the United States has been sounded by an edi- torial in the Observatore Romana, offfficial ergan of the Vatican. The editorial says that these ple- tures are spreading ideas constitut- ing a "deadly poison" capable of having seriously deleterious Sects: upon European civilization. "Watch out for these so-called educational films by which the Unit- ed States presumes not only to gm- mse but to instruct us," says the edi- torial, © 'America' is a very great country whose uncontested dollar superiority has made it think it al- 80 possesses spiritual superiority, Certain American tendencies, furn- {shed with exceptional gifts of prac- ticality, which consider force as a' philosophy and the aphorisms of Henry Ford as criticisms of pure reason, can be adaptable to certain too-modern mentalities, bug for our part we find them 'very defective, Americans have built monstrous scrape the skies, but when America was yet unknown we built our ca- thedrals. This old Burope, whose soil Is made of the glorious remains of ten civilizations, cannot easily renounce its past to accept blindly an improvised civilization beyond the sea." SUICIDE RATE IS HIGH IN STATES New York, N.Y, Aug. B--The sui- cide rate for the United States is 12.1 per 100,000, according to Dr. Frederick L. Hoffman, consulting statistician of a large insurance company, who pre- pared a statistical study for "The Spec- tator." This rate is almost the same as that for Australia and New Zea- land, and about two less than for Sweden and Denmark. The highest rates shown by Dr. Hoffman were for Austria, Germany, Hungary and witzerland, varying between 21 and The lowest were found in North ern Ireland, 3.7; Spain, 39; Scotland. 6; the Netherlands, 6.7; Italy, 78; and England and Wales, 9.7. houses of fifty or more stories which |' "THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, MONDAY, AUGUST 8; 1027 SSH 192 | Watch Our Windows This Week Interesting . Odd Lot Savings Displayed Each Day Shop Here and Save GET IT AT THE ARCADE Dry Goods Ladies' Ready ~to-wear 'JEDDO--Premium Coal SOLVAY--COKE The best fuel products that it is possible to purchase, Fill your bins at present low Summer prices, General Motors Wood Best Wood Value in this City 262 DIXONS s40 All fuel ordess weighed on City Scales if desired. REFRESHMENTS soft Prinks, Ice Cream, and Light Lunches LAKAS 14 Sinwe St. N, Phope 8264 _-- WHITBY BRANCH Barnett's Antique 479 Younge St., Toronto Antique Furpiture Sheffield Plate Rare Old China Baxter Prints English Brass WATCH FOR THE SIGN ON THE HIGHWAY - » Whitby, Ont. VuUU HUY THE BEST AT BASSE'L LD' Cor, Simcoe and King sts, INDUSTRY AIDED "BY USING X-RAYS &y Canadian Press) French Lick, Ind., Aug. 8. -- X-rays are opening the eyes of the world to new field of invention and fortune, Dr. George L. Clark, founder of the Mas- sachusetts Institute of Technicology's industrial X-ray research laboratory, declared before the American Society for Testing Materials convention here recently. "Industry's newest tool, the X-ray, until recently only known in hospital and academic laboratories, already is amazing its new employers," said Dr. Clark. "Just recently X-rays showed that spiders and silkworms spin exact- ly the same kind of fibre and immedi- ately set United States manufacturers to consider establishing spider farms. "Prohibition agents in California are using X-rays to detect liguor in sus- pected packages. The British army uses the X-ray to examine wood in its aeroplanes for cracks, worm holes and knots. Boston stores have X-ray de- vices showing customers how their feet fit into shoes. And an Ohio dairy farm recently envaged to use X-rays to find size and location of holes in Swiss cheese. "One golf ball maker has increased sales 200 per cent by advertising the fact that X-rays prove the symmetry of his golf ball centres." Dr. Clark said that steel rail break- age, long a mystery, seems close to solution through X-ray observation Huminum, new element recently dis- covered at the University of Illinois, was found because X-rays could rc veal pnknown substances, Dr. Clark reported. WOMEN WEAR BEARDS IN AUSTRIAN VALLEY (By Press) Vienna, Aug. B. -- A strange tribe whose women, like the men, are beard- ed, and which is voluntarily isolated in the Voralberg Mountains, has been "discovered" by tourists. This tribe, the Walsertal, has long been known to exist but was almost forgotten as no outsiders are allowed to settle in its valley, and the people shun contact with the world. One person is chosen to do whatever business is necessary with civilization and this "contact" job descends in the family. Marriages are made within the tribe and economically, also, the people live by themselves, raising their own cat- tle and grain and weaving their own cloth. Their language is a dialect unintel ligible to German-speaking Austrians. Outsiders they regard as "beggars" and so describe them, because the only persons who ever venture into their region are those seeking something, if only information about roads. SURGEONS DEVELOP ELECTRICAL SCALPEL (By Canadian Press) Baltimore, Md., Aug. 8B. -- A needle carrying a high frequency electrical current, a kind of "surgical acetylene torch" known as the accusector, is be- ing developed by investigation and ex- periment in Baltimore hospitals. This little instrument, which ns an incision without touching the flesh, by means of a thin blue stream of elec- trical energy, already is supplanting the scalpel in the hands of i surgeons. Opening a clean incision without ing infection from one part of the wound to another, automatic cau- tery, and the immediate of the flow of are trophy in Japan new champion is 32 years oM, five feet, mine inches I'd mever have suspected that he ever inside a chuoch™ : | in the: towns yy Quick Interurban Service NTERURBAN Service is as simple as Local Service, Give your local operator the number you want, and do not hang vp. The connection is made immediately, as in a Local Call, ® A list of towns reached by this quick Interurban Service is given in your Telephone Directory, If you do not know the distant number, ask "In- surmation" before you put in your eh 7% Cheap, simple, quick and reliable,' you can increase your selling radius very materially by using Interurban Service, "Like having a store or office in a dezen towns," one sub scriber said, Suppose you try it? Number, pleass / es ate Ch CALL THESE NEARBY TOWNS is Interurban Service OSHAWA to Bowmanville Brooklin Port Hope Port Perry Toronto Uxbridge Whitby i H, M. BLACK Manager Luke's August wrnifur Sale Lowest Prices of the Year You don't need to argue over prices when you see the great reduction every item on the floor has received. This is a Sale that opens up the mos§ wonderful for the careful, economical buyer, Let us prove it to you! 9-Plece Solid Walnut Dining Room Suite $195 | Handsomely finished snd designed. Consists of 60" buffet, oblong extension table, beamntiful chins cabinet with fret work door, 8 diners in gennine blue leather. A regular $219.00 suite, During f od end bed, large dresser, chiflerette, vanity dresser and bemch. This is a very handsome suite and should be seen to be appre- ciated. Regular $283.00, for Kitchen Cabinets Very special value are these splendid Kitchen fn high grade tapestry. side chair and arm chair. Regular $310.00 for Luke Furniture Co! 63 King St. E. 2 Phone 79

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