Two Night Entertainments Planned At Oshawa Fair DOLE RACE LOOKED UPON AS BIG MISTAKE BEING ING AFFAIR y GIVES QUARTERS AWAY ROTARY FAIR Tuesday Aug. 23 HERE is a spirit abroad I in Oshawa today that re- minds of that hour on Christmas Eve when the whole world suddenly remembers that within a few hours the bells will ring in another Christmas morn, But today basks under the ardor of an August sun; for Christmas holly we have the blue-eyed chicory of the road- sides and the fronds of golden rod, But tomorrow, Tuesday, August 28, the Rotary Street Fair opens in the heart of Osh- awa's business district, and it is evident that the Heart of Osh- awa itself has already sealed that night of caunival and joy with a promise of success, The reason? Like Christmas, it's a Feast of Childhood, $0» Oshawa's streets, tomorrow night, will be thronged with merrymaking thousands, Hun- dreds will appear in masquer- Bde costume; a great parade will move off to the music of three civic bands, and the joy- bus rhythm of jazz orchestras, On the four blocks nearest the Four Corners -- east, west, north and south -- over a score of booths will raise their be- flagged invitations to celebra- tion, That area will be roped off to all but pedestrian traffic, But all the fun, the merriment, the buying and selling, the priz- es and the contests will be de- dicated -- just as Christmas is ~to happy childhood, : . » For up on Centre Street there are seven acres of land where, next- year, the children of Oshawa will find a Paradise for Play, Much has already been done, but a great deal yet remains to be completed. A swimming pool is planned; bath houses; flower gardens both slong the playground's front on Centre Street and at the Rockery which will divide the i : HHI 3 HHT ¥ ® Het ef : Us i sh ple. 0 cura The Oshawa'Daily Reformer AWA, ONTARIO, MONDAY, AUGUST 22, 1927 0 10 Cents a Week; 2 Cents a Copy. [Children's Day to Mark Opening of Three Day how September 14-16 TRY YOUR LUCK CHARLIE ANDERSON Who with Hugh Ross will be in charge of another of The Rotary Street Fair's Sweater Booths, These two master salesmen are said to have one of the best lines ever heard in Ontario; their lines of sweaters to be shown at Tuesday night's carnival of fun are known to be the best ever. All the profits, moreover, go to the Children's Playground on Centre Street. FLIERS LEAVE TODAY TO ENCIRCLE WORLD Detroit, Aug. 21,--A hope of elr- cling the globe in the record-smash- ing time of 15 days will guide Ed- ward PF. Schlee, President of the Wayeo Oil Corporation, and William Broek, his pilot, when -they-hop tomorrow morning for Curtiss Field, I. I., en route to Harbor Grace, New- foundland, the official starting point, woman's dimples man's heart.-- Sometimes a make dents in a Montreal Star. roofs of David's City. All ranks of Oshawa citizens have .en- dorsed the objective of tomor- row night's Street Fair, and they are coming out to join the night's jewelled hours of pub- lic merrymaking. And not only Oshawa, but the surrounding district is sending in contin- gents of friendly folk to take part in Oshawa's great festival. *® * * A final word: Don't forget the great street parade. That is, don't forget to enter. Prizes are offered for the best decor- ated car, and for the best dee- orated truck. On the other E L i : i : FERS ei} i i N £ .r 1 South off} Displays and Vaudeville Acts Second and Thivd Nights Night shows will feature the Ontario Agrienltural Assocl- ation's fall fair at Alexandria Park for the first time this year, Seven acts of superior vaudeville have been secured, and will he presented hefore the grand stand Thoth on Thursday and Friday evenings. September 15 and 16. as well as afternoons of the fair's three days, beginning September 15, The fair this year bherins with Children's Day, for which free passes have been issued to every public school child--hoy or girl-- throughout South Ontario While all details of the program have not heen completed, it 18 announced that prizes are to he given the hest drilled class, the hest costumed, and so on. There will also be » good program of school drills and a splendid program of sports. As previously announced. the fair will be opened at Alexandra Park by Maj. Gen. MacBrien, one of Can- ada's most distinguished soldiers. The prize list for the coming fair Is, in the words of President R. B Smith, "The largest list of prem- Inms ever offered hy the Society. The agricultural community in the vicinity of Oshawa never had a bet- ter chance to show its wares or to take larger prizes home." ~ Fireworks Display In addition to the vaudeville turns which will "he presented be- fore the grandstand, there will be splendid displays of fireworks both on Thursday snd Friday evening. The vaudeville acts secured in- cinde the Moralles Trio, aerial ar- tists, whose thrilling performances have won them a wide reputation Retlan, king of the air. will do a hair raising act on top of a forty- foot pole in two special numbers. Overfield, stated to be a very clever actor on both tight and slack wire, will he one of the perform- ance's stellar numbers. Hattie Delmar, billed as "The girl who sings to beat the band" is consid- ered one of the best features se- cured, Other acts will be announced la- ter, while it is officially stated that the Ontario Regiment's fine band will give concerts every afternoon and eveping. A particularly good midway has been booked for the Oshawa fair consisting among other features of a ferris wheel, aerial swings, a mer- ry mix-up device, and a merry-go- round, The directors of the fair an- pounce that a grand parade of prize winning animals will take place in front of the grand stand at 4 p.m. Saturday, September 17. The pa- rade will be staged similarly to such parades at English and Scotch exhibitions. Trials of speed will be held ¥ri- day and Saturday, with purses amounting to $1.300 going to the successful competitors. Great interest will centre fin the Baby Show to be held in the Big Tent at 3 o'clock Saturday. The first prize for babies fis a cash award of $8; the second is $4; and the third $3. Dr. Rundle is acting as judge, and the competition is open to babies both of Ontario and Durham counties. "Borrowed ba- bies barred." the secretary declares, "if you have not one mow, you will stand mo show this year for the money." Officers Officers of the South Ontario Agricultural Society include the fol- lowing honorary presidents: Wil- liam Smith, Columbus; J. D. How- den, Whitby: Robery W. Grierson Brooklin: W. E. N. Oshawa; L. O. W. H. Stainton, MP. The executive of the society fol- lows:--R. B. Smith, Columbus, pre- sident; J. 8. Kyle, first wice presi- dent; Oscar Downey, Myrtle, second vice president; Charles P. Davis. secretary-treasurer. Divectors: R. N. Johns, E. Mclaughlin, T. E Trull, M. Duff, Myrtle Station: R. Mclaughlin, George Browa. Brook- lin: Fred Rowe, Whitby: W. Glas- pell, E. W. Webber, Columbus: A. J. Howden, Columbus: uff, F. Havdman, W. Elliott, Geo. Robinson, T. Hall, Brooklin; M. Vi- LJ Competitions on the Opening Day in Which Every School in South Ontarie Will Par: ticipate -- Passes Issued to Every Pupil -- Fireworks VV. B. Wood-: a wk aily Times[=! Second Section--Pages 9-12 SWEATERS FOR ALL MORLEY JACOBI Who with Ernie Parsons will oper- ate one of the Rotary Street I"alr's sweater hooths, Sweaters for ladies and gentlemen are the features of this department whose profits go to the Child- ren"s Playground on Centre Street, Only the soclally impos- sible will refuse this hooth's of- ferings, On the other hand, a mark of social distinction throughout the coming winter will be the possession of one or more Jacobi-Parsons sweaters. Those in anyway careful of their posi- tion in the Blue Blook or Burke's Peerage will not hesitate over the Sweater Booth, Besides, exception- al hargains will he offered. GAME OF GAMES MURRY MILLER Chairman of the Rotary Street Fair Booth with Bill Tait, who have devised a splendid "Break a balloon and win a prize" game for the amusement of the throngs Tuesday evening. There's no trick about it. Here's the balloon. you fire the projectile, and if the balloon bursts the prize is yours. Attacking balloons in aeroplanes barred of course. E. L. Vickery, W. Dyer, Columbus. and I. Fisher. Associate directors are E. L. Chapman, Pickering; John Baker. Hampton: W. H. Tonkin, Oshawa; William Croskery, Uxbridge; G. M. Forsyth, Claremont: L. Gifford, Oshawa; and N. White. Ashburn. The auditors of the association are R. H. James and W. H. Tonkin. Committee in charge of the Fair's several departments, the first named being the chairman: Heavy horses--Oscar Downey, R. W. Grierson, N. White, M. Vipond, Fred Rowe, M. Duff. Light horses--E. McLaughlin, T. E. Trull. G. B. Mothersill, J. 8. Kyle, V. B. Woodruff, Job White, Geo. Brown, R. R. MeLaughlin. Cattle--T. E. Trull, J. E. Disney, W. Glaspell, I. Gifford. G. M. For- syth, E. W. Webber, W. D. Dyer, J. Baker, A. J. Howden. Swine--R. R. McLaughlin, E. L Chapman, Wm. Croskery, Geo. Rob- inson, M. Vipond. Sheep--W. G. Glaspell, L. Gif- ford, A. J. Howden, W. D. Dyer, J. Baker. Poultry--W. Elliott, R. McLaugh- lin. J. 8. Kyle, E. L. Vickery, Geo. Brown, IL. Fisher. Ladies' Building--J. 8. Kyle, R. N. Johns, D. M. Tod, G. B. Mother- sill. F. Hardman. Main Building--R. Brooks - W. H. Tonkin, R. N. Johns. D. M. Tod. J. 8. Kyle, W. Croskery, E. L. Chap- man, G. Brown. Attractions--R. Langhlin, E. N. Sinclair, V. B. Woodruff. Printing--W. E. N. Sinclair, D. M. Tod. Entertainment -- J. D. Howden. Job White, G. B. Mothersill, W. E. N. Sinclair, J. E. Disney. D. M. Tod, R. W. Grierson, Innis Grant. Program--yjob White, T. Hall, T. E. Trall, R. W. Grierson, G. B. Mothersill. Trials of Speed--V. B. Woodraf'. Baby show--G. B. Mothersill E. Trail, : pond, Brooklin; D. w. , I. Heavy Toll Taken in First Transoceanic Air Race -- Cost Over $300,000 While Records Show Three Killed and Seven Missing -- Avi. ator Has Odds of 4 to 1 Against Him in 8,400- Mile Flight eo » San Francisco, Cal, Aug.21---The first transoceamic alr race in history has taken a high toll In men and money, To date the records show three killed, seven missing and in excess of $300,000 spent to win $36,000 in prizes and fame, ' The only contribution te the de- velopment of commercial aviation mady by the flight, according to avi- ation experts, is that a professional aviator starting on a flight over a 2,400-mile course to Honolulu has the odds four to one against his get- ting there, Originally there wore 13 starters in the race who obtained planes, Three were killed en route Lo the take-off place, one never got away from his home hangar, and an- other was ruled out before post time, stunt Flying, Ernest Smith, the first civilian pi- lot to fly an aeroplane from the mainland to the Hawaiian Islands, sald the whole Dole race was a *'big mistake," "It is stunt flying," Smith declared, "and not practical with and planes." Of the eight who actually faced he starters flag two stumbled and crashed at the start, two put back vith engine trouble tor damaged plancs, two reached Honolulu and hree are missing today. The third was piloted by Captain Nilliam Erwin, who, after being 'orced back, started out in search of hose who were missing. inthe race. Tames Dole, Hawaiian magnate, don- or of the prizes, did not contem- late an air race when he offered the iwards, He erts in the aviation world, that it i yould be some months before B wroperly financed aerial ould be equipped and sent on its ll vay. Instead, before the National Aero- | } :autical Association had time to for- nulate rules and fix a date for the ace, two army leutenants--Mait- | and and Hegenberger--aceomplish- d the feat for which the prize was offered, but were not eligible for the award, Dash To Hawaii, A few weeks later, with glory as their only reward, two civilian avi- ators, Ernie Smith, pilot, and Emory Bronte, navigator, made the dash in a monoplane and reached am island in the Hawaiian group just as their gasoline supply became exhausted. At this point the Dole prize money began to loom as the stakes for a race, and a condition undreamed of by the Hawaiian millionaire result- ed. Entries flocked into headguart- ers from all parts of the country. A chronological history of flight casualties follows: Aug. 10---Lieuts. George D. Co- vell and R. 8S. Waggener killed when their plane crashed in the fog off Point Loma while bound for Oak- land. Aug. 11--The triplane of James L. Giddin T crashed into San ] it was Approaching, from Long Beach, Cal. injured, but the occupants the plane were compelled to swim for their lives. % wi British Fr Killed. Aug. 12--Captain Arthur X. Rog- ers, former British Army fly- ing a tandem engine plane near Los Angeles, was killed when he jumped from his plane after the en- ed in their biplane from Oakland airport as competitors in the race. Aug. 16--The Golden Eagle, entry of The San Francisco Examiner, pi- loted by Jack Frost and navigated Bichwaldt, took off from Oakland in , « Ang. 21 The vast Pacific Ocean continued today to hold fast the fate of the sowen who daved to fly over its thousands of miles of water from the const of Calornia to the Islands of Hawaii Despite all the vesompces of the STUNT FLY GEORGE HENLEY Five Pin game at the big Rotary Street Fair Tuesday evening will he a center of in- terest, The quarter, which is the second subject of this sketeh will sit on top of the five pin which. in turn, will stand on ¢ plain apple barrel, You hit the five pin and away flies the quar ter, If it falls on the ground it's your quarter! If it doesn't. well there's a Children's Play ground on Centre Street to com plete and equip, Whose CHILD DIES FROM INJURIES IN CRASH Two Motorists Arrested or Charge of Criminal Negligence believed, as did ex- | expedition | fam Erwin and navigated by A. H. | 21. | Paris, Ont., Aug. When the wheels of a two-seated buggy were fouled by a motor car driving ip the opposite direction one mile east | of St. George, six miles from here, the infant son of Mr, and Mrs Robert Mulholland of Branchtor was fatally injured, while Mrs. Mul holland and one other child received minor injuries, The car did not stop, and late W. Coubrough and Charles Brazie: were arfested in St. George on charges of criminal negligence and failufe to give assistance. Accord- ing to the police, the two men had left their car on the outskirts of the village and had gone to a shop to have a tire tube repaired. County Constable Mitten was waiting for them at their car when they return- ed. The Mulholiands' phaeton, occun- pied by the mother, father and four children, was travelling east, anc the motor car, poceeding west struck the buggy wheels as it pass ed, hurling the child to the ground. The infant was taken to the Brantford Hospital, where it died a few moments after being admitted As we understand it, the little King of kKumania has almost as much authority as the King of Italy. --El Paso Times. navy, the army, the scores of steam- ships plying the great swelling sea, and the hopes and prayers of rela- tives, friends, and the world that pays tribute to brave effort, there was no word to indicate whether the ocean had claimed them or they were still afloat, waiting for rescue. Five Days Pass. Five days had passed since the Golden Eagle and the Miss Doran, bearing their four courageous men and on: woman, had roared away from the crowded Oakland airport that cheered them to win glory and the prizes offered by James D. Dole for the first and second planes to cross 2,400 wiles of the Pacific. Nor was anything heard from Pji- lot Jack Frost and Navigator Gordon Scott of Los Angeles; of the Golden Eagle. nor from Miss Mildred Doran. the beautiful young Canadian-born school teacher who bravely shared the damzers of John Aunggy Pediar and Lieut. ¥. R. Knope, who piloted and navigated the plane named in her honor. Two days had gone by simce Cap- tain William P. Erwin of Dallas. Mevas. amd Alvin H. Bichwaldt of Alameda, Cal., with the courage that launched in the face of death, flew ont 10 sea to search the waves along the whole noute to Honolulu for tranes of those who had preceded the. Foom their plana, the Dallas Spirit. ther radioed the ay mes games to f-iands and the jests of men | mofme VM ~hiheantedly on a graat ad , venture. MAN DROWNED IN SHALLOW WATER SIXFEET OUT Gruesome Discovery Made By Leonard Tisdale of Man Upright in Water J. V, DUPONT VICTIM Stranger May Have Taken Out Boat and Fallen Out on Return Belleville, Aug, 21. -- J, W, Du- pont, aged between fifty and sixty years, met with death Friday night by drowning In the Belleville har- bour six feet from the door of the Tisdale hoathouse in a little ovir five feet of water, Returning up the harbour about ten o'clock last night Mr. Leonard Tisdale made the sensational discovery of a man standing slightly stooped in the wi- ter, As he was facing the dock ul the boathouse it is thought he may have been out in a skiff and have fallen into the water as the boat struck the framework on its return, Mr, Tisdale left the boathouse about seven thirty and did not re- turn until about ten o'clock. Al- though the boat house had heen left open, no one had applied at the house for a skiff, Going to the 10or to look down the harbour Mr. Tisdale saw a hoat resembling one of his which he saw out of the hoat- house and he thought some hoys had taken it out, Going. as far south as the Boulter dock he sow the hoat empty drifting out of the harbour, Taking a canoe from his own boathouse Mr. Tisdale soon overhauled the fugitive craft and towed it back to the boathouse. He had found some matches scattered about, a tie and a pipe and the oars unused. As he was turning the canoe prowmd ito tekcit into the boathouse. It struck something white which he had seen just a few feet away, Investightion showed 't was the body of a man, the bald appearance of the head giving the impression that 'the man was very old and grey, such, however, prov- ine not to be the cage. The police were called, Sergt. Harman and Constable Evans responding. The body had meanwhile been pulled out of the water, but although it is said to have been warm there was no sien of life. Coroner Dr Bovre pronounced the man dead and the body was taken to the morgue of Mes-rs. Tickell and Sons Company. It is thought that the man com- ing out of the boathouse and find- ing mo one about took out the skiff and was returning when tha accident hanpened. Mr. Tisdale told The Ontario reporter that the skiff was moving almost impercep- tibly in the direction of the bav and that the time for the boat to flost from the hoathonse to where it was first seen would have taken a long time, there be'n= not a rin- ple on the water and not a breath of air moving. That would indicate that by the time of the discovery of the boat the man had been in the water for a considerable length of time. Mr. Tisdale when he first saw the body did mot think it was that of a man and later om discovering ft= nature. he thought the body had drifted in from the harbour as there in om ebh apd flow to the water in this chenmel. The police authorities. after all nieht efforts. got in touch this mor- nine with the son of the man, living at Napanee. The youth set out at once for this city. . On the hody were references and letters, these belne 'mn the hip pocket and mot yet soaked with wa- ter. The proprietor of the boathouse stated that he had mever seen the man hefore. The man is believed to have come here from Cormwall. At elevem o'- clock it was mot certain whether am inquest would he held. The cor- oner and the authorities were wait- ing for the arrival of the young wan from Napamee for identifica- thom. When the police were speaking with the young mam fin Napanee ther were informed that Dupont had an antificial fee. This had mot heen moticed »» Ae that time al- though Mr. Tisdale when informed of this t he was lift- 'ng hic tie tl the assist- smee of the police he thought one of the limbs peemed strange. Outside of the letters in the possession of the authorities there is mo clue to the mam til Adenti- fication fs iv probably by the ad ar'dfinial lex donut ~ entity was The police we © Ane 3 = h- 'mg the hotel resister: t al mar named hed » one Moths 4a known 'o- fin" or Se R, ville sp fax.as the police co 11 za IB ¥ i A