PAGE FOUR Suburban and District New I ---------------------- - THORNTON'S CORNERS Thornton's Corners, June 29.-- Mrs. Bradford Powell was a recent guest with Mr. and Mrs. Harold Powell, of Raglan. Our Boy Scouts meet tonight at headquarters at the usual hour, and then proceed to Ross' Corners for a. combined meeting with the 5th Oshawa Troop. The girls' softball team expect to go to Brooklin tonight te practice. Don't forget that the Ladies' Aid meets Wednesday, July 4th, at the home of Mrs. J. Sully. Good luck to our entrance class. * Whe school is now closed for the summer vacation, much to the joy of three children. It is with great regret that we learn that Miss Ford, the popular senior teacher, is leaving. She will be much miss- ed in the community as well as by the pupils. Thursday afternoon the pupils presented her with a pretty bar pin, as a small token of their love for her. The vest wishes of the community go with her for her future success. Miss Taylor has left for her home in Lynedoeh. We wish her a very nleasant vacation. , * A great number of the children rent down to see the circus parade on' Wednesday morning. They all seemed to greatly enjoy it, especi- ally seeing the animals. Mr. J. Sully is in Torento, on a business trip. Mrs. G. H. Robinson spent Thurs- day in Oourtice, visiting with friends, We are glad to report that Mrs. J. Luke's mother, Mrs, Collins, is much improved, though she is still quite ill, ~ MYRTLE Mytrle, June 28.--Success to the five entrance candidates who wrote on their examinations this week. AR --_-- to Mrs. George Luke's house, south of Raglan. Mr. Oscar H. Downey has added much to the appearance of his house with a fresh coat of paiat. A number from here were in Oshawa on Wednesday emivouing the circus. The beef ring season has open- ed up again with Mr. Mac, Bur- roughs who has been butcher for a number of years at 'ue uae place again. Some choice anun.s have already been divided up among the patrons, 2 Mr. and Mrs. Pengally, of North Dakota, are visiting the former's sister, Mrs. James Cook. COLUMBUS Columbus, June 27.--Miss Mary Dyer, of Oshawa, is spending her vacation at her home here. ' Miss Viola Benner spent last Sunday with friends at Enniskil- len. Mrs. Richard Ashton and daugh- ter, Miss Reina Ashton, of Marietta, Ohio, are visiting relatives in the village. Misses Bernice and Marjory Stinson, of North Oshawa, and Marguerite' Trevail, of Taunton, visited with their aunt, Miss Nellie Boynton last week, Miss Marjory Ashton has return- ed home in Toronto after spending the past week with hre mother, Mrs. Jas. Ashton. : Mr. and Mrs. Fred Wickett and Miss Evelyn Wickett, of Toronto, spent Sunday at J. Stone's. The Columbus United Chureh will hold anniversary services on Sunday, July 8th, when Rev. Wm. Sterling, of Orono, will preach at 11 am. and 7 p.m. There will al- so be special music. On Tuesday, July 10, a garden party will be- held. Supper will start at 5.30 o'clock. A girls' soft. Mr, Charlie Andrews nas moved ball game, Thornton's Corners vs. EQUIPMENT: Standard snd Compartment, tion Lib- rary Car--Radio Equipped, Valet ar, Sas ar, Calgary H. Ww. Iv. Toronto ar. Winnipeg ar, Brandon ar. Regina ar, Edmonton ar, Jasper Park ar, Vancouver Sheridan, Agt., 39 Sime daily 9.00 p.m. 1st day Eest. Time 8.45 a.m. 3rd" Cont. Time 1.00 p.m. 3rd " 6.40 pom. 3rd "Me Time 11.40p.m. 3rd " 10.00 a.m, 4th 6.40 pam. 4th 9,30 3.m. 5th 5.90 p.m. 5th oe St, '8,, Telephone n "" sata z2 Pas, Time 5 CANADIAN NATIONAL STOCKS StoBIE-FORLONG & BONDS ead Office; Reford Bu AND WELLINGTON STS. S. F. EVERSON, Local Manager Private Wire System 11 King Street East, Oshawa -- Above C.P.R, Office Phones 143 and 144 GRAIN who will also pay any firm. We Wish To Announce That we have disposed of our hardware busi- ness to Mr. Harry D. Wilson, who has been connected with the firm for the past nine years, and who will take it over on July 2 and carry it on under his own name. All accounts will be payable to C. R. Bailes, We wish to thank our many customers for their liberal patronage during the past 25 years we have been in business and bespeak for Mr. Wilson a continuance of this same patronage. John Bailes & Sons Limited bills owing by the old + Progkit will start at 6 o'clock. and gram at 8.30, will include Bert Petch, entertainer; Miss La Rush, soprano, Miss Hogg, pianist, Miss Harrington, soloist, Rolanu Smith, violinist, Allan Harrington, pianist, and the Harrington orches- tra. Mr. Howard James, of Detroit, Mich,, is visiting his mother, Mrs. J. James. Miss Marion Oster, of Oshawa, is visiting at. W. Dyer's. ENFIELD Enfield, June 29.--Mr. and Mrs. John Hepburn visited in Toronto recently, : Misw Francis A. rage, Supt, of the Children's Hospital, Honolulu, is visiting with Mr. and Mrs. 8, Page. Mr. and Mrs, W. Hudson and family, Heartney, .Manitoba, are visiting at Mr. John McCulloch's. Dr. R. C. West and Mrs. Flor ence Thompson, Woodstock, are visiting with relatives here, Mrs. John Alexander, Miss ¥Fran- cls. Messrs. Will and John Alex- ander, Jr., visited at Mr, L. C. Pascoe's. Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Tapp, Tor- onto, visited at Mr. W. J, Ormis- ton's. Misses Vera Stinson and Helen Stark wrote on the entyunes exams inations at Solina. Mr. Harry Stinson has purchas- ed a mew Heintzman L.eav, Several from here attended Sparke Circus at Oshawa. The people of this community extepd hearty . congratulations to Mr, and Mrs, David Ferguson, who celehrated the golden anniversary of their wedding last week, 'The guests, who presented and groom of. fifty years ago with a purse of gold, were from Los Angeles, Calif.,, Cairn, Toronto, Peterhoro', Bowmanville, and Osh- awa, besides those who live in this community. The Ladies' Aid will hold their meeting for July at the home of Mrs, Edwin Ormiston, on Wednes- day, July 4, Our pastor, Rev. E. M. Cooke, preached his farewell sermon here last Sunday. We are very sorry to see Rev, and Mrs. Cooke depart from our midst. BETHESDA Bethesda, June 28.--The Beth- esda Cemetery Board are desirous of raising sufficient funds to endow the plot of John Hicks Eyuen. Many younger people do not real- ize that John Hicks Eyuen ana hig wife, Elizabeth Dart Eyuen, sailed from Podstow, Cornwall, on May 1, 1833, and after a long and stormy voyage reached Quebec on June 17. Pressing on he reached his destination at Cobourg on July 6. Here at Cobourg the cradle of the Bible Christian Church in Canada, Mr. Eyuen preached first in the open air, then in the goal and later in a dwelling house. His work soon extended until it took in a eireuit of 200 miles. His first quarter's receipts was an English half erown. Many families were kind and devot- ed to the missionaries; they gave whatever they could to help the work along and often put them- selves to persona) inconvenience and sacrifice to éntertain and sup- ply the needs of the servants of God. Money was exceedingly scarce, Mr. and Mrs, Eyusn were suceeesful pioneer missionaries and heroically pressed through many difficulties; and will ever be remembered ds wise and judicious leaders, und able preachers. Let us then attend the drama and cafeteria lunch served hy the ladies of Tyrone circuit on the evening of July 5. Mrs. John Baker, of Solina, spent a day with her sister, Mrs. Howard Couch. Miss Winnifred Cole, of Toronto, spent the week-end at home. Mr. G. Rundle has return- ed from visiting her daughter, Mrs. E. Oke, of Ebenezer. Mr. and Mrs. P. A, Werry visit- ed Mr. Werry's sister, Mrs, Rowan, of Bethany last week, "COURTICE Courtice, June 29.--Mr. and Mrs. Jesse Arnot, Miss Bernice and Master Jack, Maxwell's, were Sun- day guests at her mother's, Mrs. Eli Osborne. Mr. and Mrs. Thos. Sanderson, Toronto, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. W, R. Courtice. Miss Lyla Osborne, Toronto, was home over the week-end. Three services were held on Sunday and our Pastor, Rev. H. J Stainton, preached two excellent sermons, ope in the morning and one in the evening. The sacra- ment of. the Lord's Supper was served in the morning. The Sun- day School gession in the afternoon was well attended as usual. Next Sunday the Rev. Mr. Lane of Can- ton circuit, will preach morning and evening and our pastor will preach at Elizabethville. On W-dnesday afternoon the Ladjes' Berean Class held its monthly meeting at the home of Mrs. Kenneth Courtice. The pro- gram was in charge of Mrs. Her- bert' Nichols' group and it was a good one. Mrs. Jno. Found was in charge of the devotional period. The meeting opened with the President, Mrs. W. R. Courtice, in the chair. The Doxology was sung and a short prayer read by Mrs. Herbert Nichols. A hymn was sung and payers offered by Mid. G. ¥. Annis and 'Mrs. A. J. Gay. Mrs. Sam Vinson read the bible lesson on the story of Moses and afterward. Mrs. Frank Rundle gave a very fine talk on the lesson. After the business part of the meeting the program was presented as follows -- A chorus by the group in charge. A reading was nicely rendered by Miss Anna Osborne. Mrs. Roberts, Darlington Station. sang » pretty solo. Miss Robertson cf South [] the bride. Oshawa Mission, then gave a very interesting and imspiring talk on her work. Miss Robertson told us her vision of what the young people of today need, and Wwe think she has the right vision for helping to win the young folk into the right ways of living. A plano duet was played splen- didi by Misses Louise Osborne and Hazel Rundle. Miss Louise Courtice then recited a pretty selection on "The Bumble Bee". Mrs. "Reo" Stainton sang sweet- ly a song of roses. After the pro- gram a nice lunch was served by Mrs. Nichols' group to about sixty ladies and children.' Mrs. Jack Brooks and babe and Mrs, Cam- eron Trull, Oshawa, were guests at the meeting. Mrs. Kenneth Courtice was a most gracious host- ess. Next meeting will be in charge of Mrs. Blake Oke's group. Rev. H. J. Stainton, B.A, B.D, visited in Campbellford recently. A number of the people in this vicinity are taking a trip to the 'Thousand Islands on Saturday. Mr. Garton is taking the bus load to Kingston, where they take the boat for the Islands. Mr. Harry Phair is improving appearances of his home by a new coat of paint on his house, A "Fouth of July" tea will be served in Miss Mabelle Walters' tea room, Courtice, on Wednesday, July 4th from 3 to 10 p.m, by the ladies of Mrs. L: J. Courtice's group in Women's Missionary So- ciety. Everyone who would en- joy a nice tea and a social hour is invited. The price is not much. POINCARE WINS IN CHAMBER CRISIS Confidence is Overwhelming ly Voted His Cabinet-- Small Opposition Paris, June 29--Raymond Poincare emerged victorious today from the most bitter and best-planned attack that his Government has heen called upon to face since he assumed power in 1926. The Chamber of Deputies voted confidence in the Cabinet by 455 to 126. As the Chamber will adjourn with- in a few days for the summer recess, the Opposition has been found tam- ed until Parliament reconvenes in October Two Pro-Government Votes There were really two pro-Govern- ment votes in the proceedings. Af- ter the Radical Left had presented approval of the Ministerial declara- tion as the order of the day, the Socialists tried to gain priority for a Parliamentary program of their own, They came out at the small end of a 460 to 120 ballot. With this as a test, the result of the actual confidence vote was a foregone conclusion, y Poincare, who has made many masterful speeches in his long career, outtlid himself today, and complete- ly disorganized his opponents' forces. Only Communists, Socialists and a Small group of Radicals voted against nim, : Yielded Not an Inch The Premier declined to yield an inch, and, in his own words, refused to "elide one single syllable from the Ministerial declaration." He virtually stampeded the Chamber, and three- fourths of the Deputies who hal come to slay him politically arose at the end of the speech to join in an ovation of length and magnitude. The scene had not been surpass- ed in the French Parliament since the glorious days of 1918, when Clemenceau told the House how the allied armies were marching on to victory in the World War, TELLS OF GANADA'S AIR PHOTOGRAPHY Expert in Address at Que- bzc Convention Points to Record Quebec, June 29.--While Can- ada has not sent any aviators across the Atlantic it holds a world's rec- ord of its own, in that during the course of the past five years this country has had 200,000 square miles of country photographed from the air, which is umique In the history of any country. A. M. Narraway, second in com mand of aerial photography ind Canada, announced this record to the automotive engineers in con- vention here at present. Canadian airplanes, he stated, inventoried the forestry resources of the Dominion, while 200,000,000 acres were patrolled each year for forest fire protection. In addition 30,000 miles of timber limits, in supposedly inaccessible regions, have been discovered. All of these items are infinitely more import- ant than flights to the North Pole or across the Atlantie, he said. Explaining why she had her beautiful tresses bobbed, Mary Pickford says she will not again play girlish roles in her pictures. Now is there logic in that--or isn't there?--Hamilton Spectator. P | Monday, July 283, 1928 (Seeing 600 miles of Canada's Mountain Grandeur and) ) ag World famous Beauty Spots oid nd BANFF: LAKE LOUISE - EMERALD LAKE FORO VALLMY . Drives Steamer Trips IMiustrated booklet on application t~ Wm. Fulton) District Passenger Agent, Toronto, or to A Deas Staclais Laid, Macdonald Collese P 0 = Nwsl THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, JUNE"30, 1928 a---- | At a Glance | The Telegram certainly steps on the right foot when it says the Chinese war seems to have stopped,' while all concerned try to decide whether it is a fight or a traffic jam. "Golfer expires on sink from tee"--headline. Someone was waxing poetical when this ori. ginated. One might think he had been comsuming too much of the well-known beverage. . . -. The Orillia citizens are now resting in comparative comfort since the doom of the mosquito was sealed some months ago. Toronto has taken up the cry and war to the death has been proclaimed on the cricket. No more will the little hero of "Cricket on the Hearth" sing in his solitude. L . LJ The man who neglects to change worn-out hrake linings hould r ber that a ch is as good as a vest. --Dally Star. might be fairly And that rest permanent. * A repetition of some startling in- cidents which aroused ¥rance at the time when Laundru, the mur- derer was alive has vccurrea. ue case is interesting in that the cele- brated French police have been unable to arrest the suspect, . LJ * The Bolshevist is all right in his place, says the Port Hope Times, but his place isn't on the earth. CREE President Von Hindenburgh of Germany is a proud grand. dad, and is glad the family name will live on through the ages, at least for one more age. Vive la petite (le petit) Hine denburgh. «There seems to be a rivalry he- tween local cafe owners. No sooner does one have a new elee- tric sign placed on the establish- ment, than another tears the fornr- er down and erects a larger one on his own place. LJ . As a matter of fact, they don't give an;' premiums away any more for the golf far who makes a hole in one, They are becoming too numerous, * * * The first night, we put up at an hofel--" : "Don't say 'put up;' say stopped.' "Well, we had so much to put up with that we didn't stop." * - » THE MOST IMPORTANT THING 1 do not think that Mr. Watt Thought out an engine on the spot, Or even Mr. Stephenson, Like that, an engine that would 'We run. I guess they studied quite a bit Before the right idea they hit. And had a lot to do and learn Before the wheels began to turn, Come down today and see the mill; You want to come, I hope you will, And then I hope you do not miss A lot of lessons such as this. Yes, sonny, there is one mistake I wouldn't like to see you make; Don't think the biggest wheel, my son, Is always the important one. For there is many a little wheel, Perhaps that bigger ones conceal, That always has to do its part Before the bigger wheel can start. For I don't know a wheel, or man, That isn't part of all the plan, A single task there is to do That isn't most important' too. The hoy who brings my morning mail May fool along the way, and fail, Or pass a hundred bigger chaps. And help me more than them per- haps. His promptness many a time, no doubt, Has straightened many a matter out. If to our task our best we bring-- Well, that's the most important thing. --Douglas Malloch. * LJ * For a' that an' a' that. L LJ LJ By Renrut. TWO ARE KILLED, FIVE HURT WHEN CARS MEET HEAD-ON Munro, Mich., June 29. -- One man was burned to death, a child was injured fatally and five per- sons were hurt severely, one probably -tataity," when two auto- mobiles collided on the Dixie Highway ( six miles south of here, today. : The accident happened when two machines came together head- on, One car was thrown into the ditch' and burned. Lee Smith) Jr., was burned to death when hs foot caught in a broken door and he was unable to extricate himself from the burning auto, EE Fours and Sixes from Taxgs Extra Passenger Cars $725 10 $2195 fob. Leaside, Ont. The Business of icul of Agriculture ARMING is more than an occupae F tion; it is a highly commerciale ized business which requires caree ful planning and thoughtful execution. Bountifu! production is necessary bug much effort is wasted unless the busie ness of disposing of the year's output is properly managed. In conducting the «business of the farm the Standard Bank can play a prominent and useful part. Consult the manager and learn how true co-operation between banking and agriculture builds a more prosper- ous community, E. GC. HODGINS Manager, Oshawa Branch Branche' also at Bowmanville; Brooklin; Newcastle, Part Perry, Whithy ER Brown pony coats with plaid lin- Brown and white and violet and ings are an advance fashion for | white are two new smart combina fall, being seen in New York. tions of the season, A. L. HUDSON & CO, NEW YORK STOCK EXCHANGE CHICAGO BOARD OF TRADE WINNIPEG GRAIN EXCHANGE STANDARD STOCK and MINING EXCHANGE NEW YORK PRODUCE EXCHANGE (Ass'ts), NEW YORK CURB MARKET (Ass'te) : OFFICES AT: = TORONTO, ONT, BUFFALO, N.Y, OSHAWA, ONT. SARNIA, ONT. OWEN SOUND, ONT. DIRECT PRIVATE WIRE CONNECTIONS TO ALL PRINCIPAL MARKETS THROUGH. OUT CANADA sad . ,y UNITED STATES Oshawa Office Times Building Telephone 2700, Resident Manager: C. N. 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