Dental 7. C. CLENENCE, DENTIST, FOR SAL DRice over Andison's Taflor Shop, |All .| This is a bargain for quick sale. Basy 19 King St. West, Phone 231, DR. T, 8. TUCKER--DENTIST, OF- fice over Hogg and Lytle's store, Phone 948, 1-yr, DR. 8. J, PHILLIPS, -- DENTIST, Office over Royal Bank, Phone 959. Residence 306. (4-1yr.) DR. JAMES, DENTIST -- OFFICE over Jury and Lovell's Drug Store. Phone No, 97, DR, TREWIN, DENTIST -- EN: trance to office one door east of Detenbeck's Store, DR, W, J. LANGMAID, DENTIST, Office over Engel's Store, 16 Simcoe St, N, Phone 1243, DR, ARMSTRONG, DENTIST, OF- fice at his residence, 201 Simeve Sb -t Medical DR. C. E, WILSON, PHYSICIAN and Surgeon, Union Bank Building, Simcoe St, North, Phone 57, 110-1yr Houses For Sale ¥ = 5 ROOMED HOUSE conveniences, centrally located. terms, Apply at 1 Celina St. 86 MOR SALE--6 ROOM BRICK HOUSE at 117 Stacey Ave., also building lot adjoining,' Will 8éll' on easy terms. Apply to Russel Perkins, Regent Bldg. 50 King St, KE, 82-e FOR SALE--A GASOLINE ENGINE and Culling Box. Apply Wm. Hock- in, Park Rd. N. 85-b A NEW 6 ROOMED, HOUSE FOR sale--or to rent, Apply to Thomas Robinson, Cedar Dale, 84-c FOR SALE OR TO LET--LARGE store on Simcoe St, Very central, 9 apartments above, Electric lights and furnace, Possession arranged. Apply Harry Salter, 2¢ Royal 8t. Phone 185, 86-a FOR SALE -- GAS STOVE, NO, 218K Gurney, in A-1 condition, Apply 172 King East, or phone 544, 86-c HOUSE, FOR SALE -- 30 LLOYD St, Phone 903, " 1: i 86-a Help Wanted--Female DR. McKAY -- PHYSICIAN, SUR- geon, Accoucher, Office and resi- dence, King St, East, corner Victoria St., Oshawa, Phone 94, PLAIN COOK WANTED AT ONCE -- For family of three, no laundry, house maid kept. Apply 261 King Street East, Phone 566, 86-a DR. L, J, SEBERT, 73 BLOOR ST, East, Toronto, will be at Jury & Lovell's Drug Store each Saturday from 11 a.m, to 4 p.m, for Ita- WANTED -- A YOUNG GIRL FOR house work. Apply 166 Centre Byeet. : -C tion in disease of the oye, DR. D, B, NEELY, EAR, NOSE AND Throat, Diseases of children, Office over Dominion Bank, Telephone 1155, Hours 11--1; 5--6; 5--9; Satur- days 2--5; 7--9; or by appointment, 45-6mos DR, A, A, HALLIDAY, 143 COL- lege Street, Toronto, will ba at Jury & Lovell's Drug Store first and third Friday each month from 2.30 to 4 for consultation in diseases of the nose, throat and ear. 134-tf DR. F, T. BRYANS, OF 160 BLOOR Street West, Toronto, will be at his 'office over Miller's Arcade each Sat- urday, from 1 till 4 p.m, for consul- talion and treatment of diseases of ear, nose and throat only, Legal JOSEPH P. MANGAN, B.A.--BAR- rister, Solicitor, Notary Publie, Con- veyancer., Money to loan, Office 143% King St. Bast, Oshawa, Phone 445, = D. A, J, SWANSON--BARRISTER, Solictor, Notary Public, Conveyan- cer, etc. All branches of Civil and Criminal Law, Loans arranged. Of- fice, King St. Chambers (Formerly Oshawa House) King St. West, Osh- aya. Phones, Office 940; Residence GRIERSON & CREIGHTON--BAR- risters, Conveyancers, Notaries Pub- lic, ete, Office over Standard Bank, entrance Simcoe St.; Phone 13. J. 4 Grierson, B.A, T. K., Creighton, G. D. CONANT, B.A, L.L.B.--BAR- rister,' Solicitor, Notary Public, etc. Ofifice (entrance) 7% Simeoe St., South, Oshawa, Loans arranged on mortgages, conveyancing and gen- eral practice... Phone 63, H. E. MORPHY, B.A.--BARRISTER, Solicitor, Notary Public, ete. Office 11% Simcoe St. South, Oshawa, Phones--Office 210, Res. 160, IF YOU ARE SICK, TAKE CHIRO- practic Spinal Adjustments and get well. Examinationy free at office. Dr. 8. M, Jones, 86 Simeee St. North. Surveyors M. M. GIBSON--ONTARIO AND DO- | minion Land Surveyors and Civie En- | gineers, Whitby. Phone 231. Suec-| cessor to late W. E, Yarnold, of Port | Perry. . 73-tf Undertakers & Embalmers LUKE BURIAL CO. -- FUNERAL directors, embalmers, private am- bulance; morgue and chapel in con- nection; picture framing; 11 Simcoe St. South." Phone 210. Residence 19 Division St. 26-1yr Tire Repairing ALL KINDS OF TIRE REPAIRS AT Ideal Tire Repair Shop, over Oshawa Sales & Service, 99 Simcoe St. South. Tires for sale. Jamieson Bros., Pro- prietors. Phone 1162. 11-4£ FURNITURE STORED. -- IN CLEAN dry building. Also storage for cars. Day phome 552j, might 552w. Rit- son Road North 91-11 ii Patents RIDOUT AND MAYBEE, KENT Bldg., Yonge Street, Toronto, Regis- tered Patent Attormeys. Send for free booklet. 20-tf GOOD GENERAL SERVANT WANT- ed, Apply Mrs. F., J. Bailes, 209 Simcoe St, 8. Phone 250, 86-tt WANTED--YOUNG GIRL TO AS- sist with housé work. Good home, Phone 425W, (84-1.1,) WANTED--GOOD GENERAL SERV- ant. 299 Simcoe St, K, 82-t! WANTED--WO TO HANDLE sale of Christmas cards on commis- sion, Apply at once, Reformer B4-tf, Board and Rooms OOMFORTABLE WARM ROOM for man with board, or two business girls, Convenient to G.M.C., Ap- ply to 271 Jarvis St, _(B4-c) SINGLE ROOM AND BOARD FOR one, Apply 110 Alice Street. 84-c BOARD AND LODGING WANTED for two boys, four and five years old. Box "D", Reformer, ".. 86-a TO RENT -- FURNISHED ROOM, suitable for two gentlemen. 72 Brock St. W. Te en B6-o TO LET--SMALL FRONT ROOM for working man. 13 Simcoe St, N., upstairs, : 86-n FOR RENT--THREE NICE FUR- nshed . rooms, suitable for light housekeeping. Apply 62 Base Line E., South Oshawa. B6-c TWO PARTLY FURNISHED rooms, suitable for housekeeping. Phone 1198-J. Tae 86-c ROOM AND BOARD--THREE MIN- on at $195, OSHAWA, _ Articles For Sale FOR SALE -- BOST! 1 -D very kind. Apply '134 trie 5 { : i44 Oshawa, , v.84 case, good condition, & bargain talter's Music Store, 2% Simcoe St. N., Oshawa, 45-tt SWEET CIDER -- MADE FROM good sound apples. Any quantity. Phone 908 r 24. €66-t.2,) WHEN HOUSE CLEANING, CHEER up the homé with a change in fur- niture. We .buy, sell and exchange used furniture, Highest cash price paid for good second hand furni- ture, DN. Dime, 58 King Street West. Phone 271, 76-2mos FOR SALE--COAL AND WOOD Mc- Clary range; Singer sewing ma- chine, practically new; oak dining room suite; New Process oil gtqve; fron bedstead and springs. Apply 94 Oshawa Boulevard. between 4 and 6 o'clock, , 85h White Leghorns; coc¢kerels bred from song of Lady Victory, official record 304 eggs, #2 each, 62 Pipe Ave, Westmount, = 85D A SUPPLY OF MILLINERY FOR sale ¢heap. Apply 102 Ailce Street, 85-d HOUND FOR SALE--APPLY W. Scattergood, R.R. No, 1, Cedar Dale. { 85-¢ \FOR SALE--ONE CROWN TREAF- ure self feeder heater in first class condition, Apply 124 Tylor Crescent, N , 86-a IRISH TERRIER PUP, 5 MONTHS old, Fine playmate Tor children. 75 Hall St. Bbc FOR SALE--TWELVE BRED TO lay 0O.A.C, Rock pullets. April hatched from Government Inspected Stock; also young cokerels. Geo. ON 10, ONTAR VHIL.--Forerunners of the Author. ized Version Tyndale's Bible was the first of many versions to appear in the next half-century, The next was by Myles Coverdale, Issued in 1535, the year before Tyndale's death and much of it was taken from Tysdalé's version, Two years later appeared Matthew's Bible, a large part of which was also taken bodily from Tyndale, This may be called the first authorized Bible, it being "set forth with the kinge's most gracyous lycence." Tyn- dale's last prayer seems, therefore, to have been answered within about a year of his death, In 1539 came Taverner's Bible, The same year was (ssued also the Great Bible a copy of which was ordered to be placed in every church, These were sometimes chained to the desks and a few of these 'chained Bibles" are still found in some of the old churches. The Geneva Version, published in 16560, was the next to appear, being the work of several who had fled during the stormy days of Queen Mary's reign to Switzerland, where they were in close association with John Knox who was then preaching at Geneva. This was the first Eng- lish version to use the verse-divis- ions, the first to be printed in handy size, the first to adopt the Roman type and the first to omit the Ap- ocrypha, Fourteen hooks of the H, Watson, 36 Park Road 8, Phone 144, 86-a | Septuagint and Vulgate versions not It was the popular Bible for nearly. a oentury, maintaining a successful rivalry for first place with the King James version long after the publi- cation of the latter, just as that ver- sion has heen retaining its populdr- ity over our latest revised versions, In 1568 appeared the Bishops® 'Bible the purpose of wiich was to countéract the influence of the Pur- itanical marginal notes of fhe Geneva Version. A little ldtef cameé the Douai Bible, the first Roman Catholic Bible in the English language; New Testament beilg issued in 1682, the Old Testament and Apocrypha (two volumes) in 1609 and 1610, just as the King James vérsion was being completed. Thus, in the space of forty-three years--{rom 16856 to 1668--seven' different versions of the English Bible were published, an average of one in évery six years, which is quite a unique event in Biblical his- tory. It was just forty-three years more before another version appear- ed under Protestant auspices. When this new. version appeared in 1611, it remained in the field two hundred and seventy yéars before its successor arrived upon the seene, and now after more than three hun- dred years is probably still more widely read than any other--another unique circumstance of Biblical history, (Copyrighted by British & Colonial Press Limited) Next article, The Authorized Version FOR SALE--UPRIGHT GAS STOVE, almots new, with oven. Cheap. ply 97 Bond St, E. 86-5 HEN COOP FOR SALE; 7 x 8. AP-| ply 46 Elgin St. W, BIG SALE OF FURNITURE THE People's furniture store 17 Prince St. 15 stoves, ranges and heaters, side boards, dining tables chairs rockers, carpets, rugs. Bed springs, mattresses couches, cots--cribs camp beds, hall racks, piles of tin ware at cost. Furni- ture bought and sold. 84-1mo. Lumber dressed lumber, lath, shingles, sash, Yard, Whitby, Ont, 5,000 FT. NEW INCH LUMBER, $25 thousand, delivered. Apply A. Cook, Alice St. E, To Rent ors HALL TO RENT -- HARDWOOD 83-1 utes' walk from main corners, near all works. Apply 97 Bond St. E, 86-a Rooms Wanted nished rooms, desirable with bath and kitchenette, Address Box "W", Reformer. 86-a WANTED--TWO OR THREE FUR- nished rooms or flat for married cou- ple with baby. All conveniences for housekeeping, or two rooms and board near General Motors. Box "H", Reformer. WOOD SALE WEDNESDAY NOV. 1--MR. JOHN Vinson will sell by auetion six acres of standing Hardwood timber in % acre lots on Lot 2 Con. 3 East Whit- by. Terms Cash or five month's | credit on approved notes bearing 6 | per cent. Sale 1.30 P.M. James Bishop, Auctioneer. (85-b) (88-a) OF REGISTRATION OF BY-LAW. NOTICE is hereby given that a by- law was passed by the Council of the Town of Oshawa oa the 18th. day of August 1922, providing for the issue of denbentures to the amount of $8,000.00 for High School pur poses, and that such by-law was re- gistered in the registry office of the County of Ontario on the 29th. day of September 1922. Any motion to quash Or set aside same or any part thereof must be made within three mouths after the first publication of this notice, ayd cannot be made thereafter. Dated the 9th. day of October 1922. F. E. HARE, Clerk. 80-83-86 NOTICE NOTICE OF REGISTRATION OF BY-LAW NOTICE is hereby given that a By law was passed by the Council of the Town of Oshawa on the 18th day of August 1922, providing for the issue of debentures to the amount of $102,000.00 for Piblic School purposes, and that such by- foams -- a. ' SHARP & HORNER, 73 King St. West Toronto, Schools, Churches, Public Buildings,. ete. Economy in design, efficiency in administration. 71-tf | made within three months after the HERBERT C. TRENEER, AT.CM., organist and choir master of King St. Methodist Church, is prepared to accept a limited number of pupils in office of the County of Ontario on canngt be made thereafter. law was registered in the registry the 29th. day of September 1922. Any motion to quash or set aside same or any part thereof must be first publication of this notice, and Dated the 9th. day of October 1922, F. E. HARE, Clerk. 80-83-86 -- Pianoforte, Voice Culture and Pipe Organ. For terms, ete., apply on Saturdays at King St. Methbdist' Church or Phone 5647. (65-¢.1.) Accountants pared; income tax reports prepared, DODD'S ALDI ERE 86a | floor--heat light, Size 27x73. Al- |terations to suit tenant. Apply to H. Engel. {GARAGE TO RENT -- BRICK, CON- St. East. Phone 544 for particulars. 86-¢ OFFICE TO RENT --- A BRIGHT, clean, up-to-date office 18 x 21 ft., in the Royal Bank Chambers, immed- iately adjoining R. Moffat's law of- fice. Hardwood floor, hot water heating. Will rent at a reasonable (figure to suitable tenant. Apply to John Bailes & Sons, Hardware. 86-17 Wanted ToBuy WANTED TO BUY--SIX OR SEVEN roomed brick house in good condition apply, Box "TV, Reformer. Stenography And French MISS L. GRISON, GRADUATE HEN- tion very reasonable. Phone 1249-J. Farms For Sele WILSON CROSIER FARM, 100 acres, nice frame house, good out- buildings, and eighty acres cultivat- ed. Price $4,000. Terms easy. W. C.| Pollard, Notary Public, Uxbridge,| Ont, 3-51 Work Was WHAT ABOUT THAT LEAKY Roof, we do all kinds of roof work. Slate, Tile, felt and gravel or shing- les. S$. J. Gascoigue, 50 King St. E. Oshawa phone 1232. 66-t1 ! Lost and Found FOUND--AK SMALL BUNCH OF] keys. Owner may have same by proving property and paying for ad. at 42 Bound St. Ww. sp LOST--GOLD WRIST WATCH SAT- urday night in business section. Finder please return to 91 William St. W. 86-c LOST--AUTO TIRE AND RIM, SiZe 33 x 4%.. Reward. Dr. Belt, John St. 86 Situations Wanted YOUNG LADY DESIRES POSITION as stenographer. 3 years experience. Apply Box "P", Reformer. 841 Help Wanted--Male MAKE MONEY AT- -- $15 $60 lor your spare time We instruct and supply you Showcard Toronto. 334.L th work. Wes iy 23 'Cottosne Plas. WANTED--A RELIABLE MESSEN- ger. Apply at once. Canadian Na- tional Telegraph Office, King St. JX. . ~8 | qu------ Ap- | 86-a | doors and interior trim. F, L. Bee-; croft, Whitby Lumber and Wood-| C.| Smyrna of Asia Minor to fall before the Ma- in the canonical Hebrew Scriptures, | . | | | | i SMYRNA Smyrna threatened by the Turks! | Smyrna evacuated by the Greek 'army! Smyrna captured by the Turks! Smyrna sacked by the Turks! {| Smyrna burned! Smyrna Christians | massacred by the Turks! Smyrna full LUMBER--WE HAVE ROUGH AND| of unburied dead! Smyrna a holo-| caust! Smyrna a vast open sepul- chre! Thus have run the { headlines for days and weeks. newspaper The 69-t¢, Public have read them casually, then { turned to something more interest- ling, the sports page and society notes. Even those who have read the sick- | ening details have not been profound- ly affected. Smyrna is a long dis- tance away. It is out of the ordin- ary line of travel. They know little | about its location, its history, its | size, its importance in ancient or {modern times. Like Jiggs going to 47-t1.| Recuperate, "if it is a big town we | their prosperity, hated them for their | may take it in," | "Smyrna? Smyrna? What and WANTED--TWO OR THREE FUR-| crete floor, centrally located on King| where is Smyrna? quarters | "It is a town in Turkey some- where." "What were there anyway?" "Don't know, I'm sure." "Bally good for them if they did get kicked out. No business going there. How did the tennis .game | come off to-day? 80 Smyrna would pass out out of their minds if it were not that we have a vague notion that we may get mixed up in it ourselves. But Smy- rna means more than that to any one who knows history. Especially does it mean much to any one who the Greeks doing also good locality. None other need knows his Bible, or the annals of | 85-C|the Christian Church. To such Smyr-| hot be angry. -| na deserves a far different fate from | With the festive Turk. j that which has fallen upon it. Smyrna was a Greek city on the coast of Asia. By the beginning of the Christian era it was the greatest its commerce, and its faithfulness to its alliance with Rome. Then came the introduction of! | Christianity, and Smyrna became one | of the outstanding Christian centres | of the Roman empire. Of all the | Seven Churches of Asia addressed | by the author of,the Book of Reve- | lation Smyrna is the oue which re-! ceives the highest commendation | tions are given in varyin each of the other six. Smyrna alone | couragement, 'Be thou faithful unto death, and 1 will of life." i The subsequent history of Smyrna | confirmed the reputation of the Church of Smyrna for faithfulness. | At no place was the persecution of the Christians more bitter. At no place did the sufferers remain more t. Heathen and Jews united in devising tortures. The aged Poly- carp, a disciple of the Apostle John, was burned to death there. {it was the Jewish Sabbath, but the Jews of Smyrna forgot their reveremce for the Sabbath in their hatred of the Christian, and joined with the heath- | | give tire the erown i the martyr. The fury of the persecu- tion did net destroy the church, and when better days came and persecu- tion ceased, it-grew and flourished. was the last of the cities : invasion. it resisted every attempt at capture till 1402, Giles, Base Line W. | MITCHELL TRUCK FOR SALE IN first class shape. Price $150. Appl |South End Garage Simcoe St. S. 86-¢ Plioties 43 G. D. CONANT, Era LE SRR a A EA and 921 OSHAWA (84-41) FOR SALE VALUABLE BUIL- gite on Simcoe St. North, 75 frontage, 150 foot deep. Price for quick sale. Phone 584 J | More than a thousand years before | time to murder all the Christians in ry's Shorthand School, Ottawa. Tui- the birth of Christ, more than 2200 | bis empire, and then we'll hold an- 337 Centre St.| years before the ancestors of the Other Peace Conference, and we'll 85-c! modern Turks were even heard of, Send a High Commission to see if city of western Asia, noted for the | known as "The Faithful." beauty of its situation, the extent of | en in carrying fagots to pile around |{ when it fell before that wild Mon- gol savage Tamerlane, who utterly | destroyed it. From his successors it {soon passed into the hands of the | Turks, who retained control for near- | ly six hundred years, until the Greeks | took it again following the Great War. In all these centuries of barbarity | and repression the Turks could never make Smyrna Mahommedan. | Through every form of suffering it] 'has remained predomininatly Chris- flan. It was the second city of the Ottoman empire, the foremost com- | mercial city of Western Asia. But its wealth was largely in the hands of | its Christian population. Their quar- {ters were dark, dirty and ill-smell- !ing. The Christians, mostly Greeks and Arménians, numbered three- fourths of the whole population of : 300,000 or more. The Turks envied religion, and called this, the second | eity of their empire, Giaour Ismir, {--Infidel Smyrna. |! Now Smyrna has been recaptured {and made Turkish again in true | Turkish fashion. The Christian | homes looted and burned. The Chris- tian women and girls ravished and | then bayoneted. The Christian pris- oners shot in droves and thrown in- to the harbor. Meanwhile the Greeks have the ragged remmants of a once power- {ful army and a poor king, and a | patriot statesman in exile who would {have prevented all this. Meanwhile, | too, the Christian nations of Europe !and the very Christian United States stand aside and say: "Let us not get excited. Let us We must deal gently He is en- { joying himself muchly. Give him perchance there are amy left whom he has missed." From ancient times Smyrna was She has kept faith with others. They have | not kept faith with her. | Petes Take the First of O.B.A.A. Final from Errors proved costly for the Lucan | Warnings, rebukes, stern denuncia- team on Saturday and resulted in their any further. & degree 0 | defeat at the hands of the Peterboro |rael! C. G. E. aggregaton by 5 to 3 in the O0.BAA. intermediate championship. Weir, who did the hurling for the visitors, walked four mien, hit two and tossed over one wild : Frost did the mound work for the : © Sr 00h 00 10 EET STN + BRRRVBBR2 AVWIRVERER TS a Mrs. J. Walker--1 See you are ___ldriving the new car yourself. Mrs. K. Driver--Yes, my .|nas been so busy he hasn't learnéd gears yet. Wi to change 1 i Mrs. J. Walker--¥He hasn't? the gears so I have to shift| change tor myself.-- "Topics of the Day" Films. Sure Sign "He's a tlew driver." "What makes you think so?" "He hasn't got over arguing with (Continued from page 6) rounding dolintry fiotors had Brought fans. to: witness what they predicted fo be .the last match of the season. Belleville madé an unusiial start by getting into the lead, but the three- hag hit of N, Himes put the visitors in the léad by ohe. The second innings was a dangerous one, with two men out and the bases loaded. Williams, however, struck out the jpext man up, In the third innings leville scored another rum, \W. Mills, who had singled, coming in on J. K. Willlams' hit ever second. The tie was not broken until the fifth, when W, Mills, who had tripled, was sent home by his brother, Harry, on a e|double, the latter being tagged out at third, The seventh and eighth each gave the Terriers a run. H, Mills erred in the seventh frame and let Wilkin- son reach first. He found his way home on singles by Kress and Evans, Jack Williams fumbled a grounder in the eighth, and let Groves reach the first bag. e struck out G, Himes, and hit Watts with the ball. N. Himes flew out, but Wilkinson's double put Groves across thé plate for the winning run. Hall to Graham . Graham's pitching 'was much ad- mired. He has unusual delivery. The past four weeks have béen very busy ones for Belleville -- playing in thé finals of the Central Ontario League and in the semi-finals of the Provin- cial championship, 'The last three series were unusual, in that three games have been necessary in each. In thé first two Belleville won at home and lest away, while they won the play-off in the O.B.A.A. finals. Galt-- . H, P. N. Himes, ss .. .. Wilkinson, 2b .. .. Kress, #f.. ..-.. .., W. Graham, ¢ .. .. F, Graham, p .. . Evans, 1b Groves, cf*., .. .. G. Himes, 3b .. .. Watts, If .. .. .. FARRIS SI. crnwOocomoN ND RD De hp DO TN BD Cmca A®RD sco ormaco® Polals., .. :. . Bellevitle-- ROBE, ef .. + +0. Weir, 88 .. .. .. .. W. Mills, c .. .. H. Mills, 1b... .. . J. K. Williams, 3 Casey, rf.. .. .. Meagher, 2b. .. .. Hagerman, If .. .. J. H. Williams, p.. ® b BOO 0D Totals. .::»x »» Three-base hits--N. Himes, W. Mills. Two-base hits--H, Mills, Wilkinson. Stolen bases -- Kress, G. Himes. Struck out--By Williams, 7; by Gra- bam, 2. Hit by pitcher--Williame, 3. Double plays--J. H. Williams to H. Mills; F. Graham to Wilkinson to Evans. Passed on balls--Williams, 2; Graham, 4. Time, 1.50. Promise After Continued from page 1) vators, coal sheds were mapped off on paper, so expansive as to cover all the 'wall space and its rooms in the House of Parliament. He pur- chased the swamps at the Lake and pledged himself to proceed at once, and what was the final consequence of his pledge and promises? bridge at the Lake fell in and the effluent from Robson's tannery poisoned all the fish along the stream at the entrance to the Lake. All from 'these great men, and these great plans of this great harbor are 8 few dead buirushes scattered along the swell. The only risk in now esk- ing the Government again to restore to us what we once had and which they deliberately destroyed, is the fear that they may set fire to the bul- rushes. The time has now arrived when patiénce has ceased to become a vir- tue. We have waited and asked for this convenience and necessity for 80 many years that We are deter- mined t¢ make one more effort. When we contemplate the fact that The | that is now left of these great pledges | PAGE SEVEN Town Laboratory (Continued from page 1) practioners of the district asking for their support and giving a list of the charges for the various examina- tions. As yet certain appliances and ap- paratus have not arrived at the lab- oratory. When it is finally equipped, however, the public will be invited to inspect it. The work that is he- ing carried on will also be explained. Work may be arranged through the following. Dr. T. W. G. McKay, telephone, Oshawa 04. Dr. G. L. Bird, telephone Whitby 122. Mr, F. C, Palmer, telephone, Osh- awa, 606, night, Oshawa 996J. Public Health Nurses, telephone Oshawa 606, Miss E. MacWilliams, Hospital, telephone, 249. Miss G. G. Bain, telephone Whitby 67 Oshawa * Dr. Bird will be at the Laboratory from 9 to 10 A.M. each day and by appointment, Ae¢counts gre payable to the Osh- a%a Board of Health and will be rendered monthly to the patient or the physician as the physician desires. et A ---------- J Get a arent big Goose Free for your Thanksgiving Dinner. See Saturday's paper. 86b A ------------------ RAILWAY TIME TABLES G.T.R.-C.N.R,, Oshawa Junction Going east: 8.23 a.m, daily; 10.24 a.m. daily; 1.09 p.m. daily except Sunday; 2.60 p,m, daily except Sun- day; 6.54 p.m. dally except Sunday; 9.40 p.m. daily; 11.60 p.m. daily, stops only to take on passengers for Montreal and beyond; 12.16 a.m. daily. Going west: 4.44 am. daily; 65.58 a.m, daily; 624 am. daily; 10,26 a.m. daily except Sunday; 2.22 p.m. daily except Sunday; 4.41 p.m. daily 7.29 p.m. daily except Sunday; 8.45 p.m. daily. . C.N.R., North Oshawa Station Going west: 8,356 a.m. daily except Sunday. Going east: Sunday. Canadian Pacific Railway Going east: 10.01 daily; 2.28 p.m. daily except Sunday; 9.49 p.m. dally except Sunday; 12.03 am. daily. Going west: 6,06 a.m. daily; 8.40 a.m, daily except Sunday; 4.53 -.p.n. daily; 8.04 p.m. daily except Sunday. 7.156 p.m. daily except CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING The Ontario Reformer gets results for the employer seeking competent help, and also for people who wish a real position. Advertising Rates Furnished on Request The Reformer Printing Co., Limited { Simcoe St, S. Oshawa 6 'toom brick house to rent or sell in North. $8200 will buy an 8 room solid brick house with all conven- fences, hardwood floors down- stairs, double garage, lovely lawn, 3 acres orchard, excel- lent garden (11 meres in all) in the Towh of Bowmanville. This is your chance for a nice country home. $3800 will buy =a nice 6 room brick with all conveniences ex- cept furnace, in splendid loca- tion. Terms easy. $6500 will buy a 9 room house with all conveniences, garage. centrally located, suitable for the working men of Oshawa are tax-| ed #4 per ton for coal more than is} paid by the working men of any oth-| er town in Canada where a harbor! web EERRREN exists, it is surely the business of the people of this town to see that the men who toil have at least a fair chance to exist without being pilfer- ed by profiteers or humbugged by the brilliant promises of politicians To your tents, oh Is- T. E. KAISER. receives unqualified praise and en- | first game of the final series for the |Oshawa, October 23 1922. Chaurc| pele HOT WATER HEATING There will be 2 masquerade at Zion | rooming house. We have some good prospects for houses. List your property with us for quick sale. f "Now is the time to buy your lot for Spring building. We have them to suit you. All kinds of Insurdfice written. Cafl in or 'phose ws and you will receive prompt service. 'OSHAWA REAL ESTATE SALES CO. *A. C. Lycett J. C. Young Phone 625 Phone 5093 - 61 King St. E. Phone 793 Formerly of 79 Simcoe St. North HAS MOVED TO HIS NEW STORE 148 Siisicoe St. South Baird Block the trafic cop yet." --Ohio Motorist!