Oshawa Daily Times, 7 Jul 1928, p. 18

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WOMAN JAILED FOR BEATING MAD Hired Girl at $1.25 Per Week Had Rough Time London.--Described as the wife of an officer in the Royal Navy, Mrs. Helen Malet Warden was sent to prison for a month at Ro- chester for beating her servant. It was stated that the servant, Eva Pittilla, who was 17, came to Mrs. Warden from Sunderland last No- vember. She was to have been paid $1.25 a week, but alleged that ome payment of $1.10 was all that she had received. The girl said that she was fre- quently beaten with sticks, and de- clared that Mrs. Warden had broken two hair brushes over her. Every washing day, because she could not lift the sheets, she was thrashed. She wrote to her father at Sund- erland asking for money to pay her fare home, but Mrs. Warden heard of this and she threatened to take her into the basement and give her the worst thrashing she had had in her life. Collapse In April, said rva, Mrs. Warden cut her hair off without her consent. Mrs. Warden's children were unkind to her and had occasionally assisted their mother in thrashing her. She was not alowed to go out alone and her life became so intoler- able that she eventually put a note under the gate to the servant next door, THE OSHAWA DAILY. TIMES, SATURDAY, JULY 7, 1928 THESE MEN WORK WHILE OTHERS SLEEP This is The Times night staff in charge of the foreman, Wm. Corbett, who is shown at the left of the group. i not aboard the tram. A thorough : search was instituted, and he was found im his berth umcomscions. Thursday, the members of his party explained that they made a solemn promise to Featherstone that should he be taken ill while on the train, the fact should not be divulged. He had often had such attacks before, declared Reginald Featherstone, om the witness stand Wednesday night, on ome occasion being unconscious for five days, and no fears of a fa- tal seizure were cmtertained. Removed by the police to hospital, Featherstone died a few hours later without regaining comsciousness. "The coroner's inquiry was adiourn- ed until next week. TRASHY LITERATURE (Toronto Globe) Trashy or filthy literature should not be allowed in by virtue of pay- ing a mere 25 per cent. penalty to the Treasury. It should be rigia- ly and absolutely excluded. If there are 100 periodicals on the dutiable list which are degrading in character, the sooner they are removed from that list the better, They should be put out of this country and kept out. Canada has enough evils of domestic origin, She should not be made the cess- pool for the overflow of United States filth, literary or otherwise, LORD TERRINGTON (Arthur Brisbane) Lord Terrington, British peer, stole $300,000, admits it and sues THAT FEMININE INSTINCY (Journal of Commerce, Montreal) "This is a rough life," remarked a broker. "One of our custon ers has carried 2,000 shares of Dodge Bros. preferred for several months and on my advice that the price of the stock indicated the but what would she think if she knew the short end of the story? "Fortunately I don't talk in my sleep." THE INCORRIGIBLE TUNNEY Since the*day it was discovered that he had a book Gene Tunney | 3 }) i t to the square inch, But it is used for rolling "mats", NO LADIES! THIS IS NOT AN TRONING MACHINE It is said by the manufacturers to have a pressure of 30 tons Its chiel characteristics are po wer and squeeze--plenty of both, An Inspector of the R.S.P.C.C. vis- ! jted the house and found the girl (he told the court) in a state of col- lapse. She was taken to a Church Army Home and examined by Dr. Kennedy, who gave cvidence that he found bruises on her shoulders, chest and legs. : Mrs, Warden deccrared that the whole of the girl's story was a fabri- cation, but she admitted that Eva bad been thrashed by her children, who 'sceried to hate her." Eva, she said, wns an unsatisfac- tory maid, but she had begged to be kept. dividend out." "Your case is mild compared to mine," replied a trader. "My wife bought 200 shares of Radio at $by a share and refused to sell on my advice whey it reached $100 so I sold 200 shares short in my ac- count and was confident that in a féw weeks, when the stock was selling much lower, I could cou- vince her she didn't know any- thing about the market. I cover- ed at 160 and took a loss of $12,- was in danger he sold [000 and my wife gold out at a profit of $25,000, She doesn't | has been a great disappointment to patrons of what W, O, McGeehun calls the cauliflower industry. His latest lapse is to plan a walking trip in Europe with Thornton Wild- er, author of that phenomenon among best-sellers, 'The Bridge of San Luis Rey," which has noth- ing to do with Mr, Luis Firpo. The champion and the novelist will go abroad shortly after the Heeney fight in July. They hope to spend some time in Rye, England, in the home sacred to the memory of Henry James. It must be apparent at last that | think mueh of my judgment now Gene js incorrigible. A Marvel of Elec trical Efficiency-- And Complexity The switchboard that provides the automatic control for the big newspaper press. We don't know how it works, but the Bowra Electric Company found out and it has not given the slightest trouble since. / / basis this is a magnificent picture, THIS IS POSITIVELY NOT A STILL It is the best picture we could get of the Gurney Boiler that heats The Times building. "Handsome is that handsome does and on that to jail for four years. That hap- | pens in Britain. | Had the gentleman come to this | '|country and made it $30,000,000 instead of $300,000, he would be on his private car or yacht now, .|and able lawyers would be de- nouneing anybody trying to inter. fere with him Or, as Senator Nye puts it, "You can't convict §100,000,000." HOME OF THE REFORMER ERE (TED JUST BEFORE THE WA This picture shows The Reformer building (Mundy Blogk) that { completed just before the outbreak of the War in 1914. At that ting was considered to he the most up-to-date newspaper and job .printis building in a town the size of Oshawa anywhere in Canada, RAILWAY T0 HELP MINING INDUSTRY Thornton Expresses Opinion in Regard to Hudson Bay Line Winnipeg, July 6.--Even {f the Hudson Bay railway serves no other purpose, the cost of its eon- struction will he amply justified in its value to Canada's rapidly de- veloping mineral projects, declar- ed Sir Henry Thornton, presidest of the Canadian National ways, before his departure from here on his western tour of inspec- tion, "I do not mean to insinuate any doubts as to the value of the new "but I helieve that even if it does dustry will cost." Sir Henry declared that the Can- adia nNational Railways was ag- make it worth son Bay and Flin Flon lines. habilitated from Pas, Man., to mile 265, 'involving the placing of 850,- { 000 cubic yards of material for hallasting and bridge filling. The divisional yard at mile 327 is be. inz completed and further perma- nent facilities, grading, track lay- ing, and hallasting will be in pro- gress on the Fort Churchill exten- sion. Grading and track laying on the Flin Flon Railway will be complet- ed and sufficiently ballasted to per- mil inauguration of revenue traf- fic by the end of this year, the | president said. With respect to branch line ex- tensions Sir Henry stated that par- ticular attention womld be devoted to those sections of the west where density of population warranted more adequate service. The policy of the railway was to go slowly and carefully into the whole mat- ter of branch lines. WAR VETERAN HAD STRANGE ILLUSIONS Winnipeg, July 7.--A strange story of a 43-year-old shellshocked war victim, Percy E. Featherstone, a widower, who died in the hospital | here on Sunday, was related to a coroner's jury Wednesday night. Featherstone had suffered greatly since his return from the war. At times he was mentally affected and had believed himself possessed of | great wealth, a titled personage and | the recipient of numerous decora- tions for distinguished service im | France and Belgium. Featherstone, who was engaged to Rail- | railway as a net outlet for western | grain to the sea," Sir Henry added, | not prove all that is hoped in that | regard, its value to the mining m- | the | gressively pushing forward a pro- | gram of construction on the Hud- | The | Hudson Bay Railway is being re- | | be married to Miss Eleanor Mason, of Montreal, who had acted as his~ housckeeper, was taken ill while en route from Cotquitlam, B.C, to Mons treal. He was accompanied on the train by Miss Mason, his 20-year-old son Reginald and a Miss Lillian Ma- son. Local police, advised of his illness and requested to make inquiry into his sanity, met the train upon its arrival here, hut were told he was. JUST ROLLS OF PAPER WEIGHING 600 TO 700 LBS, EACH The paper storage basement beneath a section of the garage, It will hold a carload of newsprint, RATCLIFF Paper Co., Ltd. [Established 1889) Wrapping Papers of all kinds 80 York Street Toronto

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