SS 2800 EE lt TS, a li ii a i EN ie 0 All the News Whale It Is News VOLUME 51--No. 11 PUbTioaa 1 Gana, Cues 'Canosa OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, APRIL 27, 1922 TEN PAGES STANDARD BANK BUYS PROPERTY ON KING ST. E Building Occupied By Boston Cafe Acquired At Cost Of $30,000 J. C. McGILL SELLS STORE J: 'W. Borsbarry is Purchaser-- " Figure. $18,000 -- Other Realty Transfers: | Pwo important real estate tran- ctions, involving business property on King Street East, have just been ompleted, and according to the prices received show that the value pt property around the Four Corners s on the upward elimb in the mat- of price, The Standard Bank has purchased om the Mackie Estate the property djoining the bank now occupied by he Boston Cafe, The price paid, it s understood, was $30,000. The broperty has a frontage of 21 feet. Ad the building is three storeys in height, It was assessed last year or $7,120, or less than one third of ts present value. The bank property bn the corner was assessed for about 90 a foot last year and the year brevious. With the steady expansion f their business in Osawa the ndard bank premises today are loo small, and the new property has en secured to allow for expansion a the future. No alterations will be nade until next spring at least, It said that several years ago (he Baak was offered the same property $3,200. Today the value has pore than trebled. Ever since Osh- wa was a centre of any importance, a site of the Standard Bank has sen used for banking purposes. The ld western Bank, absorbed by the ndard, first stood on the site, Store Property Sold Mr. J. W. Borsberry has purchased pm Mr. J. C. McGill} his store prop- y on King street east, a few doors urther east from the bank. A year go Mr. McGill bought the property pm Mr. Borsberry for $16,500. He aceived $18,000 for it a few days 0, realiing $1,500 on his deal. he property has a frontage of 22 fet nd po .st year the .store was only abd for 4,600. It js" a two torey structure and part of the up- rs is occupied by the Grand heatre. Mr. MeGill will remain in he store. » : Houses Are Moving Residential properly is said by beal agents to be much in demand, d several good sales are reported. Mr Geo. Wright has sold his puse on Elgin Street East, now pied by J. J. Callaghan, to Mr. erritt. of Bowmanville. INCLAIR'S MOTION PASSES THE HOUSE cal Member Alleges 1922 ~ Receipts Used To Get 1921 Swphs Though the Budget debate proper mot reached in the 'Legislature 'ednesday until evening, a "minor" ot debate occupied most of the fternoon, on a notice of motion of E. N. Sinclair, Liberal member South Ontario, calling for the pduction of particulars of receipts expenditures of the Government the three months, August, Sep- or and October, in each of the pe years, 1919, 1920 and 1921. . Sinclair, 'in speaking to his on, subjected the Government a financial criticism. Hoa. Peter ith said the Government could get the whole return down this ion. H. H. Dewart. Southwest Toronto, od to Mr. Sinclair's criticism | The export department and its ex- tensive activities of Oshawa's lead- ing industry, the General Motors of Canada, has been vi vidly pic- tured in a cinematogra Im show- ing the loading and move of the train of 63 cars of automobiles, which left Oshawa last Thursday for the seaboard for transportation to England, A private view of the film, pre- pared by the Maritime Motion Pic ture Company, of Bydney, N.S., was enjoyed hy members of the General Motors Executivé staff d press representatives Tuesday afternoon at the New Martin Theatre, and | the opinion of all the film is a fine piece of work. It shows not' only the immense train pulling out, with Mr, R, 8. x Laughlin handing the waybills \to the conductor, but various opera- tions at the factory that made the a i FILM VIVIDLY-DEPICTS THE GREAT ACTIVITY AT THE GENERAL MOTORS huge shipment possible, The 'dis- mantling of the cars after they have been built up and tested, the various operations carried out in the pack- ing for shipment, the loading of the cars, the huge cranes lifting the loaded boxes, the electric engines of the Oshawa Rall- way Company taking the cars from the factory to the G, T. R. railway yards, Mr. J, B. Thompson, execu- tive of the Export Department, in front of the office, Mr. Lawrence sales manager of London, Eng. leaving his office to see the train ull out, and various views of the train in motion are included in the film. Printed on the film is the in- formation that the train was over a mile long, valued at over $320,- 000, and represented the factory output of a day and a half . The film will be shown at local theatres in a few days for the bene- fit of the citizens, NEW TRAINS FOR SUMMER TRAFFIC Changes In Railway Timetables Take Effect On Sunda Next b At midnight on Sunday, April 30th, several important changes in G. T. R, and C, P. R, trains in and out of Oshawa will take place, but not until Saturday will local agenis. have the complete time tables with the changes thereon. New summer trains are be- ing put on, and one or two trains be- ing cancelled and replaced by other drains to give a better service. C, P. R. Changes On the C.P.R. there are bat two changes in trains going west as far as is known now. The train leaving now at 5 p.m. for Toronto will leave at 5.26, and the train leaving at 8 p. m. will leave earlier the time being 7.22. Going east the train leaving at 2.19 will go at 1.47. Other trains going this direction, so far as is known now, will not be changed. G. T. R. Changes Among the changes on the G.T.R. taking effect on Sunday are the gom- mencement of summer trains. Two new trains are being put on, one leay- ing Cobourg daily except Sunday at 6.20 a.m. and arriving at Toronto at 8.45 am. and another leaving To- ronio daily except Sunday at 5.10 p. m., arriving at Cobourg 7.46 p.m, There will be a ¢hange in the Sun- day trains. Train No. T10leaving Toronto at 7.456 a.m. for Trentom, arriving there at 11.05 am, bas beén cancelled. To take its place a train will leave Toronto at 7 a.m. and go right through to Brockville, instead of Trenton on Sunday and Montreal on week days. On Sunday at Brockville this train will make connection for Montreal. Train No. 109, which ran from Trénton to To- ronto on Sunday has been cancelled, and in its place a train will leave Montreal daily at 11 a. m., arriving in Toronto at 10 pm. daily. There will be otherschanges in the daily train service east and west, but local railway officials will not be in Pp ion of the lete time table until Saturday. Down Out of Trees » To Meet Saviour A powerful discourse was"delivered in the Baptist Church last might by Rev. Felix Powell, Italian evangelist, continuing his 17 day campaign in Oshawa. It was based om the New Testament narrative of Zaccheus the Publician who climbed the sycamore tree "to see Jesus who he was because be was little of stature." 'The preach- er pointed out that Zaccheus in order to see Jesus had to come down out of the tree, and so it was today. PORT HOPE PASTOR GOES TO HAMILTON Rev. C. S, Applegath To Return To Native City--Founder of Canadian Chautauqua Rey. C. Sinclair Applegath, for the last three years pastor of the Method- ist Church, Port Hope, has accept- ed a call to become pastor of Emer- ald St. Methodist Church, Hamilton. The call to Mr. Applegath was ex- tended by unanimous vote of the offi- cial board of the Emerald St. church. Mr. Applegath is well known to mem- bers of that church, as it was in that district of Hamilton where he was raised, and worked before entering the ministry. His first charge, too, after being ordained, was in Hamil- ton. M. Applegath was also for a time assistant pastor of Eaton Mem- orial Chugeh, Toronto. A During his pastorate in Port Hope there has heen a large increase in the membership, and the congregations have been the largest in years. Mr. Applegath last year organized and was. the President and managing di- rector of the Canadian Chautauqua Institution Limited, which operated Epworth .Inn. at Muskoka Assembly P.O. 'This year that institution ds being greatly extended, a¥i@ the Port Hope congregation have granted Mr. Applegath two months leave of ab- sense. which is for the balance of the conference year, so that he can de- Xote his full time to the Chautauqua work, Emerald St. church have also given him leave of absemce for the first two months of his pastorate there, so that Mr. Applegath will not commence his work in his native city until September. SEEKING T0 CURB LIQUOR SHIPHENTS Make Movement of Whiskey Illegal Except By Rail, Government Plan To meet the decision of the courts that liguor shipments con- signed to points in the United States were legal and could not be imnter- fered with on their way to the bord- er--ithe Attorney-General in a bill introduced in the Legislature Tues- day, proposes to make the move- ment of the liquor illegal except by rail. : The bill is labelled "The Carriage of Liquor Act," and prohibits the transport of liguor over amy high- way within the Province subject to the following clause: "The Board (Ontario License may make regulations per- Chris- | hipped for any lawful purpose." mitting the transportation and car- of liquor over amy highway under such terms and conditions as the Board may impose from any place where liguor may be lawfully manufactured or stored to a railway station freight shed, dock or other place from which the same is to be in other words, where the ship- ment is to ently a muscular deterioration, and NEAT REJECTED AS FOOD FOR HUMANS: "BUTCHER IS LOSER Port Hope Purveyor Sough t To From Farmer 4 NO FRAUD PERPETRATED Action Started Under Ontario Public .Health Act Dis- missed by Judge An unusual case was heard at the last sittings of , the Division Court at Port Hope, by Judge Ed. ward Huycke, It was an action in which a butcher, Clarke Greenaway, of Port Hope, sought to recover from Robert Robinson. a farmer, $65, for alleged loss and damage suffered to the plaintiff as a result of the sale to him by the defendant of two cattle, one of which was sald to: be unfit for human consumption, and the other was over-driven and over-heated at the time of delivery to plaintifr, Judgment was reserved at the | time, but on Monday Judge Huycke dismissed the action with costs, set- ting forth his views in the follow* ing judgment: Inspector's View "This is an action for damages, or to recover part of the purchase mon- ey of two cattle, The plaintiff is a butcher at Port Hope, and the de- fendant is a farmer of Hope Town- ship. In April or May, 1920, Robin- son sold Greenaway. two animals fattened, for beef. These were afters wards slaughtered, and it is said that the flesh of one of them was unfit for use under the Public Health Act. The meat Inspector, Dr. 8. 8. Dick- inson, said he saw the earcase, or part of it. and that there was appar- although it would not be condemned absolutely it would be rejected as unfit for food. There seems to be, from what he says, in" the regula- tions a sharp distinction between the terms "condemned" and "reject- ed." "The defendant I find was abso- Jutely ipnocent and did not know of anything being wrong with thesé cattle, or either of them. It may fairly be assumed, although it is not proved, thet one of these apim- als was to some diseased at the time of the gale, althpugh it w mot shows to thy satisfaction t could mot have occurred bet slaughtering. Both Parties Innocent "The plaintiff brings action to re- cover back part of his money, or, for damages. Both parties I find imno- cent of any fraud in connection with the matter. The plaintiff relies on the principle of cases under the Con- tagious Diseases Act Dominion--I find it laid down in one case-- Nickle vs Harris, 1910, 14 W. L. R. Page 515, by Mr. Justice Newlands, that the vendor of diseased horses( glan- ders) could not recover on a liem| note, part of the purchase money of these horses, the sale being illegal pursuant to the Dominion Statute. It is expressly pointed out in this judgment that knowledge on the part of, the vendor is mot material under this act, that the sale is il- legal, knowledge or, mo knowledge. I do not find any case going so far as to say that even under the Con- tagious Diseases Act, that purchase money cap be recovered from the after a sale is completed, delivered and payment made, and both parties being innocent; but this case is mot mumder the UP TO STANDARD the time of the sale and thelpggtenrized milk is passable, but the The auxiliary class fcr hackward children, in connection with Oshawa public schools, authorized by the Board of Education a few months ago, is now in operation in the pub- lie library building, The class opened this week with Miss Rae, of Almonte, a specialist in this line of work, in charge, the class having 16 pupils, The room in the library, which is only temp- orary until the new schools are built, has been fitted with modérn desks and all necessary supplies will be purchased, The establishment of the auxiliary class: was the suggestion of Trustee AUXILIARY CLASS FOR BACKWARD CHILDREN NOW IN OPERATION Dr, D, 8. Hoig, of the Board of Edu- cation, who, because of his profes- sion, knew something of existing conditions in local schools, The Board 'decided to apply to the De- partment of Education for a medical survey of all children in the public schools, and it was when the report of the medical examiners came back, accompanied by a recommendation from School Inspector Hutchinson, that the Board decided to have such a class started here, Auxiliary ciasses of this nature, tried out in a few places in the pro- vince, have met with great success, The class brings Oshawa's education- al system up to a new high level, ALL MILK NOT Board of Health Will To-night Consider Report of ' Analyst During' the present month eight- een tests of milk sold in Oshawa were made by the local health auth. orities and five tests of cream, these tests being taken from the milk and cream of the farmers being deliver- ed at local dairies, getting as it were at the foundation of likely trouble. Three tests'of the milk and two of cream were not as high in butter fat as is generally expectéd from farm milk. Notification of the stand- ards of the milk and cream was giv- en the dairymen who warned the farmers concerned with the result that repeat tests show a marked im- provement. The local Health Department authorities, under Dr. McKay, are regularly and almost daily testing milk and cream in Oshawa this be- ing a new enterprise. This know- ledge alone {is showing a better standard of milk. Samples of milk from six local dairymen were taken on April 20th and forwarded to the Provincial Laboragory for bacteriological ex- amination ,the result being as fol- lows in the matter of bacteria per centimeter: 0. Lander 10,000 J. H. Horne George Hart H. M. Hinkson E. Purtelle over 2,000,000 and F. S$. Winter, 3,000,000, and showing colon bacilli. This shows the first three samples as being as cleag milk, the first two being equal to ecertified milk. Hinkson's for un- two samples of Purtelle and Winter are very bad and by showing 'colon bacilli are liable to be dangeromns, as colon bacilli is 4 germ of intestinal origin, liable t0 cause typhoid, se- cording to the Health Department officials. The Board of Health meets tonight and will decide as to what step to take concerning the last two samples. Music, Good Things to Eat, Dain- ty Service, Elegant Surroundings, at Welsh's Saturday might. 11» [comm Events | DON'T FORGET THE TEA AT Presbyterian Church, Saturday from 3 to §. 11a MARY STREET HOME & SCHOOL Club will meet on Monday, May 1st, for election of officers. 11-b FRIDAY, APRIL 28, VICTORIA Lodge, No. 55 are holding an "At Home" at Mrs. R. Glides', Centre St. South. ila REMEMBER FELIX POWELL'S Life Story, "Ditch Digging to Soul Winning," Monday, May lst. at Baptist Church. 11-5 DANCE--AUSPICES OF OSHAWA Fire Department, Town Hall, Fri- day, April 28, 1922. Adamac Or-| chestra.. Admission 50 -e. 4 . 2 fi A if ; | i cational affairs, died Tuesday ago. Catherine { daughter of the Rev. David Crichton i il i FORMER WHITBY COLLEGE HEAD DIES Rev, Dr. Hare Passes Away Few Weeks After Wife's Demise Rev, J. J. Hare, Ph, D,, one of the foremost educators in the Dominion, Principal emeritus of the Ontario Ladies' College, Whitby, and well known to many in Oshawa and for 41 years active director of its edu- at Mayo Brothers' Hospital, Rochester, Minn., following a serious operation which he underwent about a week His end came less than a month after the decease of his wife. A host of friends mourn the pass- ing of one who had endeared himself to many by his kindly nature and broad humanity. The Ontario Ladies' College, with which the greater part of his life had been scentified, and which, under his guidance, develop- ed from a comparatively small sem- inary to one of the largest institu- tions of its kind in Canada, suffers a deep loss in his deatn. Borm Near Ottawa. Dr. Hare was born near Ottawa 74 years ago. He graduated from Vie- toria College, then situated in Co- bourg, after which he was stationed in London. at the First Methodist Church, where he remainded for one year, until called to become -Prin- cipal of the Ontario Ladies' College. He married in the same year Miss Isabella MeDowell, a McDowell, a noted Methodist divine of his day and ome of the founders of the college. Dr. Hare was considered tp be one of the foremost psychologists of his day, lucrative offers from large universi- ties in the United States. Was Living in South. and had frequently declined Dr. Hare retired from active duties in the Ontario Ladies' College at the commencement exercises in 1915 and after residing privately in Whitby for some months, was forced to moye to Miami, Florida, owing to the ill-health of Mrs. Hare. Subse- quently, he went on an extended trip in the West Indies, and last ¥ear moved tp Rockford, Tl, where His son, Frank C. Hare, resides. Be- gides his som, Dr. Hare is survived by three' brothers and a sister-- Messrs. Samuel and Albert Have of Ottawa, and William, of Western Canada; and Mys. F. McAmmond of Los Angeles. . Mr. Franklin M. Mc- Dowell, of the Toronto General Trusts Corporation, Toromto, is a brother-in-law, and Rev. R. B. Me- Ammond, of West China, at present in Toronto on furlough, is a nephew. The fumeral service will be held from the Ontario Ladies' College on Friday afternoon at 3 o'clock fIn- terment to be made in the family plot in the Union Cemetery. Many Transients » Get Lodgings at P 'H St ts So far this year the Oshawa lock- up has a havem for 173 persons coming into this town and presenting themselves at Police headguanters for a night's lodging. > 3 i i FEE 1 £ g Et : i I ii | i i i i T ; HH] ; It : : fl i + i ! | | § a { j I ; HINDU GYPSY BABE 1S BURIED LOGALLY BY TP. AUTHORITIES Succumbed To Cold Blast of Last Week---Caravan Bound for Vancouver PARENTS FORTUNE TELLING am And Then All Was Forgotten With their faces and heart towards the great Indian ET the East, from whence they had come hoping to make well on this continent, a band of Hindu gypsies visited Oshawa last week. Their stay was brief. As they foretold the future in local places, and it seemed as if they might camp in these parts, the officers of the law stepped in and bade them move their caravan furtheron, From Montreal these strange travellers had come, and were bound for Vancouver, hoping to be able to sail from there #0 the great country from whence they come. The weather was mild as they approached Oshawa, and they pitched their tent and tied up old Dobin in a field between Courtice and Bowmanville, But there came a day last week when old King Winter eame back for a brief stay and made his pres- ence very much felt in the little tent pitched in the field, with no shelter from the cold blast and no fire with- in. Half of the tent was filled with hay for the horse, for Old Dobin fis indispensable to any BYPSy caravan. On the ground In the other half sat the parents and the kiddies, the lat- cold blasts. An old pipe had been secured, with one end in and an- other out of the tent. This was stuffed with paper and lighted to create heat, but the more the paper burned the more smoke invaded the crude domicile, and added to the misery. The second day of the cold snap a baby boy, three months old, was seized with the cold, followed later by pneumonia and convulsions, only to end in death. The : parents went through their Hindu antics as they realized that their baby was dying. Nearby neighbors visited the tent, saw the plight but like the priest in holy writ, "passed by on the other side," taking steps however, to notify the medical health officer of the township. Dr. Rundle. With the child's condition 50 serious it may be that those who saw its plight thought of a contag- ious disease and the consequences of taking in the child of wandering gypsies. When Dr. little tent, strangeness nessed, the & ng h the suffering family inside but cold, and the child in convulsions, away before anything could be done for it. At first the gypsies were frantic but later when the child was handed over for burial they became subdued. Never has such a scene been witnessed by the Dr. A few hours later the scene was changed. To Oshawa came the gyp- sies 'entering stores and business places to ply their art of foretelfnz the future, and perhaps horse, and all the while body of the little Hindn A it seemed to "suffering and untold," waf being laid away in little grave in Union cemetery, funeral arrangements Rundle arrived at the Hinduism fa all .its i Lit 2 4 parents of the child, but was carried out well, every was given the child when its was first brought to the attention the Township health authorities. | 4: ter suffering most from the intensely ££ L