Oshawa Daily Times, 17 Mar 1928, p. 7

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THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, MARCH 17, 1928 = ------ COLLEGIATE CHATTER As it was In rugby, Oshawa Col- 1¢giate Justitute again goes out of the Ontario championship rumning this vear, thanks to, the University ToRonto Schools; The rugby me which put us out was far fom being a walk away and neith- er was the series of basketball S@mes, the last of which was seen last night and resulted in a 25 to 19+ victory for the U TS. quin- tette. * & % The first game of the sefles which was played on the U.T.S. floor on Wednesday was just as good a game as that seen here yes- terday afternoon, althought in many respects it was quite differ- ent, the score for example being one instance, and sensational play- ing of the Qshawa team in the first half which resulted in them being ahead at the close of the period by a 19 to 12 score, being another. un When "Tiny," or Dick Douglas, the U.T.S. center, gets under an opponent's basket with the ball above him, there is indeed some merry excitement until he either finds the net or lets the ball slip out of his grasp. Up in Toronto he almost had the O.C.I. guards tearing their hair in their futile efforts to check nim while he soine- times took three or four shots he- fore he finally located the rizht spot on the boards. J * An interesting change vesterday in Oshawa's arrangement with the guards standing one behind the other in a line with Hubbell at center. Those who saw the game in Tor- onto will readily understand and appreciate the change when they remember the tactics used hy U. * was made defensive HARDWOOD FLOORS Laid by Expert Mechanics. All floors finished like new. B. W HAYNES 161 King St W Office phone 481; Res 180 R 2 Eo S. in the last period of the game in the Queen City which netted them basket after basket through outwitting the Oshawa defence on a clever play which had variations and which always seemed to end up with a player directly beneath the basket for a shot that hardly ever went amiss. Yesterday's new arrangement prevented this play from being carried out. LJ * LJ] Don't forget too soon the game in North Toronto Collegiate on Monday which -was beyond a doubt the fastest if mot the most excit- ing game in which the seniors have played this season. The U. T. S. games had many inactive moments throughout but the North Toronto affair was a regular non- stop cyclone from start to finish with a particularly outstanding climax in the last five or ten min- utes of play. Whether or not yesterday's U. T. S. game is the last game of the seasoh is not yet decided, a!- though with examinations being announced to being on March 26, it may be. If so it will in al probability be the last game in which four of the players, Gum- mow, Hubbell, Baird and Young will ever officially wear the colors of Oshawa Collegiate Institute, and in fact it may be the last time for several years that they, along with Carver and Barnum, will ever again play basketball togethér as a team. After two, three and even four years of playing together and for the school, this indeed means something. * With a last minute rush for touching up and completing some of the articles, the Acta Ludi goes into the hands of the printer on Monday of next week, and from then on, mum will be the word as to when the Acta Ludi will be completed or as to what it will he like, until the finished product goes on the market. Only a tew advertisements are being Becepled after Monday. * * LJ The gymnasium display is now the centre of interest in the school and the elaborate preparations can- not help hut draw the enthusiasm The laundry that serves tea We find that a short rest period, with a cup of tea all round, during the morning and again in the afternoon, makes for better work--so at ten o'clock and four the gong sounds and the power is shut off for ten minutes, 0» employes ! ~»~fit and your laundry is better, which, after all, is our constant objective? Have you enquired about oug constant objective, Have you enquired about our five different services? You will find one to exactly suit your needs. These include the super- speed "overnight" wash, Our young lady will ex- plain to you. Phone to- day. Phone 788 | and of everyone and make them resolve that exams or no exams, nothing will stop them from turning wut either on Thursday or Friday nights of next week to see the dis- play. w * LJ The ticket selling contest the display is a popular one and is bringing results both in the school and in the homes. 'The idea of having no more tickets printed for each night than the gymnasium can accommodate is a good one, and the result moreover may he that unless some studen's decide to procure their tickets early, they might find themselves unohie . to gain admittance through not hav- ing bought one of the blue or pink pasteboards while they had the chance, for Ld W This week the * inspector of the academie section of the school, Mr. I. M. Levan of the department of education at Toronto, visited and made his annual tour of In- tion. He closed his last day's sojourn with a most instructive interesting address at assem- bly on Friday morning while on Thursday evening he was tender- ed a luncheon by the staff. spec The Japanese bride who is to marry the prince will wear trousers at the wedding. The only difference hetween this lady and most brides East YE 22 King St. in this area is that she merely | wears them at the wedding.--Ot- | tawa Journal. DENIES REPORT PLANE IN MAINE Resident Dispels Ray of Hope That Aviators Safe Greenville, Me., March 16.--Re- port that William A. Cole, Post- master of Kokadjo, 20 miles from here, had seen an unidentified plane flying northwestward at 6 o'clock yesterday morning was de- nied by him tonight. He told in- vestigators sent out by Deputy Sheriff Adelbert G. Rogers that he had meither seen nor heard the plane, according to the Depury. The report, coupled with a fur- ther notification that John Dyer and his wife, in the same vicinity, had heard the plane's motor at that time, led to hurried telephoning to camps and small communities throughout the Moosehead Lake re- gion, in the belief that the craft might have been the missing Hincheliffe monoplane Endeavor, Search Falls. Search by woodsmen, however, failed to reveal any plane in the region, Two men sent into the ter- ritory in automobiles today re- turned tonight with the same ,u- port. If a Government or a commer- cial plane were ordered to search the section, as indicated in an ear- lier despateh from Washington , it would have an opportunity to land on Moosehead Lake. Reports were that the ice was solid and the sur- face smooth. A Faint Hope New York, March 16.--A faint hope revived today that the Hon. Elsie Mackay and Captain Walter Hincheliffe reached these shores, for which they set out on the plane Endeavor from England eayly on Tuesday morning. It depended solely on reports from persons in the vicinity of Greenville, Maine, that an uniden- tified plane had heen heard ana sighted at 6 a.m., flying in a North- western direction, If this were the British craft, it was near the limit of its fuel supply, and a forced landing would have plunged it in. to a wilderness broken only hy lumber camps and a few very small settlements. Plane Ma: Search The reports came from the north- east of Greenville, several from Kokadjo, a postoffice in the unor- ganized Township of Frenchtown, which has 33 inhabitants. It is sev- en miles east of Moosehead Lave, 50 miles from the Canadian hor- der, and about 120 miles from the City of Quebec. Deputy Sheriff Adelbert BE. Rog- ers failed to find any one who could identify the plane in the course of questioning by telephone of points within the county. The Canadian Government was report- ed to be considering sending a plane from Montreal to search in the vicinity, and Washington offi- cials were endeavoring to locate un army plane in the vicinity, MR. ASQUITH'S GREAT MOMENT We shall remember Mr. As- quith first of all for the courage with whieh he faced the sudden and terrible crisis of July, 1914, when Germany went to war. His Cabinet . was divided; he was in the midst of a bitter political con- flict over Irish Home Rule and Welsh Disestablishment; the coun- try was utterly unprepared for a conflict with the greatest miliary power in the world, At thet su- preme moment, Mr. Asquith, as he then was, rose to the fuil height of his opportunity, His calm and quiet determination to take up the German challenge and, regardless of the consequences to honor our pledge to defend Belgian neutrality was irresistible. Do You Own Your Own Rea! Estate and . Insurance DISNEY | ELGIN ST.6 ROOM NEW erick | Bungalow, hardwood floors, chestnut trim. Immediate pos- | session, Price only $4,500. | Terms to suit, HORTON & FRENCH Mundy Bldg., Phone 2696 - Good lot on Oshawa Blvd. Sewer and water $550 URIAH JONES Phone 2667 Cor. Bond and Simcoe | -- ------ | C. RTER'S Real Estate 5 King St. E. or phone 1380 ---------- HONE' AP 793" 4% Prince ST. Oshaws, Ont. i 1 0 Te LOANS No Commission BRADLEY BROS. Gop pep ppp ni Ai Ke IR aN dh Beautiful 7-room brick home on one of the best residential streets; chestnut trim, oak floors, sunroom, electric mantel, divided cellar, up- to-the-minute in every respect. Price very reasonable. Terms ar- ranged. Desirable 5-room district for £2.900, ance $30 monthly, home in good $400 cash, bal- Wiy pay rent? LYCETT'S RFAL ESTATE 25 King St. E. Phone 205 in the heart of Oshawa, within five minutes walk of four corpers. Cheap for quick sale, with $600 buys $4,200 6 room brick veneer house, All conveni- ences, oak floors down, Chestnut trim, on paved street. with small cash $2,800 payment buys 14 acre truck farm. Close to Oshawa. Sulley's Real Estate 41 King St. W. Phone 2580 or 5164 ---- REAL ESTATE Homes built to suit purchasers. R.M. KELLY $10 Simcoe St. N. Phone 1668W ----r------ LIBRARY NEWS One of the gutstunding books among the new fiction is the Mad Carews by Martha Ostenso. More sensational in plot than Miss Ostenso's previous movels, the present tale has something of the excitement of a thriller in its ro- mantic, half-mad characters, the Carews. Yet there is truth and reality in the midwestern scene, and in the sturdy natives, whose petty quarrels, faults, virtues, joys and sorrows form the backbone of the story, The Marked Man, a romance of the Great Lakes, by Detzer is a good story about fish ermen, coastguards and a lights house keeper along the northern shores of Lake Michigan. It con- cerns principally the struggle of a boy who feared a storm but who fically proved to himself that he was not the coward his seaman father thought him. The Cap of Youth by J, A. Steuart is an ideal- ized and romantic version of an early love affair of Robert Louis Stevenson with a Highland girl, Katie Drummond, The readers of F, W, Crofts detective stories and the creator of Inspector French, will welcome his last book, The Starvel Hollow Trage- dy, The destruction of an old house on lonely Yorkshire moors by fire, with three charred bodies, indicated nothing but accidental death at the coroner's inquest, But by the slightest of clues, In- spector French uncovered a mon- strous crime which arouses keen interest in the unravelling, Iron and Smoke Ly Shella Kaye-Smith is a novel written after the tradi- tion of Thomas Hardy. The book pursues an uneven course to the end, a course often and violent- ly interrupted by the workings of a cruelly careless fate. The one stabilizing element in the story is the friendship of Jenny and Isa- bel, who had both loved the same man and had heen saerificed by him to his land. Ballyhoo by Beth Brown is a story of carnival life, the lowest rung in the show game ladder. Into this life step- ped Virginia Redfieldd-Pendleton of Virginia. What happened to her in that upward climb from the lowest rung in the ladder to the highest is the subject of Ballyhoo. A hook of representative war stories is C'est la guepre ed. by J, G. Dunton. The stories have heen selected in the most part from magazines. The Burning Ring by K. Burdekin is an unsual book, It relates how a mediocre sculptor sitting on his lawn of a fine summer's day, discovers a wishing ring lying on his knee, From this moment he embarks on an extraordinory series of adven- tures, some diverting, some ters rible. He wishes himself back into the past. First he finds him- self in- Roman Britain, a savage propitiated hy his fellows as a lunatic. Next, he becomes a trusted friend of Charles II. Fin- ally he sojourns for a while in the olden Elizabethan age. These three excursions are linked up in the form of a parable that the reader must interpret for himself, The library has now a bound copy of the World's Work maga- zine for 1927, at the service of its patrons, The magazine Is made more accessible by the use of the Reader's Guide to Periodical Lit- erature as any article may be readily found. The Times Office kindly denoted a hound edition of the 1922 Oshawa Reformer which is at present in the Reference | Room of the library. At this season of dances, Putnam's Book of Par- ties by M. Aspinwall will prove very useful. It is a book of sug- gestions for parties and entertain- ments for various oceasions, There are full directions for hnli- day affairs, beginning Year's and ending with Christmas, engagements, announcements, showers, wedding anniversaries, children's parties, and miscellan- eous parties. Your Growing Child by H. A, Bruce is a book of interest to every parent, Com- monsense methods of rearing children are discussed in this book which offes up-to-date material on education, child psychology, child nutrition and special prob- lems of chillhood. The Montes- sori Method by Maria Montessori is a clear, interesting exposition of the method so successfully us- ed with young children by the originator, The Cyclopaedia of Social Usage by H. L. Roberts is a book of manners and customs of the twentieth century. Photo- graphic Art Secrets by W. Nut- ing is an illustrated discussion on the techmique of taking good pic- tures, with practical advice on every phase from the selection of a camera to the revealing of spec- ial photographic secrets. There are numerous illustrations, the merits and faults of each plate be- ing briefly pointed out. The A B interesting and readable Part one jis an outline of a study and is written for the beginning stu- dent. It contains material on draughtsmanship, architecture as a profession and eo-operation be-! tween architect and draughtsman. ( Part two is 'a brief history of architecture from fits bg innings to its latest developments i» Amer- ica. A small booklet, Television, by A. Dinsdale, describes in sim- ple language the pripeiple of tel- evision or seeing by wireless, which has made possible the transmission of photographs ov- er many hundreds of miles. Mod- ern Automobile Painting by M. J. Pearce is intended as a helpful is an book. architecture as tor-car finishes. It has been the "aim to point out the underlying principles" and "at the same time give detailed information regard- «ing each major step to be taken in finishing an automobile." "Shall women be ordained?" -- Headline. The old-fashioned notion that they were ordained for man has gone by the boards long ago. --Brantford Expositor. Christ Church (ANGLICAN) North Simcoe School (Temporarily) REV. R. B. PATTERSON, Sunday School, 10 a.m. Morning Prayer, 11 am. CHRISTIAN "Church W. P. FLETCHER, B.A, D.D. Sunday, March 18 11 a.m.--"He Wants You." 2.30 p.m. -- Sunday School. REV, 7 p.m. -- "Hurrah Home!" St. George's ANGLICAN Bagot and Centre Sts. C. R. dePENCIER, M. A, 39 Athol Street West Sunday, March 18 Holy Communion--S§ a.m. 11 a.m.--Morning Prayer Sunday School Centre St.--2.30 p.m, 7 p.m.--Evensong, Baptisms 2nd Sunday each month Lenten Service Wednesday, 8 p.m. Confirmation class Friday, 8 p.m. in the Chapel. Cor, CANON Tenderness that he should touch them; that brought them. me, and forbid them not: God. 15, ter therein. children by bad names, be like Jesus in taking them blessing them. Amen. Forgive us if we have set them a wrong example. to Children Mark 10:13. And they brought young children to him, and his disciples rebuked those 14. But when Jesus saw it, he was much displeased, and said unto them, Suffer the little children to come unto for of such is the kingdom of Verily | say unto you, Whosoever shall not re- ceive the kingdom of God as a little child, he shall not en- 16. And he took them up in his arms, put his hands upon them, and blessed them. PRAYER. Forgive us, O Lord, if we have ever called Forgive us if we have lied to them. May we up sweetly into our arms and Remember the Sabbath Day, to Keep It Holy. --Exodus 20:8. Go to Church Sunday. 52 ---- CHRISTIAN SCIENCE First Church of Christ, Scientist, 64 Colborne Street East Sunday, March 18 "MATTER" Church Service parties and Wednesday Meeting 8 p.m. { through Christian Science. You are cordially invited to at- tend the services and to make use of the with New | C of Architecture by C. M. Price | guide to anyone interested in mo- | | Free Public Reading Room | where the Bible and all authorized | Christian Science literature may be read, borrowed or purchased and periodicals subscribed for. Open on | Tuegdays and Thursday from 12 to 4, and Saturdays from 3 to 5 p.m TT i PENTECOSTAL ASSEMBLY OF CANADA OVER ARGADE. ON COE ST. N Sunday, March 18 Sunday School 10 a.m. Worship 11 a.m. Evangelistic Meeting 7 m. Committee in charge. All welconie, SIM- p. CHRISTADELPHIAN "WHEN THY JUDGMENTS ARE IN THE EARTH THE INHABITANTS OF THE WORI, 1 WiLL LEARN RIGHT - EOUSNES Isaiah 26.9 Christ to return ad force the nations to acknowledge Hi m and give Glory to God, then there shall be "peace on earth and good will among men." Pon't fail to read Psalm 2, be fultilled, It's soon to Sunday School at close of | "" "'Establishnig Equal Justice, Simcoe St. United Church REV, Living Among Men," vels and Teachings of the fam- ous Irish Saint, Monday, 8 p.m.-- Young People's League, Wednesday, 8 p.m.--Midweek Service. John H. Renwick, Organist and Choirmaster. H. S. DOUGALL Minister Simcoe St, 8. DR. Phone 148 Sunday, March 18 11 a.m, -- "The Science of 7 p.m, -- St, Patrick. Mar- Special Music, Subject; » -- of SPECIAL SERVICES, 11 a.m.--Rey. George preacher and reader. 3 pm.--Sunday School "Ben Hur'--A Tale story, Tickets, 35¢c and 25¢, Study of the Pupil." ST. ANDREW'S PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH UNITED CHURCH OF CANADA REV. F. J. MAXWELL, Minister Including testimonies of Healing | i Topic, 7 p.m.--Rev, Mr. Morley will tell the fascinating The Young People of the church will assist the pas- tor in conducting both of these services, Monday, 8 p.m.--Concert and Entertainment. Geo, E. Morley, elecutionist, assisted by leading local artists, Wednesday, 8 p.m.--Midweek Prayer Service, Thursday, 7.30 p.m.--Dr. Fletcher's Class, the -- SUNDAY, MARCH 18 E. Morley, B.A. special "The Drive of Jehu." and Bible Classes. of the Christ, "The Albert Street UNITED R. A, WHATTAM, Minister 30 Elena St. Phone 567F Sunday, March 18 11 Apostles REV. a.m.--"Acts of the in Trinidad." 2:30 p.m.--Supday School and Eirra Bible Class. 7 p.m.--*"Jesus and Her- 0d." Song Service, PENTECOSTAL CHURCH OF THE ASSEMBLIES OF CANADA 200 Kin; St. West PASTOR J. T. BALL SUNDAY, MARCH 18 10 a.m.--Sunday School. 11 a.m.--Morning Wor- ship. 7 p.m.--Evening Worship. Services Tues, and Thurs- day at 8 p.m. Wednesday, 3 p.m.--Pray- er Service. RUMANIA HONORS ENVOY T0 ENEVA Count Apponyi Gets Ova- tion Upon Return to Budapest Vienna, Mar. 17.--While the | 88-year-old Count Albert Apponyi was received with an ovatiop upon his appearance in the Hungarian chamber of deputies at Budapest Tuesday following his return from Geneva, where he represented his country at the session of the coun- cil of the League of-Nations, down- | heartedness was apparent in Ru- what jis felt as a Ru- in the five-year- mania over manian defeat loa Hupsariap: Rumanian Vand ex- | | propriation quarrel. In Tuesday's session of the Ru- 1 all parties ap- proved the refusal of Foreign Minister Titelescur to accept the | decision at the league council in | to that dispute. Minister Titeleseu who openly and copiously at Geneva under the charges of Sir Austen | Chamberlain, the British Foreign Secretary and Foreign Minister Aristide Briand of France that he was endangering the peace of the | word by bis intransigeance, gave | a detailed account of the Ruman- lian chamber | suid that the league councils ae- tion meant an infringement of Ru- manian sovereignty. One by one, the leaders of the | minority Rumanian parties stood up to declare their solidarity with the government on this "crucial | question of foreign policy." M. | manian chamber wept of his attitude and | [Madgeary, the Peasants party | leader, while supporting the goy- ernment in the dispute, chargel | that the government was to be | blamed ""because its general policy | had robbed Rumania of sympathy abroad." Premier Bratianu de- clared that Rumania regards the Hungarian land matter as settled. Nevertheless, the signs are that the Peasants party will use the Geneva disappointments as a wel- come pretext for another attempt to force the liberal government in- to resigning. Pedlars seem to be causing as much trouble in the Legislature as they do at the front door.--Peter- boro Examiner. - Their honeymoon will con- tinue until February 20th, - when they will go to New York to live. | --Washington, D.C., Star. Presbyterian Church Simcoe Street North and Brock Street REV. A. C. REEVES, B.A. 34 Brock St. W. Phone 1833 Sunday, March 18 "The Day's 11 am. -- Man." 3 pm--Sunday School, 7 pm-- Traditions." Closing Evangelistic Services Sunday Night at 8.15, "Holding the Calvary Baptist (INDEPENDENT) Sunday, March 18 atthe Y. M. C. A, Rev, F, Dickie will preach, 10.00 a, m, = Sunday School, 11 a.m --"The Power of a Personal Experience of the Living God." 8.30 p.m, -- Meeting: Athol St, Mission ad- dressed by Rev, Walter Hughes, of Toronto, See Special advertisement on page 16, 7 p.m.--*"What a Won- derful Saviour," A Cordial Welcome to all Emmanuel BAPTIST CHURCH Sunday, March 18 Minister: Rev. John Galt, 11 a.m.~'"Present . Day Miracles', Sunday School 8 p.m, All invited, 7 p.m~Evangelistic Ser- vice with Community Sing- ing from 6,50 p. m, BY.P.U, Monday 8 p.m, Prayer Meeting Wednes- day 8 p.m, Choir practice 8 pm, Strangers come. Thursday always wel- KING STREET United Church REV. C. W, DeMILLE B.A, Minister 139 King St. E~~Phone 218 Ir---- Sunday, March 18 I -- 11 a.m.~--Morning Wor. ship. "Thy Word a8 Lamp." 2.30 p.m.~Sunday School, 6.45 p.m,--Song Service, 7 p.m.--Evening Worship, #Serving God at Our Own Altar." Monday, 7.45 -- Young People's League, Wednesday, 7.30--Prayer Service, (Keep Monday, March 26, clear). Unity Truth Centre §. 0. BE. HALL, KING ST. E. SUNDAY, MARCH 18 11 a.m.--Public Service. Everybody welcome A THREE TRAPPED 10 WEEKS Three men were trapped for more than 10 weeks in the famous Lonship's Lighthouse at Land's End England, during the recent storms. The men ordinarily do a month's duty at the lighthouse, but rough weather and stormy seas made it impossible to get a boat to traverse the mile and three- quarters to land. A relief boat waited in Sennen Cove with a stock of supplies, but was helpless dur- ing that time. The long vigil of the men to keep the light burning was not even relieved by radio, for . their receiving set had been sent to shore for repairs just before the' storm broke... All three were in | good spirits when rescued.

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