Oshawa Daily Times, 22 May 1928, p. 18

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PAGE EIGHTEEN CHURCH REFUSES BURIAL SERVICE Christian Scientists Object to Calling Doctor Before Death Bridgeport, Conn, May 21.-- Charges that the Christian Science Church here refused to bury Wil- lia mope, prominent manufactur- er, who died Wednesday, because he called a doctor just before he died have aroused heated com- ts in this city. hy was my husband's last wish," Mrs. Elsie H. Pope, his wi- dow, told the United Press "that the funeral should be conducted by the Christian Science Church. For five years until his death, Mr, Pope devoutly attended services at the First Church of Christ, Scientist and religiously practis- ed the tenets of Christian Science belief. Mrs. Pope said her husband had been attended by a Christian Science reader for four years. Pope had never joined the church, she said. Church officials here refused to comment on the case other than to say Pope was not a member of the congregation. EARL OF DERRY FORMS A COM- PANY London, May 21.---The Earl of Derby has followed the lead of sev- eral other great land-owners in converting a large part of his Lan. cashire estates into a limited lia- bility company. The company has heen registered as Prescot Propri- etary, Ltd!, with a nominal capital ' of £10,000, Among the company's objects is to acquire lands and buildings by purchase, lease or ex- change. The directors are the Earl of Derby and his heir, Lord Stan- ley, There will be no public fis- sue. The principal object in con- verting the estates into a company, it is understood, is to avoid the heavy death duties, In recent years Lord Derby has sold portions of his huge estates, the most re- cent heing the Bootle estate, for £1,717,500, last November. AT cial. Get yours now ... 'Boys' Long Khaki vee HOLIDAY BARGAINS Dominion Clothing - Company 25 Doz, Men's Straw Hats. Holiday spe. $1 39 serra rare ENGLISH BISHOP OPPOSES CHURCH DISESTABLISHMENT London, May 21.--Preaching at Buxton, Derbyshire, receatly, Rt. Rev. Dr. B. Pollock, Bishop of Nor- wich, made he following referemce to the question of the disestablish- ment of the Church of England: -- "When people, to my mind fool- ishly, talk about the disestablish- ment of the national Church I ask myself what would happen in our country districts if the churches were disestablished and disendow- ed. IT doubt whether, with the loss of the endowments, there would be continued preaching of the Gos- pel to the poor in anything like the same way. At any rate, we should lose in ever so many places that priceless influence of the clergy man and his family making their home among the homes of his flock. They are welcome everywhere, and people of every village instinctively turn to them for sympathy and guidance. No band of itinerant preachers can have the same upe lifting effect: and remember that we can work on happy terms with our brethren of the Free Church- es. "Superfigial thinkers talk of dis- establishment as if the chief losers would be thosa in high places, It is not so. It is the poor who would lose. 1 believe that many who know the value of the freehold of oppor. tunity possessed by our parochial clergy wlil not lightly allow a few people, even though they may he imposing officials and dignitaries of the Church, to succeed in produe- ing so great a disaster." NIG FLYING PROGRAM Paris, May 20. -- Dieudonne Costes and Joseph Lebrix left Par- is this morning for Belgrade, where they had been invited by the Jugoslav aviation service, They expected to reach Belgrade about dusk. The French aviators are planning to visit Angora, Athens, Warsaw, Prague, Munich Geneva and Rome spending a few days in each city. Upon their return to Paris they will begin final pre- parations for their Paris-New York flight. / THE ee pdrd Bath, ...n0 0a Men's Cotton Socks, Men's Fancy Hose Pair... ......: -- Men's Broadcloth Shirts Each, Pr rr marae s Boys' Khaki Drill Shirts sre oe Shirts ..,. black shades. Pair, Men's Navy. Blue Serge Pair, .....0: >> Men's Black and Brown Soles. .. ... Men's Sweater Coats, heavy jumbo knit, $3 95 pre rrr dd ' Regular $5.50. crepe soles ........ Men's Fancy Tweed Cans 1 enrsir ree: » rrr A Men's and Young Men's Sweat Children's Cotton Stockings, Men's and Young Men's Top Coats. Reg, up to $24.00. Out they go at . . srr ER Children's Running Shoes, Men's Flannel Trousers CR $1.69 oe en 15 $12.50 oer. $2.98 Oxfords, Panco $2.75 sere Trousers 9c $1.39 $4.50 sar rare Buy Now and Buy at-- The Dominion Clothing Co. 68 King St. W. -- We The Store for "Dad and His Lad" Store Open Wednesday Evening Deliver -- Phone 2141 --_-- LONDON PROTESTS BUILDING SCHEME Objections Raised to Plan to Erect 22 Shops 1,953 Flats * London, May 21.--~The proposal to erect 22 shops amd 1,953 flats 'on the Foundling Hospital site, Bloomsbury, continues to evoke protests, particularly ny those who wish the site to 'be preserved as an open space. The London County Council consented a few weeks ago to the building scheme and accord- ing to W. Loftus Have, who is as- sociated with the Foundling Es- tate Protection Association the flats will rise to a greater height | than mormally permitted under the London Building Act. "On the Guilford-street frontage on a 60-foot roadway," Mr. Hue says, 'there is to stand an emor- mous block of buildings in which 22 shops occupy the ground floor, business premises the second and perhaps the third, and flats the re- maining lot, Upon this huge mass of 22 shops and flats wiil gaze the inhabitants of the charming little piazza of Guilford place and the southern side of Guilford street, Gone are the noble trees thal even now in their leafless stage bend gracefully over the hospital wall, Gone are the two fine lawns where children walked and skipped. Gone are the simple cloisters east and west where in cold or wet weather the foundlings drew the fresh and windless alr into their lungs. » "In place whereof I desery four huge blocks in the plan which, when arched in the centre facing Guilford street, become two blocks 462 feet wide. Looking east and west I see these two monsters join. ed at the ends by three-storey juac. tions each containing a large door leading off from Caroline place and Lansdowne place respectively. The inhabitants of these two pleasant four-storey terraces will look upon the sky at an acute angle over the tops of their new neighbors near- ly 100 feet high. "Immediately hetween the squares, with no inch of space di- viding the buildings from the gar. dens, will rise three more mons- ters 416 feet wide, 100 feet high, united: at the ends with three- storey units, Here are 524 flats. The two culs-de-saec north of ine square gardens are again to he joined by a new road 50 feet wide, dividing the triangular section from the rest. Between the terraces an- other long hlock will spread the full width of the space. "There are three courses open before us. The first is for the own- ers 'and lessees within 100 yards of the site to go before the Tribun. al of Appeal. The second is for the Minister of Health to modify or reject the London County Council Town Planning Scheme. The third is to buy the whole site from the owners for an agreed sum and to devote it to a worthy and beneteial purpose." MANY SAY THEY SAW MISSING DOG Invalid Girl Rests Easier as Friends Hasten to Run Down Clues Detroit, May 22.--Olive Sutton breathed a little easier last Thursday and. the medicines tasted a little less vile when she heard scattered reports that her pet talking dog had been found. And last Thursday night Olive's iriends were running down clues in an effort to find the nonde- script terrier which disappeared moie than a weck ago. The dog, which answers to name of "Mickey," and which nounces with distinctness the name "Olive," jumped from the automo- hile of a friend of Olive's family as he was taking it to the police veter- inarian to have it inoculated. Since that time Olive, who has been con- fined to her sick bed for some time has had nothing to cheer her, Many "Mickey's" Found The story of the dog's disappear- ance appeared in last Wednesday's Free Press, and the reports on the finding of the dog kept the telephone wires busy for several hours. The nondescript nature of "Mickey," who had a description which might fit many animals, added to the com- plexity of the situation, for several persons called in to say they had the missing dog. River Rouge police called in what might prove to be the real clue, when they said ope of the River Rouge police officers had found a dog answering the same description, I'he dog was found wandering in Rouge park, they said, They were holding it at the police station until someone came to identify it as the missing canine, Druggist Has Clue A man who gave his name as Mugler, a druggist at 13900 Charle- voix street, called to say a dog an- swering the description had been hanging around his store. The dog appeared lost, he said, and is fond of childreh. Stephen Benedict Drummond Cur- rie, 918 West Willis avenue, phoned to say that he is sure Olive's dog is somewhere on the west side, as he tried to capture it as it passed his home. He chased it from Fourth and Willis avenues to Calumet and Brooklyn avenues, he said, but the dog eluded him. Others called to ask further de- tails of the disappearance, and still others called in with vague "tips" on where the pet might be found. So last Thursday night, although the dog had not been returned to her home, Olive waited at her home, 19209 Schoenherr road, and felt con- siderably cheered over the prospect the pro- of the ultimate return of her pet. + THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, TUESDAY, MAY 22, 1928 SWEDEN PLANNING * FINE EXHIBITIONS Stockholm, Sweden, May 21.-- Sweden, the "land of the white summer nights," this ytar will be a real centre of exhibitions and con- gresses. In Stockholm a series of congresses and in Gothenburg and Malmco commercial fairs will be held. Not less than five Swedish cities, Qerebro, Joenkoeping, Sundsvall, Alingsaas and Uddeval- la, have organized agricultural, in- dustrial, art and cultural exhibi- tions for this summer and in a number of smaller towns special fairs will be held. All the five bigger cities, dating from mediae- val times, aré of old connected with important home or export indus- tries. Thus, Oerebro is the leading city for shoe manufacturing, Joen- koeping the centre of the Swedi:h match industry, Sundsvall tne headquarters of the timber and woodpulp industry, Alingsaas the ancient home of Swedish textile ir. dustries and Uddevalla an impor- tant centre of the Swedish fishing industry, Visby, the town of ruins and of roses, on the isle of Gotland, in the Baltic. andronce a powerful cen. tre 'of the Baltic and North Euro- pean trade, will have an agrienltur- al show and Malmoe a fishery fair, The eleventh commercial fair of Gothenburg will be opened on May 12 and last until May 20. During the past 10 years the exiibitors have usually numbered 500 every year, the visitors averaging av, 000. The popularity of the Gothen- burg fair is well illustrated by the fact that customers from some 20 foreign countries have visited the fair. Stockholm, the 'Venice of the North," will assemble the radiolo- gists of the whole world, not less than 800 delegates, many of whom will bring their families, thus bringing the number of visitors up to about 1,400 persons, This im- portant congress wiil he held July 23-27. At this congress ahout 100 lectures will be held on X-ray di- agnostics, radio therapy and radio physics. The international committee of the colonel produce merchants so- ciety has accepted an invitation from the Swedish section to hold its annual congress of 1028 in Stockholm, where everything is he- ing prepared for their reception, The Swedish Land Surveyance Department is preparing to cele- brate its 300th anniversary on June 18, 1928, and on this occasion a congress of land surveyors in the four northern countries will meet in Stockholm, to discuss interna- tional problems, The International Union of Transport Workers will organize a congress in the Stockholm Riksdag 1 ASK RADIO COMMISS'N FOR NEW CHANNELS ---- Washington, May 21.--Final recommendations for the alloca- tio mot short transoceanic wave as- signments were presented today to the Federal Radio Commission, but no final action was taken, and it is probable none will be taken until the return of Commission Caldwell on Wednesday, The recommendations, it is un- derstood, did not deal with the exact wave-lengths to be assigned those asking for them, but merely the number which should be as- signed to each applicant.' It is said there was an understanding that if there were any conflicting assign- ments a hearing of engineers wduld be held, and it is anticipated such a hearing will be held the latter part of this week or early next week. Mobile Band Unaffected The recommendations deal only with transoceamic short wave as- transcontinental wavelengths those in the mobile band. In line with what had been done during recent months, the Cana- dian Government is again asking this country for three more radio channels. A communication bearing on this subject has been forwarded to the Commission by the State Department. May Alter Scheme Should any action be taken on the Canadian situation, it is as- sumed it would materially alter the plans so far made by the Commis- sion on reallocation of waves made in the United States. Installation of television appar- atus in South African broadcasting stations is reported under consider- ation in that country by Trade Commissioner Edward D. Lawson at Johannesburg. A British tele- vision conrpany, he said, is offering broadcasting television apparatus to South African radio stations at a price between $2,500 and $3,000. Receiving sets for television recep- tion are said to he quoted at about $150 in Great Britain. ROCKEFELLER SCIENTIST DIES OF YELLOW FEVER Accra, Gold Coast Colony, Africa, May 21.--Professor Hideyo Nogu- chi, aBceteriologist of the Rockefel- ler Institute for Medical Research. died here today from yellow fever which he contracted during a lab- oratory experiment, Professor Noguchi arrived at Acera in Novem- ber to investigate this disease, nor A ---------- That new award for fossil research might be helpful in eliminating a number of politicians.--Chicago Eve- ning Post, psp------------ signments, and take up neither the |- Building July 9-14, For all these congresses trips to places, of his- torical interest or of beautiful scen- ery have been planned by the va- rious reception committees, CHURCH BELLS RING AFTER 500 YEARS Belgrade, May 21. --- For nearly five centuries the sound of church bells was not heard in Yugo Sla- via. , Now, however, ringing of church bells is generally regard- ed as a most natural thing. After the downfall of the Serhian Em- pire at Kossovo in 1339, the Turks, who conquered Serbia, re- fused in their Moslem fanaticism, to allow bells to be rung. The Christian churches remain- ed but the hells were all taken down by the Turks and many of them were made into guns, that is, all those which the people were not able to hide away until better days should come. In their place wooden clappers were made, which were struck to summon people tb the services. It was only in 1804 when the Serbs freed themselves under Karadjordle, the great grandfath- er of the present King Alexander, that hells were set up again, First, with great national rejoicing three bells were set up at Belgrade, on the ruined belfry, and were rung for three days continuously. This time the bells came to stay per- manently, PULVERIZED COAL BURNING SUCCESS Halifax, May 21. -- The collier Lingan, of the Dominion Coal com- pany's fleet, first steamer in the British Empire to be equipped with apparatus fo rburning pulver- ized coal, sailed Fri. for Sydney to Joad a coal cargo for Montreal Trial runs staged Thursday proy- ed the new equipment satisfactory. On arrival of the steamer in Montreal a party of steamship men of that eity will be taken for a run down to Three Rivers to demonstrate the new fuel system, which will mean a great saving in coal consumption, fuel cost and stoking. The apparatus was in- stalled at the Halifax shipyards. FROM SMALL, TOWNS (Montreal Herald) It is discovered that 80 percent. of the men whose names appear in a list of prominent citizens in Chicago were born in small towns. The same will be found true in al- most every large eity. There is greater likelihood of the develop- ment of individuality in small towns. People born and spend- ing their early years in large ci- ties seem to grow up to be more alike -- more of a certain type-- of a certain type--than folks who than folks who grow up in little places. In the big cities corners get knocked off and we tend to become like marbles in a bag. hi I Fg AM ) ' y . Ml O Picts of 8° Set 34 Prvet GENUINE Wm. ROGERS & SON SILVERWARE "Triumph --This pretty design can be procured in any of the many odd pieces required to set a table for any occa- sion. We might state "Triumph is Rogers quality--stands for the best. Every piece is guaranteed to give the best of satisfaction. Get our prices, some are listed here--Can be purchased in any quantity. Tea Spoons, doz., $4.00 - Dessert Spoons, doz., $7.30 Table Spoons, doz., .... $8.00 Dessert Forks, doz., .. $7.30 Knives, plated, doz., $10.30 Knives, stainless, doz., $16.50 Above Prices Are Interesting STAINLESS FLATWARE Just what you are wanting. We have it and are selling it at the following prices: Tea Spoons, doz., $1.60 Dessert Forks, doz., .. $2.60 Table Spoons, each, 25 Knives with French Deasert Spoons, doz., $2.60 blades, doz, Stainless Flatware will save lots of hard worl FELT BROS. The Leading Jewellers Established 1886 12 Simcoe St, South "Buy Where Satisfaction is a Certainty" ¢ Dress-Up -Day New Toggery or SUMMER NEW NECKWEAR EVERY WEEK NEW DENNIE TROUSERS KNICKERS SPORT SHIRTS SWEATERS BLAZERS ---- YOUR NEW SUIT AND ~ TOPCOAT FOR THE 24th MUST HAVE STYLE MUST HAVE QUALITY NEED NOT BE TOO HIGH IN PRICE Come to Anderson's and see the new Suits at the new low prices, Single and double breasted, two and three button, men's and young men's,. See the way they are styled and finished and the way they fit. Then be agreeably surprised when you hear the price~-- $25.00 Navy Serges, Grey Worsteds, Fancy Worsteds and Tweeds. --_-- ns i Get Your New Hat Here Most Oshawa men do. Largest assortment in the city. Brock, Horton, St. Lawrence, Borsalino. $6.00 $3.95 $5.00 $8.00 § SIMCOE ST. SOUTH

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