Oshawa Daily Times, 4 Feb 1931, p. 6

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Te THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES. WEDNESDAY, FEBRUARY 4, 1931 .® Shannon, & pretty steno 18 In love with her ems Phillp Dane: It is a love, for PAlllp ia rich Il connected and taters Carolite Gibbons, a girl mE his own soolal world, He Beth was wearing some ful clothes sent by an aunt dled In Parle, and she hoped something might come 18 meeting. Beth is recovers 'W from an attack of grip. come to her shabby tens Home, who &shere lives invalld mother, to tell going to Florida, for a eke, and to give her some | tion: \ about the office. As leaviag he Is accosted by Metealt, a neghborhood man who is in love with INSTALLMENT TWENTYIWO "This Is Good-By" haven't any idea who you Philip was saying impatient. hb, yes, I do remember you dn the dim light of this hall I recoguize you, How are you recall your tel can't Ll "George Metcalt, waa the short , "and I want to know what BU are doing here." "1 can't think of any particular you," replied, pausing to lght a Rarette, "but since you think it | 85 important, I'll tell you. I up here to seo Miss Shane why I should tell a A jon _on business." i" 'closely at George. ne of your 1p," George shot "I've never touched a drop in VE'S PRISO by Barbara Webb ," said George violently, 'on ! That's the only use you for her, {sn't it? Businoss!" ith saw Philip lean over and "Have you 'drinking too much?" hoe asked ER 1t was always because you hoped to get mo to MArty yous' "We Can Leave Tomorrow" "Oh, Beth, do marry me, now, Listen, I've sold my business. I've Bot a good price for it, enough to start me off anywhere in the coun. try you want to go. I'll take you and your mother South, whére the climate will be better for her, Any place you say, Beth, We can leave tomorgow if you'd say yes." "Well, I won't," sald Beth, rat. 1y. "I like the way I live here, and I like my new friends, and I'm per. fectly able to take care of myso:f without having you hang aronna to see what time I come in. I don't thank you for a single bit ob your {nterference, and I hope you do go away and stay away. Oh, I'm so overcome by having this excitement follow so quickly upon her illness, "I'thsorry, Beth," his tone was vory gentle} "it all happened bes cause I love you so much, because this time last year I was too cause tious to marry you when you might have had me. Can't you forgive me, Beth?" "No. No." "I'l go away, Beth; I'll go te night; but I hate to go and think that gyou're angry with me. Can't you Tet all tho times when we have boen friends count as much, at least, as what I did tonight?" Beth continued to sob, and he put a tentative hand on her should. er. She did not shake it off ana he ventured to pull one hand away from her eyes and hold ft hig own, "I'll always love you, Beth: too mueh to bother you again: but IY would like to know that there's no here feeling betweon us, before I Beth stood very still, The mem ory of all that had happened since they moved Into the flat overcame her. George had been the first to make any gesturs of friendliness. Time after time ho had carried her mother to and from her bedrosm, ashamed" And she began to sob, . |AVIATRIX DEFEATS Hee. which is more than you ean Just want to tell you to keep Way from here. Miss Sharnon pesn't want anything to do with ju, She's not coming back to your old office to work for yon more. She's not going to have Miything to do with you and y.ur Jh=hat friends. Do you her ma?" Conflict Time after time tlevm fn lis narrow limited way. He had been tho first man whs Lad over taken her any place, yao, the first man who had ever kissed her, the only man who had ever wanled to marry her. l'or two years, until the coming of the trunk and tha letter and the loss of her old Joh and the getting of the new ono that had changed lier life so radtealiy, he lad helped NEW LIFE SEEN IN TEXTILE INDUSTRY Optimism Features Banquet At Valleyfield Plant Opening. Valloyfleld, Que. eb. 4.--The textile industry, bled nearly white by unfair competition, has been given a new leaso of life by the protectionist tariff of the Conserv ative ' Government, RK. W. Brup- bacher, president of the Brupbach- er Sile Mills, Limited. told guests assembled here at a dinner given by the City of Valleyfield in honor of the Brupbacher officials who re- cen:ly opened their silk plant here. Mr. Brupbacher predicted a brill. fant future for the textile industry --especially sllk=--it the present protection policy is continued. "To give our textile industry, which is in its infancy in the Dominion, a chance to grow we need protection, and with the new t~~!ff I think we have an excellent chance," re said. Optimisim in the future of Vale leyfleld was the keynote of the evening. Not tho optimisim of the dreamer, but the optimisim of the thinker and the business man, who basis his deduction on power, rail and water facilities, utstanding Champion HE eet Mr. "Strathmore C. Koba Fairchild," prize bull who has been awarded Reserve All American honors by a committee in the United States appointed by the American Holstein-Friesian Association. In addition he won first Prize at the recent Royal Canadian Winter Show in Toronto. Mary Koba was Reserve All Amer- ican Junior yearling heifer, 1930. Both animals were bred at the Canadian Pacific Experimental Farm at Strathmore, Alberta. The Strathmore and Tilley farms, oper- ated by the Agricultural Branch of the Canadian Pacific Railway, made a very remarkable showing at the Toronto show last November. Suf- Strathmore | folk sheep from the Tilley farm won every first and second prize and all championships including Champion wether. In Hampshires the flock from Tilley farm won four firsts including Grand Champion ewe, reserve Grand Champion ram and Champion wether, Holsteins from the Strathmore farm won the coveted Haley & Lee jrophy for the second time. Altogether the sheep from the Tilley farm and the cattle from Strathmore farm won eighty ribbons at the Royal Winter Show, Toronto, of which fifty were made up of nineteen Firsts, twenty Seconds and eleven Championships and Reserve Championships. MALE CONTESTANTS 8 Daphine Patterson Success- ful In Trials At § Montreal p uw Paterson, well known member of the Montreal Light Aeroplane Club, and at the present time Secretary |n of the Ladies' Aeroplane Club of |a tion here, beating her nearest malo competitor by one point, fi Keen interest was displayed in|; machines according to the exacting || requirements of the competition in which the pilots were supposed to| be making a forced-landing on aln narrow fleld. Flying down-wind| markedly as the tivy Montreal, Feb, 4.-- Miss Daphine | sentimental by room for whole thing is carried forward bh the efforts of the fliers to land their | spicuon 3 ite critics says, "The music of Mr. Dunhill, in spite of occasional lapses Ito oversscrionsness, is, on the whole, parkling and melodious, It improves Oper Progra "Whatever else it is or is not; "Ian- Towers' is certainly an opera," ays The Times critic, who refers to this as "the satisfactory thing, be dight thread of its story lyrics, jovial, atirie, and turny, leave plenty ol 1s Indeed the the sic (there is no spoken dialogue), ad if the music had not that versa ause the nd the the Saint John, N.B,, gained the highest | tility which: My, Dunhill displays, its score in a novel landing competi-| three acts would hang fire, fact they which in Jay's artists never do rst song, 'Where the ather," 1« nearly Sullivan, con because for tl part, urprisingly clear o Jenni merry It 1st 1e music keep lear of the juzzy jerk aturally accompany gas nd streamers." balloons | unhappy lot of working ty the Sullivan idiom, but it also keeps | Possibly visualize the | I which would | this London County Council==to co-ordine ate the whole thing and with this the suggested Traffic Advisory Commit. tee would co-operate. They would see that every improvement was cars ried out in relation to a given plan, and that there were proper approach- es to railway stations and docks. They would begin where the demand for reform was most urgent--where congestion was greatest, YA great new, wide avenue ought to run from somewhere about Hol- born Viaduct, crossing Smithfield and Barbican and running north of Liv. erpool. I can visualize, in time to come, all vehicular traffic in the heart of the City--the third of a mile around the Bank--Dbeing forbidden except such traffic as is actually des tined for buildings in that area. "How much would all this cost? Well, Kingsvay, that great, broad thoroughfare, cost nothing, because land was acquired and whole thing was done on a business basis, The same could be done with all these schemes, and there would be a huge public gain, The narrow lanes in many parts of London, which cannot be used for tr.ffic, should go, and the new buildings could be higher, light- and airier because they would be set further apart, All this would take time. But we have to do it gradually, and to make little improvement when and where we can--and they ought to begin at once." Major Crawfurd"s plans formed part of the report of the Transport Com. mission, which was presented to the Government recently, DISCUSS PROBLEM OF CHILD TRAINING McGill Teacher Gives In. teresting Lecture To Mothers Montreal, Feb, 4.--Pproblem of the "Absenteo Mother" was discussed the other day by Dr. C. A. Dawson, director of the McGill School for So. cial Workers. This problem, he felt, was dependent for solution upon the type of mother in question, There was such a thing as too close sup: ervision, with the danger of the child not being allowed opportunity to develop its own individuality, but certainly some adult had to be re sponsible for the behavior habits of thie young child, and in this connec tion, the nursery school or similar institution was doing good work. Again, he felt, the father in many cases tended to Jet the training of BRONCHITIS RAZ-MAH Capsules taken as a hot drink at meal time are positive relief for chronic bronchitis, A wonderful remedy, Harmless. $1 a box at all druggists. Just try it, R.93 RAZ-MAH the child fall altogether on the mo ther, which was a shirking ot his re- sponsibilities, ns the child needed both parents for ideal development, In the case of the one-child fume ily, care should be taken to see that companionship in his own age group is given, either through a nurery school, playmates "or some other means whereby the child is with children rather than adults ull the time. Chronic conflict in the fam. ily the danger of pushing a child to the point of making him over-so- phisticated, the adjustment to differ ing family standards, and the egos centric child, were briefly discussed, it being pointed out in conelusion that if a child is allowed to mature with « sense of frustration, or other serious emotional handicaps, passes that on to the next generation by making in his turn the same mistakes in dealing with his family difficulties, he would take perhaps 50 years to come plete<<awhereby there would be more traflic chaos here, | Major Crawfurd's plan making all improvements in roads and buildings serve the cause of traf- fic reform, widening streets, wherever possible, and banning vehicular traf- lic from the onesthird-squarc-mile of | the heart of the City, "Imagine the delays that are causes eld in transport of goods from th rapidly developing industrial centr ol Middlesex to the other side ol London," Major Crawfurd said in a recent anterview, "Imagine the miles long queves of lorries waiting to en ter the docks, the impossibility of executing an urgént errand in a ear mn many parts of London, and the uirls who have to travel to their business stand. Then you ean immensity of ing 15 in a carriage. traffic problem, "Instead "of saying that certain kinds of trafic should not go here or no | includes | ! EERE ssi RES BOYS J) SUITS SPECIALS FOR ursday- Friday-Saturday We offer 75 Boys' Suits--made from fancy tweed and worsteds as well as Fox Serge--in two, three and four piece models--all beautifully Tailored and Trimmed--many 'with Knickers, Bloomers, Breech- es and Longs. Some made with the "Aero-Buke:" waist band and cuffs. $4.95 36-9 $8.95 119° Sizes 4 years to 18 ycars, Rs Se re ---- ARE WE Ws, L ""You," sald Phillp with danger. mildness, "I hear you, Lut OU say doesn't make senso. you'd better let me go, and TU Miss Shannon and my. Jf to manage our own affairs." was so much contempt in tone in which the last words spoken that George lashed 6 with his right fist and stinck a grazing blow. Ph!l last he had beenr the one Lright spot in her drab existence, Yes, she owed him something. Very slowly Sho raised lier head ond smiley a him through Ler tears, "It you're really going away,' she said, "I'll --1'l] forgive you. But I don't want to see you ABU ee things have changed so, for Lath of 1s, George. Wo don't Mang to. hil gether any more, I'm going to mov | balance and toppled over on|away from here, le 1 So and the two of them began | you're 1'zU¢ when you ask that we 5 neg fi fn > tight in grim earnest thove on part Without any hard feelings. narrow stairs, " hh rushed down. "Stop 1+," he | The Only Link ® 4 She Lield out her other hand anu A guarded tome. "You'il ! 'erybody in the house 410wn | George tools it, liolding her row Ly (eS, the police--~ol, stop it, both | both hands and looking for & ng ) i, You aust be crazy." time {nto her eyes. b Phil tad caught George by this| "Then this fs good-by," he sald, jim and was shaking him bask and | solemnly and Leth did not resist OFLL as a terrier might shave a | when he loaned forward and-kissed Ho released him suddeniy and |her forhead and ler wet <heeke. peed on the stairway. | But When he took her in his arms and tried to kiss Lier mouth she w ® anpoy you, Miss Shan- 1" Phil asked, straightening h's | turned her head aside. "No, please," sl prod. "No, I can manage him, Please Or a, hig Whispers A Ho held her close for a moment, : dulekly, before a crowd gatle v i y fhon without another word Lo loft, A eth saw the door close hohind [Phil hesitated. "I Lats to leave a foul in trouble," hoe begau. Lim, heard his steps on the sinirs, a0rge had gone, and she know that ¢ "PH be in far worse trouble if|she would not see him again, OU stay," eho assured him, so| With her kneek trembling from ostly that he could not Lut be-| weakness she climbed up on the ® hier. "This man--Georgs, here, | chair and took out tho letter, knits me to marry him. I sbould| be opened a year from today." and vo sont iim away long ago. Now| the date in the corner in hes own Will! you'll only léave--wses, | neat handwriting, ® are opening doors now, "The only link from the past hurry," that I'll carry into the new year, And she gave him a slight shove] she sald softly to herself. and ine 1 the stairs, With a last girewes | stead of putting the letter bac'e tile trembling George, trying to|she tucked it in the bosom of her 8 breuth back as he loaned | dress, t the wall, Phil started down "I'll keep it with me from now ops. Hoe lad no wish to be|on" she thought, "It's ths only in a tenement brawl, aud|hopaful thing I have left, anyway." t sure that Deth was quite | To Be Continued Tomorrow potont to manage her ows uf.' As lie stepped {uto his road- "parked at the curd with a of etirfous youngsters looking "long rakish lines, hie gave a paosght to Beth's sorld Lica, there, we ought to meet the needs of the people and make it possible for the traffic to go where it is wanted, "We ought to have in London an tauthority=it would lave to be the THE END! TO-MORROW, THURSDAY FEBRUARY 5th IS POSITIVELY THE LAST DAY F Luke's Quitting Business AUCTION A SOUVENIR TO FIRST A beautiful and expensive piece of Furniture will be 50 LADIES IN STORE given away to someone in . BEFORE 2 P.M. TO. the crowd at both after. MORROW noon and evening sales! at a point ubout 1,000 feet directly above the flag-marked onclosure each competitor was required to shut oft his engine, turn into the wind, and enter the imaginary field by diving under a telegraph line and over a hedge which were repre. sented by two tapes stretched be tween two poles ninety feet apart, The tape representing the telegraph line was fixed at a helght of twenty feet while the so-called hedge was five feet from the ground. Having safely entered the enclosure the pi- lot was required to bring his ma- chine to rest within 300 feet of the hedge, points being awarded for the nearness of the machine to the 300-foot limit, for the style of the approach and for the landing itself, JOHNSTON'S th; The student today accumulates the horsehide, the pigskin, the' coonskin and, by the timo he has tha sheepskin father haen't vory much hide left elther.--Minuea. polls Journal, Thousands of Dollars Worth of Valuable Furniture, Rugs, Radios, Pianos, Cur- tains, Drapes, Fixtures still to be Sold. All Must Go Tomorrow Regardless of Price! . = LAST TWO SALES ~ 200430 pm. = To-morrow -730t 10pm. The Greatest Bargains ot The Entire Sale i To-morrow Woman in Haverhill, Mass., conwclous for 500 hours after an auto accident, has entered suit for $20.000 damages. It's a serious thing to mako a woman remain silent for 0600 hours, Stratford Beacon-Herald, J lives of the people who Work for you," lie told himself sy ho dtoyo sway. "I'd never pave gone it Arnold hadn't been so svio wag tao thing to do, Yunny enap, pid. 1 wonder if Le's in love the girl. 1 Lope hie doesn't run with this Geor.e person if fiow-"' atid Phil drew 11 a th of the clear winter a'r land dismissed Beth from his mind, ehind fim fn the tenement Doth iy ught George by one arm and P! "I don's believe," says Mies Peggy Joyce, "1 shall ever marry agaln." 1t sho doesn't, ft will be uling him up after her. ex- [tho first time. using the remnant of lier slendcr rength to get him into the Stan. j hen. ; ow," she sald, standing' fim i the wall, "maybe you'll tell you meant by making that ous scone~disgracing wo 8 89." fi couldn't helo it, Beth, dear," ) slowly. "I Just saw red whon met that men coming down ths ys 1 know how you feel about im, and how he treats you lke the tier under his feet, Night ° after T've stood down there wait- « for' youn Lo come in, Jiayle to | : ; (new you wore safe. Pr J 4 Ee at ho 1 could never do! jad sivinates fever, relieves Ry thingMAnd tonight 1 Just lost re An a the eontrol myself completely." "wiAnd lost me, too. Doth said ino. "lor Vm through wih w, Oeorge. 1 ani Jou Shon og trom he » fa wnow dave Pos) nd niher, 'Anal. 0 (sn meand tom er Bul when 1 vas sick Just woh SH 4 Luke Fumiture Co. * 683 King Street, East Oshawa, Ont. he LAXPYRIN at once" Act now before a severe cold, flu, pneumonia get a deadly grip on you. Laxpyrin de- stroys cold germs, reduces Colds on the chest mean congestion, Is congestion in bronchial tubes and air passages must be relieved by bring. is fre blood to the congested parts, The deeply Sretealing quality of BAUME. BENGU (pronounced BendGay) stimulates outerchest circu. lation, lessening deeper congestion and ging prompt relief, Prescribed for over 3 "BeH:Gav o ears, for "SAYING GOOG-BYE TO OUR MANY FRIENDS" The story of "Tantivy Towers, At a birthday party in Chelsea Lady Ann Gallop, the davghter of Hugh Heather, the celebrated ténos Jennie Jay, a painter, falls in love] the of the Larl of Tantivy Heather and Jenny find themselves, giv Towers on the night of the Hunt | all, Lady Ann is engaged to Cap- | tain Darcback, the Hunt, In the third act the larl of Hunt because his daughter has jilted Captain Bareback, goes shooting, and | ts cuctsontinmm set -- Hunt passes, und Heather siwots the fox=~whereupon Lady Ann Lose ALLEGED CALGARY he Master of the Hound back with lis nui y Chelsea, / The Times critic says: * "Tantivy | ---- for Jones is a real tenor, and 1 uy Anny can be excused fo arining Alberta Authorities Request ||" i"! 1c 'tied, for imagining Extradition of Mike X y braban, as the MISH, not only ooks as though Lie. would ride Dudko from U.S. particulirly successful in getting the | Topeka, Ku, Feb, 4.--Tho arm of words across. Roy Russell and Mi law reached down from Canada Conntess, are worthy of their titles, ko, 28, from bohind the walls of | "4 Miss Barbara Pert Fraser Lovenworth I"ederal prison to face especially when she engaged in the task of making friends boyy | Canadian officials digging deep ot { Inno thousands of finger print re- ------------ tiary where he was serving a sen- WOULD REBUILD tence from Indiana for transport- | Yesterday Rudko, allay Mike tadko, allas Jack Peterio, was | Richard J. Hopkins here and heard himself accused in the slaying last gary taxi driver, D - George D. Henwood, Deputy A- ' Novel Scheme Suggested To George Harvey, detective of the Alberta Provincial Police, reguest- Solve Traffic Judge Hopkins said he expected aa uni. | 10 report of evidence in the case London, Feb, 3.~A bold scheme to who would decide tho matter, sebuild the Metropolis so that 50 . uildings in London, und no traffic CRITICS PRAISE problems to solve as at present, is ex-M.P., a member of the Royal Commission on Transport. Major solve the traffic question is by prac- tically rebuilding the Metropolis, and : Lyrics By A. P. Herbert] caching and ambitious one, which Compared to Those of London, Yeb, 3.~"Tantivy Towers," which had its first production recent- smith, London, of which Sir Nigel Playfair, noted actor, is Yessee and the London critics. One of these A fred Kalisch, music critic for the the opera are the best since W. S, Gilbert's time, The Times critic vies, and. refers to some . of it us "siearly Sullivan." A Towers" are by A. P. Herbert, dras matic author, and the music is by fessor at theRoyal College of Music liere, Herhest are the most brilliant known to the frglish stage since the days briefly told, is us follow the Earl of Tantivy, falls in love with with Charles Viscount Harkawa in the second act, as guests at Tan- | he master of the Tantivy, being unable to follow thie meets Heather and Lady Ann, The s and returns to her alleglar Heather goes SLAYER LOCATED Towers' is fortunat in it cast, 'It Har straight, but sings straight, and wa Feb. 4 Doris Woodall, as the Earl and yestorday and brought Mike Rud- 8 Lady Anu, was pleasantly allusis o murder charge at Calgary, Alin. two antipathetic lovers." cords traced Rudko to the peniton- ing a stolen automobile. brought before Federal Judge August of Ernest Midwinter, Cal- WITHIN a0 YEARS ttorney General of Alberta, and ne ed the extradition of the prisoner. . Problems [to Secretary of State Stimson, who Fears hence there will be tall, airy suggested by Major H. E. Crawford, i 'TANTIVY TOWERS' Crawfurd, thinks the only way to hie has a scheme mapped out--a fare Gilbert's Day ly at the Lyric Theatre, Hammer- Blaager ic highly commended by News-Chronicle, Jays the lyrics in praises the music more thay the ly The k and lyrics of "Tantivy Thomas F, Dunhill, composer, pro. "Fhe libretto and the lyrics of Mr, Lol W..5. Gilbert," [he News-Cliron- Accept No Sulbstitutes \

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