Oshawa Daily Times, 19 Jul 1929, p. 12

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ts Rapi meer. of Chown 'United' s Vi yr," Has His Day : ho says that dogs have not brains? - One wise canine these warm days has sought - and claimed a spot where he defies the t to pentrate his shaggy fur. ily when Old Sol is doing his ut- st' to make things uncomfortable for the inhabitants of dogdoni, 'this wise animal crawls next to the Felgh daire and jis lulled to sleep by the hum of the motor, staying there until the straight, severe rays of the sun have turned into slanting and harm- less ones. . Every Peterboro.-- 4 River View i + Peterboro.--Many ~ local citizens have remarked on the view to the south of the Hunter street bridge from that lofty structure, The is- lands that 'dot the water in that vi- cinity; covered with 'trees whose limbs touch. -the . water's edge, the green foliage contrasting with the color of | the water, forms a picture that at- tracts favorable comment. One per- son said, it was too bad that the land could not be turned into a park--it would make a little Venice. Just Another Type Peterboro.--A very obnoixous type of motorist was observed on Water street recently, Pulling away from the curb bétween Hunter and Sim- coe street he carelessly ran over the back wheel of a little boy's bicycle that happened to.be leaning against the curb. Considerable damage was done to the bicycle but the driver failed to stop to rectify matters. He sped away ifom the scene so rapid- I that it was impossible to get his license number. A Rare Event Peterboro.--It is rare that Perer- borough's main street is disturbed with runaway horses, due to the fact that few horses are to be found of fate years, but one such event oc- éurred recently. Frightened by a large piece of wrapping paper that was being blown around the street, a delivery ree bolted near the Sim- ¢oe street corner and for a time the safety of the pedestrians on George street was menaced before the horse was subdued, Paddlers Ready Gananoque.--The paddlers of the Gananoque Canoe Club will go to Ottawa Saturday morning to take part in the elimination races over the new Edinburgh and Ottawa Canoe Club course that afternoon, to quali- fy to take part in the Canadian Canoe Association championship races at Carleton Place on Aug. 3rd. It re- quires that the contestant in these be the winner of first, second or third place in any of the events in which they are a contestant in Saturday's races at Ottawa. Highest Registration Kingston~At the Chamber of Commerce office Wednesday J. M. Hughes, the manager, reported that on Tuesday the office had the high- est registration &f tourists so far this season, Is: Reserve Officer i Kingston.--A. E. Orwell, son of Mr. snd Mrs, R. Orwell, Barrie street, and a recent graduate of the Royal Military College, .is granted a com- mission in the Reserve of Officers, ~ Canadian Engineers. Join P. W. O. R. Kingston--T. W, K. Wood, and W. R. Travers, both of this city, are granted commissions as Lieutenants 'cial in the P-W.OR. in accordance with Militia Orders-quoted in- the current issue of The Canada. Gazette. Farmers Busy With Hay Rockfield --Haying operations are | in full swing and the weather being a a goodly quantity will be stored this week. : : Seeks Change of Climate Brockville --Through ill health, Rev. P. Gathy Reynolds has resign- ed his incumbency. Mr. Reynolds suffered a severe attack of pneumonia last winter, and a change of climate is considered essential, With 'Mrs, Reynolds and son, he will leave for Madoc at the close of the month and will later go to the south to spend the winter. fo Flying Service Started Brockville--W. H. Warburton, proprietor of the Thousand Island House at Alexandria Bay, is inaugur- ating a flying service this week. A Sikorsky hydro-airplane will make hourly trips for those who desire to sec the islands from the air. The air- plane is capable of accommodating three passengers. W. R. Johnson, of Syracuse, commissioned officer dur- ing the last war, will pilot the plane, Recovering Nicely Brockville --Helen Knowlton, little daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Knowlton, 13 Bennett street, who was seriously injured when struck by an automobile in King street east on the afternoon of June 27, has recov- ered sufficiently to be removed from the General hospital to her home. Her complete recovery ffom the se- vere injuries is anticipated. Fractured Right Arm Brockville.--~Thomas Hough, well known employee of the Canada Foun- dries & Forgings Co., Limited, had the misfortune to fall in the yard at his residence, 68 Pearl street east, and fractured his right arm at the wrist, E. B. Moles and it was expected the fracture would be reduced at St. Vincent de Paul Hospital. Will Move Crane Kingston.--~Workmen are engaged at the yards of the Shipbuilding Co. in digging a trench for the founda- tion of the large crane, which will be moved to the west side of the dock. Pulpit Exchange Brockville.--Rev. J. H. Miller, Kemptville, president of the Montreal and Ottawa conference of the United Church, and Rev, Jacob I. Hughes, Huntingdon, Que., are to exchange pulpits, the changes going into effect next month. Steamer Arrives Prescott.--The steamer Kingston arrived at port here on Tuesday morning, carrying the largest passen- ger list of the season. About 450 pas- sengers were transferred to the Rapids Prince for the trip down the Rapids to Montreal and other points east. Arrested in Hamilton Kingston.--George Howard of Dés- eronto, who is wanted in that téwn for non-support of his wife and fam- ily, was arrested in Hamilton at the instigation of the Belleville Provin- Police, and Constable David Sylvester has gone to the Ambitious City to bring him back. Work Progressing Peterboro.--~Worknien arc busy on the site of the new Assembly Hall at the corner of Brock and Aylmer streets, levelling off the ground pre- paratory to erecting the new build- ng. New Shower Bath Peterboro.--It is a problem these hot days how to keep the kiddies cool, and to prevent them from wan- dering to a swimming hole where LI J Ladies' Shoes Latest Styles Handmade In Satin, Suede and Kid. All sizes Regular $3.75 $6.50. Special ... ALL OUR SHOES ARE HANDMADE AT Mens' Boots and Shoes Sizes 6 to 10. Reg $3.25 $4.00, Special. . Boys' Boots and Shoes All sizes. Value . Progressive Shoe Store Corner Bond and Prince Street HEAT YOUR HOME THE DIXON WAY a Now Is The Time -Jeddo Coal - to Fill Your Coal Bin With That Good Solvay Coke And All Other Good Fuel "FOR THE Gravel, Sand, BUILDER Stone, Lime And Building Material ~~ DIXON COAL 'AND SUPPLIES Telephone 262 FOUR DIRECT LINES Make the most of the morn- ing tub--dash a handful of Bath Crystals into the 'water when preparing the bath. This will suffice to -scent a tubful of water and . make it soft as dew ---- ex- hilarating and refreshing. The assortment of Bath Salts is complete at your Rexall Drug Store--call in for a bottle and get new enjoyment out of the daily plunge. Georgia Rose Bath Salts 59¢ Lorie Lavender ...... 69c Yardley's Lavender ., $1.00 Duska Bath Crystals $1.23 Shari Bath Crystals. $2.00 Houbigants .......,. $1.50 Three Flowers ..... $1.00 Cara Nome Bath Salts $1.50 At the Rexall Drug Store Jury & Lovell King E. Simcoe S. Phone 28 Phone 068 , THE OBHAWA DAILY TIMES, FRIDAY, JULY. 19, 1929 ' onde 4 Ror No.2 creamery, fans 9 patiliohs, 30 to 3c. He is being attended by Dr.. Produce Prices Commercial Markets in the "TORONTO PRODUCE holesale dealers are offering pro- OT euins dealers ot tho lollowing. pri- as~Frosh extras; in cartons, 35c; fresh 1 3c; firsts, 2 to Me; seco mery, prints, 40 to dic; 2A 1-2; 2c; ga old, as, loose, ,. 226; 8 tw 26 1.2; triplets, and cuts, 28 AAA 3 up sug SelB: Brier i 1b. * TORONTO PROVISION PRICES J clear bacon, 50 to 70 s., $19; 90 to 100 Ibs.' $11.50; Lard 16 1-4c; pails, 16 3-4c; to, 18 3 hortening, tierces, 13 1.2 to 14 1. TORONTO FARMERS' MARKET 88: }W: 3 1100: OO, sEABL 1 8 soos: i ©) ocoo~ooomo920000C0 BLURERBRISIAREEIES | spberries, pint .. Raspberries, quart ... TORONTO-HAY AND § WwW Local wholesale hay and straw s are making the following' quotations to farmers delivered at Toronto) ;--~ « , 0. 1 timothy," loose,' per ° * Wheat straw . 50 3, do, «+ 1200 NEW YORK PRODUCE New York, EAST BUFFALO LIVE STOCK East Buffalo, July 18.--Hogs, 1,300; hold- overs, 1,000; very dull unevenly weak to iSc lower on weights 210 Ibs, The following are quotations, retail, in ef- fect on the 8, Lawrence k T 3 some danger. One there may be mother solved the Peterborough problem by setting the hose going in |B the afternoon and putting the spray on so it made a nice shower of cool- ing water, Here she let her kiddies and all the kiddies in the neighbor- hood play under the water, They all seemed to be having a whale of a time as they played follow the leader through the sprinkler. Quaker Man On High Peterboro--A Quaker Man now adorns the water tower which is lo- cated at the top of the Quaker Oats factory. This huge sign is symbolic of the brand of the product that this cereal company produces. ° Cut Writs Kingston. Lindsay Storie, attend- ing the camp at Barriefield, slipped on the sidewalk, and striking a sharp stone, cut his wrist quite badly. The wound was dressed at the Hotel Dieu Hospital, and several stitches were required to close the cut, Stolen Car Found Kingston.--William Jackson, of the Jackson Press had his car stolen from the Cricket Field on Monday night while he was attending the Chautau- qua, On Tuesday night while one of his employees was on Bagot street he "spotted" the missing car parked at the curb, The car had not suffered any damage and was prob- ably left on the street by "joy riders" who had made off with it from the Cricket Field, Gay Reminders Peterboro.--Nothing remains to re- mind one of the big doings of Old Home Week but the occasional flag or streamer that has not yet been put away. Several of these are still to be seen on George and Charlotte streets, and some of the residences in the city still sport the gay decora- tions for the big week. Wooden Posts Removed Peterboro.--The old wooden poles that have held their place on Hunter street between Aylmer and George for so many years arc now giving way to more modern iron standards. Inspector Is Here Kingston.--Mr, Gilbert Smith, of Ottawa, inspector of penitentiaries, is in the city and spent Wednesday at Portsmouth Penitentiary, - While In- spector Smith himself will not talk it is understood his visit is more or less connected with routine matters and is not in the nature of an in- vestigation. It is also reported that the issucs involved in connection with the recent suspension of De- puty Warden Tucker, subsequently reinstated with full pay, are now considered closed and it is not in- tended that they shall be reopened. SUBMARINES LURE SHIPS T0 THEIR END Towed by Harmless Trawler Sinks Enemy Craft New York.--The cloak of invisibil- ity is one of mankind's ancient dreams. Its advantages in many sit- uations of life are obvious--in a fight especially. Invisibility in warfare has been an endless preoccupation of frequently enbattled humanity, writes Lowell Thomas in Popular Mechanics Magazine. The World War, which brought the art of spilling blood to new heights of technique, provided new wonders of concealment. Two especial and opposing arts there were, as there have always been, the one for spy- ing on the enemy, the other for hid- ing yourself from hin. The former, essentially reconnais- sance, found its principal modern in vention in the aeroplane. Of the latter there were many sorts, camou= flage, the smoke screen, and, above | all, the submarine, Among the many measures that the allied powers took to thwart the fear- fully effective threat of the U-boats | was the systematic use of submarines that it could have any importance. Chance encounters between sub - oy , per Fruits and Ve Asparagus, 2 bunche: Carrots, 3 bunches Spinach, peck ushrooms, per pound Leaf lettuce, three for Head lettuce, eaeh . Potatoes, bag .... Cucumbers, 3 for . Parsley, per bunch vesevesssnenss co~ocooooecaons cose SRBESNEVNYEAB an _ Suns 175; cows slow, TORONTO GRAIN OTATIONS Grain dealers on the Toronto Board of Trade are making the following quotations for car lots; Wheat ¢ "ee (c.if. Goderich and bay ports. track, Ic higher than above.) Price on against the U-boats haunting and stalking the lanes which German prowlers customarily followed. Dur- ing the entire war the Germans had a few more than 300 U-boats in ac- tive fighting service, 17 Sunk by "Subs" Of these, 178 were sunk by the al- lies, a ghastly percentage of losses. Mines took tthe heaviest toll of the under-sea raiders. But as we look over the list, we are amazed and at first a bit baffled, to observe that 17 U-boats were sunk by allied submar- ines. The first U-boat sunk by an allied submarine was the U-10, lost in the summer of 1915. The British admir- alty conceived a brilliant and cunmng idea. The subtle plan of the London sea lords was to use a fishing smack as a decoy and have it cruise around with a British submarine in' tow. Of course the latter was to lurk just un- der the surface, with not even its periscope above water to give warn- ing. . It would be connected with the fish ing smack by a telephone line, Then if a U-boat on the prowl approached the innocent-looking fisherman and came along on the surface with the intention of sinking her by shell fire, the plan was for the British sub, ap- prised and guided by telephone, to pop suddenly to the upper zone and cut loose with a. torpedo. Superb idea, and so, in fact, it 'came to pass. On June 23, 1915, the trawler Tar- anaki could have been seen meander- ing along the Scottish coast, some miles off Aberdeen. And who would have suspected that she had a haul of steel fish in view with a steel fish of her own to effect the capture? For, attached to the towline of the harmless-looking Taranaki was the British under-sca ship of war, the C-24, G "U-boat in sight!" called the look- out on the fishing smack. "U-40" Meets Doom Leaning against the wall of his conning tower, with ' telephone re- ceivers over his ears, was a gaunt young Englishman, Lieut F, H. Tay- lor of the C-24, "Submarine a thousand yards astern," The message came from the trawler on the surface. "Slip the towline," the order was passed along from Licutenant Tay- lor to his men, But something went wrong and she could not free herself. Her com- mander telephoned to the trawler, which loosened the towline at its' end. The C-24 now had 300 fathoms of towline hanging from her bow. She immediately began to sink bow first, It 'took time to bring her up to an cven keel. Then she came to peri- scope depth for a look. The U-boat was lying on the sur- face ready to sink the trawler. The C-24, ruunning with her periscope showing and dragging that monoton- ous length of cable, steered to within 50 yards of the unsuspecting German, It took great scamanship to get in a shot, "Torpedo, fire!" And the white wake of the torpedo sped true to the mark, A heavy explosion and the U- 40 instantly sank. The British boat came to the surface and picked up two officers who had been on deck of the U-boat--the only survivors, A month later the British C-27 was being towed beneath the surface un- der similar circumstances. A U-boat appeared and ordered the trawler to "abandon ship." This was reported to the C-27, deep in the water. The telephone wires were kept hot, while the stalkers waited for the U- || boat to come up close enough for an effective attack. Then, right at the critical moment, the telephone went out of commission, Torpedo Misses Below the surface Lieutenant Dob«" son, in command of the C-27 swore his best sailorman's oath at the luck: He waited in a quandary. Then he heard explosions above, shells burst- ing on the surface, The U-boat was ines you might expect as a remote possibility, but surely. not that such encounters would become a normal feature in the scheme of things, or that these fights would have any ap- preciable part in the decision of war at sea. Nevertheless, allied were sent out on regular submarines' patrols Store, HAY FEVER and the summer cold , H. Karn, Drug Your Nose Needs 'Nostroline" firing on the trawler, "Slip the towline," ordered Dob- son, and the C-27 came up for a look around with her periscope. The Ger- man was shelling the trawler, which was replying to the fire. The C-27 maocuvred for a shot, "Torpedo, fire!" A tense wait in the submerged boat. Not a sound. The torpedo had missed. Surely their game would be up. How could the Germans have helped but see that telltale white wake? The ill-starred U-boat kept on firing. In the excitement of the fight and the thrill of seeing their missiles bursting on the enemy deck, the Germans were oblivious of every- thing else. They never noticed the white torpedo track that had swept past them, "Ready for another shot," ordered Dobson, as he shifted his aim. This time the torpedo sped true. A heavy explosion and the "U-23" plunged io the bottom. The C-27 blew her tanks, came to the surface, and picked up the cap- tain of the U-boat, two officers and four men who were swimming in the sea. This is going to be an even bet- ter world when dry statesmen act the way they talk and sound pie- ture performers talk the way they act.--The New Yorker. At Blacklake, Quebec, 400 gal- lons of whisky weie seized which had been labelled "asbestos." This was a distinct slur upon the fire qualities of the contents, -- Brant- ford Expositor, THE ARCADE $2.49 COME TO OUR CLEARANCE DRESSES 3 POPULAR PRICES Li Ww i $3.95 $4.95 These prices cover the majority of our Dresses up to $7.95 each. Everyone a wonderful Bargain, FRIDAY AND SATURDAY = i i \ ALL REMNAN TO CLEAR AT 25% Discount MOVE T0 INSURE ARWORTHY PLANES Rigorous Standards For Safety of Most Vital Parts Washington, D. C, July 19.--A comprehensive governmental move to insure more airworthy planes has been taken in new Department of Commerce "airworthiness re- quirements", which set 'up rigor- ous standards for the safety of vital parts. An analysis made by the Aeren- autical Chamber of Commerce shows 38 specific change in the "airworthiness requirements," the aircraft engineering code follow- ed by American manufacturers to obtain opproved type eertificates for their plains before they are sold to the public. Advance copies of the code have been prepared by the chamber and sent to its members, who include approximately 95 per cent of the airplane manufacturers in the coun- try. To bring about further streng- thening of airplane structures, the Department of Commerce will re- quire manufacturers to demon- strate by loading tests the strength of all control surfaces and control systems, and the shock absorbing qualities of landing gears on their planes. Such tests were not. re- quired previously. Specimens of all wood members used in airplane construction must now be loaded to destruction and sample of the parts that fail must be analyzed to determine their physical properties. Cabin planes must have one exit for each six persons carried instead of just two exists as pre- viously required. Detailed speci fications for all openings and ex- its are giyen. The former sketchy require- ments for engine installation have been expanded to inculde detailed instructions to insure the highest type of construction. Propeller clearance above the ground has been changed from a minimum of six inches to nine in- ches for land plans and 18 inches for seaplanes, The propellers must be so designed and adjusted that they will limit the engine specd to 105 per cent. of the official rated speed at full throttle in lev- el flight. The instruction of glider. build- ing in the United States has promp- ted the addition of a new para- graph devoted to this type of con- struction, C-0-A-L MALLETT BROS. Phone 3060 Our yard will 'be closed every Saturday afternoon, May to August, Summer Weather Is Here: A Few Refrigerators Left Will Clear at the Following Prices: 1 Only Walnut Finish Hardwood Refrigerator ........... $15.50 | Only Walnut Finish Hardwood Refrigerator ......... $22.50 1 Only White Enamel Hardwood Refrigerator ........... $32.50 1 Only Natural Finish Oak, Porcelain lined .............. $95.00 | Grey Metal Refrigerator, white enamel interior ......... $18.25 | White Metal Refrigerator with white enamel interior. .... $20.25 2 White Metal Refrigerators with white enamel interior. . . .$27.25 1 Grey Metal Refrigerator with porcelain interior ........$45.00 One Grey Metal Refrigerator With Porcelein Interior $57.50 It will pay vou to inspect these refrigerators before buying. We are sole agents for Kelvinator electric refrigerators. We will be glad to demonstrate at our show rooms, King Street East, Phone 78 and 79. uke Furniture Company 63 King St. East Phone 78-79 63

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