Ontario Reformer, 18 May 1922, p. 10

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PAGE SIX { OSHAWA, ONTARIO, THURSDAY, MAY 18, 1922 -- Synopsis of By-law number of the Corporation of the: Town of Oshawa. The amount, namely $16,000.00, to he raised bY this. Bydaw fa 20t the purpose of making up the loss which was inéurfed In {Ne sale of the $50,- 000.00 worth of Debentures passed for the purchase of the Pedlar Pro- perty; said loss being $8,168.00, and also td provide sufficient money, namely, $6,000.00, as estimated by the Town Engineer, to theroughly clean up dnd put in your proper eon- dition the property purchase from the Pedlar People Limited for the Town Hall and Municipal purposes, and also to reimburse the Town for the amoupt that has already been Spel Tor'vam purpose, namely, $6,- 42.00, ved py Crd ti of Y, + Smyth, convenor fhe Ba of trade Tailway commit. tee, shat Work is being doné on the C. P. R. branch from Coronati Finhing northwest through Bulwar and & pang of ten is employed oid up the trestls work on the a little north of Lorraine. rym A +o Ky 8 through- out the New Branedic Biter a fommeneing now, General Sdper- re Ib nid at an ro: 1 on to p t of Ra fon oaddition there would be laid on the main lined up- wards of fifty miles of new heavy steel - that upwards of 80 miles By-laws (Continued from gage 1) strongly in favor of the flusher re- commended by the Bickle Company and the Town Engineer. Coun, Trick told Reeve Morris that he had changed his mind three or four times on the question, He challenged the reeve or the engineer to say that the flushing machine was a success in the city of Windsor. That it was purely a business pro- position was the contention of Dep- uty-reeve Mason. Did the town have a proper system for keeping its streets clean? The présent sys- tem was obsolete, and how could it be improved? These he held were the questions for the Council to deal with, He argued that the Council should place confidence in thgj en- gineer and lay weight on his opinion inasmuch as he was oxperienced in handling and working with all kinds of street cleaning machines and knew the machine recommended and what it was able to do. To the low estimate, and the work was not | '| weeks ago, worked very well but was having already been worn out. The engineer expressed himself as sat- isfied that the machine recommendeil woul \ meet the. town's needs and would 'do all that it was guaranteed to do. Coun. Moffatt was opposed to the purchase of the machine because it had not been made clear to him thet it would he able to ciean such as exist in Oshawa. He took depended very largely on the kind of "streefs it operated on. He thought that the Council should see it in operation here, An important point by Deputy, Reeve Mason was that only the people who henefited fron the flusher would have to pay for it. Coun, Brown criticized done properly or satisfactorily. The | present method of flushing with the ure hose, inaugurated by him. two very expensive, four lengths of hose | streets | | would cost it that the efficiency of the machine | posed to doing business in this man- brought _out | mittee Town | of rails will 'be relaid by heavier steel on the branch lines, including the Shore Line, 2 rp ---- Fort William,--Over half a mil. lon dollars will be spent by the Can- adian Pacific Rallway this summer Upon improvements to their big coa! s on Isla 'N Sbey One, at 'the mouth of the Rel ar river. Sup. erintendent 'Hawkins announced estimates in. cently that the 1 cl an' appropridtiott for the work, and start sometime durin the present month. improve ment will consist of a huge storin or distribution crane, and genera enlargement of the epal handling and storage facilities of the docks. 8t/ Jobn,--While erossing from | Gothenburg to London, in order to join the Canadian Pacific liner 'Melita" at Liverpool, a Swede named Mr. Peter Hendricksen, a widower, fell in Jove with Mrs. Mar- garet Crams, a widow, who was' ae- companied by her two daughters, who are also proceeding to Canada. Within twenty-four hours of ar- rival 'in Liverpool a special license was gbtained and the marriage took place' at the Brownlow-hill Registry Office. Mrs, Crams' sge was as 35, while Mr, Hendricksen is 58, The honéyriotn was spent cross- ng the ar antic 2 the iaital an ppy party is settling at Minnedosa, anitoba, where the bridegroom has a farm, Both bride and bridegroom are of Swedish na- tionality. iven Sm -------- Vancowver.--Mr. H. J, Loughran, vho is in charge of the farm land department of the Canadian Pacific Railway at Vancouver, reports that business was very satisfactory dur- ing 1921 and prospects are better than ever for this year. Duting the vear there were re. ceived at the office 6,820 erquiries for information regarding land. tim ber, and general conditiofs in Brit ish Columbia aad the prairies: Sales were made directly and in- Seng to oo parties, oem e were s ng men ai e re- minder men families. About 182.000 acres of land were disposed of at an average price of $18 per acte; about $2,376,000 of property being sold. During the past two months the company has sn advertising Co ivmbis Valley lands, as a result of which 397 enquiries have been re- ceived and forty applications for land made. With the intention of still fur ther popularizing the St. Lawrerce route to Europe the Canadian Pa- cific Railway "1as jostituted a great. ly improved service in the matter of train connections of Canadian Padific trains with Canadian Pacific cteamers at tie ports of Montreal and Quebec. Under this srra- .- ment which is made ro=sible by the joint maragement of rai'way and ocean lines, passengers from Vic. toria and Vancouver and all inter- mediary points bound for FEuro:~ are practically guaranteed au ue iterrupted journey to their destins- on. For some years Canadian Pacific steamiships have been sailing at 10 a.m. Passengers travelling by after. noon trains from Detroit and To- ronto, and ° night trains from Hamilton and Totonto (Yonge Street Station) both due at Montreal at 8 a.m.. have connected with steam- ships sailing from Montreal at 10 a.m., or with the steamshin special leaving, Montreal at 9 am. for steamships sailing from Quebec. Unders ¢ new arrangement this guardntee of connection with steam- ships is extended more surely to travellers from points farther west. Jf any of the trains from western poitits bearifig steamship passengérs are delayed in arrival at Montreal, the steamships will be held two hours, if by so doing the passengers can émbark at that point. If the delay 'is longer, the st hip will te Quebec and there await the délayed passengers. fort will be made to have these 'trains connest with the steamships at Montreal. but if they are by any ps; . to assist their that ie to p 'dock at CEE ee (Continued on page 8) ~ CRISP COMMENT It is still debatalile whether the amatenf painter 'paints the house or paints himself with the greatest de- gree of efficiency.--Ottawa Jourmal. 'Fresh air is the one that éan bé depénded upon to do at all times to prevent persons from hdving influenza.--Utica Observer. The New York pugilist has irted t0 write pdetry will learn t a good deal of his success wil depend on how he handles his feet. ~--Kineardine Review. They're making 4000 Ford's 2a i There should Ue money in it pr a man who will invent a small ajrplane in which 10 eroés the btheet. --Manitoba Free Press. re- | at 'construction' would f the end of lis to day; on the 10th day of June, Every #f- | ,'ntmobt | Son the question of Daylight Saving | All of the ahove sims have been charged up to current account, and in consequence of which the Council has been carrying a deficit over each year, which should be wiped out. The amount with interest at five and one-half per cent is to be paid in ten equal consecutive annual instalments of $2,125.66 each, DATED at Oshawa this 18th day | of May A.D. 1922. Board of Works he reported very favorably on the flusker. The en- gineer)s figures showed that it cost $8,600 per annum to clean the streets 'of the town, and it was not done properly, While with the ma- chine the work could -he done for per annum, [Its life was 10 years. and In three years the town would save sufficient to pay for it and still have the machine for use for seven years, The Deputy-reeve pointed out that the road oiling machine brought this week from Toronto by | Corporation of the Town of Oshawa. the engineer had gone cver the same The amount of debt to be created | torritory as last year and saved { by this By-law is $7,900.00 which is 3,000 gallons of oil: The cost was {to bé used for the purchase of a |g. per gallon. | Studebaker Flusher and Sprinkler | Goun. Trick held that this ma- | for cleaning the streets of the Town. | chine was not an oiling machine and The $7,900.00 with interest at five | would not do the oiling work requir- and one-half per cent per anninm is [ed hy the town. tb be repayable in 'ten equal conse- Coun. Preston contended that he. cutive annual payments of $1,048.07 (fore any purchase was made the each, which latter sum is the améunt | Council should have an opportunity to he raised annually. of seeing the machine recommended DATED at Oshawa, this 18th day | in actual operation on Oshawa of May A.D. 1922. streets, He had never even seen a | pieture of it. Coun. Preston stated ---- that he was surprised that the NOTICE chairman of the Finance Committee TAKE NOTICE that the above are | Should recommend such a large ex- Synopsis of two proposed By-laws penditure without seeing the ma- which have been taken into consider- | ¢hine in operation here. ation by the Municipal Council of Coun. Burns concurred in the the Town of Oshawa and which will| view that a demonstration of the be finally passed by the said Council | machine should be given on Oshawa in the event of the assent of the el- | streets. He held that if the engin- ectors qualified being obtalned there- | ¢er's figures were right that it cost to, after one month from the first | $8,600 to clean the town's streets publication thereof in the Ontario |there was something wrong, for Reformer, the date of the first publi. | Surely it never cost a thousand dol- cation being May 18th, 1922. lars a mile for this work. Service at Cheap Cost The votes of the qualified eleetors M hoo i > 1 , at. for shall be taken on the above By-law Mayor pslacey recalled that for at the following time and places, that Synopsis of By-law number of the many years there had heen dissatis- faction with the present method of street cleaning, while the Council had always felt that the work b could not he properly done with the ing until five o'clock in the afternoon equipment A Ye was the of the same day. same as in use 20 years ago when For the South West Watd polling | there were no pavements, The two sub-divisions One and Two shall be | factors in street cleaning were that united, and Earl Moore shall be the |the Council wanted to give the peo- Deputy-Returning Officer, and Cen-| ple service and do it as cheaply as tre Street School the polling place. | possible. If it were a case of ccon- jomy he would recommend the' pur- For the South East Ward, the first | chyge of the machine. The mayor polling Subdivision shall Pg o stated that in 1921 it cost the town all that part of .the Sou St Ward | nearly $10,000 to keep thf pave- lying to the north of Bruce Street to | ments in ha'f decent shape. With a the sie hel wash Lois eight and nine, machine mor: satisfaction would be and also all of lots seven and eight | given at less cost. in the first concession between King Asked to give his opinion Engineer Street and the Base Line, and A. 8. Smith strongly recommended the McLeese shall be Deputy-Returning | purchase of the flusher, which he Officer, and Miller & Libby's shop | stated was made by the pioneers of the polling place. | street machine manufacture and For the second polling division of | thousands of machines of all types {the South East Ward polling sub- 1922, commencing at the "hoar of 9 o'clock in the forenoon and continu- | were in use in ail parts of the world divisions four &nd five shall be unit-! $6,600, an actual saving of $3,000 Councils of the past for ignoring the opinion of the engineer, no matter how high a salary, he was paid. The town's street cleaning methods had | been a laughing stock for some time, he contended, while people had of- fered to pay for street cleaning and watering if it were done properly. In view of the opinloa of the en gineer he was in favor of buying the | machine recommended. Coun, Trick moved that the clause recommending the, purchase of a flusher he struck out of the Board of Works report. Deputy-reeve Mason moved amendment that the clause he in the report. THe amendment |car- ried on the following Coun. Trick calling for the yeas and nays: an ~Morris, Mason, Alger. Brown and Hall 6 Nays Trick, Burns, Hawkes and Preston--05 There was a similar division re corded when a motion was passed to give the bylaw, authorizing the bor rowing of $7,900 by the issue of de RHEUMATISM LUMBAGO 9 NEURITIS ws. T R C S SCIATICA EN ee tism and similartroubles invariably yield to this T.R.C.'s {Templeton a Rbeumatic Cape sules) treatment, and many hundreds of druggists from coast to coast will confirm this truth, The hundreds of tess timonial letters in our files show that T.R.C.'s have successfully treated Rheumatism, Lumbago, Neuritis, Sciatica and acute Neu- ralgia of all kinds. But the best svidence is your own experience. 3 Jou suffer we want you to try t uaranteed non-injuricus re y at our expense, Drug. gists sell T.R.C.'s $1.00 per box. For Free Trial write T.R.C. Go., ? Colborne St., Toronto. Sold By JURY & LOVELL MON., TUES. REGENT Xo wo. Mary Pickford in "Little Lord Fauntleroy" left | division, | Hubbell, | Moffatt, | Many doctors | The engineer stated that $8,500 for |bentures to pay for the machine, a street cleaning last year was a very second reading. Opposition to the Pedlar property bylaw was voiced by Coun' Trick, on the ground that the Council last year, before it spent the money for cleaning up the pronerty, should have passed gs€hylaw io raise money and nbt Mrag the deficit into this year's transactions and ask that it be covered by a hylaw, If the $6,876.28 spent last year had been carried as an overdraft He was not opposed to spending further meney to coms- plete the cleaning up of the pro- perty, although he didn't think it $6,000, but he was op- ner. The principle was wrong and he would oppose the bylaw to the limit. Deputy-reeve Mason championed the bylaw. The money to he raised was required and the finance com- had thought i* best, after much consideration, the | since it | could continue as same until the end | yof the year, THE TWO AGES OF MEN amounts for the deficit on the de- Richmond Times-Dispatch: Of al] hentures, the money spent and to ba | the ages of man, there are only two: spent on cleaning up in one bylaw. Cribbage and dotage. The ages in The property, as it waz now, was a|between do not count. Thay vary disgrace to the town and should be|so with personal experience kA they cleaned up and seeded. With re-|can 'not he analyzed weighed, ai- gard to the money spent he pointed | yaised. There is no way of .sticl out that when the work was started jo 4 vale on them the \ money had te be raised forth- Yea, verily brethren it is only a with and was therefore carried as an pa grant and at the finish that. overdraft. The money had to be... ana on either end wo omit both raised, and he thought it wag 83 | 0oth and hair > much the duty of future ratepayers. | . who would benefit from the park, as those of today, to help put the money up, When the bylaw to authorize the issuing of the $16,000 debentures came up for second reading, Coun. Trick called for the™ycas and nays and the vote was thus recorded: Yeas--Morris, Mason, Burns, Mof- fatt, Hawkes, Hall and Brown. Nays--"Trick, Hubbell, Alger and reston The bylaw goes to the people, include the A surprising number of hoys turn out well in spite of the restraining influences of their parents, --King- ston Whig. Not the least remarkable of the numerous exploits of the late Richard Croker was his ability to die peace- fully in his bed in Ireland. to Mail and Empire. Wonder if the conflict in China i a war to make chopsuey safe for mocracy--Ottawa Journal. EE -- 0 0 530 Simcoe St. Dominion Stores, Limited CHAIN GROCERY STORES OF CANADA, OSHAWA 3 . 36 King St. W. 24 pound bag best Pastry Flour 99c. PURE STRAWBERRY OR RASPBERRY Jam 75c. | Choice Red Salmon 30c. rar Puffed Wheat Puffed Rice Shredded Wheat Corn Flakes Corn Meal Cream of Wheat tin tin tin tin tin tin Blueberries Green Gage Plums Grated Pineapple Pears Spinach Peas .... 2 for 25c 3 for 29c 7 Ib. 25¢ 3. 1b. 25¢ PRET RPr Gar'snsssns PURE LARD 53c. 3-1b. Pail AYLMER Pork and Beans | 14ec. 2-lb. Tin BRUNSWICK SARDINES 4 Tins 25c¢. SHIRRIFF'S MARMALADE 63c. 4-lb. Tin 5-lb. Pail CROWN SYRUP 41c. Lyle's Golden SYRUP 2-1b. Tin 29c. CAMPBELL'S SOUPS 15c. Tin LARGE . PRUNES 2 Lb. | 29c. COOKING FIGS DRIED PEACHES 2 Lb. 29c. 25 Ce -- OUR OWN SPECIAL BLEND TEA - 45c¢. pound Black or Mixed GLASSCO'S MARMALADE 45c. 3-lb. Tin Rice TOILET PAPER | TAPIOCA OR SAGO 6 roll 25¢c. | 3 lbs. 25c. 3 lb. 25c¢. $30.00 Suits at $14.99 . ed and Chas. P. Davis shall be the] deputy-returning officer, and Albert . . Street School the polling place. | Helpful Hair Hint For the North-West Ward polling' You can easily clean your head sub-divisions six and seven shall be of dandruff, prevent the hair from united, and P. H. Punshon shall be falling out and beautify it, if vou use the Deputy-Returning Officer, and Parisian Sage. Town Hall the polling place. { A lady visiting friepds says "'Par- For the North-East Ward polling | $122 Bage is the besi thing 1 iid sub-divisions eight and nine shall be | rous and abundant. It also keeps united, and D. W. Parks shall be the|,oay aif dandruff and immcdia.els Deputy-Returning Officer, and Mary stops itching scalp." Street School the polling place. This inexpensive invigorator is On the 9th day of June A.D. 1922 |gold at all good drug.anfl toilet coun- at the hour of twelve o'clock noon, [ters. Be sure you get the genuine the head of the Couneil of the said {Parisian Sage (Giroux's) as that has corporation or some membef of said |the money back guagintee printed Council appointed for that punpose|On every bottle. by resolution, shall attend at the Clerk's office in the said Muniecipal- ity for the purpose of appointing and, if requested so to do, shall apoint by writing signed by 'him, two Pper- sons to attend 'at the final summing up of the votes by the Clerk and one | person to attend at each polling place on behalf of the persons interested in and promoting the pro, By- Mary Pickford in "Little Lord Fauntleroy" Just a few left in Serges and Tricotines. Regular up to $20 for..." . $140.99 Coats up to $45 for $18 up to $24.95 It's time to get your summer Dress. We have them in Ging hams =*Voiles and Organdgies Prices very moderate, Fancy Sport Skirts 99 up to $7.25 Blouses, Voiles and Silks $2.50 up to $5.99 J siock ys j Schwartz Bargain Store 136-138 Simcoe S. Phone carry a complete men's furnishings. also of St. laws and a like number on behalf of ha ona the persons interested in and' . - n ing the proposed By-laws. hi a On the 12th day of June, 1922, at the hour of twelve o'clock noon, at the Clerk's office in the said Muniei- pality, the Clerk of the said Muniei- § pality shall attend and sum up the fi votes given for and agsinst the pro- |§ . posed By-laws. : ("Oshawa Cash Grocery 41 OLD QUEENS BLOCK AND ALSO TAKE NOTICE that all persons claiming to vote as Lease | Holders on said By-laws are requir- | ed, at least ten days next preceding f the day of polling, to file in the of- | fice of the Clerk of the "Town of Osh- awa a statutory declaratioh stdting that their lease meets the' require- ments provided in Seetion 265 of Chapter 1912, R.S.0. as to the vot- ing of hoyseholders. & | AND FURTHER TAKE NOTICE {that the names of lease Holders ne- | | glecting to so file such a declaration Blog the Clerk of the said Municipal- ity shall not be placed on the Voters' List for such voting. ; DATED af Oshawd this 18th day | |of May, A.D. 1922. Domestic Shortening per Ib. Bulk Seedless Raisins Bulk Dates | : F. E. Hare, | % Clerk. | : > ! Large bottle Mixed Pickles PAYLIGHT SAVING. A plebiscite of the ratepayers of | the Town of Oshawe will be taken | at the same time as the vefe on the above by-laws on Saturday, June 10, 1922. i . © © F.E. HARE, Friday ai Saturday 1 SPECIALS CRIB... I iniisiin > King Nut Margarine, per Ib. ._. Shelled Walnuts per lb. ..__... Try Belleville Creamery Butter. Friday and Saturday only, Ib. 40c W. J. Harlow Special to introduce, for (20-a)-(23-a)-26-2) m-- 1 Again --- Leeds Hit The '" Bullseye value. OFFERING FOR -THE 24th Ready-to-Wear Suits and hw ail A Matchless Group Offered Saturday We are confident you will agree thai we have excelled all previous efforts in value-giving with this extraordinary suit offering for Saturday. You will not be disappointed. a - Come expecting amazing Toron- +

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