Oshawa Daily Times, 12 Sep 1927, p. 3

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Case Adjourned The case against Garnet Chap: man f violating traffic signals was further adjourned until tomorrow morning by Magistrate A. F. Hind in police court this morning. Given Three Months Phil Duncan, who has been con- victed several times in the past few months of being intoxicated, was found guilty of the same offence when he appeared before Magistrate A, F. Hind in police court this morning. He was sentenced to three months in the county jail, Must Pay Board Bill Charles Ryan pleaded guilty to not paying his board bill in police court this morning and was allow- ed out on suspended sentence when he agreed to paying the court costs amounting to $9. He must report to thee echiéf of police on the first f each mnth. "t's a mean thing," commented his worship, who point- ed out that occurrences of this kind make it hard for the thousands of boys who must board. LTP Three Loyal party held at of Mrs, Henry Hurst, King street west, Friday evening, The event which took the form of a weiner and corn roast was enjoyed im- mensely by the large gathering. Mayor Preston was present and act- ed as chairman, The program in- cluded numbers by the UKrainians of South Oshawa and music was pro- vided by Reg. Nooks and his Blue Bird Orchestra, Mr, William Farrell and family supplied the music for the square dances, Garden Party hundred attended the True Blue garden the home </ HI jill Jill i i HN: Leen = The Latest Styles in Frames and Mountings 1 now in stock, Have yout Eyes Exam- S inéd now by ow Opti- cal Specialist, Jury & Lovell Optical Parlors I PHONE 378. NEXT THE POST OFFI EE ------ A For PHONE 2 vs dot Thompson's Drug Store 10 Simcoe St. 8. We Delive? CHEVS WILL PLAY day night, The return game will take place here a with from next Saturday, Sept, 24, The winner of the Oshawa-Toronto series will then meet the winner of the Guelph section, This lat. tov aokion musg he completed by STOCK MARKETS TORONTO Stock Bell Telephone Brazilian .C. Fishing Jdurt, F.N. Can, Bread : 'an. Ind. Aleohol Adiram Walker nt. Petroleum imperial Oil nt, Nickel Massey Harris Scagram Shredded Wheat I'win City Ask 14944 Argonaut Area Amulet Beaver Castle Trethewey Central Manitoba ... Dome Keeley Sil Cirkland- Lake tHellinger [Lake Shore [Laval Macassa Mining Corpn, McIntyre Noranda Nipissing Potterdoal Premier Pioneer Teck Hughes F'owagamac Vipond Wright Hargraves . 755 Mining sales to noon, i shares. 60 NEW YORK STOCKS (Supplied by Stobie, Forlong & Co.) Stock High Low Close Amer. Can, 63% 62 62% Amer, Tel, ,.1728% 171% 172% Atchison ,,.,.193 192% 192% Amer. 8. Raz. 48 48 48 Bald. Loco. 261 260% 260% Balt. & Ohio 121% 120% 120% Briggs Mfg. 26 22 22 Can, Pac. L186 185 158 Chrysler .... 58% H8%% Can, Dry, .., hay Dupont 314 Dodge 185 Erie 61 Fam. ,104 % 104& Gen. Asphalt 753% 75 Gen. Motors 251% 248% Gold Dust 57% bh Hudson 83% 82% Int, Comb. bl 513 Int. Nickel 65 64 Int. Harvest 217 215 Int. Paper .. 54 53% Loews Incor. 555 551% Lehigh Val. 107% 107% Manhatt. Elee. 55 55 Miss. Pac. 55 54%, Mont. Ward. 77 76 Overland 17 63 637% Roek Island 108 108 Phil. Pete. 44% Studebaker ., 63% Sears Rbek. . 756% St. Louis San 112 17.8. Rubber 537% U.S. C.I. Pipe 194% 1.8. Steel ,.157 Woolworth ..187% Yellow Cab. .. 35% 186% 335 CHICAGO GRAIN (Supplied by Stobje. Forlong & Co.) Open High Low Close 1315 12914 135% 133% 94% 95% 44 46%: 34% 7 Sept. 131 Dee. 1345 Corn Sept. 95% Dec. +100 Oats Sept. 44% 47% Dec. Rye Sept. 95 95 94 Dec. 97%, 98 96% WINNIPEG GRAIN 137% 135% 130 134 96% 975% 44% 475% 94% 27 98 100 44% 47% Wheat Sept. 136% 135% 133% 131% 58% 575 53% 52% Dee. 133% Oats 58% Sept. Dec. 53% 132% 58% 58 MONTREAL HAMILTON BRANTFORD E ToRLONG 86 ------ ry OFFICE : REFORD BUILDING Bay and Wellington Sts., Toronto Private Wise { OSHAWA | System Ie CATHARINES 11 King Street East, Oshawa Above CPR. Office, Phone 144 NEB 8. F. Everson, Local Manager | Lake, Wednesday September 14. | Cemetery. { BLANCHARD--In | § THE OSHAWA DALY TIMES. MONDAY. SEFTEMEER 12, 1927 album of Idea of Public Service Commission Here Head of the Union Comelory| Board Also Joins in Ap- proval of Proposal to Amal- gamate Parks Board, Plan: ning Commission and Cem- etery Board of Governors --Dnr, F, L. Henry Believes Such a Body Consisting of Six Members Would Be Able to Render Most Effi- cient Service Amalgamation of the Parks Board, Cemetery Board of Governors, and the Town Planning Commission into a Public Service Commission of six members was today given earnest endorsation by Dr. F. L. Henry, chairman of the Parks Board, and D, A, Valleau, chairman of the Union Cemetery Board. This, with the en- dorsation given the proposal on Sat- urday by G. W. McLaughlin, chair- min of the Town Planning Commis- sion, lines up the heads of the three hodies most concerned in favor of a plan that is receiving general endors- ment by public men and citizens at large. Dr. Henry, in an interview given The Oshawa Daily Times, said that he had been thinking along the lines of the proposal suggested by City Clerk F., E. Hare for the past six months, "It seems to me," he stated, "that the amalgamation could be easily worked out and that the proposed commission of six members would he able to give more efficient ser- vice than the divided bodies are able to do at present, "At present, none of them are fac- ed by any extensive amount of husi- ness, and the placing of the several bodies under one good committee would be to the best interest of the city at large. "] feel that I can endorse the plan as outlined," he declared with conviction. D. A. Valleau, chairman of the Cemtery Board of Governors, told the Times that he was entirely in favor of the amalgamation and considered the creation of a Public Service Coin- mission as a challenge to the best thought of the community, "Such a body," he stated, "would attract citizens of thie highest cali- bre who would see in it a chance to serve their fellow citizens in a very splendid way. I make this point with reference to the future of this growing city. The committees named for the proposed amalgama- tion have been notably fortunate in the character of the men who have so gladly served upon them, But this happy condition might not be continued when Oshawa doubles its population, as it will before long. "The creation of one hody to deal with these related matters would, I helieve, be a splendid move in every way. "As to its being an elected body, that will require thought, Offhand 1 imagine that it should be an ap- pointed body named, as the sepa- rate boards are at present, by the City Council. "The term office, however, should be two years allowing three men t be appointed or reappointed each year." With the chairman of the three hoards concerned endorsing the pro- posed amalgamation, it is congid- ered certain that the City Council will take definite steps in the mat- ter at an early meeting. Chairman McLaughlin of the Town Planning Board on Saturday sug- gested that the aldermen should take the initiative in the matter , and pending the securing of special leg- islation covering the legal aspect of the merger, he suggested that six men might be appointed early in 1928 to each of the bodies concern- ed, thus bringing about a tentative amalgamation which would serve all practical -ends until the scheme re- ceived formal sanction by the On- tario parliament. Card of Thanks Mr. and Mrs. A. Tattersall, North Oshawa, wish to express their sincere appreciation of the many kindnesses shown them during their recent ber- eavement. We wish also to thank Miss Hogarth. - 59a BLACK--At 168 Park Rd. N., Septem- ber 10th, to Mr. and Mrs. Archibald Black, .a son (James). 59a Died SAUNDERS--At Oshawa-on-the-Lake, Monday September 12th, Emily Lloyd Saunders. Funeral from the residence of Mr. James Northcott, at Oshawa-on-the- Ser- Interment in: Union 59a vice at 4 o'clock. SCOTT--In Oshawa, September 11, 1927, Mary Jean Davidson, widow of William H. Scott, late of Kedron. Funeral from the residence of her son-in-law, Mr. Edward Pollard, 378 King street west, Tuesday, September 13. Service at 2.30 o'clock. Interment in Union Cemetery. Oshawa, September 12th, son of Mr. and Mrs. Blanchard, aged 6 years months. Funeral from the family 238 Kendal avenue, Wednesday, Charles H. and 3 residence, Sep- tember 14th. Service at 2.30 o'clock. In- | terment in Union Cemetery. Surrey na : My wife hit me on the head with a bottle. She has no nto e wa - " 59a ! Monday Robert Allan, only | FINAL STORY OF THE OLD GLORY Told By Last Men to Hear from the Missing Aeroplane New York, Sept. 11.--A series of hesitating signals, followed by a halting amateurish SOS" and a few minutes later by an indefinite state- ment of position and then silence was the story told by the last men to hear from the missing airplane Old Glory. It was told by Captain David W. Bone, master of the Anchor Liner Translyvania, and the ship's chief radio operator, Wallace D, Davis, when the liner arrived Sunday. The Translyvania's arrival seem- ed to writethe final chapter of Old Glory. Captain Bone, who sent his ship zigzagging to cover a visible urea of 3,600 square miles of dreary grey, tumbling waters, was not hopeful. "I'm afraid they're gone," he said "I feel so disgruntled--and rotten. The pity of it is, they didn't give vs a chance to help them." Their SOS" Captain Bone said, with its brief message, 'five hours east of Newfoundland," helped the rescuers hut little, Too indefinite in the vast spaces--too brief to use the radio direction finder--it meant nothing in the task of finding them. "If we had only had their exact position," Captain Bone said, 'we could have saved them." Shortly after three o'clock on Wednesday morning, Captain Bone related Sunday, he had heen roused from sleep when the Anchor Liner California reported Old Glory pass- ing overhead. "At 4.29 a.m, just as daylight was breaking,we took our exact posi tion. Then at 5.17 the first "SOS" came through followed by a second message at 5.20, These were im- mediately sent to me on the bridge." Then hegan the hopeless task of finding the tiny speck, A ---- Recent Deaths ROBERT ALLAN BLANCHARD Citizens of Oshawa will learn with regret of the death of Robert Allan, only son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Blanchard, 238 Kendal avenue, Osh- awa. The deceased was aged 6 years and 3 months. The sympathy of the entire city goes out to Mr. and Mrs. Blanchard in their bereavement. The funeral will be held from the parent's residence, 238 Kendal avenue, Wed- nesday afternoon, September 14, at 2.30 o'clock. Interment will take place in the Union cemetery. MRS. WILLIAM H. SCOTT Mrs. William H. Scott, for many years a resident of Oshawa and form- erly of Kedron, passed away Sunday at the home of her son-in-law, Edward Pollard, 378 West King street, in her 58th year. The late Mrs. Scott was Well known throughout this district and her death will be a source of deep regret to all who knew her. She leaves to mourn her loss two daughters, Mrs, E. Pollard, Oshawa, and Mrs. E. Henderson, of Toronto. The funeral will take place from 378 King street west, Tuesday afternoon at 230 o'- clock. Interment will be made in the Union cemetery. New Visitor: "Has this boarding- house any special advantages?" Older Visitor: "Yes. You'll find it quite safe to bathe directly after a meal I" Burglar (as he rouses household hy knocking down mirror): "Lumme! That's done it! I can see seven years' bad luck for me!" Too Late to Classify FOR SALE -- BEAVER COAT. A bargain. Phone 1085W after 6.30 p.m. 59¢ HOUSEKEEPER WANTED -- Phone 2378 hefore 6 p.m. 59¢ LOST--PAY ENVELOPE, SATUR- day afternoon in one of the downtown stores of on main street. Finder leave at Times office and receive reward. 59¢ YOUTH WITH HIGH SCHOOL education desires office position. Phone 721] after 5.30, 59a FOR SAL E--ONE SANDURA RUG 9x12, one brussels rug 9x9, one electric fixture. Apply 114 Agnes St. 59¢ FOR SALE--SIX ROOMED BRICK Veneer house newly decorated, large summer kitchen, electric lights,' 3 piece hath, large lot and garage. Apply 21] Maple St. 59¢ Negotiations are underway with the art committee of the Canadian National Exhibition at Toronto to have the widely discussed paintings shown there during the past weeks in Oshawa for at least one day dur- ing the South Ontario Agricultural Association's fall fair. Officials of the fair are not optimistic in this regard, however, but the possibility is one of wide interest. The two pantings which attracted such in- terest at Toronto were "A Fantasy" May Bring Famous Paintin Shown at C, N. E. to awn Fair and "Paola and Francesca", the] latter being the most finished of the | two and unquestionably beautiful even if somewhat likely to aroused bitter controversy hetween the var- fous schools of art. The Oshawa Fair, which opens on Thursday, will, however have a splendid showing of art by local exhibitors. Some of it will sHow developing genius while others will indicate that the artistic sense of Ontario County is worthy ' of its curture and history, SINCLAIR SAYS PREMIER SHOULD (Continued from page 1) Stacey "representing the Government of Ontario" appears before the Osh- awa Council to inject into municipal politics a matter which has been delegated by the Legislature to the Liquor Control Board. Premier Fer- guson should lose no time in telling Mr. Stacey that he was not "'repre- senting the Government of Ontario." If the Premier does not do so, then the people will be justified in saying tht the Liquor Control Act is not in the hands of the Liquor Control Board but in the hands of a partisan | Government for partisan purposes. Mr. Stacey's statement becomes a "representing the Government of Ontario", he makes it before the representatives of the people of Osh- | trol Act in the hands of the Govern- | pearing before public bodies to ad- public and Provincial matter, when, | | can defeat any one opposing him in | eral support. awa in Council. Will the Government | of Ontario allow the statement of | Mr. Stacey to go unchallenged? The | question now is.---Is the Liquor Con- | | as if the contest would be very spec- | tacular, ment with its representatives ap- vocate the establishment of liquor stores, or is it in the hands of the Liquor Control Board to carry out its provisions. Let Mr. Ferguson speak and say whether Mr, Stacey was representing the Government or not. Let Mr. Ferguson say whether the Act is being administered by his Government or by the Liquor Con- trol Board. Mr. Stacey's statement demands a statement from the Pre- mier, for the people of the whole Province, "As to Mr. Stacey's challenge to run as Mayor, on his proposed pol- icy, that is a minor matter. History shows that wherever there is a Gol- iath, there is also a little David with a sling and a few well-selected stones. Mr. Stacey states that he be- lieves that the people of this town support him in his policy, and that the Conservative people of Oshawa the matter. He eliminates all Lib- He must know that very many Conservatives will not support him in it. He also eliminates "banners and bands, songs and prayers" from his support, and bans collections at church doors. He also chastises the Oshawa Daily Times. "At this distance it does not look excepting in regard to the ma jority- which an opponent would have. "The people of Oshawa can look after their own Mayoralty contests, but the Government of Ontario has been placed in a very awkward posi- tion. The question is whether the Government, for political purposes, is handling the Liquor Control Act. Is the action of Mr. Stacey typical of what is going on in other rid- ings? "The Premier must now repounce Mr. Stacey, and his action, or accept the position his "representative" has placed the Government in be- fore the people of Ontario." TAUNTON Taunton, Sept. 8.--Mprs. Gar- field Trevail spent the week end in Toronto, and also visited the Exhibition while there. Several attended Mr. R. Beath's sale on Monday. ig Birks and children, Alec an ary, who were holida at Mr. J. McGregor's have daring to Toronto. Miss Gladys Doan, Stayner, re- LI BV EL TY Te Heavy En On Sale Wednesday, each . Sale Wednesday, pair ....... Genuine Leather Shopping Sale Wednesday, each Wednesday, pair .... Wednesday, each Sale Wednesday, each Wednesday, yard . On Sale Wednesday, ders, fancy borders. There's A Window Full of Wonderful Bargains for Wednesday Morning These Are Some of Them! 36 inch White Spot Curtain Marquisette, On Fr Wednesday, yard ........ Bath Toweh, 21 x 42 inches, Ibex Flannelette Blankets, hid x " inches, On On Sale Wednesday, each .. Ecru Lace Curtain Panels, fringed ends, White Marquisette Ruffled Curtains, Men's Strong Umbrellals, steel frames. On Sale Wemen's Colored Umbrellas, short handles, On 40 inch All Wool Navy Serge, fast dye. On Sale 52 inch Irish Linen Lunch Cloths, colored bor- Fancy Face Cloths, reg. 15¢ quality, checks and On Sale Wednesday, 3 for PAGE THREE A rm ------ A EE ---------- 19¢ 34c $2.10 n taong) 00 cane tetera tattanannartatene Bam, oy, on se gg $1.00 $1.00 > 59¢ $1.39 25¢ each Friday, Mr. and Mrs, Arnott and family Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Wight, and daughters, Jean and Aileen, spent the week end and the holiday on a motor trip to Peterborough, Lake- field, Burleigh Falls and at places of interest on the Kawartha Lakes. Misses Doris and Ada Cobon are attending the Oshawa High School. Mrs. George Scott, Ray and on Monday. Some from this vicinity recently visited the Kent flower gardens at Port Perry, There is at pres- ent a lovely mass of bloom from the rose garden to the wonderful display of the gladiolus and dahlias. Mr. Fred Cobon has purchased a Ford coach. Some from this locality attended the shower given to Mr, and Mrs. Malcolm McGregor, by Mrs. Hil- Grace, visited friends in Columbus, bert Trevail, of Centre street, Osi lawa, How many give te Woams [7 \ EV sumed her duties as teacher of Maxwell's on Tuesday. During the holidays, Miss Doan had .a very interesting trip 10 the Pacific Miss Elsie Bradley gave a jolly little party to her schoolmates on | Coast and also visited various places | of interest em route. i when the telep) when she needs to telephone, does your wife have to race down that l-o-n-g hall? As a business' man, you in- sist that your should be at your elbow. For as little as the price of a daily news in another room. At the new low price hun- dreds of subscribers are put- ting in extension telephones. Decide now to have one, and give us a call! I your apartment, is the telephone in the living room? And is there a l-on-g hall leading*to the kitchen? times a day, hone rings, or telephone you can ce an extension H. M. BLACK

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