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Oshawa Daily Times, 7 Jul 1928, p. 22

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"Heidelberg" Is Latest Ad- : Job Presses : The Times job printing depart- lent is fortunate in having a re- arkably up-to-date job press equip- ment. Three different types of auto. presses are in use, the latest e being a Heidelberg automat- ic machine. This press, because of its high quality and superior per- formance, 'has overcome the prejus dice attached to it, due to its being | manufactured in Germany, and is now being installed in many Cana- dian plants alongside of machines of United States manufacture, The Heidelberg Press is uinque in construction and design, automatically feeding, printing and delivering the sheets absolutely without manual op- eration, It will print all classes of paper stocks from thin tissue to heavy cardboard up to a high speed of 3,- 200 printed sheets per hour, also small jobs and envelopes two up-- that is, handling two envelopes or | sheets and printing them at the same time, ' AUTONATS ARE. | pm . THE OSHAWA DAILY TIMES, SATURDAY, JULY 7, 192e! HIGH SPEED AUTOMATIC JOB PRESS hand-fed press could turn out in four hours, This machine will automatically feed, print and deliver as much work in an hour as an ordinary Each sheet is picked up by rubber fingers, operated by suc- tion, and it rarely makes a mistake, It is known as a "Miller High Speed". PRESSES LIKE THESE WERE ONCE MADE IN OSHAWA The Joseph Hall Machine Works was a fairly large manufacturer of printing presses and at on? time all of the presses in The Reformer office were made by that Company. this picture are the Gordon Presses in the job printing department. The machines shown in A REMINDER THAT THE TIMES OFFICE HANDLES OFFICE SUPPLIES This des : : LAN A \ ; his department in charge of R. A. Hamilton does a flourishing business with local factories and other large users of office supplies and equipment. CRISP COMMENT Any fruit expert will tell you that what the crop needs now is Pld-Sol blazing out in all hi% glory for a few weeks.--St, Cath- arines Standard. Flying over cannibal islands adds gest to the conquest of the air, The gviator can never be certain whether he will be dined or dined on.--Sault Daily Star, We didn't suppose any poor In- dian would be allowed to get away with such a high crime and misde- meanor as healing a sick man.-- Hamilton Herald, "The. Scotchman," says a writer, "is very particular about his gram- mar." However, in convivial mo- ments he is always willing to split an infinitive with a friend.--London Sunday News, EXCAVATION Times' ewers and eneral Excavations The * for the : Néw Building was made by J.D. ARMSTRONG CONSTRUCTION CO. 47 Alanson Street » Hamilton, Ont ENGLISH CHIVALRY APPEALS TO WOMAN American Writer Explains Why She Likes British Men . -- It is true that the average Eng- lishman has a casual and indiffer- cnt manner. His aloofness is the first thing that impresses all visitors, especially those of 'us who are acs customed to the adoration of wo- men in the United States; and you can imagine the consternation and resentment that his gnanner arouses in the breasts of wéhen accustomed to lavish compliments, unquestioning devotion, and, perhaps, the charming gestures of Latins, writes an Ameri- can woman in the London Daily Mail. : But the impression of coldness _soon disappears. Before I had been here a year I discovered (if I may use an architectural term) the warmth and genuine friendliness of spirit behind that chilly facade, In the course of a great deal of wand- ering I have made friends in four continents, but none .on whom I would rely with quite so much con- fidence as the unemotional, outward- ly stolid, slightly casual whom I have grown to admire and like so enormously during my stay in Engiaifffher do not cultivate wo- men witi®the ceaseless zest and pro- fessional skill of some of the Con- tinentals; neither do most of them lavish on you orchids which they cannot afford and chocolates which make you sick--or fat. They are so reserved in the matter of compli- ments that for the first week or two I kept flying to my mirror and changing frocks and hats in a des- perate attempt to retrieve what I could only regard as a hopeless fail- ure to create dn impression. Now I know Englishmen better, I do not expect daily and hourly as- surances that I am ravishing. And though I still miss some of the little attentions to which I was accustom- ed, I have learned to see things in their proper propgrtion and appreciate the things that Yeally matter. No Theatrical Gestures For the truth is t the English- man is the most us man in the world. He dislikes, or does mot bother with, theatrical gestures such as kissing your hand; he has too much sense of humor to assure a operation, HEIDELBERG AUTOMATIC PRESS This is the atest acquisition in printing machinery to The Times job printing plant. It is unique in construction and design, automatically feed- ing, printing and delivering the sheets, completely eliminating manual or to pretend that because he had to take someone else to dinner his appetite and his evening were ruin- ed. But--and this is the real test--he is all there when he is needed, as those who have travelled much will agree, Who is it that gets up in a Continental train and offers you his seat? The Englishman. Who is it that looks after your luggage, effi- ciently and without fuss? The Eng- lishman, And who is it that never spoils a dance by trying to kiss you on the way home in the taxi? The Englishman again, The Englishman certainly does not parade his chivalry--though in the matter of opening doors and rising when you enter the room he offers an example to most foreigners. But my experience is that in everything that really matters he shows a quiet consideration and tact which are the better, if not the most showy, part of chivalry, RHINE EVACUATION Socialist Chancellor Says Chance of Entente May Be Missed Paris, July 7.--Chancellor Mueller insisted on evacuation of the Rhine- land in his speech on Tuesday in the Reichstag. BRADLEY BROS. Oshawa's Oldest Established REAL ESTATE FIRM Also Specializing in FIRE INSURANCE and MONEY TO LOAN 29 Simcoe St. South MUELLER DEMANDS The French do not like to hear a German socialist talk about retire- ment from the Rhineland without guarantee from Berlin, Officials here remark that Herr Mueller's request for a rapid withdrawal makes no mention either of compensation or the equivalent in guarantees. To the German chancellor's state- ment that an important opportunity NE i | ties, Automotive Glass Store Fronts, Phone 169 plain woman that she is Cleopatra, etc., Plate Glass Table Tops, Selected Picture and Window Glass, Picture Dealers' Sundries, Mirrors Resilvered, Copper for an entente will be missed if the Rhineland is not evacuated now, the French simply reply: "Why does not Germany make a concrete offer of the concessions it is willing to give?" The French did not forget that For- eign Minister Stresemann promised M. Briand in September, "1926 that he would assemble proposals to pre- cipitate evacuation, but as yet none have ever been received from 'Ber- lin, Until such proposals are forth- coming, France will be little effected by words, Press comment likewise attacks Herr Mueller's statement that Ger- many has fulfilled all its conditions and flings back the retort that Ger- many merely has disarmed and ac- cepted the Dawes' plan, Paris papers demahd to know what assurances France has for continued Dawes payments and why Germany persists to clamor for a revision of the treaty of Versailles, Le Temps recalls that since Thoiry the Germans have furnished no seri- ous basis for evacuation discussion and the treaty of Versailles cannot be changed without all of Berlin's obligations being fulfilied. The paper continues: "Either Germany sincerely wishes a policy of entente or she does not, In the first case, it is necessary that she should loyally undertake her just part of sacrifices to permit its rea- lization as the allies already have done a long time since. In the scc- ond case, she will have to be held only to the strict application of the treaty." In L'Echo, Pertinax, referring to the hopes for a general settlement of reparations and war debts, declares that Herbert Hoover's candidacy al- ready threatens the possibility of such an adjustment. He adds that Herr Mueller proposes that France accept as her share the loss brought by such liquidation of a portion of the Daws' annuities that are al- ready paid. "The Germans say: 'What' need have you to replace occupation by other guarantees while we no longer pursue a policy of revenge?" says Pertinax, "A happy declaration! Are we ready to take it for its face val- ue? Germany cannot talk revenge so long as she has not recovered the Rhine. Having recovered the Rhine, she will have in her hands an in- strument for revenge. It can only be prudent to delay such an event «as much as possible. In any case France must quickly define its doctrine, Prantoms have disappeared, It is time to say what one thinks and what one wants." THE-- Used in the CLOUDBURST RUINS 185 AUTOMOBILES Landslide Occurs at Pleas. ure Resort Near Mc. Keesport, Pa. McKeesport, July 7. -- Over a thousand persons were marooned, one| boy was missing and 185 automobiles! were destroyed when a landslide, af- ter a cloudburst, occurred at Rain- bow Gardens, a pleasure resort near McKeesport, late Wednesday. A landslide on the Dravosburg- Duquesne Boulevard, near McKees- port, wrecked 40 automobiles an: slightly injured a dozen persons, Flood waters washed nine other car over a dam in Olympia Park, Mc Keesport. Several sections of the county were hit by cloudbursts. In the Becks Run district, a dozen families were res cued when waters inundated thei homes. A hillside cave-in, at the Rainbov Gardens resort, buried many parked automobiles. Other automobiles, parked on the hillside overlooking : creek, were carried into the wate and wrecked. Subsequent explosions destroyed many of the machines. Have an dpiegisel Some of the purposes for which an appraisal can be used, are: To determine the amount of insurance carry. As a proof of loss in case of fire. As a work of reference, As a basis for the installa. tion of a Cost System, To determine valuation partnerships, Ar a basis for incorporation. As a basis for the settling of estate, As an ald in financing, For the purpose of obtain- ing the facts, To prepare you for emer- gencies, As a basis for opening up an equipment ledger. As a basis for sale or amal- gamat.on, correct to in TELEPHONE ELGIN 0035 GRAPHIC ARTS APPRAISAL CO, 145 ADELAIDE ST. WEST TORONTO, ONT. -].-A- Vioray "TIMES" supplied by LIMITED Mouldings, Picture Frames, Mirrors, Art Novel Specialties, Windshields, Shelves, etc., BUILDING is an Oshawa product WE Phillips (Ompany Let Vioray Glass help you bring your children up tall, strong and sturdy, From the medical world comes the announcement of an- other great forward step, the perfecting of & clear window glass, which per- mits the passage of the val- uable ultra-violet rays of the sun, These rays are the health-giving rays and are of incalculable value to the growing child and the convalescent, Exposure to ultra-violet rays build strong, sturdy upstanding children and speeds the return to health of those who have been sick, THE WHOLE SUNSHINE POURS THROUGH VIOBAY Common glass separates the ultra-violet rays from sunshine just as a separ- ator eliminates the cream from the milk, Vioray glass permits the passage of these precious rays. The whole sunshine pours through Vioray Glass right into your home. Your children should mever be behind glass unless the glass is Vioray, You owe your children the heritage of fine splendid health, Vioray Glass is here to help you.

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