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Oshawa Daily Times, 31 May 1928, p. 16

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EASTERN ONTARIO NEWS DIES IN CALIFORNIA M#s, Edward Crumley of Kings- ton, well-known all over Eastern Ontario, died at Stockton, Calif. according to information received in. yesterday afternoon. She .was a leader in the work of the. women's organizations in Kingston and also prominent in church circles. She is survived by her husband, one son and one daughter, DIRECTORS ELECTED The following were yesterday elected as the Board of Directors for Kingston's newly organized Chamber of Commerce; R., Frazer, Armstrong, Thomas G. Bishop, John M., Campbell, I. Cohen, May- or W. H. Craig, Stuart Crawford, Capt. John Donnelly, Collamer C. Folger, A. .C. Hanley, Francis King, K.C., T.-A. McGinnis, H, B, Muir, Hugh C. Nickel, Hon, W, F, Nickel, K.C., John F, Sowards, NATIVE OF GANANOQUE Daniel Smith for the past seven years a resident of Chatham, pass- ed away at the home of his daughy ter, Mrs, Douglas Pound, Tuesday night following a long illness. He was born in ' Gananoque seventy- five years ago, where he resided until his removal to Chatham. He is survived by his daughter, one son, Jessie, and a sister, Mrs. Wy J. Dustin, both of Gananoque. The remains will be taken to the home of his son and interment will take place in Willow Grove Cem- etery Gananoque, Friday after- noon, PRESENTATION TO MAGISTRATE Prior to his retirement from the Bemch, Police Magistrate Levi Williams, Picton, was presented yesterday with an armchair by court officials of Picton and county. County Judge Evan H. McLean acted as Chairman on this occasion and M. R. Allison, Coun- ty Crown Attorney, and Dean. of the Bar, delivered short addresses of regret at the Magistrate's re- tirement, and appreciation of his work, R. H, Hubbs, Clerk of the court, made the presentation, Mr, Williams 1s 84 years of age. R. A. Norman ex-M,P.P., his succes- sor in office, will assume charge of Magisterial affairs June 1, TMMMIGRANT MISSING Norman Malcolmson, a 16 year old Irish immigrant boy, who just recently arrived in Canada, has 'MADAM MELBA hc. The Internationally Singer and 'Plane Is the ovals of sentury Aid re LS threequarters THE JOHNS PIANO STORE it Phone 251 TIRE BARGAINS GALORE! i values. ALK about tire Just look at what we have to offer the man wh drives a light car. Every tire made 2 iGaody ear, Eve tire hid of SUPER. TWIST Cords, See 0 Pata Te - BCE ar" Pathfinder Cord. . All-Weather Cord. . ..... All-Weather Heavy Duty 00, 00 Pathfinder Cord, 29 x 4.40 coeness 300.00 All-Weather Cord. ...... 00.00 All-Weather Cord, ..... 30 x 4.50 .$00.00 All Weather Tire Sho 5 CELINA STREET--OSHAWA E 2462 Open until 9 o'clock every evening except WHONE 2 For service sake, buy at home Fred been missing from his home in Rawdon Township, near, Peter- boro, since some time during the night of May 22. To date all that has been found of the missing boy is his wallet, which contains his birth certificate, 'passport and four dollars in Canadian curren- cy. This was picked up by Isaac Lane, a farmer, beside a stump near the Rawdon Township boun- dary, in the County of Northum- berland on May 25. The boy 'made the trip across the Atlantic on the Antonia, which docked in Montreal on May 20, and immedi- ately preceeded to the home of Rutherford a ' Rawdon Township farmer. But before the boy arrived Rutherford had secured another man, and did not need a second. In order that he might not be out-of work, Ruther- ford arranged with a farmer in Seymour West to engage him, and was to have taken him to his new place on Wednesday, May 23, but the lad was gone and search fail- ed to reveal any trace of him or any message saying why he had left or where he had intended go- ing, The boy was entirely ignor- ant of the surrounding country, The Peterboro police have com- municated with the Immigration officials at the Port of Montréal, and have also started to investi- gate along several other lines that may furnish some information as to the missing lad"s whereabouts. Many of those who have heard the subject discussed are of the opin- ion that the boy was accidentally drowned, Not uncommon is the belief that the boy became despon- dent and committed some rash act, but to date there has been nothing definite established by the authori- ties who are Investigating. PAPAL DELEGATE TO CORNWALL The members of the Roman Catholic faith in the Diocese of Alexandria, near Cornwall, one of the oldest, if not the oldest, in .the Province of Ontario over the week-end had the honor of re- ceiving his Excellency Archbishop Andrea Cassullo "Apostolic Dele- gate to Canada. His Excellency arrived in Alexandria Saturday, wheré he was the guest of his Lordship Bishop Couturier, Sun- day morning at 7.30 he celebratéd 'Mass and later distributed Holy Communion to 600 Roman Cath- olic children of Alexandria at the cathedral, Later addresses of welcome were read on hehalf of the diocese by A, J, MacDonald, M.P, for Glengarry, in English and by Joseph KE, Chevrier of Cornwall in French, His Excel- lency, in replying, conveyed to the people of the diocese the good wishes of Pope Pius for the pros- perity of Canada in general, Sub- sequently Pontifical High Mass was sung at the cathedral, a very large congregation being present, After dinner his Excellency motor- ed to Cornwall, Short stops were made at the parish churches at Glen Nevis, St. Raphael and St, Andrew's, The first stop at Cornwh]l was at St. Columban"s Church, which ,in common with the other churches and institu- tions visited, was decora for the occasion, The Nazareth Or- phanage was visited and the bless- ing bestowed upon the children and reverend sisters of the insti- tution after which the Hotel Dieu was visited and the monastery, His Worship the Mayor in a brief address welcomed the Papal Del- egate. JUDGE, JURY, COUNSEL ° TO VISIT CRIME SCENE New Westminster, B.C., May 30. Judge, jury, counsel for the Crown and for the accused, as well as the accused and the necessary officials, will go to Port Essington, nearly 500 miles away, to view the scene of the murder, May 23, 1926, of Loretta Chisholm, school teacher. This was decided at the Spring Assizes here today, during the second .trial of Joseph Sankey, In- | dian, on a charge of Miss Chisholm. Formal application was made to the presiding Judge, Mr. Justice Aulay Morrison, by A, M. Johnson, K.C., Crown prosecutor, to view the scene of the erime. Arrange: ments have heen made to have all the parties concerned leave here on Wednesday morning, and it is said that they will arrive at Port Es- sington on Friday of this week, Felt Bros. 7 he LEADING JEWELERS Established 1886 murdering 12 Simcoe St. South Let Our Experts Tell You Whether Your Furnace Should Burn "COKE Jeddo-- COAL G.MC.- WooD Coal or Cake ~----This Service is maintained by this company, simply to assist our hundreds of customers in their various difficulties, DIXON COAL COMPANY Telephone 262--4 Lines to Central Ton TENTH DAYS RECALLED Amateur Plays in 1870 in Barracks Genesis of Modern Drama Montreal, Que., May 28.--Duality of race undoubtedly retards the pro- gress of Montreal as a theatrical cen- tre, yet its historic life dates back almost as far as that of any commu- ity on the continent. Glancing k over a century and a half of plays and players in Montreal, one is struck by the fact that the ama- teur stage, so puny today as com- pared with its robust commercial brother, is the senior by some dec- ades here, Graphic pictures of early theatri- cal days are preserved between the covers of "Histrionic Montreal," a work written and published thirty years ago by Franklin T, Graham, Mr. Graham's history, comprehensive in its scope, reliable in detail and vigorous in its literary style, stands as an unique contribution to Cana- diana and one which is today prized by discerning book collectors, Prob- ably no art has been so neglected by Canadian chroniclers as the histrion- ic, and one phase of Mr. Graham's work alone, the biographical notes covering every actor, who mouthed his lines on a Montreal stage between 1783 and 1898, should be of interest even to students of the theatre far removed from Montreal, Amateur theatricals made their de- but in the isolated Frenth town on the St. Lawrence with the arrival of the British army of occupation in 1760, In the eighteenth century British officers, stationed thousands of miles away from London in a primitive land the population of which afforded little opportunity for the social recreations to which they were accustomed, were wont to en- liven garrison life with dabbling in the field of drama, In barracks halls, weirdly adorned with makeshift scenery, colonels and subalterns who fought under Wolfe on the Plains of Abraham rendered the tragedies of Shakespeare and the broad comedies of the Restoration, By degrees they added-to their com- pany from the civilian society of the day and the play as a pastime gained a hold on the hearts of the better-off burghers, From Mr. Graham's book we learn that the first proffessional talent found its way to Montreal by water from Albany, shortly after the close of the Revolutionary War, This ven- turesome troupe had fallen on evil days during the war because of its British extraction. Its run in Mon- treal was brief and apparently profit- less, During two succeeding decades sev- eral similar visits were paid by com- panies from American cities, but it was not until 1804 that professional players made any attempt to estab- lish themselves in the frontier city, In that year a Mr, Ormsby brought a New York company to Montreal. He fitted out the town's first thea- tre, on the upper floor of a ware: house, then standing on St. Sulpice street, near St, Pauly Mr, Ormsby's comedians did not survive very long, but troupes which performed after him in the theatre which he estab- lished met with better support and within the next quarter of a century the public was educated into appre- ciation of the commercial playhouse, It is hoped that these experiments in the musical treatment of inei- dents in Canadian history, conducted by leading artists under favorable auspices, will stimulate others to similar attempts, Here is a field, the surface of which has as yet scarcely been scratched, offering rich material for the painter, the writer, the dram- atist and the composer, A YOUNG RUSSIAN ARTIST PJCTURES - SCENES AT DOCK Montreal, Que., May. 28,--At the recent spring exhibition of the Art Association of Montreal much inter- est was shown in a group of water colors, executed by Alexander Ber- covitch, a young Russian, so recently arrived in this country that he has not yet acquired more than a few words of English. In picturing scenes along Mon- treal's waterfront Mr. Bercovitch comes near to succeeding completely where a host of well-known artists have failed, In this age of bulking, smuted tramp steamers, with no expanse of graceful canvas, to relieve their stark utilitarianism, it is very difi- cult to' instil beauty and harmony of line into a harbor scene, The beauty is there, as any artist can see, disguised as it may be to the layman by graceless derricks and clumsy engines of modern commerce. But to put it on canvas--there is a task which requires daring concep- tion and skill in design. The immigrant from Russia, who works for his living during the day and has only his evenings for the pursuit of art, has accomplished this BETTER THAN SODA FOR 'SOUR, GASSY STOMACH : "For some time I used soda for gas and sourness. Then I tried Adlerika and find it far better 49 Simcoe St. 5. than soda."--Ed. McNeill. Alerika relieves stomach - gas in TEN minutes. 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EE in at least three of his exhibits and scenes on his way to the conquest of a highly intriguing field, Ahulk- ing, sea-bitten freighter moored at | the dockside, was givep its true aes- other water color, picturing one of or ba EE {those tangles of derricks and hulls and ropes so commonly met with Store Hours 9 am. to 6 pm. Linen Table Cloths Particularly delightful is our snowy white, satin finish Linens. Imported direct from the leading Irish manufacturers. Linen Table Cloths at $2 25 to $16.50 Store Hours Saturday 9 am. to 10 p.m, i -- i shade. for Tulye--now in 12 |5 During this Month We Make Special | Features of Linens For The June Bride Linen Tabl cellent choice of designs. See our Special at $2.25. Pure Linen Table Lloths, size 66 x 66 ins. Small, neat patterns. \Ex- | Special at $2.25 e Cloths | About Hostery Priced at, ver pair. \/8\/8) UY BBY A most important detail of one's dréss in these days of the short 'skirt. 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