THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, APRIL 23, 1932 PAGE TWO | News of Nearby Places | Seagrave (Mrs. L. Scott, Correspondent) geagrave, April 21. -- The Young People's League met on Tuesday evening in the Sunday School room with the president Bert Wanpamaker presiding. Hymn 170 "Come Holy spirit, Heavenly Dove," was the opening hymn, after which Ila Moon led in prayer, Dorothy Reynolds yea the scripture lesson. Bible study conducted by Fern Mobo and Mrs. J. McTaggart. Min- utes read and adopted, followed by a business period, Hymn 386 «Fairest Lord Jesus, Ruler of all Natute," was sung. The topic on Christian Citizenship, Was pre sented by Rev. Mr. Green, who gave a very inspiring address. Hymn, "Abide With Me, Fast Fills the Eventide," and bene dietion, closed the meeting. . The monthly meeting of the Women's Association was held on Wednesday afternoon in the Sunday School room where the quilting of a quilt was also held in the early part of the after noon. The president, Mrs. J. Shunk opened the meeting with ihe use of hymn "Must Jesus Bear the Cross Alone,' after which Mrs, Green led in prayer. The president led in responsive Bible reading from Psalm B57. Niinutes of last meeting read and adopted. 17 members answered the roll call, two visitors were present. Several items of busi- fess transacted, in which a pan- cake social was planned to be held in the Sunday School room on the evening of Wedenesday, April 27th. Pancakes with good old-taghioned maple syrup and many other things will be served, ufter which games will be enjoy- ed. Admission 15 and 10 cents. Nhe meeting closed with a hymn and Lord's Prayer in unison, af- tor which a lovely lunch was served and social time spent by all Seagrave is beginning to come back on the map. The roads have become passable again, For the past two or three weeks any- one wishing to get into our vil- lage with a car had to come in from Manilla. Friends of Mrs. H. Wanamaker will be pleased to hear her &ls- ter. Misg Sarah Byers, who un- derwent a serious operation In Bowmanville Hospital recently is progressing nicely, having re- covered sufficiently to return to her home in Burketon. The death occurred in Whitby Home for Aged, of Isaac Midgley, sged 76 years, The late Mr. Mid- gley was a resident of Seagrave up until a few years ago, when through ill health was taken to Whitby, where he died on Batur- day last. The late Mr. Midgley nade many friends in the com- munity who extend sympatby to the relatives. Glad to report Mr. Wilbert Couch is improving nicely after his recent operation at Port Perry Hospital, A very successful wood bee was held at the church here one day last week, when the year's wood was cut, split and piled up for the coming winter. "Mr. and Mrs. Robert Maneely apd sons, of Somya, visiting at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Harding recently. 'Mr. Melville Sleep, of Brook- lin spent a day last week with his mother, Mrs. T. Couch. Mrs. M. Moase, sister and daughter Ruth recent visitors at the former's som, Mr. Walter Mosse. 'Mr. and Mrs. Frank Watson and Miss Alma Clements in Tor- onto on Tuesday. Mr. and Mrs, Albert Martin and Mrs. T. Couc' visited with Wilbert Couch at Port Perry Hospital on Sunday afternoon. . Mrs. Wilson, of Toronto, spend- ing a few days with her brother, Mr. Cephas Sleep, who has re- cently returned from Toronto. 'Mr. and Mrs. Thomas of Lay- ton, visiting with Mr, and Mrs. W.; Frise on Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. W. Boe and little daughter, of Beaverton, visiting the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. Isazc Beadle on Wednesday. "Air. and Mrs, J. Short accom- gbfed by Mrs. A. Tanuer in Port érry on Wednesday. Mrs. L. Scott gpent a few days at 'Pleasant Point with her daughter, Mrz. C. W. Clarke, Port Perry (Miss M. Cockburn, Correspondent) ort Perry, April 20---Mr. Robert Woods is visiting friends in Toron- to. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Thompson and pily, fo Toronto, were guests of Port Perry friends last weck. ~ Nine members of the Church of the Tscension attended the service in St. George's Church, Oshawa, on Monday evening when the speaker wag Bishop Sherman of Calgary. Rey. T. A. Nind assisted in the ser- vice. A very pretty wedding took place Safe Speedy Relief fe SCIATICA Poisons along sciatic nerve 'cause stabbing pains in thigh. 500 and 31 at all drugglev Pimples, Blotches Quickly Vanish This Penetrating Antiseptic bave a clear, smooth, velvety ir only 117 pure calif quid hy. It issves and drives ples, blotches and other blemishes, STOPS m; ING * gives yonr money hack, THOMPSON DRUG STORE ¥ he Re ! bride of Mr. David Henr: at the hone of Mrs, L. Pickard on Thursday last when her second daughter Violet Isabel became thie Skeyratt, second son of Mr. and Mrs. Sker- ratt of Utica. Rev. R. 1. Richards performed the ceremony. The bride who was given away by her uncle, Ben Forsythe, wore a gown of pink taffeta silk with tulle veil, caught with orange blos- soms and carried a bouquet of pink carnations. She was attended by Miss Ruth Stone, of Seagrave, who wore a frock of pale green silk and cafried a bouquet of pink carnation. Mt. Geo. Skerratt, brother of the g om atced as best men. The wed- ng music was played by Miss Hel- en Willard of Port Perry. After the ceremony a wedding breakfast wag served. There were about fifty guests present many of them trom out of town. Later the happy couple left for Toronto, the bride travelling in a brown tweed suit, with hat to match, On their return they will reside on the groom's farm west of Utiea. Miss Alice Hayden, of Turonto, was home on Saturday for a short visit, Mrs. M. T. O'Brien and tamil have moved to Toronto where they will make their future home. We are glad to Know that Mr. A. Rose and Mr. TV]. Widden wh have both been on the sick list for sometime, are able to be out again. Mr. and Mrs. Spain and family, of Toronto, were week-end guests at the home of Mr, Mrs. Gibb Mrs. Robert Dickson is visiting her daughter Mrs. G. A Woods Mr. John S. Hal, of Toronto, Zave an illustrated address on "Cul- ture of Bulbs and Lilies" in the Parish Hall on Tuesday evening The lecture was intensely interest- ing and the many illustrations beau- tiful. A short musical program preceded the address _ Mr. and Mrs. Geo. Heusler, Mar- jorie and Mrs. Whitewood, of Tor- onto, were Sunday guests of Port Perry friends. Miss Hilda Wallace was in Tor- onto last week. Mrs. W. H. Harris was in Hamil- ton last week, attending the 1.O. D.E. convention. Miss May Cockburn, of Toronto, was home for the week-end. Solina News W. T. Baker, dent) Solina, April 21.--The Young People's meeting was held as usu- al on Monday night with Mr. Leo- nard Barlin, third vice-president in the chair. Miss L. Dearborn took up the devotional topic. The program was along temperance lines and Miss Audrey Cowling gave a reading and Miss Elleen Balson took the topic. Mr. Barton favored with musie, Mrs. 8. E Werry and Rev. Mr. Bick gave temperance talks. Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Reynolds were in Toronto last weak. Mrs. (Capt.) Shaw, of Lake- port, is visiting her cousin, Mrs, Thos. Baker. Mr. and Mrs. Jim Reynolds and Mr. and Mrs, Joe Reynolds and Ronald, Toronto, visited at the home of Mr. J. W. Reynolds. Mr. and Mrs. H. E, Tink, Mise Evelyn apd Mr. Bruce Tink visit- ed at the home of Mr. H. G. Pas- coe, Zion. Mr. and Mrs. George White at- tended the funeral of Mrs. George Burton, Toronto, on Monday. Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd Ferguson were guests of Mrs, William Mont- gomery. Mr, and Mrs. Howsam Mary visited with Port friends. Mr. and Mrs. Bruce Montgom- ery were Sunday visitors with Mr, and Mrs. Lloyd Ferguson, Enfield. There were over thirty ladies out for election of officers at the Women's Institute on Thursday. The meeting was opened by sing- ing the opening Ode and repeat- ing the Lord's Prayer. The roll call was answered by a quotation on home or country and was re- sponded to by several splendid writing. New and old business was dealt with and the eléction of officers 'took place with the fol- lowing results: President, Mrs. J McMaster; first vice-president, Mrs. A. P. McKessock; sec'y treasurer, Mrs. R. Langmaid; dis- trict director, Mrs, T. Baker; au- ditors, Mrs. M. J. Hobbs, Mrs. A. P. McKessock, Mrs Roy Lang-. maid then gave the treasurer's re- port, There was a balance on hand from last year of $69.93 this year this {is a balance of $74.75. Mrs, Money, the president. then called on Miss Helen Daker to present her program which was as follows: piano solo, "Gyp- sy Love Song," by Miss Annie McMaster; reading by Mrs. A. I'. McKessock, one of Mr. Peter Mc- Arthur's pieces, when Mr. Mec- Nefl served the settlement. Mrs. Thos. Baker then gave a paper on the Women's Institute, Vocal solo was sung by Mrs, Isaac Hardy. Miss Baker then put on an endurance contestr after which Mre. Mooney apnounced the group leaders for this year. Group 1, Mrs. Harry Hardy: group 2, Mrs. J. Kivell; group 3, Mrs. |. Yellowlees; group 4, Mrs, H. E. Tink; group 5, Mrs. E. R. Taylor; group 6, Mrs. A. Stainton, Delicious refreshments were serv- ed by Group 6. Miss Margaret McKessock spent Sunday in Oshawa. (Mrs, Correspon. and Perry BOURGEOIS ART BANNED Moscow, April 23-"Bourgeois" designs on porcelain and chinaware are the latest objects of the wrath of good Soviet proletarians, Following a wave of indignant criticisms of "the encroachment of capitalistic influence" on textile de- signs and on the names of flowers, t'e magazine Proletarian Art has taken up the cudgels against the Dulevsky factory here for allowing its products to bc decorated with flowers, birds and seventeenth cen- tury French beauties, | ada and SAYS KINGSTON WEDIEVAL CITY Professor Says It Reminds Him of Characteristics of Middle Ages Kingston, Ont. -- "Kingston is pre-eminently and above all things medieval," said Prof. A. E. Prince of the Department of History at Queen's University in an address hei.. The city, he sald, was medieval in the sense that practically all the institue trons which gave Kingston its character had either developed or undergone some radical change during the Middle Ages. He spoke of each of the insti. tutions on the Kingston sky-line and told how each had its back- ground in the 13th and 14th centuries. Kingstor General Hospital had been the seat of the first parliament of United Canada. Military institutions bad not begun in the Middle Ages, Prof. Privee continued, but had de- veloped during that rime on the lines they followed today and the bright uniform of the cadets of | thao Royal Military College | brought to mind the thought that | | it vvas in the Middle Ages soldier first dressed in uniform and a wage their services. The barracks of the Royal Cun- ad:an Horse Artillery could be | traced back into medieval times | when the use o Jlery Leginning, The University brought up the fact these institutions of warning + began medieval times; the courthouse recalled the point that English common law came into being in the 13th and 14th centuries. The cath- edrals and residences of the {shops in Kingston reminded one of the power and influence 5¢ the church in the Middle Ages 8€5, | Vref. Prince concluded. were (ald for was just | SERVED IN U.S. ARMY, DEPORTED Soldier Who Was Return- ing From Furlough in Canada Arrested Windsor, -- After having serv- er four years, twc months and eight days in the United States regular army forces at Fort Wayne, Detroit, Mich., and hav- twice taken the oath of al- United States, Wil- ham C. Johns has been deport- ed to Canada on the grounds that entered the United States il- ing lagiance -to he legs] gal entry was | at Bonners Ferry, Idaho, when Johns was re- ruining from a 60-day furlough which he had spent with ftelatives at Calgary John he did know was breaking any tomigration regulations and adds taat if he had returned he | could have been arrested as a de- | serter {rom the United States | Army, been extradited from Can- sentenced to two years The alleg madé last says not not in the penitentiary Johns alleges that when the immigration charge wag laid he was told he could leave the coun- try voluntarily and later might return by legal entry and resume life ip the army. He bought his Lonorable discharge from the army by paying #85 and signed papers for voluntary movement to Canada but was taken {nto custody and he claims held for six weeks before he was sent to Windsor on a deportation order. YSAYE'S WIDOW TO New York, N.Y.--Mrs. Jeanette Dincin Ysaye, young widow of the famous violinist, Eugene Ysaye, who was 44 than has just re ative Brook- lyn From now on, she said, her | "chief 11 y interpret the | master's Mrs. 15 1 y She | 19 when Ysaye, then 63, cane ooklyn for a concert ten years Tascinated, listened - and rilled arrangements were made for him to hear her play. She had been playing the violin since she was four, and was consid- cred a prodigy. Ysaye was impressed. She beg- ged him to take her abroad with him to study. He agreed and for five years she toured Europe, giv. ing concerts and always studying. Five years later they were married. The aged master's health had be- gun to fail and his young wife took his place, first as instructor in the Conservatoire Royale de Music, in Brussels: later as private instructor to the Queen of the Belgians, years older she, 2Y. 1 uly she when higher | 4) { been beneath the altar. | MeMurray RELICS OF RACE OF ' 6,000 YEARS AGO Mysore, India.~Relics of a race who lived in the Deccan 6,000 years ago who made pottery with rémark- able skill and attained a considers able degree of culture, have been discovered in the Chandravalli Val. ley near Cnitaldrug. Six different levels, each marking a ground-surface of which an an- cient people unce lived, were reveal- ed by excavations. 'The most re- cent strata was 800 years old--the lowest marked the level of the ground 6,000 years ago. In this lower strata pottery and other relics of stone and iron ages were found. The stone age relics were ornate, with geometrical floral and other designs, The discoveries are considered to indicate that these prehistoric inhabitants of the Dec- can had attained a degree of culture equal to that of the Campignian of France and Get ulan of Africa. SAY EASTER BUNNY IS PAGAN SYMBOL Philadelphia.--~The Easter bunny was assailed as a pagan symbol at the weekly meeting of the Presby- terian Ministerial Association. The Rey. Zed 'H. Copp introduced a re- solution which was defeated, to proscribe bunnies, eggs and also red Christmas candles, Yule logs, poin- setting and postacrds of Santa Claus The res protested "the commercialization Holy Wed substit the rabbit and Faster cyg for the nd th 1 ition of the ing cr IX $s substitution," it ied, "a combined insidious at- 1 the historicity of Scripture, f reh and on which tend no children and blind paganize their spiritual sight.' CLAIM HISTORIC BOULDER FOUND our Tiberias, Palestine,--~The uvoulder upon which Christ stood on the shores of the sea of Galilee to per- orm the miracle of the loaves and fishes is belicved to have been dis- covered at Tabgha, near here. The stone was found in the centre of a fourth-century church recently un- covered, and is presumed to have The church was one of the many built during the reign of Constantine the Grea Behind the stone was found a mo- siac panel, depicting in vivid black, ed and yellow, a basket, several loaves of bread and two fishes. In the western half of the church 1 mosaic floor was uncovered, and about 15 feet long and 21 feet across, It contains a design of storks and other birds, and is said to be the best- preserved mosiac floor ever found in the Holy Land Although buried beneath dust and rubble - for about. 1,600 vears, the saic shows no signs of erosion. CENTENARY OF ALGOMA DIOCESE Sanit Ste. Marie, Ont, -- Ang- | | hearse, and wn diocese of Algoma this year rbrating its centenary. In Chief Shangwank of the iibhwi Indians, walked to To- ronto on spowshoes to petition the lieutenant-governor for a missionary to Christianize his reople. In October of that year Wiliam McMurray, then a ren, arrived at Sault Ste. Marie 'o begin a fruitful miesion. He Lad left Toronto early in Spring ind travelled hy canoe. In 1833 was ordained deacon by Bishop Stewart of Quebec and ¢yutinued his work until 1838. He baptized 160 Indians, of wliom 40 became communicants. loug after McMurray had gone the Indlans moved to a reserve at Garden River where their de- scendants live today. REMINISCENCE OF NOTED POET'S LIFE New Plymouth, N.Z. -- A man whe was a friend of Keats and an Intimate of the poet's circle, hos descendants here, One may imagine that Keats wrote letters | and possibly lines of some now ANNIE ANT PILLS nas L KipneY / h// Bi] !| A | deuthless poems upon f Christ | of resurrection." | | piey, lay- | GARDEN SEEDS BULK GARDEN AN GRASS SEED AND FERTILIZERS "AND HOW THEY GROW" D FLOWER SEEDS, 16 CELINA STREET COOPER-SMITH CO. PHONE 8 a little rosewood table standing in a cor- ner of the drawing room of Mrs. Jessie Brown Vogeltown, New Plymouth, grand-daughter of Keats' friend. Quite possibly, for all one may know, on | Charles Armitage Brown may lave written his name to what proved a fateful anc momentous bill of exchange of a friend--an act o nobility that led to Brown's liquidating his riend"s debt and fmpoverishing his own fortune. tet NEW TESTS FOR MOVIE TALENT Directors Are Searching in New York for Future Stars New York, N.Y, -- The search for new stars to hang in the movie firmament has shifted from the ecamera-wise on the crowded lots of Hollywood to the camera-shy along Broadway. While producers on the coast are shouting louder than ever for "new material', an ubusual method of finding talen has been adopted here, The results have |! Leen so successful that one diree- ior alone in one year hag, given | seven-year contractg to 23 young | mer and women he 'discovered' in New York---and none had had avy movie experience No longer does an aspiving cinema star have to save her pens nieg for a raflroad ticket to Holly- wood and then ty a job as an "extra" so she can working toward her cherished goul. - Now it's all done by sys- | tens, A girl who has never bad | | | to get ' star! a bit of dramatic training, never ¢#poken a line on a stage and never seen a movie lot, often finds herself suddenly in posses- sion of a ticket to California and la lcng-term contract. This ig the method, as explain- ed by "Al" Parker, veteran Holly- | E pi | Canad s anada nd | wocd director, ag he sat in a | warechouse-like building in a west eide tenement district where the picking is done. i "We passed the word around Broadway we wanted talent," sald, "The parade began. first all were legitimate stage actresses. Now we get little girls who've just been in high school plays and even those who lave done nothing more than | ead movie magazines. I've in- terviewed 500 in the last year and found 150 with the person- a.ity that made them stand out {rym the crowd. "The 150 were measured (girls must be between § feet and 5 feet |* 6) and weighed (pot more than 126 pounds nor less than 90 de- punding on height) and given screepg and voice tests, Then the unique final process, Some stu- afos still give them a few lines At *o read in front of a camera with | ' black velvet as a background, "But we have an aspiring scen- aurio writer submit a full-length upporting cast, give weeks to re- shoot the thing it were a regular feature picture. We try to put the nl ts across, instead of try them up as a hire a a couple of then them as it ap- ing 0 show lot of 'Gams.' "It costs $1.000 to make a test | CT like that. but {t's worth it. Out | of 100 we 'shot' 30 got contracts, and three of the scenario ers were so good they went west vith jobs. WRITES BOOK ON HUMAN STUPIDITY Professor Is Waiting For Reaction of Book on Public New York, N.Y. -- Professor Walter B. Pitkin is sitting back | chuckling and waiting to hear wnat kind of a thud his "short | mtroduetion to the history of human stupidity" will make when it hits homo stultus, There have been other bad boys of literature, but this one- time newspaper editor and later | professor of psychology hopes and confidently expects to dodging cabbages hurled «ings as well as taxi-drivers The book has gone out to the! unsuspecting United States pub- | lie and Mr. Pitkin calculates it | will take a few days for filtration | through skull and bone, so he hasn't closed the. storm doors vet, In speaking of man, meaning vou and you and you, Mr. Pitkin uzer such charming terms as 'felly, blunder, irrational, frenzy, varary, quackery, delusion, ob- session, hysteric, puerility, para- nofa, stupor, hallucination," and ;ust go on in your own diction- ary. But is there no hope? Oh, yes! "Ten years ago," said Mr. Pit- kin, "IT know I ghould never have been able to get such a book pub- lished. Wherever it appeared there would have been public bonfires; Boston would have bar- red it, . "We in the United States have changed a lot. Since 1918 there have been three great waves of progressive disillusionment. First, we were disillusioned about our war leaders, our gen- erals and statesmen and profit- eors, such as the $l-a-year pat- riots . "Second, we lost our illusions about our business and industrial loaders. That was in the boom and depression of 1920, the jazz gge with the war excitement worn off. : "Then, third -- the big crash. We lost our faith in fundamental human ability, and that is the historical justification for my book." 1 ha by | in September he | Ont writ- 3 FREE As a means of introducing to the public the super quality work of our new finishing unit which has just been install- ed we will do free for one week, starting April 25th ONE DRESS SHIRT with each and every order of laundry or dry cleaning amounting to 75¢ or over. Just PHONE 2520 AND OUR DRIVER WILL CALL CHURCH SCHOOLS SHOW GROWTH Striking Increases in All Lines of Endeavour Are Shown to, April 23.--At its biennial the Board of Religious of the United Church of reviewed the whole field yd formulated policies for report y General Council which convenes Chancellor E. W. \llace of Victoria University is an curricula for Sunday schools rtant progress is reported, with letion of the three-year cycle led lessons only six months Publication of this Lana in series is being carried through v the United Church's publishing in Toronto. Recommenda- use tion is that missionary education be interest in the Courses already ary lessons per jor classes, under major activities, nade a yoard's ay school work in Ontario has een received from the estate of the Robert Coatsworth of Merlin, A fund in memory. of the late J. C. Robertson, former gen- | secretary, has been established. Statistical reports show that 51 er cent of all Sunday schools have ver than 50 pupils, while 65 per t of the pupils are in schools of pupils, indicating that ies predominate, tak- y as a whi 1 « 10 or more egistered the direction of vhich has in- cent since 1924 for teacher train- sed from nine in 1923 106 with 7347 students enrolled Young people's societies have srown in number from 2233 to 2366. I'otal membership of 78,735 is ac- counted for by an increase of 4,754 members over the previous year Joys' and girls' groups: also report increased enrolment for spiritual in- struction and fellowship. The report of the general secre- tary, Rev. Dr. Frank Langford, set the keynote in these words: "The ner hools response of youth to a sacr i embodied in a life, g today as at any t of the Christin ready 1] appeal st as thril in the history hurch." IN THE AUTOMOTIVE WORID TOURING IN THE EMPIRE it to visit among the countries of the Empire {8 to b. requested at the forthcoming Imperial Confer ence in Ottawa. Suggestions for improvements to encourage this type of motor travel are submitted by the Royal Antomo- bile Club, Montreal, for the ap- proval of the Dominion Govern- tient, A! present the motorist taking his ear to England must make a cash deposit and also se- cure permits and licenses. There are no such laws in Canada for visitors from the other side of the Atlantic, and the Royal Auto- mobile Club Is suggesting a recl- procity in drivin: licenses and permits, which would probably inerease the number of motorists touring through Empire coun- tries. WOMAN FINES HERSELF London.--When Mrs. J. L. Wood of Hemel Hempstead fails to go. to church on a Sunday morning, or when she catches a salmon, or kills a stag, she fines herself, the amount beinz proportional to the "offense." With the fund thus created she made in a resolution | {set aside » endowed two beds with 500 nds sterling (normally $2,500) t Aberlour Orphanage and pounds (normally §1,200) tor a third bed. 24 | | NATIVES BEING TAMED Abolition of red tape to make | easier for automobile tourists | Canberra, Australia --Natives® of Papua are gradually being tamed and head hunting by wild Kanakas on the hinterland is being suppress- ed, Sir Hubert Murray, administra- tor of Papua, said in a report to the Federal Australian Government, which controls the territory. Qut of 1 total native mopulation of about 300,000, said Sir Hubert, about 240.- O00 have been tamed, but the re- mainder are still cannibals. Sir Hubert is asking Australia for more white policemen and money in order to employ more Kanaka police hoys to protect the tame natives from the wild tribes. Newfoundland gets more like South America every day. After a tropical winter, it turns up with a revolution --Guelph Mercury. 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Its reasonable first cost and low maintenance spell econ- omy to the taxpayer. crete, It is Advocate con- all-Canadian, using local labor and local materials, Sales Offices at: South Shore ad Harbour itr oneal, Kennedy Construction Com- pany, Contractors, J. E. Pervault, Minister of High uays. J. L. Boulanger, Deputy Minister of ish. ways, Alex. Fraser, Chief Engineer, Dept, of High weys. CALGARY