Oshawa Daily Times, 28 May 1931, p. 12

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

ie: a Be sina vsn THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, THURSDAY, MAY 28, 1931 " PAGE TWELVE om, cand ern Ontario News Moderator at Belleville Belleville.--St. Andrew's Pres- byterian Church 'was honored by a visit from the Moderator, Rt. Rev. Frank Baird, M.A, D.D., on Sunday, who preached to' the congregation at the morning ser. vice-and left a message that will no 'doubt 'stimulate the church to ter achievements. Dr. ird, was intrdduced to the con- gregution by Rev. J. A, Seymour, resident pastor although the Moderator had, at another time, visited the church. He spoke at Deseronto on Sunday night, on the occasion of the anniversary services, Found Old ; ""-Brockville.--An old copy of ""The Echo", a long defunct pub- Heation appearing at Port Hope in the year 1852 with the sub- title, "Protestant Episcopal Re- corder", was found recently by David Hodge,, R.R. No. 3, Brock- ville, in the house occupied by him, The old paper, exceptionally well preserved, contains many items of much interest. Big Horse Parade Ottawa.--Betweén 30,000 and 40,000 lovers of horses lined the streets of Oftawa on Monday morning to witness the largest and finest horse parade ever held in the annals . of the city. Mar- shalling at the corner of King Edward Ave. and Rideau Sts. at 10 o'clock, , more than 580 glossy. and spirited members of the equine species formed in a procession over mile in length, and preceded by a' military band and a detachment of dragoons and hussars, marched through the streets to Lansdowne Park, Boxers Defeated Belleville.-- Three, Belleville entrants in the boxing bouts at Lindsay Friday evening last were defeated. Lack of condition is stated to have been the reason for their defeat. ee Remodelling Church Belleville.--Foster Ward was the scene of activity when the tradesmén of the ward gathered together and started 'to remodel St. Paul's Church, They are stuc- coing ana redecorating the build- ing. 'All the labour is gratis and fhe members of the church are indebted to the efforts of the tradesmen, as cn completion, they expect to have a very fine church equipped with up-to-date electrical fixtures, Blossom Days ; . Port Hope.--Blossom days in Durham County brought thous- ands of week-end tourists to this district at the week-end, when a specially arranged tour, was en- joyed by the visitors. s Grandson Wed Perth.--Two of Perth's popu- lar young people were united in yrriage here on Monday, the Saran pony taking place in St. ames' Anglican Church, Rev, G. 'Brunet "officiating. The contract- ng parties were Peter Gay Mc- Laren, son of Mr. and Mrs, J. L. P. McLaren, and grandson of the late Senator McLaren, and Dor- othy Jane Gould Hicks, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. G. Hicks, of Perth, Jail Wall Falling Kingston.--A portion of the wall of the county jail at the rear of the Court House, fell during the week-end. The wall has been weak in this section for some time and signs have been placed in front of it to warn passers-by of its condition. It is thought that the heavy rains of the week end caused the wall to crumble. First Communion Kingston,--One hundred and five children received Holy Com- munion for the first time in their lives on Sunday morning in St. Mary's Cathedral at the eight o'clock mass. Rey, Father Cal- laghan was the celebrant and the Convent girls Tthoir sang very sweetly during the mass, Three Fire Alarms Ottawa.--For the second time within a few months, Ottawa ftire- men on Tuesday were called upon to respond to two alarms while a general alarm fire was in pro- gress, in this case at Redpath and, Sussex streets, Held Big Reunion Lindsay.--The three days re- union of the 109th Battalion Old Boys concluded . Monday: hight with a dance in the Armories. Monday's entertainment was var- led. Hundreds of 109th Old Boys renewed acquaintances and Ag- ricultural Park = was crowded Monday afternoon, while three aeroplanes from Camp Borden performed stunts. There 'were three horse races, three motor- cycles races, many track events, twelve softball games and six baseball games, besides the troop- ing of the colors and band con- certs, and a monster military and calithumpian parade. In the sarade there were 400 soldiers from the Third Battalion, To- ronto; 200 from Peterborough Regiment; 100 ex-109th soldiers, and 200 from the Victoria and Haliburton Regiment, with six bands. No Big Parades Peterboro.--Victoria Day was just another quiet holiday in Peterborough. While small boys tried hard to give the day the added dash of jubilation with cannonading salutes and spark- ling fireworks, somehow the citi- zens as a whole did not seem to put any heart into the celebra- tion. There were no fanfare of trumpets, parades, great athletic meets or other community enter- prises that in bygone years al- ways marked the Good Queen's birthday, Dedicated Memorial Picton.--On Sunday morning at, eleven o'clock service the Thomas Shannon Memorial' Tab- let was dedicated by the Rector, Rev. Cecil Winter, assisted by the Rev. John Bushell, M.A,, Rec- tor of St. Clement's Church, To- ronto. The Tablet was presented by Mrs. Bushell of Toronto in memory of her father, mother and brothers. Monument To Hero Kingston.--The cairn to the memory of Frederick Denyes, who died on June 21, 1929, in an endeavor to save the life of Kenneth MacRow, was unveiled by Mr. J. L. Haycock on Mon- day afternoon before about 300 phis iron--or pay Dally the letters pour in tell- ing how new Ironized Yeast has added pounds of good solid flesh in few weeks. Has built up new strength and pep in mervous, tired people. Has banished con- stipation, indigestion. Has clear- ed skin. Ironized Yeast is two tonics in one<-- special weight-building dried brewer's Yeast and blood- enriching, strengthening Irom. The yeast is dried brewer's yeast. the same as used in making malt and which makes malt so benefi- cial, It is specially cultured and concentrated to give the utmost in flesh-producing value. Double- tested for strength, purity and potency, used by doctors and big hospitals. To this concentrated dried brewer's' Yeast is added three kinds of easily assimilated Iron to quickly make rich, red blood and tone up nerves and muscles. By this special process Ironized Yeast is made more effective than yeast or iron taken separ- ately. Contains no starches, flours or gas-forming fillers. Pleasant little tablets---no nasty taste, no gas or bloating. Never spoil, safe for everybody. Don't have a "skinny", weak body. Go to your druggist today and get a full size treatment of Ironized Yeast, Take as directed, and if you are not delighted with quick results, your money promptly refunded by manufac- turer. If inconvenient to buy from druggist, send $1.25 direct to Canadian Ironized Yeast Co. Ltd., Dox 1323, Montreal, Que., Desk residents of Kingston Township who had gathered to do honor to Denyes' memory. Major James Caines, who had been instru- mental in gathering the money for the erection of the cairn, acted as chairman and introduced Canon A. L. McTear, of Christ Church, Cataraqui, who offici- ated as chaplain, and Mr. J, L. Haycock, who unveiled the cairn. The monument is located on Highway No. 2 just east of West_ brooke. Died From Injuries Belleville.--Injuries received when his team ran away, ended fatally for Eastcourt Dyer, well known . Ameliasburg Township resident at the Belleville General Hospital on Sunday. He was brought in from Consecon late last week suffering from critical interasl wounds but it was found impossible to save his life. Three Days Lain Kingston.--This district has had three days of rain, terminat- fng Monday afternoon with sun- shine, The dryness that prevailed for much of this Spring was re- lieved, wells are replenished and creeks were filled to the brim. Farmers rejoiced for the ground was hard and dry but the rain gave it a moistness that promises good crops. The grass is lux- uriant and the face of nature has been greatly changed by the fall- ing water. -- Chinaman Win Honors Kingston.--Wing Y. Wong, Vancouver, is the second member of a Chinese family who in medi, cipe, won the Boak scholarship at Queen's Medical College. It was given for the highest marks in third year anatomy. Wing. aged 22, is popular here, His prother, Ross W. Wing, gradu- ated in medicine here in 1024 and is now at Hackett Medical College at Canton, China. Held Sports Day Smiths Falls.--The annual sports program presented on Vic- toria Day und:r the auspices of the Smiths Falls bands and the Strathcona Park Assocition at- tracted a large crowd to the spac- ious park today despite the fact that the horse racing events .| scheduled were cancelled on ac- Three Packages " of OLD DUTCH" and laundry. There's nothing else fike it;you don't need several styles and kinds of cleaners. Think of this added convenience in Old Dutch; if'sallyou need for all your cleaning. Cleans Quicker--quicker thon any- thing else you can use. Help your- self to more time with Old Dutch. Cleans Safely--becauseit contains no harsh, chunky grit and doesn't scratch. Old Dutch protects the surface. Keeps lovely things love- ly. And it's kind to the hands. Healthful Cleanliness--is brought to your home by Old Dutch because it removes the invisible impurities with the visible dirt. It is economi- cal because a little Old Dutch goes a long wey. MADE IN CANADA LISTEN the Columbia Broadcasting System. Tune in to the Old Dutch Girl every Monday, Wednesday and Friday morning over Toronto Station CFR 8:45 a. m. Standard Time d Dutch Holders, in Colors! Old Dutch Cleanser labels the windmill panel 10c and name and address. Fill o aring above the coupon feday, these, fogether | Cudahy Soap Wi 64 Macauley Ave, I Toront, Ovaries Pr At. Please find enclosed. , , cents and . . . labels for which send me. .. Old Duich Holders. Color: wanted: IVORY.CI GREEN (1 BLUECH \ - - 5 APSR count of the condition of the track. Was Recovered Ottawa.--Nine days after she had disappeared from her home, the body of Mrs. Mary Powers, aged 68, of 216 Bay street, was found in the Ottawa River near the Interprovincial Bridge Mon- day morning shortly after six o'clock. The body was recovered by Pierre Proulx, 9 Champlain street, Hull, who was returning home after spending some hours fishing on the river. InterCity Golf Belleville--The first inter-city visit of local golf clubs will take place Thursday afternoén, when the Bay of Quinte Country Club will go to Napanee for the sea- son's first tournament. About twenty or twenty-five golfers are expected to make the trip. :| No Infectious Disease 'Belleville.--With- the exception of a few scattered cases of 'mumps, there are no contagious diseases reported by Meadieal Health Officer Dr. Cronk. He algo stated that the city was in a sanitary condition. LJ in Honorary A.D.C. _Perth.--Lt-Col. J. A. M.C., D;8.0., of Perth, officer commanding the Lanark and Renfrew. Scottish Regiment, has beenraphainted an honorary aide- Hope, Je:camp to His Excellency the "| Guyernor General, in writing and oral examinations, | Golf Is Golf From Coast To Coast olf has assum- ed such im- Jeriah propor- , tions in the make- up of modern everyday life that it constitutes .a vi real phase of the activities of the public. Canadian P: 3 Railway is such a one and its train services to golf courses and estab- lished arrange- ments for guests otels interpretation of its desire to main- tain the traditions of 50 years of meeting the 're- uirements of the kb 0 people and their visitors. From coast to coast, excellent courses are available and where the com- fay does not operate its own inks, playing privileges at first-class clubs are granted. In the Maritimes, there are courses -at St. Andrews-by- the-Sea, N.B.; Kentville;N.S.; Digby, N.S.; and Yarmouth, NE. allin connection with the company's hotels. Quebec City has two fine courses, one THE PICTURES (1) Looking from the fair= way at the first tee, pavilion and Banff Springs Hotel, at Banfi, Alta. The Spray River (left) forms a sporty water~ hazard. 'This course is a mile above sea-level In the heart of the beautiful Rocky Mountains. (2) On the famous course at St. An- drews-by~the-Sea, N.B. (3) 'The 13th tec at the Oak Bay Golf Club, Victoria, B.C. Note the periscope to allow players a glimpse of what they have to cope with. Golf is played the year round on this course. zX elub dating back to 1874. TIMETABLE WHITBY, OSHAWA, BOWMANVILLE BUS LINES Week Day Schedule . (Effective on and after April 13th, 1931) (Daylight Saving Time) soing West Leave Leave Arrive Bowmanville Oshawa Whitby 6.20 am, 7.05 am, J a.m, Arrive Hospital 8.05 a.m. 8.50 a.m, 10.0 a.m, 1210 p.m 1.45 p.m. 3.15 pm, 7.20 am, 8.15 a.m, 10.00 a.m, 11.35 a.m. * 1,15 p.m, 245 pm. 4.40 p.m, * 5.40 p.m. 7.15 pam, * 9.35 p.m, 11.30 p.m. Times marked Whitby Hospital 6.30 p.m, 8.00 p.m. 6.45 pan, 7.45 p.m. 10.00 p.m. 10,15 pn 12.200 a.m. 12,15 am * are through busses to 10.30 p.m. Going East | Leave Leave Leave Arrive Hospital Whitby Oshawa Bowmanville 6.30 a.m 6.56 a.m, 7.3 aw, 7.30 a.m. 7.5 aan, &.15 a.m, 8.30 a.m, Ar. 8.50 ao. Of 9.10 a.m, 9.25 a.m, 9.55 a.m. 10.45 am. 11.00 am, 11.30 a.m, Lv. 12.05 p.m. 12.40 p.m, 1:30 pm. 1.45 pom, 2.15 p.m. 2.45 p.m. Ar, 3.00 p.m, Lv. 4.10 p.m, 5.05 pon. 5.45 p.m, 6.05 p.m, 7.30 p.m. 7.45 p.m, 8.15 p.m Ar. 8.30 p.m, Lv. 9.05 p.m, 11.00 pan, Oi 4.40 pan, 5.40 p.m. 0.40 p.m, 8.15 p.m, Off 4.45 p.m, 9.35.p.m 10.30 p.m. 10.45 p.m, 11.30 p.m. SUNDAY AND HOLIDAY SCHEDULE Going West Leave Leave Arrive Bowmanville Oshawa Whitby YW a.m, 9.30 a.m, 9.45 a.m, 1.00 am, 11.30 a.m. 11.45 am 2.30 p.m. 2.45 p.m, 4.30 pm, 4.45 pm, 6.30 pm, 6.45 p.nv. 8.00 p.m. 8.15 p.m, 10.30 p.m. 10.45 p.m. Going East Leave Arrive Oshawa Bowmanville 10.15 a.m. 10.45 a.m, 12.15 p.m, 12.45 p.m, 3.00 p.m, 3.30 p.m, 500 pm, 5.30 pan. 7.00 p.m, 7.30 p.m, 8.30 p.m, 9.00 p.m. 1.00 pom. 11,30 p.m. 0.00 a.m, 12.00 p.m, 2.45 p.m. 4.45 pm, 6.45 p.m, 8.15 p.m, 10.45 p.m, Special Busses for all casions Reasonable Rates and Careful Drivers T. A. GARTON, PROPRIETOR BOWMANVILLE, PHONE 412 or 346 Oshawa Waiting Room, 10 Prince Street Phone 2283 GRAY COACH LINES Effective April - 26th, (Eastern Standard Tim)) Leave Oshawa ve Toronto AM. P.M. AM. P.M. 2.30 a 6.30 30 7.30 4.30 8.30 5.30 9.30 hb 6.30 10.30 11.30 b #30 P.M, 9.30 12.30 d 10.20 . oe Co Soma mata Nm ERslkuauase 1.30 a= Daily except Sunday, b--Saturday, & d-Sunday only. CANADIAN NATIONAL RAILWAYS Effective April 26th (Standard Time) Eastbound . Daily, except Sunday. um. Daily, om. Daily, Lm. Daily, except Sunday. . Daily, except Saturday. .m, Daily, . . Daily. Westbound 4.26 a.m. Daily, except Sunday. 5.18 a.m. Daily, 5.30 a.m. D. 6.12 a.m, Db: 9.07 am 4.05 p.m. 6.28 p.m. Daily. 2.39 p.m. Daily, except Sunday. CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAYS Effective April 26th (Standard Time) Eastbound 29 a.m. Daily. 28 p.m. Trenton Lccal Daily, ex. Sun, 19 p.m, Daily. except Sunday, x 1 1 10 pon. Daily, 05 a.m. Daily. ttawa, Montreal and East only, 'Westbound 9 2. | 2 x For S 6, 2 i. O 28 ,39 2.50 ¥. 7.32 p.m. Daily, except Sunday, m8.21 p.m. Daily, m Toronto and West Only, | l|{loet another | birl undays and Holidays only, , ql, County Man Passes Hastings County well-known and +'y respected resident on ntirday with tae passing of Wil | Ham Albert Kectcheson at. the home of his son, Blake Ketche- #ci. Moira, Huntingd:n Town- shup. In his eizhtieth year, he sa8 born in the Township in wh'ch he died, a Mr. and Mrs. Owen R. m. Despite his very advanced years, his health had - been remarkably good and the illness which result. ed in his death, was of short dur- ation, y Belleville.-- son ol Keiches Girl Guides Paraded Brockville.~~On Sunday a de- tachment of Girl Guides, 'repre- senting the First and Second Brockville companies, motored to Kingston and took part in'the annual parade which was follow- ed. by divine service in Grant Hall, Queen's University. Quite a number of Jocal adults went to the Limestone City and witness- ed the parade in which the local girls made a good showing. Department Kept Busy Brockville.--Five calls re- ceived by the Fire Department since Saturday afternoon marred the week-end festivities for some people at any rate. This is a fair- ly high toll as compared with 38 fires in Toronto for the same period. Sunday, however, was not a busy day for the firémen. Bungalow camps at Frenc | YOU CAN CUT AN | ACE EVERY TIME ! 1's always "ace up" | when you phone your ors: ders to Jury and Lovell, | Phone 28. When you give a party, just phone 28 to {il have the ice cream arrive il mt a certain time and it will be there on the dot. Give your friends a real treat and i || serve Canada Dry, and pass I avound a box of Jury and Lovell sweets--there are a hundred sorts to choose (rom, It's so comfortable to the || hostess to know that the | dessert will arrive at the proper time, to. be served Just. oft the ice. Jury and Lovell service is "ace high" ~he sure you use it. THE REXALL STORES Jury & Lovell King E. Simcoe S. Phone 68 Phone 28 Montreal has the oldest club in Canada, the Royal Montreal, founded in 1873, which today boasts two championship 18-hole courses. Other Clubs are numerous and ! y 1 lacluding the Royal York Golf Club, where guests at the Royal York Hotel have playing privileges. Ontario abounds in courses, all along the Canadian Pacific's lines. ch 8 3 (Lake of the Woods) have sporty 9-hole courses for their patrons. Throughout the Prairie Provinces, golf is available at all the larger centres, while the Banff Springs Hotel Golf course is among the best in the country in settings of unrivalled mountain scenery. It is the Mecca for golfers from all over Canada and the United States, to say nothing of the numerous overseas visitors who play it each summer. Vancouver and Victoria offer ready hospitality, the latter standing unique among Canadian golf centres, in that the game is played throughout the 12 months of the year, the annual mid-winter tournament for the E. W. Beatty Challenge Cup, run by the Canadian Pacific Railway, being an outstanding feature of the golf calendar. good. Toronto, too has many excellent links, River and Kenora Calf Caused Nive Kemptville.--A calf kicking over a lantern in the barn own- |ed by James Sloan, living three | miles west of here, caused a fire | which destroyed the building. Alone in the barn at about 8.00 o'clock on Monday evening, Mr. Sloan had just completed milk- ing the cows, and started to feed the calf. He had placed his lan- tern on the floor just behind the calf, and suddenly the calf kicked and knocked it over, The burning oil spread quickly in the dry straw on the floor, and Mr. Sloan barely had time to release the 'attle 'and horses in the barn be- fore the building was a mass of flames, Plan For Numbering Streets Is Offered Montreal, May 27.--A proposal to the City of Montreal to adopt a system of street numbering which will assist strangers and residents to find their way about the City with greater ease is con- tained in a resolution being pre- pared hy a sub-committee of the Chambre de Commerce. The motion, including a num- ber of suggestions, was offered at the last regular meeting of the season yesterday afternoon by Charles Duquette, president and acting chairman. Briefly, the plan is to number each street ex- tending from east to west and similarly from north to south, Guide books will be issued indi- cating tho exact manner of num- bering. : Debate centred for a few min- utes on the present system of street names. where it is found that thoroughfare such as St. James street is also known as Rue St. Jacques. It was argued that the difference in name leads to 11any confusing mistakes on the part of strangers to Montreal, , The matter has been taken into consideration, Proposal Passed C. N. Moisan raised the motion of endorsing the 60-day exten- sion request made by the City to the Federal and Provincial au- thorities for the completion of the program of public works un- dertaken as unemployment relief. The proppsal was passed. Mr. Duquette pointed out that owing to some of the clauses in the City Charter, it was impos- sibl to proceed with parts of. the program of work until the pro- Ject is brought before the Legis lature. He hoped that the Fed- eral as well as the Provincial authorities would view the mat- ter favorably. Bill B of the amendment to the Bankruptcy Act - which was passed by the Senate on. May 7 and now awaits the attention of the House of Commons was pro- tested in a motion passed by the Chambre, . The bill deals with "the election of domicile of a debtor" in cases arising out of bankrupteies. Copies of the pro- test will be forwarded to Premier Bennett and other members of his cabinet. The question of census taking was reviewed by the members on receipt of a request from R. H. Coats, Dominion Statistician, asking for full co-operation of the Chambre in the coming an- nual industrial census, The mo- AGE AND YOUTH IN IRISH MARRIAGES Clergy in Ireland Have Busy Week--80 Weds 21 i London.-- Aged bridegrooms figured largely in a record num- ber of weddings in Ireland two weeks ago, Clergymen confess it was the busiest time they have known for many years, some of them per- forming: marriage from early morning noon without a break One of the was the number of y marrying elderly men. a common thing to see a bride- groom anything from 20 to 30° years older than h ride, Sev- eral men with flowing white beards married girls not long out of their teens. A sprightly bridegroom of 75 walked jauntily down the aisle of a church in Dublin with his bride, aged 25. He said he was 75 'years young, and that abh- stinence from smoking and drink- ing had kept him hale and hearty. In Belfast a man of 80 led his thing wife"to the altar, She was til after- features ing girls Popular: seaside resorts in Ire- land were - overwhelmed with honeymoon couples. The proprie- tor of an hotel in Bray, the honeymoon town, stated that he had had a record week, but it was not without its worries. Young girls, defending their preference for old age, say that the average young men are not worth considering as husbands, They are conceited and think too much of their own amusement. Older men, they declare, ars gallant and more dependable, They have a wider knowledge of the little attentions that please women and are less callous than youth, MEN GOING BALD EARLIER NOWADAYS London, May 27--The average age at which baldness begins now- adays is forty-cight. Twenty years ago it was sixty. The number of bald men is still steadily increasing. Twenty years ago 10 per cent. of a hairdresser's customers were grey. Today, in good-class establishments, 20 per cent. are grey. Is trade depression, with its ac- companying business worries turn- ing men bald earlier in life than before the war, and giving them grey hair at a comparatively early age, Leading hairdressers who have made a careful study of the subject think so. Here are some amazing facts giv- en to a reporter recently by one of them. "Anything which upsets the ner- ves or increases strain is reflected in 'the condition of the hair. For some years we have noticed in the heads of our clients the reaction of trade depression. "On the other hand, hairdressers are suffering, too. days, I can remember business men would troll in for a haircut about once a week. Now they work at such a pressure that they come in only about once in three." J. J. McKenna, master of the In- corporated Guild of Hairdressers, confirmed the ill-effects of bad trade on hair. "We hairdressers realize the prob In the leisurely, fem exists and are taking every possible step to solve it," he sald," he said. SALE OF BIBLES ; STILL INCREASES London, May 28.--Nearly twelve million volumes were is- sued last year by the British and Foreign" Bible Sdclety--a figure surpassed only in 1929, which was the "peak' year of the So- clety's history, Lord Hailsham, in producing these figures at the annual meets ing, made reference, also tothe belief--rather, perhaps, a guesf based - on- the narrowest of ex perience--that the Bible is less read today in this country than it tonce was. A few years ago an English writer, himself a fore- most "best seller," pronounced that "the sale of Bibles is stcad- ily and seriously declining." The records of the Bible Society told then, and tell now, a very dif- ferent story. "Since the war," said Lord Hailsham, "the dis- tribution of the English version of the Bible has been more than doubled." Considering that the Bible is the least ephemeral literary work in the world the figures quoted by Lord Hailsham pro- voke the question: What be« comes of old Bibles? No ordinary person would think of throwing a Bible on a refuse heap. Do these millions of Bibles disap- pear through sheer wear and tear, and is the annual output of the Bibles Society mostly by way of replacement? MANY FOREIGN FLAGS IN ETHICAL CHURCH London, May 28.--At a recent morning service in the Ethical Cturch here the Jugo-Slavian flag was presented to the church, which is ir Queen's Rod, Bays- watr, Dr. Stanley Colt, president of the Ethical Church said: "For the first time the congregation of an English Church see ranged around them the flags of many nations. They symbolize the ideal of the modern world, the ideal of the brotherhood of nations." Dr. Sibi Milicic, first secretary of the Jugo-Slavian Legation in London, was present at the cere= mony. The various colors of the flags of Great Britain, the United States, Italy, France, Belgium and other countries, gave a festi« val air to the building, and matched in their diversity the symbols of many religions which this" broad-minded church shel. ters within its walls, SOISSONS CATHEDRAL VIRTUALLY RESTORED Paris, May 28.--There was public rejoicing in Soissons res cently at the restoration of the 15th century Gothic cathedral which was badly damaged by German shells in the War, The work of reconstruction, being virtually complete, the French Government handed the cathed- ral over to the Bishop of Soise sons for the resumption of reli- gious services therein. The nave was cut in two by the German bombardment, the roof carried way, and the tower completely destroyed. Everything has been repaired except the tower, which it will take several years to res place. Worry-Saving Betty realized one day that holiday-time was not far off, She made a mentgl nots that this year she was not going to be bothered with the usual worri- some details. No, ipdeed, she'd used Long Distance to settle things on the spot. choice t. The Pension Bond is because it can be fature and in subject to years by appli an income of $50.00 a balance of life. to protect WOMAN whe earns her own A Woman's Assurance of Independence / living--either n invest her er mecessity--ca: in a Mutual Life of Canada ill bring an income when her the peak, and thus enable ially attractive to women either with or without the insurance feature. When your own future is your only care, the Pension Plan Without Insurance inning at age 50, 55, or 60) will meke your dependent. At age 25 an » menthl it of $16.50-- age verage monthly depos St ion of dividends--will provide month at age 55 for the If you have children or others dependent upon your pit od power, you need the Pension with Insurance Take this road te financial independence, Sign and mail the coupon for full parti 1 MUTUAL LIFE Assurance Company OF CANADA Head Office-- WATERLOO, ONT. Representatives: ¥rank V. Evans, | Roy G. Bird, | 31 King St. E, Osh- awa, Ont. Wm. A. Hare, 8 Bond St. E., Oshawa Ont. tion was carried,. The Mutual Life Awarance Company of Canada, Waterlea, Ost. 1 i Pension Bond Name, ..ivo00 CAESAR RII aR ITs saan sarnes rata sen crheessRisitesieans

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy