Boston THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1940 PAGE THREE BE BASEBALL RECORDS EEEEEENREEEEncasmsanned AMERICAN LEAGUE Ww. L. 62 64 64 71 1 85 Pet. 589 576 568 530 520 437 Cleveland New York . Chicago St. Louis .... Washington 87 Philadelphia 94 Wednesday Results, Detroit. ....x10-3 Chicago Cleveland 4 St. Louis Washingten at New York---post- poned. . Boston at Philadelphia--postpon- ed. x--Ten innings. Games Thursday--New York at Philadelphia (2); Washington at Boston. Only games scheduled. NATIONAL LEAGUE L. 51 62 68 4 75 Cincinnati Brooklyn ....... St. Louis Pittsburgh .... Chicago . O.R.F. U. SCHEDULE New York 9 Boston 85 Philadelphia 100 Wednesday - Results. Chicago. ....x2-6 Pittsburgh ...1-4| Cincinnatl....5-3 St. Louis ....0-4 | New York at Brooklyn--Postpon. | Philadelphia at Boston--Postpon- ed. x--11 innings. Games Thursday -- Philadelphia at New York (2); Boston at Brook- lyn; ittsburgh at Chicago; Cin- cinnati at St. Louis (2). Toronto, Sept. 26.--R. H. Bailey, secretary-treasurer of the Ontario Rugby Football Union, Wednesday released the revised senior ®.R.F.U. schedule for the 1940 season and announced the inclusion of a Sarnia team from the 2-26 Field Battery, Royal Canadian Artillery. Oct. 4 (Friday night) -- Balmy Beach at Hamilton. Oct, 5--Camp Borden at Sarnia, Oct. 12--Sarnia at Hamilton. Oct. 14 (Thanksgiving Day)=-- Camp Borden at Balmy Beach. Oct, 19. -- Hamilton at Balmy Beach; Sarnia at Camp Borden (to be played at London): Oct. 26--Camp Borden at Hamil- ton; Balmy Beach at Sarnia. Nov. 2--Balmy Beach at Camp Borden (to be played at Toronto); Hamilton at Sarnia. Nov. 9--Hamilton at Camp Bor- den (to be played at London); Sar- nig at Balmy Beach. Nov. 16 and 23--First and second teams will play off, points to count on the round. | Urges Daylight Saving Tn All Canadian Cities Brantford, Sept. 26.--The board of directors of the Board of Trade on Tuesday night unanimously | passed a resolution strongly advo- | cating that the Federal Govern- ment make daylight saving compul- | sory in all cities of the Dominion, The resolution declared such a o TR pa China to attack the Chinese on a new front. | Hull's repeated warnings to Japan against disturbing the "status quo" in the Orient. with the extent of the aid the U.S. navy would give her if attacked by Japan, and there is talk of the Am- erican navy's obtaining use of the British base at Singapore, which is the strongest in the Far East. Singapore Is strongest British base In British, Americans Confer, Keep Watch On Japan LCN Far East 2 4 & & mn s CELT Cn easy plo RL nS" 4 *e Anglo-American-Jay en Hong Kong defenses PHILIPPINE ISLANDS ~ Sending by the United States of expert naval observers to Australia, New Zealand, South Africa and | India has emphasized the increasing collaboration of British and American authorities in the Far East. | At the same time, Japanese and U.S. relations are becoming more strained as Japan invades French Indo- The invasion comes in the face of Secretary of State Cordell Australia is cornered 1 is the price being paid by the Can- BUMPER YIELD BOOSTS VALLE PRAIRIE GRAIN Estimate Crop Worth $240,- 000,000 -- No. 1 Nor. Minimum May be 70¢ Ottawa, Sept. 26 -- Present pros. pects are that the total value of the 1940 western wheat crop at the farms will be somewhat higher than that of the 1939 crop. A valuation of $240,000,000 is possible, according to an unofficial estimate. That will be only $5,000,000 better than the value of the 1939 crop, which was 70,000,000 bushels smaller than the estimated yield this year. One certainty is that a bumper crop is being threshed. The last estimate of the Dominion Bureau of Statistics placed the prairie wheat yield at 534,000,000 bushels. Another certainty js that the minimum price for No. 1 Northern | wheat, basis Fort William or Van- | couver, is 70 cents per pushel. That adian Wheat Board government guarantee, The uncertainties arise from the war. The great wheat consuming | population of Europe is cut off from Canadian supplies. Should any- thing happen to alter that situation, the price of wheat might rise The position of the United Kingdom as | a market is also somewhat uncer- | tain. The trend of the war at sea and in the gir may result in sudden alteraticas in British plans for im- under a stationed here, that drill periods and lecture sessions for N.C.O.s and junior officers will be held five sg a week, starting on Thurs- ay. Officers and N.C.O.'s will be given three lectures a week for four weeks, in addition to which two regular drill sessions are to be held each week until the equivalent of 30 days' training is completed. Resuming after their two weeks' training at Camp Petawawa, the H. and P.E. unit reported at the various company headquarters on Tuesday night for a pay parade. It was the first parade for companies at Bancroft, Picton, Wellington and Madoc since camp. At Trenton, members of the ser- geants' mess elected their officers for the year, choosing Sgt. J. Ahearn, mess president; Sgt. H. Ormshaw, vice-president; Sgt. A. Black, secretary - treasurer, and mess caterer, Sgt. A. Bruyea. The mess committee consists of Sgts. O. Farrar, P, Moon and E. Beale, -- No Wonder You Are Constipated! What do you eat for breakfast? Coffee, toast, maybe some eggs? What do you eat for lunch and dinner? Bread, meat, potatoes? No wonder yow're constipated , .. due to lack of "bulk." And "bulk" doesn't mean the amount you eat, It means the kind of food that forms a soft, bulky mass in the bowels, It's this mass that helps your bowels move. The common sense thing to do about it is to eat Kellogg's All- Bran for breakfast. This ready- to-eat cereal will give you just the "bulk" you need. And fit gives you, in addition, Nature's intestinal-tonic, vitamin Bi. Eat a generous portion of All-Bran every day, drink plenty of water; and life will be brighter for you! All-Bran is made by Kellogg in London, Canada. Sold by every grocer. 4 J How to have better heat, more room in your home, greater firing ease--at less cost. Void When you put in a Livingston you do "FURNACE FIRING FINANCE these things. You cut down coal costs--and save the difference year after year . . . you turn troublesome fur- nace work into a pleasure . . . you have a better home, worth more any tume . . . you always have even heat and a clean it takes only a few hours to present furnace. A improves a home far The saving on a year's porting and storing wheat. Assuming that the 70-cent guar- anteed minimum price gives the farmers an average price of 45 | canis a bushel at the farm, after | deductions for freight and grade, | the total value of this year's crop would be about $240,000,000 Canada has an acute storage prob- | move would not only further aid in conserving electric power, but would SEEGER AMOMTSWAGON [onc =etstrre | RAF, CANADIANS "Zoe WOMAN INJURED on Cosine YANOUISH OFTEN Brantford, without daylight sav- | ing time, is "out of step" with To- | -- Montreal, Sept. 26. -- With the | side oY GOVERNORS' CUP SERIES Finals. Newark at Baltimore--Rain, Final series tied, 1-1. INTERNATIONAL LEAGUE | The Livingston is specially designed and built for home heating. It will give you not a minute's worry or house . . . install it in Livingston Stoker beyond the outlay your | ronto, Hamilton and other cities | AMERICAN ASSOCIATION : | with daylight saving, the board be- | Wednesday Result. country the 1 in TEENS DRTTE ARS ESL SR ETE. Lads TlsL PRET Seon: Louisville at Kansas City--post- Series "B." Waterloo 9 Port Credit Best-of-three series tied, 1-1. Intermediate "A." Aylmer........15 Cobourg Aylmer wins championship, 3 Intermediate "B." Hagersville 5 Waterloo . Best-of-three series tied, 1 to 1. 6 Southampton Hensall wins series. | 2 Intermediate "C™. i Tor. Columbus. .12 Milton 0 | Bantam i Tor. Kiwanis. .15 Niag. Falls 4 Toronto Kiwanis wins champion- go -to Ottawa, and at time, the city council's support of the plan to make Brantford a day- light saving city will be sought. GOOD OLD DAYS! Times have changed If vou don't believe it, read the following rules 'that were in force at the the year 1837: "No young lady shall become a member of Mount Holyoke semin- ary who cannot kindle a fire, mash potatoes, repeat the multiplication table, and at least two-thirds of the shorter catechism. Every member to the shall walk a mile a day unless a calamity prevent. "No young lady shall devote more than an hour a day to miscellane- ous reading. "No young lady is expected to have gentlemen acquaintances un- less they are returned missionaries, or agents of benevolent societies." --The Presbyterian Witness. 1941 RCA VICTOR _ Globe Trotter BEAUTY Entirely different in Cabinet Styling Enjoy. the double entertainment of Radip and Records . . . Play Records through Your-Radio -- Ask your Deal- er about ne RCA Victor Special Offer --Get this $15.95 'RCA Victor Record Player for only $10.95 with the pur- chase of $5.00 worth of Victor ME 92 SIMCOE ST. N. / C Records. ) Ie omy | HER'S ... 0 | famous Mount Holyoke College in | school | . 3 | freshet, earthquake or some other | ert | lieves. A copy of its resolution will Two More Cars Collide Near the same | Bowmanville Bowmanville, Sept. 26. -- Mrs Clara McNutt, Morganstown, Ont, | suffered severe hip injuries in a | car accident east of the village of Newcastle on Tuesday. She was removed to Bowmanville Hospital. The car, in which she was a pas- | senger, was driven by Claude Mc- Nutt and was proceeding westward when it collided with a wagon loaded with grain, driven by Sidney Brown, Newcastle farmer. J. Duffey, Port Hope, following behind, swerved into the other traf- fic lane and came in collision with an eastbound .car driven by Mrs. Ellen Grandy, Brooklin. She suf- | fered, facial lacerations, as did Rob- randy, a passenger, A car driven by Wm. K. Fraser Mt. Pleasant Road, Toronto, turned over twice when it skidded on a | curve east of Bowmanville on Tues- cay. Fraser's wife, father and mother, passengers in the car, were slightly injured. Traffic Officer W. PF. Thompson investigated both ac- cidents. GERMANY' RATION TWICE POLAND'S Nazis Increase Bread Allow- ance at Expense of Vic- timized Nations New York, Sept. 26 -- A German will draw more than double the pread rations allotted to a Pole un- der new quotas fixed in Germany and the occupied territories' in Eu- rope, grain circles heard from Brit. ish sources yesterday. | Broomhall's Corn Trade News, In- ternational grain authority, in a cable from Liverpool, informed the trade that bread rations had been set at 80 ounces weekly for each per- son in Germany compared with 35 | for Poland, 44 in Bohemia-Moravia, 56 in Belgium, 70 in the occupied | section of France and 71 in Holland. At Broomhall's New York office, it was said the German rations re- presented an increase, probably be- cause of increased stocks obtained from conquered areas, but definite figures for comparison were unavail. able. The source of Broomhall's infor- mation was not disclosed. GOBOURG TO PAY TRIBUTE TO UNS. 3rd-47th Battery To Be Guests at Town 5 | Cobourg, Sept. 26.--Cobourg will | officially honor its 3rd-47th Battery | when the Battery pays a visit to the town on Sunday next. | A program, in charge of Acting- Mayor Roy Dodge, Councillors J. _Pewtress and Alan Field, will start off on Sunday with a church par- ade to Trinity United Church in the morning, After church they will parade up College Street, down University and Ball Streets, along | King and down Church Street to the park, where they will have their lunch. Assembling at the Market Square in the afternoon, the men will par- ade to the park, headed by the Cobourg Kilties Band, where a civic presentation will be made at a platform to be built. in front of the the autumn color f the fall week-ends holiday Monday, October 14, Thanks- giving Day will be the occasion for | the railways of Canada duced fares and g u to be adequate to ¢ the heavy traffic th according to C Canadian Passeng These reduced fares will tween all stations in Canada on the | basis of single fare and one-quarter trip in coaches on | ] fare long on re- | to offer time limit encourage | | | or pariour cars on payme nt charge for such Tickets will noon Friday, p.m. Monday, turn good leaving destir later than midnight on October 15, accommoda be good gol October 11, wu: October 14, with re- | ation not i Tuesday,| 1] | until 2 Farmers' Cash Income Increased By 30 P.C. ncome ne sale during v, 1940, from from months Jar was 85 per' cent come from 1 i g corresponding months of 1939, Income received this source | compared with Rolf Pinchot, charged with smug- mugling $300,000 in Dominion of Canada bearer bonds across the bandstand. Each member of the Battery will receive a gift and a PHONE 450 special presentation will be made | to Mayor Jack Ewart, now with the Battery, border, is shown with an R.C.M.P. | officer as he left Toronto for Mont- | real where he will stand trial with | j three others for violating foreign | exchange board regulations. it | | | the oxygen-carrying power of your blood. | back your pep, Downed 33 Huns in 3 Bat. tles -- Legless Squadron Leader Gets D.S.0 | | | London, Sept. 26 -- The all-Cana- | dian squadron of the Royal Air | Force, under its English ¢quadron leader, Douglas Bader, D.S.O., de- | stroyed 33 Nazi planes in three re- cent battles. The disclosure was made in the formal announcement of the con- | ferring of the Distinguished Service | Order on Bader, who is legless. No details were given out when | the honor was made known, Sept 21, bug the citation yesterday said: | "During three recent engagements | he led his squadron with such skill { and ability that 33 enemy aircraft have been destroyed." It was learned that Bader person- | can deliver to the ele lem which led the Government to | limit the amount of wheat a farmer Ar- | rangements for hel the farmers to finance themse by providing | loans or advances of some. sort on the wheat they are required to store on the farms are still under consid- eration, N.C.O0.'s To Start Lecture Course | Trenton, Sept. 26 --Instructions were received by Major Angus Mowat, O.C. of Headquarters Com- pany of the Second Battalion, Hast- ings and Prince Edward Regiment, tors. g ally bagged six of the 33 planes. No || details of the battles were given. ENROLMENT DROPS. AT NORM. SCHOOLS Decrease Traceable to En- listments and Men En- gaging in War Work Toronto, Sept. 26 -- Enrolment in the eight Normal ' schools in. the province has decreased by more than 100 this fall compared to last year, states the Department of Education. | The drop is presumed due to en- | listments, male registrations being down. Registration so far total 1,120, 1234 at the same time last year: To meet this situation, which will result in a shortage of teachers, Hon. Duncan McArthur, Minister | of Education, previously announced that candidates who had completed eight of the nine upper school pa- pers hitherto required would be con- sidered for admission to the course leading to first class certificates, A survey showed, Dr. McArthur said, | that many who would normally en. | ter the teaching profession are en- listing - or going into war work. Refused to Register Arnprior Man Jailed Arnprior, Sept. 26.--Daniel Hest- rick, local resident, was sentenced to two months in jail on Tuesday on charges of refusing to register and counselling others not to regis- ter. Hestrick's sister, Mrs. Alvenia Ramus, and two of her sons, Lester and Julius, appeared on charges of not registering and their cases were adjourned a week. Another son, Wilfred, was remanded in custody. Accused maintained it is contrary to their religious beliefs to register and refused the court's request that they register. TAKETHE "LEAD" FEELING OUT OF YOUR LEGS Get More Oxygen In Your Blood and Get the Pep that Sends You Bounding Up the Stairs People who smother to death die because oxygen has been completely cut off from them, Just as surely you are slowly smoth- ering if your blood lacks red corpuscles. Red corpuscles are your oxygen-carriers. They carry the oxygen you breathe in to ev- ery part of your system, Without enough oxy= gen-carrying corpuscles, your kidneys, liver, stomach and bowels slow down, Your skin wets pale, flabby, often pimply. Your nerves may become jittery -- you tire quickly -- feel depressed, What you need is Dr. Williams Pink Pills. These world-famous pills help make more and better red corpuscles and thus increase Get Dr, Williams Pink Pills today at your druggist, See for yourself how quickly 5 time-proven blood-builder will help give you Cope. 1988, G. T. Pulford O6., Lid, FRIDAY & | SATURDAY | SPECIALS fuel for this automatic coal burner rep- resents a substantial part of the stoker's reasons why you should These are cost. put in a Livingston Stoker now, ready for next winter, tvin ST ston KERS trouble. The new smaller-sized Livingston is adapted to the home of modest income. It helps save where savings are most important, It makes & good basement into a livable room. The larger Livingston, if needed, pays in propor- tion. A Livingston survey of your home heating needs is friendly and free, a We'll give you the facts in detail F. D. GARRARD 116 Brock St. E. Phone 726 | If the meat course disappoints the fam- then the whole me al is ruined. That's why you're always safe buying your meats here, lhey're the best in town. ily w\ ONTARIO BRAND GRADE CREAMERY ROAST Shankless Fresh SHOULDER FRESH PORK Tenderloin HOICE SI TENDER PURE LARD 3: 1-1b. Prints P EANUT Butter 2: FIRST BEEF LAMB FRONTS FRESH LEAN HAMBURG « SMALL LINK SAUSAGE | ' MILD NEW CHEESE Ib. 1 9. ------------ |] BONELESS ROLLED f // PRIME RIB | Roast = 28: | SLICED BREAKFAST BACON 1h. 2 5: CROICE SKINLESS WIENERS R 2-49 'SHOULDER CHOPS 2): 23 12 KING E. « PHONE 1147