Oshawa Daily Times, 25 Sep 1931, p. 8

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

Hr ---------- 100th an- 7ith a re- _4imer pastors who are living and who will be 'able to leave their charges for this occasion. The present pastor Is Rev. Mahlon I. Robinson, form- erly of Shawville and Iroquois, end whose home as a boy was tt Winchester Springs. Rey. Mr. Robinson is formulating plans for the affair. Petition For Peterborough, -- A petition seeking the construction of a bridge over the St. Lawrence river as close to Kingston as pos- sible will be sent to the Federal and Provincial governments and circulated among the cities of Eastern Ontario by the Peter- borough Chamber of Commerce according to a recommendation of the transportation committee. Has Old Document Iroquois.--A., H.- Arnold, of Athens, has in his possession an old document signed by John Wesley, dated 1784, in which Wesley describes himself as "late fellow of Lincoln College at Ox- ford, and Presbyter of the Church of England. The docu- ment appoints Thomas Coke, doc- tor of civil law and a Presbyter of the Church of England, super- intendent of Methodist missions in North America. Wesley affirms Coke to be a man "whom I judge to be well ' qualified - for that great work." Back Into Service . Belleville. -- Trainmen with years of service ,who have been laid off through decrease of freight handling and curtailment of passenger service, will be brought back into service through the action of their fel- low-employees in taking a cut in their mileage, the same going into effect immediately. The mileage for trainmen bas been 4,300 miles for a 30-day period. This has been reduced to 3,500. This new order will effect a number of trainmen at this ter- minal, ' Pastor Is Leaving 5 Lindsay.--Woodville village is losing a fine citizen in the per- son of Rev. Robt. Simpson, for five years minister of the Presby- terian church, Rev, Mr. Simpson was one of the ablest preachers in the Presbytery. He is return- ing to Brooklin, Ont., where he pwns property. Hospital Has Deficit Kingston.--A meeting of the board of governors of the King- ston General Hospital was held in athe board room at the hospital i 5 ; + iy on Tuesday evening. Many mat- ters of business were brought to the attention of the board which approved of the insurance distri- bution on the buildings totalling $1,178,000, Accounts were pass- ed and the financial report show- ed that owing to the low price of the rooms in the new building the revenue had dropped, and Timetable Changes ffective Sunday, Sept. 27 in passenger will be made on M.188 Canadian Canadian National Pacific 10913 WEST 45th STREET NEW YORK In the heart of Times Square Three to Five Minutes to All Theatres and Best Shops although expenses were also period showed a = deficit of $1, 382.25. Chicken Thief Sentenced Napanee.--Henry Sizer, of the township of North Fredericks- burg, who was taken into custody a few days sgo on a charge of chicken stealing, and who was remanded for eight days, appear- ed before Police Magistrate Graham on Tuesday, victed and sentenced to the On- tario Reformatory for not less than six months determinate and indeterminate. Auto Hits Pole Belleville.--Mr. and Mrs. J. Blake, of Vancouver, and J. Car- penter, of Toronto, were bruised and shaken up when their car left the highway, striking a tele- phone pole. The party were en route to Montreal. The car was badly damaged. ted Delegates Smiths Falls.--Af the regular quarterly meeting of the official board of Smiths Falls United Church, J. W. Kitchen and D. H. Gemmell were appointed local delegates to the Missionary Con- gress to be held in Toronto, October 1 and 2. Holding Eliminations Kingston.--Arrangements are being made for an elimination plowing match among the 'junior farmers of Frontenac county to be held at Glenburnie on Sep- tember 30 for the purpose of selecting a team to represent Frontenac County in the inter- county plowing matches to be held in connection with the In- ternational Plowing match at Peterboro on Friday, Oct. 16. Appointed Curate Lindsay.--Rev. Father J V. Powers, of Hastings, who was ordained at St. Peter's Cathedral, Peterboro, on Sunday last is in town. It is understood that he has been appointed curate at St. Mary's church, succeeding Rev. Father Ferguson, who leaves for Warkworth on Saturday, , Destroyed By Fire Roseneath. -- The frame resi- dence of Mrs. Emma Thompson situated about three miles from Roeeneath was totally destroyed by fire on Tuesday afternoon. The owner of the building was away at the time and her son who was plowing in the field was the fifirst to notice the blaz- ing home. Putting in the alarm several of the neighbors and many from Roseneath village hastened to the sceme but little could be saved from the inferno, the house together with most of its contents falling prey to the flames. The loss was partly covered by insurance. Holding Air Meet Peterbarough. -- Peterborough is to be the scene of a small air meet next month according to a report from the Chamber of Commerce. It is to be staged in a further éndeavor to arouse in- terest in aviation in this district. The meet is being staged under the direction of the local Cham- ber of Commerce officials with the co-operation of the Torunto Flying Club, The members of the club have volunteered to send a half dozen machines to the city and endeavour to attract aircraft from other sections of Ontario will be made. Hoboes Raid Farms Pembroke. -- Members of the hobo colony in the jungle east of the town are sald to have visited Allumette Island recently and made a wholesale rald for piv- visions and refreshment on some of the farms bordering the river. Artillery Drill Gananoque. -- Instead of go- ing to camp the 3rd Field Bat- tery stationed at Gananoque is holding its drill at the armour- ier here. The commanding officer of the battery is Capt. James Dowsley of this town. The dril- ling is carried out three even- inge each week under an instruc- tor and will be continued until the allotted time for annual drill has been carried out. Cider Was too Strong Cobourg. --Awakened by some- thing falling, Jas. Fee, a farmer living near Cobourg, secured his revolver and entered the cellar, finding four tramps, three of tiem quite drunk. They had crawled through the open win- dow and had located some jugs of cider. Mr. Fee did not hold them ,and they made a hasty ex- it. The cider, Mr. Fee says, was noarly five years old, and was too strong for a beverage. He is el- ated over the way the cider pre- vented the toughs pilfering his h , and intends to keep a supply on hand. Had Narrow Escape Rockport. -- During a recent electrical storm, Albert Hunt had a very narrow escape when the cow he was milking was struck and killed by a bolt of lightning. Four other cows were knocked down by the bolt, while Mr. Hunt was tossed several feet. A pig was also killed during the storm, : TWISTED NECKLACES The latest necklaces are of sup- ple strands of twisted metal, and a bracelet, a brooch, and hatpin are sold together with the neck- lace, so that the whole ensemble is in harmony. For the day they are worn round bronzed necks in gold metal, and for 'the even- ng white metal is the more popu- Te - . aud 4 Succeeding The Oshawa Reformer down, the end of the nine month |! was con- > not more than eighteen months RBOR WORK T0. RUSHED AHEAD, ART NEXT WEEK § of Contracting Com- hy in City Today Ar- nging for Operations A. Brown, of the T. A. Co. Ltd., Toronto, con- s for the improvements local Harbour the work fch is to commence im- ely, is in Oshawa today ne of his foremen ar- for the unloading and of time, but as people are b ing light saving plan, their numbers are likely to be very few. Train schedules will he ho aad samarrqw. but otherwise thipge »iV-~- Daylight Saving Comes To End Today; Clocks to Be Turned Back Tonight Citizens of Oshawa will have the luxury of an extra hour of sleep tonight, that is, unless they forget to turn the clock back one hour before retiring to rest. Today is the last day of daylight saving time for this year, and the hour which was stolen from the slumbers of the citizens away back in April will tonight be return- ed to them. Tomorrow, the ciiy will be operating on standard time again, and darkness will come an hour earlier in the evening, with daylight making its appearance correspondingly earlier in the morn- ing, Of course there will be some citizens who will forget all about the change, and will be turning up for church an hour ahead d to the day- 11.5. T0 SPONSOR NO ARMS SCHEME Favors General Idea of Holiday on All Construction Washington, D.C., Sept. 25.-- Instructions to favor the general idea of a holiday on constructior of all armaments--land, air and fea -- were borne to the disarm- ament discussion at Geneva yes- terday by Hugh R. Wilson, Unit- ed States represcn' 'ive, Sending the ter to St zerland as this country's aele- rate, Secretary of State, Henry L. Stimson instructed him to re- posal is made. the United States has no plan ex- cept to be friendly toward dny feasible one which may come up. Important considerations invoiv- ed in the general question include whether the holiday shall apply sbsolutely to all armaments un- the next 12 months, The United States is not expect ed to favor a holiday involvinz cessation of construction now in progress, as this would add to un employment. CHURCH BUDGET FINALLY PASSED Episcopalians Make Futile Attempt to Reduce 1932 Total of $4,325,000 Denver, Colo., Sept. 25. budget of $4,325,000 for 1932 was approved by the House of Deputies of the Protestant Epis- copal Church yesterday after fu- tile attempts were made to reduce the amount in view of prevalling economic conditions. As a part of a three-year Jpro- gram, the deputies also authoriz- ed the National Council of the Church to increase the budget for 1933 and 1934, subject to the am- otint of collections on next year's total. The National Council, in sub- niitting the budget, recommended that when and if cuts are neces- sary, they be made in administra- tive economy and departmental budgets, particularly the publicity budget. The House of Deputies defeat ed a resolution submitted by Charles L. Dibble, Detroit, which called upon the convention 'to repudiate' the decision of the Mnited States Supreme Ceurt in denying citizenship to Prof. Doug- las Clyde MacIntosh, of the Yaie Divinity School, and Miss Marie Averill Bland, New York nnurse, both Canadians, for their refusal to agree to bear arms in case of war. The resolution was tabied by a vote of 305 to 106. -- A WOULD TRAIN UP LUMBERJACKS AS WEIGHT THROWERS Captain Cornelius Believes Olympic Material Exists In Backwoods Winnipeg, Man., Sept. 25.-- Canada has a superabundance of strong men and if someong will go to the trouble . of hustling a couple of the muscular gentle- men out of the back-woods, the Dominion might suddenly find itseif with a weight-thrower or two capable of cutting some kind of a figure at the Olympic Games next summer, As it is, this division is hopelessly backward in Canada and no wearer of the Maple Leal is likely to chal- | | | | | HEM-ROID-- to port as soon as a detailed pro-| I Etate Department officials said | even in {salves and cutting fail der construction or planned for lenge the supremacy of United States and Germany in the weight field. A little hunting up in the north country, believes Capt. J. R. Cornelius, coach of the last wo Canadian Olympic track and field teams, might be productive of the strength needed. "The woods," he said here re- ently, "are full of muscles, just the kind of beef it takes to make weight throwers. But we haven't apped the lumber camps yet. It Painful Piles 0 Quick--No Cutting----No Salves It takes only one bottle of | S. Leonhardt's prescription end itching, piles. This remedy acts quickly old, stubborn cases. HEM-ROID succeeds because it heals and restores the affected parts and removes blood conges- tion in the lower bowel--the cause of piles. Only an internal medicine can do this, that's why Jury & Lovell says HEM-ROIDN Tablets nst end your Pile misery or mney back. leeding, protruding nternal | | { { | i [|] You Are as Smart as Your Makeup For the new modes are as distinctive in faces as they are in fashion, HELENA RUBINSTEIN the worlds foremost beauty specialist, has created for | the feminine vogue, new | shades in rouge and lp- sticks ¢ For the olive brunette-- Brunette rouge . ...$1.00 Gypsy tan powder 1.00 Red ruby lipstick 1.00 For the'golden blonde-- . Red geranium rouge 1.00 Natural powder ... 1.00 Red geranium lip. stick 1.00 For the medium brunette---- Red raspberry rouge 1.00 Mauresque powder 1.00 Red raspberry lip- stick ASK TO SEE THIS COM- , PLETE LINE AT OUR TOILET GOODS COUNTER When in need of Drugs "Quickly" 'phone Jury & Lovell THE REXALL STORES King E. Simcoe S. Phone 28 Phone 68 MEH Mi ERG oF PIS LINIMENT «liv LLY might be a good idea if we did." If Canada is to do anything about the situation, it must be done in a hurry. But in two years has an athlete done anything in a weight-tossing way in this country that even remotely re- sembled an Olympic perform- ance. Since Doral Pilling, the juvenile thrower from Cardston, Alta, started to slip after his re- turn from the Amsterdam Olym- vics, the matter has been grad- become more serious. Pilling is not expécted to ¢h his 1923 form with the again, There {8 no figure a horizon who looms as y:oivle sueccescor, and tiers, discus throwers ud mmcr-ith «rs are not of Guollty that will even faintly youee the interest of the com- o selecting the team for Los Anzecles, (lant George Sutherland, a fuir-haired, good-natured farmer wlio competes for Calgary Olym- pic club, is one of the best all- round athletes in Canada. With the weights, he probably is the most consistent of the lot. And George is a good jumper. He won two firsts and thres seconds at the Dominion championship this year and outscored. every indiv- idual at the title meet, But George Sutherland {is not an Olympic prospect, because the big fellow is just a general work- er, He likes heaving the 16- pound shot about as well as doing a running hop, step and jump. He is about as good at one as the other. For that matter, he is equally proficient at the ham- mer-throw, with the javelin and the discus. If necessary, he can do tricks with a caber with the test of them. Sutherland's winning hammer throw at this year's champion- ship was 139 feet, 5 inches, The world's record is 189 feet, 6% Inches, He threw the javelin 155 feet, 61% inches. The world's mark is 232 feet, 118 inches, One of the best and most popular athletes Alberta has ever turned out and a performer who has color, Sutherland still is only an old-fashioned all-round man. Five Olympic 'specialists' would beat him with ease at five events, Abe Zvonkin, Hamilton's red- headed husky, is in a similar fix with apparently little chance of becoming proficient enough at one event to make a place on the Los Angeles-bound squad. He won the shot put with a throw of 39 feet at the Dominion cham- pionships and his winning discus throw measured 124 feet--many feet short of records in both instances. Capt, Cornelius would like to sound a call to the lumber- jacks, the beefy boys who have never seen a shot or a discus or any kind of a hammer except of the carpenter-adopted variety. Under good coaching he 'thinks they would become quite prime weight men. "Some of those said, "would throw shots un- heard-of distances if we could get them under instruction. We must go after them some day because Canada can't send a bal- anced team to the Olympic games without them. "Right now, with thousands of unemployed men crowding the cities, is the time to search. There are plenty of big fellows, out of jobs who could be induced to join athletic clubs, Keep your ¥ be t i id 1 fellows," he {eye open for the workless lum- ber-jack and get him busy at throwing things and you'll see something." ; ; Old Lady (to captain on a river steamer)): "Are we going up stream of down stream?" : Old Captain: "Well, ma'am, there's no knowing; her boilers bain't 'be very good, so we may be going up; then again, I know her's got a leak, so we might be 'going down." Dad (to small 'son): "I never smoked when I was your age, my lad. Will you be able to tell that to your son when you grow up?" Willie: "Not with such a straight face as you do, Dad." WHAT YOU'D DLAGRON (O] BS] 13 g oF Tes : Keen 3 OUTSTANDING PERFORMANCE OVER THE ENTIRE DIAL Now less of its to tabi a can select a f its location on | the dial--listen +h the prog ence from other stations--and hear each and every instrument and note, for the new, Kolster International loss o £ tone or notes at any point on the dial. Visit your nearest Kolster dealer. See the [ ¢iful hi +, tehad rx 723, © Hear the reproduction of different mes and, reme: r --every Kolster International has tested for home performance--your Mantel Model . . $ 99.50 Lowboy Console . $139.80 Highboy Console. $179.50 DeLuxe Console . $245.00 of out per over the entire dial in your home, Automatic volume control, tone con- trol, variab) superheterod curately calibrated in kilocycles--all are included in the new Kolster Inter- national, as well Kolster features that make ing performance over the entire dials le-mu and pentode tubes, circuit, dials ac- as the le outstand- VISIT YOUR NEAREST DEALER NOW - MANUFACTURED BY KOLSTER RADIO LIMITED AT TORONTO Sold in Oshawa by BOND BROS. Cor. King St. and Ritson Rd. Phone 2561 John had a new chum and he was telling his mother about him. "Is he as tall as you?" asked his mother. "Well, he is at ore end," re- plied John, "Goodness me!' said his moth- "What do you mean?" "Well," said John, 'his head only comes to my shoulders, but his feet reach as far down as mine." er. Grubbs: "Perkins seems to be a self-made man." Stubbs: "Well, if you saw him wken his wife was about, you would think he was made to or- der!" "Wipe that blinkin' smile off." *Can't you see I'm one of the crowd?" "Wot crowd?" "The crowd with the Bu the crowd wot smokes 1,500,000 more Buckingham Cigarettes Every Week." *Sez you?" "Sez me!" ingham Smile +78.000.,000 more Bue ms sold every year *325.000 more Packages sol every month ' moke | Buckingham average increased sales of Cigarettes during the past five years.

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy