Oshawa Daily Times, 21 Oct 1930, p. 7

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THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, TUESDAY, OCTOBER 21, 1930 PAGE SEVEN Allin, Mrs. W. W, Horn, and Mar- jorie Pascoe, bearing on the subject for discussion were given. Misses M. Peters and N. Horn contributed to thle musical part of the pi with a piano duet. Mrs. L. Trull read a letter from Mrs. G. H. Hun. ter, of Brooklin distriet, ¢ of this work, giving some good ideas that might be carried out in the] Hampton Branch. Louise Goodman gave a splendid "Sandwich' Demon- stration," for which she was given a hearty vote of thanks. The meet- ing closed by singing the National Anthem. Refreshments were served by the East Group. Attendance, 47. Next meeting, November 6th, will be held at the home of Mrs. J. R. Knox, Program .in charge of Mrs. A. H. Clemens and committee on "Agricul ture." : A Mrs, W. M, Strutt and Mr. and Miss .Dean, Rochester, N.Y. were recent guests at the home of Mrs. Maud Robbins. Mr. and Mrs. Piper and family, Toronto, and Mrs. J. Joll were Sun- day visitors at the home of Mrs. Lewis Cryderman, L. Reeve is visiting relatives in Qshawa for.a few days.' Mr. and 'Mrs. Will Ranton and Margaret, and | Mrs. Jno. Ranton, Trenton, visited Mrs. W. J. Virtue on Sunday. G. Adcock has been appointed tax collector for this year. Mrs. Theophilus Salter, Toronto, is visiting' relatives in the vi Mr. and Mrs. W. W, Horn were in Toronto, on Tuesday. Charlie Shaw lost a valuable horse recently, A number of neighboring friends acre on Wednesday night to.avelcome her to our village and spent a social ing, she recently moved Wa in g advan< 1g at the occa~| family, : friends here on Wednesday. | { that visit our mill the shooting being heard in the early hours of the day. | Interment took place at Hampton oh Friday afternoon of Mr. H. R. Samuel of s in Jacks in a very asters also, c n APPLES SCARCE visiting her daughter, Hooke. been reported by some. If falls such as we have had this year ) each year, we might well put 'the pr iy. back as w j little longer, - . <as the Jacks has a great showing 8 bs don, NS 4 t .is, not e oni to an ac- t ey His many. friends wish | him a speedy recovery. Ida Taylor can compte with Mr. display of Mr. and Mrh. W. G. Doidge ac- companied by Mr. and Mrs. T. Wray and f , are spending the week- end Soeully home of Mr; and Mrs. J. B. Horn, Peterborough. Mrs, Lewis Cryderman returned home on Friday from Toronto, ace ompanied by her mother, Mrs. Fan. y Qlarke, who enjoyed a short visit. AROUND MYRTLE Farmers Who Have Crop Are Busy in Orchards Myrtle, Oct, 17.--~Those who are fortunate enough to have a few ap- ples this fall have been bus the week picking them. quite scarce, and are selling at two and a half a barrel. during hey are Mr. Albert Timmins, who has been living at Scarboro Junction for the past two years, has moved back and is occupying part of Mr. W. Henry Wilsons house, south of the village. Miss Pearl Vance attended the Teacher's Convention in Whitby, on Thursday and Friday of last week and consequently the scholars had a two days' holiday. Miss Effie Graham has been visit- ing friends at Cherrywood. Miss Mary Ross, of Newcastle, spent the week-end with her sister. The special Thank Offering ser- vices are being held on Sunday, October 19th, when Rev. Capt. Best, of Whitby, will preach at 2.30 and gathered at the home of Mrs. Half-|7 .m. Kirs. Gustav Hahn, of Toronto, is Mrs. Harry Pleased, to report that Mrs. James | 'Dickson, who Has been under the village | doctor's care, is improving. 4 Mr. and\ Mrs. Norman Scott and of = le; -calléed on old Mr. Gay, of Columbus, has rented Mr. Bert Duff's house that was re- cently vacated by Mr. Macken and is starting the blacksmithing business On all orders placed October now--and Save Money. Storm Sash and. Combination Doors BARGAIN PRICES ing you the benefit of thess prices. , Don't worry--Buy 21 to 24th, we are allow- Willard's Planing Mill - 443 Richmond St. E. : County, 'Open New C.P.R. Offices He pdegme new: offices of Pacific Railway have Just at Ouellette Avenue and Chatham Windsor, Ont. the. Canadian a Above lay-out shows the location of these offices, the opening of which was made the occasion of a of C.P.R. men from every ge gatherin, ar department the company's activities as well as of repre- sentative citizens from Windsor. Inset shows His Honor Cecil E. Jackson, Mayor { Windsor, who cut the ribbon that served to tie the front emtrance * the building. at Mr. W, S. Park's stand. Mr. Park has been in poor health all fall and is unable to continue thé work for a time. Mr. Gay comes here highly recommended as a skill- ful "smithy" and the community generally wish he may meet with a generous patronage and make a suc cess of the trade here. BRAZILIAN REBELS WILL PAY DEBTS But Not Those Contracted to Fight Uprising, They" Assert New York, Oct. 21,--The Braz- flisn Revolutionary Committee here has received a cablegram from the revolutionists' repre- sentative ii Buenos Afres saying that all debts of the Brazilian Government "contracted prior tc the civil war" would be respected by the men in arms against it. "But," he added, "we will not be responsible for the payment of any debts contracted by the Rio de Janeiro: Government to fight Brazilians." Adolfo Collor, the Buenos Aires representative, explained he made the statement on the authority of the Government of the States fighting the Federal Goyernment. Augusto Amaral, President of the Brazilian Revolutionary Com- mittee of New York, declared the purpose of the revolution Is to make possible another Presidential election in Brazil. Taschereau's Son Wins By-election Oct. 21.«--Bellechasse which in 22 Provincial elections since Confederation fail- ed on only three occasions to re- turn a Liberal, ran true to form in yesterday's by-elcetion, and re- turned Robert Taschereau, Liberal, with a majority slightly under 1,000 votes. The by-election in Bellechasse County was to fill the vacancy created by the recent appointment of Hon. Antonin Gallpeault to the Bench of the Quebec Court of Ap- peals. Rober Taschereau, the suc- cessful candidate, is a mon of Premier L. A. Taschereau of Que- bec, and 1s a lawyer. Quebec, Storm Victims Died "of Monoxide Gas Regina, Oct. 21.--Monozxide gas caused the death of five men found in an automobile on the outskirts of Regina last Friday, it is stated today. Following reports of blood tests, the autopsy and analysis of organs of the dead. men, marked traces of the deadly poison have been found and will be submitted in at the inquest, to be vo. held some time this week. KEEPS THE SINK 5] free=~ running Pour full strength Gillett's Lye down your sink drains once each week and they will never clog with greasy waste accumulations and dirt. Use Gillett's Lye, too, for everyday as Farmer, 4 .small quantity ofscold * water you with an ideal, safe JENS CRITICLE - BRITAIN'S RULE Condemn Statement of Policy Issued by Labor Cabinet Washington, Oct. 21.--A resolu- tion asserting that the policy of Great Britain toward Palestine "constitutes a repudiation of the solemn pledge given by the British Government to the Jewish people" was adopted yesterday by the Am- erican Jewish Congress. The statement of policy, issued by the British Government at Lon- don was characterized by the resolution as "a violation and breach" of the mandate under Which Great Britain governs Pales- ne, Great Britain was criticized for failure tg establish a Jewish na- tional home in Paiestine, which, the resolution said, had been promiseds . The. report of Sir John Hope Simpson, the British Government's expert, was described as "biased and contrary to the terms and spirit of the mandate." The resolution also called for a meeting of the Administrative Committee of the Jewish Congress As soon as possible, 'to take such further action in regard to this resolution as the committe p e deem advisable." : UPHOLD ONTARID'S FISH REGULATIONS St. Thomas Court Admits Province's Right in In- ternational Waters St. Thomas, Oct. 21.--A deci sion with far reaching effect, was handed down in police court here when Magistrate C. F. Maxwell ruled that the provinces have power to restrict fishing in inter- national waters, Sargon is. Powerful nvigorating Tonic Increase Your Bodily Vigor, Eat With a Keen, Hearty Appetite, and Enjoy a New Kind of Sound, Re- freshing Sleep By Taking Sargon, The instant and record-breaking success of Sargon is easily explain- ed. Its effecct is almost immediate, Right from the first few doses peo- ple who are suffering from loweted vitality, loss of appetite, poor assim- ilation and elimination, begin to feel its stimulating tonic effects. Thous- ands of toxic, run down men and women who hjve taken it report it seems to pick them right up and put them on their feet, It is not only a powerful recon- structive tonic, designed to impart tone and strength to the entire sys- tem, but it is a constitutional treat- ment as well and exerts a tremen- dous influence upon the processes of assimilation and elimination. It also contains ingredients of recognized therapeutic value which are valyable for their influence upon the appe- tite and digestion, If you do not wake up in the mornings feeling rested and refresh ed and ready for a good heart breakfast; if you are not brim full of energy and ready for a good day's veork, you are not enjoying the bless. ings of health that should be yours, It is not' natural for people to simply drag through life never knaw- ing what it is to enjoy a well day. Nature never intended it and unless you are suffering from some organic or specific disease, Sargon and Sar- gon Soft Mass Pills are designed to overcome your troubles and give you a new grip on life, Wherever ccnstipation exists Sare gon Soft Mass Pills are a necessary. part of the Sargon treatment and. should be takén daily until regular. }ity of bowel movement is well es- * STANDARD BRANDS LIMITED el Conte! GILLETT PRODUCTS Montreal Winnipeg Vancouver tablished. Sargon now has the largest sale of any medicine of its kind in the world today and may well be considered one of the greatest health-giving remedies of the age. Sargon may be obtained in Osh- awa rom Karn's Drug Stores f dv.) The ruling was a part of the verdict in the case against Wilson and 'McPherson, charged with violating the five-mile shore limit imposed on gill netters in Lake Erie, east of Port Stanley, by the Provincial Department of Fisher- les. C. St. Clair Leitch, K.C., who ap- peared for the fishermen, stated that had it not been for the fact that the court 'had found the men were not violating the shore limit regulation, he would have appeal- od the decision and carried it to the highest court in the land to prove that constitutionally, the provinces have no jurisdiction in such matters jn International waters. : His Worship found that the province, under section 92 of the British. North America Act, was || vested with the power to tax fish- eries by means of a license and by virtue of its propriety rights in the fish, could make terms and conditions for the granting of licenses. Beaverbrook Adopts Bennett's Plan of Empire Preference London, Oct. 21.--Lord Beaver- brook, the leader of the Empire free-trade crusaders, tonight made an offer to Right Hon. Stanley Baldwin, Conservative dghieftatn, Speaking on behalf of Vice-Admir- al E. A, Taylor, the crusaders' candidate in the South Padding ton by-election, Lord Beaverbrook said: "I am'prepared to make Mr. Baldwin an offer which will give him an opportunity of restoring unity to the ranks of the Conser- vative Party, On behalf of the Em- pire crusade, I accept the recipro- cal preference offer of the Domin- fon Prime Ministers in the iden tical terms of the original accept ance of "Mr. Baldwin. I am pres pared, on behalf of my colleagues and myself, to leave the .inter- pretation of that offer to the Do- minion Prime Ministers. My ques- tion fs: 'Will Mr, Baldwin do the same?' CUT TIME IN HALF BRINGING MAIL Will Be Taken One-Thicd of Distance by Seaplanes Ottawa, Oct. 21--Letters posted in Liverpool, England, may be deliver- ed in Montreal and Toronto less than four days later when the Empress of Britain makes her maiden voyage on the St. Lawrence route next year. This semi-official prediction is made following experimental flights be. tween the Strait of Belle Isle and Montreal which were undertaken by authority of oHn. Arthur Suave, Postmaster-General, during the last week in September. Instead of trans. ferring the mails to and from trans- atlantic steamers at Rimouski, which is 300 miles east of Montreal, # is proposed to transfer them at Point Amour, nearly 900 miles cast of Mon- treal. In other words, letters destin- ed for Britain will go by air one- third of distance, Liverpool is 2,700 miles from Montreal. Point Amour is near Greenley Island, where the German aeroplane Bremen landed. At the present time letters going to England must be posted in Mont- real at the close of the business day on Tuesday to catch the big ships sailing from Quebec on Wednesday. Under the proposed plan, mail posted two days later, or at the close of the business day on Thursday, would connect with the same boat in the Strait of Belle Isle, Letters coming in to the opposite direction from Liv erpool te Montreal will make the journey in three days, instead of. five and a half or six days, the fastest time, yet recorded. The problem of transferring the mail from the ocean liners to the aircraft is one which is not considered insuperable, and it is probable flying boats capable of car- rying from two to three tons of mail will be used. WOMAN HOLDS UP BANK IN TEXAS Too Proud to Beg, She "Pulls Stunt" to be Sent to Prison Fort Worth, Texas, Oct. 21 -- A grey-haired, motherly woman walked into the Union Bank and Trast Com- pany here yesterday, held a bottle over her head and shouted she would blow up the bank unless given $3,000. Someone stepped behind her and easily seized the bottle, It contained sweet milk mixed with copperas "I had been out of work since the first of July and was desperate," she told Assistant District Attorney R. J. Lockland. "Although I needed money badly and was hungry, I was too proud to beg. ' - "I had no one to take care of me in old age, no living relative in the FROM ENGLAND, 'Montreal's most prominent business world. My husband and I had no children. . "This morning 1 decided to go t§ the Union Bank and Trust Company and pull a stunt which I knew would get me into the penitentiary where I could work and be taken care of." MANCHESTER NEWS Manchester, Oct, 17. ~The, Auxil- jary of the Women's Missionary So- ciety will- meet at the home of Mrs. Isaac Vernon, on Tuesday afternoon. at three o'clock: Mrs. Coultis is visiting in Osh- awa, Mr. and Mrs. Walker were at. the home of Mr, and Mrs. Elliott, of Brooklin, on Sunday. The teachers' convention was held at Whitby last. Thursday and Fri- day, and our school was. closed. The children enjoyed two beautiful sunny holidays. Mr. and Mrs. Rissell Lamb, Mr. and Mrs, Howard Lamb and children of Lindsay, were Sunday. visitors at the home of their parents, Mr. and Mrs, Frank Lamb. Miss Annie Reese spent a couple of days last week with friends in Toronto, Mr. Alwyn Owen spent a day in Toronto last week. Mr. John Johnson, the tax collec- tor for this year, is making his rounds delivering the tax slips. Mr. Thos. Smith, of Blackstock, re turned home after spending a week with her parents, Mr. and Mrs, Lamb, Miss A. Baird, of Toronto, was a visitor with her uncle, Mr. Jas Baird, Mr. and Mrs. Crawan, from the United States, are visitors with Mr, and Mrs. Crawan, who own the farm formerly owned by Foley Bros. Owing to the anniversary services at Myrtle next Sunday, there will be no church service in our church but o'clock. A number from here attended the services at Utica, on Sunday, also the supper and concert on Monday. Miss Florence Bush, of Toronto and Mr. Gordon Reeson, of Mark- ham, were visiting his parents, Mr. and Mrs. F. E. Reeson, over the week-end. NEW MARTIN THEATRE Court intrigue has formed the basis for some of the most fascinating pictures that have been presented on the screen, "Passion" "Beau Brum- mell" and "Disraeli" are just a few | of them, They all hold their own, for the simple reason that movie au- | dienices the world over get a thrill | out of seeing how kings, queens, | statesmen and diplomats behave when off guard, Everybody knows that they must be human--and prob- ably squabble amongst themselves just like the family next door. An interesting example of what a tilt between a king and queen is like is shown in "Last of the Lone Wolf," Columbia's romantic. crook drama, which comes to the New Martin Theatre on Wednesday. The fracas all started over a ring. The King gave it to the Queen, and the Queen gave it to an admirer. Her husband hard about it and there was the devil to pay. One of the most delight- ful features of the plot is that it takes an American--and a gentleman crook at that--to bring peace to the royal household. No less person than Bert Lytell-- famous stage and screen star--plays the important role of the American in this rapid-moving drama. He is ably supported by such players as Patsy Ruth Miller, Lucien Prival, Ot- to Matieson, Alfred Hickman and Maryland Morne. Richard Boles- lavsky directed. LOYAL TO CANADA, Sunday* School will start at eleven | 5 CALLED 'POOL Veteran Refuses to Become U.S. Citizen and Loses Good Job Montreal, Oct. 21.--~What price Canadianism? Ask a native-born Montrealer whg pulled in his belt last evening, wished he had had more than two meals in two days and longed for the tiny room from which he was evicted this morning after his trunk had been seized for non-payment of rent. dh In August, 1914, Canadians were glad of his services. He served in Europe and the Far East with the secret service, After demobiliza- tion came varying fortunes, then he got a job with one of the largest New York corporations. is work was liked and promotion was ahead of him. "Americans First" is the motto below the line. The Canadian got an ultimatum to become an Am- erican citizen or quit. He refus- ed to sell his birthright for the dollar that would have secured him his papers. He is back in Montreal. "A few days ago he walked in on one of med, told his story, and applied for work, "You're a~fool," was all he got. WHERE CARS ARE NOT OVER. BURDENED WITH TAGS Motorists in Florida, Alabama, Kansas, Louisiana, Mississippi and Oklahoma are required to carry on- ly one automobile license tag on their cars, wo Buy Kayser Hose and Gloves At THE ARCADE A Complete Stock Always v | | A | | ail gil | lh | Hil "QANSHEEN"--Kayser's smartly = dull, irresistibly lovely stock- ing--makes it possible for you to wear sheer hose ulways. For the marvelous twist of thread tha *Trade Mork Registered Mode in Canada SANSHEEN" Looks Sheerer Than Chiffon ... Wears Better Than Chiffon... gives "Sansheen" alluring dull- ness also gives it uncanny long wear. In the new leading Autumn shades (made with Slendo™ Heel). Chiffon . . . d | 65 gauge Chifon | 95 Extra fine 4 A

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